Additional documentation can be found at the Marlin Home Page. Please test this firmware and let us know if it misbehaves in any way. Volunteers are standing by!
Not for production use. Use with caution!
Marlin 2.1 continues to support both 32-bit ARM and 8-bit AVR boards while adding support for up to 9 coordinated axes and to up to 8 extruders.
This branch is for patches to the latest 2.1.x release version. Periodically this branch will form the basis for the next minor 2.1.x release.
Download earlier versions of Marlin on the Releases page.
Before you can build Marlin for your machine you'll need a configuration for your specific hardware. Upon request, your vendor will be happy to provide you with the complete source code and configurations for your machine, but you'll need to get updated configuration files if you want to install a newer version of Marlin. Fortunately, Marlin users have contributed dozens of tested configurations to get you started. Visit the MarlinFirmware/Configurations repository to find the right configuration for your hardware.
To build and upload Marlin you will use one of these tools:
Marlin is optimized to build with the PlatformIO IDE extension for Visual Studio Code. You can still build Marlin with Arduino IDE, and we hope to improve the Arduino build experience, but at this time PlatformIO is the better choice.
We intend to continue supporting 8-bit AVR boards in perpetuity, maintaining a single codebase that can apply to all machines. We want casual hobbyists and tinkerers and owners of older machines to benefit from the community's innovations just as much as those with fancier machines. Plus, those old AVR-based machines are often the best for your testing and feedback!
Marlin includes an abstraction layer to provide a common API for all the platforms it targets. This allows Marlin code to address the details of motion and user interface tasks at the lowest and highest levels with no system overhead, tying all events directly to the hardware clock.
Every new HAL opens up a world of hardware. At this time we need HALs for RP2040 and the Duet3D family of boards. A HAL that wraps an RTOS is an interesting concept that could be explored. Did you know that Marlin includes a Simulator that can run on Windows, macOS, and Linux? Join the Discord to help move these sub-projects forward!
Platform | MCU | Example Boards |
---|---|---|
Arduino AVR | ATmega | RAMPS, Melzi, RAMBo |
Teensy++ 2.0 | AT90USB1286 | Printrboard |
Arduino Due | SAM3X8E | RAMPS-FD, RADDS, RAMPS4DUE |
ESP32 | ESP32 | FYSETC E4, E4d@BOX, MRR |
HC32 | HC32 | Ender-2 Pro, Voxelab Aquila |
LPC1768 | ARM® Cortex-M3 | MKS SBASE, Re-ARM, Selena Compact |
LPC1769 | ARM® Cortex-M3 | Smoothieboard, Azteeg X5 mini, TH3D EZBoard |
STM32F103 | ARM® Cortex-M3 | Malyan M200, GTM32 Pro, MKS Robin, BTT SKR Mini |
STM32F401 | ARM® Cortex-M4 | ARMED, Rumba32, SKR Pro, Lerdge, FYSETC S6, Artillery Ruby |
Pico RP2040 | Dual Cortex M0+ | BigTreeTech SKR Pico |
STM32F7x6 | ARM® Cortex-M7 | The Borg, RemRam V1 |
STM32G0B1RET6 | ARM® Cortex-M0+ | BigTreeTech SKR mini E3 V3.0 |
STM32H743xIT6 | ARM® Cortex-M7 | BigTreeTech SKR V3.0, SKR EZ V3.0, SKR SE BX V2.0/V3.0 |
SAMD21P20A | ARM® Cortex-M0+ | Adafruit Grand Central M4 |
SAMD51P20A | ARM® Cortex-M4 | Adafruit Grand Central M4 |
Teensy 3.2/3.1 | MK20DX256VLH7 ARM® Cortex-M4 | |
Teensy 3.5 | MK64FX512-VMD12 ARM® Cortex-M4 | |
Teensy 3.6 | MK66FX1MB-VMD18 ARM® Cortex-M4 | |
Teensy 4.0 | MIMXRT1062-DVL6B ARM® Cortex-M7 | |
Teensy 4.1 | MIMXRT1062-DVJ6B ARM® Cortex-M7 | |
Linux Native | x86 / ARM / RISC-V | Raspberry Pi GPIO |
Simulator | Windows, macOS, Linux | Desktop OS |
All supported boards | All platforms | All boards |
The Issue Queue is reserved for Bug Reports and Feature Requests. Please use the following resources for help with configuration and troubleshooting:
You can contribute patches by submitting a Pull Request to the (bugfix-2.1.x) branch.
buildroot/tests
. Any tests added to a PR will be run within that PR on GitHub servers as soon as they are pushed. To minimize iteration be sure to run your new tests locally, if possible.
make tests-config-all-local
make tests-config-single-local TEST_TARGET=...
make tests-config-all-local-docker
make tests-config-all-local-docker TEST_TARGET=...
platformio run -t test-marlin
make unit-test-all-local
maker unit-test-all-local-docker
platformio run -t marlin_<test-suite-name>
make unit-test-single-local TEST_TARGET=<test-suite-name>
maker unit-test-single-local-docker TEST_TARGET=<test-suite-name>
Marlin is constantly improving thanks to a huge number of contributors from all over the world bringing their specialties and talents. Huge thanks are due to all the contributors who regularly patch up bugs, help direct traffic, and basically keep Marlin from falling apart. Marlin's continued existence would not be possible without them.
Marlin Firmware original logo design by Ahmet Cem TURAN @ahmetcemturan.
Name | Role | Link | Donate |
---|---|---|---|
🇺🇸 Scott Lahteine | Project Lead | [@thinkyhead] | 💸 Donate |
🇺🇸 Roxanne Neufeld | Admin | [@Roxy-3D] | |
🇺🇸 Keith Bennett | Admin | [@thisiskeithb] | 💸 Donate |
🇺🇸 Jason Smith | Admin | [@sjasonsmith] | |
🇧🇷 Victor Oliveira | Admin | [@rhapsodyv] | |
🇬🇧 Chris Pepper | Admin | [@p3p] | |
🇳🇿 Peter Ellens | Admin | [@ellensp] | 💸 Donate |
🇺🇸 Bob Kuhn | Admin | [@Bob-the-Kuhn] | |
🇳🇱 Erik van der Zalm | Founder | [@ErikZalm] |
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Marlin is published under the GPL license because we believe in open development. The GPL comes with both rights and obligations. Whether you use Marlin firmware as the driver for your open or closed-source product, you must keep Marlin open, and you must provide your compatible Marlin source code to end users upon request. The most straightforward way to comply with the Marlin license is to make a fork of Marlin on Github, perform your modifications, and direct users to your modified fork.