This commit updates the esp32 port to work exclusively with ESP-IDF v5.
IDF v5 is needed for some of the newer ESP32 SoCs to work, and it also
cleans up a lot of the inconsistencies between existing SoCs (eg S2, S3,
and C3).
Support for IDF v4 is dropped because it's a lot of effort to maintain both
versions at the same time.
The following components have been verified to work on the various SoCs:
ESP32 ESP32-S2 ESP32-S3 ESP32-C3
build pass pass pass pass
SPIRAM pass pass pass N/A
REPL (UART) pass pass pass pass
REPL (USB) N/A pass pass N/A
filesystem pass pass pass pass
GPIO pass pass pass pass
SPI pass pass pass pass
I2C pass pass pass pass
PWM pass pass pass pass
ADC pass pass pass pass
WiFi STA pass pass pass pass
WiFi AP pass pass pass pass
BLE pass N/A pass pass
ETH pass -- -- --
PPP pass pass pass --
sockets pass pass pass pass
SSL pass ENOMEM pass pass
RMT pass pass pass pass
NeoPixel pass pass pass pass
I2S pass pass pass N/A
ESPNow pass pass pass pass
ULP-FSM pass pass pass N/A
SDCard pass N/A N/A pass
WDT pass pass pass pass
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
When the network module was first introduced in the esp8266 port in
ee3fec3167 there was only one interface (STA)
and, to save flash, the WLAN object was aliased to the network module,
which had just static methods for WLAN operations. This was subsequently
changed in 9e8396accb when the AP interface
was introduced, and the WLAN object became a true class.
But, network.WLAN remained a function that returned either the STA or AP
object and was never upgraded to the type itself. This scheme was then
copied over to the esp32 port when it was first introduced.
This commit changes network.WLAN from a function to a reference to the WLAN
type. This makes it consistent with other ports and network objects, and
allows accessing constants of network.WLAN without creating an instance.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Rather than duplicating the implementation of `network`, this allows ESP32
to use the shared one in extmod. In particular this gains access to
network.hostname and network.country.
Set default hostnames for various ESP32 boards.
Other than adding these two methods and the change to the default hostname,
there is no other user-visible change.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>