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Embedded Linux Development Using Yocto Project

Embedded Linux Development Using Yocto Project

By : Otavio Salvador, Angolini
5 (9)
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Embedded Linux Development Using Yocto Project

Embedded Linux Development Using Yocto Project

5 (9)
By: Otavio Salvador, Angolini

Overview of this book

The Yocto Project is the industry standard for developing dependable embedded Linux projects. It stands out from other frameworks by offering time-efficient development with enhanced reliability and robustness. With Embedded Linux Development Using Yocto Project, you’ll acquire an understanding of Yocto Project tools, helping you perform different Linux-based tasks. You’ll gain a deep understanding of Poky and BitBake, explore practical use cases for building a Linux subsystem project, employ Yocto Project tools available for embedded Linux, and uncover the secrets of SDK, recipe tool, and others. This new edition is aligned with the latest long-term support release of the aforementioned technologies and introduces two new chapters, covering optimal emulation in QEMU for faster product development and best practices. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-equipped to generate and run an image for real hardware boards. You’ll gain hands-on experience in building efficient Linux systems using the Yocto Project.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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Understanding shared state cache

The default behavior of Poky is to build everything from scratch unless BitBake determines that a recipe does not need to be rebuilt. The main advantage of building everything from scratch is that the result is fresh, and there is no risk of previous data causing problems. However, rebuilding everything requires computational time and resources.

The strategy to determine whether a recipe must be rebuilt is complex. BitBake tries to track as much information as possible about every task, variable, and piece of code used in the build process. BitBake then generates a checksum for the information used by every task, including dependencies from other tasks. In summary, BitBake recursively tracks used variables, task source code, and dependencies for the recipes and their dependencies.

Poky uses all this information provided by BitBake to store snapshots of those tasks as a set of packaged data, generated in a cache called the shared state cache (sstate...

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