Fast part creation in KiCad and InvenTree
Project description
Ki-nTree
Fast part creation in KiCad and InvenTree
Demo Videos :fast_forward: Full Demo :fast_forward: KiCad Demo
Introduction
Ki-nTree (pronounced "Key Entry" or "Key 'n' Tree") aims to:
- automate part creation of KiCad library parts
- automate part creation of InvenTree parts
- synchronize parts data between KiCad and InvenTree
Ki-nTree works with:
- Digi-Key, Mouser and LCSC enormous part databases and free APIs
- the awesome open-source Digi-Key API python library built and maintained by @peeter123
- the Mouser Python API built and maintained by @eeintech
- the awesome open-source InvenTree Inventory Management System built and maintained by @SchrodingersGat
- KiCad (of course!) and their open-source library utils
Important Note
Because of limited maintenance bandwidth, Ki-nTree versions
0.5.x
and newer will only support KiCad version 6. To keep using Ki-nTree with KiCad version 5, use older0.4.x
versions (pip install kintree==0.4.8
).
Ki-nTree was developped by @eeintech for SPARK Microsystems, who generously accepted to make it open-source!
Get Started
Requirements
- Ki-nTree is currently tested for Python 3.8 to 3.10 versions.
- Ki-nTree requires a Digi-Key production API instance. To create one, go to https://developer.digikey.com/. Create an account, an organization and add a production API to your organization. Save both Client ID and Secret keys.
Here is a video to help with the different steps
- Ki-nTree requires a Mouser Search API key. To request one, head over to https://www.mouser.ca/api-search/ and click on "Sign Up for Search API"
Installation (system wide)
- Install using Pip
$ pip install -U kintree
- Run Ki-nTree
$ kintree
Run in virtual environment (contained)
Linux / MacOS
Create a virtual environment and activate it with:
$ python3 -m venv env-kintree
$ source env-kintree/bin/activate
Then follow the steps from the installation section.
Windows
In Git Bash, use the following commands to create and activate a virtual environment:
$ python3 -m venv env-kintree
$ source env-kintree/Scripts/activate
For any other Windows terminal, refer to the official documentation
Packages
Arch Linux
Ki-nTree is available on Arch Linux's AUR as python-kintree
.
Usage Instructions
Before Starting
If you intend to use Ki-nTree with InvenTree, this tool offers to setup the InvenTree category tree with a simple script that you can run as follow:
Warining: Before running it, make sure you have setup your category tree in your category settings file (
~/.config/kintree/user/categories.yaml
) according to your own preferences, else it will use the default setup.
$ python3 -m kintree.setup_inventree
If the InvenTree category tree is not setup before starting to use Ki-nTree, you will not be able to add parts to InvenTree.
InvenTree Permissions
Each InvenTree user has a set of permissions associated to them. Please refer to the InvenTree documentation to understand how to setup user permissions.
The minimum set of user/group permission required to add parts to InvenTree is:
- "Part - Add" to add InvenTree parts
- "Purchase Orders - Add" to add manufacturers, suppliers and their associated parts
If you wish to automatically add subcategories while creating InvenTree parts, you will need to enable the "Part Categories - Add" permission.
Note that each time you enable the "Add" permission to an object, InvenTree automatically enables the "Change" permission to that object too.
Settings
- With Ki-nTree GUI open, click on "Settings > Digi-Key" and fill in both Digi-Key API Client ID and Secret keys (optional: click on "Test" to get an API token)
- Click on "Settings > Mouser" and fill in the Mouser part search API key
- Click on "Settings > KiCad", browse to the location where KiCad symbol, template and footprint libraries are stored on your computer then click "Save"
- If you intend to use InvenTree with this tool, click on "Settings > InvenTree" and fill in your InvenTree server address and credentials then click "Save" (optional: click on "Test" to get an API token)
Get Digi-Key API token
Show steps (click to expand)
Enter your Digi-Key developper account credentials then login. The following page will appear (user@email.com
will show your email address):
Click on "Allow", another page will open.
Click on the "Advanced" button, then click on "Proceed to localhost (unsafe)" at the bottom of the page:
On Chrome, if the "Proceed to localhost (unsafe)" link does not appear, enable the following flag: chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost
Lastly, a new page will open with a "You may now close this window." message, proceed to get the token.
Part Number Search
Ki-nTree currently supports APIs for the following electronics suppliers: Digi-Key, Mouser and LCSC.
- In the main window, enter the part number and select the supplier in drop-down list, then click "CREATE". It will start by fetching part data using the supplier's API
- In the case Digi-Key has been selected and the API token is not found or expired, a browser window will pop-up. To get a new token: follow those steps
- Once the part data has been successfully fetched from the supplier's API, you will be prompted to add/confirm/edit the part information, followed by the
Category
andSubcategory
to use for this part (Ki-nTree tries to match them automatically) - Then, you will be prompted with selecting the KiCad symbol library, the template and the footprint library to use for this part
- It will take some time to complete the part creation in InvenTree and/or KiCad, once it finishes you'll be notified of the result
- Finally, if the part was created or found in InvenTree, your browser will automatically open a new tab with the part information
Enjoy!
For any problem/bug you find, please report an issue.
Development
Requirements
You need python>=3.8
and poetry
.
You can install poetry by following the instructions on its official website, by using pip install poetry
or by installing a package on your Linux distro.
Setup and run
- Clone this repository
$ git clone https://github.com/sparkmicro/Ki-nTree
- Install the requirements into a
poetry
-managed virtual environment
$ poetry install
Installing dependencies from lock file
...
Installing the current project: kintree (0.4.99)
Note: the version is not accurate (placeholder only)
- Run Ki-nTree in the virtual environment
$ poetry run python -m kintree_gui
or
$ poetry shell
$ python -m kintree_gui
Build
- Make sure you followed the previous installation steps, then run:
$ poetry build
Building kintree (0.4.99)
- Building sdist
- Built kintree-0.4.99.tar.gz
- Building wheel
- Built kintree-0.4.99-py3-none-any.whl
-
Exit the virtual environment (
Ctrl + D
on Linux; you can also close the terminal and reopen it in the same folder).Run
pip install dist/<wheel_file>.whl
with the file name from the previous step. For example:
pip install dist/kintree-0.4.99-py3-none-any.whl
- You can now start Ki-nTree by typing
kintree
in the terminal, provided that your python dist path is a part of your$PATH
.
Roadmap
Priority goes to implementing new features over GUI improvements
Open to new ideas and pull requests :smiley:
Versions 0.5.x or later
New Features
- Allow user to decide the category code to use for IPN
- Add "Synchronize" menu option to pull InvenTree parts data into KiCad
- Fetch Digi-Key price breakdowns and add them to Supplier Part (InvenTree)
- Add option to add as alternate (supplier part) to existing part
- Document configuration and backend
GUI
- Migrate to Qt? (see discussion)
- Create loading animation for API searches (asyncio)
License
The Ki-nTree source code is licensed under the GPL3.0 license as it uses source code under that license:
The KiCad templates are licensed under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 license which means that "you can copy, modify, distribute and perform the work, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission" (reference).
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