Recommended for those who are using the Z Probe for Z Homing (as
Z-Endstop)
This feature has two changes:
1) Allow user to choose where the Z Probe will touch the bed when homing
all axis together (G28) by setting below defines:
Z_SAFE_HOMING_X_POINT
Z_SAFE_HOMING_Y_POINT
2) Prevents the user to perform Z Axis Homing when the Z Probe is
outsite bed.
Enables two stepper drivers to be used for the Y axis (useful for
Shapeoko style machines)
Each Y driver can be stepped in either the same way or in opposite
directions, accounting for different hardware setups (leadscrew vs. belt
driven)
Enables two stepper drivers to be used for the Y axis (useful for
Shapeoko style machines)
Each Y driver can be stepped either the same way or in opposite
directions, accounting for different hardware setups (leadscrew vs. belt
driven)
Reviert previous change of #if BLAH_PIN > 0 to #if defined(BLAH_PIN) &&
BLAH_PIN > -1. Unfortunately some times pin 0 is used. For my sins I've
gone through and replaced all unsafe checks of #if BLAH_PIN > -1 with
the safe version.
SERIAL_ECHOPAIR implies, eventually, two calls to MYSERIAL.print. One
of these has FORCE_INLINE for a per-character loop, and both involve
constructing a method call rather than a simple function call.
Produce better and smaller code by providing three specialised
functions serial_echopair. This saves 672 bytes of program memory
(with EEPROM_SETTINGS and SDSUPPORT enabled).
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Previously the parameters set in M206 would only be used if a G82
command was sent with specific axis home values. This limits its
usefulness.
Really, we should have a way to adjust the XYZ homing of a machine in
the eeprom. So as the first stage of this, make M206 affect every
home command. The values set using M206 are now added to the
configuration variables [XYZ]_HOME_POS.
This is achieved by replacing all uses of [XYZ]_HOME_POS in the code
by a new home_pos[] which includes the adjustment. We also have to
adjust the uses of [XYZ]_{MIN,MAX}_POS similarly - see below.
To allow axis_is_at_home to be written as a function taking an axis
index rather than a macro taking an axis letter, we provide
constant arrays in program memory containing the values of
[XYZ]_{MIN,MAX,HOME}_POS from the compiled-in configuration.
This is done with some helper macros to deal with the declaration
(XYZ_CONSTS_FROM_CONFIG) and definition of the inline function which
does the program memory access.
We also introduce the overloaded function read_pgm_any, whose
instances are produced with DEFINE_PGM_READ_ANY, which allows the
access functions to automatically produce the correct type.
The type- and pointer-massaging code in the access function boils
down, when compiled, to a simple program memory access.
A question arises: if the M206 offset is set, should this adjustment
to the home position shift or change the possible range of movement
permitted by the software endstops ?
The documentation in Configuration.h describes these limits as:
// Travel limits after homing
Since this is a file containing physical limits, and actual suggested
values for these configuration parameters appear to include a certain
amount of slop, I've taken the view that these should be regarded as
nominal physical distances from the limit switches, and that the
permissible travel should be unaffected by M206.
So for example with the (rather unrealistic)
#define X_HOME_DIR -1
#define X_MIN_POS -20
#define X_HOME_POS 0
#define X_MAX_POS 100
no matter the setting of M206 X, the machine would be permitted
to move from 20mm "beyond" the limit switch trigger point in
the negative X direction and 100mm away from the limit switch in
the positive X direction, for a total travel of 120mm.
With M206 X-10 that would be considered to correspond to X coordinates
-30 to +90. With M206 X+10 that would be considered to correspond to
X coordinates -10 to +110.
fixes#200 (in ErikZalm/Marlin).
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
If [XYZ]_HOME_POS and [XYZ]_MIN_POS aren't 0, these corrections are
wrong. Use the same logic as in Marlin.pde:prepare_move: ie, clamp to
[XYZ]_{MIN,MAX}_POS.
While we're here, put this cut-and-paste code in a function
clamp_to_software_endstops.
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>