When assembling the command line for the various supported serial
monitors, MONITOR_CMD must match the name of one of the supported
commands to be recognized. Serial monitors given with leading path
components are not recognized, and a command like
make MONITOR_CMD=~/src/picocom/picocom monitor
errors out as the fallback monitor command is executed instead of the
picocom-specific one. However, sometimes it's necessary to specify a
supported serial monitor with its full path, because e.g. the user
wants to tests a freshly compiled version before installing it. Sure,
the user could just run the serial monitor directly, but that's
cumbersome because he has to pay attention to use the right baud rate
and USB port.
So strip all leading path components, if present, from MONITOR_CMD
using the 'nondir' make function before checking whether it's one of
the supported serial monitors. This way commands like the above would
just work.
While at it, remove the single quotes around 'putty': they are both
unnecessary and inconsistent with similar constructs throughout
Arduino.mk.
Considering the number of project files spread in different locations
when developing an Arduino project, proper use of tags can be difficult;
resolving beyond local functions.
I've added automatic generation of a tags file, which includes:
* Standard ctags source in project dir (.c, .cpp, .h)
* Arduino source in project dir (.ide, .pde)
* Arduino core based on detected project core from Arduino install.
* Included Arduino libraries from user library folder.
As a Vim user I find this hugely useful and think it would be a useful
addtion for others. Target has been added as `make tags`.
The matching parentheses and | in sed expresssions need to be escaped
or sed will consider like normal characters.
Without this fix, make show_submenu was showing lines like this one:
pro.menu.cpu.8MHzatmega328 ATmega328 (3.3V, 8 MHz)
It now properly outputs lines like this:
pro 8MHzatmega328 ATmega328 (3.3V, 8 MHz)
This output is much less misleading to users especially newcomers.
doesn't support LTO or plugins. Fixes Issue #456
So essentially LTO support will only be enabled with avr-gcc 4.9.2 which comes with 1.6.10 or later
and Debian, Ubuntu etc; not 4.8.1 which comes with IDE 1.6.9 and a few earlier versions.
Tested with:
* 1.6.8 (avr-gcc 4.8.1 which doesn't support LTO so uses avr-ar and doesn't set LTO flags)
* 1.6.12 (avr-gcc 4.9.2 which supports LTO so uses avr-gcc-ar and sets LTO flags)
* 1.0.5 with Debian avr-gcc 4.9.2 (supports LTO so uses avr-gcc-ar and sets LTO flags)
upstream (without it compilation seems to fail on OSX). Updated docs.
Also made ARDUINO_LIB_PATH overloadable (as implied by arduino-mk-vars.md) although this is a
pretty niche use-case.
Using new Arduino IDE and ATTinyCore board module he need to search var
various vars not in cpu submenu but in chip. Changed the makefile in
order to search chip or cpu using regular expression.
$ARCHITECTURE is probably safe as that's usually called $ARCH.
Fixes issue #386.
Need to decide if this is going to upset too many user's who have already
started using $VENDOR - and who uses tcsh? ;-)
With this fix the `TARGET` variable is set correctly when the project directory
(or its path) contains spaces. So in this case:
/Users/Joe/Dropbox (Personal)/example project
`TARGET` will be set to `example_project` instead of `Dropbox example project`
(like it was before this fix).
Needed to fix the new wiring_pulse.S in IDE 1.6.5 which
also has a wiring_pulse.c source file.
Mostly rebased @peplin's PR #266, so should allow us
to support newer chipKIT builds too.