Firmware for the Keyboardio Model 01 and other keyboards with AVR or ARM MCUs.
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Go to file
Jesse Vincent b73f6a7eeb
Bullet-proofing against the mouse button constants not being defined
3 years ago
.github Automatically publish a kaleidoscope bundle on every commit for Arduino users who want to live on the bleading edge 4 years ago
bin Ongoing work to build the GD32 core 3 years ago
docs Remove historical 'kaleidoscope-builder' 3 years ago
etc WIP porting to the Model100 / GD32 3 years ago
examples Fix our sketch id in the model 100 example 3 years ago
extras Initial import 8 years ago
plugins Bullet-proofing against the mouse button constants not being defined 3 years ago
src astyle 3 years ago
test/MatrixAddr Update linear addressing branch for firmware drift 5 years ago
testing Update embedded googletest to 1.11.0 3 years ago
tests Add keyIsInjected helper 3 years ago
.astylerc Clean up astyle invocations based on @gendankenexperimenter's KeyboardioHID cleanups 4 years ago
.gitignore Ignore the docs/plugins dir which hosts copied plugin docs at build time 4 years ago
.readthedocs.yml try to get rtd to see our master doc 5 years ago
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md Code of conduct 8 years ago
CONTRIBUTING.md CONTRIBUTING.md: Add a very short section about how to accept the DCO 6 years ago
LICENSE License clarificataion & copyright headers 6 years ago
Makefile WIP porting to the Model100 / GD32 3 years ago
README.md Update README to say that the Arduino IDE and git checkouts are not friends 4 years ago
library.properties fix paragraph section in Kaleidsocope library.properties 4 years ago

README.md

Kaleidoscope

Flexible firmware for Arduino-powered keyboards.

This package contains the "core" of Kaleidoscope and a number of example firmware "Sketches".

If you're just getting started with the Keyboardio Model 01, the introductory docs are here and the source for the basic firmware package is here: https://github.com/keyboardio/Model01-Firmware. It's probably a good idea to start there, learn how to modify your keymap and maybe turn some modules on or off, and then come back to the full repository when you have more complex changes in mind.

Getting Started

If you want to use Kaleidoscope to customize or compile a "sketch" to power a supported keyboard, the fastest way to get started is to use the Arduino IDE. You can find setup instructions on kaleidoscope.readthedocs.io

If you prefer to work from the command line or intend to work on Kaleidscope itself, please follow the instructions below. It's important to note that the Arduino IDE needs the source code laid out in a slightly different arrangement than you'll find in this repository. If you want to use the Arduino IDE, you should follow these instructions instead.

Use git to check out a copy of Kaleidoscope

  1. Open a commandline shell and navigate to where you want to check out Kaleidoscope.

For the purposes of this tutorial, we'll assume your checkout is in a directory called kaleidoscope inside a directory called git in your home directory.

$ mkdir ${HOME}/git
$ cd ${HOME}/git
  1. Download the latest version of Kaleidoscope
$ git clone https://github.com/keyboardio/Kaleidoscope
  1. Ask Kaleidoscope to install the compiler toolchain, arduino-cli and platform support
$ cd ${HOME}/git/Kaleidoscope
$ make setup
  1. Tell your shell where to find your Kaleidoscope installation. This example is for bash. If you're using another shell, consult the shell's documentation for instructions about how to set an environment variable
$ export KALEIDOSCOPE_DIR=${HOME}/git/Kaleidoscope

$ echo "export KALEIDOSCOPE_DIR=${HOME}/git/Kaleidoscope" >> ${HOME}/.bash_profile
  1. Build the Kaleidoscope Firmware for your keyboard

(This part assumes you're building firmware for the Keyboardio Atreus)

$ cd examples/Devices/Keyboardio/Atreus

$ make compile
  1. Install your firmware
$ make flash

<3 jesse