commit | bbabfb40ba300d36f36c4bbacd196e028c758974 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Damien George <damien.p.george@gmail.com> | Thu Jan 02 16:14:19 2014 +0000 |
committer | Damien George <damien.p.george@gmail.com> | Thu Jan 02 16:14:19 2014 +0000 |
tree | 94d0a721041f9c5def20d754bd9628c136d4b3dc | |
parent | 40563d56bdabf270f0f2296dcc1b2f64b0c238c0 [diff] |
Fix bash->/usr/bin/env bash; add LICENSE for Python library tests.
This is the Micro Python project, which aims to put an implementation of Python 3.x on a microcontroller. The project also includes a small microcontroller board based around the STM32F405RG.
WARNING: this project is in its early stages and is subject to large changes of the code-base, including project-wide name changes and API changes. The software will not start to mature until March 2014 at the earliest. For the moment the priority is the hardware.
Major components:
Additional components:
"make" is used to build the components, or "gmake" on BSD-based systems.
The "unix" part requires a standard Unix environment with gcc and GNU make. It works only for 64-bit machines due to a small piece of x86-64 assembler for the exception handling.
To build:
$ cd unix $ make
Then to test it:
$ ./py >>> list(5 * x + y for x in range(10) for y in [4, 2, 1])
Ubuntu and Mint derivatives will require build-essentials and libreadline-dev packages installed.
The "stm" part requires an ARM compiler, arm-none-eabi-gcc, and associated bin-utils. For those using Arch Linux, you need arm-none-eabi-binutils and arm-none-eabi-gcc packages from the AUR. Otherwise, try here: https://launchpad.net/gcc-arm-embedded
To build:
$ cd stm $ make
Then to flash it via USB DFU to your device:
$ dfu-util -a 0 -D build/flash.dfu
You will need the dfu-util program, on Arch Linux it's dfu-util-git in the AUR.