* Added null pointer check * Fixed typo * Added Serial.setRxBufferSize method description in libraries reference document
6.9 KiB
Reference
Digital IO
Pin numbers in Arduino correspond directly to the ESP8266 GPIO pin
numbers. pinMode
, digitalRead
, and
digitalWrite
functions work as usual, so to read GPIO2,
call digitalRead(2)
.
Digital pins 0—15 can be INPUT
, OUTPUT
, or
INPUT_PULLUP
. Pin 16 can be INPUT
,
OUTPUT
or INPUT_PULLDOWN_16
. At startup, pins
are configured as INPUT
.
Pins may also serve other functions, like Serial, I2C, SPI. These functions are normally activated by the corresponding library. The diagram below shows pin mapping for the popular ESP-12 module.

Digital pins 6—11 are not shown on this diagram because they are used to connect flash memory chip on most modules. Trying to use these pins as IOs will likely cause the program to crash.
Note that some boards and modules (ESP-12ED, NodeMCU 1.0) also break out pins 9 and 11. These may be used as IO if flash chip works in DIO mode (as opposed to QIO, which is the default one).
Pin interrupts are supported through attachInterrupt
,
detachInterrupt
functions. Interrupts may be attached to
any GPIO pin, except GPIO16. Standard Arduino interrupt types are
supported: CHANGE
, RISING
,
FALLING
.
Analog input
ESP8266 has a single ADC channel available to users. It may be used either to read voltage at ADC pin, or to read module supply voltage (VCC).
To read external voltage applied to ADC pin, use
analogRead(A0)
. Input voltage range is 0 — 1.0V.
To read VCC voltage, use ESP.getVcc()
and ADC pin must
be kept unconnected. Additionally, the following line has to be added to
the sketch:
(ADC_VCC); ADC_MODE
This line has to appear outside of any functions, for instance right
after the #include
lines of your sketch.
Analog output
analogWrite(pin, value)
enables software PWM on the
given pin. PWM may be used on pins 0 to 16. Call
analogWrite(pin, 0)
to disable PWM on the pin.
value
may be in range from 0 to PWMRANGE
,
which is equal to 1023 by default. PWM range may be changed by calling
analogWriteRange(new_range)
.
PWM frequency is 1kHz by default. Call
analogWriteFreq(new_frequency)
to change the frequency.
Timing and delays
millis()
and micros()
return the number of
milliseconds and microseconds elapsed after reset, respectively.
delay(ms)
pauses the sketch for a given number of
milliseconds and allows WiFi and TCP/IP tasks to run.
delayMicroseconds(us)
pauses for a given number of
microseconds.
Remember that there is a lot of code that needs to run on the chip
besides the sketch when WiFi is connected. WiFi and TCP/IP libraries get
a chance to handle any pending events each time the loop()
function completes, OR when delay
is called. If you have a
loop somewhere in your sketch that takes a lot of time (>50ms)
without calling delay
, you might consider adding a call to
delay
function to keep the WiFi stack running smoothly.
There is also a yield()
function which is equivalent to
delay(0)
. The delayMicroseconds
function, on
the other hand, does not yield to other tasks, so using it for delays
more than 20 milliseconds is not recommended.
Serial
Serial
object works much the same way as on a regular
Arduino. Apart from hardware FIFO (128 bytes for TX and RX)
Serial
has additional 256-byte TX and RX buffers. Both
transmit and receive is interrupt-driven. Write and read functions only
block the sketch execution when the respective FIFO/buffers are
full/empty. Note that the length of additional 256-bit buffer can be
customized.
Serial
uses UART0, which is mapped to pins GPIO1 (TX)
and GPIO3 (RX). Serial may be remapped to GPIO15 (TX) and GPIO13 (RX) by
calling Serial.swap()
after Serial.begin
.
Calling swap
again maps UART0 back to GPIO1 and GPIO3.
Serial1
uses UART1, TX pin is GPIO2. UART1 can not be
used to receive data because normally it's RX pin is occupied for flash
chip connection. To use Serial1
, call
Serial1.begin(baudrate)
.
If Serial1
is not used and Serial
is not
swapped - TX for UART0 can be mapped to GPIO2 instead by calling
Serial.set_tx(2)
after Serial.begin
or
directly with Serial.begin(baud, config, mode, 2)
.
By default the diagnostic output from WiFi libraries is disabled when
you call Serial.begin
. To enable debug output again, call
Serial.setDebugOutput(true)
. To redirect debug output to
Serial1
instead, call
Serial1.setDebugOutput(true)
.
You also need to use Serial.setDebugOutput(true)
to
enable output from printf()
function.
The method Serial.setRxBufferSize(size_t size)
allows to
define the receiving buffer depth. The default value is 256.
Both Serial
and Serial1
objects support 5,
6, 7, 8 data bits, odd (O), even (E), and no (N) parity, and 1 or 2 stop
bits. To set the desired mode, call
Serial.begin(baudrate, SERIAL_8N1)
,
Serial.begin(baudrate, SERIAL_6E2)
, etc.
A new method has been implemented on both Serial
and
Serial1
to get current baud rate setting. To get the
current baud rate, call Serial.baudRate()
,
Serial1.baudRate()
. Return a int
of current
speed. For example
// Set Baud rate to 57600
.begin(57600);
Serial
// Get current baud rate
int br = Serial.baudRate();
// Will print "Serial is 57600 bps"
.printf("Serial is %d bps", br); Serial
Serial
and Serial1
objects are both instances of the HardwareSerial
class.I've done this also for official ESP8266 Software Serial library, see this pull request.
Note that this implementation is only for ESP8266 based boards, and will not works with other Arduino boards.
Progmem
The Program memory features work much the same way as on a regular
Arduino; placing read only data and strings in read only memory and
freeing heap for your application. The important difference is that on
the ESP8266 the literal strings are not pooled. This means that the same
literal string defined inside a F("")
and/or
PSTR("")
will take up space for each instance in the code.
So you will need to manage the duplicate strings yourself.
There is one additional helper macro to make it easier to pass
const PROGMEM
strings to methods that take a
__FlashStringHelper
called FPSTR()
. The use of
this will help make it easier to pool strings. Not pooling
strings...
;
String response1+= F("http:");
response1 ...
;
String response2+= F("http:"); response2
using FPSTR would become...
const char HTTP[] PROGMEM = "http:";
...
{
;
String response1+= FPSTR(HTTP);
response1 ...
;
String response2+= FPSTR(HTTP);
response2 }