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http://code.google.com/p/arduino/issues/detail?id=554
end of flash memory where they can be read (at least in theory) by
device programmers, hex-file examination, or application programs.
This is done by putting the version number in a separate section
(".version"), and using linker/objcopy magic to locate that section as
appropriate for the target chip. (See
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/avr-gcc-list/2011-02/msg00016.html
for some discussion on the details.)
Start the version at 4.1 (the last "packaged" version of optiboot was
called version 3, so the "top of source" would be 4.0, and adding the
version number makes 4.1)
Refactor LDSECTION in the Makefile to LDSECTIONS so that multiple
section start addresses can be defined.
Change the _isp makefile definitions to make the bootloader section
readable (but not writable) by the application section. (This would
need to be done elsewhere as well to handle all bootloader programming
techniques. Notably Arduino's boards.txt
Note that this change does not change the "code" portion of optiboot
at all. The only diffs in the .hex files are the added version word
at the end of flash memory.
(cherry picked from commit 00706284dec3171646419839bd4a9e3f1c2d7088)
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optiboot up-to-date with the optiboot source repository as of Jun-2011
(the last changes made in the optiboot repository were in Oct-2010)
This adds support for several plaforms, fixes the "30k bug", and
refactors the source to have separate stk500.h, boot.h, and pin_defs.h
These are the arduino opticode issues fixed:
http://code.google.com/p/arduino/issues/detail?id=380
optiboot has problems upload sketches bigger than 30 KB
http://code.google.com/p/arduino/issues/detail?id=556
update optiboot to the point of the latest optiboot project sources.
These are issues that had been solved in the optiboot source aready:
http://code.google.com/p/arduino/issues/detail?id=364
optiboot leaves timer1 configured when starting app, breaks PWM on
pin 9 and 10. (fixed with a workaround in arduino core.)
aka http://code.google.com/p/optiboot/source/detail?r=c778fbe72df6ac13ef730c25283358c3c970f73e
Support for ATmega8 and mega88.
Fix fuse settings for mega168 _ISP targets
Additional new platforms (mega, sanguino)
http://code.google.com/p/optiboot/issues/detail?id=26
Set R1 to 0 (already in arduino code)
http://code.google.com/p/optiboot/issues/detail?id=36&can=1
Fails to build correctly for mega88
After this commit, the only differences between the Arduino optiboot.c
and the optiboot repository optiboot.c are cosmetic.
(cherry picked from commit e2812ef91cc1489527827dcd14c843f3b3244f36)
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Remove the trailing comments when setting fuse values for the various
*_isp targets, so that they won't cause avrdude errors.
This was done the same way as in the optiboot source tree:
http://code.google.com/p/optiboot/issues/detail?id=17
http://code.google.com/p/optiboot/source/detail?r=005fb033fc08c551b2f86f7c90c5db21549b3f20
(cherry picked from commit 6840b77643a75b850d48bed80c578da484e6559f)
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Allows building within the Arduino Source tree, and within the Arduino
IDE tree, as well as using CrossPack on Mac.
Adds README.TXT to track arduino-specific changes (and documents the
new build options.)
This addresses Arduino issue:
http://code.google.com/p/arduino/issues/detail?id=487
And optiboot issue
http://code.google.com/p/optiboot/issues/detail?id=1
(which can be thought of as a subset of the Arduno issue.)
Note that the binaries produced after these Makefile changes (using any
of the compile environments) are identical to those produced by the
crosspack-20100115 environment on a Mac.
(cherry picked from commit 2d2ed324b48e709f59a002cb274ed60bb0ebc911)
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