Arduino: Difference between revisions
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Installing the Arduino IDE on OLPC OS. |
Installing the Arduino IDE on OLPC OS. |
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== 13.2.0 == |
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Switch to the |
Switch to the Gnome desktop. This is because the application has been tested with Gnome, and not with Sugar. |
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=== Packages === |
=== Packages === |
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In Terminal: |
In Terminal, type this: |
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sudo yum install -y arduino |
sudo yum install -y arduino |
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Roughly |
Roughly 61 MB of lists and packages are downloaded and installed. |
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=== |
=== Choose a larger font === |
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The IDE requires that the user be a member of the ''lock'' group. See also <trac>11972</trac>. |
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* Quit and restart Arduino. |
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== 12.1.0 == |
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⚫ | As above for [[#13.2.0]] but before starting Arduino you must fix a problem. The IDE requires that the user be a member of the ''lock'' group. See also <trac>11972</trac>. This fix also restarts Gnome, so that the membership change is effective. <!-- todo: test to see if this is actually necessary --> |
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sudo groupmems --group lock --add olpc && \ |
sudo groupmems --group lock --add olpc && \ |
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sudo systemctl restart prefdm.service |
sudo systemctl restart prefdm.service |
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=== Choose a larger font === |
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== Testing == |
== Testing == |
Revision as of 05:56, 19 November 2013
Installing the Arduino IDE on OLPC OS.
13.2.0
Switch to the Gnome desktop. This is because the application has been tested with Gnome, and not with Sugar.
Packages
In Terminal, type this:
sudo yum install -y arduino
Roughly 61 MB of lists and packages are downloaded and installed.
Choose a larger font
The default font is very small on the XO laptop, to fix it:
- Applications -> Programming -> Arduino,
- File -> Preferences,
- Editor font size to 18, OK,
- Quit and restart Arduino.
12.1.0
As above for #13.2.0 but before starting Arduino you must fix a problem. The IDE requires that the user be a member of the lock group. See also <trac>11972</trac>. This fix also restarts Gnome, so that the membership change is effective.
In Terminal, type this:
sudo groupmems --group lock --add olpc && \ sudo systemctl restart prefdm.service
Testing
- start Applications -> Programming -> Arduino,
- connect Arduino board,
- choose Tools -> Board entry, e.g. Arduino Uno,
- choose Tools -> Serial Port entry, e.g. /dev/ttyACM0,
- choose File -> Examples -> Basics -> Blink,
- choose Upload to send the program to the Arduino board,
- see LED flashing.
Firmata
Firmata is a generic protocol for a computer to communicate with microcontrollers. The Sugar Labs Turtle Art activity included in OLPC OS builds supports Firmata, and can use an Arduino board as a general purpose analog and digital I/O interface.
The StandardFirmata may be uploaded to an Arduino board, using the Arduino IDE:
- start Applications -> Programming -> Arduino,
- connect Arduino board,
- choose File -> Examples -> Firmata > StandardFirmata,
- choose Upload to send the program to the Arduino board.
Alternatively, StandardFirmata may be uploaded without using the Arduino IDE, see How to upload StandardFirmata using ino.
See also
How to use TurtleBots with the SparkFun ProtoSnap - Pro Mini
References
- http://arduino.cc/playground/Linux/Fedora
- http://blog.makezine.com/2007/12/21/howto-run-arduino-on-the-xo-la/
- http://tonyforster.blogspot.com.au/2012/01/arduino-and-xo-laptop.html
- http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/devel/2012-January/034062.html
- http://tonyforster.blogspot.com.au/2010/10/arduino-fork-of-turtle-art.html
- http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Activities/TurtleArt
- http://firmata.org/
- http://arduino.cc/playground/Interfacing/Firmata
- http://arduino.cc/en/Reference/Firmata