- C/C++
- C/C++ Extension Pack
- CMake
- CMake Tools
- Make a fork from https://github.com/liukiti/ESP32 to your personal github account;
-
Install the following packages:
$ sudo apt-get install git wget flex bison gperf python3 python3-pip python3-setuptool cmake ninja-build ccache libffi-dev libssl-dev dfu-util libusb-1.0-0
-
Clone the repository
ESP32
from your account- Change the
USUARIO
to your github user$ git clone [email protected]:USUARIO/ESP32.git
- Change the
-
init submodule esp-idf @ 7eaeaaa
$ cd ESP32 $ git submodule update --init --recursive
-
Install the ESP-IDF
$ cd esp-idf $ ./install.sh esp32
- Put your code inside the
ESP32/myCodes
directory; - It's recommended to use an IDF example as a template. Copy one from
ESP32/esp-idf/examples/
- double click in edit.desktop;
- at VSCode, click on
No Kit Selected
at the bottom menu (blue bar); - Select
GCC 8.4.0 xtensa-esp32-elf ..
at the dropdown menu; - Open a new terminal in VSCode;
- Navigate to the project directory, like
ESP32/myCodes/blink
; - Execute the following command to build the application:
$ idf.py all
- If the previous step was successed, try to flash and monitor the device at
/dev/ttyUSB0
serial port$ idf.py flash monitor -p /dev/ttyUSB0
- At terminal, view if ESP-IDF is configured and ready to go
$ echo $IDF_PATH
- Check port on Linux
ls /dev/tty*
- The currently logged user should have read and write access the serial port over USB.
sudo usermod -a -G dialout $USER
- Make sure you re-login to enable read and write permissions for the serial port
$ cd ESP32/esp-idf
$ git fetch origin
$ git checkout <commit_id>
$ git submodule update --init --recursive
$ git ./install.sh esp32