.. _west-extensions: Extensions ########## West is "pluggable": you can add your own commands to west without editing its source code. These are called **west extension commands**, or just "extensions" for short. Extensions show up in the ``west --help`` output in a special section for the project which defines them. This page provides general information on west extension commands, and has a tutorial for writing your own. Some commands you can run when using west with Zephyr, like the ones used to :ref:`build, flash, and debug ` and the :ref:`ones described here ` , are extensions. That's why help for them shows up like this in ``west --help``: .. code-block:: none commands from project at "zephyr": completion: display shell completion scripts boards: display information about supported boards build: compile a Zephyr application sign: sign a Zephyr binary for bootloader chain-loading flash: flash and run a binary on a board debug: flash and interactively debug a Zephyr application debugserver: connect to board and launch a debug server attach: interactively debug a board See :file:`zephyr/scripts/west-commands.yml` and the :file:`zephyr/scripts/west_commands` directory for the implementation details. Disabling Extension Commands **************************** To disable support for extension commands, set the ``commands.allow_extensions`` :ref:`configuration ` option to ``false``. To set this globally for whenever you run west, use: .. code-block:: console west config --global commands.allow_extensions false If you want to, you can then re-enable them in a particular :term:`west workspace` with: .. code-block:: console west config --local commands.allow_extensions true Note that the files containing extension commands are not imported by west unless the commands are explicitly run. See below for details. Adding a West Extension *********************** There are three steps to adding your own extension: #. Write the code implementing the command. #. Add information about it to a :file:`west-commands.yml` file. #. Make sure the :file:`west-commands.yml` file is referenced in the :term:`west manifest`. Note that west ignores extension commands whose names are the same as a built-in command. Step 1: Implement Your Command ============================== Create a Python file to contain your command implementation (see the "Meta > Requires" information on the `west PyPI page`_ for details on the currently supported versions of Python). You can put it in anywhere in any project tracked by your :term:`west manifest`, or the manifest repository itself. This file must contain a subclass of the ``west.commands.WestCommand`` class; this class will be instantiated and used when your extension is run. Here is a basic skeleton you can use to get started. It contains a subclass of ``WestCommand``, with implementations for all the abstract methods. For more details on the west APIs you can use, see :ref:`west-apis`. .. code-block:: py '''my_west_extension.py Basic example of a west extension.''' from textwrap import dedent # just for nicer code indentation from west.commands import WestCommand # your extension must subclass this from west import log # use this for user output class MyCommand(WestCommand): def __init__(self): super().__init__( 'my-command-name', # gets stored as self.name 'one-line help for what my-command-name does', # self.help # self.description: dedent(''' A multi-line description of my-command. You can split this up into multiple paragraphs and they'll get reflowed for you. You can also pass formatter_class=argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter when calling parser_adder.add_parser() below if you want to keep your line endings.''')) def do_add_parser(self, parser_adder): # This is a bit of boilerplate, which allows you full control over the # type of argparse handling you want. The "parser_adder" argument is # the return value of an argparse.ArgumentParser.add_subparsers() call. parser = parser_adder.add_parser(self.name, help=self.help, description=self.description) # Add some example options using the standard argparse module API. parser.add_argument('-o', '--optional', help='an optional argument') parser.add_argument('required', help='a required argument') return parser # gets stored as self.parser def do_run(self, args, unknown_args): # This gets called when the user runs the command, e.g.: # # $ west my-command-name -o FOO BAR # --optional is FOO # required is BAR log.inf('--optional is', args.optional) log.inf('required is', args.required) You can ignore the second argument to ``do_run()`` (``unknown_args`` above), as ``WestCommand`` will reject unknown arguments by default. If you want to be passed a list of unknown arguments instead, add ``accepts_unknown_args=True`` to the ``super().__init__()`` arguments. Step 2: Add or Update Your :file:`west-commands.yml` ==================================================== You now need to add a :file:`west-commands.yml` file to your project which describes your extension to west. Here is an example for the above class definition, assuming it's in :file:`my_west_extension.py` at the project root directory: .. code-block:: yaml west-commands: - file: my_west_extension.py commands: - name: my-command-name class: MyCommand help: one-line help for what my-command-name does The top level of this YAML file is a map with a ``west-commands`` key. The key's value is a sequence of "command descriptors". Each command descriptor gives the location of a file implementing west extensions, along with the names of those extensions, and optionally the names of the classes which define them (if not given, the ``class`` value defaults to the same thing as ``name``). Some information in this file is redundant with definitions in the Python code. This is because west won't import :file:`my_west_extension.py` until the user runs ``west my-command-name``, since: - It allows users to run ``west update`` with a manifest from an untrusted source, then use other west commands without your code being imported along the way. Since importing a Python module is shell-equivalent, this provides some peace of mind. - It's a small optimization, since your code will only be imported if it is needed. So, unless your command is explicitly run, west will just load the :file:`west-commands.yml` file to get the basic information it needs to display information about your extension to the user in ``west --help`` output, etc. If you have multiple extensions, or want to split your extensions across multiple files, your :file:`west-commands.yml` will look something like this: .. code-block:: yaml west-commands: - file: my_west_extension.py commands: - name: my-command-name class: MyCommand help: one-line help for what my-command-name does - file: another_file.py commands: - name: command2 help: another cool west extension - name: a-third-command class: ThirdCommand help: a third command in the same file as command2 Above: - :file:`my_west_extension.py` defines extension ``my-command-name`` with class ``MyCommand`` - :file:`another_file.py` defines two extensions: #. ``command2`` with class ``command2`` #. ``a-third-command`` with class ``ThirdCommand`` See the file :file:`west-commands-schema.yml` in the `west repository`_ for a schema describing the contents of a :file:`west-commands.yml`. Step 3: Update Your Manifest ============================ Finally, you need to specify the location of the :file:`west-commands.yml` you just edited in your west manifest. If your extension is in a project, add it like this: .. code-block:: yaml manifest: # [... other contents ...] projects: - name: your-project west-commands: path/to/west-commands.yml # [... other projects ...] Where :file:`path/to/west-commands.yml` is relative to the root of the project. Note that the name :file:`west-commands.yml`, while encouraged, is just a convention; you can name the file something else if you need to. Alternatively, if your extension is in the manifest repository, just do the same thing in the manifest's ``self`` section, like this: .. code-block:: yaml manifest: # [... other contents ...] self: west-commands: path/to/west-commands.yml That's it; you can now run ``west my-command-name``. Your command's name, help, and the project which contains its code will now also show up in the ``west --help`` output. If you share the updated repositories with others, they'll be able to use it, too. .. _west PyPI page: https://pypi.org/project/west/ .. _west repository: https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/west/