Merge pull request #525 from edasque/master

Added Docker as a simple way to build firmwares
example_keyboards
Jack Humbert 8 years ago committed by GitHub
commit 2bed835a33

@ -0,0 +1,28 @@
FROM debian:jessie
MAINTAINER Erik Dasque <erik@frenchguys.com>
RUN apt-get update
RUN apt-get install --no-install-recommends -y build-essential \
gcc \
unzip \
wget \
zip \
gcc-avr \
binutils-avr \
avr-libc \
dfu-programmer \
dfu-util \
gcc-arm-none-eabi \
binutils-arm-none-eabi \
libnewlib-arm-none-eabi \
git
RUN apt-get clean
RUN rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
ENV keyboard=ergodox_ez
ENV keymap=default
VOLUME /qmk
WORKDIR /qmk
CMD make clean ; make keyboard=${keyboard} keymap=${keymap}

@ -75,6 +75,21 @@ Debian/Ubuntu example:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install gcc-avr avr-libc dfu-programmer
### Docker
If this is a bit complex for you, Docker might be the turn-key solution you need. After installing [Docker](https://www.docker.com/products/docker), run the following command at the root of the QMK folder to build a keyboard/keymap:
```bash
# You'll run this every time you want to build a keymap
# modify the keymap and keyboard assigment to compile what you want
# defaults are ergodox_ez/default
docker run -e keymap=gwen -e keyboard=ergodox_ez --rm -v $('pwd'):/qmk:rw edasque/qmk_firmware
```
This will compile the targetted keyboard/keymap and leave it in your QMK directory for you to flash.
### 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).

Loading…
Cancel
Save