Todd,
Oops, flawed memory. The application is called schedrmt, emcsched is the main
module. The description for how it is supposed to work is in the comments of
schedrmt.cc.
Regards,
Eric
On December 2, 2019 6:50:17 PM EST, "Eric H. Johnson"
wrote:
>Todd,
>
>I wrote something along those
Todd,
I wrote something along those lines years ago, and still exists in the source
code. It is called emcsched. I wrote it for a jewelry application that did lots
of small parts. It basically lets you put a job in queue, pick a starting
point, feed rate, etc. and runs the jobs in the order in
Having it controlled by a central server is probably a good idea. But I think
the user interface at the machine would be best served by a tab or VCP panel.
Sent from my Verizon 4G LTE smartphone
Original message
From: Chris Albertson
Date: 12/2/19 4:41 PM (GMT-05:00)
To:
On Mon, 2 Dec 2019 at 23:03, dave engvall wrote:
> I have no idea what hooks are there or need to be added to make this happen.
The first thing I would try would be:
http://linuxcnc.org/docs/2.8/html/man/man1/linuxcncrsh.1.html
Which allows each machine on the network to specify its own
I've been asking about this for years and have been met with resounding
silence. I rather like the idea of doing it remotely. Not that most
cpu's can't handle it but tends to get one thinking shopwise rather then
just a single machine.
Thanks for poking the bear. ;-)
I have no idea what
On Mon, 2 Dec 2019 at 21:17, Todd Zuercher wrote:
>
> How hard might it be to add a Job Queue to one of the user interfaces?
I think this might be an easy thing to do as a VBA Macro in Excel. If
Excel is the current input level.
--
atp
"A motorcycle is a bicycle with a pandemonium attachment
I think scheduling might be a useful feature but it is best done as a
separate application.The schedule app could run CNC jobs on remote
computers. It would be able to do shop-wide scheduling on any number of
CNC machines. Also, I think you'd want the scheduler to run on a
computer that
How hard might it be to add a Job Queue to one of the user interfaces?
At our factory it is common for a supervisor to create a list of jobs that are
to be ran on a machine for the next shift(s). I think it would be nice if this
could be handled as part of Linuxcnc. The supervisor could build