Code: Select all
$ ./micropython
Micro Python build 4abaa1b-dirty on 2014-04-18; UNIX version
>>> mem_info()
mem: total=1663, current=443, peak=1346
GC: total: 128000, used: 560, free: 127440
No. of 1-blocks: 11, 2-blocks: 4, max blk sz: 6
Code: Select all
$ ./micropython
Micro Python build 4abaa1b-dirty on 2014-04-18; UNIX version
>>> mem_info()
mem: total=1663, current=443, peak=1346
GC: total: 128000, used: 560, free: 127440
No. of 1-blocks: 11, 2-blocks: 4, max blk sz: 6
How much RAM/ROM does this device have?dnhkng wrote:Hi pfalcon,
You mentioned earlier in the thread that you thought Micropython could run with less RAM. Do you think it could run on this particular 32 bit microcontroller, info here: https://github.com/esp8266/esp8266-wiki/wiki and here: https://nurdspace.nl/ESP8266
A $3, 32 bit,WiFi connected, Python Interpreting SoC seems nice to me
+1, quoted for truth. As for me, unless there is truly no choice I won't even bother with products that require an NDA to get at the documentation. I acknowledge that there are perfectly good products that I am missing out on. However, if I need to make something that works, then life is too short to go chasing down documentation from a company that won't publish it openly. It might be a different matter if I were working with a big company - then you probably have vendors falling over themselves to give you this information - but I'm not in that situation, and I imagine most micropython developers aren't either.Turbinenreiter wrote:there is no documentation of that chip whatsoever, it's dead in the water. some people will try to reverse engineer it, and if they like that, let them have fun, but i don't think this chip will see actual usage anytime soon. everyone using it right now is just in for the fun of figuring it out.
if your goal is to build something, never touch anything where you can't find tons and tons of documentation.
if you want to pull awesome reverse engineering hacks - go for this obscure piece.
Here is a initial porting on a nucleof401/4x1RE: https://github.com/nuraci/micropythonschuschu wrote:Just out of curiosity: Is it currently possible/intended to run the code on any other stm32 board (discovery with a f401, nucleo with a f407) or are the requirements strictly a f405?