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75 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
75 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
| Supported Targets | ESP32 | ESP32-C2 | ESP32-C3 | ESP32-C6 | ESP32-C61 | ESP32-P4 | ESP32-S2 | ESP32-S3 |
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| ----------------- | ----- | -------- | -------- | -------- | --------- | -------- | -------- | -------- |
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# OTA Tool Example
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This example demonstrates common operations the OTA tool [otatool.py](../../../../components/app_update/otatool.py) allows the user to perform:
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- reading, writing and erasing OTA partitions,
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- switching boot partitions, and
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- switching to factory partition.
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Users taking a look at this example should focus on the contents of the Python script [otatool_example.py](otatool_example.py) or shell script [otatool_example.sh](otatool_example.sh). The scripts contain
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programmatic invocation of the tool's functions via the Python API and command-line interface, respectively. Note
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that on Windows, the shell script example requires a POSIX-compatible environment via MSYS2/Git Bash/WSL etc.
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The built application in this example outputs the currently running partition, whose output is used to verify if the tool switched OTA
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partitions successfully. The built application binary is written to all OTA partitions at the start of the example to be able to determine the running
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partition for all switches performed.
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## How to use example
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### Build and Flash
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Before running either of the example scripts, it is necessary to build and flash the firmware using the usual means:
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```bash
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idf.py build flash
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```
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### Running [otatool_example.py](otatool_example.py)
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The example can be executed by running the script [otatool_example.py](otatool_example.py) or [otatool_example.sh](otatool_example.sh).
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Python script:
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```bash
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python otatool_example.py
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```
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Shell script:
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```
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./otatool_example.sh
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```
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The script searches for valid target devices connected to the host and performs the operations on the first one it finds. This could present problems if there
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are multiple viable target devices attached to the host. To perform the operations on a specific device, specify the port it is attached to during script invocation ("/dev/ttyUSB2" for example):
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Python script:
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```bash
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python otatool_example.py --port /dev/ttyUSB2
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```
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Shell script:
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```
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./otatool_example.sh /dev/ttyUSB2
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```
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## Example output
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Running the script produces the following output:
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```
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Writing factory firmware to ota_0
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Writing factory firmware to ota_1
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Switching to factory app
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Switching to OTA slot 0
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Switching to OTA slot 1 (twice in a row)
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Switching to OTA slot 0 (twice in a row)
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Switching to factory app
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Switching to OTA slot 1
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Partition tool operations performed successfully
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```
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