windows-setup.rst 5.3 KB

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  1. Step 1: Toolchain for Windows: Quick Steps
  2. ==================================
  3. Windows doesn't have a built-in "make" environment, so as well as installing the toolchain you will need a GNU-compatible environment. We use the MSYS2_ environment to provide.
  4. You don't need to use this environment all the time (you can use Eclipse_ or some other front-end), but it runs behind the scenes.
  5. The quick setup is to download the Windows all-in-one toolchain & MSYS zip file from dl.espressif.com:
  6. https://dl.espressif.com/dl/esp32_win32_msys2_environment_and_toolchain-20160816.zip
  7. Unzip the zip file to C:\ and it will create an "msys32" directory with a pre-prepared environment.
  8. Alternative Step 1: Configure toolchain & environment from scratch
  9. ==================================================================
  10. As an alternative to getting a pre-prepared environment, you can set up the environment from scratch:
  11. * Navigate to the MSYS2_ installer page and download the ``msys2-i686-xxxxxxx.exe`` installer executable (we only support a 32-bit MSYS environment, it works on both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows.)
  12. * Run through the installer steps, and accept the "Run MSYS2 now" option at the end. A window will open with a MSYS2 terminal.
  13. * The ESP-IDF repository on github contains a script in the tools directory titled ``windows_install_prerequisites.sh``. If you haven't downloaded the ESP-IDF yet, that's OK - you can just `download that one file in Raw format from here <https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/raw/master/tools/windows/windows_install_prerequisites.sh>`_. Save it somewhere on your computer.
  14. * Type the path to the shell script into the MSYS2 terminal window. You can type it as a normal Windows path, but use forward-slashes instead of back-slashes. ie: ``C:/Users/myuser/Downloads/windows_install_prerequisites.sh``. You can read the script beforehand to check what it does.
  15. * If you use the 201602 MSYS2 installer, the first time you run ``windows_install_prerequisites.sh`` it will update the MSYS2 core system. At the end of this update, you will be prompted to close the MSYS2 terminal and re-open. When you re-open after the update, re-run ``windows_install_prerequisites.sh``. The next version of MSYS2 (after 201602) will not need this interim step.
  16. * The ``windows_install_prerequisites.sh`` script will download and install packages for ESP-IDF support, and the ESP32 toolchain.
  17. Note: You may encounter a bug where svchost.exe uses 100% CPU in Windows after setup is finished, resulting in the ESP-IDF building very slowly. Terminating svchost.exe or restarting Windows will solve this problem.
  18. Another Alternative Step 1: Just download a toolchain
  19. =====================================================
  20. If you already have an MSYS2 install or want to do things differently, you can download just the toolchain here:
  21. https://dl.espressif.com/dl/xtensa-esp32-elf-win32-1.22.0-59.zip
  22. If you followed one of the above options for Step 1, you won't need this download.
  23. Important: Just having this toolchain is *not enough* to use ESP-IDF on Windows. You will need GNU make, bash, and sed at minimum. The above environments provide all this, plus a host compiler (required for menuconfig support).
  24. Step 2: Getting the esp-idf repository from github
  25. ==================================================
  26. Open an MSYS2 terminal window by running ``C:\msys32\msys2_shell.cmd``. The environment in this window is a bash shell.
  27. Change to the directory you want to clone the SDK into by typing a command like this one: ``cd "C:/path/to/dir"`` (note the forward-slashes in the path). Then type ``git clone --recursive https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf.git``
  28. If you'd rather use a Windows UI tool to manage your git repositories, this is also possible. A wide range are available.
  29. Step 3: Starting a project
  30. ==========================
  31. ESP-IDF by itself does not build a binary to run on the ESP32. The binary "app" comes from a project in a different directory. Multiple projects can share the same ESP-IDF directory on your computer.
  32. The easiest way to start a project is to download the Getting Started project from github_.
  33. The process is the same as for checking out the ESP-IDF from github. Change to the parent directory and run ``git clone https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf-template.git``.
  34. Step 4: Configuring the project
  35. ===============================
  36. Open an MSYS2 terminal window by running ``C:\msys32\msys2_shell.cmd``. The environment in this window is a bash shell.
  37. Type a command like this to set the path to ESP-IDF directory: ``export IDF_PATH="C:/path/to/esp-idf"`` (note the forward-slashes not back-slashes for the path). If you don't want to run this command every time you open an MSYS2 window, create a new file in ``C:/msys32/etc/profile.d/`` and paste this line in - then it will be run each time you open an MYS2 terminal.
  38. Use ``cd`` to change to the project directory (not the ESP-IDF directory.) Type ``make menuconfig`` to configure your project, then ``make`` to build it, ``make clean`` to remove built files, and ``make flash`` to flash (use the menuconfig to set the serial port for flashing.)
  39. If you'd like to use the Eclipse IDE instead of running ``make``, check out the Eclipse setup guide in this directory.
  40. .. _Eclipse: eclipse-setup.rst
  41. .. _MSYS2: https://msys2.github.io/
  42. .. _github: https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf-template