Currently, certain mpremote filesystem operations can fail on Windows due
to a mixing of '/' and '\' for path separators. Eg if filesystem_command()
is called with a destination that ends in / then dest.endswith(os.path.sep)
will return False, which gives the wrong behaviour (it does end in a path
separator).
For similar reasons to 7e9a15966acf80ff50fdf5c52553dd56de164bb3, it's best
to use '/' everywhere in pyboard.py and mpremote, because the target device
understands only '/'. mpremote already does this, so the remaining place
to fix it is in pyboard.y, to convert all incoming paths to use '/' instead
of '\'.
This effectively reverts 57fd66b80f8352e4859e6b71536b6083f9d7279c which
tried to fix the problem in a different way.
See also related 1f84440538a017e463aaad9686831ce9527122b5.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This allows the entire configuration to be defined in a single file,
including the logic for including pyboard.py and automatically versioning
based on the git tag.
Building the package works both via `python -m build` as well as
`hatch build`. `python -m build ` has the advantage of automatically
fetching all dependencies, you don't need to manually install any hatch
packages.
In order to make the versioning work, and also keep things simpler for end
users, mpremote releases will now be the same as MicroPython releases and
use the same tag. The version strings for mpremote will look like:
- X.Y.Z -- clean build at the tag
- X.Y.Z.postN+gHASH -- clean build, N revisions from the most recent tag
- X.Y.Z.postN+gHASH.dYYYYMMDD -- dirty build, N revisions from out
This commit extends on the idea from #8404.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Now that the code-size-check CI action gives a nice report (as a comment)
on the code size difference, it's possible to have a few more ports
reported there. In this commit, unix, stm32 and rp2 are added. Unix
represents non-MCU builds, and stm32 and rp2 represent ARM-based builds,
for ports that have lots of features enabled.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This 2-in-1 PR started with the goal of support the Bangle.js 2
smartwatch with *no USB*.
* Adds "secure" DFU build support with a committed private key.
* Adds 3-bit color support with one dummy bit for the JDI memory display
* Allows nrf boards to have a board_background_task() run in RUN_BACKGROUND_TASK.
This is needed because the Bangle.js 2 uses the watchdog to reset.
* Renamed port_background_task() to port_background_tick() to indicate it
runs on tick, not RUN_BACKGROUND_TASK.
* Marks serial connected when the display terminal is inited. This means
that safe mode messages show up on the display.
ACep, 7-color epaper displays also pack 3 bits in 4. So, I added that
support as well.
* Adds 3-bit ACeP color support for 7-color e-paper displays. (Not
watch related but similar due to color depth.)
* Allows a refresh sequence instead of a single int command. The 7" ACeP
display requires a data byte for refresh.
* Adds optional delay after resetting the display. The ACeP displays
need this. (Probably to load LUTs from flash.)
* Adds a cleaning phase for ACeP displays before the real refresh.
For both:
* Add dither support to Palette.
* Palette no longer converts colors when set. Instead, it caches
converted colors at each index.
* ColorConverter now caches the last converted color. It should make
conversions faster for repeated colors (not dithering.)
These are for working with the filesystem when using pyboard.py as a
library, rather than at the command line.
- fs_listdir returns a list of tuples, in the same format as os.ilistdir().
- fs_readfile returns the contents of a file as a bytes object.
- fs_writefile allows writing a bytes object to a file.
- fs_stat returns an os.statresult.
All raise FileNotFoundError (or OSError(ENOENT) on Python 2) if the file is
not found (or PyboardError on other errors).
Updated fs_cp and fs_get to use fs_stat to compute file size.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This is useful when using pyboard.py as a library rather than at the
command line.
pyb.eval("1+1") --> b"2"
pyb.eval("{'a': '\x00'}") --> b"{'a': '\\x00'}"
Now you can also do
pyb.eval("1+1", parse=True) --> 2
pyb.eval("{'a': '\x00'}", parse=True) --> {'a': '\x00'}
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This prevents a bogus line such as `from types import ` from being
generated.
surprisingly this was not detected as a problem until a change
in isort! Formerly it would remove the bad line, but now it (correctly!)
errors
On MacOS and Windows there are a few default serial devices that are
returned by `serial.tools.list_ports.comports()`. For example on MacOS:
```
{'description': 'n/a',
'device': '/dev/cu.Bluetooth-Incoming-Port',
'hwid': 'n/a',
'interface': None,
'location': None,
'manufacturer': None,
'name': 'cu.Bluetooth-Incoming-Port',
'pid': None,
'product': None,
'serial_number': None,
'vid': None}
{'description': 'n/a',
'device': '/dev/cu.wlan-debug',
'hwid': 'n/a',
'interface': None,
'location': None,
'manufacturer': None,
'name': 'cu.wlan-debug',
'pid': None,
'product': None,
'serial_number': None,
'vid': None}
```
Users of mpremote most likely do not want to connect to these ports. It
would be desirable if mpremote did not select this ports when using the
auto connect behavior. These serial ports do not have USB VID or PID
values and serial ports for Micropython boards with FTDI/serial-to-USB
adapter or native USB CDC/ACM support do.
Check for the presence of a USB VID / PID int value when selecting a
serial port to auto connect to. All serial ports will still be listed by
the `list` command and can still be selected by name when connecting.
Signed-off-by: Michael Mogenson <michael.mogenson@gmail.com>