This is a repository of libraries designed to be useful for writing MicroPython applications.
 
 
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Damien George dedf328503 fnmatch: Remove dependency on posixpath module.
In micropython-lib, os.path.normcase is already a no-op.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2020-07-07 19:09:59 +10:00
__future__
_libc
_markupbase
abc
argparse
array
asyncio
asyncio_slow
base64
binascii
binhex
bisect
calendar
cgi
cmd
code
codecs
codeop
collections
collections.defaultdict
collections.deque
concurrent.futures
contextlib
copy
cpython-uasyncio
csv
curses
curses.ascii
datetime
dbm
decimal
difflib
dis
dummy_threading
email.charset
email.encoders
email.errors
email.feedparser
email.header
email.internal
email.message
email.parser
email.utils
errno
fcntl
ffilib
fnmatch
formatter
fractions
ftplib
functools
getopt
getpass
gettext
glob
gzip
hashlib
heapq
hmac
html
html.entities
html.parser
http.client
imaplib
imp
importlib
inspect
io
ipaddress
itertools
json
keyword
linecache
locale
logging
machine
mailbox
mailcap
math
mimetypes
multiprocessing
nntplib
numbers
operator
optparse
os
os.path
pathlib
pdb
pickle
pickletools
pkg_resources
pkgutil
platform
poplib
posixpath
pprint
profile
pty
pwd
pyb
pystone
pystone_lowmem
queue
quopri
random
re-pcre
readline
reprlib
runpy
sched
select
selectors
shelve
shlex
shutil
signal
smtplib
socket
socketserver
sqlite3
ssl
stat
statistics
string
stringprep
struct
subprocess
sys
tarfile
telnetlib
tempfile
test
test.pystone
test.support
textwrap
threading
time
timeit
trace
traceback
tty
types
typing
uaiohttpclient
uasyncio
uasyncio.core
uasyncio.queues
uasyncio.synchro
uasyncio.udp
uasyncio.websocket.server
ucontextlib
ucurses
udnspkt
umqtt.robust
umqtt.simple
unicodedata
unittest
upip
upysh
urequests
urllib
urllib.parse
urllib.urequest
utarfile
uu
uuid
venv
warnings
weakref
xmltok
zipfile
zlib
.gitignore
CONTRIBUTING.md
LICENSE
Makefile
README.md
make_metadata.py
optimize_upip.py
sdist_upip.py

README.md

micropython-lib

micropython-lib is a project to develop a non-monolothic standard library for "advanced" MicroPython fork (https://github.com/pfalcon/micropython). Each module or package is available as a separate distribution package from PyPI. Each module comes from one of the following sources (and thus each module has its own licensing terms):

  • written from scratch specifically for MicroPython
  • ported from CPython
  • ported from some other Python implementation, e.g. PyPy
  • some modules actually aren't implemented yet and are dummy

Note that the main target of micropython-lib is a "Unix" port of the aforementioned fork of MicroPython. Actual system requirements vary per module. Majority of modules are compatible with the upstream MicroPython, though some may require additional functionality/optimizations present in the "advanced" fork. Modules not related to I/O may also work without problems on bare-metal ports, not just on "Unix" port (e.g. pyboard).

Usage

micropython-lib packages are published on PyPI (Python Package Index), the standard Python community package repository: https://pypi.org/ . On PyPI, you can search for MicroPython related packages and read additional package information. By convention, all micropython-lib package names are prefixed with "micropython-" (the reverse is not true - some package starting with "micropython-" aren't part of micropython-lib and were released by 3rd parties).

Browse available packages via this URL.

To install packages from PyPI for usage on your local system, use the upip tool, which is MicroPython's native package manager, similar to pip, which is used to install packages for CPython. upip is bundled with MicroPython "Unix" port (i.e. if you build "Unix" port, you automatically have upip tool). Following examples assume that micropython binary is available on your PATH:

$ micropython -m upip install micropython-pystone
...
$ micropython
>>> import pystone
>>> pystone.main()
Pystone(1.2) time for 50000 passes = 0.534
This machine benchmarks at 93633 pystones/second

Run micropython -m upip --help for more information about upip.

Development

To install modules during development, use make install. By default, all available packages will be installed. To install a specific module, add the MOD=<module> parameter to the end of the make install command.

If you would like to trace evolution of MicroPython packaging support, you may find following links useful (note that they may contain outdated information):

Guidelines for packaging MicroPython modules for PyPI: