West, Zephyr's meta-tool
Go to file
Martí Bolívar fe3cba3021 manifest: remove unecessary Path() call
The repo_root value is already a Path.

Signed-off-by: Martí Bolívar <marti.bolivar@nordicsemi.no>
2020-01-24 18:13:57 -05:00
src/west manifest: remove unecessary Path() call 2020-01-24 18:13:57 -05:00
tests manifest: fix AttributeError in self import 2020-01-24 18:13:57 -05:00
.gitignore .gitignore: add .coverage 2020-01-22 07:36:31 -05:00
.shippable.yml ci: move west to a different node pool 2020-01-17 13:39:33 -05:00
LICENSE Add setuptools integration. 2018-06-06 12:21:14 -04:00
MANIFEST.in tree-wide: move CLI into new west.app package 2020-01-22 07:36:31 -05:00
README.rst README.rst: update for 0.6 2019-07-23 11:02:55 +02:00
setup.py tree-wide: move CLI into new west.app package 2020-01-22 07:36:31 -05:00
tox.ini tox.ini: run linter first 2020-01-22 07:36:31 -05:00
tox_deps.txt tests: call flake8 from tox 2019-01-09 11:21:05 -07:00

README.rst

This is the Zephyr RTOS meta tool, ``west``.

https://docs.zephyrproject.org/latest/guides/west/index.html

Installation
------------

Using pip::

  pip3 install west

(Use ``pip3 uninstall west`` to uninstall it.)

Basic Usage
-----------

West lets you manage multiple Git repositories under a single directory using a
single file, called the *west manifest file*, or *manifest* for short. The
manifest file is named ``west.yml``. You use ``west init`` to set up this
directory, then ``west update`` to fetch and/or update the repositories named
in the manifest.

By default, west uses `upstream Zephyr's manifest file
<https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/blob/master/west.yml>`_, but west
doesn't care if the manifest repository is a Zephyr tree or not.

For more details, see `Multiple Repository Management
<https://docs.zephyrproject.org/latest/guides/west/repo-tool.html>`_ in the
west documentation.

Example usage using the upstream manifest file::

  mkdir zephyrproject && cd zephyrproject
  west init
  west update

What just happened:

- ``west init`` clones the upstream *west manifest* repository, which in this
  case is the zephyr repository. The manifest repository contains ``west.yml``,
  a YAML description of the Zephyr installation, including Git repositories and
  other metadata.

- ``west update`` clones the other repositories named in the manifest file,
  creating working trees in the installation directory ``zephyrproject``.

Use ``west init -m`` to specify another manifest repository. Use ``--mr`` to
use a revision other than ``master``.

Additional Commands
-------------------

West has multiple sub-commands. After running ``west init``, you can
run them from anywhere under ``zephyrproject``.

For a list of available commands, run ``west -h``. Get help on a
command with ``west <command> -h``.

West is extensible: you can add new commands to west without modifying its
source code. See `Extensions
<https://docs.zephyrproject.org/latest/guides/west/extensions.html>`_ in the
documentation for details.

Running the Tests
-----------------

First, install tox::

  # macOS, Windows
  pip3 install tox

  # Linux
  pip3 install --user tox

Then, run the test suite locally from the top level directory::

  tox

See the tox configuration file, tox.ini, for more details.

Hacking on West
---------------

Installing from Source
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The `wheel`_ package is required to install west from source. See "Installing
Wheel" below if you don't have ``wheel`` installed.

To build the west wheel file::

  # macOS, Linux
  python3 setup.py bdist_wheel

  # Windows
  py -3 setup.py bdist_wheel

This will create a file named ``dist/west-x.y.z-py3-none-any.whl``,
where ``x.y.z`` is the current version in setup.py.

To install the wheel::

  pip3 install -U dist/west-x.y.z-py3-none-any.whl

You can ``pip3 uninstall west`` to remove this wheel before re-installing the
version from PyPI, etc.

Editable Install
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To run west "live" from the current source code tree, run this command from the
top level directory in the west repository::

  pip3 install -e .

This is useful if you are actively working on west and don't want to re-package
and install a wheel each time you run it.

Installing Wheel
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

On macOS and Windows, you can install wheel with::

  pip3 install wheel

That also works on Linux, but you may want to install wheel from your
system package manager instead -- e.g. if you installed pip from your
system package manager. The wheel package is likely named something
like ``python3-wheel`` in that case.

.. _wheel: https://wheel.readthedocs.io/en/latest/