The actual output from the build tool (CMake/Ninja) may or may not
contain color escape codes, depending on various factors. The output
written to the log file should never include color escape codes,
though. This is because color escape codes in files are usually not
rendered as "color" in editors, and complicate reading. Also escape
codes would break the regular expressions used to display hints for
compilation errors.
If stdout is a TTY (meaning that the output is not redirected), tell
the build tool (GNU Make or Ninja) to enable colorized output.
GNU Make and Ninja also check if their stdout is redirected and
strip color escape sequences in that case. CLICOLOR_FORCE environment
variable overrides this behavior.
With this change, if the compiler was launched with the
-fcolor-diagnostics flag and idf.py output is not redirected, the
final output in the terminal will be colorized.
(-fcolor-diagnostics is handled at CMake level by the previous commit)
Related to https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/4162
Setting this option informs CMake that it should pass
-fcolor-diagnostics flag to the compiler.
(Colorized build system output, like from GNU Make, is produced even
without this flag.)
Note that if the build is done using Ninja and the build output is
redirected (not a TTY), Ninja will still strip the escape codes from
the output. For the case of idf.py, this is handled in the next
commit.
There are multiple changes in this commit:
1. Unify the RISC-V and ULP-FSM code paths in esp32ulp_mapgen.py.
It seems that these were originally introduced because `nm` output
for the RISC-V case contained symbol sizes, while for the ULP-FSM
no symbol sizes were reported. This makes sense, because the
ULP-FSM object files are produced from assembly source, symbol
sizes have to be added manually using the .size directive.
In the case of RISC-V, the object files are built from C sources
and the sizes are automatically added by the compiler.
Now 'posix' output format is used for both RISC-V and ULP-FSM.
2. Move BASE_ADDR out of esp32ulp_mapgen.py. This now has to be passed
from CMake, which should make it easier to modify if a new chip
with a different RTC RAM base address is added.
3. Add C++ guards to the generated header file.
4. Switch from optparse to argparse for similarity with other IDF
tools.
5. Add type annotations.
This fixes the issue with build output not being colorized on Windows,
while the hints messages are colorized.
The issue occurred because sys.stdout and sys.stderr get overridden
by colorama.init() at runtime, but the default argument
output_stream=sys.stdout holds the reference to the"original"
sys.stdout.
colorama.init() (which, by the way, gets called via a curious chain
of imports, via idf_component_tools.manifest and tqdm package)
overrides standard streams, on Windows only. The overridden streams
contain logic to convert ANSI color codes into Windows Console API
calls to colorize the text.
Since read_and_write_stream function used the default value of
output_stream evaluated at module loading time, it was using the
original sys.stdout, not the one overridden by colorama.
One extra note is that while this does fix the coloring issue, the
solution is a bit fragile, as it relies on one of the following
(on Windows):
- colorama.init() is called (this can change if idf-component-manager
stops importing tqdm)
- Sufficiently new version of Windows 10 is used, and ANSI color codes
support is enabled in the Registry.
The actual output from the build tool (CMake/Ninja) may or may not
contain color escape codes, depending on various factors. The output
written to the log file should never include color escape codes,
though. This is because color escape codes in files are usually not
rendered as "color" in editors, and complicate reading. Also escape
codes would break the regular expressions used to display hints for
compilation errors.
If stdout is a TTY (meaning that the output is not redirected), tell
the build tool (GNU Make or Ninja) to enable colorized output.
GNU Make and Ninja also check if their stdout is redirected and
strip color escape sequences in that case. CLICOLOR_FORCE environment
variable overrides this behavior.
With this change, if the compiler was launched with the
-fcolor-diagnostics flag and idf.py output is not redirected, the
final output in the terminal will be colorized.
(-fcolor-diagnostics is handled at CMake level by the previous commit)
Related to https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/4162
Setting this option informs CMake that it should pass
-fcolor-diagnostics flag to the compiler.
(Colorized build system output, like from GNU Make, is produced even
without this flag.)
Note that if the build is done using Ninja and the build output is
redirected (not a TTY), Ninja will still strip the escape codes from
the output. For the case of idf.py, this is handled in the next
commit.
- primary reason: 4.6.2 fixes errors if the user's home directory contains a space
- alternative fix: the CCACHE_DIR env var can be set to something without a space in it, or set to TMP which properly escapes the home dir name
- there may be other issues with spaces in filenames on builds in other parts of ESP-IDF, see https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/8364 for more info
tested locally on windows only, use at your own risk
This adds CSV support to idf_size.py and idf.py size actions and using the --format argument which accepts 'text', 'json' or 'csv' as input.
idf_size.py --json argument is deprecated but left to avoid a breaking change.
For idf.py size actions OUTPUT_JSON environment variable set at configuration time is overriden at target build time if --format is used.
Additionally, this commit refactors big parts of code, unified usage of json_dict and manually generated dictionaries for textual output and improves code quality in many parts.
On the build runners, the installation frequently takes around 150
seconds, which is above the current timeout. This change increases
the timeout.
Closes IDFCI-1436
This commit fixes gpio_hold_en(pin) function for ESP32, where after wakeup from deep sleep, the pin gets reset to default state and stop holding the pin level.
'linux' component provides some of the common header files, such as
'sys/queue.h' and 'sys/lock.h'. For chip targets, it is possible to
include these files without having to add any extra requirements.
With this change, the same behavior will apply for the linux target.
libpython2.7 was added to the container to allow running GDB built
with Python 2.7 support and distributed as part of the cross-compiler
toolchain.
Now that we have a new release of GDB which works with Python 3.x,
the GDB shipped with the cross-compiler is no longer used. Removing
libpython2.7 should reduce the image size.
This reverts commit be0372b1db.