# # Please run the following command for opening a page with more information about this configuration file: # idf.py docs -sp api-reference/kconfig.html # mainmenu "Espressif IoT Development Framework Configuration" orsource "./components/soc/$IDF_TARGET/include/soc/Kconfig.soc_caps.in" config IDF_CMAKE bool default "y" config IDF_ENV_FPGA bool option env="IDF_ENV_FPGA" help - This option is for internal use only. - Enabling this option will help enable all FPGA support so as to run ESP-IDF on an FPGA. This can help reproduce some issues that only happens on FPGA condition, or when you have to burn some efuses multiple times. config IDF_ENV_BRINGUP bool help - This option is ONLY used when doing new chip bringup. - This option will only enable necessary hw / sw settings for running a hello_world application. config IDF_CI_BUILD bool default y if "$(IDF_CI_BUILD)" = "y" || "$(IDF_CI_BUILD)" = 1 config IDF_DOC_BUILD bool default y if "$(IDF_DOC_BUILD)" = "y" || "$(IDF_DOC_BUILD)" = 1 config IDF_TOOLCHAIN # This option records the IDF target when sdkconfig is generated the first time. # It is not updated if environment variable $IDF_TOOLCHAIN changes later, and # the build system is responsible for detecting the mismatch between # CONFIG_IDF_TOOLCHAIN and $IDF_TOOLCHAIN. string default "$IDF_TOOLCHAIN" config IDF_TOOLCHAIN_CLANG bool default "y" if IDF_TOOLCHAIN="clang" config IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV bool default "n" config IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA bool default "n" config IDF_TARGET_ARCH string default "riscv" if IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV default "xtensa" if IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA config IDF_TARGET # This option records the IDF target when sdkconfig is generated the first time. # It is not updated if environment variable $IDF_TARGET changes later, and # the build system is responsible for detecting the mismatch between # CONFIG_IDF_TARGET and $IDF_TARGET. string default "$IDF_TARGET" config IDF_INIT_VERSION # This option records the IDF version when sdkconfig is generated the first time. # It is not updated if environment variable $IDF_VERSION changes later string default "$IDF_INIT_VERSION" config IDF_TARGET_LINUX bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="linux" config IDF_TARGET_ESP32 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32" select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA config IDF_TARGET_ESP32S2 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32s2" select FREERTOS_UNICORE select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA config IDF_TARGET_ESP32S3 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32s3" select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C3 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32c3" select FREERTOS_UNICORE select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C2 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32c2" select FREERTOS_UNICORE select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C6 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32c6" select FREERTOS_UNICORE select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32c5" select FREERTOS_UNICORE select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV # TODO: IDF-9197 choice IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5_VERSION prompt "ESP32-C5 version" depends on IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5 default IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5_MP_VERSION help ESP32-C5 will support two versions for a period. This option is for internal use only. Select the one that matches your chip model. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5_BETA3_VERSION bool prompt "ESP32-C5 beta3" select ESPTOOLPY_NO_STUB config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5_MP_VERSION bool prompt "ESP32-C5 MP" select ESPTOOLPY_NO_STUB select IDF_ENV_FPGA endchoice config IDF_TARGET_ESP32P4 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32p4" select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV config IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32h2" select FREERTOS_UNICORE select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C61 bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32c61" select FREERTOS_UNICORE select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV select IDF_ENV_FPGA config IDF_TARGET_LINUX bool default "y" if IDF_TARGET="linux" config IDF_FIRMWARE_CHIP_ID hex default 0x0000 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32 default 0x0002 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32S2 default 0x0005 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32C3 default 0x0009 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32S3 default 0x000C if IDF_TARGET_ESP32C2 default 0x000D if IDF_TARGET_ESP32C6 default 0x0010 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2 default 0x0012 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32P4 default 0x0011 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5 && IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5_BETA3_VERSION # TODO: IDF-9197 default 0x0017 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5 && IDF_TARGET_ESP32C5_MP_VERSION # TODO: IDF-9197 default 0x0014 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32C61 default 0xFFFF menu "Build type" choice APP_BUILD_TYPE prompt "Application build type" default APP_BUILD_TYPE_APP_2NDBOOT help Select the way the application is built. By default, the application is built as a binary file in a format compatible with the ESP-IDF bootloader. In addition to this application, 2nd stage bootloader is also built. Application and bootloader binaries can be written into flash and loaded/executed from there. Another option, useful for only very small and limited applications, is to only link the .elf file of the application, such that it can be loaded directly into RAM over JTAG or UART. Note that since IRAM and DRAM sizes are very limited, it is not possible to build any complex application this way. However for some kinds of testing and debugging, this option may provide faster iterations, since the application does not need to be written into flash. Note: when APP_BUILD_TYPE_RAM is selected and loaded with JTAG, ESP-IDF does not contain all the startup code required to initialize the CPUs and ROM memory (data/bss). Therefore it is necessary to execute a bit of ROM code prior to executing the application. A gdbinit file may look as follows (for ESP32): # Connect to a running instance of OpenOCD target remote :3333 # Reset and halt the target mon reset halt # Run to a specific point in ROM code, # where most of initialization is complete. thb *0x40007d54 c # Load the application into RAM load # Run till app_main tb app_main c Execute this gdbinit file as follows: xtensa-esp32-elf-gdb build/app-name.elf -x gdbinit Example gdbinit files for other targets can be found in tools/test_apps/system/gdb_loadable_elf/ When loading the BIN with UART, the ROM will jump to ram and run the app after finishing the ROM startup code, so there's no additional startup initialization required. You can use the `load_ram` in esptool.py to load the generated .bin file into ram and execute. Example: esptool.py --chip {chip} -p {port} -b {baud} --no-stub load_ram {app.bin} Recommended sdkconfig.defaults for building loadable ELF files is as follows. CONFIG_APP_BUILD_TYPE_RAM is required, other options help reduce application memory footprint. CONFIG_APP_BUILD_TYPE_RAM=y CONFIG_VFS_SUPPORT_TERMIOS= CONFIG_NEWLIB_NANO_FORMAT=y CONFIG_ESP_SYSTEM_PANIC_PRINT_HALT=y CONFIG_ESP_DEBUG_STUBS_ENABLE= CONFIG_ESP_ERR_TO_NAME_LOOKUP= config APP_BUILD_TYPE_APP_2NDBOOT bool prompt "Default (binary application + 2nd stage bootloader)" depends on !IDF_TARGET_LINUX select APP_BUILD_GENERATE_BINARIES select APP_BUILD_BOOTLOADER select APP_BUILD_USE_FLASH_SECTIONS config APP_BUILD_TYPE_RAM bool prompt "Build app runs entirely in RAM (EXPERIMENTAL)" select APP_BUILD_GENERATE_BINARIES endchoice # APP_BUILD_TYPE # Hidden options, set according to the choice above config APP_BUILD_GENERATE_BINARIES bool # Whether to generate .bin files or not config APP_BUILD_BOOTLOADER bool # Whether to build the bootloader config APP_BUILD_TYPE_PURE_RAM_APP bool prompt "Build app without SPI_FLASH/PSRAM support (saves ram)" depends on APP_BUILD_TYPE_RAM help If this option is enabled, external memory and related peripherals, such as Cache, MMU, Flash and PSRAM, won't be initialized. Corresponding drivers won't be introduced either. Components that depend on the spi_flash component will also be unavailable, such as app_update, etc. When this option is enabled, about 26KB of RAM space can be saved. config APP_BUILD_USE_FLASH_SECTIONS bool # Whether to place code/data into memory-mapped flash sections config APP_REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD bool "Enable reproducible build" default n select COMPILER_HIDE_PATHS_MACROS help If enabled, all date, time, and path information would be eliminated. A .gdbinit file would be create automatically. (or will be append if you have one already) config APP_NO_BLOBS bool "No Binary Blobs" default n help If enabled, this disables the linking of binary libraries in the application build. Note that after enabling this Wi-Fi/Bluetooth will not work. config APP_COMPATIBLE_PRE_V2_1_BOOTLOADERS bool "App compatible with bootloaders before ESP-IDF v2.1" select APP_COMPATIBLE_PRE_V3_1_BOOTLOADERS depends on IDF_TARGET_ESP32 default n help Bootloaders before ESP-IDF v2.1 did less initialisation of the system clock. This setting needs to be enabled to build an app which can be booted by these older bootloaders. If this setting is enabled, the app can be booted by any bootloader from IDF v1.0 up to the current version. If this setting is disabled, the app can only be booted by bootloaders from IDF v2.1 or newer. Enabling this setting adds approximately 1KB to the app's IRAM usage. config APP_COMPATIBLE_PRE_V3_1_BOOTLOADERS bool "App compatible with bootloader and partition table before ESP-IDF v3.1" depends on IDF_TARGET_ESP32 default n help Partition tables before ESP-IDF V3.1 do not contain an MD5 checksum field, and the bootloader before ESP-IDF v3.1 cannot read a partition table that contains an MD5 checksum field. Enable this option only if your app needs to boot on a bootloader and/or partition table that was generated from a version *before* ESP-IDF v3.1. If this option and Flash Encryption are enabled at the same time, and any data partitions in the partition table are marked Encrypted, then the partition encrypted flag should be manually verified in the app before accessing the partition (see CVE-2021-27926). config APP_INIT_CLK bool depends on IDF_TARGET_ESP32 default y if APP_COMPATIBLE_PRE_V2_1_BOOTLOADERS default y if APP_BUILD_TYPE_RAM endmenu # Build type source "$COMPONENT_KCONFIGS_PROJBUILD_SOURCE_FILE" menu "Compiler options" choice COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION prompt "Optimization Level" default COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_DEBUG help This option sets compiler optimization level (gcc -O argument) for the app. - The "Debug" setting will add the -0g flag to CFLAGS. - The "Size" setting will add the -0s flag to CFLAGS. - The "Performance" setting will add the -O2 flag to CFLAGS. - The "None" setting will add the -O0 flag to CFLAGS. The "Size" setting cause the compiled code to be smaller and faster, but may lead to difficulties of correlating code addresses to source file lines when debugging. The "Performance" setting causes the compiled code to be larger and faster, but will be easier to correlated code addresses to source file lines. "None" with -O0 produces compiled code without optimization. Note that custom optimization levels may be unsupported. Compiler optimization for the IDF bootloader is set separately, see the BOOTLOADER_COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION setting. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_DEBUG bool "Debug (-Og)" config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_SIZE bool "Optimize for size (-Os)" config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_PERF bool "Optimize for performance (-O2)" config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_NONE bool "Debug without optimization (-O0)" endchoice choice COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTION_LEVEL prompt "Assertion level" default COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_ENABLE help Assertions can be: - Enabled. Failure will print verbose assertion details. This is the default. - Set to "silent" to save code size (failed assertions will abort() but user needs to use the aborting address to find the line number with the failed assertion.) - Disabled entirely (not recommended for most configurations.) -DNDEBUG is added to CPPFLAGS in this case. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_ENABLE prompt "Enabled" bool help Enable assertions. Assertion content and line number will be printed on failure. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_SILENT prompt "Silent (saves code size)" bool help Enable silent assertions. Failed assertions will abort(), user needs to use the aborting address to find the line number with the failed assertion. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_DISABLE prompt "Disabled (sets -DNDEBUG)" bool help If assertions are disabled, -DNDEBUG is added to CPPFLAGS. endchoice # assertions choice COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM prompt "Compiler float lib source" default COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM_RVFPLIB if ESP_ROM_HAS_RVFPLIB default COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM_GCCLIB help In the soft-fp part of libgcc, riscv version is written in C, and handles all edge cases in IEEE754, which makes it larger and performance is slow. RVfplib is an optimized RISC-V library for FP arithmetic on 32-bit integer processors, for single and double-precision FP. RVfplib is "fast", but it has a few exceptions from IEEE 754 compliance. config COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM_GCCLIB bool "libgcc" config COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM_RVFPLIB depends on ESP_ROM_HAS_RVFPLIB bool "librvfp" endchoice # COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTION_LEVEL int default 0 if COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_DISABLE default 1 if COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_SILENT default 2 if COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_ENABLE config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_CHECKS_SILENT bool "Disable messages in ESP_RETURN_ON_* and ESP_EXIT_ON_* macros" default n help If enabled, the error messages will be discarded in following check macros: - ESP_RETURN_ON_ERROR - ESP_EXIT_ON_ERROR - ESP_RETURN_ON_FALSE - ESP_EXIT_ON_FALSE menuconfig COMPILER_HIDE_PATHS_MACROS bool "Replace ESP-IDF and project paths in binaries" default y help When expanding the __FILE__ and __BASE_FILE__ macros, replace paths inside ESP-IDF with paths relative to the placeholder string "IDF", and convert paths inside the project directory to relative paths. This allows building the project with assertions or other code that embeds file paths, without the binary containing the exact path to the IDF or project directories. This option passes -fmacro-prefix-map options to the GCC command line. To replace additional paths in your binaries, modify the project CMakeLists.txt file to pass custom -fmacro-prefix-map or -ffile-prefix-map arguments. menuconfig COMPILER_CXX_EXCEPTIONS bool "Enable C++ exceptions" default n help Enabling this option compiles all IDF C++ files with exception support enabled. Disabling this option disables C++ exception support in all compiled files, and any libstdc++ code which throws an exception will abort instead. Enabling this option currently adds an additional ~500 bytes of heap overhead when an exception is thrown in user code for the first time. config COMPILER_CXX_EXCEPTIONS_EMG_POOL_SIZE int "Emergency Pool Size" default 0 depends on COMPILER_CXX_EXCEPTIONS help Size (in bytes) of the emergency memory pool for C++ exceptions. This pool will be used to allocate memory for thrown exceptions when there is not enough memory on the heap. config COMPILER_CXX_RTTI bool "Enable C++ run-time type info (RTTI)" default n help Enabling this option compiles all C++ files with RTTI support enabled. This increases binary size (typically by tens of kB) but allows using dynamic_cast conversion and typeid operator. choice COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE prompt "Stack smashing protection mode" default COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_NONE help Stack smashing protection mode. Emit extra code to check for buffer overflows, such as stack smashing attacks. This is done by adding a guard variable to functions with vulnerable objects. The guards are initialized when a function is entered and then checked when the function exits. If a guard check fails, program is halted. Protection has the following modes: - In NORMAL mode (GCC flag: -fstack-protector) only functions that call alloca, and functions with buffers larger than 8 bytes are protected. - STRONG mode (GCC flag: -fstack-protector-strong) is like NORMAL, but includes additional functions to be protected -- those that have local array definitions, or have references to local frame addresses. - In OVERALL mode (GCC flag: -fstack-protector-all) all functions are protected. Modes have the following impact on code performance and coverage: - performance: NORMAL > STRONG > OVERALL - coverage: NORMAL < STRONG < OVERALL The performance impact includes increasing the amount of stack memory required for each task. config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_NONE bool "None" config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_NORM bool "Normal" config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_STRONG bool "Strong" config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_ALL bool "Overall" endchoice config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK bool default !COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_NONE help Stack smashing protection. config COMPILER_WARN_WRITE_STRINGS bool "Enable -Wwrite-strings warning flag" default "n" help Adds -Wwrite-strings flag for the C/C++ compilers. For C, this gives string constants the type ``const char[]`` so that copying the address of one into a non-const ``char *`` pointer produces a warning. This warning helps to find at compile time code that tries to write into a string constant. For C++, this warns about the deprecated conversion from string literals to ``char *``. config COMPILER_SAVE_RESTORE_LIBCALLS bool "Enable -msave-restore flag to reduce code size" depends on IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV help Adds -msave-restore to C/C++ compilation flags. When this flag is enabled, compiler will call library functions to save/restore registers in function prologues/epilogues. This results in lower overall code size, at the expense of slightly reduced performance. This option can be enabled for RISC-V targets only. config COMPILER_DISABLE_GCC12_WARNINGS bool "Disable new warnings introduced in GCC 12" default "n" help Enable this option if use GCC 12 or newer, and want to disable warnings which don't appear with GCC 11. config COMPILER_DISABLE_GCC13_WARNINGS bool "Disable new warnings introduced in GCC 13" default "n" help Enable this option if use GCC 13 or newer, and want to disable warnings which don't appear with GCC 12. config COMPILER_DUMP_RTL_FILES bool "Dump RTL files during compilation" help If enabled, RTL files will be produced during compilation. These files can be used by other tools, for example to calculate call graphs. choice COMPILER_RT_LIB prompt "Compiler runtime library" default COMPILER_RT_LIB_CLANGRT if IDF_TOOLCHAIN_CLANG default COMPILER_RT_LIB_HOST if IDF_TARGET_LINUX default COMPILER_RT_LIB_GCCLIB help Select runtime library to be used by compiler. - GCC toolchain supports libgcc only. - Clang allows to choose between libgcc or libclang_rt. - For host builds ("linux" target), uses the default library. config COMPILER_RT_LIB_GCCLIB depends on !IDF_TARGET_LINUX bool "libgcc" config COMPILER_RT_LIB_CLANGRT depends on IDF_TOOLCHAIN_CLANG && !IDF_TARGET_LINUX bool "libclang_rt" config COMPILER_RT_LIB_HOST depends on IDF_TARGET_LINUX bool "Host" endchoice config COMPILER_RT_LIB_NAME string default "clang_rt.builtins" if COMPILER_RT_LIB_CLANGRT default "gcc" if COMPILER_RT_LIB_GCCLIB default "" if COMPILER_RT_LIB_HOST endmenu # Compiler Options menu "Component config" source "$COMPONENT_KCONFIGS_SOURCE_FILE" endmenu config IDF_EXPERIMENTAL_FEATURES bool "Make experimental features visible" default "n" help By enabling this option, ESP-IDF experimental feature options will be visible. Note you should still enable a certain experimental feature option to use it, and you should read the corresponding risk warning and known issue list carefully. Current experimental feature list: - CONFIG_ESPTOOLPY_FLASHFREQ_120M && CONFIG_ESPTOOLPY_FLASH_SAMPLE_MODE_DTR - CONFIG_SPIRAM_SPEED_120M && CONFIG_SPIRAM_MODE_OCT - CONFIG_BOOTLOADER_CACHE_32BIT_ADDR_QUAD_FLASH - CONFIG_MBEDTLS_USE_CRYPTO_ROM_IMPL - CONFIG_ESP_WIFI_EAP_TLS1_3 - CONFIG_ESP_WIFI_ENABLE_ROAMING_APP