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Contributions Guide

We welcome contributions to the esptool.py project!

How to Contribute

Contributions to esptool.py - fixing bugs, adding features, adding documentation - are welcome. We accept contributions via Github Pull Requests.

Development Setup

Development mode allows you to run the latest development version from the esptool.py repository on GitHub.

$ git clone https://github.com/espressif/esptool.git
$ cd esptool
$ pip install --user -e .

This will install esptool.py’s dependencies and create some executable script wrappers in the user’s bin directory. The wrappers will run the scripts found in the git working directory directly, so any time the working directory contents change it will pick up the new versions.

It’s also possible to run the scripts directly from the working directory with this Development Mode installation.

To also install additional tools needed for actually developing and testing esptool.py, run this command to install a development copy of esptool.py plus packages useful for development:

$ pip install --user -e ".[dev]"

(This command uses the “extras” feature of setuptools.)

Reporting Issues

Please report bugs in esptool.py if you find them. However, before reporting a bug please check through the following:

If you don’t find anything, please open a new issue.

Sending Feature Requests

Feel free to post feature requests. It’s helpful if you can explain exactly why the feature would be useful.

There are usually some outstanding feature requests in the existing issues list, feel free to add comments to them.

Before Contributing

Before sending us a Pull Request, please consider this list of points:

  • Have you tried running esptool.py test suite locally?
  • Is the code adequately commented for people to understand how it is structured?
  • Is there documentation or examples that go with code contributions?
  • Are comments and documentation written in clear English, with no spelling or grammar errors?
  • If the contribution contains multiple commits, are they grouped together into logical changes (one major change per pull request)? Are any commits with names like "fixed typo" squashed into previous commits?
  • If you're unsure about any of these points, please open the Pull Request anyhow and then ask us for feedback.

Code Style & Static Analysis

Please follow these coding standards when writing code for esptool.py:

Pre-commit checks

pre-commit is a framework for managing pre-commit hooks. These hooks help to identify simple issues before committing code for review.

To use the tool, first install pre-commit and then the git hooks:

$ python -m pip install pre-commit
$ pre-commit install

On the first commit pre-commit will install the hooks, subsequent checks will be significantly faster. If an error is found an appropriate error message will be displayed. If the error was with black then the tool will fix them for you automatically. Review the changes and re-stage for commit if you are happy with them.

Flake8

esptool.py complies with flake8 style guide enforcement.

Black

All files should be formatted using the Black auto-formatter.

Black and flake8 tools will be automatically run by pre-commit if that is configured. To check your code manually before submitting, run python -m flake8 and black . (the tools are installed as part of the development requirements shown at the beginning of this document).

When you submit a Pull Request, the GitHub Actions automated build system will run automated checks using these tools.

Automated Integration Tests

The test directory contains a pytest integration suite with some integration tests for esptool.py, espefuse.py, and espsecure.py.

It is necessary to have esptool.py installed (see Development Setup) in your environment in order to run these tests.

The following tests run automatically by GitHub Actions for each Pull Request. You can run them locally to check for regressions in the respective functionality:

  • test_imagegen.py tests the elf2image command
  • test_image_info.py tests the image_info command
  • test_mergebin.py tests the merge_bin command
  • test_modules.py tests the modules used by esptool.py for regressions
  • test_espsecure.py tests espsecure.py functionality

The following tests are not run automatically by GitHub Actions, because they need real connected hardware. Therefore, they need to be run locally in a command line:

  • test_esptool.py contains integration tests for esptool.py and needs to be run against real Espressif hardware with the following format:

    pytest test_esptool.py --port <serial port> --chip <name of chip> --baud <baud rate>

    For example, to run all tests on an ESP32 board connected to /dev/ttyUSB0, at 230400bps:

    pytest test_esptool.py --port /dev/ttyUSB0 --chip esp32 --baud 230400

    Or to run the TestFlashing suite only (using the pytest -k option to select tests based on their name) on an ESP8266 board connected to /dev/ttyUSB2, at 460800bps:

    pytest test_esptool.py --port /dev/ttyUSB2 --chip esp8266 --baud 460800 -k TestFlashing

    Note

    Some tests might fail at higher baud rates on some hardware.

The following tests are not run automatically by GitHub Actions, but can be run locally in a command line:

  • test_espefuse.py tests espefuse.py functionality. To run it:

    pytest test_espefuse.py --chip <name of chip>

    These test use the --virt virtual mode of espefuse.py to safely test the functionality without a connection to a chip and without the possibility of affecting the actual eFuses in a real hardware.

    Warning

    Do not attempt to run these tests on real hardware! You risk damaging or destroying the ESP chip!

The whole test suite (without the tests needing an actual hardware) can be easily run with the following command in the esptool root folder: pytest --ignore=test/test_esptool.py

Pull Request Process

Note

If you are developing the stub flasher and plan to send a pull request, please use the latest toolchains available.

After you open the Pull Request, there will probably be some discussion in the comments field of the request itself.

Once the Pull Request is ready to merge, it will first be merged into our internal git system for in-house automated testing.

If this process passes, it will be merged onto the public github repository, hooray!