qmk-dactyl-manuform-a/keyboards/ps2avrGB
Sebastian Kaim 7b754e1a5a added bfake support as a subproject (#1903)
* added bfake support as a subproject

also moved existing bmini stuff to a subproject

fixed columns

minor keymap update

making this a subproject

remove old stuff

got subproject stuff figured out

* travis was upset because a board didn't have a default keymap
2017-10-25 13:01:02 -10:00
..
bfake added bfake support as a subproject (#1903) 2017-10-25 13:01:02 -10:00
bmini_x2 added bfake support as a subproject (#1903) 2017-10-25 13:01:02 -10:00
README.md Make arguments redo, subproject elimination (#1784) 2017-10-14 11:32:19 -10:00
config.h added bfake support as a subproject (#1903) 2017-10-25 13:01:02 -10:00
i2c.c
i2c.h
matrix.c added bfake support as a subproject (#1903) 2017-10-25 13:01:02 -10:00
program Extended the programming script for the ps2avrGB keyboard series: 2017-10-13 05:37:19 -10:00
ps2avrGB.c
ps2avrGB.h added bfake support as a subproject (#1903) 2017-10-25 13:01:02 -10:00
rules.mk
usbconfig.h

README.md

ps2avrGB keyboard firmware

This is a port of the QMK firmware for boards that are based on the ps2avrGB firmware, like the ps2avrGB keyboard or the ones sold by Winkeyless.

Note that this is a complete replacement for the firmware, so you won't be using Bootmapper Client to change any keyboard settings, since not all the USB report options are supported.

Supported Boards

Only the B.mini X2 has been tested so far (since it's the only one I own). But other boards that use the ps2avrGB firmware should work as well.

Installing

First, install the requirements. These commands are for OSX, but all you need is the AVR toolchain and bootloadHID for flashing:

$ brew cask install crosspack-avr
$ brew install --HEAD https://raw.githubusercontent.com/robertgzr/homebrew-tap/master/bootloadhid.rb

In order to use the ./program script, which can reboot the board into the bootloader, you'll need Python 2 with PyUSB installed:

$ pip install pyusb

Then, with the keyboard plugged in, simply run this command from the qmk_firmware directory:

$ make ps2avrGB:program

If you prefer, you can just build it and flash the firmware directly with bootloadHID if you boot the board while holding down L_Ctrl to keep it in the bootloader:

$ make ps2avrGB
$ bootloadHID -r ps2avrGB_default.hex

Troubleshooting

From my experience, it's really hard to brick these boards. But these tricks have been useful when it got stuck in a weird scenario.

  1. Try plugging the board in while pressing L_Ctrl. This will force it to boot only the bootloader without loading the firmware. Once this is done, just reflash the board with the original firmware.
  2. Sometimes USB hubs can act weird, so try connecting the board directly to your computer or plugging/unplugging the USB hub.