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Mastering Embedded Linux Development

Mastering Embedded Linux Development

By : Frank Vasquez, Mr. Chris Simmonds
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Mastering Embedded Linux Development

Mastering Embedded Linux Development

By: Frank Vasquez, Mr. Chris Simmonds

Overview of this book

Mastering Embedded Linux Development' is designed to be both a learning resource and a reference for your embedded Linux projects. The book starts by breaking down the fundamental elements that underpin all embedded Linux projects: the toolchain, the bootloader, the kernel, and the root filesystem. First, you will download and install a pre-built toolchain. After that, you will cross-compile each of the remaining three elements from scratch and learn to automate the process using Buildroot and the Yocto Project. The book progresses with coverage of over-the-air software updates and rapid prototyping with add-on boards. Two new chapters tackle modern development practices including Python packaging and deploying containerized applications. These are followed by a chapter on writing multithreaded code and another on techniques to manage memory in an efficient way. The final chapters demonstrate how to debug your code, whether it resides in user space or in the Linux kernel itself. In addition to GDB, the book also covers the different tracers and profilers that are available for Linux so that you can quickly pinpoint any performance bottlenecks in your system. By the end of this book, you will be able to create efficient and secure embedded devices with Linux that will delight your users.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Elements of Embedded Linux
7
Part 2: Building Embedded Linux Images
11
Part 3: System Architecture and Design Decisions
18
Part 4: Developing Applications
23
Part 5: Debugging and Optimizing Performance

DevOps and Embedded Linux

Hardware is hard. PCB layout, contract manufacturing, and board revisions cost time and money. The risks are bigger than with software. Lead times are longer, and mistakes can be catastrophic. Embedded Linux forms the bridge between hardware and software.

Embedded Linux engineers work closely with electrical engineers during board bring-up, troubleshooting issues as they arise. It’s not uncommon to ask an electrical engineer to rewire a component or add a pull-up resistor. PCB layout is extremely complex. Nobody is perfect, so a new board rarely ever boots the first time around.

With such high stakes, it might seem like DevOps principles are a bad fit for hardware products. Industry trends like test-driven development (TDD) are often dismissed as impractical by experienced embedded developers. Automated testing is harder when dealing with real hardware but not impossible. Investing time and energy in establishing a CI/CD pipeline pays dividends...

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