DEVICE = atmega328p CLOCK = 16000000L BAUD = 57600 SERIALPORT = /dev/tty.usb* PROGRAMMER = arduino OBJECTS = main.o #FUSES = -U hfuse:w:0xd9:m -U lfuse:w:0x24:m # Tune the lines below only if you know what you are doing: AVRDUDE = avrdude -c $(PROGRAMMER) -b $(BAUD) -P $(SERIALPORT) -p $(DEVICE) COMPILE = avr-gcc -Wall -Os -DF_CPU=$(CLOCK) -mmcu=$(DEVICE) # symbolic targets: all: main.hex .c.o: $(COMPILE) -c $< -o $@ .S.o: $(COMPILE) -x assembler-with-cpp -c $< -o $@ # "-x assembler-with-cpp" should not be necessary since this is the default # file type for the .S (with capital S) extension. However, upper case # characters are not always preserved on Windows. To ensure WinAVR # compatibility define the file type manually. .c.s: $(COMPILE) -S $< -o $@ flash: all $(AVRDUDE) -U flash:w:main.hex:i fuse: $(AVRDUDE) $(FUSES) # Xcode uses the Makefile targets "", "clean" and "install" install: flash fuse # if you use a bootloader, change the command below appropriately: load: all bootloadHID main.hex clean: rm -f main.hex main.elf $(OBJECTS) # file targets: main.elf: $(OBJECTS) $(COMPILE) -o main.elf $(OBJECTS) main.hex: main.elf rm -f main.hex avr-objcopy -j .text -j .data -O ihex main.elf main.hex # If you have an EEPROM section, you must also create a hex file for the # EEPROM and add it to the "flash" target. # Targets for code debugging and analysis: disasm: main.elf avr-objdump -d main.elf cpp: $(COMPILE) -E main.c