14 KiB
QMK Keyboard Guidelines
Since starting, QMK has grown by leaps and bounds thanks to people like you who contribute to creating and maintaining our community keyboards. As we have grown we have discovered some patterns that work well, and ask that you conform to them to make it easier for other people to make use of your hard work.
Naming Your Keyboard/Project
All keyboard names are in lower case, consisting only of letters,
numbers, and underscore (_). Names may not begin with an
underscore. Forward slash (/) is used as a sub-folder
separation character.
The names test, keyboard, and
all are reserved for make commands and may not be used as a
keyboard or subfolder name.
Valid Examples:
412_64chimera_orthoclueboard/66/rev3planckv60_type_r
Sub-folders
QMK uses sub-folders both for organization and to share code between revisions of the same keyboard. You can nest folders up to 4 levels deep:
qmk_firmware/keyboards/top_folder/sub_1/sub_2/sub_3/sub_4
If a sub-folder has a rules.mk file it will be
considered a compilable keyboard. It will be available in QMK
Configurator and tested with make all. If you are using a
folder to organize several keyboards from the same maker you should not
have a rules.mk file.
Example:
Clueboard uses sub-folders for both purposes, organization and keyboard revisions.
qmk_firmware
Keyboard Folder Structure
Your keyboard should be located in
qmk_firmware/keyboards/ and the directory name should be
your keyboard’s name as described in the previous section. Inside this
directory should be several files:
readme.mdconfig.hrules.mk<keyboard_name>.c<keyboard_name>.h
readme.md
All projects need to have a readme.md file that explains
what the keyboard is, who made it and where it’s available. If
applicable, it should also contain links to more information, such as
the maker’s website. Please follow the published
template.
config.h
All projects need to have a config.h file that sets
things like the matrix size, product name, USB VID/PID, description and
other settings. In general, use this file to set essential information
and defaults for your keyboard that will always work.
rules.mk
The presence of this file means that the folder is a keyboard target
and can be used in make commands. This is where you setup
the build environment for your keyboard and configure the default set of
features.
<keyboard_name.c>
This is where you will write custom code for your keyboard. Typically you will write code to initialize and interface with the hardware in your keyboard. If your keyboard consists of only a key matrix with no LEDs, speakers, or other auxillary hardware this file can be blank.
The following functions are typically defined in this file:
void matrix_init_kb(void)void matrix_scan_kb(void)bool process_record_kb(uint16_t keycode, keyrecord_t *record)void led_set_kb(uint8_t usb_led)
<keyboard_name.h>
This file is used to define the matrix for your keyboard. You should
define at least one C macro named LAYOUT which translates
an array into a matrix representing the physical switch matrix for your
keyboard. If it’s possible to build your keyboard with multiple layouts
you may define additional macros.
When defining multiple layouts you should have a base layout, named
LAYOUT, that supports all possible switch positions on your
matrix, even if that layout is impossible to build physically. This is
the macro you should use in your default keymap. You should
then have additional keymaps named default-<layout>
that use your other layout macros. This will make it easier for people
to use the layouts you define.
Layout macro names are entirely lowercase, except for the word
LAYOUT at the front.
As an example, if you have a 60% PCB that supports ANSI and ISO you might define the following layouts and keymaps:
| Layout Name | Keymap Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| LAYOUT | default | A keymap that supports both ISO and ANSI |
| LAYOUT_ansi | default-ansi | An ANSI layout |
| LAYOUT_iso | default-iso | An ISO layout |
Image/Hardware Files
In an effort to keep the repo size down we’re no longer accepting
binary files of any format, with few exceptions. Hosting them elsewhere
(such as https://imgur.com)
and linking them in the readme.md is preferred.
Any sort of hardware file (plate, case, pcb) can’t be stored in
qmk_firmware, but we have the qmk.fm repo where such files
(as well as in-depth info) can be stored and viewed on qmk.fm. Downloadable files are stored in
/<keyboard>/ (name follows the same format as above)
which are served at http://qmk.fm/<keyboard>/, and
pages are generated from /_pages/<keyboard>/ which
are served at the same location (.md files are generated into .html
files through Jekyll). Check out the lets_split directory
for an example.
Keyboard Defaults
Given the amount of functionality that QMK exposes it’s very easy to confuse new users. When putting together the default firmware for your keyboard we recommend limiting your enabled features and options to the minimal set needed to support your hardware. Recommendations for specific features follow.
Bootmagic and Command
Bootmagic and Command are two related features that allow a user to control their keyboard in non-obvious ways. We recommend you think long and hard about if you’re going to enable either feature, and how you will expose this functionality. Keep in mind that users who want this functionality can enable it in their personal keymaps without affecting all the novice users who may be using your keyboard as their first programmable board.
By far the most common problem new users encounter is accidentally
triggering Bootmagic while they’re plugging in their keyboard. They’re
holding the keyboard by the bottom, unknowingly pressing in alt and
spacebar, and then they find that these keys have been swapped on them.
We recommend leaving this feature disabled by default, but if you do
turn it on consider setting BOOTMAGIC_KEY_SALT to a key
that is hard to press while plugging your keyboard in.
If your keyboard does not have 2 shift keys you should provide a
working default for IS_COMMAND, even when you have set
COMMAND_ENABLE = no. This will give your users a default to
conform to if they do enable Command.
Custom Keyboard Programming
As documented on Customizing
Functionality you can define custom functions for your keyboard.
Please keep in mind that your users may want to customize that behavior
as well, and make it possible for them to do that. If you are providing
a custom function, for example process_record_kb(), make
sure that your function calls the _user() version of the
call too. You should also take into account the return value of the
_user() version, and only run your custom code if the user
returns true.
Keyboard Metadata
As QMK grows so does the ecosystem surrounding QMK. To make it easier for projects in that ecosystem to tie into QMK as we make changes we are developing a metadata system to expose information about keyboards in QMK.
You can create info.json files at every level under
qmk_firmware/keyboards/<name> to specify this
metadata. These files are combined, with more specific files overriding
keys in less specific files. This means you do not need to duplicate
your metadata information. For example,
qmk_firmware/keyboards/clueboard/info.json specifies
manufacturer and maintainer, while
qmk_firmware/keyboards/clueboard/66/info.json specifies
more specific information about Clueboard 66%.
info.json Format
The info.json file is a JSON formatted dictionary with
the following keys available to be set. You do not have to set all of
them, merely the keys that apply to your keyboard.
keyboard_name- A free-form text string describing the keyboard.
- Example:
Clueboard 66%
url- A URL to the keyboard’s product page, QMK.fm/keyboards page, or other page describing information about the keyboard.
maintainer- GitHub username of the maintainer, or
qmkfor community maintained boards
- GitHub username of the maintainer, or
width- Width of the board in Key Units
height- Height of the board in Key Units
layouts- Physical Layout representations. See the next section for more detail.
Layout Format
Within our info.json file the layouts
portion of the dictionary contains several nested dictionaries. The
outer layer consists of QMK layout macros, for example
LAYOUT_ansi or LAYOUT_iso. Within each layout
macro are keys for width, height, and
key_count, each of which should be self-explanatory.
width- Optional: The width of the layout in Key Units
height- Optional: The height of the layout in Key Units
key_count- Required: The number of keys in this layout
layout- A list of Key Dictionaries describing the physical layout. See the next section for more details.
Key Dictionary Format
Each Key Dictionary in a layout describes the physical properties of a key. If you are familiar with the Raw Code for http://keyboard-layout-editor.com you will find many of the concepts the same. We re-use the same key names and layout choices wherever possible, but unlike keyboard-layout-editor each key is stateless, inheriting no properties from the keys that came before it.
All key positions and rotations are specified in relation to the top-left corner of the keyboard, and the top-left corner of each key.
X- Required: The absolute position of the key in the horizontal axis, in Key Units.
Y- Required: The absolute position of the key in the vertical axis, in Key Units.
W- The width of the key, in Key Units. Ignored if
ksis provided. Default:1
- The width of the key, in Key Units. Ignored if
H- The height of the key, in Key Units. Ignored if
ksis provided. Default:1
- The height of the key, in Key Units. Ignored if
R- How many degrees clockwise to rotate the key.
RX- The absolute position of the point to rotate the key around in the
horizontal axis. Default:
x
- The absolute position of the point to rotate the key around in the
horizontal axis. Default:
RY- The absolute position of the point to rotate the key around in the
vertical axis. Default:
y
- The absolute position of the point to rotate the key around in the
vertical axis. Default:
KS- Key Shape: define a polygon by providing a list of points, in Key Units.
- Important: These are relative to the top-left of the key, not absolute.
- Example ISO Enter:
[ [0,0], [1.5,0], [1.5,2], [0.25,2], [0.25,1], [0,1], [0,0] ]
How is the Metadata Exposed?
This metadata is primarily used in two ways:
- To allow web-based configurators to dynamically generate UI
- To support the new
make keyboard:keymap:qmktarget, which bundles this metadata up with the firmware to allow QMK Toolbox to be smarter.
Configurator authors can see the QMK Compiler docs for more information on using the JSON API.
Non-Production/Handwired Projects
We’re happy to accept any project that uses QMK, including prototypes
and handwired ones, but we have a separate
/keyboards/handwired/ folder for them, so the main
/keyboards/ folder doesn’t get overcrowded. If a prototype
project becomes a production project at some point in the future, we’d
be happy to move it to the main /keyboards/ folder!
Warnings as Errors
When developing your keyboard, keep in mind that all warnings will be treated as errors - these small warnings can build-up and cause larger errors down the road (and keeping them is generally a bad practice).
Copyright Blurb
If you’re adapting your keyboard’s setup from another project, but not using the same code, but sure to update the copyright header at the top of the files to show your name, in this format:
Copyright 2017 Your Name <your@email.com>
If you are modifying someone else’s code and have made only trivial changes you should leave their name in the copyright statement. If you have done significant work on the file you should add your name to theirs, like so:
Copyright 2017 Their Name <original_author@example.com> Your Name <you@example.com>
The year should be the first year the file is created. If work was done to that file in later years you can reflect that by appending the second year to the first, like so:
Copyright 2015-2017 Your Name <you@example.com>
License
The core of QMK is licensed under the GNU General Public License. If you are shipping binaries for AVR processors you may choose either GPLv2 or GPLv3. If you are shipping binaries for ARM processors you must choose GPL Version 3 to comply with the ChibiOS GPLv3 license.
If your keyboard makes use of the uGFX features within QMK you must comply with the uGFX License, which requires a separate commercial license before selling a device containing uGFX.
Technical Details
If you’re looking for more information on making your keyboard work with QMK, check out the hardware section!