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Changes to Creality's Firmware

  • Included the Autolevel-Grid to a 7x7-Mesh based on the fork of @aschmitt1909
  • Included the Linear Advance functions based on the fork of @queeup-Forks
  • Included the Support of Hosts Commands based on the fork of @rtorchia

Important

My fork changes includes:

  • The 7x7 Mesh to 5x5
  • Increase the Z distance when M600(change filament) is invoked to provide enough space to change and purge the filament.
  • Added M117 Support to show Messages in the LCD Screen.
  • Added the detailed page and controls of a Print Job Coming from Octoprint to be shown in the LCD
  • Added custom comand O9000 to receive the data to render in the Print Job Page from Octo print.
  • Increased Buffers for the Serial Communication.
  • Increased the BaudRate from 115200 to 128000.


Octorpint Print Job Detai




Tip

Under Firmware folder you can find a precompiled .bin inside a zip file, which you can just flash on your printer, if youre running 1.0.6 already.

  1. Put the firmware on your SD-Card(Format you SD to fat32 recommended to use MiniTool Partition or Gparted)
  2. Rename it to something random, i.E. "hiPrinterPleaseFlashThisFirmware123.bin"
  3. Plug the SD Card in your printer and turn it on
  4. Wait for the update to finish - it needs ~10 seconds.
  5. Run a new Autolevel.
  6. In Octoprint enable the 128000 baud rate.


Caution

Disclaimer

I'm not responsable of the damage or brick that may happen to your printer if you don't know what are you doing. I'm provided this fork tested on my own printer without warranties.**


Marlin 3D Printer Firmware

GitHub GitHub contributors GitHub Release Date Build Status

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.

Example Configurations

Before building Marlin you'll need to configure it for your specific hardware. Your vendor should have already provided source code with configurations for the installed firmware, but if you ever decide to upgrade you'll need updated configuration files. Marlin users have contributed dozens of tested example configurations to get you started. Visit the MarlinFirmware/Configurations repository to find the right configuration for your hardware.

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
ESP32 ESP32 FYSETC E4, E4d@BOX, MRR
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
Linux Native x86/ARM/etc. Raspberry Pi

Submitting Changes

Marlin Support

The Issue Queue is reserved for Bug Reports and Feature Requests. To get help with configuration and troubleshooting, please use the following resources:

Contributors

Marlin is constantly improving thanks to a huge number of contributors from all over the world bringing their specialties and talents. Huge thanks are due to all the contributors who regularly patch up bugs, help direct traffic, and basically keep Marlin from falling apart. Marlin's continued existence would not be possible without them.

Administration

Regular users can open and close their own issues, but only the administrators can do project-related things like add labels, merge changes, set milestones, and kick trolls. The current Marlin admin 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.