You need to set PICO_SDK_PATH in the environment, or pass it to cmake with -DPICO_SDK_PATH=/path/to/pico-sdk
. To use features such as signing or hashing, you will need to make sure the mbedtls submodule in the SDK is checked out - this can be done by running this from your SDK directory.
git submodule update --init lib/mbedtls
You also need to install libusb-1.0
if you want to use the USB functionality.
If libusb-1.0 is not installed, picotool still builds, but it omits all options that deal with managing a pico via USB (load, save, erase, verify, reboot). Builds that do not include USB support can be identified by running
picotool version
, which will stateThis version of picotool was compiled without USB support. Some commands are not available.
. Additionally, the unsupported commands won't appear in the output of the help command, and if you attempt to execute an invalid command you will get an error message. The build output messagelibUSB is not found - no USB support will be built
also appears in the build logs.
Use your favorite package tool to install dependencies. For example, on Ubuntu:
sudo apt install build-essential pkg-config libusb-1.0-0-dev cmake
Then simply build like a normal CMake project:
mkdir build cd build cmake .. make
On Linux you can add udev rules in order to run picotool without sudo:
sudo cp udev/60-picotool.rules /etc/udev/rules.d/
Download libUSB from here https://libusb.info/
Set LIBUSB_ROOT environment variable to the install directory.
mkdir build cd build cmake -G "NMake Makefiles" .. nmake
Download libUSB from here https://libusb.info/
Set LIBUSB_ROOT environment variable to the install directory.
mkdir build cd build cmake .. make
No need to download libusb separately or set LIBUSB_ROOT
.
pacman -S $MINGW_PACKAGE_PREFIX-{toolchain,cmake,libusb} mkdir build cd build cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$MINGW_PREFIX cmake --build .
The Raspberry Pi Pico SDK (pico-sdk) version 2.0.0 and above uses picotool
to do the ELF-to-UF2 conversion previously handled by the elf2uf2
tool in the SDK. The SDK also uses picotool
to hash and sign binaries.
Whilst the SDK can download picotool on its own per project, if you have multiple projects or build configurations, it is preferable to install a single copy of picotool
locally. This can be done most simply with make install
or cmake --install .
, using sudo
if required; the SDK will use this installed version by default.
On some Linux systems, the
~/.local
prefix may be used for an install withoutsudo
; from your build directory simply runcmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=~/.local .. make installThis will only work if
~/.local/bin
is included in yourPATH
sudo
)Alternatively, you can install to a custom path via:
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$MY_INSTALL_DIR -DPICOTOOL_FLAT_INSTALL=1 .. make install
In order for the SDK to find picotool
in this custom folder, you will usually need to set the picotool_DIR
variable in your project. This can be achieved either by setting the picotool_DIR
environment variable to $MY_INSTALL_DIR/picotool
, by passing -Dpicotool_DIR=$MY_INSTALL_DIR/picotool
to your cmake
command, or by adding set(picotool_DIR $MY_INSTALL_DIR/picotool)
to your CMakeLists.txt file.
See the find_package documentation for more details