ST7789 Driver for MicroPython ============================= Overview -------- This is a driver for MicroPython to handle cheap displays based on ST7789 chip.

ST7789 display photo

It supports both 240x240 and 135x240 variants of displays. It is written in pure C, so you have to build firmware by yourself. ESP8266, ESP32, and STM32 ports are supported for now. Building instruction --------------------- Prepare build tools as described in the manual. You should follow the instruction for building MicroPython and ensure that you can build the firmware without this display module. Clone this module alongside the MPY sources: git clone https://github.com/devbis/st7789_mpy.git Go to MicroPython ports directory and for ESP8266 run: cd micropython/ports/esp8266 for ESP32: cd micropython/ports/esp32 And then compile the module with specified USER_C_MODULES dir make USER_C_MODULES=../../../st7789_mpy/ all If you have other user modules, copy the st7789_driver/st7789 to the user modules directory Upload the resulting firmware to your MCU as usual with esptool.py (See [MicroPython docs](http://docs.micropython.org/en/latest/esp8266/tutorial/intro.html#deploying-the-firmware) for more info) make deploy Working examples ---------------- This module was tested on ESP32 and ESP8266 MCUs. You have to provide `machine.SPI` object and at least two pins for RESET and DC pins on the screen for the display object. # ESP 8266 import machine import st7789 spi = machine.SPI(1, baudrate=40000000, polarity=1) display = st7789.ST7789(spi, 240, 240, reset=machine.Pin(5, machine.Pin.OUT), dc=machine.Pin(4, machine.Pin.OUT)) display.init() For ESP32 modules you have to provide specific pins for SPI. Unfortunately, I was unable to run this display on SPI(1) interface. For machine.SPI(2) == VSPI you have to use - CLK: Pin(18) - MOSI: Pin(23) Other SPI pins are not used. # ESP32 import machine import st7789 spi = machine.SPI(2, baudrate=40000000, polarity=1, sck=machine.Pin(18), mosi=machine.Pin(23)) display = st7789.ST7789(spi, 240, 240, reset=machine.Pin(4, machine.Pin.OUT), dc=machine.Pin(2, machine.Pin.OUT)) display.init() I couldn't run the display on an SPI with baudrate higher than 40MHZ Also, the driver was tested on STM32 board: # STM32 import machine import st7789 spi = machine.SPI(2, baudrate=12000000, polarity=1) display = st7789.ST7789(spi, 135, 240, reset=machine.Pin('B3', machine.Pin.OUT), dc=machine.Pin('B6', machine.Pin.OUT)) display.init() Methods ------------- This driver supports only 16bit colors in RGB565 notation. - `ST7789.fill(color)` Fill the entire display with the specified color. - `ST7789.pixel(x, y, color)` Set the specified pixel to the given color. - `ST7789.line(x0, y0, x1, y1, color)` Draws a single line with the provided `color` from (`x0`, `y0`) to (`x1`, `y1`). - `ST7789.hline(x, y, length, color)` Draws a single horizontal line with the provided `color` and `length` in pixels. Along with `vline`, this is a fast version with reduced number of SPI calls. - `ST7789.vline(x, y, length, color)` Draws a single horizontal line with the provided `color` and `length` in pixels. - `ST7789.rect(x, y, width, height, color)` Draws a rectangle from (`x`, `y`) with corresponding dimensions - `ST7789.fill_rect(x, y, width, height, color)` Fill a rectangle starting from (`x`, `y`) coordinates - `ST7789.blit_buffer(buffer, x, y, width, height)` Copy bytes() or bytearray() content to the screen internal memory. Note: every color requires 2 bytes in the array Also, the module exposes predefined colors: `BLACK`, `BLUE`, `RED`, `GREEN`, `CYAN`, `MAGENTA`, `YELLOW`, and `WHITE` Helper functions ---------------- - `color565(r, g, b)` Pack a color into 2-bytes rgb565 format - `map_bitarray_to_rgb565(bitarray, buffer, width, color=WHITE, bg_color=BLACK)` Convert a bitarray to the rgb565 color buffer which is suitable for blitting. Bit 1 in bitarray is a pixel with `color` and 0 - with `bg_color`. This is a helper with a good performance to print text with a high resolution font. You can use an awesome tool https://github.com/peterhinch/micropython-font-to-py to generate a bitmap fonts from .ttf and use them as a frozen bytecode from the ROM memory. Performance ----------- For the comparison I used an excellent library for Arduino that can handle this screen. https://github.com/ananevilya/Arduino-ST7789-Library/ Also, I used my slow driver for this screen, written in pure python. https://github.com/devbis/st7789py_mpy/ I used these modules to draw a line from 0,0 to 239,239 The table represents the time in milliseconds for each case | | Arduino-ST7789 | st7789py_mpy | st7789_mpy | |---------|----------------|--------------|---------------| | ESP8266 | 26 | 450 | 12 | | ESP32 | 23 | 450 | 47 | As you can see, the ESP32 module draws a line 4 times slower than the older ESP8266 module. Troubleshooting --------------- #### Overflow of iram1_0_seg When building a firmware for esp8266 you can see this failure message from the linker: LINK build/firmware.elf xtensa-lx106-elf-ld: build/firmware.elf section `.text' will not fit in region `iram1_0_seg' xtensa-lx106-elf-ld: region `iram1_0_seg' overflowed by 292 bytes Makefile:192: recipe for target 'build/firmware.elf' failed To fix this issue, you have to put st7789 module to irom0 section. Edit `esp8266_common.ld` file in the `ports/esp8266` dir and add a line *st7789/*.o(.literal* .text*) in the `.irom0.text : ALIGN(4)` section #### Unsupported dimensions This driver supports only 240x240 and 135x240 pixel displays. If you have a display with an unsupported resolution, you can pass `xstart` and `ystart` parameters to the display constructor to set the required offsets.