grbl-LPC-CoreXY/grbl/settings.c

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Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
/*
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
settings.c - eeprom configuration handling
Part of Grbl
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
Copyright (c) 2011-2016 Sungeun K. Jeon for Gnea Research LLC
Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Simen Svale Skogsrud
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
Grbl is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
Grbl is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with Grbl. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include "grbl.h"
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
settings_t settings;
// Method to store startup lines into EEPROM
void settings_store_startup_line(uint8_t n, char *line)
{
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
#ifdef FORCE_BUFFER_SYNC_DURING_EEPROM_WRITE
protocol_buffer_synchronize(); // A startup line may contain a motion and be executing.
#endif
uint32_t addr = n*(LINE_BUFFER_SIZE+1)+EEPROM_ADDR_STARTUP_BLOCK;
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
memcpy_to_eeprom_with_checksum(addr,(char*)line, LINE_BUFFER_SIZE);
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
eeprom_commit();
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
}
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
// Method to store build info into EEPROM
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
// NOTE: This function can only be called in IDLE state.
void settings_store_build_info(char *line)
{
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
// Build info can only be stored when state is IDLE.
memcpy_to_eeprom_with_checksum(EEPROM_ADDR_BUILD_INFO,(char*)line, LINE_BUFFER_SIZE);
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
eeprom_commit();
}
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
// Method to store coord data parameters into EEPROM
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
void settings_write_coord_data(uint8_t coord_select, float *coord_data, bool force, bool commit)
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
{
#ifdef FORCE_BUFFER_SYNC_DURING_EEPROM_WRITE
protocol_buffer_synchronize();
#endif
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
#ifdef STORE_COORD_DATA
force = true;
#endif
if(force) {
uint32_t addr = coord_select*(sizeof(float)*N_AXIS+1) + EEPROM_ADDR_PARAMETERS;
memcpy_to_eeprom_with_checksum(addr,(char*)coord_data, sizeof(float)*N_AXIS);
if(commit)
eeprom_commit();
}
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
}
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
// Method to store Grbl global settings struct and version number into EEPROM
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
// NOTE: This function can only be called in IDLE state.
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
void write_global_settings(bool commit)
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
{
eeprom_put_char(0, SETTINGS_VERSION);
memcpy_to_eeprom_with_checksum(EEPROM_ADDR_GLOBAL, (char*)&settings, sizeof(settings_t));
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
if(commit)
eeprom_commit();
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
}
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
// Method to restore EEPROM-saved Grbl global settings back to defaults.
void settings_restore(uint8_t restore_flag) {
if (restore_flag & SETTINGS_RESTORE_DEFAULTS) {
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
settings.pulse_microseconds = DEFAULT_STEP_PULSE_MICROSECONDS;
settings.stepper_idle_lock_time = DEFAULT_STEPPER_IDLE_LOCK_TIME;
settings.step_invert_mask = DEFAULT_STEPPING_INVERT_MASK;
settings.dir_invert_mask = DEFAULT_DIRECTION_INVERT_MASK;
settings.status_report_mask = DEFAULT_STATUS_REPORT_MASK;
settings.junction_deviation = DEFAULT_JUNCTION_DEVIATION;
settings.arc_tolerance = DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE;
settings.rpm_max = DEFAULT_SPINDLE_RPM_MAX;
settings.rpm_min = DEFAULT_SPINDLE_RPM_MIN;
settings.homing_dir_mask = DEFAULT_HOMING_DIR_MASK;
settings.homing_feed_rate = DEFAULT_HOMING_FEED_RATE;
settings.homing_seek_rate = DEFAULT_HOMING_SEEK_RATE;
settings.homing_debounce_delay = DEFAULT_HOMING_DEBOUNCE_DELAY;
settings.homing_pulloff = DEFAULT_HOMING_PULLOFF;
settings.flags = 0;
if (DEFAULT_REPORT_INCHES) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_REPORT_INCHES; }
if (DEFAULT_LASER_MODE) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_LASER_MODE; }
if (DEFAULT_INVERT_ST_ENABLE) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_INVERT_ST_ENABLE; }
if (DEFAULT_HARD_LIMIT_ENABLE) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_HARD_LIMIT_ENABLE; }
if (DEFAULT_HOMING_ENABLE) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_HOMING_ENABLE; }
if (DEFAULT_SOFT_LIMIT_ENABLE) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_SOFT_LIMIT_ENABLE; }
if (DEFAULT_INVERT_LIMIT_PINS) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_INVERT_LIMIT_PINS; }
if (DEFAULT_INVERT_PROBE_PIN) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_INVERT_PROBE_PIN; }
settings.steps_per_mm[X_AXIS] = DEFAULT_X_STEPS_PER_MM;
settings.steps_per_mm[Y_AXIS] = DEFAULT_Y_STEPS_PER_MM;
settings.steps_per_mm[Z_AXIS] = DEFAULT_Z_STEPS_PER_MM;
settings.max_rate[X_AXIS] = DEFAULT_X_MAX_RATE;
settings.max_rate[Y_AXIS] = DEFAULT_Y_MAX_RATE;
settings.max_rate[Z_AXIS] = DEFAULT_Z_MAX_RATE;
settings.acceleration[X_AXIS] = DEFAULT_X_ACCELERATION;
settings.acceleration[Y_AXIS] = DEFAULT_Y_ACCELERATION;
settings.acceleration[Z_AXIS] = DEFAULT_Z_ACCELERATION;
settings.max_travel[X_AXIS] = (-DEFAULT_X_MAX_TRAVEL);
settings.max_travel[Y_AXIS] = (-DEFAULT_Y_MAX_TRAVEL);
settings.max_travel[Z_AXIS] = (-DEFAULT_Z_MAX_TRAVEL);
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
write_global_settings(false);
}
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
if (restore_flag & SETTINGS_RESTORE_PARAMETERS) {
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
uint8_t idx;
float coord_data[N_AXIS];
memset(&coord_data, 0, sizeof(coord_data));
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
for (idx=0; idx <= SETTING_INDEX_NCOORD; idx++) { settings_write_coord_data(idx, coord_data, true, false); }
}
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
if (restore_flag & SETTINGS_RESTORE_STARTUP_LINES) {
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
#if N_STARTUP_LINE > 0
eeprom_put_char(EEPROM_ADDR_STARTUP_BLOCK, 0);
eeprom_put_char(EEPROM_ADDR_STARTUP_BLOCK+1, 0); // Checksum
#endif
#if N_STARTUP_LINE > 1
eeprom_put_char(EEPROM_ADDR_STARTUP_BLOCK+(LINE_BUFFER_SIZE+1), 0);
eeprom_put_char(EEPROM_ADDR_STARTUP_BLOCK+(LINE_BUFFER_SIZE+2), 0); // Checksum
#endif
}
if (restore_flag & SETTINGS_RESTORE_BUILD_INFO) {
eeprom_put_char(EEPROM_ADDR_BUILD_INFO , 0);
eeprom_put_char(EEPROM_ADDR_BUILD_INFO+1 , 0); // Checksum
}
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
eeprom_commit();
}
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
// Reads startup line from EEPROM. Updated pointed line string data.
uint8_t settings_read_startup_line(uint8_t n, char *line)
{
uint32_t addr = n*(LINE_BUFFER_SIZE+1)+EEPROM_ADDR_STARTUP_BLOCK;
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
if (!(memcpy_from_eeprom_with_checksum((char*)line, addr, LINE_BUFFER_SIZE))) {
// Reset line with default value
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
line[0] = 0; // Empty line
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
settings_store_startup_line(n, line);
return(false);
}
return(true);
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
}
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
// Reads startup line from EEPROM. Updated pointed line string data.
uint8_t settings_read_build_info(char *line)
{
if (!(memcpy_from_eeprom_with_checksum((char*)line, EEPROM_ADDR_BUILD_INFO, LINE_BUFFER_SIZE))) {
// Reset line with default value
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
line[0] = 0; // Empty line
settings_store_build_info(line);
return(false);
}
return(true);
}
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
// Read selected coordinate data from EEPROM. Updates pointed coord_data value.
uint8_t settings_read_coord_data(uint8_t coord_select, float *coord_data)
{
uint32_t addr = coord_select*(sizeof(float)*N_AXIS+1) + EEPROM_ADDR_PARAMETERS;
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
if (!(memcpy_from_eeprom_with_checksum((char*)coord_data, addr, sizeof(float)*N_AXIS))) {
// Reset with default zero vector
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
clear_vector_float(coord_data);
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
settings_write_coord_data(coord_select,coord_data,true,true);
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
return(false);
}
return(true);
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
}
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
// Reads Grbl global settings struct from EEPROM.
uint8_t read_global_settings() {
// Check version-byte of eeprom
uint8_t version = eeprom_get_char(0);
if (version == SETTINGS_VERSION) {
// Read settings-record and check checksum
if (!(memcpy_from_eeprom_with_checksum((char*)&settings, EEPROM_ADDR_GLOBAL, sizeof(settings_t)))) {
return(false);
}
} else {
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
return(false);
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
}
return(true);
}
// A helper method to set settings from command line
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
uint8_t settings_store_global_setting(uint8_t parameter, float value) {
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
if (value < 0.0) { return(STATUS_NEGATIVE_VALUE); }
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
if (parameter >= AXIS_SETTINGS_START_VAL) {
// Store axis configuration. Axis numbering sequence set by AXIS_SETTING defines.
// NOTE: Ensure the setting index corresponds to the report.c settings printout.
parameter -= AXIS_SETTINGS_START_VAL;
uint8_t set_idx = 0;
while (set_idx < AXIS_N_SETTINGS) {
if (parameter < N_AXIS) {
// Valid axis setting found.
switch (set_idx) {
case 0:
#ifdef MAX_STEP_RATE_HZ
if (value*settings.max_rate[parameter] > (MAX_STEP_RATE_HZ*60.0)) { return(STATUS_MAX_STEP_RATE_EXCEEDED); }
#endif
settings.steps_per_mm[parameter] = value;
break;
case 1:
#ifdef MAX_STEP_RATE_HZ
if (value*settings.steps_per_mm[parameter] > (MAX_STEP_RATE_HZ*60.0)) { return(STATUS_MAX_STEP_RATE_EXCEEDED); }
#endif
settings.max_rate[parameter] = value;
break;
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
case 2: settings.acceleration[parameter] = value*60*60; break; // Convert to mm/min^2 for grbl internal use.
case 3: settings.max_travel[parameter] = -value; break; // Store as negative for grbl internal use.
}
break; // Exit while-loop after setting has been configured and proceed to the EEPROM write call.
} else {
set_idx++;
// If axis index greater than N_AXIS or setting index greater than number of axis settings, error out.
if ((parameter < AXIS_SETTINGS_INCREMENT) || (set_idx == AXIS_N_SETTINGS)) { return(STATUS_INVALID_STATEMENT); }
parameter -= AXIS_SETTINGS_INCREMENT;
}
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
}
} else {
// Store non-axis Grbl settings
uint8_t int_value = trunc(value);
switch(parameter) {
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
case 0:
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
if (int_value < 3) { return(STATUS_SETTING_STEP_PULSE_MIN); }
settings.pulse_microseconds = int_value; break;
case 1: settings.stepper_idle_lock_time = int_value; break;
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
case 2:
settings.step_invert_mask = int_value;
st_generate_step_dir_invert_masks(); // Regenerate step and direction port invert masks.
break;
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
case 3:
settings.dir_invert_mask = int_value;
st_generate_step_dir_invert_masks(); // Regenerate step and direction port invert masks.
break;
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
case 4: // Reset to ensure change. Immediate re-init may cause problems.
if (int_value) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_INVERT_ST_ENABLE; }
else { settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_INVERT_ST_ENABLE; }
break;
case 5: // Reset to ensure change. Immediate re-init may cause problems.
if (int_value) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_INVERT_LIMIT_PINS; }
else { settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_INVERT_LIMIT_PINS; }
break;
case 6: // Reset to ensure change. Immediate re-init may cause problems.
if (int_value) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_INVERT_PROBE_PIN; }
else { settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_INVERT_PROBE_PIN; }
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
probe_configure_invert_mask(false);
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
break;
case 10: settings.status_report_mask = int_value; break;
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
case 11: settings.junction_deviation = value; break;
case 12: settings.arc_tolerance = value; break;
case 13:
if (int_value) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_REPORT_INCHES; }
else { settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_REPORT_INCHES; }
v1.1e: New laser features. G-code parser refactoring. CoreXY homing fix. - Increment to v1.1e due to new laser features. - After several discussions with some prominent laser people, a few tweaks to the new laser mode has been installed. - LASER: M3 behaves in a constant power mode. - LASER: M4 behaves in a dynamic power mode, where the laser power is automatically adjusted based on how fast Grbl is moving relative to the programmed feed rate. This is the same as the CONSTANT_POWER_PER_RATE config.h option in the last version. NOTE: When not in motion in M4, Grbl automatically turns off the laser. Again, it only operates while moving! - LASER: Only G1, G2, and G3 motion modes will turn on the laser. So, this means that G0, G80 motion modes will always keep the laser disabled. No matter if M3/M4 are active! - LASER: A spindle stop override is automatically invoked when a laser is put in a feed hold. This behavior may be disabled by a config.h option. - Lots of little tweaks to the g-code parser to help streamline it a bit. It should no effect how it operates. Generally just added a parser flag to track and execute certain scenarios a little more clearly. - Jog motions now allow line numbers to be passed to it and will be displayed in the status reports. - Fixed a CoreXY homing bug. - Fixed an issue when $13 is changed, WCO isn’t sent immediately. - Altered how spindle PWM is set in the stepper ISR. Updated on a step segment basis now. May need to change this back if there are any oddities from doing this. - Updated some documentation. Clarified why M0 no longer showing up in $G and why a `1.` floating point values are shown with no decimals, like so `1`.
2016-12-04 02:02:45 +01:00
system_flag_wco_change(); // Make sure WCO is immediately updated.
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
break;
case 20:
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
if (int_value) {
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
if (bit_isfalse(settings.flags, BITFLAG_HOMING_ENABLE)) { return(STATUS_SOFT_LIMIT_ERROR); }
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
settings.flags |= BITFLAG_SOFT_LIMIT_ENABLE;
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
} else { settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_SOFT_LIMIT_ENABLE; }
break;
case 21:
if (int_value) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_HARD_LIMIT_ENABLE; }
else { settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_HARD_LIMIT_ENABLE; }
limits_init(); // Re-init to immediately change. NOTE: Nice to have but could be problematic later.
break;
case 22:
if (int_value) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_HOMING_ENABLE; }
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
else {
settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_HOMING_ENABLE;
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_SOFT_LIMIT_ENABLE; // Force disable soft-limits.
}
break;
case 23: settings.homing_dir_mask = int_value; break;
case 24: settings.homing_feed_rate = value; break;
case 25: settings.homing_seek_rate = value; break;
case 26: settings.homing_debounce_delay = int_value; break;
case 27: settings.homing_pulloff = value; break;
case 30: settings.rpm_max = value; spindle_init(); break; // Re-initialize spindle rpm calibration
case 31: settings.rpm_min = value; spindle_init(); break; // Re-initialize spindle rpm calibration
Grbl v1.0e huge beta release. Overrides and new reporting. - Feature: Realtime feed, rapid, and spindle speed overrides. These alter the running machine state within tens of milliseconds! - Feed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 1-200% of programmed feed - Rapid override: 100%, 50%, 25% rapid rate commands - Spindle speed override: 100%, +/-10%, +/-1% commands with values 50-200% of programmed speed - Override values have configurable limits and increments in config.h. - Feature: Realtime toggle overrides for spindle stop, flood coolant, and optionally mist coolant - Spindle stop: Enables and disables spindle during a feed hold. Automatically restores last spindles state. - Flood and mist coolant: Immediately toggles coolant state until next toggle or g-code coolant command. - Feature: Jogging mode! Incremental and absolute modes supported. - Grbl accepts jogging-specific commands like $J=X100F50. An axis word and feed rate are required. G20/21 and G90/G91 commands are accepted. - Jog motions can be canceled at any time by a feed hold `!` command. The buffer is automatically flushed. (No resetting required). - Jog motions do not alter the g-code parser state so GUIs don’t have to track what they changed and correct it. - Feature: Laser mode setting. Allows Grbl to execute continuous motions with spindle speed and state changes. - Feature: Significantly improved status reports. Overhauled to cram in more meaningful data and still make it smaller on average. - All available data is now sent by default, but does not appear if it doesn’t change or is not active. - Machine position(MPos) or work position(WPos) is reported but not both at the same time. Instead, the work coordinate offsets (WCO)are sent intermittently whenever it changes or refreshes after 10-30 status reports. Position vectors are easily computed by WPos = MPos - WCO. - All data has changed in some way. Details of changes are in the markdown documents and wiki. - Feature: 16 new realtime commands to control overrides. All in extended-ASCII character space. - While they are not easily typeable and requires a GUI, they can’t be accidentally triggered by some latent character in the g-code program and have tons of room for expansion. - Feature: New substates for HOLD and SAFETY DOOR. A `:x` is appended to the state, where `x` is an integer and indicates a substate. - For example, each integer of a door state describes in what phase the machine is in during parking. Substates are detailed in the documentation. - Feature: With the alarm codes, homing and probe alarms have been expanded with more codes to provide more exact feedback on what caused the alarm. - Feature: New hard limit check upon power-up or reset. If detected, a feedback message to check the limit switches sent immediately after the welcome message. - May be disabled in config.h. - OEM feature: Enable/disable `$RST=` individual commands based on desired behavior in config.h. - OEM feature: Configurable EEPROM wipe to prevent certain data from being deleted during firmware upgrade to a new settings version or `RST=*` command. - OEM feature: Enable/disable the `$I=` build info write string with external EEPROM write example sketch. - This prevents a user from altering the build info string in EEPROM. This requires the vendor to write the string to EEPROM via external means. An Arduino example sketch is provided to accomplish this. This would be useful for contain product data that is retrievable. - Tweak: All feedback has been drastically trimmed to free up flash space for the v1.0 release. - The `$` help message is just one string, listing available commands. - The `$$` settings printout no longer includes descriptions. Only the setting values. (Sorry it’s this or remove overrides!) - Grbl `error:` and `ALARM:` responses now only contain codes. No descriptions. All codes are explained in documentation. - Grbl’s old feedback style may be restored via a config.h, but keep in mind that it will likely not fit into the Arduino’s flash space. - Tweak: Grbl now forces a buffer sync or stop motion whenever a g-code command needs to update and write a value to EEPROM or changes the work coordinate offset. - This addresses two old issues in all prior Grbl versions. First, an EEPROM write requires interrupts to be disabled, including stepper and serial comm. Steps can be lost and data can be corrupted. Second, the work position may not be correlated to the actual machine position, since machine position is derived from the actual current execution state, while work position is based on the g-code parser offset state. They are usually not in sync and the parser state is several motions behind. This forced sync ensures work and machine positions are always correct. - This behavior can be disabled through a config.h option, but it’s not recommended to do so. - Tweak: To make status reports standardized, users can no longer change what is reported via status report mask, except for only toggling machine or work positions. - All other data fields are included in the report and can only be disabled through the config.h file. It’s not recommended to alter this, because GUIs will be expecting this data to be present and may not be compatible. - Tweak: Homing cycle and parking motion no longer report a negative line number in a status report. These will now not report a line number at all. - Tweak: New `[Restoring spindle]` message when restoring from a spindle stop override. Provides feedback what Grbl is doing while the spindle is powering up and a 4.0 second delay is enforced. - Tweak: Override values are reset to 100% upon M2/30. This behavior can be disabled in config.h - Tweak: The planner buffer size has been reduced from 18 to 16 to free up RAM for tracking and controlling overrides. - Tweak: TX buffer size has been increased from 64 to 90 bytes to improve status reporting and overall performance. - Tweak: Removed the MOTION CANCEL state. It was redundant and didn’t affect Grbl’s overall operation by doing so. - Tweak: Grbl’s serial buffer increased by +1 internally, such that 128 bytes means 128, not 127 due to the ring buffer implementation. Long overdue. - Tweak: Altered sys.alarm variable to be set by alarm codes, rather than bit flags. Simplified how it worked overall. - Tweak: Planner buffer and serial RX buffer usage has been combined in the status reports. - Tweak: Pin state reporting has been refactored to report only the pins “triggered” and nothing when not “triggered”. - Tweak: Current machine rate or speed is now included in every report. - Tweak: The work coordinate offset (WCO) and override states only need to be refreshed intermittently or reported when they change. The refresh rates may be altered for each in the config.h file with different idle and busy rates to lessen Grbl’s load during a job. - Tweak: For temporary compatibility to existing GUIs until they are updated, an option to revert back to the old style status reports is available in config.h, but not recommended for long term use. - Tweak: Removed old limit pin state reporting option from config.h in lieu of new status report that includes them. - Tweak: Updated the defaults.h file to include laser mode, altered status report mask, and fix an issue with a missing invert probe pin default. - Refactor: Changed how planner line data is generated and passed to the planner and onto the step generator. By making it a struct variable, this saved significant flash space. - Refactor: Major re-factoring of the planner to incorporate override values and allow for re-calculations fast enough to immediately take effect during operation. No small feat. - Refactor: Re-factored the step segment generator for re-computing new override states. - Refactor: Re-factored spindle_control.c to accommodate the spindle speed overrides and laser mode. - Refactor: Re-factored parts of the codebase for a new jogging mode. Still under development though and slated to be part of the official v1.0 release. Hang tight. - Refactor: Created functions for computing a unit vector and value limiting based on axis maximums to free up more flash. - Refactor: The spindle PWM is now set directly inside of the stepper ISR as it loads new step segments. - Refactor: Moved machine travel checks out of soft limits function into its own since jogging uses this too. - Refactor: Removed coolant_stop() and combined with coolant_set_state(). - Refactor: The serial RX ISR forks off extended ASCII values to quickly assess the new override realtime commands. - Refactor: Altered some names of the step control flags. - Refactor: Improved efficiency of the serial RX get buffer count function. - Refactor: Saved significant flash by removing and combining print functions. Namely the uint8 base10 and base2 functions. - Refactor: Moved the probe state check in the main stepper ISR to improve its efficiency. - Refactor: Single character printPgmStrings() went converted to direct serial_write() commands to save significant flash space. - Documentation: Detailed Markdown documents on error codes, alarm codes, messages, new real-time commands, new status reports, and how jogging works. More to come later and will be posted on the Wiki as well. - Documentation: CSV files for quick importing of Grbl error and alarm codes. - Bug Fix: Applied v0.9 master fixes to CoreXY homing. - Bug Fix: The print float function would cause Grbl to crash if a value was 1e6 or greater. Increased the buffer by 3 bytes to help prevent this in the future. - Bug Fix: Build info and startup string EEPROM restoring was not writing the checksum value. - Bug Fix: Corrected an issue with safety door restoring the proper spindle and coolant state. It worked before, but breaks with laser mode that can continually change spindle state per planner block. - Bug Fix: Move system position and probe position arrays out of the system_t struct. Ran into some compiling errors that were hard to track down as to why. Moving them out fixed it.
2016-09-22 03:08:24 +02:00
case 32:
#ifdef VARIABLE_SPINDLE
if (int_value) { settings.flags |= BITFLAG_LASER_MODE; }
else { settings.flags &= ~BITFLAG_LASER_MODE; }
#else
return(STATUS_SETTING_DISABLED);
#endif
break;
default:
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
return(STATUS_INVALID_STATEMENT);
}
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
}
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
write_global_settings(true);
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
return(STATUS_OK);
}
Lots of re-organization and cleaning-up. Some bug fixes. - Added a new source and header file called system. These files contain the system commands and variables, as well as all of the system headers and standard libraries Grbl uses. Centralizing some of the code. - Re-organized the include headers throughout the source code. - ENABLE_M7 define was missing from config.h. Now there. - SPINDLE_MAX_RPM and SPINDLE_MIN_RPM now defined in config.h. No uncommenting to prevent user issues. Minimum spindle RPM now provides the lower, near 0V, scale adjustment, i.e. some spindles can go really slow so why use up our 256 voltage bins for them? - Remove some persistent variables from coolant and spindle control. They were redundant. - Removed a VARIABLE_SPINDLE define in cpu_map.h that shouldn’t have been there. - Changed the DEFAULT_ARC_TOLERANCE to 0.002mm to improve arc tracing. Before we had issues with performance, no longer. - Fixed a bug with the hard limits and the software debounce feature enabled. The invert limit pin setting wasn’t honored. - Fixed a bug with the homing direction mask. Now is like it used to be. At least for now. - Re-organized main.c to serve as only as the reset/initialization routine. Makes things a little bit clearer in terms of execution procedures. - Re-organized protocol.c as the overall master control unit for execution procedures. Not quite there yet, but starting to make a little more sense in how things are run. - Removed updating of old settings records. So many new settings have been added that it’s not worth adding the code to migrate old user settings. - Tweaked spindle_control.c a bit and made it more clear and consistent with other parts of Grbl. - Tweaked the stepper disable bit code in stepper.c. Requires less flash memory.
2014-01-11 04:22:10 +01:00
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
// Initialize the config subsystem
void settings_init() {
if(!read_global_settings()) {
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
report_status_message(STATUS_SETTING_READ_FAIL);
settings_restore(SETTINGS_RESTORE_ALL); // Force restore all EEPROM data.
2017-01-15 05:54:36 +01:00
report_grbl_settings();
Re-factored system states and alarm management. Serial baud support greater than 57600. - Refactored system states to be more clear and concise. Alarm locks processes when position is unknown to indicate to user something has gone wrong. - Changed mc_alarm to mc_reset, which now manages the system reset function. Centralizes it. - Renamed '$X' kill homing lock to kill alarm lock. - Created an alarm error reporting method to clear up what is an alarm: message vs a status error: message. For GUIs mainly. Alarm codes are negative. Status codes are positive. - Serial baud support upto 115200. Previous baudrate calc was unstable for 57600 and above. - Alarm state locks out all g-code blocks, including startup scripts, but allows user to access settings and internal commands. For example, to disable hard limits, if they are problematic. - Hard limits do not respond in an alarm state. - Fixed a problem with the hard limit interrupt during the homing cycle. The interrupt register is still active during the homing cycle and still signal the interrupt to trigger when re-enabled. Instead, just disabled the register. - Homing rate adjusted. All axes move at homing seek rate, regardless of how many axes move at the same time. This is unlike how the stepper module does it as a point to point rate. - New config.h settings to disable the homing rate adjustment and the force homing upon powerup. - Reduced the number of startup lines back down to 2 from 3. This discourages users from placing motion block in there, which can be very dangerous. - Startup blocks now run only after an alarm-free reset or after a homing cycle. Does not run when $X kill is called. For satefy reasons
2012-11-15 01:36:29 +01:00
}
}
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
// Returns step pin mask according to Grbl internal axis indexing.
2017-01-05 01:04:38 +01:00
uint32_t get_step_pin_mask(uint8_t axis_idx)
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
{
if ( axis_idx == X_AXIS ) { return((1<<X_STEP_BIT)); }
if ( axis_idx == Y_AXIS ) { return((1<<Y_STEP_BIT)); }
return((1<<Z_STEP_BIT));
}
// Returns direction pin mask according to Grbl internal axis indexing.
2017-01-05 01:04:38 +01:00
uint32_t get_direction_pin_mask(uint8_t axis_idx)
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
{
if ( axis_idx == X_AXIS ) { return((1<<X_DIRECTION_BIT)); }
if ( axis_idx == Y_AXIS ) { return((1<<Y_DIRECTION_BIT)); }
return((1<<Z_DIRECTION_BIT));
}
// Returns limit pin mask according to Grbl internal axis indexing.
2017-01-05 02:48:59 +01:00
uint32_t get_limit_pin_mask(uint8_t axis_idx)
Settings refactoring. Bug fixes. Misc new features. This is likely the last major change to the v0.9 code base before push to master. Only two minor things remain on the agenda (CoreXY support, force clear EEPROM, and an extremely low federate bug). - NEW! Grbl is now compile-able and may be flashed directly through the Arduino IDE. Only minor changes were required for this compatibility. See the Wiki to learn how to do it. - New status reporting mask to turn on and off what Grbl sends back. This includes machine coordinates, work coordinates, serial RX buffer usage, and planner buffer usage. Expandable to more information on user request, but that’s it for now. - Settings have been completely renumbered to allow for future new settings to be installed without having to constantly reshuffle and renumber all of the settings every time. - All settings masks have been standardized to mean bit 0 = X, bit 1 = Y, and bit 2 = Z, to reduce confusion on how they work. The invert masks used by the internal Grbl system were updated to accommodate this change as well. - New invert probe pin setting, which does what it sounds like. - Fixed a probing cycle bug, where it would freeze intermittently, and removed some redundant code. - Homing may now be set to the origin wherever the limit switches are. Traditionally machine coordinates should always be in negative space, but when limit switches on are on the opposite side, the machine coordinate would be set to -max_travel for the axis. Now you can always make it [0,0,0] via a compile-time option in config.h. (Soft limits routine was updated to account for this as well.) - Probe coordinate message immediately after a probing cycle may now be turned off via a compile-time option in config.h. By default the probing location is always reported. - Reduced the N_ARC_CORRECTION default value to reflect the changes in how circles are generated by an arc tolerance, rather than a fixed arc segment setting. - Increased the incoming line buffer limit from 70 to 80 characters. Had some extra memory space to invest into this. - Fixed a bug where tool number T was not being tracked and reported correctly. - Added a print free memory function for debugging purposes. Not used otherwise. - Realtime rate report should now work during feed holds, but it hasn’t been tested yet. - Updated the streaming scripts with MIT-license and added the simple streaming to the main stream.py script to allow for settings to be sent. - Some minor code refactoring to improve flash efficiency. Reduced the flash by several hundred KB, which was re-invested in some of these new features.
2014-07-26 23:01:34 +02:00
{
if ( axis_idx == X_AXIS ) { return((1<<X_LIMIT_BIT)); }
if ( axis_idx == Y_AXIS ) { return((1<<Y_LIMIT_BIT)); }
return((1<<Z_LIMIT_BIT));
}