IDF Docker Image

IDF Docker image (espressif/idf) is intended for building applications and libraries with specific versions of ESP-IDF, when doing automated builds.

The image contains:

  • Common utilities such as git, wget, curl, zip.

  • Python 3.6 or newer.

  • A copy of a specific version of ESP-IDF (see below for information about versions). IDF_PATH environment variable is set, and points to ESP-IDF location in the container.

  • All the build tools required for the specific version of ESP-IDF: CMake, make, ninja, cross-compiler toolchains, etc.

  • All Python packages required by ESP-IDF are installed in a virtual environment.

The image entrypoint sets up PATH environment variable to point to the correct version of tools, and activates the Python virtual environment. As a result, the environment is ready to use the ESP-IDF build system.

The image can also be used as a base for custom images, if additional utilities are required.

Tags

Multiple tags of this image are maintained:

  • latest: tracks master branch of ESP-IDF

  • vX.Y: corresponds to ESP-IDF release vX.Y

  • release-vX.Y: tracks release/vX.Y branch of ESP-IDF

注解

Versions of ESP-IDF released before this feature was introduced do not have corresponding Docker image versions. You can check the up-to-date list of available tags at https://hub.docker.com/r/espressif/idf/tags.

Usage

Setting up Docker

Before using the espressif/idf Docker image locally, make sure you have Docker installed. Follow the instructions at https://docs.docker.com/install/, if it is not installed yet.

If using the image in CI environment, consult the documentation of your CI service on how to specify the image used for the build process.

Building a project with CMake

In the project directory, run:

docker run --rm -v $PWD:/project -w /project espressif/idf idf.py build

The above command explained:

  • docker run: runs a Docker image. It is a shorter form of the command docker container run.

  • --rm: removes the container when the build is finished

  • -v $PWD:/project: mounts the current directory on the host ($PWD) as /project directory in the container

  • espressif/idf: uses Docker image espressif/idf with tag latest (implicitly added by Docker when no tag is specified)

  • idf.py build: runs this command inside the container

To build with a specific docker image tag, specify it as espressif/idf:TAG, for example:

docker run --rm -v $PWD:/project -w /project espressif/idf:release-v4.4 idf.py build

You can check the up-to-date list of available tags at https://hub.docker.com/r/espressif/idf/tags.

Building a project with GNU Make

Same as for CMake, except that the build command is different:

docker run --rm -v $PWD:/project -w /project espressif/idf make defconfig all -j4

注解

If the sdkconfig file does not exist, the default behavior of GNU Make build system is to open the menuconfig UI. This may be not desired in automated build environments. To ensure that the sdkconfig file exists, defconfig target is added before all.

If you intend to build the same project repeatedly, you may bind the tools/kconfig directory of ESP-IDF to a named volume. This will prevent Kconfig tools, located in ESP-IDF directory, from being rebuilt, causing a rebuild of the rest of the project:

docker run --rm -v $PWD:/project -v kconfig:/opt/esp/idf/tools/kconfig -w /project espressif/idf make defconfig all -j4

If you need clean up the kconfig volume, run docker volume rm kconfig.

Binding the tools/kconfig directory to a volume is not necessary when using the CMake build system.

Using the image interactively

It is also possible to do builds interactively, to debug build issues or test the automated build scripts. Start the container with -i -t flags:

docker run --rm -v $PWD:/project -w /project -it espressif/idf

Then inside the container, use idf.py as usual:

idf.py menuconfig
idf.py build

注解

Commands which communicate with the development board, such as idf.py flash and idf.py monitor will not work in the container unless the serial port is passed through into the container. However currently this is not possible with Docker for Windows (https://github.com/docker/for-win/issues/1018) and Docker for Mac (https://github.com/docker/for-mac/issues/900).

Building custom images

The Dockerfile in ESP-IDF repository provides several build arguments which can be used to customize the Docker image:

  • IDF_CLONE_URL: URL of the repository to clone ESP-IDF from. Can be set to a custom URL when working with a fork of ESP-IDF. Default is https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf.git.

  • IDF_CLONE_BRANCH_OR_TAG: Name of a git branch or tag use when cloning ESP-IDF. This value is passed to git clone command using the --branch argument. Default is master.

  • IDF_CHECKOUT_REF: If this argument is set to a non-empty value, git checkout $IDF_CHECKOUT_REF command will be performed after cloning. This argument can be set to the SHA of the specific commit to check out, for example if some specific commit on a release branch is desired.

  • IDF_CLONE_SHALLOW: If this argument is set to a non-empty value, --depth=1 --shallow-submodules arguments will be used when performing git clone. This significantly reduces the amount of data downloaded and the size of the resulting Docker image. However, if switching to a different branch in such a “shallow” repository is necessary, an additional git fetch origin <branch> command must be executed first.

  • IDF_INSTALL_TARGETS: Comma-separated list of IDF targets to install toolchains for, or all to install toolchains for all targets. Selecting specific targets reduces the amount of data downloaded and the size of the resulting Docker image. Default is all.

To use these arguments, pass them via the --build-arg command line option. For example, the following command will build a Docker image with a shallow clone of ESP-IDF v4.4.1 and tools for ESP32-C3, only:

docker build -t idf-custom:v4.4.1-esp32c3 \
    --build-arg IDF_CLONE_BRANCH_OR_TAG=v4.4.1 \
    --build-arg IDF_CLONE_SHALLOW=1 \
    --build-arg IDF_INSTALL_TARGETS=esp32c3 \
    tools/docker