These are a list of unsorted, commonly asked questions and answers.
Please feel free to add items to link:https://github.com/embassy-rs/embassy/edit/main/docs/modules/ROOT/pages/faq.adoc[this page], especially if someone in the chat answered a question for you!
The command-line parameters `--deploy` will detect your device and upload the binary, `--serial` starts a serial connection. See the documentation for more info.
For Xtensa ESP32, consider using the executors and `#[main]` macro provided by your appropriate link:https://crates.io/crates/esp-hal-common[HAL crate].
The first step to managing your binary size is to set up your link:https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/profiles.html[profiles].
[source,toml]
----
[profile.release]
debug = false
lto = true
opt-level = "s"
incremental = true
----
All of these flags are elaborated on in the Rust Book page linked above.
=== My binary is still big... filled with `std::fmt` stuff!
This means your code is sufficiently complex that `panic!` invocation's formatting requirements could not be optimized out, despite your usage of `panic-halt` or `panic-reset`.
You can remedy this by adding the following to your `.cargo/config.toml`:
[source,toml]
----
[unstable]
build-std = ["core"]
build-std-features = ["panic_immediate_abort"]
----
This replaces all panics with a `UDF` (undefined) instruction.
Depending on your chipset, this will exhibit different behavior.
Refer to the spec for your chipset, but for `thumbv6m`, it results in a hardfault. Which can be configured like so: