João Brázio f077c7abbf Fix dogm lcd error when FAN_PIN is defined as -1 | 8 年之前 | |
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ArduinoAddons | 8 年之前 | |
Documentation | 9 年之前 | |
LinuxAddons/bin | 8 年之前 | |
Marlin | 8 年之前 | |
PlatformIOAddons | 9 年之前 | |
.astylerc | 9 年之前 | |
.gitignore | 8 年之前 | |
.travis.yml | 8 年之前 | |
LICENSE | 9 年之前 | |
README.md | 8 年之前 |
Additional documentation can be found in The Marlin Wiki.
Not for production use – use with caution!
You can download earlier versions of Marlin on the Releases page. (The latest “stable” release of Marlin is 1.0.2-1.)
You’ll always find the latest Release Candidate in the “RC” branch. Bugs that we find in the current Release Candidate are patched in the “RCBugFix” branch, so during beta testing this is where you can always find the latest code on its way towards release.
Future development (Marlin 1.2 and beyond) takes place in the MarlinDev repository.
RC4 - 24 Mar 2016
Many lingering bugs and nagging issues addressed
Improvements to LCD menus, CoreXY/CoreXZ, Delta, Bed Leveling, and more…
RC3 - 01 Dec 2015
A number of language sensitive strings have been revised
Formatting of the LCD display has been improved to handle negative coordinates better
Various compiler-related issues have been corrected
RC2 - 29 Sep 2015
File styling reverted
LCD update frequency reduced
RC1 - 19 Sep 2015
Published for testing
Proposed patches should be submitted as a Pull Request against the RCBugFix branch.
Please test this firmware and inform us if it misbehaves in any way. Volunteers are standing by!
The current Marlin dev team consists of:
More features have been added by:
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.