Release 2.0.rc1
Pre-release
Pre-release
This is a release candidate
For a stable release please use: https://github.com/jeelabs/esp-link/releases/tag/v1.0.4
Warnings
- This release does not fit into 512KB flash, it requires larger flash (e.g. as typically found in esp-12 modules).
If your module has 512KB flash, try the latest V1 release. - If your module has a 512KB version of esp-link V1 flashed you cannot upgrade over-the-air,
you have to serially flash the larger firmware - sorry. - If you are using an Adafruit Huzzah module then you should select the esp-bridge pin-out (default) and add an external 4.7k-10k pull-up directly on the esp module's RX pin, alternatively, recompile esp-link to change https://github.com/jeelabs/esp-link/blob/master/serial/uart.c#L63 to PIN_PULLUP_EN, this will be a UI option in the next release...
Features:
- over-the-air (OTA) reflashing of the esp
- port 23 transparent bridge, port 2323 programming bridge
- AVR & ARM flashing support (port 23 and 2323)
- outbound TCP connections from attached micro-controller to the internet
- outbound HTTP REST requests from attached microcontroller using espduino library and protocol (NEW in 2.0)
- built-in MQTT client that can be used by attached uC using espduino library and protocol (NEW in 2.0)
- console page to see the attached uC's output
- simple debug log page to view the esp-link's own os_printf output
- buttons to reset the uC and change the baud rate
- pin configuration selector to change GPIO function assignments
- web page to configure MQTT client and built-in status message publishing
- saving of configuration changes in flash
Changes since v2.0.beta2:
- new feature: MQTT client
- tweaked AVR programming (drop initial sync chars)
- improved serial buffering for continuous transmission
- switch to SDK 1.4.0
This version uses the Espressif IOT SDK version 1.4.0.
Install via serial upload
The short version for the serial install is:
- flash
boot_v1.4(b1).bin
from the officialesp_iot_sdk_v1.4.0
and included in the release tgz to0x00000
- flash
blank.bin
from the official SDK and also included in the tgz to0x3FE000
- flash
user1.bin
to0x01000
On Linux using esptool.py this turns into the following for a 32mbit=4MByte flash chip, such as an esp-12 module typically has:
curl -L https://github.com/jeelabs/esp-link/releases/download/v2.0.rc1/esp-link-v2.0.rc1.tgz | tar xzf -
cd esp-link-v2.0.rc1
esptool.py --port /dev/ttyUSB0 --baud 460800 write_flash -fs 32m -ff 80m 0x00000 boot_v1.4\(b1\).bin 0x1000 user1.bin 0x3FE000 blank.bin
I use a high baud rate as shown above because I'm impatient, but that's not required.
Upgrade over-the-air
To upgrade from an earlier version of esp-link:
curl -L https://github.com/jeelabs/esp-link/releases/download/v2.0.rc1/esp-link-v2.0.rc1.tgz | tar xzf -
cd esp-link-2.0.rc1
./wiflash <esp-hostname> user1.bin user2.bin
Installing esptool.py
On Linux use esptool.py to flash the esp8266.
If you're a little python challenged then the following install instructions might help:
-
Install ez_setup with the following two commands (I believe this will do something
reasonable if you already have it):wget https://bootstrap.pypa.io/ez_setup.py python ez_setup.py
-
Install esptool.py:
git clone https://github.com/themadinventor/esptool.git cd esptool python setup.py install cd .. esptool.py -h