This is the documentation for the latest development branch of MicroPython and may refer to features that are not available in released versions.

If you are looking for the documentation for a specific release, use the drop-down menu on the left and select the desired version.

MicroPython 2.0 Migration Guide

MicroPython 2.0 is the (currently in development, not yet available) next major release of MicroPython.

After maintaining API compatibility for almost a decade with the 1.x series, in order to unblock some project-wide improvements MicroPython 2.0 will introduce a small number of breaking API changes that will require some programs to be updated. This guide explains how to update your Python code to accommodate these changes.

This document is a work-in-progress. As more work is done on MicroPython 2.0, more items will be added to the lists below.

Note: There are currently no MicroPython 2.0 firmware builds available for download. You can build it yourself by enabling the MICROPY_PREVIEW_VERSION_2 config option. As it gets closer to being ready for release, builds will be provided for both 1.x.y and 2.0.0-preview.

Hardware and peripherals

Overview

The goal is to improve consistency in the machine APIs across different ports, making it easier to write code, documentation, and tutorials that work on any supported microcontroller.

This means that some ports’ APIs need to change to match other ports.

Changes

None yet

OS & filesystem

Overview

The primary goal is to support the ability to execute .mpy files directly from the filesystem without first copying them into RAM. This improves code deployment time and reduces memory overhead and fragmentation.

Additionally, a further goal is to support a more flexible way of configuring partitions, filesystem types, and options like USB mass storage.

Changes

None yet

CPython compatibility

Overview

The goal is to improve compatibility with CPython by removing MicroPython extensions from CPython APIs. In most cases this means moving existing MicroPython-specific functions or classes to new modules.

This makes it easier to write code that works on both CPython and MicroPython, which is useful for development and testing.

Changes

Introduction of a new module vfs. The following functions and classes have moved out of os to vfs: - os.mount - os.umount - os.VfsFat - os.VfsLfs1 - os.VfsLfs2 - os.VfsPosix