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kamahat/GTR

Marlin 3D Printer Firmware

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Additional documentation can be found at the Marlin Home Page. Please test this firmware and let us know if it misbehaves in any way. Volunteers are standing by!

Marlin 2.0

Marlin 2.0 takes this popular RepRap firmware to the next level by adding support for much faster 32-bit and ARM-based boards while improving support for 8-bit AVR boards. Read about Marlin's decision to use a "Hardware Abstraction Layer" below.

Download earlier versions of Marlin on the Releases page.

Building Marlin 2.0

To build Marlin 2.0 you'll need Arduino IDE 1.8.8 or newer or PlatformIO. Detailed build and install instructions are posted at:

Supported Platforms

Platform MCU Example Boards
Arduino AVR ATmega RAMPS, Melzi, RAMBo
Teensy++ 2.0 AT90USB1286 Printrboard
Arduino Due SAM3X8E RAMPS-FD, RADDS, RAMPS4DUE
LPC1768 ARM® Cortex-M3 MKS SBASE, Re-ARM, Selena Compact
LPC1769 ARM® Cortex-M3 Smoothieboard, Azteeg X5 mini, TH3D EZBoard
STM32F103 ARM® Cortex-M3 Malyan M200, GTM32 Pro, MKS Robin, BTT SKR Mini
STM32F401 ARM® Cortex-M4 ARMED, Rumba32, SKR Pro, Lerdge, FYSETC S6
STM32F7x6 ARM® Cortex-M7 The Borg, RemRam V1
SAMD51P20A ARM® Cortex-M4 Adafruit Grand Central M4
Teensy 3.5 ARM® Cortex-M4
Teensy 3.6 ARM® Cortex-M4
Teensy 4.0 ARM® Cortex-M7
Teensy 4.1 ARM® Cortex-M7

Submitting Changes

Marlin Support

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
Arduino Due, RAMPS-FD, etc. SAM3X8E ARM-Cortex M3 84MHz 512k 64+32k 3.3V no

ESP32

board processor speed flash sram logic fpu
ESP32 Tensilica Xtensa LX6 160-240MHz variants --- --- 3.3V ---

LPC1768 / LPC1769

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
Re-ARM LPC1768 ARM-Cortex M3 100MHz 512k 32+16+16k 3.3-5V no
MKS SBASE LPC1768 ARM-Cortex M3 100MHz 512k 32+16+16k 3.3-5V no
Selena Compact LPC1768 ARM-Cortex M3 100MHz 512k 32+16+16k 3.3-5V no
Azteeg X5 GT LPC1769 ARM-Cortex M3 120MHz 512k 32+16+16k 3.3-5V no
Smoothieboard LPC1769 ARM-Cortex M3 120MHz 512k 64k 3.3-5V no

SAMD51

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
Adafruit Grand Central M4 SAMD51P20A ARM-Cortex M4 120MHz 1M 256k 3.3V yes

STM32F1

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
Arduino STM32 STM32F1 ARM-Cortex M3 72MHz 256-512k 48-64k 3.3V no
Geeetech3D GTM32 STM32F1 ARM-Cortex M3 72MHz 256-512k 48-64k 3.3V no

STM32F4

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
STEVAL-3DP001V1 STM32F401VE Arm-Cortex M4 84MHz 512k 64+32k 3.3-5V yes

Teensy++ 2.0

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
Teensy++ 2.0 AT90USB1286 16MHz 128k 8k 5V no

Teensy 3.1 / 3.2

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
Teensy 3.2 MK20DX256VLH7 ARM-Cortex M4 72MHz 256k 32k 3.3V-5V yes

Teensy 3.5 / 3.6

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
Teensy 3.5 MK64FX512VMD12 ARM-Cortex M4 120MHz 512k 192k 3.3-5V yes
Teensy 3.6 MK66FX1M0VMD18 ARM-Cortex M4 180MHz 1M 256k 3.3V yes

Teensy 4.0 / 4.1

boards processor speed flash sram logic fpu
Teensy 4.0 IMXRT1062DVL6A ARM-Cortex M7 600MHz 1M 2M 3.3V yes
Teensy 4.1 IMXRT1062DVJ6A ARM-Cortex M7 600MHz 1M 2M 3.3V yes

Submitting Patches

Proposed patches should be submitted as a Pull Request against the (bugfix-2.0.x) branch.

  • This branch is for fixing bugs and integrating any new features for the duration of the Marlin 2.0.x life-cycle.
  • Follow the Coding Standards to gain points with the maintainers.
  • Please submit Feature Requests and Bug Reports to the Issue Queue. Support resources are also listed there.
  • Whenever you add new features, be sure to add tests to buildroot/tests and then run your tests locally, if possible.
    • It's optional: Running all the tests on Windows might take a long time, and they will run anyway on GitHub.
    • If you're running the tests on Linux (or on WSL with the code on a Linux volume) the speed is much faster.
    • You can use make tests-all-local or make tests-single-local TEST_TARGET=....
    • If you prefer Docker you can use make tests-all-local-docker or make tests-all-local-docker TEST_TARGET=....

Credits

The current Marlin dev team consists of:

License

Marlin is published under the GPL license because we believe in open development. The GPL comes with both rights and obligations. Whether you use Marlin firmware as the driver for your open or closed-source product, you must keep Marlin open, and you must provide your compatible Marlin source code to end users upon request. The most straightforward way to comply with the Marlin license is to make a fork of Marlin on Github, perform your modifications, and direct users to your modified fork.

While we can't prevent the use of this code in products (3D printers, CNC, etc.) that are closed source or crippled by a patent, we would prefer that you choose another firmware or, better yet, make your own.

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