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Developer Information
You can compile the bootloader with a Raspberry Pi, Ubuntu or Windows yourself. Everything you need is covered here (avr-gcc 4.7.2, 4.8.1 and 4.9.2 as well!). See this tutorial on how to get the newer 4.8.1 for raspberry pi and this tutorial to get the newest 4.9.2 for Windows.
HoodLoader2.0.3 compiles with 3958(+2 for Mega) bytes with avr-gcc 4.7.2 and with 3908(+2 for Mega) bytes with avr-gcc 4.8.1.
The HoodLoader2 itself uses the official Arduinos VID and PID. The HID Project and the board definition files uses a special PID but this has nothing to do with the bootloader itself. See current inf file/boards.txt for more used PIDs
#define LUFA_VID 0x03EB
#define LUFA_PID 0x204A
#define ARDUINO_VID 0x2341
#define ARDUINO_UNO_PID 0x0043 // R3 (0001 R1)
#define ARDUINO_MEGA_PID 0x0042 // R3 (0010 R1)
#define ARDUINO_MEGA_ADK_PID 0x0044 // R3 (003F R1)
HoodLoader2atmega16u2.vid.0=0x2341
HoodLoader2atmega16u2.pid.0=0x484C
HoodLoader2atmega32u2.pid.0=0x484D
HoodLoader2atmega8u2.pid.0=0x484E
HoodLoader2at90usb162.pid.0=0x484F
To upload the HoodLoader2 I used a modification of Nick Gammon's Atmega Bootloader Programmer. Instructions can be found here.
One of the change was to add new bootloader files. You can convert your hex file as described with Nick's Lua script. One thing to add is the address of the 16u2 in the end_addresses array (line 16). The new .lua script is also in the repository now.
You need to download the MUSHclient as described in his instructions. He provides a simple, ready to use zip file.
Copyright (c) 2014-2021 NicoHood
Additional Information