This fork of marlin is an adaption for my GT2560 board that was bundled with a Geeetech Prusa I3 Pro B printer. It's work in progress so use it at your own risk.
But seriously if you want to use it on a stock Geeetech prusa then you
will have to set E-steps
to 93, and invert the direction back to a direct-drive mode for the stock mk8-extruder as I've upgraded mine with a geared extruder.
And optionally configure the auto-level features but that shouldn't be necessary as they're set to manual.
Marlin 1.1 represents an evolutionary leap over Marlin 1.0.2. It is the result of over two years of effort by several volunteers around the world who have paid meticulous and sometimes obsessive attention to every detail. For this release we focused on code quality, performance, stability, and overall user experience. Several new features have also been added, many of which require no extra hardware.
For complete Marlin documentation click over to the Marlin Homepage <marlinfw.org>, where you will find in-depth articles, how-to videos, and tutorials on every aspect of Marlin, as the site develops. For release notes, see the Releases page.
This Release branch contains the latest tagged version of Marlin (currently 1.1.3 – June 2017).
Previous releases of Marlin include 1.0.2-2 (December 2016) and 1.0.1 (December 2014). Any version of Marlin prior to 1.0.1 (when we started tagging versions) can be collectively referred to as Marlin 1.0.0.
Click on the Issue Queue and Pull Requests links above at any time to see what we're currently working on.
To submit patches and new features for Marlin 1.1 check out the bugfix-1.1.x branch, add your commits, and submit a Pull Request back to the bugfix-1.1.x
branch. Periodically that branch will form the basis for the next minor release.
Note that our "bugfix" branch will always contain the latest patches to the current release version. These patches may not be widely tested. As always, when using "nightly" builds of Marlin, proceed with full caution.
Marlin development has reached an important milestone with its first stable release in over 2 years. During this period we focused on cleaning up the code and making it more modern, consistent, readable, and sensible.
Marlin 1.1 is the last "flat" version of Marlin!
Arduino IDE now has support for folder hierarchies, so Marlin 1.2 will have a hierarchical file structure. Marlin's newly reorganized code will be easier to work with and form a stronger starting-point as we get into 32-bit CPU support and the Hardware Access Layer (HAL).
- Marlin Home Page - The Marlin Documentation Project. Join us!
- RepRap.org Wiki Page - An overview of Marlin and its role in RepRap.
- Marlin Firmware Forum - Find help with configuration, get up and running.
- @MarlinFirmware on Twitter - Follow for news, release alerts, and tips & tricks. (Maintained by @thinkyhead.)
The current Marlin dev team consists of:
- Roxanne Neufeld [@Roxy-3D] - English
- Scott Lahteine [@thinkyhead] - English
- Bob Kuhn [@Bob-the-Kuhn] - English
- Andreas Hardtung [@AnHardt] - Deutsch, English
- Nico Tonnhofer [@Wurstnase] - Deutsch, English
- Jochen Groppe [@CONSULitAS] - Deutsch, English
- João Brazio [@jbrazio] - Portuguese, English
- Bo Hermannsen [@boelle] - Danish, English
- Bob Cousins [@bobc] - English
- [@maverikou]
- Chris Palmer [@nophead]
- [@paclema]
- Erik van der Zalm [@ErikZalm]
- David Braam [@daid]
- Bernhard Kubicek [@bkubicek]
More features have been added by:
- Alberto Cotronei [@MagoKimbra] - English, Italian
- Thomas Moore [@tcm0116]
- Ernesto Martinez [@emartinez167]
- Petr Zahradnik [@clexpert]
- Kai [@Kaibob2]
- Edward Patel [@epatel]
- F. Malpartida [@fmalpartida] - English, Spanish
- [@esenapaj] - English, Japanese
- [@benlye]
- [@Tannoo]
- [@teemuatlut]
- [@bgort]
- Luc Van Daele[@LVD-AC] - Dutch, French, English
- [@paulusjacobus]
- ...and many others
Marlin is published under the GPL license because we believe in open development. The GPL comes with both rights and obligations. Whether you use Marlin firmware as the driver for your open or closed-source product, you must keep Marlin open, and you must provide your compatible Marlin source code to end users upon request. The most straightforward way to comply with the Marlin license is to make a fork of Marlin on Github, perform your modifications, and direct users to your modified fork.
While we can't prevent the use of this code in products (3D printers, CNC, etc.) that are closed source or crippled by a patent, we would prefer that you choose another firmware or, better yet, make your own.