Those dependencies are always satisfied because:
- ESP-IDF supports Python 3.8+ at this moment,
- click version is checked and ensured by the install scripts.
Rather than running the command inside the container as root, which will
mean that any build artifacts created will be owned by root on the host,
run the command as the current user.
This requires setting a temporary home directory as idf.py will try to
access e.g. ~/.cache, so just use /tmp inside the container which is
ephemeral anyway.
This also allows the command to use `git`. without setting the user ID,
`docker run ... git status` will fail with
fatal: detected dubious ownership in repository at '/project'
Also added the missing explanation for `-w /project`.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
On Windows/Mac the serial port cannot be access directly inside
docker container. This is already mentioned in the documentation.
This expands the documentation for steps which can be used to overcome
this limitation by using remote serial port access via telnet protocol.
Closes https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/10617
Signed-off-by: Frantisek Hrbata <frantisek.hrbata@espressif.com>
IDF_PYTHON_ENV_PATH is the path where the Python environment is created
and used. By default it is inside IDF_TOOLS_PATH. IDF_PYTHON_ENV_PATH
was exported by idf_tools.py but was not imported back. This fixes the
issue and ESP-IDF will honor the value of IDF_PYTHON_ENV_PATH.
Closes https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/issues/10489
This adds a new outdated option, which only lists outdated
packages installed in IDF_TOOLS_PATH. It searches for the
latest installed tool version in the IDF_TOOLS_PATH/tools path and
compares it against the latest available version in the tools.json
file. If the latest version of a tool installed in IDF_TOOLS_PATH/tools
is smaller, it's reported as outdated. Nothing is reported if the tool
is up to date.
Two new tests are added. First just checks if nothing is reported in
case there is no update available. The second artificially generates
new tools.json file called tools.outdated.json and sets XTENSA_ESP32_ELF
version to 'zzzzzz'. It then checks if the XTENSA_ESP32_ELF tool
is reported as outdated by the 'zzzzzz' version.
Description of the new outdated option is addedd to docs as well.
Signed-off-by: Frantisek Hrbata <frantisek.hrbata@espressif.com>
Hints should be now working for gdbui and openocd. They are not
produced via RunTool(), but the hints are used directly.
Signed-off-by: Frantisek Hrbata <frantisek.hrbata@espressif.com>
The Python dependency checker called from the export scripts and before
build remains offline, i.e. it will use the previously downloaded
constraint file but won't download a newer version.
Related to https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf/pull/9328