metronome/pico-cp/README.md
Me Here e8945ee1d1 PM_K-1: one-click A/B firmware updates over USB-MIDI (+ version check)
Split the CircuitPython firmware into a tiny stable loader (code.py) + the application (app.py,
carries APP_VERSION). The editor's ⋯ → "⬆ Update firmware" queries the device version (SysEx 0x02
-> 0x03 reply), fetches the latest app from the site (/pico-cp-app.py), shows device-vs-latest, and
pushes the new app.py over USB-MIDI (SysEx 0x20). The device installs it to a trial slot (old build
kept as app.bak), reboots, and the loader AUTO-ROLLS-BACK to app.bak if the new build fails to start;
a build that runs cleanly ~5s is confirmed (clears /trial). No BOOTSEL, no dragging; Chromium/Firefox.
app.py forced to pure ASCII so it pushes raw (no base64); SysEx buffer raised to 60KB.

build.sh/deploy.sh: bundle code.py+app.py and serve /pico-cp-app.py. Docs updated.

Verified in CPython: version reply, update install+reboot+ACK, rollback file dance; editor loads clean
with the updater wired.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-29 06:55:58 -05:00

6 KiB
Raw Blame History

PM_K1 "Kit" — CircuitPython edition (USB drive · push programming · MIDI audio · practice log)

The CircuitPython firmware for the 52Pi EP0172 Pico kit, set up as a selfcontained appliance. It runs the same programstring language as https://metronome.varasys.io. The simpler MicroPython firmware (../pico/main.py) stays as a rocksolid fallback — and the Pico can't be bricked (BOOTSEL → drag a MicroPython .uf2 back).

What it does: drives the 3.5″ touchscreen with a lanes/pads display + antialiased text, plays the buzzer + RGB beat light, logs your practice to /history.json, accepts new set lists pushed from the web editor over USBMIDI, and plays through your computer's speakers over USBMIDI.

Two poweron modes (set by boot.py)

  • Appliance mode — default (just plug in / power up). The firmware owns the filesystem, so it saves your practice log and writes set lists the editor pushes over USBMIDI. The drive is then readonly to the computer — which also protects the firmware from accidental deletion.
  • Editor mode — hold BUTTON A while plugging in. The drive is writable by the computer, so you can drag programs.json / code.py / fonts on from any OS or browser (the universal fallback). Reset afterwards to return to appliance mode.

Install

  1. Flash CircuitPython: hold BOOTSEL, plug in, drop the CircuitPython .uf2 onto RPIRP2 (https://circuitpython.org/board/raspberry_pi_pico/ — Pico 2 / W builds also fine). A CIRCUITPY drive appears.
  2. Copy the whole bundle onto CIRCUITPY: boot.py, code.py (loader) + app.py (the application), programs.json, font_s.bin / font_m.bin / font_l.bin, editor.html (offline editor), and the helper scripts. (code.py is a tiny stable loader; app.py is what firmware updates replace.)
  3. Powercycle (so boot.py takes effect). It boots into appliance mode and runs.

Program it from the web (push over USBMIDI)

In the editor (Chrome / Edge / Firefox), build a set list → setlist menu → 📟 Save to device. The editor sends it to the Pico over USBMIDI (SysEx); the firmware writes /programs.json, reloads, and acknowledges — the editor shows Saved ✓. 📥 Load from device reads it back.

Universal fallback (any browser / OS, even Safari): Save to device downloads programs.json when no device answers — boot the Pico in editor mode (hold A) and drag the file onto the CIRCUITPY drive.

Firmware updates (oneclick, A/B with autorollback)

code.py is a small stable loader; the application is app.py (it carries APP_VERSION). To update: the editor's ⋯ menu → ⬆ Update firmware… queries the device's version, fetches the latest from the site, shows device vs latest, and on confirm pushes the new app.py over USBMIDI. The device installs it to a trial slot (keeping the old build as app.bak) and reboots; if the new build doesn't boot, the loader automatically rolls back to app.bak. A build that runs cleanly for ~5 s is confirmed. No BOOTSEL, no dragging. (Updating CircuitPython itself still uses BOOTSEL + a .uf2, but that's rare. And the Pico is unbrickable as the ultimate backstop.)

Play through the computer's speakers

The Pico is a USBMIDI device and sends a note per click (GM drum note per lane, velocity by accent). In the editor click 🎹 Device audio, grant MIDI access, and press play on the device — the editor voices the groove through its full synth, out your speakers, locked to the device's clock. While a host is listening the screen shows a green MIDI badge and the buzzer automutes (the computer plays instead). The editor also syncs the device clock, so the practice log gets real wallclock timestamps.

Controls & the practice log

  • Joystick: up/down = tempo, left/right = previous/next groove.
  • Button A (GP15): play / stop. Button B (GP14): tap tempo.
  • Touchscreen: the bottom of the screen shows the practice log (time · BPM · duration · track) — newest first. Plays under 5 s aren't logged. Tap a row to arm it (turns amber), tap again to delete.
  • RGB LED flashes the beat (amber accent / cyan normal / violet ghost); the buzzer clicks to match.
  • The log is saved to /history.json (next to programs.json) in appliance mode and survives powercycles.

programs.json

{ "title": "PolyMeter",
  "programs": [ { "name": "Four on the floor", "prog": "t120;kick:4;snare:4=.x.x;hatClosed:4/2" } ] }

Each prog is a program string from the editor (tempo, lanes, patterns, /2 subdivision, /2s swing, (3,8) Euclid, ~ polymeter, @-3 dB). The push above is the easy way to update it.

Calibration (flags at the top of code.py)

  • Red/blue swapped: flip MADCTL between 0x48 (default) and 0x40.
  • Colours look negative: toggle INVERT_COLORS.
  • Taps land wrong: set TOUCH_DEBUG = True, read the raw coords over USB serial, then set TOUCH_SWAP_XY / TOUCH_INVERT_X / TOUCH_INVERT_Y.
  • Joystick reversed: toggle JOY_INVERT_X / JOY_INVERT_Y.
  • Computer audio: MIDI_ENABLED (default on); MUTE_BUZZER forces the buzzer off even standalone.
  • LED too bright/dim: LED_BRIGHTNESS (0..1, default 0.15).
  • Screen tearing: SPI panels have no tearingeffect sync; SPI_BAUD (default 62.5 MHz) is pushed fast to minimise it — lower only if unstable.
  • Blank / garbled: the panel lot may differ; drop SPI_BAUD, and if it's a 240×320 ILI9341 rather than the 320×480 ST7796, the init/size need changing (this targets the 320×480 you have).
  • RGB LED uses the core neopixel_write (no library to install).

If code.py ever errors, CircuitPython prints the traceback on the screen and over USB serial — send me that. The fonts are the baked antialiased blobs from ../pico/gen_font.py. protect-firmware.sh (hide the firmware files) is mainly for editor mode — appliance mode already keeps the drive readonly.