Skip to content

DavesCodeMusings/thimble

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Thimble

A tiny web framework for MicroPython.

Build thimble

What is it?

Thimble is similar in spirit to Flask, but scaled way back to fit on a microcontroller. Basically, you can create a web application using functions and routes. It's more robust than the typical MicroPython web server example code. But, there's a lot of features it lacks when compared to a full-featured web application framework. Still, for something that runs on an eight dollar microcontroller, it's pretty sweet.

How can I use it?

Copy thimble.py to your MicroPython powered microcontroller (or install with MIP). Use main.py to test. Customize with your own functions and routes.

Thimble is a class with a route() method and a run() method. You add routes similar to the way you would with Flask and then call a run() method to start listening.

from thimble import Thimble

app = Thimble() 

@app.route('/')
def hello(req):
    return 'Hello World'

app.run()

Now, point your web browser to the IP of your device on the default port of 80 and you should see 'Hello World'.

There are more complex examples in the examples subdirectory.

See the wiki for examples in a step by step tutorial format.

Can it serve static web pages?

As we say here in Wisconsin: "Oh yah, you betcha!" You can put your static files in /static on your flash filesystem and they will be served up just like any other web server, though a bit slower.

You can save space by compressing static files with GZIP and adding a .gzip extension. These files will be sent with a 'Content-Encoding: gzip' header that will tell the web browser to decompress upon receipt. For example, something like script-library.js could be compressed and stored as script-library.js.gzip. Then, when a request is made for script-library.js, Thimble will send the contents of script-library.js.gzip and add the Content-Encoding header.

What pitfalls do I need to be aware of?

Using the example main.py assumes that networking is already configured by a boot.py that you supply. Thimble won't work without it. If you need help with wifi connections, see my example under lolin32oled

Thimble is in the early phases of development and may have a few bugs lurking. If you find one, add a Github issue and I'll see if I can fix it.

Will it run on Microcontroller X?

Code is being developed and tested using an ESP32-C3 devkit with MicroPython 1.21. Occasionally, I will run it on a Wemos LOLIN32 (ESP32) or a NodeMCU ESP-12E (ESP8266). It may or may not work with other devices.

How do I install it?

Using mpremote on Windows, do this:

py -m mpremote connect PORT mip install github:DavesCodeMusings/thimble

where PORT is something like COM4 (or whatever shows up in Device Manager for your microcontroller.)

For Linux mpremote, do this:

mpremote connect PORT mip install github:DavesCodeMusings/thimble

where PORT is something like /dev/ttyUSB0 (or whatever shows up in your dmesg output when you plug the device in.)

Or just download directly from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DavesCodeMusings/thimble/main/thimble.py and place it in your device's /lib directory.

Show me the docs!

About

A tiny web framework for MicroPython

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages