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espressif logo

ESP-IDF Extension for VSCode

Tutorials Espressif Documentation Troubleshooting ESP32 Version Releases Forum

Develop, build, flash, monitor, debug and more with Espressif chips using Espressif IoT Development Framework (ESP-IDF).

Latest master installer for Visual Studio Code. You can use this VSIX to test the current github master of the extension by pressing F1 or click menu View -> Command Palette..., type Install from VSIX and then select the previously downloaded .vsix file to install the extension.

Make sure to review our Espressif documentation or Github documentation first to properly use the extension.

How to use

Install

  1. Download and install Visual Studio Code.

  2. Install ESP-IDF system prerequisites for your operating system:

  • Prerequisites for MacOS
  • Prerequisites for Linux
  • For Windows there is no additional prerequisites.
  1. In Visual Studio Code, Open the Extensions view by clicking on the Extension icon in the Activity Bar on the side of Visual Studio Code or the View: Extensions command (shortcut: X or Ctrl+Shift+X.

  2. Search for ESP-IDF Extension.

  3. Install the extension. After you install the extension, the Espressif icon should appear in the VS Code Activity bar (left side set of icons). When you click the Espressif icon you can see a list of the basic commands provided by this extension.

Commands list

  1. From the command list select Configure ESP-IDF Extension or press F1 and type Configure ESP-IDF Extension. After, choose the ESP-IDF: Configure ESP-IDF Extension option.

    NOTE: For versions of ESP-IDF < 5.0, spaces are not supported inside configured paths.

Select ESP-IDF

  1. Choose Express and select the download server:
  • Espressif: Faster speed in China using Espressif Download servers links.
  • Github: Using github releases links.
  1. Pick an ESP-IDF version to download or the Find ESP-IDF in your system option to search for existing ESP-IDF directory.

  2. Choose the location for ESP-IDF Tools (also known as IDF_TOOLS_PATH) which is $HOME\.espressif on MacOS/Linux and %USERPROFILE%\.espressif on Windows by default.

  3. If your operating system is MacOS/Linux, choose the system python executable to create ESP-IDF virtual environment inside ESP-IDF Tools and install ESP-IDF python package there.

    NOTE: Windows users don't need to select a python executable since it is going to be installed by this setup.

  4. Make sure that IDF_TOOLS_PATH doesn't have any spaces to avoid any build issues. Also make sure that IDF_TOOLS_PATH is not the same directory as IDF_PATH.

  5. You will see a page showing the setup progress status showing ESP-IDF download progress, ESP-IDF Tools download and install progress as well as the creation of a python virtual environment.

  6. If everything is installed correctly, you will see a message that all settings have been configured. You can start using the extension.

Check the Troubleshooting section if you have any issues.

Using the ESP-IDF Extension for VSCode

This extension provides a list of icons in the status bar (blue bar in the bottom of VS Code window) for ESP-IDF commands. You can see the command to be executed when you hover the icon.

Status bar

These icons will be used in the steps below showing common ESP-IDF use cases:

  1. Press F1 and type ESP-IDF: Show Examples Projects to create a new project from ESP-IDF examples. Select ESP-IDF and choose an example to create a new project from.

  2. Once the project is created and opened in VS Code, Set the serial port of your device by pressing status bar icon serial port or F1, typing ESP-IDF: Select Port to Use: and choosing the serial port your device is connected.

  3. Select an Espressif target (esp32, esp32s2, etc.) by pressing status bar icon IDF Target or F1 and type ESP-IDF: Set Espressif Device Target command.

  4. Next configure your ESP-IDF project by pressing status bar icon sdkconfig editor or press F1 and typing ESP-IDF: SDK Configuration Editor command (CTRL E G keyboard shortcut ) where you can modify the ESP-IDF project settings. After all changes are made, click save and close this window. You can see the output in the menu View -> Output and choose ESP-IDF from the dropdown list.

  5. (OPTIONAL) Run ESP-IDF: Run idf.py reconfigure task to generate the compile_commands.json file so language support works. Additionally you can configure the .vscode/c_cpp_properties.json as explained in C/C++ Configuration documentation.

  6. At this point you can modify the code and when the project is completed, build your project by pressing status bar icon build or press F1 and typing ESP-IDF: Build your Project.

  7. Flash to your device by pressing status bar icon flash or F1 and typing ESP-IDF: Flash your project to select either UART, DFU or JTAG depending on your serial connection, and start flashing the application to your device.

  8. Change the flash method pressing status bar icon flash method or F1 and typing ESP-IDF: Select Flash Method to select either UART, DFU or JTAG. You can alternatively use the ESP-IDF: Flash (UART) your Project, ESP-IDF: Flash (with JTag) or ESP-IDF: Flash (DFU) your project.

  9. Start a monitor by pressing status bar icon monitor or F1 and typing ESP-IDF: Monitor Device which will log the device activity in a Visual Studio Code terminal.

  10. Make sure to configure your drivers as mentioned in ESP-IDF Configure JTAG Interface documentation.

  11. Before debugging your device, select the device OpenOCD board configuration files by pressing F1 and typing ESP-IDF: Select OpenOCD Board Configuration. You can test the connection by pressing status bar icon openocd or F1 and typing ESP-IDF: OpenOCD Manager. The output is shown in the menu View -> Output and choose ESP-IDF from the dropdown list.

    NOTE: you can start or stop the OpenOCD from Visual Studio Code using the ESP-IDF: OpenOCD Manager command or from the OpenOCD Server (Running | Stopped) button in the visual studio code status bar.

  12. If you want to start a debug session, just press F5 (make sure you had at least build, flash and OpenOCD is connecting correctly so the debugger works correctly). The debug session output can be seen in the menu View -> Debug Console.

Check the Troubleshooting section if you have any issues.

Further reading

You can find a list of tutorials, commands and documentation about all features in depth below.

All Available commands

Click F1 or click menu View -> Command Palette... to show Visual studio code commands, then type ESP-IDF to see all possible extension commands.

Category Command Description Description Keyboard Shortcuts (Mac) Keyboard Shortcuts (Windows/ Linux)
Add Docker Container Configuration Add the .devcontainer files to the currently opened project directory, necessary to use a ESP-IDF project in a Docker container with Visual Studio Code Remote - Containers extension
Add vscode configuration folder Add .vscode files to the currently opened project directory. These include launch.json (for debugging), settings.json and c_cpp_properties.json for syntax highlight.
Configure ESP-IDF extension Open a window with a setup wizard to install ESP-IDF, IDF Tools and python virtual environment.
Select output and notification mode This extension shows many notifications and output in the Output window ESP-IDF. This command allows you to set if to show notifications, show output, both or none of them.
Select where to save configuration settings In Visual Studio Code settings can be saved in 3 places: User Settings (global settings), workspace ( .code-workspace file) or workspace folder (.vscode/settings.json). More information in working with multiple projects.
Pick a workspace folder when using a Visual Studio Code workspace with multiple workspace folders, this command allow you to select which workspace folder to use for this extension commands. More information in working with multiple projects.
Basic Show Examples Projects Launch UI to show examples from selected framework and allow you to create a project from them. This command will show frameworks already configured in the extension so if you want to see ESP-Rainmaker examples you need to run the Install ESP-Rainmaker first (or set the equivalent setting idf.espRainmakerPath) and then execute this command to see the examples.
Set Espressif device target This will set the target for the current project (IDF_TARGET). Similar to idf.py set-target. For example if you want to use ESP32 or ESP32-C3 you need to execute this command.
SDK Configuration editor Launch a UI to configure your ESP-IDF project settings. This is equivalent to idf.py menuconfig I G Ctrl E G
Build your project Build your project using `CMake` and `Ninja-build` as explained in ESP-IDF Build System Using Cmake Directly. You could modify the behavior of the build task with idf.cmakeCompilerArgs for Cmake configure step and idf.ninjaArgs for Ninja step. For example, using [-j N] where N is the number of jobs run in parallel. I B Ctrl E B
Size analysis of the binaries Launch UI with the ESP-IDF project binaries size information. I S Ctrl E S
Select port to use Select which serial port to use for ESP-IDF tasks like flashing or monitor your device. I P Ctrl E P
Flash your project Write binary data to the ESP’s flash chip from your current ESP-IDF project. This command will use either UART, DFU or JTAG based on idf.flashType I F Ctrl E F
Monitor device This command will execute idf.py monitor to start serial communication with Espressif device. Please take a look at the IDF Monitor Documentation. I M Ctrl E M
Open ESP-IDF Terminal Launch a terminal window configured with extension ESP-IDF settings. Similar to export.sh script from ESP-IDF CLI. I T Ctrl E T
Select OpenOCD Board Configuration Select the OpenOCD configuration files that match your Espressif device target. For example if you are using DevKitC or ESP-Wrover-Kit. This is necessary for flashing with JTAG or debugging your device.
Build, Flash and start a monitor on your device Build the project, write binaries program to device and start a monitor terminal with a single command. Similar to `idf.py build flash monitor` I D Ctrl E D
Project creation Show Examples Projects Launch UI to show examples from selected framework and allow you to create a project from them. This command will show frameworks already configured in the extension so if you want to see ESP-Rainmaker examples you need to run the Install ESP-Rainmaker first (or set the equivalent setting idf.espRainmakerPath) and then execute this command to see the examples.
Create project from Extension Template Create ESP-IDF using one of the extension template projects. I C Ctrl E C
Create New ESP-IDF Component Create a new component in the current directory based on ESP-IDF component template
Import ESP-IDF Project Import an existing ESP-IDF project and add .vscode and .devcontainer files to a new location and also able to rename the project.
New Project Launch UI with a ESP-IDF project creation wizard using examples templates from ESP-IDF and additional frameworks configured in the extension. I N Ctrl E N
Flashing Select Flash Method Select which flash method to use for Flash your project command. It can be DFU, JTAG or UART.
Flash your project Write binary data to the ESP’s flash chip from your current ESP-IDF project. This command will use either UART, DFU or JTAG based on idf.flashType I F Ctrl E F
Flash (DFU) your project Write binary data to the ESP’s flash chip from your current ESP-IDF project using DFU. Only for ESP32-S2 and ESP32-S3.
Flash (UART) your project Write binary data to the ESP’s flash chip from your current ESP-IDF project using esptool.py
Flash (with JTag) Write binary data to the ESP’s flash chip from your current ESP-IDF project using OpenOCD JTAG
Encrypt and Flash your Project Execute flashing the project program to device while adding --encrypt for partitions to be encrypted.
Erase Flash Memory from Device Execute esptool.py erase_flash command to erase flash chip (set to 0xFF bytes) I R Ctrl E R
Code coverage Add Editor coverage Parse your project GCOV Code coverage files to add color lines representing code coverage on currently opened source code file
Configure Project SDKConfig for Coverage Set required values in your project SDKConfig to enable Code Coverage
Get HTML Coverage Report for project Parse your project GCOV Code coverage files to generate a HTML coverage report.
Remove Editor coverage Remove editor colored lines from Add Editor coverage command
Additional frameworks Install ESP-ADF Clone ESP-ADF inside the selected directory and set idf.espAdfPath (idf.espAdfPathWin in Windows) configuration setting.
Add Arduino ESP32 as ESP-IDF Component Add Arduino-ESP32 as a ESP-IDF component in your current directory (${CURRENT_DIRECTORY}/components/arduino).
Install ESP-IDF Python Packages (DEPRECATION NOTICE) Install extension python packages. Deprecated will be removed soon.
Install ESP-MDF Clone ESP-MDF inside the selected directory and set idf.espMdfPath (idf.espMdfPathWin in Windows) configuration setting.
Install ESP-Matter Clone ESP-Matter and set idf.espMatterPath. The ESP-IDF: Set ESP-MATTER Device Path (ESP_MATTER_DEVICE_PATH) is used to define the device path for ESP-Matter. ESP-Matter is not supported in Windows. Make sure to install Matter system prerequisites first.
Set ESP-MATTER Device Path (ESP_MATTER_DEVICE_PATH) The ESP-IDF: Set ESP-MATTER Device Path (ESP_MATTER_DEVICE_PATH) is used to define the device path for ESP-Matter. ESP-Matter is not supported in Windows.
Install ESP-Rainmaker Clone ESP-Rainmaker and set idf.espRainmakerPath (idf.espRainmakerPathWin in Windows) configuration setting.
Install ESP-HomeKit-SDK Clone ESP-HomeKit-SDK inside the selected directory and set idf.espHomeKitSdkPath (idf.espHomeKitSdkPathWin in Windows) configuration setting.
eFuse Get eFuse Summary Get list of eFuse and values from currently serial port chip.
Clear eFuse Summary Clear the eFuse Summary tree from ESP Explorer EFUSEEXPLORER
QEMU Launch QEMU Server As described in QEMU documentation this command will execute ESP32 QEMU from the project Dockerfile with the current project binaries.
Launch QEMU Debug Session As described in QEMU documentation this command will start a debug session to ESP32 QEMU from the project Dockerfile with the current project binaries.
Monitor QEMU Device As described in QEMU documentation this command will start a terminal to monitor the ESP32 QEMU from the project Dockerfile with the current project binaries.
Monitoring Monitor device This command will execute idf.py monitor to start serial communication with Espressif device. Please take a look at the IDF Monitor Documentation. I M Ctrl E M
Launch IDF Monitor for CoreDump / GDB-Stub Mode Launch ESP-IDF Monitor with websocket capabilities. If you has configured the panic handler to gdbstub or core dump, the monitor will launch a post mortem debug session of the chip.
Monitor QEMU Device As described in QEMU documentation this command will start a terminal to monitor the ESP32 QEMU from the project Dockerfile with the current project binaries.
Editors NVS Partition Editor Launch UI to create a CSV file for ESP_IDF Non Volatile Storage
Partition Table Editor Launch UI to manage custom partition table as described in ESP_IDF Partition Table
SDK Configuration editor Launch a UI to configure your ESP-IDF project settings. This is equivalent to idf.py menuconfig I G Ctrl E G
Unit Testing Unit Test: Build and flash unit test app for testing Copy the unit test app in the current project, build the current project and flash the unit test application to the connected device. More information in Unit testing documentation
Unit Test: Install ESP-IDF PyTest requirements Install the ESP-IDF Pytest requirements packages to be able to execute ESP-IDF Unit tests. More information in
Scripts and Tools Run idf.py reconfigure task This command will execute idf.py reconfigure (CMake configure task). Useful when you need to generate compile_commands.json for the C/C++ language support.
Erase Flash Memory from Device Execute esptool.py erase_flash command to erase flash chip (set to 0xFF bytes) I R Ctrl E R
Dispose Current SDK Configuration Editor Server Process If you already executed the SDK Configuration editor, a cache process will remain in the background for faster re opening. This command will dispose of such cache process.
Doctor Command Run a diagnostic of the extension setup settings and extension logs to provide a troubleshooting report.
Troubleshoot Form Launch UI for user to send a troubleshoot report with steps to reproduce, run a diagnostic of the extension setup settings and extension logs to send to telemetry backend.
Run ESP-IDF-SBOM vulnerability check Creates Software bill of materials (SBOM) files in the Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) format for applications generated by the Espressif IoT Development Framework (ESP-IDF).
Save Default SDKCONFIG file (save-defconfig) Generate sdkconfig.defaults files using the project current sdkconfig file.
Show Ninja Build Summary Execute the Chromium ninja-build-summary.py
Search in documentation... Select some text from your source code file and search in ESP-IDF documentation with results right in the vscode ESP-IDF Explorer tab. I Q Ctrl E Q
Search Error Hint Type some text to find a matching error from ESP-IDF hints dictionary.
Clear ESP-IDF Search Results Clear results from ESP Explorer Documentation Search Results
Clear Saved ESP-IDF Setups Clear existing esp-idf setups saved by the extension.

Commands for tasks.json and launch.json

We have implemented some utilities commands that can be used in tasks.json and launch.json that can be used like:

"miDebuggerPath": "${command:espIdf.getToolchainGdb}"
  • espIdf.getExtensionPath: Get the installed location absolute path.
  • espIdf.getOpenOcdScriptValue: Return the value of OPENOCD_SCRIPTS computed from ESP-IDF Tools path or from idf.customExtraVars or from system OPENOCD_SCRIPTS environment variable.
  • espIdf.getOpenOcdConfig: Return the openOCD configuration files as string. Example -f interface/ftdi/esp32_devkitj_v1.cfg -f board/esp32-wrover.cfg.
  • espIdf.getProjectName: Return the project name from current workspace folder build/project_description.json.
  • espIdf.getToolchainGcc: Return the absolute path of the toolchain gcc for the ESP-IDF target given by current IDF_TARGET in sdkconfig.
  • espIdf.getToolchainGdb: Return the absolute path of the toolchain gdb for the ESP-IDF target given by current IDF_TARGET in sdkconfig.

See an example in the debugging documentation.

Available Tasks in tasks.json

A template Tasks.json is included when creating a project using ESP-IDF: Create Project from Extension Template. These tasks can be executed by running F1, writing Tasks: Run task and selecting one of the following:

  1. Build - Build Project
  2. Set Target to esp32
  3. Set Target to esp32s2
  4. Clean - Clean the project
  5. Flash - Flash the device
  6. Monitor - Start a monitor terminal
  7. OpenOCD - Start the OpenOCD server
  8. BuildFlash - Execute a build followed by a flash command.

Note that for OpenOCD tasks you need to define OpenOCD_SCRIPTS in your system environment variables with OpenOCD scripts folder path.

Troubleshooting

If something is not working please check for any error on one of these:

NOTE: Use idf.OpenOCDDebugLevel configuration setting to 3 or more to show debug logging in OpenOCD server output.

NOTE: Use logLevel in your /.vscode/launch.json to 3 or more to show more debug adapter output.

  1. In Visual Studio Code select menu View > Output > ESP-IDF. This output information is useful to know what is happening in the extension.
  2. In Visual Studio Code select menu View > Command Palette... and type ESP-IDF: Doctor Command to generate a report of your environment configuration and it will be copied in your clipboard to paste anywhere.
  3. Check log file which can be obtained from:
  • Windows: %USERPROFILE%\.vscode\extensions\espressif.esp-idf-extension-VERSION\esp_idf_vsc_ext.log
  • Linux & MacOSX: $HOME/.vscode/extensions/espressif.esp-idf-extension-VERSION/esp_idf_vsc_ext.log
  1. In Visual Studio Code, select menu Help > Toggle Developer Tools and copy any error in the Console tab related to this extension.

  2. Make sure that your extension is properly configured as described in JSON Manual Configuration. Visual Studio Code allows you to configure settings at different levels: Global (User Settings), Workspace and Workspace Folder so make sure your project has the right settings. The ESP-IDF: Doctor command result might give the values from user settings instead of the workspace folder settings.

  3. Review the OpenOCD troubleshooting FAQ related to the OpenOCD output, for application tracing, debug or any OpenOCD related issues.

  4. In some cases that the default shell (Powershell, zsh, sh, .etc) configured in VS Code could affect the behavior of the extension. Make sure that MSYS/MinGW is not set in the environment and the variables don't conflict with terminal behavior. The ESP-IDF: Doctor Command shows which shell is detected by the extension when running tasks like build flash and monitor. More information in here.

If there is any Python package error, please try to reinstall the required python packages with the ESP-IDF: Install ESP-IDF Python Packages command or running the setup again with the ESP-IDF: Configure ESP-IDF Extension command.

NOTE: When downloading ESP-IDF using git cloning in Windows if you receive errors like "unable to create symlink", enabling Developer Mode while cloning ESP-IDF could help resolve the issue.

If you can't resolve the error, please search in the github repository issues for existing errors or open a new issue here.

Code of Conduct

This project and everyone participating in it is governed by the Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to [email protected].

License

This extension is licensed under the Apache License 2.0. Please see the LICENSE file for additional copyright notices and terms.

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