Copy of https://github.com/qmk/qmk_firmware Modified for our keyboard.
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Dean Camera 31d3984d8d
Fixed Low Speed USB devices broken when using the library HID Class driver (thanks to Michael).
12 years ago
Bootloaders Add known-issues documentation section to the various LUFA bootloaders. 12 years ago
BuildTests Add smaller AVR8 targets to the Mass Storage bootloader target list in the Bootloader build test. 12 years ago
Demos Minor documentation improvements. 12 years ago
LUFA Fixed Low Speed USB devices broken when using the library HID Class driver (thanks to Michael). 12 years ago
Maintenance Changed all *_SendByte() function prototypes to accept a void pointer for the input buffer (thanks to Simon Küppers) instead of a uint8_t pointer. 12 years ago
Projects Minor documentation improvements. 12 years ago
LUFA.pnproj Remove CPPCheck suppressions for unused functions, disable checking for them in the StaticAnalysisTest build test as it can't cope with GCC aliasing and mixed library/application code. 12 years ago
README.txt Minor documentation improvements. 13 years ago
makefile Fix missing references to the ANSI terminal driver codes in the USART peripheral driver module. 12 years ago

README.txt


_ _ _ ___ _
| | | | | __/ \
| |_| U | _| o | - The Lightweight USB
|___|___|_||_n_| Framework for AVRs
=========================================
Written by Dean Camera
dean [at] fourwalledcubicle [dot] com

http://www.lufa-lib.org
=========================================

LUFA is donation supported. To support LUFA,
please donate at http://www.lufa-lib.org/donate

Released under a modified MIT license - see
LUFA/License.txt for license details.

For Commercial Licensing information, see
http://www.lufa-lib.org/license


This package contains the complete LUFA library, demos, user-submitted
projects and bootloaders for use with compatible microcontroller models.
LUFA is a simple to use, lightweight framework which sits atop the hardware
USB controller in specific AVR microcontroller models, and allows for the
quick and easy creation of complex USB devices and hosts.

To get started, you will need to install the "Doxygen" documentation
generation tool. If you use Linux, this can be installed via the "doxygen"
package in your chosen package management tool - under Ubuntu, this can be
achieved by running the following command in the terminal:

sudo apt-get install doxygen

Other package managers and distributions will have similar methods to
install Doxygen. In Windows, you can download a prebuilt installer for
Doxygen from its website, www.doxygen.org.

Once installed, you can then use the Doxygen tool to generate the library
documentation from the command line or terminal of your operating system. To
do this, open your terminal or command line to the root directory of the
LUFA package, and type the following command:

make doxygen

Which will recursively generate documentation for all elements in the
library - the core, plus all demos, projects and bootloaders. Generated
documentation will then be available by opening the file "index.html" of the
created Documentation/html/ subdirectories inside each project folder.

The documentation for the library itself (but not the documentation for the
individual demos, projects or bootloaders) is also available as a separate
package from the project webpage for convenience if Doxygen cannot be
installed.