autobar/README.md

103 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
Raw Permalink Normal View History

# AutoBar
Automatic bartender machine running on a Raspberry Pi Pico/W
Copyright Wyatt Miller, Avery Miller 2022
2023-02-12 11:54:12 -06:00
Licensed by the Mozilla Public License v2
## Table of Contents
2022-07-16 13:24:09 -05:00
- [Overview](#overview)
- [Building](#building)
- [Installing](#installing)
## Overview
TODO
## Building
### Requirements
You'll need the following to be able to build this:
- [git](https://git-scm.com/)
- C/C++ compiler (supporting C11 and C++17)
2022-07-29 10:46:55 -05:00
- [GCC](https://gcc.gnu.org/) or [MinGW](https://osdn.net/projects/mingw/) works for this
- [cmake](https://cmake.org)
- [Rust 1.59 or greater](https://rustup.rs)
- [Pico SDK](https://github.com/raspberrypi/pico-sdk)
2022-07-29 10:46:55 -05:00
If you're on Linux, use your appropriate package manager, such as apt, dnf, yum, or zypper. Most modern versions of Linux that are supported will install these.
If you're on Windows, please follow the links and use the given installers/scripts from the websites above.
### Clone
First, grab the Pico SDK from the link above via `git clone`. You'll need this when it comes to building.
Clone the repository by running the following (or using your favorite git client):
```bash
git clone https://scm.wyattjmiller.com/wymiller/AutoBar/
```
Make sure that the Pico SDK and the AutoBar repositories are sitting side-by-side. This is needed because you have to set the `PICO_SDK_PATH` environment variable and the settings require that the repositories need to be set that way. You can do this in Linux by running the following:
```bash
export PICO_SDK_PATH=../pico-sdk/
```
Alternatively, you can run the following in Powershell if you're on Windows:
```powershell
$Env:PICO_SDK_PATH = "../pico-sdk"
```
2022-07-29 10:46:55 -05:00
Run the above Powershell command when you're in the `AutoBar` directory (again, if you're running on Windows).
### Installation of requirements
###### Fedora Linux
First, install a C/C++ compiler and git. Install via `dnf`:
```bash
sudo dnf install gcc gcc-c++ git
```
Install Rust, `rustc` and `cargo` via rustup:
```bash
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
```
###### Windows
First, install [MinGW](https://osdn.net/projects/mingw/downloads/68260/mingw-get-setup.exe/) for a C/C++ compiler. Download and follow the installer.
Next, install [git](https://git-scm.com/). Download and follow the installer.
Finally, install Rust, `rustc` and `cargo` via [rustup](https://win.rustup.rs/x86_64). We assume the Windows installation is running `amd64` hardware.
### Building (for real this time)
Run the following commands in sequential order in the root of the AutoBar directory:
```
cargo build --manifest-path libautobar/Cargo.toml --target thumbv6m-none-eabi -r
cmake .
make
```
The first command invokes the `cargo` command, which builds the Rust library.
The next command invokes `cmake`. It's not really a build system *per se* but it generates a `Makefile` for us to use `make`.
Speaking of which, the last command that's invoked is `make` which links the library and executable together and builds them.
## Installing
Press the **BOOTSEL** button on the RP Pico until you get the RP Pico to show up as a mass storage device on your computer. From there, you can drag the `autobar.uf2` from the root of the AutoBar directory to the root of the RP Pico. It should run automatmically once that is done.