Belay is:
- A python library that enables the rapid development of projects that interact with hardware via a MicroPython or CircuitPython compatible board.
- A command-line tool for developing standalone MicroPython projects.
- A Poetry-inspired MicroPython package manager.
Belay supports wired serial connections (USB) and wireless connections via WebREPL over WiFi.
Quick Video of Belay in 22 seconds.
See the documentation for usage and other details.
Belay is for people creating a software project that needs to interact with hardware. Examples include:
- Control a motor so a webcam is always pointing at a person.
- Turn on an LED when you receive a notification.
- Read a potentiometer to control system volume.
The Belay Package Manager is for people that want to use public libraries, and get them on-device in an easy, repeatable, dependable manner.
Typically, having a python script interact with hardware involves 3 major challenges:
- On-device firmware (usually C or MicroPython) for directly handling hardware interactions. Typically this is developed, compiled, and uploaded as a (nearly) independent project.
- A program on your computer that performs the tasks specified and interacts with the device.
- Computer-to-device communication protocol. How are commands and results transferred? How does the device execute those commands?
This is lot of work if you just want your computer to do something simple like turn on an LED. Belay simplifies all of this by merging steps 1 and 2 into the same codebase, and manages step 3 for you. Code is automatically synced at the beginning of script execution.
The Belay Package Manager makes it easy to cache, update, and deploy third party libraries with your project.
Belay requires Python >=3.8
and can be installed via:
pip install belay
The MicroPython-compatible board only needs MicroPython installed; no additional preparation is required.
If using CircuitPython, and additional modification needs to be made to boot.py
. See documentation for details.
Turning on an LED with Belay takes only 6 lines of code.
Functions decorated with the task
decorator are sent to the device and interpreted by the MicroPython interpreter.
Calling the decorated function on-host sends a command to the device to execute the actual function.
import belay
device = belay.Device("/dev/ttyUSB0")
@device.task
def set_led(state):
print(f"Printing from device; turning LED to {state}.")
Pin(25, Pin.OUT).value(state)
set_led(True)
Outputs from print
calls from on-device user-code are forwarded to host stdout
.