micropython/docs
Thorsten von Eicken 952ff8a8ea esp32: Improve support for OTA updates.
This commit adds several small items to improve the support for OTA
updates on an esp32:

- a partition table for 4MB flash modules that has two OTA partitions ready
  to go to do updates
- a GENERIC_OTA board that uses that partition table and that enables
  automatic roll-back in the bootloader
- a new esp32.Partition.mark_app_valid_cancel_rollback() class-method to
  signal that the boot is successful and should not be rolled back at the
  next reset
- an automated test for doing an OTA update
- documentation updates
2020-05-03 15:00:45 +10:00
..
develop docs/develop: Detail how to add symbols to mp_fun_table for native mods. 2020-02-16 00:04:25 +11:00
differences
esp32
esp8266
library esp32: Improve support for OTA updates. 2020-05-03 15:00:45 +10:00
pyboard
readthedocs/settings
reference esp8266: Change from FAT to littlefs v2 as default filesystem. 2020-04-04 16:30:36 +11:00
static
templates
unix windows: Improve default search path. 2020-02-11 13:34:35 +11:00
wipy
Makefile
README.md
conf.py
index.rst
license.rst
make.bat

README.md

MicroPython Documentation

The MicroPython documentation can be found at: http://docs.micropython.org/en/latest/

The documentation you see there is generated from the files in the docs tree: https://github.com/micropython/micropython/tree/master/docs

Building the documentation locally

If you're making changes to the documentation, you may want to build the documentation locally so that you can preview your changes.

Install Sphinx, and optionally (for the RTD-styling), sphinx_rtd_theme, preferably in a virtualenv:

 pip install sphinx
 pip install sphinx_rtd_theme

In micropython/docs, build the docs:

make html

You'll find the index page at micropython/docs/build/html/index.html.

Having readthedocs.org build the documentation

If you would like to have docs for forks/branches hosted on GitHub, GitLab or BitBucket an alternative to building the docs locally is to sign up for a free https://readthedocs.org account. The rough steps to follow are:

  1. sign-up for an account, unless you already have one
  2. in your account settings: add GitHub as a connected service (assuming you have forked this repo on github)
  3. in your account projects: import your forked/cloned micropython repository into readthedocs
  4. in the project's versions: add the branches you are developing on or for which you'd like readthedocs to auto-generate docs whenever you push a change

PDF manual generation

This can be achieved with:

make latexpdf

but require rather complete install of LaTeX with various extensions. On Debian/Ubuntu, try (500MB+ download):

apt-get install texlive-latex-recommended texlive-latex-extra