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Merge pull request #171 from NoahAndrews/restructure-documentation

Restructure documentation
Jack Humbert 9 年之前
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5f3e99f67b
共有 4 個文件被更改,包括 30 次插入2 次删除
  1. 26 0
      BUILD_GUIDE.md
  2. 0 0
      HAND_WIRE.md
  3. 3 2
      README.md
  4. 1 0
      VAGRANT_GUIDE.md

+ 26 - 0
BUILD_GUIDE.md

@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
+# Build Guide
+
+## Build Environment Setup
+
+### Windows
+What these instructions look like depends on whether NoahAndrews's setup scripts get merged
+
+### Mac
+If you're using [homebrew,](http://brew.sh/) you can use the following commands:
+
+    brew tap osx-cross/avr
+    brew install avr-libc
+    brew install dfu-programmer
+
+This is the recommended method. If you don't have homebrew, [install it!](http://brew.sh/) It's very much worth it for anyone who works in the command line.
+
+You can also try these instructions:
+
+1. Install Xcode from the App Store.
+2. Install the Command Line Tools from `Xcode->Preferences->Downloads`.
+3. Install [DFU-Programmer][dfu-prog].
+
+### Linux
+
+### Vagrant
+If you have any problems building the firmware, you can try using a tool called Vagrant. It will set up a virtual computer with a known configuration that's ready-to-go for firmware building. OLKB does NOT host the files for this virtual computer. Details on how to set up Vagrant are in the [VAGRANT_GUIDE file](VAGRANT_GUIDE.md).

+ 0 - 0
HAND-WIRE.md → HAND_WIRE.md


+ 3 - 2
README.md

@@ -12,8 +12,8 @@ The documentation below explains QMK customizations and elaborates on some of th
 
 ## Getting started
 
-* **If you're looking to customize a keyboard that currently runs QMK or TMK** , find your keyboard's directory under `/keyboard/` and read the README file. This will get you all set up.
-* Read the [QUICK_START.md](QUICK_START.md) if you want to hit the ground running with minimal fuss or you aren't a technical person and you just want to build the firmware with the least amount of hassle possible.
+* [BUILD_GUIDE.md](BUILD_GUIDE.md) contains instructions to set up a build environment, build the firmware, and deploy it to a keyboard. Once your build environment has been set up, all `make` commands to actually build the firmware must be run from a folder in `keyboard/`.
+* If you're looking to customize a keyboard that currently runs QMK or TMK, find your keyboard's directory under `keyboard/` and run the make commands from there.
 * If you're looking to apply this firmware to an entirely new hardware project (a new kind of keyboard), you can create your own Quantum-based project by using `./new_project.sh <project_name>`, which will create `/keyboard/<project_name>` with all the necessary components for a Quantum project.
 
 You have access to a bunch of goodies! Check out the Makefile to enable/disable some of the features. Uncomment the `#` to enable them. Setting them to `no` does nothing and will only confuse future you.
@@ -309,3 +309,4 @@ what things are (and likely aren't) too risky.
 - EEPROM has around a 100000 write cycle.  You shouldn't rewrite the
   firmware repeatedly and continually; that'll burn the EEPROM
   eventually.
+					

+ 1 - 0
QUICK_START.md → VAGRANT_GUIDE.md

@@ -23,3 +23,4 @@ See [doc/keymap.md](tmk_core/doc/keymap.md).
 The "easy" way to flash the firmware is using a tool from your host OS like the Teensy programming app. [ErgoDox EZ](keyboard/ergodox_ez/readme.md) gives a great example.
 
 If you want to program via the command line you can uncomment the ['modifyvm'] lines in the Vagrantfile to enable the USB passthrough into Linux and then program using the command line tools like dfu-util/dfu-programmer or you can install the Teensy CLI version.
+