A command line tool for compiling Arduino sketches
This tool is able to parse Arduino Hardware specifications, properly run gcc
and produce compiled sketches.
An Arduino sketch differs from a standard C program in that it misses a main
(provided by the Arduino core), function prototypes are not mandatory, and libraries inclusion is automagic (you just have to #include
them).
This tool generates function prototypes and gathers library paths, providing gcc
with all the needed -I
params.
-
-compile
or-dump-prefs
or-preprocess
: Optional. If omitted, defaults to-compile
.-dump-prefs
will just print all build preferences used,-compile
will use those preferences to run the actual compiler,-preprocess
will only print preprocessed code to stdout. -
-hardware
: Mandatory. Folder containing Arduino platforms. An example is thehardware
folder shipped with the Arduino IDE, or thepackages
folder created by Arduino Boards Manager. Can be specified multiple times. If conflicting hardware definitions are specified, the last one wins. -
-tools
: Mandatory. Folder containing Arduino tools (gcc
,avrdude
...). An example is thehardware/tools
folder shipped with the Arduino IDE, or thepackages
folder created by Arduino Boards Manager. Can be specified multiple times. -
-libraries
: Optional. Folder containing Arduino libraries. An example is thelibraries
folder shipped with the Arduino IDE. Can be specified multiple times. -
-fqbn
: Mandatory. Fully Qualified Board Name, e.g.: arduino:avr:uno -
-build-path
: Optional. Folder where to save compiled files. If omitted, a folder will be created in the temporary folder specified by your OS. -
-prefs=key=value
: Optional. It allows to override some build properties. -
-warnings
: Optional, can be "none", "default", "more" and "all". Defaults to "none". Used to tellgcc
which warning level to use (-W
flag). -
-verbose
: Optional, turns on verbose mode. -
-quiet
: Optional, supresses almost every output. -
-debug-level
: Optional, defaults to "5". Used for debugging. Set it to 10 when submitting an issue. -
-core-api-version
: Optional, defaults to "10600". The version of the Arduino IDE which is using this tool. -
-logger
: Optional, can be "human" or "machine". Defaults to "human". If "machine", messages emitted will be in a format which the Arduino IDE understands and that it uses for I18N. -
-version
: if specified, prints version and exits. -
-build-options-file
: it specifies path to a localbuild.options.json
file (see paragraph below), which allows you to omit specifying params such as-hardware
,-tools
,-libraries
,-fqbn
,-pref
and-ide-version
. -
-vid-pid
: when specified, VID/PID specific build properties are used, if boards supports them.
Final mandatory parameter is the sketch to compile (of course).
Every time you run this tool, it will create a build.options.json
file in build path. It's used to understand if build options (such as hardware folders, fqbn and so on) were changed when compiling the same sketch.
If they changed, the whole build path is wiped out. If they didn't change, previous compiled files will be reused if the corresponding source files didn't change as well.
You can save this file locally and use it instead of specifying -hardware
, -tools
, -libraries
, -fqbn
, -pref
and -ide-version
.
See Doing continuous integration with arduino builder.
You need Go 1.6.3.
Repo root contains the script setup_go_env_vars
. Use it as is or as a template for setting up Go environment variables.
To install codereview/patch
you have to install Mercurial first.
Once done, run the following commands:
go get github.com/go-errors/errors
go get github.com/stretchr/testify
go get github.com/jstemmer/go-junit-report
go build arduino.cc/arduino-builder
In order to run the tests, type:
go test arduino.cc/...
This runs all tests, showing any failures and a summary at the end. Add the -v option to show each test as it is being ran. Currently, arduino-builder itself also generates copious output, even for non-failing testcases and without -v, and testing does not stop at the first failure, so you probably want to redirect test output so you can scroll back to find any failures.
To run a single test, use the -run option, which accepts a regular expression (see also go help testflag).
go test arduino.cc/... -run 'TestBuilderEmptySketch'
go test arduino.cc/... -run 'TestPrototypesAdder.*'
In jenkins, use
go test -v arduino.cc/... | bin/go-junit-report > report.xml
The first time you run the tests, some needed files (toolchains and
source files) will be downloaded, which needs about 1GB of space (at the
time of writing). If you have a slow connection, this download might
exceed the default 10 minute timeout for a single test. If you run into
this, add -timeout 60m
or similar to the commandline to extend the
timeout. If you are running on slower system (like a rasbperry pi),
increasing the timeout might be needed as well.
arduino-builder
is licensed under General Public License version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation. See LICENSE.txt.
Copyright (C) 2015 Arduino LLC and contributors
See https://www.arduino.cc/ and https://github.com/arduino/arduino-builder/graphs/contributors