- Overhauled the state machine and cleaned up its overall operation.
This involved creating a new ‘suspend’ state for what all external
commands, except real-time commands, are ignored. All hold type states
enter this suspend state.
- Removed ‘auto cycle start’ setting from Grbl. This was not used by
users in its intended way and is somewhat redundant, as GUI manage the
cycle start by streaming. It also muddled up how Grbl should interpret
how and when to execute a g-code block. Removing it made everything
much much simpler.
- Fixed a program pause bug when used with other buffer_sync commands.
- New safety door feature for OEMs. Immediately forces a feed hold and
then de-energizes the machine. Resuming is blocked until the door is
closed. When it is, it re-energizes the system and then resumes on the
normal toolpath.
- Safety door input pin is optional and uses the feed hold pin on A1.
Enabled by config.h define.
- Spindle and coolant re-energizing upon a safety door resume has a
programmable delay time to allow for complete spin up to rpm and
turning on the coolant before resuming motion.
- Safety door-style feed holds can be used instead of regular feed hold
(doesn’t de-energize the machine) with a ‘@‘ character. If the safety
door input pin is not enabled, the system can be resumed at any time.
- ‘build’ directory was not being synced by git because it was empty.
Added a .gitignore file in the ‘build’ directory to force git to sync
it but keep it empty.
- Updated the Makefile to not erase the .gitignore.
- Re-organized source code files into a ‘grbl’ directory to lessen one
step in compiling Grbl through the Arduino IDE.
- Added an ‘examples’ directory with an upload .INO sketch to further
simplify compiling and uploading Grbl via the Arduino IDE.
- Updated the Makefile with regard to the source code no longer being
in the root directory. All files generated by compiling is placed in a
separate ‘build’ directory to keep things tidy. The makefile should
operate in the same way as it did before.
- Critical bug fix for diagonal motions that continue on the same
direction or return in the exact opposite direction. This issue could
cause Grbl to crash intermittently due to a numerical round-off error.
Grbl versions prior to v0.9g shouldn’t have this issue.
- Reorganized all of the includes used by Grbl. Centralized it into a
single “grbl.h” include. This will help simplify the compiling and
uploading process through the Arduino IDE.
- Added an example .INO file for users to simply open and run when
compiling and uploading through the IDE. More to come later.
- As a setup feature, users can compile-in input pin status reporting.
Doesn’t do anything special, just prints the binary for the port. 0’s
and 1’s indicate low and high signals on the pins. It’s a bit cryptic
right now, but it’s just a start.
- Added a max step rate check when writing step/mm and max rate
settings. Should help avoid people misdiagnosing problems associated
with going over the 30kHz step rate limit. Right now not enabled. Takes
up over 100k of flash. Need that room for other things right now.
- Planner bug when moving along a diagonal back and forth on the same
path. Rare for the fact that most CAM programs don’t program this type
of motion, neither does jogging. Fixed in this update.
- Added grbl_sim defaults for testing purposes.
- All pins, which include limits, control command, and probe pins, can
now all be configured to trigger as active-low or active-high and
whether the pin has its internal pull-up resistor enabled. This should
allow for just about all types of NO and NC switch configurations.
- The probe pin invert setting hasn’t been added to the Grbl settings,
like the others, and will have to wait until v1.0. But for now, it’s
available as a compile-time option in config.h.
- Fixed a variable spindle bug.
- Rudimentary CoreXY kinematics support. Didn’t test, but homing and
feed holds should work. See config.h. Please report successes and
issues as we find bugs.
- G40 (disable cutter comp) is now “supported”. Meaning that Grbl will
no longer issue an error when typically sent in g-code program header.
- Refactored coolant and spindle state setting into separate functions
for future features.
- Configuration option for fixing homing behavior when there are two
limit switches on the same axis sharing an input pin.
- Created a new “grbl.h” that will eventually be used as the main
include file for Grbl. Also will help simply uploading through the
Arduino IDE
- Separated out the alarms execution flags from the realtime (used be
called runtime) execution flag variable. Now reports exactly what
caused the alarm. Expandable for new alarms later on.
- Refactored the homing cycle to support CoreXY.
- Applied @EliteEng updates to Mega2560 support. Some pins were
reconfigured.
- Created a central step to position and vice versa function. Needed
for non-traditional cartesian machines. Should make it easier later.
- Removed the new CPU map for the Uno. No longer going to used. There
will be only one configuration to keep things uniform.
- Minor bug fix for variable spindle PWM output. Values smaller than
the minimum RPM for the spindle would overflow the PWM value. Thanks
Rob!
- Created an optional minimum spindle PWM low-mark value as a
compile-time option. This is for special circumstances when the PWM has
to be at a certain level to be read by the spindle controller.
- Refactored the new probing commands (G38.3, G38.4, G38.5) code to
work better with the rest of Grbl’s systems.
- Refactored mc_probe() and mc_arc() to accept the mode of the command,
i.e. clockwise vs counter, toward vs away, etc. This is to make these
functions independent of gcode state variables.
- Removed the pull off motion in the probing cycle. This is not an
official operation and was added for user simplicity, but wrongly did
so. So bye bye.
- Created a configure probe invert mask function to handle the
different probe pin setting and probing cycle modes with a single mask.
- Minor bug fix with reporting motion modes via $G. G38.2 wasn’t
showing up. It now does, along with the other new probing commands.
- Refactored some of the new pin configurations for the future of Grbl.
-
- The `x` in `$x=val` would overflow when a value larger than 255 was
entered and passed to Grbl. This resulted with unintended parameters
being set by the overflow value. To fix, simply check for values larger
than 255 and error out.
- Sometime I HATE github. This push is just here to be able to describe
the last two pushes today that had a merging conflict and lost all of
the commit comments before.
- Setting $10 would cause $11 to be the same value. Missed a break
statement in the switch-case. Oops! Now fixed.
- CPU pin map for the future versions of Grbl introduced, but not yet
finalized. Still working on it and it’s subject to change.
- Added a new high-speed machining test g-code routine written by Todd
Fleming. Mills a pocket at 15,000mm/min. Do not use when connected to
your machine! You’ve been warned!