This repository contains tools for building firmwares for the Home Assistant Connect ZBT-1/SkyConnect and the Home Assistant Yellow's IEEE 802.15.4 radio. The firmware manifests are entirely generic, however, and are intended to be written easily for any Silicon Labs EFR32 device.
It uses the Silicon Labs Gecko/Simplicity SDK and proprietary Silicon Labs tools such as the Silicon Labs Configurator (slc) and the Simplicity Commander standalone utility.
The project templates in this repository are configured and built for specific boards
using manifest files. For example, the skyconnect_zigbee_ncp.yaml
manifest file configures the Zigbee firmware for the SkyConnect/Connect ZBT-1.
If you are going to be developing using Simplicity Studio, note that each project can potentially use a different Simplicity SDK release. It is recommended to forego the typical Simplicity Studio SDK management workflow and manually manage SDKs:
Clone a specific version of the Simplicity SDK:
# For macOS
mkdir ~/SimplicityStudio/SDKs/simplicity_sdk_2024.6.2
cd ~/SimplicityStudio/SDKs/simplicity_sdk_2024.6.2
git clone -b v2024.6.2 https://github.com/SiliconLabs/simplicity_sdk .
git checkout -b branch_tag
Open preferences, navigate to Simplicity Studio > SDKs, click the Add SDK...
button, and browse to the above location.
Repeat this process for every necessary SDK version.
[!TIP] If you have build issues after switching commits, make sure to delete any
simplicity_sdk_*
,gecko_sdk_*
, andtemplate
folders from the project working tree.
Command line building requires:
slc-cli
commander
)Dockerfile
for the necessary toolchains.[!TIP] If you have set up Simplicity Studio on macOS, everything will be automatically detected with the exception of
slc
. This is the only tool you need to download.[!WARNING] M1 users should set
JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home -a x86_64)
when running the build command to make sure the correct Java version is picked by slc-cli. It currently is not compatible with ARM Java.
slc-cli
maintains its own SDK and extension trust store so you first must trust all
SDK extensions for every SDK you plan to use:
slc signature trust --sdk ~/SimplicityStudio/SDKs/simplicity_sdk_2024.6.2
slc signature trust --sdk ~/SimplicityStudio/SDKs/simplicity_sdk_2024.6.2 --extension-path ~/SimplicityStudio/SDKs/simplicity_sdk_2024.6.2/extension/nc_efr32_watchdog_extension
tools/build_project.py
is the main entry point for building firmwares. Provide paths
to potential SDKs and toolchains with the --sdk
and --toolchain
flags. The build
tool will automatically determine which SDK and toolchain to use.
[!TIP] If you have set up Simplicity Studio on macOS, the default toolchain and SDK paths are automatically found so these flags can be omitted.
pip install ruamel.yaml # Only dependency
python tools/build_project.py \
# The following SDK and toolchain flags can be omitted on macOS, they are all autodetected
--sdk ~/SimplicityStudio/SDKs/gecko_sdk_4.4.4 \
--sdk ~/SimplicityStudio/SDKs/simplicity_sdk_2024.6.0 \
--toolchain '/Applications/Simplicity Studio.app/Contents/Eclipse/developer/toolchains/gnu_arm/10.3_2021.10' \
--toolchain '/Applications/Simplicity Studio.app/Contents/Eclipse/developer/toolchains/gnu_arm/12.2.rel1_2023.7' \
--manifest manifests/skyconnect_ncp-uart-hw.yaml \
--build-dir build \
--output-dir output \
# Generate `.gbl`, `.out`, and `.hex` firmwares
--output gbl \
--output out \
--output hex
Once the build is complete, the firmwares will be in the output
directory.