circuitpython/tools/pyboard.py
Damien George 56f6ceba7f tools/pyboard.py: Don't accumulate output data if data_consumer used.
Prior to this patch, when a lot of data was output by a running script
pyboard.py would try to capture all of this output into the "data"
variable, which would gradually slow down pyboard.py to the point where it
would have large CPU and memory usage (on the host) and potentially lose
data.

This patch fixes this problem by not accumulating the data in the case that
the data is not needed, which is when "data_consumer" is used.
2019-04-25 13:24:32 +10:00

471 lines
16 KiB
Python
Executable File

#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# This file is part of the MicroPython project, http://micropython.org/
#
# The MIT License (MIT)
#
# Copyright (c) 2014-2016 Damien P. George
# Copyright (c) 2017 Paul Sokolovsky
#
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
# of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
# in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
# to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
# copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
# furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
#
# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
# all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
# IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
# AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
# LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
# OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
# THE SOFTWARE.
"""
pyboard interface
This module provides the Pyboard class, used to communicate with and
control a MicroPython device over a communication channel. Both real
boards and emulated devices (e.g. running in QEMU) are supported.
Various communication channels are supported, including a serial
connection, telnet-style network connection, external process
connection.
Example usage:
import pyboard
pyb = pyboard.Pyboard('/dev/ttyACM0')
Or:
pyb = pyboard.Pyboard('192.168.1.1')
Then:
pyb.enter_raw_repl()
pyb.exec('import pyb')
pyb.exec('pyb.LED(1).on()')
pyb.exit_raw_repl()
Note: if using Python2 then pyb.exec must be written as pyb.exec_.
To run a script from the local machine on the board and print out the results:
import pyboard
pyboard.execfile('test.py', device='/dev/ttyACM0')
This script can also be run directly. To execute a local script, use:
./pyboard.py test.py
Or:
python pyboard.py test.py
"""
import sys
import time
import os
try:
stdout = sys.stdout.buffer
except AttributeError:
# Python2 doesn't have buffer attr
stdout = sys.stdout
def stdout_write_bytes(b):
b = b.replace(b"\x04", b"")
stdout.write(b)
stdout.flush()
class PyboardError(Exception):
pass
class TelnetToSerial:
def __init__(self, ip, user, password, read_timeout=None):
self.tn = None
import telnetlib
self.tn = telnetlib.Telnet(ip, timeout=15)
self.read_timeout = read_timeout
if b'Login as:' in self.tn.read_until(b'Login as:', timeout=read_timeout):
self.tn.write(bytes(user, 'ascii') + b"\r\n")
if b'Password:' in self.tn.read_until(b'Password:', timeout=read_timeout):
# needed because of internal implementation details of the telnet server
time.sleep(0.2)
self.tn.write(bytes(password, 'ascii') + b"\r\n")
if b'for more information.' in self.tn.read_until(b'Type "help()" for more information.', timeout=read_timeout):
# login successful
from collections import deque
self.fifo = deque()
return
raise PyboardError('Failed to establish a telnet connection with the board')
def __del__(self):
self.close()
def close(self):
if self.tn:
self.tn.close()
def read(self, size=1):
while len(self.fifo) < size:
timeout_count = 0
data = self.tn.read_eager()
if len(data):
self.fifo.extend(data)
timeout_count = 0
else:
time.sleep(0.25)
if self.read_timeout is not None and timeout_count > 4 * self.read_timeout:
break
timeout_count += 1
data = b''
while len(data) < size and len(self.fifo) > 0:
data += bytes([self.fifo.popleft()])
return data
def write(self, data):
self.tn.write(data)
return len(data)
def inWaiting(self):
n_waiting = len(self.fifo)
if not n_waiting:
data = self.tn.read_eager()
self.fifo.extend(data)
return len(data)
else:
return n_waiting
class ProcessToSerial:
"Execute a process and emulate serial connection using its stdin/stdout."
def __init__(self, cmd):
import subprocess
self.subp = subprocess.Popen(cmd, bufsize=0, shell=True, preexec_fn=os.setsid,
stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
# Initially was implemented with selectors, but that adds Python3
# dependency. However, there can be race conditions communicating
# with a particular child process (like QEMU), and selectors may
# still work better in that case, so left inplace for now.
#
#import selectors
#self.sel = selectors.DefaultSelector()
#self.sel.register(self.subp.stdout, selectors.EVENT_READ)
import select
self.poll = select.poll()
self.poll.register(self.subp.stdout.fileno())
def close(self):
import signal
os.killpg(os.getpgid(self.subp.pid), signal.SIGTERM)
def read(self, size=1):
data = b""
while len(data) < size:
data += self.subp.stdout.read(size - len(data))
return data
def write(self, data):
self.subp.stdin.write(data)
return len(data)
def inWaiting(self):
#res = self.sel.select(0)
res = self.poll.poll(0)
if res:
return 1
return 0
class ProcessPtyToTerminal:
"""Execute a process which creates a PTY and prints slave PTY as
first line of its output, and emulate serial connection using
this PTY."""
def __init__(self, cmd):
import subprocess
import re
import serial
self.subp = subprocess.Popen(cmd.split(), bufsize=0, shell=False, preexec_fn=os.setsid,
stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
pty_line = self.subp.stderr.readline().decode("utf-8")
m = re.search(r"/dev/pts/[0-9]+", pty_line)
if not m:
print("Error: unable to find PTY device in startup line:", pty_line)
self.close()
sys.exit(1)
pty = m.group()
# rtscts, dsrdtr params are to workaround pyserial bug:
# http://stackoverflow.com/questions/34831131/pyserial-does-not-play-well-with-virtual-port
self.ser = serial.Serial(pty, interCharTimeout=1, rtscts=True, dsrdtr=True)
def close(self):
import signal
os.killpg(os.getpgid(self.subp.pid), signal.SIGTERM)
def read(self, size=1):
return self.ser.read(size)
def write(self, data):
return self.ser.write(data)
def inWaiting(self):
return self.ser.inWaiting()
class Pyboard:
def __init__(self, device, baudrate=115200, user='micro', password='python', wait=0):
if device.startswith("exec:"):
self.serial = ProcessToSerial(device[len("exec:"):])
elif device.startswith("execpty:"):
self.serial = ProcessPtyToTerminal(device[len("qemupty:"):])
elif device and device[0].isdigit() and device[-1].isdigit() and device.count('.') == 3:
# device looks like an IP address
self.serial = TelnetToSerial(device, user, password, read_timeout=10)
else:
import serial
delayed = False
for attempt in range(wait + 1):
try:
self.serial = serial.Serial(device, baudrate=baudrate, interCharTimeout=1)
break
except (OSError, IOError): # Py2 and Py3 have different errors
if wait == 0:
continue
if attempt == 0:
sys.stdout.write('Waiting {} seconds for pyboard '.format(wait))
delayed = True
time.sleep(1)
sys.stdout.write('.')
sys.stdout.flush()
else:
if delayed:
print('')
raise PyboardError('failed to access ' + device)
if delayed:
print('')
def close(self):
self.serial.close()
def read_until(self, min_num_bytes, ending, timeout=10, data_consumer=None):
# if data_consumer is used then data is not accumulated and the ending must be 1 byte long
assert data_consumer is None or len(ending) == 1
data = self.serial.read(min_num_bytes)
if data_consumer:
data_consumer(data)
timeout_count = 0
while True:
if data.endswith(ending):
break
elif self.serial.inWaiting() > 0:
new_data = self.serial.read(1)
if data_consumer:
data_consumer(new_data)
data = new_data
else:
data = data + new_data
timeout_count = 0
else:
timeout_count += 1
if timeout is not None and timeout_count >= 100 * timeout:
break
time.sleep(0.01)
return data
def enter_raw_repl(self):
self.serial.write(b'\r\x03\x03') # ctrl-C twice: interrupt any running program
# flush input (without relying on serial.flushInput())
n = self.serial.inWaiting()
while n > 0:
self.serial.read(n)
n = self.serial.inWaiting()
self.serial.write(b'\r\x01') # ctrl-A: enter raw REPL
data = self.read_until(1, b'raw REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n>')
if not data.endswith(b'raw REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n>'):
print(data)
raise PyboardError('could not enter raw repl')
self.serial.write(b'\x04') # ctrl-D: soft reset
data = self.read_until(1, b'soft reboot\r\n')
if not data.endswith(b'soft reboot\r\n'):
print(data)
raise PyboardError('could not enter raw repl')
# By splitting this into 2 reads, it allows boot.py to print stuff,
# which will show up after the soft reboot and before the raw REPL.
data = self.read_until(1, b'raw REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n')
if not data.endswith(b'raw REPL; CTRL-B to exit\r\n'):
print(data)
raise PyboardError('could not enter raw repl')
def exit_raw_repl(self):
self.serial.write(b'\r\x02') # ctrl-B: enter friendly REPL
def follow(self, timeout, data_consumer=None):
# wait for normal output
data = self.read_until(1, b'\x04', timeout=timeout, data_consumer=data_consumer)
if not data.endswith(b'\x04'):
raise PyboardError('timeout waiting for first EOF reception')
data = data[:-1]
# wait for error output
data_err = self.read_until(1, b'\x04', timeout=timeout)
if not data_err.endswith(b'\x04'):
raise PyboardError('timeout waiting for second EOF reception')
data_err = data_err[:-1]
# return normal and error output
return data, data_err
def exec_raw_no_follow(self, command):
if isinstance(command, bytes):
command_bytes = command
else:
command_bytes = bytes(command, encoding='utf8')
# check we have a prompt
data = self.read_until(1, b'>')
if not data.endswith(b'>'):
raise PyboardError('could not enter raw repl')
# write command
for i in range(0, len(command_bytes), 256):
self.serial.write(command_bytes[i:min(i + 256, len(command_bytes))])
time.sleep(0.01)
self.serial.write(b'\x04')
# check if we could exec command
data = self.serial.read(2)
if data != b'OK':
raise PyboardError('could not exec command (response: %r)' % data)
def exec_raw(self, command, timeout=10, data_consumer=None):
self.exec_raw_no_follow(command);
return self.follow(timeout, data_consumer)
def eval(self, expression):
ret = self.exec_('print({})'.format(expression))
ret = ret.strip()
return ret
def exec_(self, command):
ret, ret_err = self.exec_raw(command)
if ret_err:
raise PyboardError('exception', ret, ret_err)
return ret
def execfile(self, filename):
with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
pyfile = f.read()
return self.exec_(pyfile)
def get_time(self):
t = str(self.eval('pyb.RTC().datetime()'), encoding='utf8')[1:-1].split(', ')
return int(t[4]) * 3600 + int(t[5]) * 60 + int(t[6])
# in Python2 exec is a keyword so one must use "exec_"
# but for Python3 we want to provide the nicer version "exec"
setattr(Pyboard, "exec", Pyboard.exec_)
def execfile(filename, device='/dev/ttyACM0', baudrate=115200, user='micro', password='python'):
pyb = Pyboard(device, baudrate, user, password)
pyb.enter_raw_repl()
output = pyb.execfile(filename)
stdout_write_bytes(output)
pyb.exit_raw_repl()
pyb.close()
def main():
import argparse
cmd_parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Run scripts on the pyboard.')
cmd_parser.add_argument('--device', default='/dev/ttyACM0', help='the serial device or the IP address of the pyboard')
cmd_parser.add_argument('-b', '--baudrate', default=115200, help='the baud rate of the serial device')
cmd_parser.add_argument('-u', '--user', default='micro', help='the telnet login username')
cmd_parser.add_argument('-p', '--password', default='python', help='the telnet login password')
cmd_parser.add_argument('-c', '--command', help='program passed in as string')
cmd_parser.add_argument('-w', '--wait', default=0, type=int, help='seconds to wait for USB connected board to become available')
cmd_parser.add_argument('--follow', action='store_true', help='follow the output after running the scripts [default if no scripts given]')
cmd_parser.add_argument('files', nargs='*', help='input files')
args = cmd_parser.parse_args()
# open the connection to the pyboard
try:
pyb = Pyboard(args.device, args.baudrate, args.user, args.password, args.wait)
except PyboardError as er:
print(er)
sys.exit(1)
# run any command or file(s)
if args.command is not None or len(args.files):
# we must enter raw-REPL mode to execute commands
# this will do a soft-reset of the board
try:
pyb.enter_raw_repl()
except PyboardError as er:
print(er)
pyb.close()
sys.exit(1)
def execbuffer(buf):
try:
ret, ret_err = pyb.exec_raw(buf, timeout=None, data_consumer=stdout_write_bytes)
except PyboardError as er:
print(er)
pyb.close()
sys.exit(1)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
sys.exit(1)
if ret_err:
pyb.exit_raw_repl()
pyb.close()
stdout_write_bytes(ret_err)
sys.exit(1)
# run the command, if given
if args.command is not None:
execbuffer(args.command.encode('utf-8'))
# run any files
for filename in args.files:
with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
pyfile = f.read()
execbuffer(pyfile)
# exiting raw-REPL just drops to friendly-REPL mode
pyb.exit_raw_repl()
# if asked explicitly, or no files given, then follow the output
if args.follow or (args.command is None and len(args.files) == 0):
try:
ret, ret_err = pyb.follow(timeout=None, data_consumer=stdout_write_bytes)
except PyboardError as er:
print(er)
sys.exit(1)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
sys.exit(1)
if ret_err:
pyb.close()
stdout_write_bytes(ret_err)
sys.exit(1)
# close the connection to the pyboard
pyb.close()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()