5.8 KiB
Setup
Installing CircuitPython submodules
Before you can build, you will need to run the following commands once, which
will install the submodules that are part of the CircuitPython ecosystem, and
build the mpy-cross
tool:
$ cd circuitpython
$ git submodule update --init
$ make -C mpy-cross
You then need to download the SD and Nordic SDK files via:
This script relies on
wget
, which must be available from the command line.
$ cd ports/nrf
$ ./drivers/bluetooth/download_ble_stack.sh
Installing nrfutil
The Adafruit Bluefruit nRF52 Feather ships with a serial and OTA BLE bootloader that can be used to flash firmware images over a simple serial connection, using the on-board USB serial converter.
If you haven't installed this command-line tool yet, go to the /libs/nrfutil
folder (where nrfutil 0.5.2 is installed as a sub-module) and run the following
commands:
If you get a 'sudo: pip: command not found' error running 'sudo pip install', you can install pip via 'sudo easy_install pip'
$ cd ../../lib/nrfutil
$ sudo pip install -r requirements.txt
$ sudo python setup.py install
Building and flashing firmware images
Building CircuitPython binaries
REPL over UART (default settings)
To build a CircuitPython binary with default settings for the
feather52832
target enter:
NOTE:
BOARD=feather52832
is the default option and isn't stricly required.
$ make BOARD=feather52832 V=1
REPL over BLE UART (AKA 'NUS')
To build a CircuitPython binary that uses the Nordic UART Service (AKA 'NUS' or
'BLEUART'), modify /ports/nrf/bluetooth_conf.h
to have the following macro
set to 1
in the #elif (BLUETOOTH_SD == 132)
section:
#define MICROPY_PY_BLE_NUS (1)
... then build as normal, via:
$ make BOARD=feather52832 V=1
You can then connect over BLE UART using an application like Bluefruit LE Connect, available for Android, iOS and OS X, or any other application that supports the NUS service and allows you to send the corrent EOL sequence.
Flashing binaries with nrfutil
1. Update bootloader to single-bank version
The Adafruit nRF52 Feather ships, by default, with a dual-bank bootloader that cuts the available flash memory in half in exchange for safer OTA updates.
Due to the size of CircuitPython, we must migrate this bootloader to a single-bank version, doubling the amount of flash memory available to us.
These commands only need to be run once and will update the SoftDevice and bootloader from the dual-bank version that ships on Arduino-based Adafruit Feather52 boards to a single-bank CircuitPython compatible version:
S132 v2.0.1 single-bank (recommended):
By default s132 v2.0.1 is used when no SOFTDEV_VERSION
field is passed in:
$ make BOARD=feather52832 SERIAL=/dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART boot-flash
S132 v5.0.0 (BLE5, experimental):
To enable BLE5 support and the latest S132 release, flash the v5.0.0 bootloader via:
$ make BOARD=feather52832 SERIAL=/dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART SOFTDEV_VERSION=5.0.0 boot-flash
2. Generate and flash a CircuitPython DFU .zip package over serial
The following command will package and flash the CircuitPython binary using the appropriate bootloader mentionned above.
This command assumes you have already built a valid circuitpython image, as described earlier in this readme.
The name of the serial port target will vary, depending on your OS.
$ make BOARD=feather52832 SERIAL=/dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART dfu-gen dfu-flash
By default, CircuitPython will build with BLE support enabled using
SD=s132
and the SOFTDEV_VERSION=2.0.1
. If you wish to specify a different
SD family or version you can enter the optional fields as shown below:
$ make BOARD=feather52832 SERIAL=/dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART SD=s132 SOFTDEV_VERSION=5.0.0 dfu-gen dfu-flash
Working with CircuitPython
Running local files with ampy
ampy is a command-line tool that can be used with the nRF52 Feather to transfer local python files to the nRF52 for execution, rather than having to enter the REPL manually, enter paste mode, and paste the code yourself.
Important
: You must have
ampy
version 1.0.3 or higher to useampy
with the nRF52. The bootloader on the nRF52 requires a delay between the HW reset, and the moment when the command sequance is sent to enter raw mode. This required-d/--delay
flag was added in release 1.0.3.
Save the following file as test.py
:
import board
import digitalio
import time
led = digitalio.DigitalInOut(board.LED2)
led.direction = digitalio.Direction.OUTPUT
while True:
led.value = True
time.sleep(0.5)
led.value = False
time.sleep(0.5)
Then run the saved file via ampy, updating the serial port as required:
$ ampy -p /dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART -d 1.5 run test.py
This should give you blinky at 1 Hz on LED2 (the blue LED on the nRF52 Feather).
Uploading files and libraries with ampy
To upload Python files or pre-compiled CircuitPython libraries to the lib
folder,
run the following commands:
In this example i2c_device.py is used, which is part of Adafruit_CircuitPython_BusDevice
$ ampy -p /dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART -d 1.5 put i2c_device.py lib/i2c_device.py
To verify that the file was uploaded correctly, you can check the contents of
the lib
folder with:
$ ampy -p /dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART -d 1.5 ls /lib
i2c_device.py
Suggested libraries
The following libraries should be installed as a minimum on most new boards: