See the release announcement on BotBench for more information.
- A Linux (virtual) installation. I used Ubuntu 13.04 on VMware Workstation, but I am sure other combinations also work.
The reason for the Linux installation requirement is due to the case-sensitive filenames used by the Linux kernel source repository. Attempting to clone the source repository to a non-case sensitive file system such as Mac OSX HFS+ or Windows FAT would result in a corrupted repository. - Eclipse. I used Helios Service Release 1, but I know more recent versions will also work.
- Java JRE (for Eclipse)
- Code Sourcery Lite for ARM version 2009q1-203. You can download here directly.
- The mkimage program from u-boot-tools package to compile kernel.
- The convert program from imagemagick package.
- A USB to serial port dongle. You need to splice an NXT cable and hook up dig0 (pin 5) and dig1 (pin 6) to TX and RX, not 100% which way around. GND is pin 2 and 3, just pick one. The brick’s console is on port 1 and has a baud rate of 115200 8N1. I have a pre-made one with an NXT socket, it’s not actually as fancy as it sounds. A guide can be found here.
- An SD card to put your custom firmware on. It doesn’t use up a lot of space, but I’d stick with a simple 2GB one
- A pair of flat-nosed pliers, for removing the SD card
- A Netgear WNA1100 WiFi dongle. It is currently the only WiFi dongle that is supported by the EV3’s firmware.
Use Git to clone this repo:
git clone https://github.com/mindboards/ev3sources.git
The scripts in the EV3 sources expect the source code to live in a projects folder in your home directory. You will need to create a projects symlink to the ev3sources folder that was created when you cloned the Git repo.
To import this project in Eclipse, check out the Wiki article
To make changes to the source code, click on the Fork button at the top of this page. This will create a copy of this repository under your own GitHub account. You can make changes to this repository as you wish. See this page for more information about Forking.
If you want to make a change to this shared repo, submit a Pull Request, which people can discuss and decide whether to apply your changes or not. See this page for more information about Pull Requests..