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Embedded Linux Development using Yocto Projects

Embedded Linux Development using Yocto Projects

By : Otavio Salvador, Angolini
3.4 (5)
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Embedded Linux Development using Yocto Projects

Embedded Linux Development using Yocto Projects

3.4 (5)
By: Otavio Salvador, Angolini

Overview of this book

Yocto Project is turning out to be the best integration framework for creating reliable embedded Linux projects. It has the edge over other frameworks because of its features such as less development time and improved reliability and robustness. Embedded Linux Development using Yocto Project starts with an in-depth explanation of all Yocto Project tools, to help you perform different Linux-based tasks. The book then moves on to in-depth explanations of Poky and BitBake. It also includes some practical use cases for building a Linux subsystem project using Yocto Project tools available for embedded Linux. The book also covers topics such as SDK, recipetool, and others. By the end of the book, you will have learned how to generate and run an image for real hardware boards and will have gained hands-on experience at building efficient Linux systems using Yocto Project.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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7
Diving into BitBake Metadata

Explaining package versioning


Package versioning is used to differentiate the same package in different stages of its life cycle. From Poky's perspective, it is also used as part of the equation that generates the checksum used by BitBake to verify whether a task must be rebuilt.

The package version, also known as PV, plays a central role when we select which recipe to build. The default behavior of Poky is to always prefer the newest recipe version, unless there is an explicit different preference, as we discussed in the Chapter 4, Grasping the BitBake Tool. For example, consider that we have two versions of the recipe myrecipe—myrecipe_1.0.bb and myrecipe_1.1.bb. BitBake, by default, builds the recipe with version 1.1.

Inside the recipe, we may have other variables that compose package versioning with the PV variable. These are package epoch, known as PE and package revision, known as PR.

The PE variable has a default value of zero and is used when the package version schema is changed, breaking...

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