THIS MODULE ONLY WORKS WITH PYTHON 2.7 or 3.3+.
A utility for flashing the BBC micro:bit with Python scripts and the MicroPython runtime. You pronounce the name of this utility "micro-flash". ;-)
It provides two services:
- A library of functions to programatically create a hex file and flash it onto a BBC micro:bit.
- A command line utility called uflash that will flash Python scripts onto a BBC micro:bit.
Several essential operations are implemented:
- Encode Python into the hex format.
- Embed the resulting hexified Python into the MicroPython runtime hex.
- Extract an encoded Python script from a MicroPython hex file.
- Discover the connected micro:bit.
- Copy the resulting hex onto the micro:bit, thus flashing the device.
- Specify the MicroPython runtime hex in which to embed your Python code.
To install simply type:
$ pip install uflash
...and the package will download from PyPI. If you wish to upgrade to the latest version, use the following command:
$ pip install --no-cache --upgrade uflash
NB: You must use a USB data cable to connect the micro:bit to your computer (some cables are power only). You're in good shape if, when plugged in, the micro:bit appears as a USB storage device on your file system.
Linux users: For uflash to work you must ensure the micro:bit is mounted as a USB storage device. Usually this is done automatically. If not you've probably configured automounting to be off. If that's the case, we assume you have the technical knowledge to mount the device yourself or to install the required kernel modules if they're missing. Default installs of popular Linux distros "should just work" (tm) out of the box given a default install.
To read help simply type:
$ uflash --help
or:
$ uflash -h
If you type the command on its own then uflash will attempt to find a connected BBC micro:bit and flash an unmodified default version of the MicroPython runtime onto it:
$ uflash Flashing Python to: /media/ntoll/MICROBIT/micropython.hex
To flash a version of the MicroPython runtime with a specified script embedded within it (so that script is run when the BBC micro:bit boots up) then pass the path to the Python script in as the first argument to the command:
$ uflash my_script.py Flashing Python to: /media/ntoll/MICROBIT/micropython.hex
You can let uflash watch for changes of your script. It will be flashed automatically every time you save it:
$ uflash -w my_script.py
or:
$ uflash --watch my_script.py
At this point uflash will try to automatically detect the path to the device. However, if you have several devices plugged in and/or know what the path on the filesystem to the BBC micro:bit already is, you can specify this as a second argument to the command:
$ uflash myscript.py /media/ntoll/MICROBIT Flashing Python to: /media/ntoll/MICROBIT/micropython.hex
You can even flash multiple devices at once:
$ uflash myscript.py /media/ntoll/MICROBIT /media/ntoll/MICROBIT1 Flashing Python to: /media/ntoll/MICROBIT/micropython.hex Flashing Python to: /media/ntoll/MICROBIT1/micropython.hex
To extract a Python script from a hex file use the "-e" flag like this:
$ uflash -e something.hex myscript.py
This will save the Python script recovered from "something.hex" into the file "myscript.py". If you don't supply a target the recovered script will emit to stdout.
If you're developing MicroPython and have a custom runtime hex file you can specify that uflash use it instead of the built-in version of MicroPython in the following way:
$ uflash -r firmware.hex
or:
$ uflash --runtime=firmware.hex
The source code is hosted in GitHub. Please feel free to fork the repository. Assuming you have Git installed you can download the code from the canonical repository with the following command:
$ git clone https://github.com/ntoll/uflash.git
Ensure you have the correct dependencies for development installed by creating a virtualenv and running:
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
To locally install your development version of the module into a virtualenv, run the following command:
$ python setup.py develop
There is a Makefile that helps with most of the common workflows associated
with development. Typing make
on its own will list the options thus:
$ make There is no default Makefile target right now. Try: make clean - reset the project and remove auto-generated assets. make pyflakes - run the PyFlakes code checker. make pep8 - run the PEP8 style checker. make test - run the test suite. make coverage - view a report on test coverage. make check - run all the checkers and tests. make package - create a deployable package for the project. make publish - publish the project to PyPI. make docs - run sphinx to create project documentation.