mbed CLI is the name of the ARM mbed command-line tool, packaged as mbed-cli. mbed CLI enables Git- and Mercurial-based version control, dependencies management, code publishing, support for remotely hosted repositories (GitHub, GitLab and mbed.org), use of the ARM mbed OS build system and export functions and other operations.
This document covers the installation and usage of mbed CLI.
- Using mbed CLI
- Installing and uninstalling
- Understanding working context and program root
- Creating and importing programs
- Adding and removing libraries
- Compiling code
- Exporting to desktop IDEs
- Testing
- Publishing your changes
- Updating programs and libraries
- mbed CLI configuration
- Troubleshooting
The basic workflow for mbed CLI is to:
- Initialize a new repository, for either a new application (or library) or an imported one. In both cases, this action also adds the mbed OS codebase.
- Build the application code.
- Test your build.
- Publish your application.
To support long-term development, mbed CLI offers source control, including selective updates of libraries and the codebase, support for multiple toolchains and manual configuration of the system.
Tip: To list all mbed CLI commands, use mbed --help
. A detailed command-specific help is available by using mbed <command> --help
.
Windows, Linux and Mac OS X support mbed CLI. We're keen to learn about your experience with mbed CLI on other operating systems at the mbed CLI development page.
-
Python - mbed CLI is a Python script, so you'll need Python to use it. We test mbed CLI with version 2.7.11 of Python. It is not compatible with Python 3.
-
Git and Mercurial - mbed CLI supports both Git and Mercurial repositories, so you need to install both:
The directories of Git and Mercurial executables (git
and hg
) need to be in your system's PATH.
- Command-line compiler or IDE toolchain - mbed CLI invokes the mbed OS 5 tools for various features, such as compiling, testing and exporting to industry standard toolchains. To compile your code, you need either a compiler or an IDE:
- Compilers: GCC ARM, ARM Compiler 5, IAR.
- IDE: Keil uVision, DS-5, IAR Workbench.
You can get the latest stable version of mbed CLI through pip by running:
$ pip install mbed-cli
On Linux or Mac, you may need to run with sudo
.
Alternatively, you can get the development version of mbed CLI by cloning the development repository https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-cli:
$ git clone https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-cli
Once cloned, you can install mbed CLI as a python package:
$ python setup.py install
On Linux or Mac, you may need to run with sudo
.
Note: mbed CLI is compatible with Virtual Python Environment (virtualenv). You can read more about isolated Python virtual environments here.
To uninstall mbed CLI, run:
pip uninstall mbed-cli
To install mbed-cli bash tab completion navigate to the tools/bash_completion
directory. Then copy the mbed
script into your /etc/bash_completion.d/
or /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d
directory and reload your terminal.
mbed CLI uses the current directory as a working context, in a similar way to Git, Mercurial and many other command-line tools. This means that before calling any mbed CLI command, you must first change to the directory containing the code you want to act on. For example, if you want to update the mbed OS sources in your mbed-example-program
directory:
$ cd mbed-example-program
$ cd mbed-os
$ mbed update master # This will update "mbed-os", not "my-program"
Various mbed CLI features require a program root, which should be under version control - either Git or Mercurial. This makes it possible to switch between revisions of the whole program and its libraries, control the program history, synchronize the program with remote repositories, share it with others and so on. Version control is also the primary and preferred delivery mechanism for mbed OS source code, which allows everyone to contribute to mbed OS.
Warning: mbed CLI stores information about libraries and dependencies in reference files that use the .lib
extension (such as lib_name.lib
). Although these files are human-readable, we strongly advise that you don't edit these manually - let mbed CLI manage them instead.
mbed CLI can create and import programs based on both mbed OS 2 and mbed OS 5.
When you create a new program, mbed CLI automatically imports the latest mbed OS release. Each release includes all the components: code, build tools and IDE exporters.
With this in mind, let's create a new program (we'll call it mbed-os-program
):
$ mbed new mbed-os-program
[mbed] Creating new program "mbed-os-program" (git)
[mbed] Adding library "mbed-os" from "https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os" at latest revision in the current branch
[mbed] Updating reference "mbed-os" -> "https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os/#89962277c20729504d1d6c95250fbd36ea5f4a2d"
This creates a new folder "mbed-os-program", initializes a new repository and imports the latest revision of the mbed-os dependency to your program tree.
Tip: You can instruct mbed CLI to use a specific source control management system or prevent source control management initialization, by using --scm [name|none]
option.
Use mbed ls
to list all the libraries imported to your program:
$ cd mbed-os-program
$ mbed ls -a
mbed-os-program (mbed-os-program)
`- mbed-os (https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os#89962277c207)
Note: If you want to start from an existing folder in your workspace, you can use mbed new .
, which initializes an mbed program, as well as a new Git or Mercurial repository in that folder.
mbed CLI is also compatible with mbed OS 2 programs based on the mbed library, and it automatically imports the latest mbed library release if you use the --mbedlib
option:
$ mbed new mbed-classic-program --mbedlib
[mbed] Creating new program "mbed-classic-program" (git)
[mbed] Adding library "mbed" from "https://mbed.org/users/mbed_official/code/mbed/builds" at latest revision in the current branch
[mbed] Downloading mbed library build "f9eeca106725" (might take a minute)
[mbed] Unpacking mbed library build "f9eeca106725" in "D:\Work\examples\mbed-classic-program\mbed"
[mbed] Updating reference "mbed" -> "https://mbed.org/users/mbed_official/code/mbed/builds/f9eeca106725"
[mbed] Couldn't find build tools in your program. Downloading the mbed 2.0 SDK tools...
You can create plain (empty) programs, without either mbed OS 5 or mbed OS 2, by using the --create-only
option.
Use mbed import
to clone an existing program and all its dependencies to your machine:
$ mbed import https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os-example-blinky
[mbed] Importing program "mbed-os-example-blinky" from "https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os-example-blinky" at latest revision in the current branch
[mbed] Adding library "mbed-os" from "https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os" at rev #dd36dc4228b5
$ cd mbed-os-example-blinky
mbed CLI also supports programs based on mbed OS 2, which it automatically detects and which do not require additional options:
$ mbed import https://mbed.org/teams/mbed/code/mbed_blinky/
[mbed] Importing program "mbed_blinky" from "https://mbed.org/teams/mbed/code/mbed_blinky" at latest revision in the current branch
[mbed] Adding library "mbed" from "http://mbed.org/users/mbed_official/code/mbed/builds" at rev #f9eeca106725
[mbed] Couldn't find build tools in your program. Downloading the mbed 2.0 SDK tools...
$ cd mbed-os-example-blinky
You can use the "import" command without specifying a full URL; mbed CLI adds a prefix (https://github.com/ARMmbed) to the URL if one is not present. For example, this command:
$ mbed import mbed-os-example-blinky
is equivalent to this command:
$ mbed import https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os-example-blinky
If you have manually cloned a Git repository into your workspace and you want to add all missing libraries, then you can use the deploy
command:
$ mbed deploy
[mbed] Adding library "mbed-os" from "https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os" at rev #dd36dc4228b5
Don't forget to set the current directory as the root of your program:
$ mbed new .
While working on your code, you may need to add another library to your application or remove existing libraries.
Adding a new library to your program is not the same as cloning the repository. Don't clone a library using hg
or git
; use mbed add
to add the library. This ensures that all libraries and sublibraries are populated as well.
Removing a library from your program is not the same as deleting the library directory. mbed CLI updates and removes library reference files. Use mbed remove
to remove the library; don't remove its directory with rm
.
Use mbed add
to add the latest revision of a library:
$ mbed add https://developer.mbed.org/users/wim/code/TextLCD/
Use the URL#hash
format to add a library from a URL at a specific revision hash:
$ mbed add https://developer.mbed.org/users/wim/code/TextLCD/#e5a0dcb43ecc
If you want to specify a directory to which to add your library, you can give an additional argument to add
, which names that directory. For example, If you'd rather add the previous library in a directory called "text-lcd" (instead of TextLCD):
$ mbed add https://developer.mbed.org/users/wim/code/TextLCD/ text-lcd
Although mbed CLI supports this functionality, we don't encourage it. Adding a library with a name that differs from its source repository can lead to confusion.
If at any point you decide that you don't need a library any more, you can use mbed remove
with the path of the library:
$ mbed remove text-lcd
After importing a program or creating a new one, you need to tell mbed CLI where to find the toolchains that you want to use for compiling your source tree.
There are multiple ways to configure toolchain locations:
mbed_settings.py
file in the root of your program. The tools will automatically create this file if it doesn't already exist.- The mbed CLI configuration.
- Setting an environment variable.
- Adding directory of the compiler binary to your PATH.
Methods for configuring toolchains that appear earlier in the above list override methods that appear later.
Edit mbed_settings.py
to set your toolchain:
- To use the ARM Compiler toolchain, set
ARM_PATH
to the base directory of your ARM Compiler installation (example: C:\Program Files\ARM\armcc5.06). The recommended version of the ARM Compiler toolchain is 5.06. - To use the GCC ARM Embedded toolchain, set
GCC_ARM_PATH
to the binary directory of your GCC ARM installation (example: C:\Program Files\GNU Tools ARM Embedded\4.9 2015q2\bin). Use version 4.9 of GCC ARM Embedded; version 5.0 or any more recent version might be incompatible with the tools. - To use the IAR EWARM toolhain, set
IAR_PATH
to the base directory of your IAR installation. Use versions 7.80 of IAR EWARM; prior versions might be incompatible with the tools.
Because mbed_settings.py
contains local settings (possibly relevant only to a single OS on a single machine), you should not check it into version control.
You can set the ARM Compiler 5 location via the command:
$ mbed config -G ARM_PATH "C:\Program Files\ARM"
[mbed] C:\Program Files\ARM now set as global ARM_PATH
The -G
switch tells mbed CLI to set this as a global setting, rather than local for the current program.
Supported settings for toolchain paths are ARM_PATH
, GCC_ARM_PATH
and IAR_PATH
.
You can see the active mbed CLI configuration via:
$ mbed config --list
[mbed] Global config:
ARM_PATH=C:\Program Files\ARM\armcc5.06
IAR_PATH=C:\Program Files\IAR Workbench 7.0\arm
[mbed] Local config (D:\temp\mbed-os-program):
No local configuration is set
More information about mbed CLI configuration is available in the configuration section of this document.
For each of the compilers, mbed compile
checks a corresponding environment variable for the compiler's location. The environment variables are as follows:
MBED_ARM_PATH
: The path to the base directory of your ARM Compiler installation. This should be the directory containing the directory containing the binaries forarmcc
and friends.MBED_IAR_PATH
: The path to the base directory of your IAR EWARM Compiler installation. This should be one directory containing the directory containing the binaries foriccarm
and friends.MBED_GCC_ARM_PATH
: The path to the binary directory of your GCC ARM Embedded Compiler installation. This should be the directory containing the binaries forarm-none-eabi-gcc
and friends.
If none of the above are configured, the mbed compile
command will fall back to checking your PATH
for an executable that is part of the compiler suite in question. This check is the same as a shell would perform to find the executable on the command-line. When mbed compile
finds the executable it is looking for, it uses the location of that executable as the appropriate path except in the case of GCC, which will not use a path.
Use the mbed compile
command to compile your code:
$ mbed compile -t ARM -m K64F
Building project mbed-os-program (K64F, GCC_ARM)
Compile: aesni.c
Compile: blowfish.c
Compile: main.cpp
... [SNIP] ...
Compile: configuration_store.c
Link: mbed-os-program
Elf2Bin: mbed-os-program
+----------------------------+-------+-------+------+
| Module | .text | .data | .bss |
+----------------------------+-------+-------+------+
| Fill | 170 | 0 | 2294 |
| Misc | 36282 | 2220 | 2152 |
| core/hal | 15396 | 16 | 568 |
| core/rtos | 6751 | 24 | 2662 |
| features/FEATURE_IPV4 | 96 | 0 | 48 |
| frameworks/greentea-client | 912 | 28 | 44 |
| frameworks/utest | 3079 | 0 | 732 |
| Subtotals | 62686 | 2288 | 8500 |
+----------------------------+-------+-------+------+
Allocated Heap: 65540 bytes
Allocated Stack: 32768 bytes
Total Static RAM memory (data + bss): 10788 bytes
Total RAM memory (data + bss + heap + stack): 109096 bytes
Total Flash memory (text + data + misc): 66014 bytes
Image: BUILD/K64F/GCC_ARM/mbed-os-program.bin
The arguments for compile are:
-m <MCU>
to select a target. Ifdetect
orauto
parameter is passed to-m
, then mbed CLI detects the connected target.-t <TOOLCHAIN>
to select a toolchain (of those defined inmbed_settings.py
, see above). The value can beARM
(ARM Compiler 5),GCC_ARM
(GNU ARM Embedded) orIAR
(IAR Embedded Workbench for ARM).--source <SOURCE>
to select the source directory. The default is.
(the current directory). You can specify multiple source locations, even outside the program tree.--build <BUILD>
to select the build directory. Default:BUILD/
inside your program root.--profile <PATH_TO_BUILD_PROFILE>
to select a path to a build profile configuration file. Example: mbed-os/tools/profiles/debug.json.--library
to compile the code as a static .a/.ar library.--config
to inspect the runtime compile configuration (see below).-S
or--supported
shows a matrix of the supported targets and toolchains.-f
or--flash
to flash/program a connected target after successful compile.-c
to build from scratch, a clean build or rebuild.-j <jobs>
to control the compile processes on your machine. The default value is 0, which infers the number of processes from the number of cores on your machine. You can use-j 1
to trigger a sequential compile of source code.-v
or--verbose
for verbose diagnostic output.-vv
or--very_verbose
for very verbose diagnostic output.
You can find the compiled binary, ELF image, memory usage and link statistics in the BUILD
subdirectory of your program.
For more information on build profiles, see our build profiles and toolchain profiles pages.
You can build a static library of your code by adding the --library
argument to mbed compile
. Static libraries are useful when you want to build multiple applications from the same mbed OS codebase without having to recompile for every application. To achieve this:
- Build a static library for mbed-os.
- Compile multiple applications or tests against the static library:
$ mbed compile -t ARM -m K64F --library --no-archive --source=mbed-os --build=../mbed-os-build
Building library mbed-os (K64F, ARM)
[...]
Completed in: (47.4)s
$ mbed compile -t ARM -m K64F --source=mbed-os/TESTS/integration/basic --source=../mbed-os-build --build=../basic-out
Building project basic (K64F, ARM)
Compile: main.cpp
Link: basic
Elf2Bin: basic
Image: ../basic-out/basic.bin
$ mbed compile -t ARM -m K64F --source=mbed-os/TESTS/integration/threaded_blinky --source=../mbed-os-build --build=..\/hreaded_blinky-out
Building project threaded_blinky (K64F, ARM)
Compile: main.cpp
Link: threaded_blinky
Elf2Bin: threaded_blinky
Image: ../threaded_blinky-out/threaded_blinky.bin
The compile configuration system provides a flexible mechanism for configuring the mbed program, its libraries and the build target.
You can use mbed compile --config
to view the configuration:
$ mbed compile --config -t GCC_ARM -m K64F
To display more verbose information about the configuration parameters, use -v
:
$ mbed compile --config -t GCC_ARM -m K64F -v
It's possible to filter the output of mbed compile --config
by specifying one or more prefixes for the configuration parameters that mbed CLI displays. For example, to display only the configuration defined by the targets:
$ mbed compile --config -t GCC_ARM -m K64F --prefix target
You may use --prefix
more than once. To display only the application and target configuration, use two --prefix
options:
$ mbed compile --config -t GCC_ARM -m K64F --prefix target --prefix app
You can specify macros in your command-line using the -D option. For example:
$ mbed compile -t GCC_ARM -m K64F -c -DUVISOR_PRESENT
To compile in debug mode (as opposed to the default develop mode), use --profile mbed-os/tools/profiles/debug.json
in the compile command-line:
$ mbed compile -t GCC_ARM -m K64F --profile mbed-os/tools/profiles/debug.json
Tip: If you have files that you want to compile only in debug mode, put them in a directory called TARGET_DEBUG
at any level of your tree (then use --profile
as explained above).
Using mbed target <target>
and mbed toolchain <toolchain>
, you can set the default target and toolchain for your program. You won't have to specify these every time you compile or generate IDE project files.
You can also use mbed target detect
, which detects the connected target board and uses it as a parameter to every subsequent compile and export.
If you need to debug your code, you can export your source tree to an IDE project file to use the IDE's debugging facilities. mbed CLI supports exporting to Keil uVision, IAR Workbench, a Makefile using GCC ARM, Eclipse using GCC ARM and other IDEs.
For example, to export to uVision, run:
$ mbed export -i uvision -m K64F
mbed CLI creates a .uvprojx
file in the projectfiles/uvision folder. You can open the project file with uVision.
Use the mbed test
command to compile and run tests.
The arguments to test
are:
-m <MCU>
to select a target for the compilation. Ifdetect
orauto
parameter is passed, then mbed CLI will attempt to detect the connected target and compile against it.-t <TOOLCHAIN>
to select a toolchain (of those defined inmbed_settings.py
, see above), wheretoolchain
can be eitherARM
(ARM Compiler 5),GCC_ARM
(GNU ARM Embedded), orIAR
(IAR Embedded Workbench for ARM).--compile-list
to list all the tests that can be built.--run-list
to list all the tests that can be run (they must be built first).--compile
to only compile the tests.--run
to only run the tests.-n <TESTS_BY_NAME>
to limit the tests built or run to a comma separated list (ex. test1,test2,test3).--source <SOURCE>
to select the source directory. Default is.
(the current directory). You can specify multiple source locations, even outside the program tree.--build <BUILD>
to select the build directory. Default:BUILD/
inside your program.--profile <PATH_TO_BUILD_PROFILE>
to select a path to a build profile configuration file. Example: mbed-os/tools/profiles/debug.json.-c or --clean
to clean the build directory before compiling.--test-spec <TEST_SPEC>
to set the path for the test spec file used when building and running tests (the default path is the build directory).-v
or--verbose
for verbose diagnostic output.-vv
or--very_verbose
for very verbose diagnostic output.
Invoke mbed test
:
$ mbed test -m K64F -t GCC_ARM
Building library mbed-build (K64F, GCC_ARM)
Building project GCC_ARM to TESTS-unit-myclass (K64F, GCC_ARM)
Compile: main.cpp
Link: TESTS-unit-myclass
Elf2Bin: TESTS-unit-myclass
+-----------+-------+-------+------+
| Module | .text | .data | .bss |
+-----------+-------+-------+------+
| Fill | 74 | 0 | 2092 |
| Misc | 47039 | 204 | 4272 |
| Subtotals | 47113 | 204 | 6364 |
+-----------+-------+-------+------+
Allocated Heap: 65540 bytes
Allocated Stack: 32768 bytes
Total Static RAM memory (data + bss): 6568 bytes
Total RAM memory (data + bss + heap + stack): 104876 bytes
Total Flash memory (text + data + misc): 48357 bytes
Image: build\tests\K64F\GCC_ARM\TESTS\mbedmicro-rtos-mbed\mutex\TESTS-unit-myclass.bin
...[SNIP]...
mbedgt: test suite report:
+--------------+---------------+---------------------------------+--------+--------------------+-------------+
| target | platform_name | test suite | result | elapsed_time (sec) | copy_method |
+--------------+---------------+---------------------------------+--------+--------------------+-------------+
| K64F-GCC_ARM | K64F | TESTS-unit-myclass | OK | 21.09 | shell |
+--------------+---------------+---------------------------------+--------+--------------------+-------------+
mbedgt: test suite results: 1 OK
mbedgt: test case report:
+--------------+---------------+------------------------------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------------------+
| target | platform_name | test suite | test case | passed | failed | result | elapsed_time (sec) |
+--------------+---------------+--------------------+---------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------------------+
| K64F-GCC_ARM | K64F | TESTS-unit-myclass | TESTS-unit-myclass1 | 1 | 0 | OK | 5.00 |
| K64F-GCC_ARM | K64F | TESTS-unit-myclass | TESTS-unit-myclass2 | 1 | 0 | OK | 5.00 |
| K64F-GCC_ARM | K64F | TESTS-unit-myclass | TESTS-unit-myclass3 | 1 | 0 | OK | 5.00 |
+--------------+---------------+--------------------+---------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------------------+
mbedgt: test case results: 3 OK
mbedgt: completed in 21.28 sec
You can find the compiled binaries and test artifacts in the BUILD/tests/<TARGET>/<TOOLCHAIN>
directory of your program.
You can find the tests that are available for building by using the --compile-list
option:
$ mbed test --compile-list
Test Case:
Name: TESTS-functional-test1
Path: .\TESTS\functional\test1
Test Case:
Name: TESTS-functional-test2
Path: .\TESTS\functional\test2
Test Case:
Name: TESTS-functional-test3
Path: .\TESTS\functional\test3
You can find the tests that are available for running by using the --run-list
option:
$ mbed test --run-list
mbedgt: test specification file '.\build\tests\K64F\ARM\test_spec.json' (specified with --test-spec option)
mbedgt: using '.\build\tests\K64F\ARM\test_spec.json' from current directory!
mbedgt: available tests for built 'K64F-ARM', location '.\build\tests\K64F\ARM'
test 'TESTS-functional-test1'
test 'TESTS-functional-test2'
test 'TESTS-functional-test3'
You can specify to only build the tests by using the --compile
option:
$ mbed test -m K64F -t GCC_ARM --compile
You can specify to only run the tests by using the --run
option:
$ mbed test -m K64F -t GCC_ARM --run
If you don't specify any of these, mbed test
will first compile all available tests and then run them.
You can limit the scope of the tests built and run by using the -n
option. This takes a comma-separated list of test names as an argument:
$ mbed test -m K64F -t GCC_ARM -n TESTS-functional-test1,TESTS-functional-test2
You can use the wildcard character *
to run a group of tests that share a common prefix without specifying each test individually. For instance, if you only want to run the three tests TESTS-functional-test1
, TESTS-functional-test2
and TESTS-functional-test3
, but you have other tests in your project, you can run:
$ mbed test -m NUCLEO_F429ZI -t GCC_ARM -n TESTS-functional*
Note: Some shells expand the wildcard character *
into file names that exist in your working directory. To prevent this behavior, please see your shell's documentation.
Test code must follow this directory structure:
mbed-os-program
|- main.cpp # Optional main.cpp with main() if it is an application module.
|- pqr.lib # Required libs
|- xyz.lib
|- mbed-os
| |- frameworks # Test dependencies
| | `_greentea-client # Greentea client required by tests.
| |...
| `- TESTS # Tests directory. Special name upper case TESTS is excluded during application build process
| |- TestGroup1 # Test Group directory
| | `- TestCase1 # Test case source directory
| | `- main.cpp # Test source
| |- TestGroup2
| | `- TestCase2
| | `- main.cpp
| `- host_tests # Python host tests script directory
| |- host_test1.py
| `- host_test2.py
`- build # Build directory
|- <TARGET> # Target directory
| `- <TOOLCHAIN> # Toolchain directory
| |- TestCase1.bin # Test binary
| `- TestCase2.bin
| ....
As shown above, tests exist inside TESTS\testgroup\testcase\
directories. Please note that TESTS
is a special upper case directory that is excluded from module sources while compiling.
Note: mbed test
does not work in applications that contain a main
function that is outside of a TESTS
directory.
As you develop your program, you'll edit parts of it. You can get the status of all the repositories in your program (recursively) by running mbed status
. If a repository has uncommitted changes, this command displays these changes.
Here's an example:
[mbed] Status for "mbed-os-program":
M main.cpp
M mbed-os.lib
?? gdb_log.txt
?? test_spec.json
[mbed] Status for "mbed-os":
M tools/toolchains/arm.py
M tools/toolchains/gcc.py
[mbed] Status for "mbed-client-classic":
M source/m2mtimerpimpl.cpp
[mbed] Status for "mbed-mesh-api":
M source/include/static_config.h
You can then commit or discard these changes through that repository's version control system.
To push the changes in your local tree upstream, run mbed publish
. mbed publish
works recursively, pushing the leaf dependencies first, then updating the dependents and pushing them too.
Let's assume that the list of dependencies of your program (obtained by running mbed ls
) looks like this:
my-mbed-os-example (a5ac4bf2e468)
|- mbed-os (5fea6e69ec1a)
`- my-libs (e39199afa2da)
|- my-libs/iot-client (571cfef17dd0)
`- my-libs/test-framework (cd18b5a50df4)
Let's assume that you make changes to iot-client
. mbed publish
detects the change on the leaf iot-client
dependency and asks you to commit it. Then mbed publish
detects that my-libs
depends on iot-client
, updates the my-libs
dependency on iot-client
to its latest version by updating the iot-client.lib
file and asks you to commit it. This propagates up to my-libs
and finally to your program, my-mbed-os-example
.
When you create a new (local) version control managed program or library, its revision history exists only locally. The repository is not associated with the remote one. To publish the local repository, please follow these steps:
- Create a new empty repository on the remote site. This can be on a public repository hosting service (GitHub, Bitbucket, mbed.org), your own service or a different location on your system.
- Copy the URL/location of the new repository in your clipboard.
- Open command-line in the local repository directory (for example, change directory to
mbed-os-example/local-lib
). - To associate the local repository:
-
For Git, run
git remote add origin <url-or-paht-to-your-remote-repo>
. -
For Mercurial, edit .hg/hgrc and add (or replace if exists):
``` [paths] default = <url-or-paht-to-your-remote-repo> ```
- Run
mbed publish
to publish your changes.
In a scenario with nested local repositories, start with the leaf repositories first.
Git enables a workflow where the publish/push repository may be different than the original ("origin") one. This allows new revisions in a fork repository while maintaining an association with the original repository. To use this workflow, first import an mbed OS program or mbed OS itself, and then associate the push remote with your fork. For example:
$ git remote set-url --push origin https://github.com/screamerbg/repo-fork
Both git commit & git push
and mbed publish
push the new revisions to your fork. You can fetch from the original repository using mbed update
or git pull
. If you explicitly want to fetch or pull from your fork, then you can use git pull https://github.com/screamerbg/repo-fork [branch]
.
Through the workflow explained above, mbed CLI maintains association to the original repository (which you may want to send a pull request to) and will record references with the revision hashes that you push to your fork. Until your pull request (PR) is accepted, all recorded references are invalid. Once the PR is accepted, all revision hashes from your fork become part the original repository, making them valid.
You can update programs and libraries on your local machine so that they pull in changes from the remote sources (Git or Mercurial).
As with any mbed CLI command, mbed update
uses the current directory as a working context. Before calling mbed update
, you should change your working directory to the one you want to update. For example, if you're updating mbed-os, use cd mbed-os
before you begin updating.
Tip: Synchronizing library references: Before triggering an update, you may want to synchronize any changes that you've made to the program structure by running mbed sync
, which updates the necessary library references and removes the invalid ones.
The update command fails if there are changes in your program or library that mbed update
could overwrite. This is by design. mbed CLI does not run operations that would result in overwriting uncommitted local changes. If you get an error, take care of your local changes (commit or use one of the options below), and then rerun mbed update
.
To update your program to another upstream version, go to the root folder of the program, and run:
$ mbed update [branch|tag|revision]
This fetches new revisions from the remote repository, updating the program to the specified branch, tag or revision. If you don't specificy any of these, then mbed update
updates to the latest revision of the current branch. mbed update
performs this series of actions recursively against all dependencies in the program tree.
You can change the working directory to a library folder and use mbed update
to update that library and its dependencies to a different revision than the one referenced in the parent program or library. This allows you to experiment with different versions of libraries/dependencies in the program tree without having to change the parent program or library.
There are three additional options that modify how unpublished local libraries are handled:
-
mbed update --clean-deps
- Update the current program or library and its dependencies, and discard all local unpublished repositories. Use this with caution because your local unpublished repositories cannot be restored unless you have a backup copy. -
mbed update --clean-files
- Update the current program or library and its dependencies, discard local uncommitted changes and remove any untracked or ignored files. Use this with caution because your local unpublished repositories cannot be restored unless you have a backup copy. -
mbed update --ignore
- Update the current program or library and its dependencies, and ignore any local unpublished libraries (they won't be deleted or modified, just ignored).
There are two main scenarios when updating:
- Update with local uncommitted changes: dirty update.
Run mbed update [branch|revision|tag_name]
. You might have to commit or stash your changes if the source control tool (Git or Mercurial) throws an error that the update will overwrite local changes.
- Discard local uncommitted changes: clean update.
Run mbed update [branch|revision|tag_name] --clean
Specifying a branch to mbed update
will only check out that branch and won't automatically merge or fast-forward to the remote/upstream branch. You can run mbed update
to merge (fast-forward) your local branch with the latest remote branch. On Git you can do git pull
.
Warning: The --clean
option tells mbed CLI to update that program or library and its dependencies and discard all local changes. This action cannot be undone; use with caution.
You can combine the options of the mbed update command for the following scenarios:
-
mbed update --clean --clean-deps --clean-files
- Update the current program or library and its dependencies, remove all local unpublished libraries, discard local uncommitted changes and remove all untracked or ignored files. This wipes every single change that you made in the source tree and restores the stock layout. -
mbed update --clean --ignore
- Update the current program or library and its dependencies, but ignore any local repositories. mbed CLI will update whatever it can from the public repositories.
Use these with caution because your uncommitted changes and unpublished libraries cannot be restored.
You can streamline many options in mbed CLI with global and local configuration.
The mbed CLI configuration syntax is:
mbed config [--global] <var> [value] [--unset]
- The global configuration (via
--global
option) defines the default behavior of mbed CLI across programs unless overridden by local settings. - The local configuration (without
--global
) is specific to mbed program and allows overriding of global or default mbed CLI settings. - If you do not specify a value, then mbed CLI prints the value for this setting in this context.
- The
--unset
option allows you to remove a setting. - The
--list
option allows you to list global and local configuration.
Here is a list of configuration settings and their defaults:
target
- defines the default target forcompile
,test
andexport
; an alias ofmbed target
. Default: none.toolchain
- defines the default toolchain forcompile
andtest
; can be set throughmbed toolchain
. Default: none.ARM_PATH
,GCC_ARM_PATH
,IAR_PATH
- defines the path to ARM Compiler, GCC ARM and IAR Workbench toolchains. Default: none.protocol
- defines the default protocol used for importing or cloning of programs and libraries. The possible values arehttps
,http
andssh
. Usessh
if you have generated and registered SSH keys (Public Key Authentication) with a service such as GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket and so on. Read more about SSH keys here. Default:https
.depth
- defines the clone depth for importing or cloning and applies only to Git repositories. Note that though this option may improve cloning speed, it may also prevent you from correctly checking out a dependency tree when the reference revision hash is older than the clone depth. Read more about shallow clones here. Default: none.cache
- defines the local path that stores small copies of the imported or cloned repositories, and mbed CLI uses it to minimize traffic and speed up future imports of the same repositories. Useon
orenabled
to turn on caching in the system temp path. Default: none (disabled).
-
Check whether you have Mercurial installed in your system path by running
hg
in command prompt. If you're receiving "command not found" or a similar message, then you need to install Mercurial, and add it to your system path. -
Try to clone a Mercurial repository directly. For example,
hg clone https://developer.mbed.org/teams/mbed/code/mbed_blinky/
. If you receive an error similar toabort: error: [SSL: CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED] certificate verify failed (_ssl.:590)
, then your system certificates are out of date. You need to update your system certificates and possibly add the host certificate fingerprint ofmbed.com
andmbed.org
. Read more about Mercurial's certificate management here.
Currently mbed CLI is not compatible with Cygwin environment and cannot be executed inside it (ARMmbed#299).