meta-digi: add project maker and configuration templates

https://jira.digi.com/browse/DEL-213

Signed-off-by: Javier Viguera <javier.viguera@digi.com>
This commit is contained in:
Javier Viguera 2013-04-23 13:33:18 +02:00
parent e66c87bcc7
commit 119249b813
9 changed files with 1088 additions and 0 deletions

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# LAYER_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
# changes incompatibly
LCONF_VERSION = "6"
BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
BBFILES ?= ""
BBLAYERS ?= " \
##COREBASE##/meta \
##COREBASE##/meta-yocto \
##COREBASE##/meta-yocto-bsp \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-fsl-arm \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-digi/meta-digi-arm \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-digi/meta-digi-del \
"

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#
# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
#
# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
# variable as required.
#
# Parallelism Options
#
# These two options control how much parallelism BitBake should use. The first
# option determines how many tasks bitbake should run in parallel:
#
#BB_NUMBER_THREADS = "4"
#
# The second option controls how many processes make should run in parallel when
# running compile tasks:
#
#PARALLEL_MAKE = "-j 4"
#
# For a quad-core machine, BB_NUMBER_THREADS = "4", PARALLEL_MAKE = "-j 4" would
# be appropriate for example.
#
# Machine Selection
#
# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
#
#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
#
# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
# demonstration purposes:
#
#MACHINE ?= "atom-pc"
#MACHINE ?= "beagleboard"
#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
#MACHINE ?= "routerstationpro"
#
# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
MACHINE ??= "ccardimx28js"
#
# Where to place downloads
#
# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
#
# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
#
#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
#
# Where to place shared-state files
#
# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
# and this option determines where those files are placed.
#
# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
# be used (done using checksums).
#
# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
#
#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
#
# Where to place the build output
#
# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
#
# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
#
#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
#
# Default policy config
#
# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
# these defaults.
#
DISTRO ?= "del"
# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
# useful to most new users.
# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
#
# Package Management configuration
#
# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
# to generate the root filesystems.
# Options are:
# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
# We default to rpm:
PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_ipk"
#
# SDK/ADT target architecture
#
# This variable specified the architecture to build SDK/ADT items for and means
# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host._
# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
#
# Extra image configuration defaults
#
# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
# variable can contain the following options:
# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, exmap, lttng, valgrind)
# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES = "debug-tweaks del-examples"
#
# Additional image features
#
# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
# are:
# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
# - 'image-swab' to perform host system intrusion detection
# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
#
# Runtime testing of images
#
# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
# enable this uncomment this line
#IMAGETEST = "qemu"
#
# This variable controls which tests are run against virtual images if enabled
# above. The following would enable bat, boot the test case under the sanity suite
# and perform toolchain tests
#TEST_SCEN = "sanity bat sanity:boot toolchain"
#
# Because of the QEMU booting slowness issue (see bug #646 and #618), the
# autobuilder may suffer a timeout issue when running sanity tests. We introduce
# the variable TEST_SERIALIZE here to reduce the time taken by the sanity tests.
# It is set to 1 by default, which will boot the image and run cases in the same
# image without rebooting or killing the machine instance. If it is set to 0, the
# image will be copied and tested for each case, which will take longer but be
# more precise.
#TEST_SERIALIZE = "1"
#
# Interactive shell configuration
#
# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
# terminal types to find one that works.
#
# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
#
# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
# newer Konsole versions behave
#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
#
# Shared-state files from other locations
#
# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
#
# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
# correct path within the directory structure.
#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH \n \
#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
# this doesn't mean anything to you.
CONF_VERSION = "1"

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@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
# LAYER_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
# changes incompatibly
LCONF_VERSION = "6"
BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
BBFILES ?= ""
BBLAYERS ?= " \
##COREBASE##/meta \
##COREBASE##/meta-yocto \
##COREBASE##/meta-yocto-bsp \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-fsl-arm \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-digi/meta-digi-arm \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-digi/meta-digi-del \
"

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@ -0,0 +1,229 @@
#
# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
#
# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
# variable as required.
#
# Parallelism Options
#
# These two options control how much parallelism BitBake should use. The first
# option determines how many tasks bitbake should run in parallel:
#
#BB_NUMBER_THREADS = "4"
#
# The second option controls how many processes make should run in parallel when
# running compile tasks:
#
#PARALLEL_MAKE = "-j 4"
#
# For a quad-core machine, BB_NUMBER_THREADS = "4", PARALLEL_MAKE = "-j 4" would
# be appropriate for example.
#
# Machine Selection
#
# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
#
#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
#
# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
# demonstration purposes:
#
#MACHINE ?= "atom-pc"
#MACHINE ?= "beagleboard"
#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
#MACHINE ?= "routerstationpro"
#
# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
MACHINE ??= "ccimx51js"
#
# Where to place downloads
#
# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
#
# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
#
#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
#
# Where to place shared-state files
#
# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
# and this option determines where those files are placed.
#
# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
# be used (done using checksums).
#
# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
#
#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
#
# Where to place the build output
#
# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
#
# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
#
#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
#
# Default policy config
#
# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
# these defaults.
#
DISTRO ?= "del"
# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
# useful to most new users.
# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
#
# Package Management configuration
#
# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
# to generate the root filesystems.
# Options are:
# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
# We default to rpm:
PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_ipk"
#
# SDK/ADT target architecture
#
# This variable specified the architecture to build SDK/ADT items for and means
# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host._
# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
#
# Extra image configuration defaults
#
# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
# variable can contain the following options:
# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, exmap, lttng, valgrind)
# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES = "debug-tweaks del-examples"
#
# Additional image features
#
# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
# are:
# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
# - 'image-swab' to perform host system intrusion detection
# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
#
# Runtime testing of images
#
# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
# enable this uncomment this line
#IMAGETEST = "qemu"
#
# This variable controls which tests are run against virtual images if enabled
# above. The following would enable bat, boot the test case under the sanity suite
# and perform toolchain tests
#TEST_SCEN = "sanity bat sanity:boot toolchain"
#
# Because of the QEMU booting slowness issue (see bug #646 and #618), the
# autobuilder may suffer a timeout issue when running sanity tests. We introduce
# the variable TEST_SERIALIZE here to reduce the time taken by the sanity tests.
# It is set to 1 by default, which will boot the image and run cases in the same
# image without rebooting or killing the machine instance. If it is set to 0, the
# image will be copied and tested for each case, which will take longer but be
# more precise.
#TEST_SERIALIZE = "1"
#
# Interactive shell configuration
#
# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
# terminal types to find one that works.
#
# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
#
# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
# newer Konsole versions behave
#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
#
# Shared-state files from other locations
#
# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
#
# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
# correct path within the directory structure.
#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH \n \
#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
# this doesn't mean anything to you.
CONF_VERSION = "1"

View File

@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
# LAYER_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
# changes incompatibly
LCONF_VERSION = "6"
BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
BBFILES ?= ""
BBLAYERS ?= " \
##COREBASE##/meta \
##COREBASE##/meta-yocto \
##COREBASE##/meta-yocto-bsp \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-fsl-arm \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-digi/meta-digi-arm \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-digi/meta-digi-del \
"

View File

@ -0,0 +1,229 @@
#
# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
#
# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
# variable as required.
#
# Parallelism Options
#
# These two options control how much parallelism BitBake should use. The first
# option determines how many tasks bitbake should run in parallel:
#
#BB_NUMBER_THREADS = "4"
#
# The second option controls how many processes make should run in parallel when
# running compile tasks:
#
#PARALLEL_MAKE = "-j 4"
#
# For a quad-core machine, BB_NUMBER_THREADS = "4", PARALLEL_MAKE = "-j 4" would
# be appropriate for example.
#
# Machine Selection
#
# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
#
#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
#
# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
# demonstration purposes:
#
#MACHINE ?= "atom-pc"
#MACHINE ?= "beagleboard"
#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
#MACHINE ?= "routerstationpro"
#
# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
MACHINE ??= "ccimx53js"
#
# Where to place downloads
#
# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
#
# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
#
#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
#
# Where to place shared-state files
#
# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
# and this option determines where those files are placed.
#
# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
# be used (done using checksums).
#
# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
#
#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
#
# Where to place the build output
#
# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
#
# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
#
#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
#
# Default policy config
#
# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
# these defaults.
#
DISTRO ?= "del"
# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
# useful to most new users.
# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
#
# Package Management configuration
#
# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
# to generate the root filesystems.
# Options are:
# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
# We default to rpm:
PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_ipk"
#
# SDK/ADT target architecture
#
# This variable specified the architecture to build SDK/ADT items for and means
# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host._
# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
#
# Extra image configuration defaults
#
# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
# variable can contain the following options:
# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, exmap, lttng, valgrind)
# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES = "debug-tweaks del-examples"
#
# Additional image features
#
# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
# are:
# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
# - 'image-swab' to perform host system intrusion detection
# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
#
# Runtime testing of images
#
# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
# enable this uncomment this line
#IMAGETEST = "qemu"
#
# This variable controls which tests are run against virtual images if enabled
# above. The following would enable bat, boot the test case under the sanity suite
# and perform toolchain tests
#TEST_SCEN = "sanity bat sanity:boot toolchain"
#
# Because of the QEMU booting slowness issue (see bug #646 and #618), the
# autobuilder may suffer a timeout issue when running sanity tests. We introduce
# the variable TEST_SERIALIZE here to reduce the time taken by the sanity tests.
# It is set to 1 by default, which will boot the image and run cases in the same
# image without rebooting or killing the machine instance. If it is set to 0, the
# image will be copied and tested for each case, which will take longer but be
# more precise.
#TEST_SERIALIZE = "1"
#
# Interactive shell configuration
#
# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
# terminal types to find one that works.
#
# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
#
# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
# newer Konsole versions behave
#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
#
# Shared-state files from other locations
#
# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
#
# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
# correct path within the directory structure.
#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH \n \
#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
# this doesn't mean anything to you.
CONF_VERSION = "1"

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@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
# LAYER_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
# changes incompatibly
LCONF_VERSION = "6"
BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
BBFILES ?= ""
BBLAYERS ?= " \
##COREBASE##/meta \
##COREBASE##/meta-yocto \
##COREBASE##/meta-yocto-bsp \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-fsl-arm \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-digi/meta-digi-arm \
##DIGIBASE##/meta-digi/meta-digi-del \
"

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#
# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
#
# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
# variable as required.
#
# Parallelism Options
#
# These two options control how much parallelism BitBake should use. The first
# option determines how many tasks bitbake should run in parallel:
#
#BB_NUMBER_THREADS = "4"
#
# The second option controls how many processes make should run in parallel when
# running compile tasks:
#
#PARALLEL_MAKE = "-j 4"
#
# For a quad-core machine, BB_NUMBER_THREADS = "4", PARALLEL_MAKE = "-j 4" would
# be appropriate for example.
#
# Machine Selection
#
# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
#
#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
#
# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
# demonstration purposes:
#
#MACHINE ?= "atom-pc"
#MACHINE ?= "beagleboard"
#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
#MACHINE ?= "routerstationpro"
#
# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
MACHINE ??= "cpx2"
#
# Where to place downloads
#
# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
#
# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
#
#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
#
# Where to place shared-state files
#
# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
# and this option determines where those files are placed.
#
# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
# be used (done using checksums).
#
# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
#
#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
#
# Where to place the build output
#
# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
#
# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
#
#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
#
# Default policy config
#
# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
# these defaults.
#
DISTRO ?= "del"
# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
# useful to most new users.
# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
#
# Package Management configuration
#
# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
# to generate the root filesystems.
# Options are:
# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
# We default to rpm:
PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_ipk"
#
# SDK/ADT target architecture
#
# This variable specified the architecture to build SDK/ADT items for and means
# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host._
# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
#
# Extra image configuration defaults
#
# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
# variable can contain the following options:
# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, exmap, lttng, valgrind)
# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES = "debug-tweaks"
#
# Additional image features
#
# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
# are:
# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
# - 'image-swab' to perform host system intrusion detection
# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
#
# Runtime testing of images
#
# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
# enable this uncomment this line
#IMAGETEST = "qemu"
#
# This variable controls which tests are run against virtual images if enabled
# above. The following would enable bat, boot the test case under the sanity suite
# and perform toolchain tests
#TEST_SCEN = "sanity bat sanity:boot toolchain"
#
# Because of the QEMU booting slowness issue (see bug #646 and #618), the
# autobuilder may suffer a timeout issue when running sanity tests. We introduce
# the variable TEST_SERIALIZE here to reduce the time taken by the sanity tests.
# It is set to 1 by default, which will boot the image and run cases in the same
# image without rebooting or killing the machine instance. If it is set to 0, the
# image will be copied and tested for each case, which will take longer but be
# more precise.
#TEST_SERIALIZE = "1"
#
# Interactive shell configuration
#
# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
# terminal types to find one that works.
#
# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
#
# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
# newer Konsole versions behave
#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
#
# Shared-state files from other locations
#
# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
#
# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
# correct path within the directory structure.
#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH \n \
#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
# this doesn't mean anything to you.
CONF_VERSION = "1"

108
sdk/mkproject.sh Executable file
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#!/bin/bash
#===============================================================================
#
# mkproject.sh
#
# Copyright (C) 2013 by Digi International Inc.
# All rights reserved.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
# under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as published by
# the Free Software Foundation.
#
#
# !Description: Yocto project maker (for Digi's SDK)
#
#===============================================================================
SCRIPTNAME="$(basename ${BASH_SOURCE})"
SCRIPTPATH="$(cd $(dirname ${BASH_SOURCE}) && pwd)"
PROJECTPATH="$(pwd)"
# if [ "${#}" -gt "0" ]; then
# echo $1
# shift
# exec ${SCRIPTPATH}/${SCRIPTNAME} $@
# fi
# Compare the script with the one in 'meta-digi'. If it differs, then
# copy-overwrite the one here and re-exec it after warning the user that the
# script was updated.
## Color codes
RED="\033[1;31m"
GREEN="\033[1;32m"
NONE="\033[0m"
# Path to platform config files
CONFIGPATH="${SCRIPTPATH}/sources/meta-digi/sdk/config"
## Local functions
usage() {
printf "\nUsage: source ${SCRIPTNAME} [OPTIONS]\n
-l list available platforms
-p <platform> select platform for the project
\n"
printf "Available platforms: ${AVAILABLE_PLATFORMS}\n\n"
}
error() {
if [ ${#} -ne 0 ] ; then
printf "\n${RED}[ERROR]:${NONE} %s\n" "${1}"
fi
usage
}
check_selected_platform() {
for i in : ${AVAILABLE_PLATFORMS}; do
[ "${i}" = ":" ] && continue
[ "${i}" = "${platform}" ] && return 0
done
return 1
}
do_mkproject() {
export TEMPLATECONF="${CONFIGPATH}/${platform}"
source ${SCRIPTPATH}/sources/poky/oe-init-build-env .
unset TEMPLATECONF
# Customize project
NCPU="$(grep -c processor /proc/cpuinfo)"
chmod 644 ${PROJECTPATH}/conf/bblayers.conf ${PROJECTPATH}/conf/local.conf
sed -i -e"s,##DIGIBASE##,${SCRIPTPATH}/sources,g" ${PROJECTPATH}/conf/bblayers.conf
sed -i -e "/^#BB_NUMBER_THREADS =/cBB_NUMBER_THREADS = \"${NCPU}\"" \
-e "/^#PARALLEL_MAKE =/cPARALLEL_MAKE = \"-j ${NCPU}\"" \
${PROJECTPATH}/conf/local.conf
unset NCPU
}
## Get available platforms
AVAILABLE_PLATFORMS="$(echo $(ls -1 ${CONFIGPATH}/*/local.conf.sample | sed -e 's,^.*config/\([^/]\+\)/local\.conf\.sample,\1,g'))"
# The script needs to be sourced (not executed) so make sure to
# initialize OPTIND variable for getopts.
OPTIND=1
while getopts "lp:" c; do
case "${c}" in
l) list_platforms="y";;
p) platform="${OPTARG}";;
esac
done
## Sanity checks
if [ "${BASH_SOURCE}" = "${0}" ]; then
error "This script needs to be sourced"
elif [ ${#} -eq 0 ] ; then
usage
elif [ -n "${list_platforms}" ]; then
echo ${AVAILABLE_PLATFORMS}
elif [ -z "${platform}" ]; then
error "-p option is required"
elif ! check_selected_platform; then
error "the selected platform \"${platform}\" is not available"
else
do_mkproject
fi
# clean-up all variables (so the script can be re-sourced)
unset AVAILABLE_PLATFORMS GREEN NONE PROJECTPATH RED SCRIPTNAME SCRIPTPATH list_platforms platform