Marlin is an optimized firmware for RepRap 3D printers based on the Arduino platform. First created in 2011 for RepRap and Ultimaker printers, today Marlin drives a majority of the world's most popular 3D printers. Marlin delivers outstanding print quality with unprecedented control over the process.
This 1.1.x Release Branch contains the latest tagged version of Marlin (currently 1.1.8 – December 2017).
Marlin 1.1 represents an evolutionary leap over Marlin 1.0. It is the result of over two years of effort by several volunteers around the world who have paid meticulous and sometimes obsessive attention to every detail. We've focused on code quality, performance, stability, and overall user experience. Several new features have been added, many of which require no extra hardware.
Previous releases of Marlin include 1.0.2-2 (December 2016) and 1.0.1 (December 2014). Any version of Marlin prior to 1.0.1 (when we started tagging versions) can be collectively referred to as Marlin 1.0.0.
If you have coding or writing skills you're encouraged to contribute to Marlin. You may also contribute suggestions, feature requests, and bug reports through the Marlin Issue Queue.
Before contributing, please read our Contributing Guidelines and Code of Conduct.
- Marlin Home Page - The latest Marlin documentation.
- Marlin Releases - All Marlin releases with release notes.
- RepRap.org Wiki Page - An overview of Marlin and its role in RepRap.
- Marlin Firmware Forum - Get help with configuration and troubleshooting.
- Marlin Firmware Facebook group - Help from the community. (Maintained by @thinkyhead.)
- @MarlinFirmware on Twitter - Follow for news, release alerts, and tips. (Maintained by @thinkyhead.)
The current Marlin dev team consists of:
- Erik van der Zalm [@ErikZalm] - Organization founder
- Scott Lahteine [@thinkyhead] - Project Curator
- Roxanne Neufeld [@Roxy-3D] - Project Curator
- Bob Kuhn [@Bob-the-Kuhn] - 32-bit Curator
Notable contributors include:
- Alberto Cotronei [@MagoKimbra]
- Andreas Hardtung [@AnHardt]
- Bernhard Kubicek [@bkubicek]
- Bob Cousins [@bobc]
- Chris Palmer [@nophead]
- David Braam [@daid]
- Edward Patel [@epatel]
- Ernesto Martinez [@emartinez167]
- F. Malpartida [@fmalpartida]
- Jochen Groppe [@CONSULitAS]
- João Brazio [@jbrazio]
- Kai [@Kaibob2]
- Luc Van Daele [@LVD-AC]
- Nico Tonnhofer [@Wurstnase]
- Petr Zahradnik [@clexpert]
- Thomas Moore [@tcm0116]
- [@alexxy]
- [@android444]
- [@benlye]
- [@bgort]
- [@ejtagle]
- [@Grogyan]
- [@marcio-ao]
- [@maverikou]
- [@oysteinkrog]
- [@p3p]
- [@paclema]
- [@paulusjacobus]
- [@psavva]
- [@Tannoo]
- [@teemuatlut]
- ...and many others
Marlin is published under the GPLv3 license because we believe in open development. The GPL comes with both rights and obligations. Whether you use Marlin firmware as the driver for your open or closed-source product, you must keep Marlin open, and you must provide your compatible Marlin source code to end users upon request. The most straightforward way to comply with the Marlin license is to make a fork of Marlin on Github, perform your modifications, and direct users to your modified fork.