This micropython module allows for automatic updating of your code on Microcontrollers using github releases. It allows you to update devices in the field with ease.
Note: due to a bug in the SSL library of ESP8266 devices, micropython-ota-updater cannot be used on these devices. See #6 and micropython/micropython#6737
- 2018/07/19 - First public release
- 2020/12/23 - Major rewrite adding support for M5Stack and low memory devices (I now can upgrade big projects with it on devices like M5Stack Core 1 which are very memory constraint) and it now also supports secrets files (which are kept during upgrades)
The workflow is as follows:
- You have a github repo where you host your micropython project
- In this project, you include all your source code in a certain folder (e.g.
app
) - You also include the ota_updater.py (https://github.com/rdehuyss/micropython-ota-updater)
- You control your releases with GitHub releases (if you want to deploy a new version, create a new GitHub release)
There are now two different ways to update your code:
You can choose to install a new version yourself. Note that due to memory limitations, this must happen first thing after boot.
To do so, make sure you have an active internet connection and use the following code at startup:
@staticmethod
def _otaUpdate():
ulogging.info('Checking for Updates...')
from .ota_updater import OTAUpdater
otaUpdater = OTAUpdater('https://github.com/rdehuyss/chicken-shed-mgr', github_src_dir='src', main_dir='app', secrets_file="secrets.py")
otaUpdater.install_update_if_available()
del(otaUpdater)
Do not forget to do a machine.reset() after the code above.
- whenever you feel fit, you ask the OTAUpdater (on my project this is after a hardware interrupt which starts up the WLAN) to check for a new version using
ota_updater.check_for_update_to_install_during_next_reboot()
- if a new version is present, the OTAUpdater generate a
next
folder and within that folder a file called.version_on_reboot
. After that, you do amachine.reset()
to kill the WIFI connection. - You use the following code in your
main.py
:from ota_update.main.ota_updater import OTAUpdater def download_and_install_update_if_available(): o = OTAUpdater('url-to-your-github-project') o.install_update_if_available_after_boot('wifi-ssid', 'wifi-password') def start(): # your custom code goes here. Something like this: ... # from main.x import YourProject # project = YourProject() # ... def boot(): download_and_install_update_if_available() start() boot()
- the OTAUpdater will check if there is a file called
next/.version_on_reboot
.- If so, it will initialize the WIFI connection, download the latest code, move it to the
app
folder. You then need to do amachine.reset()
. On reboot, the latest code will be in theapp
folder and you will be running the latest version. - If not, it will NOT initialize the WIFI connection and just start the existing code in the
app
folder
- If so, it will initialize the WIFI connection, download the latest code, move it to the
This module also adds support for private repositories. To do so, use it as follows:
token='YOUR_GITHUB_TOKEN'
updater = OTAUpdater('https://github.com/sergiuszm/cae_fipy', headers={'Authorization': 'token {}'.format(token)})
MicroPython OTA updater now also supports a secret file (which is added to .gitignore). This secrets file must be installed initially (e.g. using USB) and will always be kept when downloading newer versions. In my case, it contains the WIFI credentials and other secret stuff. A secrets file can be used as follows:
WIFI_SSID='your-ssid'
WIFI_PASSWORD='your-password'
See main.py on how it is then used.
See the article on Medium.
- Showerloop uses the micropython-ota-updater to get the latest release.
- Chicken Shed Mgr uses the micropython-ota-updater to get the latest release.