Built-in commands
This page describes west’s built-in commands, some of which were introduced in Basics, in more detail.
Some commands are related to Git commands with the same name, but operate
on the entire workspace. For example, west diff
shows local changes in
multiple Git repositories in the workspace.
Some commands take projects as arguments. These arguments can be project
names as specified in the manifest file, or (as a fallback) paths to them
on the local file system. Omitting project arguments to commands which
accept them (such as west list
, west forall
, etc.) usually defaults
to using all projects in the manifest file plus the manifest repository
itself.
For additional help, run west <command> -h
(e.g. west init -h
).
west init
This command creates a west workspace. It can be used in two ways:
Cloning a new manifest repository from a remote URL
Creating a workspace around an existing local manifest repository
Option 1: to clone a new manifest repository from a remote URL, use:
west init [-m URL] [--mr REVISION] [--mf FILE] [directory]
The new workspace is created in the given directory
, creating a new
.west
inside this directory. You can give the manifest URL using
the -m
switch, the initial revision to check out using --mr
, and
the location of the manifest file within the repository using --mf
.
For example, running:
west init -m https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr --mr v1.14.0 zp
would clone the upstream official zephyr repository into zp/zephyr
,
and check out the v1.14.0
release. This command creates
zp/.west
, and set the manifest.path
configuration option to zephyr
to record the location of the manifest
repository in the workspace. The default manifest file location is used.
The -m
option defaults to https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr
.
The --mf
option defaults to west.yml
. Since west v0.10.1, west will use
the default branch in the manifest repository unless the --mr
option
is used to override it. (In prior versions, --mr
defaulted to master
.)
If no directory
is given, the current working directory is used.
Option 2: to create a workspace around an existing local manifest repository, use:
west init -l [--mf FILE] directory
This creates .west
next to directory
in the file
system, and sets manifest.path
to directory
.
As above, --mf
defaults to west.yml
.
Reconfiguring the workspace:
If you change your mind later, you are free to change manifest.path
and
manifest.file
using west config after running west init
.
Just be sure to run west update
afterwards to update your workspace to
match the new manifest file.
west update
west update [-f {always,smart}] [-k] [-r]
[--group-filter FILTER] [--stats] [PROJECT ...]
Which projects are updated:
By default, this command parses the manifest file, usually
west.yml
, and updates each project specified there.
If your manifest uses project groups, then
only the active projects are updated.
To operate on a subset of projects only, give PROJECT
argument(s). Each
PROJECT
is either a project name as given in the manifest file, or a
path that points to the project within the workspace. If you specify
projects explicitly, they are updated regardless of whether they are active.
Project update procedure:
For each project that is updated, this command:
Initializes a local Git repository for the project in the workspace, if it does not already exist
Inspects the project’s
revision
field in the manifest, and fetches it from the remote if it is not already available locallySets the project’s manifest-rev branch to the commit specified by the revision in the previous step
Checks out
manifest-rev
in the local working copy as a detached HEADIf the manifest file specifies a submodules key for the project, recursively updates the project’s submodules as described below.
To avoid unnecessary fetches, west update
will not fetch project
revision
values which are Git SHAs or tags that are already available
locally. This is the behavior when the -f
(--fetch
) option has its
default value, smart
. To force this command to fetch from project remotes
even if the revisions appear to be available locally, either use -f always
or set the update.fetch
configuration option to
always
. SHAs may be given as unique prefixes as long as they are acceptable
to Git [1].
If the project revision
is a Git ref that is neither a tag nor a SHA (i.e.
if the project is tracking a branch), west update
always fetches,
regardless of -f
and update.fetch
.
Some branch names might look like short SHAs, like deadbeef
. West treats
these like SHAs. You can disambiguate by prefixing the revision
value with
refs/heads/
, e.g. revision: refs/heads/deadbeef
.
For safety, west update
uses git checkout --detach
to check out a
detached HEAD
at the manifest revision for each updated project,
leaving behind any branches which were already checked out. This is
typically a safe operation that will not modify any of your local branches.
However, if you had added some local commits onto a previously detached
HEAD
checked out by west, then git will warn you that you’ve left
behind some commits which are no longer referred to by any branch. These
may be garbage-collected and lost at some point in the future. To avoid
this if you have local commits in the project, make sure you have a local
branch checked out before running west update
.
If you would rather rebase any locally checked out branches instead, use
the -r
(--rebase
) option.
If you would like west update
to keep local branches checked out as
long as they point to commits that are descendants of the new
manifest-rev
, use the -k
(--keep-descendants
) option.
Note
west update --rebase
will fail in projects that have git conflicts
between your branch and new commits brought in by the manifest. You
should immediately resolve these conflicts as you usually do with
git
, or you can use git -C <project_path> rebase --abort
to
ignore incoming changes for the moment.
With a clean working tree, a plain west update
never fails
because it does not try to hold on to your commits and simply
leaves them aside.
west update --keep-descendants
offers an intermediate option that
never fails either but does not treat all projects the same:
in projects where your branch diverged from the incoming commits, it does not even try to rebase and leaves your branches behind just like a plain
west update
does;in all other projects where no rebase or merge is needed it keeps your branches in place.
One-time project group manipulation:
The --group-filter
option can be used to change which project groups
are enabled or disabled for the duration of a single west update
command.
See Project Groups for details on the project group feature.
The west update
command behaves as if the --group-filter
option’s
value were appended to the manifest.group-filter
configuration option.
For example, running west update --group-filter=+foo,-bar
would behave
the same way as if you had temporarily appended the string "+foo,-bar"
to the value of manifest.group-filter
, run west update
, then restored
manifest.group-filter
to its original value.
Note that using the syntax --group-filter=VALUE
instead of
--group-filter VALUE
avoids issues parsing command line options
if you just want to disable a single group, e.g. --group-filter=-bar
.
Submodule update procedure:
If a project in the manifest has a submodules
key, the submodules are
updated as follows, depending on the value of the submodules
key.
If the project has submodules: true
, west first synchronizes the project’s
submodules with:
git submodule sync --recursive
West then runs one of the following in the project repository, depending on
whether you run west update
with the --rebase
option or without it:
# without --rebase, e.g. "west update":
git submodule update --init --checkout --recursive
# with --rebase, e.g. "west update --rebase":
git submodule update --init --rebase --recursive
Otherwise, the project has submodules: <list-of-submodules>
. In this
case, west synchronizes the project’s submodules with:
git submodule sync --recursive -- <submodule-path>
Then it updates each submodule in the list as follows, depending on whether you
run west update
with the --rebase
option or without it:
# without --rebase, e.g. "west update":
git submodule update --init --checkout --recursive <submodule-path>
# with --rebase, e.g. "west update --rebase":
git submodule update --init --rebase --recursive <submodule-path>
The git submodule sync
commands are skipped if the
update.sync-submodules
Configuration option is false.
Other project commands
West has a few more commands for managing the projects in the
workspace, which are summarized here. Run west <command> -h
for
detailed help.
west compare
: compare the state of the workspace against the manifestwest diff
: rungit diff
in local project repositorieswest forall
: run an arbitrary command in local project repositorieswest grep
: search for patterns in local project repositorieswest list
: print a line of information about each project in the manifest, according to a format stringwest manifest
: manage the manifest file. See Manifest Command.west status
: rungit status
in local project repositories
Other built-in commands
Finally, here is a summary of other built-in commands.
west config
: get or set configuration optionswest topdir
: print the top level directory of the west workspacewest help
: get help about a command, or print information about all commands in the workspace, including Extensions
Footnotes