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# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
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# AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
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# LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
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# OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
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# OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
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#_______________________________________________________________________________
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# This is a general purpose makefile for use with Arduino hardware and
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# software. It works with the arduino-1.0 release and requires that software
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# to be downloaded separately (see http://arduino.cc/). To download the latest
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# version of this makefile, visit the following website, where you can also
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# find more information and documentation on it's use. The following text can
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# only really be considered a reference to it's use.
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# http://ed.am/dev/make/arduino-mk
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# This makefile can be used as a drop-in replacement for the Arduino IDE's
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# build system. To use it, save arduino.mk somewhere (I keep mine at
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# ~/src/arduino.mk) and create a symlink to it in your project directory named
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# "Makefile". For example:
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# $ ln -s ~/src/arduino.mk Makefile
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# You also need to set up a couple of environment varibales. ARDUINODIR should
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# be set to the path where you unpacked the arduino software from arduino.cc
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# (it defaults to ~/opt/arduino if unset). You might be best to set this in
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# your ~/.profile by adding something like this:
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# export ARDUINODIR=~/somewhere/arduino-1.0
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# You will also need to set BOARD to the type of arduino you're using. This
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# can be done when running make (or you could set a default in ~/.profile and
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# iverride it as necessary). For example:
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# You may also need to set SERIALDEV if it is not detected correctly.
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# The presence of a .ino or .pde file causes the arduino.mk to atuomatically
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# determine va;ues for SOURCES, TARGET and LIBRARIES. Any .c, .cc and .cpp
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# files in the project directory (or any "util" or "utility" subdirectoried)
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# are automatically included in the build and are scanned for Atduino libraries
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# that have been #included.
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# Alternatively, if you want to manually specify build variables, create a
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# Makefile that defines SOURCES and LIBRARARIES and then includes arduino.mk.
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# (There is no need to define TARGET). Here is an example Makefile:
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# SOURCES := main.cc other.cc
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# include ~/src/arduino.mk
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# Here is a complete list of configuration parameters:
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# ARDUINODIR The path where you have installed/unpacked the arduino software
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# (from http://arduino.cc/)
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# BOARD Specify a target board type. Run `make boards` to see available
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# This is a general purpose makefile for use with Arduino (arduino.cc)
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# hardware and software. It works with the arduino-1.0 release and
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# requires that to be downloaded separately.
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# There are two ways to use this file, an automatic mode and a manual
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# mode. In automatic mode, you simply copy this makefile to your
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# arduino project directory, rename it "Makefile" and type make. The
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# project directory is expected to contain an .ino or .pde file, which
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# will automatically be used automatically, along with any other .c,
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# .cc or .cpp files in the project directory and any subdirectory
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# named "utility". In this way, this makefile should act as a drop-in
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# replacement for the Arduino IDE's build process and can build a
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# project automatically from the files in a project directory.
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# Alternatively, you can manually specify what files should be
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# inclided in a build. To use this makefile manually, you might be
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# better to keep it somewhere and include it in your project's
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# Makefile after having defined certain parameters that control the
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# build. As an example, consider the following Makefile:
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# SOURCES = main.cc foo.cc
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# SERIALDEV = /dev/ttyACM0
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# include ~/src/arduino.mk
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# In both manual and automatic modes, the standard Arduino main.cpp's
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# main() is included, which expects to be able to call init() and
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# loop() in your code. The main difference is that, in manual mode,
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# these would typically be placed in a .cc or .cpp file.
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# When using manual mode, the following variables can be used:
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# TARGET The name of the target file. This is typically the same name
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# as the project directory for an arduino project and, if
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# unspecified, that is used as a default.
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# SOURCES A list of all source files of whatever language. The language
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# type is determined by the file extension.
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# BOARD Specify a target board type. These are defined in boards.txt,
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# which came with your arduino installation. If unspecified,
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# a default is used. (See below).
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# SERIALDEV The unix device of the device where the arduino can be found.
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# If unspecified, an attempt is made to determine the name of a
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# connected arduino's serial device.
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# TARGET The name of the target file. This is set automatically if a
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# .ino or .pde is found, but it is not neccesary to set it
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# SOURCES A list of all source files of whatever language. The language
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# type is determined by the file extension. This is set
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# automatically if a .ino or .pde is found.
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# LIBRARIES A list of arduino libraries to build and include. This is set
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# automatically if a .ino or .pde is found.
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# This makefile also defines the following goals for use on the command line
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# all This is the default if no goal is specified. It builds the
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# If unspecified, a default is used. (See below).
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# This general-purpose makefile also defines the following goals for use on the
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# command line when you run make:
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# all This is the default if no goal is specified. It builds the
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# target and uploads it.
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# target Builds the target.
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# upload Uploads the last built target to an attached arduino.
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# clean Deletes files created during the build.
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# boards Display a list of available board names, so that you can set the
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# BOARD environment variable appropriately.
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# monitor Start `screen` on the serial device. It is ment to be an
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# equivelant to the arduino serial monitor.
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# target Builds the target of your Makefile.
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# upload Uploads the target to an attached arduino.
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# clean Deletes temporary files.
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# <file> Builds the specified file, either an object file or the target,
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# from those that that would be built for the project.
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#_______________________________________________________________________________
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# The full path to the arduino software, from arduino.cc
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ARDUINODIR := $(wildcard ~/opt/arduino)
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# check arduino software
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ifeq ($(wildcard $(ARDUINODIR)/hardware/arduino/boards.txt), )
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$(error ARDUINODIR is not set correctly; arduino software not found)
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ARDUINODIR := $(wildcard ~/opt/arduino-1.0)
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# The board name to build for and upload to. For a complete list of available
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# boards, see hardware/arduino/boards.txt in your arduino software directory.
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# Here is a list of available boards at time of writing:
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# atmega328 Arduino Duemilanove w/ ATmega328
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# diecimila Arduino Diecimila or Duemilanove w/ ATmega168
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# nano328 Arduino Nano w/ ATmega328
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# nano Arduino Nano w/ ATmega168
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# mega2560 Arduino Mega 2560 or Mega ADK
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# mega Arduino Mega (ATmega1280)
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# mini328 Arduino Mini w/ ATmega328
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# mini Arduino Mini w/ ATmega168
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# bt328 Arduino BT w/ ATmega328
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# bt Arduino BT w/ ATmega168
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# lilypad328 LilyPad Arduino w/ ATmega328
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# lilypad LilyPad Arduino w/ ATmega168
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# pro5v328 Arduino Pro or Pro Mini (5V, 16 MHz) w/ ATmega328
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# pro5v Arduino Pro or Pro Mini (5V, 16 MHz) w/ ATmega168
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# pro328 Arduino Pro or Pro Mini (3.3V, 8 MHz) w/ ATmega328
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# pro Arduino Pro or Pro Mini (3.3V, 8 MHz) w/ ATmega168
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# atmega168 Arduino NG or older w/ ATmega168
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# atmega8 Arduino NG or older w/ ATmega8
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# The name of the serial device that the arduino is at. For example,
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# /dev/ttyACM0 (Uno), or /dev/ttyUSB0 (Duemilanove)
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SERIALDEV := /dev/ttyACM0
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#_______________________________________________________________________________
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INOFILE := $(wildcard *.ino *.pde)
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ifneq ($(words $(INOFILE)), 1)
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$(error There is more than one .pde or .ino file in this directory!)
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$(error There is more than one .pde or .ino file in the directory!)
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TARGET := $(basename $(INOFILE))
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SOURCES := $(INOFILE) \
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$(wildcard *.c *.cc *.cpp) \
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$(wildcard $(addprefix util/, *.c *.cc *.cpp)) \
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$(wildcard $(addprefix utility/, *.c *.cc *.cpp))
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# automatically determine included libraries
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ARDUINOLIBSAVAIL := $(notdir $(wildcard $(ARDUINODIR)/libraries/*))
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LIBRARIES := $(filter $(ARDUINOLIBSAVAIL), \
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$(shell sed -ne "s/^ *\# *include *[<\"]\(.*\)\.h[>\"]/\1/p" $(SOURCES)))
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# no target? use default
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# no serial device? attempt to detect an arduino
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SERIALDEV := $(firstword $(wildcard /dev/ttyACM? /dev/ttyUSB?))
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# no board? oh dear...
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ifneq "$(MAKECMDGOALS)" "boards"
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ifneq "$(MAKECMDGOALS)" "clean"
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$(error BOARD is unset. Type 'make boards' to see possible values)
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$(wildcard *.c *.cc *.cpp $(addprefix utility/, *.c *.cc *.cpp))
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OBJECTS := $(addsuffix .o, $(basename $(SOURCES)))
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ARDUINOSRCDIR := $(ARDUINODIR)/hardware/arduino/cores/arduino
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ARDUINOLIB := _arduino.a
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ARDUINOLIBTMP := $(ARDUINOLIB).tmp
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ARDUINOLIBOBJS := $(patsubst %, $(ARDUINOLIBTMP)/%.o, $(basename $(notdir \
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$(wildcard $(addprefix $(ARDUINOSRCDIR)/, *.c *.cpp)))))
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ARDUINOLIBOBJS += $(foreach lib, $(LIBRARIES), \
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$(patsubst %, $(ARDUINOLIBTMP)/%.o, $(basename $(notdir \
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$(wildcard $(addprefix $(ARDUINODIR)/libraries/$(lib)/, \
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*.c *.cpp utility/*.c utility/*.cpp ))))))
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ARDUINOLIBTMP := _arduino.a.tmp
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ARDUINOSOURCES := $(wildcard $(addprefix $(ARDUINOSRCDIR)/, *.c *.cpp))
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ARDUINOOBJECTS := $(addsuffix .o, $(addprefix $(ARDUINOLIBTMP)/, $(basename \
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$(subst $(ARDUINOSRCDIR)/,,$(ARDUINOSOURCES)))))
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# obtain board parameters from the arduino boards.txt file
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# obtain parameters from the arduino boards.txt file
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BOARDS_FILE := $(ARDUINODIR)/hardware/arduino/boards.txt
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BOARD_BUILD_MCU := \
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$(shell sed -ne "s/$(BOARD).build.mcu=\(.*\)/\1/p" $(BOARDS_FILE))