*********************************************** Standard Setup of Toolchain for Windows (CMake) *********************************************** :link_to_translation:`zh_CN:[中文]` .. include:: ../cmake-warning.rst .. note:: The CMake-based build system is only supported on 64-bit versions of Windows. Introduction ============ ESP-IDF requires some prerequisite tools to be installed so you can build firmware for the ESP32. The prerequisite tools include Git, a cross-compiler and the CMake build tool. We'll go over each one in this document. For this Getting Started we're going to use a command prompt, but after ESP-IDF is installed you can use :doc:`Eclipse ` or another graphical IDE with CMake support instead. .. note:: The GNU Make based build system requires the MSYS2_ Unix compatibility environment on Windows. The CMake-based build system does not require this environment. ESP-IDF Tools Installer ======================= The easiest way to install ESP-IDF's prerequisites is to download the ESP-IDF Tools installer from this URL: https://dl.espressif.com/dl/esp-idf-tools-setup-1.2.exe The installer will automatically install the ESP32 Xtensa gcc toolchain, Ninja_ build tool, and a configuration tool called mconf-idf_. The installer can also download and run installers for CMake_ and Python_ 2.7 if these are not already installed on the computer. By default, the installer updates the Windows ``Path`` environment variable so all of these tools can be run from anywhere. If you disable this option, you will need to configure the environment where you are using ESP-IDF (terminal or chosen IDE) with the correct paths. Note that this installer is for the ESP-IDF Tools package, it doesn't include ESP-IDF itself. Installing Git ============== The ESP-IDF tools installer does not install Git. By default, the getting started guide assumes you will be using Git on the command line. You can download and install a command line Git for Windows (along with the "Git Bash" terminal) from `Git For Windows`_. If you prefer to use a different graphical Git client, then you can install one such as `Github Desktop`. You will need to translate the Git commands in the Getting Started guide for use with your chosen Git client. Using a Terminal ================ For the remaining Getting Started steps, we're going to use a terminal command prompt. It doesn't matter which command prompt you use: - You can use the built-in Windows Command Prompt, under the Start menu. All Windows command line instructions in this documentation are "batch" commands for use with the Windows Command Prompt. - You can use the "Git Bash" terminal which is part of `Git for Windows`_. This uses the same "bash" command prompt syntax as is given for Mac OS or Linux. You can find it in the Start menu once installed. - If you have MSYS2_ installed (maybe from a previous ESP-IDF version), then you can also use the MSYS terminal. Next Steps ========== To carry on with development environment setup, proceed to :ref:`get-started-get-esp-idf-cmake`. Related Documents ================= For advanced users who want to customize the install process: .. toctree:: :maxdepth: 1 windows-setup-scratch .. _MSYS2: https://msys2.github.io/ .. _cmake: https://cmake.org/download/ .. _ninja: https://ninja-build.org/ .. _Python: https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/ .. _Git for Windows: https://gitforwindows.org/ .. _mconf-idf: https://github.com/espressif/kconfig-frontends/releases/ .. _Github Desktop: https://desktop.github.com/