IDF Monitor is mainly a serial terminal program which relays serial data to and from the target device's serial port. It also provides some IDF-specific features.
- Resets the target, into bootloader via the RTS line (if connected), so that the board runs nothing. Useful when you need to wait for another device to startup.
- Pauses idf_monitor to run the project``flash``target, then resumes idf_monitor. Any changed source files are recompiled and then re-flashed. Target``encrypted-flash``is run if idf_monitor was started with argument``-E``.
- Pauses idf_monitor to run the``app-flash``target, then resumes idf_monitor. Similar to the``flash`` target, but only the main app is built and re-flashed. Target``encrypted-app-flash``is run if idf_monitor was started with argument``-E``.
- Creates a file in the project directory and the output is written to that file until this is disabled with the same keyboard shortcut (or IDF Monitor exits).
- IDF Monitor can print a timestamp in the beginning of each line. The timestamp format can be changed by the ``--timestamp-format`` command line argument.
- Pauses IDF Monitor and runs GDB_ project debugger to debug the application at runtime. This requires :ref:CONFIG_ESP_SYSTEM_GDBSTUB_RUNTIME option to be enabled.
Whenever the chip outputs a hexadecimal address that points to executable code, IDF monitor looks up the location in the source code (file name and line number) and prints the location on the next line in yellow.
panic_abort (details=details@entry=0x3fc9a37c "abort() was called at PC 0x42067cd5 on core 0") at /home/marius/esp-idf_2/components/esp_system/panic.c:367
367 *((int *) 0) = 0; // NOLINT(clang-analyzer-core.NullDereference) should be an invalid operation on targets
#0 panic_abort (details=details@entry=0x3fc9a37c "abort() was called at PC 0x42067cd5 on core 0") at /home/marius/esp-idf_2/components/esp_system/panic.c:367
#1 0x40386b02 in esp_system_abort (details=details@entry=0x3fc9a37c "abort() was called at PC 0x42067cd5 on core 0") at /home/marius/esp-idf_2/components/esp_system/system_api.c:108
#2 0x403906cc in abort () at /home/marius/esp-idf_2/components/newlib/abort.c:46
#3 0x42067cd8 in __assert_func (file=file@entry=0x3c0937f4 "", line=line@entry=42, func=func@entry=0x3c0937d4 <__func__.8540> "", failedexpr=failedexpr@entry=0x3c0917f8 "") at /builds/idf/crosstool-NG/.build/riscv32-esp-elf/src/newlib/newlib/libc/stdlib/assert.c:62
#4 0x4200729e in app_main () at ../main/iperf_example_main.c:42
#5 0x42086cd6 in main_task (args=<optimized out>) at /home/marius/esp-idf_2/components/freertos/port/port_common.c:133
#6 0x40389f3a in vPortEnterCritical () at /home/marius/esp-idf_2/components/freertos/port/riscv/port.c:129
Set environment variable ``ESP_MONITOR_DECODE`` to ``0`` or call idf_monitor.py with specific command line option: ``idf_monitor.py --disable-address-decoding`` to disable address decoding.
By default, IDF Monitor will reset the target when connecting to it. The reset of the target chip is performed using the DTR and RTS serial lines. To prevent IDF Monitor from automatically resetting the target on connection, call IDF Monitor with the ``--no-reset`` option (e.g., ``idf_monitor.py --no-reset``).
The ``--no-reset`` option applies the same behavior even when connecting IDF Monitor to a particular port (e.g., ``idf.py monitor --no-reset -p [PORT]``).
GDBStub is a useful runtime debugging feature that runs on the target and connects to the host over the serial port to receive debugging commands. GDBStub supports commands such as reading memory and variables, examining call stack frames etc. Although GDBStub is less versatile than JTAG debugging, it does not require any special hardware (such as a JTAG to USB bridge) as communication is done entirely over the serial port.
A target can be configured to run GDBStub in the background by setting the :ref:`CONFIG_ESP_SYSTEM_PANIC` to ``GDBStub on runtime``. GDBStub will run in the background until a ``Ctrl+C`` message is sent over the serial port and causes the GDBStub to break (i.e., stop the execution of) the program, thus allowing GDBStub to handle debugging commands.
Furthermore, the panic handler can be configured to run GDBStub on a crash by setting the :ref:`CONFIG_ESP_SYSTEM_PANIC` to ``GDBStub on panic``. When a crash occurs, GDBStub will output a special string pattern over the serial port to indicate that it is running.
In both cases (i.e., sending the ``Ctrl+C`` message, or receiving the special string pattern), IDF Monitor will automatically launch GDB in order to allow the user to send debugging commands. After GDB exits, the target is reset via the RTS serial line. If this line is not connected, users can reset their target (by pressing the board's Reset button).
IDF monitor can be invoked as ``idf.py monitor --print-filter="xyz"``, where ``--print-filter`` is the parameter for output filtering. The default value is an empty string, which means that everything is printed.
Restrictions on what to print can be specified as a series of ``<tag>:<log_level>`` items where ``<tag>`` is the tag string and ``<log_level>`` is a character from the set ``{N, E, W, I, D, V, *}`` referring to a level for :doc:`logging <../../api-reference/system/log>`.
For example, ``PRINT_FILTER="tag1:W"`` matches and prints only the outputs written with ``ESP_LOGW("tag1", ...)`` or at lower verbosity level, i.e. ``ESP_LOGE("tag1", ...)``. Not specifying a ``<log_level>`` or using ``*`` defaults to Verbose level.
Use primary logging to disable at compilation the outputs you do not need through the :doc:`logging library<../../api-reference/system/log>`. Output filtering with IDF monitor is a secondary solution which can be useful for adjusting the filtering options without recompiling the application.
If the last line of the output in your app is not followed by a carriage return, the output filtering might get confused, i.e., the monitor starts to print the line and later finds out that the line should not have been written. This is a known issue and can be avoided by always adding a carriage return (especially when no output follows immediately afterwards).
-``*`` can be used to match any tags. However, the string ``PRINT_FILTER="*:I tag1:E"`` with regards to ``tag1`` prints errors only, because the rule for ``tag1`` has a higher priority over the rule for ``*``.
- The default (empty) rule is equivalent to ``*:V`` because matching every tag at the Verbose level or lower means matching everything.
-``"*:N"`` suppresses not only the outputs from logging functions, but also the prints made by ``printf``, etc. To avoid this, use ``*:E`` or a higher verbosity level.
- Rules ``"tag1:V"``, ``"tag1:v"``, ``"tag1:"``, ``"tag1:*"``, and ``"tag1"`` are equivalent.
- Rule ``"tag1:W tag1:E"`` is equivalent to ``"tag1:E"`` because any consequent occurrence of the same tag name overwrites the previous one.
- Rule ``"tag1:I tag2:W"`` only prints ``tag1`` at the Info verbosity level or lower and ``tag2`` at the Warning verbosity level or lower.
- Rule ``"tag1:I tag2:W tag3:N"`` is essentially equivalent to the previous one because ``tag3:N`` specifies that ``tag3`` should not be printed.
-``tag3:N`` in the rule ``"tag1:I tag2:W tag3:N *:V"`` is more meaningful because without ``tag3:N`` the ``tag3`` messages could have been printed; the errors for ``tag1`` and ``tag2`` will be printed at the specified (or lower) verbosity level and everything else will be printed by default.