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-This directory contains the Optiboot small bootloader for AVR
-microcontrollers, somewhat modified specifically for the Arduino
-environment.
-
-Optiboot is more fully described here: http://code.google.com/p/optiboot/
-and is the work of Peter Knight (aka Cathedrow), building on work of Jason P
-Kyle, Spiff, and Ladyada. Arduino-specific modification are by Bill
-Westfield (aka WestfW)
-
-Arduino-specific issues are tracked as part of the Arduino project
-at http://code.google.com/p/arduino
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------
-Building optiboot for Arduino.
-
-Production builds of optiboot for Arduino are done on a Mac in "unix mode"
-using CrossPack-AVR-20100115. CrossPack tracks WINAVR (for windows), which
-is just a package of avr-gcc and related utilities, so similar builds should
-work on Windows or Linux systems.
-
-One of the Arduino-specific changes is modifications to the makefile to
-allow building optiboot using only the tools installed as part of the
-Arduino environment, or the Arduino source development tree. All three
-build procedures should yield identical binaries (.hex files) (although
-this may change if compiler versions drift apart between CrossPack and
-the Arduino IDE.)
-
-
-Building Optiboot in the Arduino IDE Install.
-
-Work in the .../hardware/arduino/bootloaders/optiboot/ and use the
-"omake <targets>" command, which just generates a command that uses
-the arduino-included "make" utility with a command like:
- make OS=windows ENV=arduino <targets>
-or make OS=macosx ENV=arduino <targets>
-On windows, this assumes you're using the windows command shell. If
-you're using a cygwin or mingw shell, or have one of those in your
-path, the build will probably break due to slash vs backslash issues.
-On a Mac, if you have the developer tools installed, you can use the
-Apple-supplied version of make.
-The makefile uses relative paths ("../../../tools/" and such) to find
-the programs it needs, so you need to work in the existing optiboot
-directory (or something created at the same "level") for it to work.
-
-
-Building Optiboot in the Arduino Source Development Install.
-
-In this case, there is no special shell script, and you're assumed to
-have "make" installed somewhere in your path.
-Build the Arduino source ("ant build") to unpack the tools into the
-expected directory.
-Work in Arduino/hardware/arduino/bootloaders/optiboot and use
- make OS=windows ENV=arduinodev <targets>
-or make OS=macosx ENV=arduinodev <targets>
-
-
-Programming Chips Using the _isp Targets
-
-The CPU targets have corresponding ISP targets that will actuall
-program the bootloader into a chip. "atmega328_isp" for the atmega328,
-for example. These will set the fuses and lock bits as appropriate as
-well as uploading the bootloader code.
-
-The makefiles default to using a USB programmer, but you can use
-a serial programmer like ArduinoISP by changing the appropriate
-variables when you invoke make:
-
- make ISPTOOL=stk500v1 ISPPORT=/dev/tty.usbserial-A20e1eAN \
- ISPSPEED=-b19200 atmega328_isp
-
-The "atmega8_isp" target does not currently work, because the mega8
-doesn't have the "extended" fuse that the generic ISP target wants to
-pass on to avrdude. You'll need to run avrdude manually.
-
-
-Standard Targets
-
-I've reduced the pre-built and source-version-controlled targets
-(.hex and .lst files included in the git repository) to just the
-three basic 16MHz targets: atmega8, atmega16, atmega328.