This project contains a ton of components for the ESP32 ESP-IDF framework which targets the ESP32 chip of Espressif.
The project can be executed on its own and it will use all the components that do not require additional hardware or wiring; for example it will demonstrate all features of the "mjd" component but it will not demonstrate the "mjd_bme280" because it requires that a Bosch BME280 meteo sensor is wired to the microcontroller.
- A decent ESP development board. I suggest to buy a popular development board with good technical documentation and a significant user base. Examples: Adafruit HUZZAH32, Espressif ESP32-DevKitC, Pycom WiPy, Wemos D32.
- The peripherals that are used in the project. @tip The README of each component contains a section "Shop Products". @example A Bosch BME280 meteo sensor breakout board.
- A working installation of the Espressif ESP-IDF V3.2 development framework** (detailed instructions @ http://esp-idf.readthedocs.io/en/latest/get-started/index.html).
mkdir ~/esp
cd ~/esp
git clone -b v3.2 --recursive https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf.git esp-idf-v3.2
- A C language editor or the Eclipse IDE CDT (instructions also @ http://esp-idf.readthedocs.io/en/latest/get-started/index.html).
- Run
make flash monitor
to build and upload the example to your board and connect to its serial terminal.
Do you also want to create innovative IoT projects that use the ESP32 chip, or ESP32-based modules, of the popular company Espressif? Well, I did and still do. And I hope you do too.
The objective of this well documented Starter Kit is to accelerate the development of your IoT projects for ESP32 hardware using the ESP-IDF framework from Espressif and get inspired what kind of apps you can build for ESP32 using various hardware modules.