- This is a forked of https://github.com/marcelstoer/nodemcu-pyflasher which i added some functionality to input offset address during flashing, this is usable specially when you will do an SPIFS image bin flashing that no need to have arduino IDE.
Self-contained NodeMCU flasher with GUI based on esptool.py and wxPython.
NodeMCU PyFlasher doesn't have to be installed, just double-click it and it'll start. Check the releases section for downloads for your platform. For every release there's at least a .exe file for Windows. Starting from 3.0 there's also a .dmg for macOS.
Scan the list of open issues for bugs and pending features.
Note
This is my first Python project. If you have constructive feedback as for how to improve the code please do reach out to me.
In the unlikely event that you're stuck with this simple tool the best way to get help is to turn to the "Tools and IDE" subforum on esp8266.com.
All open-source development by the author is donationware. Show your love and support for open-source development by donating to the good cause through PayPal.
If you want to build this application yourself you need to:
- Install Python 3.x and Pip (it comes with Python if installed from
python.org
). - Create a virtual environment with
python -m venv venv
- Activate the virtual environment with
. venv/bin/activate
(. venv/Scripts/activate
if you are on Windows with Cygwin or Mingw) - Run
pip install -r requirements.txt
A note on Linux: As described on the downloads section of wxPython
, wheels for Linux are complicated and may require you to run something like this to install wxPython
correctly:
# Assuming you are running it on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS with GTK3
pip install -U \
-f https://extras.wxpython.org/wxPython4/extras/linux/gtk3/ubuntu-18.04 \
wxPython
This addresses an issue the NodeMCU community touched on several times in the past, most recently at #1500 (comment).
I stated that based on my experience doing NodeMCU user support it should be a lot simpler to flash NodeMCU for Windows users.
- A number of flashing tools are available but only two are actively maintained: esptool-ck and esptool.py. Only one is endorsed by Espressif: esptool.py (they hired the developer(s)).
- 70% of the users of my nodemcu-build.com service are on Windows.
- BUT Windows doesn't come with Python installed - which is required for esptool.py.
- BUT Windows users in general are more reluctant to use the CLI than Linux/Mac users - which is required for esptool.py.
To conclude: this is not a comfortable situation for NodeMCU's largest user group.
For quite a while I planned to write a self-contained GUI tool which would use esptool.py in the background. It should primarily target Windows users but since I'm on Mac it should be cross-platform. Even though I had never used Python before I felt confident to pull this off.
- Uses the cross-platform wxPython GUI framework. I also tried PyForms/PyQt4 but settled for wxPython.
- Requires absolutely minimal user input.
- The esptool.py "console" output is redirected to text control on the GUI.
- Uses PyInstaller to create self-contained executable for Windows and Mac. The packaged app can run standalone i.e. without installing itself, a Python interpreter or any modules.
MIT © Marcel Stör