Building the example application requires the use of the Espressif ESP32 IoT Development Framework and the xtensa-esp32-elf toolchain.
The VSCode devcontainer has these components pre-installed, so you can skip this step. To install these components manually, follow these steps:
Clone the Espressif ESP-IDF and checkout v4.4.1 release
$ mkdir ${HOME}/tools $ cd ${HOME}/tools $ git clone https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf.git $ cd esp-idf $ git checkout v4.4.1 $ git submodule update --init $ ./install.sh
Install ninja-build
$ sudo apt-get install ninja-build
Currently building in VSCode and deploying from native is not supported, so make sure the IDF_PATH has been exported(See the manual setup steps above).
Setting up the environment
$ cd ${HOME}/tools/esp-idf $ ./install.sh $ . ./export.sh $ cd {path-to-connectedhomeip}
To download and install packages.
$ source ./scripts/bootstrap.sh $ source ./scripts/activate.sh
If packages are already installed then simply activate them.
$ source ./scripts/activate.sh
Enable Ccache for faster IDF builds
It is recommended to have Ccache installed for faster builds
$ export IDF_CCACHE_ENABLE=1
Target Set
$ idf.py set-target esp32(or esp32c3)
Configuration Options
This application uses ESP32-DevKitC
as a default device type. To use other ESP32 based device types, please refer examples/all-clusters-app/esp32
To build the demo application.
$ idf.py build
After building the application, to flash it outside of VSCode, connect your device via USB. Then run the following command to flash the demo application onto the device and then monitor its output. If necessary, replace /dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART
(MacOS) with the correct USB device name for your system(like /dev/ttyUSB0
on Linux). Note that sometimes you might have to press and hold the boot
button on the device while it's trying to connect before flashing. For ESP32-DevKitC devices this is labeled in the functional description diagram.
$ idf.py -p /dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART flash monitor
Note: Some users might have to install the VCP driver before the device shows up on /dev/tty
.
Quit the monitor by hitting Ctrl+]
.
Note: You can see a menu of various monitor commands by hitting Ctrl+t Ctrl+h
while the monitor is running.
If desired, the monitor can be run again like so:
$ idf.py -p /dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART monitor
Commissioning can be carried out using WiFi or BLE.
Set the Rendezvous Mode
for commissioning using menuconfig; the default Rendezvous mode is BLE.
$ idf.py menuconfig
Select the Rendezvous Mode via Demo -> Rendezvous Mode
.
Now flash the device with the same command as before. (Use the right /dev
device)
$ idf.py -p /dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART flash monitor
The device should boot up. When device connects to your network, you will see a log like this on the device console.
I (5524) chip[DL]: SYSTEM_EVENT_STA_GOT_IP I (5524) chip[DL]: IPv4 address changed on WiFi station interface: <IP_ADDRESS>...
Use python based device controller or standalone chip-tool or iOS chip-tool app or Android chip-tool app to communicate with the device.
Note: The ESP32 does not support 5GHz networks. Also, the Device will persist your network configuration. To erase it, simply run.
$ idf.py -p /dev/tty.SLAB_USBtoUART erase_flash
See the build guide for general background on build prerequisites.
Building the example:
$ cd examples/chip-tool $ rm -rf out $ gn gen out/debug $ ninja -C out/debug
which puts the binary at out/debug/chip-tool
To initiate a client commissioning request to a device, run the built executable and choose the pairing mode.
Run the built executable and pass it the discriminator and pairing code of the remote device, as well as the network credentials to use.
The command below uses the default values hard-coded into the debug versions of the ESP32 all-clusters-app to commission it onto a Wi-Fi network:
$ ./out/debug/chip-tool pairing ble-wifi 12344321 ${SSID} ${PASSWORD} 20202021 3840
Parameters:
To use the Client to send Matter commands, run the built executable and pass it the target cluster name, the target command name as well as an endpoint id.
$ ./out/debug/chip-tool onoff on 12344321 1
The client will send a single command packet and then exit.
This demo app illustrates controlling OnOff cluster (Server) attributes of an endpoint and lock/unlock status of door using LED's. For ESP32-DevKitC
, a GPIO (configurable through LOCK_STATE_LED
in main/include/AppConfig.h
) is updated through the on/off/toggle commands from the python-controller
. If you wish to see the actual effect of the commands on ESP32-DevKitC
, you will have to connect an external LED to GPIO.
Enable RPCs in the build using menuconfig:
$ idf.py menuconfig
Enable the RPC library:
Component config → CHIP Core → General Options → Enable Pigweed PRC library
After flashing a build with RPCs enabled you can use the rpc console to send commands to the device.
Build or install the rpc console
Start the console
chip-console --device /dev/ttyUSB0
From within the console you can then invoke rpcs:
rpcs.chip.rpc.Locking.Get() rpcs.chip.rpc.Locking.Set(locked=True)