This is the documentation for the latest (main) development branch of Zephyr. If you are looking for the documentation of previous releases, use the drop-down menu on the left and select the desired version.

Basics

This page introduces west’s basic concepts and provides references to further reading.

West’s built-in commands allow you to work with projects (Git repositories) under a common workspace directory.

Example workspace

If you’ve followed the upstream Zephyr getting started guide, your workspace looks like this:

zephyrproject/                 # west topdir
├── .west/                     # marks the location of the topdir
│   └── config                 # per-workspace local configuration file
│
│   # The manifest repository, never modified by west after creation:
├── zephyr/                    # .git/ repo
│   ├── west.yml               # manifest file
│   └── [... other files ...]
│
│   # Projects managed by west:
├── modules/
│   └── lib/
│       └── tinycbor/          # .git/ project
├── net-tools/                 # .git/ project
└── [ ... other projects ...]

Workspace concepts

Here are the basic concepts you should understand about this structure. Additional details are in Workspaces.

topdir

Above, zephyrproject is the name of the workspace’s top level directory, or topdir. (The name zephyrproject is just an example – it could be anything, like z, my-zephyr-workspace, etc.)

You’ll typically create the topdir and a few other files and directories using west init.

.west directory

The topdir contains the .west directory. When west needs to find the topdir, it searches for .west, and uses its parent directory. The search starts from the current working directory (and starts again from the location in the ZEPHYR_BASE environment variable as a fallback if that fails).

configuration file

The file .west/config is the workspace’s local configuration file.

manifest repository

Every west workspace contains exactly one manifest repository, which is a Git repository containing a manifest file. The location of the manifest repository is given by the manifest.path configuration option in the local configuration file.

For upstream Zephyr, zephyr is the manifest repository, but you can configure west to use any Git repository in the workspace as the manifest repository. The only requirement is that it contains a valid manifest file. See Topologies supported for information on other options, and West Manifests for details on the manifest file format.

manifest file

The manifest file is a YAML file that defines projects, which are the additional Git repositories in the workspace managed by west. The manifest file is named west.yml by default; this can be overridden using the manifest.file local configuration option.

You use the west update command to update the workspace’s projects based on the contents of the manifest file.

projects

Projects are Git repositories managed by west. Projects are defined in the manifest file and can be located anywhere inside the workspace. In the above example workspace, tinycbor and net-tools are projects.

By default, the Zephyr build system uses west to get the locations of all the projects in the workspace, so any code they contain can be used as Modules (External projects).

extensions

Any repository known to west (either the manifest repository or any project repository) can define Extensions. Extensions are extra west commands you can run when using that workspace.

The zephyr repository uses this feature to provide Zephyr-specific commands like west build. Defining these as extensions keeps west’s core agnostic to the specifics of any workspace’s Zephyr version, etc.

ignored files

A workspace can contain additional Git repositories or other files and directories not managed by west. West basically ignores anything in the workspace except .west, the manifest repository, and the projects specified in the manifest file.

west init and west update

The two most important workspace-related commands are west init and west update.

west init basics

This command creates a west workspace.

Important

West doesn’t change your manifest repository contents after west init is run. Use ordinary Git commands to pull new versions, etc.

You will typically run it once, like this:

west init -m https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr --mr v2.5.0 zephyrproject

This will:

  1. Create the topdir, zephyrproject, along with .west and .west/config inside it

  2. Clone the manifest repository from https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr, placing it into zephyrproject/zephyr

  3. Check out the v2.5.0 git tag in your local zephyr clone

  4. Set manifest.path to zephyr in .west/config

  5. Set manifest.file to west.yml

Your workspace is now almost ready to use; you just need to run west update to clone the rest of the projects into the workspace to finish.

For more details, see west init.

west update basics

This command makes sure your workspace contains Git repositories matching the projects in the manifest file.

Important

Whenever you check out a different revision in your manifest repository, you should run west update to make sure your workspace contains the project repositories the new revision expects.

The west update command reads the manifest file’s contents by:

  1. Finding the topdir. In the west init example above, that means finding zephyrproject.

  2. Loading .west/config in the topdir to read the manifest.path (e.g. zephyr) and manifest.file (e.g. west.yml) options.

  3. Loading the manifest file given by these options (e.g. zephyrproject/zephyr/west.yml).

It then uses the manifest file to decide where missing projects should be placed within the workspace, what URLs to clone them from, and what Git revisions should be checked out locally. Project repositories which already exist are updated in place by fetching and checking out their respective Git revisions in the manifest file.

For more details, see west update.

Other built-in commands

See Built-in commands.

Zephyr Extensions

See the following pages for information on Zephyr’s extension commands:

Troubleshooting

See Troubleshooting West.