This is the experimental, community-supported Windows port of MicroPython. It is based on Unix port, and expected to remain so. The port requires additional testing, debugging, and patches. Please consider to contribute. All gcc-based builds use the gcc compiler from [Mingw-w64](mingw-w64.org), which is the advancement of the original mingw project. The latter is getting obsolete and is not actively supported by MicroPython. Build instruction assume you're in the ports/windows directory. Building on Debian/Ubuntu Linux system --------------------------------------- sudo apt-get install python3 build-essential gcc-mingw-w64 make -C ../../mpy-cross make CROSS_COMPILE=i686-w64-mingw32- Building under Cygwin --------------------- Install Cygwin, then install following packages using Cygwin's setup.exe: * mingw64-i686-gcc-core * mingw64-x86_64-gcc-core * make Also install the python3 package, or install Python globally for Windows (see below). Build using: make -C ../../mpy-cross CROSS_COMPILE=i686-w64-mingw32- make CROSS_COMPILE=i686-w64-mingw32- Or for 64bit: make -C ../../mpy-cross CROSS_COMPILE=x86_64-w64-mingw32- make CROSS_COMPILE=x86_64-w64-mingw32- Building under MSYS2 -------------------- Install MSYS2 from http://repo.msys2.org/distrib, start the msys2.exe shell and install the build tools: pacman -Syuu pacman -S make mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc pkg-config python3 Start the mingw64.exe shell and build: make -C ../../mpy-cross STRIP=echo SIZE=echo make Building using MS Visual Studio 2013 (or higher) ------------------------------------------------ Install Python. There are several ways to do this, for example: download and install the latest Python 3 release from https://www.python.org/downloads/windows or from https://docs.conda.io/en/latest/miniconda.html, or open the Microsoft Store app and search for Python and install it. Install Visual Studio and the C++ toolset (for recent versions: install the free Visual Studio Community edition and the *Desktop development with C++* workload). In the IDE, open `micropython-cross.vcxproj` and `micropython.vcxproj` and build. To build from the command line: msbuild ../../mpy-cross/mpy-cross.vcxproj msbuild micropython.vcxproj __Stack usage__ The msvc compiler is quite stack-hungry which might result in a "maximum recursion depth exceeded" RuntimeError for code with lots of nested function calls. There are several ways to deal with this: - increase the threshold used for detection by altering the argument to `mp_stack_set_limit` in `ports/unix/main.c` - disable detection all together by setting `MICROPY_STACK_CHECK` to "0" in `ports/windows/mpconfigport.h` - disable the /GL compiler flag by setting `WholeProgramOptimization` to "false" See [issue 2927](https://github.com/micropython/micropython/issues/2927) for more information. Running the tests ----------------- This is similar for all ports: cd ../../tests python ./run-tests.py Though when running on Cygwin and using Cygwin's Python installation you'll need: python3 ./run-tests.py Depending on the combination of platform and Python version used it might be needed to first set the MICROPY_MICROPYTHON environment variable to the full path of micropython.exe. Running on Linux using Wine --------------------------- The default build (MICROPY_USE_READLINE=1) uses extended Windows console functions and thus should be ran using the `wineconsole` tool. Depending on the Wine build configuration, you may also want to select the curses backend which has the look&feel of a standard Unix console: wineconsole --backend=curses ./micropython.exe For more info, see https://www.winehq.org/docs/wineusr-guide/cui-programs . If built without line editing and history capabilities (MICROPY_USE_READLINE=0), the resulting binary can be run using the standard `wine` tool.