Skip to main content

CI/CD toolkit for flashing and testing embedded devices

Project description

bmlab-toolkit

Toolkit for flashing and testing embedded devices.

Features

  • Flash embedded devices (currently supports JLink)
  • List and detect connected programmers
  • Automatic STM32 device detection (F1/F4/F7/G0 series)
  • Support for multiple firmware formats (.hex, .bin)
  • Real-Time Transfer (RTT) support - Connect to device RTT for real-time communication
  • Single unified command-line interface
  • Extensible architecture for supporting additional programmers

Installation

pip install bmlab-toolkit

Usage

Command Line

List connected programmers:

bmlab-flash
# or specify programmer type
bmlab-flash --programmer jlink

Flash a device with auto-detected programmer (uses first available JLink):

bmlab-flash <firmware_file>

Flash with specific serial number:

bmlab-flash <firmware_file> --serial <serial_number>

Flash with specific MCU:

bmlab-flash <firmware_file> --mcu STM32F765ZG

Flash multiple devices via IP addresses (parallel):

bmlab-flash firmware.bin --ip 192.168.1.100 192.168.1.101 192.168.1.102 --mcu STM32F765ZG

Flash multiple devices via USB serial (sequential due to USB driver limitations):

bmlab-flash firmware.bin --serial 123456 789012 345678 --mcu STM32F103RE

Specify programmer explicitly:

bmlab-flash <firmware_file> --programmer jlink --serial 123456

Get help:

bmlab-flash --help

RTT (Real-Time Transfer)

Connect to RTT for real-time communication with the target device:

# Connect with auto-detection and read for 10 seconds
bmlab-rtt

# Specify programmer serial number
bmlab-rtt --serial 123456789

# Connect via IP address (no MCU needed)
bmlab-rtt --ip 192.168.1.100

# Specify MCU explicitly
bmlab-rtt --mcu STM32F765ZG

# Read indefinitely until Ctrl+C
bmlab-rtt -t 0

# Send message after connection
bmlab-rtt --msg "hello\n"

# Send message after custom delay
bmlab-rtt --msg "test" --msg-timeout 2.0

# Connect without resetting target
bmlab-rtt --no-reset

# Verbose output
bmlab-rtt -v

# Specify programmer explicitly (default: jlink)
bmlab-rtt --programmer jlink --serial 123456

# Monitor multiple devices via IP (parallel, saves logs to files)
bmlab-rtt --ip 192.168.1.100 192.168.1.101 192.168.1.102 --output-dir rtt_logs --timeout 10

# Monitor multiple devices via USB (sequential, saves logs to files)
bmlab-rtt --serial 123456 789012 --mcu STM32F103RE --output-dir rtt_logs --timeout 10

Note: Multiple devices require --output-dir. Logs are saved as rtt_192_168_1_100.log or rtt_serial_123456.log.

Get RTT help:

bmlab-rtt --help

Erasing Flash Memory

Erase flash memory on a device:

# Erase with auto-detected device
bmlab-erase --mcu STM32F103RE

# Erase specific device by serial
bmlab-erase --serial 123456 --mcu STM32F103RE

# Erase device via IP
bmlab-erase --ip 192.168.1.100 --mcu STM32F765ZG

# Erase multiple devices via IP (parallel)
bmlab-erase --ip 192.168.1.100 192.168.1.101 192.168.1.102 --mcu STM32F103RE

# Erase multiple devices via USB (sequential)
bmlab-erase --serial 123456 789012 345678 --mcu STM32F103RE

Scanning for Devices

Scan for USB-connected JLink devices:

bmlab-scan

Scan network for JLink Remote Servers:

# Scan entire network
bmlab-scan --network 192.168.1.0/24

# Scan specific IP range (last octet)
bmlab-scan --network 192.168.1.0/24 --start-ip 100 --end-ip 150

# With debug output
bmlab-scan --network 192.168.1.0/24 --log-level DEBUG

Python API

Flashing

from bmlab_toolkit import JLinkProgrammer

# Create programmer instance (auto-detect serial)
prog = JLinkProgrammer()

# Or specify serial number
prog = JLinkProgrammer(serial=123456789)

# Flash firmware (auto-detect MCU)
prog.flash("firmware.hex")

# Flash with specific MCU
prog.flash("firmware.hex", mcu="STM32F765ZG")

# Flash without reset
prog.flash("firmware.hex", reset=False)

RTT Communication

from bmlab_toolkit import JLinkProgrammer
import time

# Create programmer
prog = JLinkProgrammer(serial=123456789)

try:
    # Reset device (optional)
    prog.reset(halt=False)
    time.sleep(0.5)
    
    # Start RTT
    prog.start_rtt(delay=1.0)
    
    # Send data
    prog.rtt_write(b"Hello, device!\n")
    
    # Read data
    data = prog.rtt_read(max_bytes=4096)
    if data:
        print(data.decode('utf-8', errors='replace'))
    
    # Stop RTT
    prog.stop_rtt()
    
finally:
    # Disconnect
    prog._disconnect_target()

Development

# Install in editable mode with dev dependencies
pip install -e ".[dev]"

# Run tests
pytest

Currently Supported

Programmers

  • JLink (via pylink-square)

Devices

  • STM32F1 series (Low/Medium/High/XL density, Connectivity line)
  • STM32F4 series (F405/407/415/417, F427/429/437/439)
  • STM32F7 series (F74x/75x, F76x/77x)
  • STM32G0 series (G0x0, G0x1, G0Bx/G0Cx)

Roadmap

Planned Features

  • Device Testing - Automated testing capabilities

    • Run tests on connected devices
    • Collect and analyze test results via RTT
    • Generate test reports
  • Additional Programmers

    • ST-Link support
    • OpenOCD support
    • Custom programmer interfaces

Extending with New Programmers

The library is organized into functional modules:

  • constants.py - Programmer type constants
  • list_devices.py - Device detection and listing functionality
  • flashing.py - Flashing operations
  • jlink_device_detector.py - STM32-specific device detection

To add support for a new programmer:

  1. Add the programmer constant to src/bmlab_toolkit/constants.py:
PROGRAMMER_STLINK = "stlink"
SUPPORTED_PROGRAMMERS = [PROGRAMMER_JLINK, PROGRAMMER_STLINK]
  1. Implement device listing in src/bmlab_toolkit/list_devices.py:
def _get_stlink_devices() -> List[Dict[str, Any]]:
    # Implementation here
    pass

# Update get_connected_devices() function to handle new programmer
  1. Implement flashing function in src/bmlab_toolkit/flashing.py:
def _flash_with_stlink(serial: int, fw_file: str, mcu: str = None) -> None:
    # Implementation here
    pass

# Add case in flash_device_by_usb()
elif programmer_lower == PROGRAMMER_STLINK:
    _flash_with_stlink(serial, fw_file, mcu)
  1. Update documentation and tests

License

MIT

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

bmlab_toolkit-0.1.9.tar.gz (29.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

bmlab_toolkit-0.1.9-py3-none-any.whl (23.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file bmlab_toolkit-0.1.9.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: bmlab_toolkit-0.1.9.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 29.8 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.13.1

File hashes

Hashes for bmlab_toolkit-0.1.9.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 792fc6900a8a7e57f17f0776d17e918477a40c6a61766ae63ddb27c1e46b137f
MD5 e3bb403f032e5436cd13bda9962561db
BLAKE2b-256 f6a4c67225e8b7f08f308411f8b428df2b3ac15930f5d16a003e94313694d5a6

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file bmlab_toolkit-0.1.9-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: bmlab_toolkit-0.1.9-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 23.8 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.13.1

File hashes

Hashes for bmlab_toolkit-0.1.9-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 733c59163cc0cda51905743527d36a169c4df3a31afa40ff46e26d813b76a57e
MD5 84f52448358821a45c48cc29c402afcd
BLAKE2b-256 f8da6ec29f6bd8b7b6474888942ea7deb41041cfe9615722e29baebcb711f9cd

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page