M5Stack
The m5stack is a development board based on the Espressif ESP32 a powerful chip that is used on many different board mostly because of the built-in radio that can be used for WiFi or Bluetooth wireless connections.
Interfaces
Interface | Hardware Supported | TinyGo Support |
---|---|---|
GPIO | YES | YES |
UART | YES | YES |
SPI | YES | YES |
I2C | YES | Not yet |
ADC | YES | Not yet |
PWM | YES | Not yet |
USBDevice | NO | NO |
WiFi | YES | Not Yet |
Bluetooth | YES | Not yet |
Pins
Pin | Hardware pin | Alternative names |
---|---|---|
IO0 |
GPIO0 |
|
IO1 |
GPIO1 |
UART0_TX_PIN , UART_TX_PIN |
IO2 |
GPIO2 |
|
IO3 |
GPIO3 |
UART0_RX_PIN , UART_RX_PIN |
IO4 |
GPIO4 |
SDCARD_SS_PIN |
IO5 |
GPIO5 |
|
IO6 |
GPIO6 |
|
IO7 |
GPIO7 |
|
IO8 |
GPIO8 |
|
IO9 |
GPIO9 |
|
IO10 |
GPIO10 |
|
IO11 |
GPIO11 |
|
IO12 |
GPIO12 |
|
IO13 |
GPIO13 |
|
IO14 |
GPIO14 |
SPI0_CS0_PIN , LCD_SS_PIN |
IO15 |
GPIO15 |
|
IO16 |
GPIO16 |
UART1_RX_PIN |
IO17 |
GPIO17 |
UART1_TX_PIN |
IO18 |
GPIO18 |
SPI0_SCK_PIN , LCD_SCK_PIN , SDCARD_SCK_PIN |
IO19 |
GPIO19 |
SPI0_SDI_PIN , LCD_SDI_PIN , SDCARD_SDI_PIN |
IO21 |
GPIO21 |
SDA0_PIN , SDA_PIN |
IO22 |
GPIO22 |
SCL0_PIN , SCL_PIN |
IO23 |
GPIO23 |
SPI0_SDO_PIN , LCD_SDO_PIN , SDCARD_SDO_PIN |
IO25 |
GPIO25 |
SPEAKER_PIN , DAC1 |
IO26 |
GPIO26 |
DAC2 |
IO27 |
GPIO27 |
LCD_DC_PIN |
IO32 |
GPIO32 |
LCD_BL_PIN |
IO33 |
GPIO33 |
LCD_RST_PIN |
IO34 |
GPIO34 |
|
IO35 |
GPIO35 |
ADC1 |
IO36 |
GPIO36 |
ADC2 |
IO37 |
GPIO37 |
BUTTON_C |
IO38 |
GPIO38 |
BUTTON_B |
IO39 |
GPIO39 |
BUTTON_A , BUTTON |
Machine Package Docs
Documentation for the machine package for the M5Stack Core2
Flashing
CLI Flashing on Linux
You need to install the esptool
flashing tool:
https://github.com/espressif/esptool#easy-installation
Now you should be able to flash your board as follows:
-
Plug your ESP32 board into your computer’s USB port.
-
Build and flash your TinyGo code using the
tinygo flash
command. This command flashes the ESP32 with the serial example:tinygo flash -target=m5stack -port=/dev/ttyUSB0 examples/serial
-
The ESP32 board should restart and then begin running your program.
CLI Flashing on macOS
You need to install the esptool
flashing tool:
https://github.com/espressif/esptool#easy-installation
Now you should be able to flash your board as follows:
-
Plug your ESP32 board into your computer’s USB port.
-
Build and flash your TinyGo code using the
tinygo flash
command. This command flashes the ESP32 with the serial example:tinygo flash -target=m5stack examples/serial
-
The ESP32 board should restart and then begin running your program.
CLI Flashing on Windows
You need to install the esptool
flashing tool:
https://github.com/espressif/esptool#easy-installation
Now you should be able to flash your board as follows:
-
Plug your ESP32 board into your computer’s USB port.
-
Build and flash your TinyGo code using the
tinygo flash
command. This command flashes the ESP32 with the serial example:tinygo flash -target=m5stack examples/serial
-
The ESP32 board should restart and then begin running your program.
Troubleshooting
Goes here
Notes
Goes here