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Embedded Linux Development Using Yocto Project - Third Edition

You're reading from  Embedded Linux Development Using Yocto Project - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804615065
Pages 196 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Otavio Salvador Otavio Salvador
Profile icon Otavio Salvador
Daiane Angolini Daiane Angolini
Profile icon Daiane Angolini
View More author details

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Meeting the Yocto Project 2. Chapter 2: Baking Our First Poky-Based System 3. Chapter 3: Using Toaster to Bake an Image 4. Chapter 4: Meeting the BitBake Tool 5. Chapter 5: Grasping the BitBake Tool 6. Chapter 6: Detailing the Temporary Build Directory 7. Chapter 7: Assimilating Packaging Support 8. Chapter 8: Diving into BitBake Metadata 9. Chapter 9: Developing with the Yocto Project 10. Chapter 10: Debugging with the Yocto Project 11. Chapter 11: Exploring External Layers 12. Chapter 12: Creating Custom Layers 13. Chapter 13: Customizing Existing Recipes 14. Chapter 14: Achieving GPL Compliance 15. Chapter 15: Booting Our Custom Embedded Linux 16. Chapter 16: Speeding Up Product Development through Emulation – QEMU 17. Chapter 17: Best Practices 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using packages to generate a rootfs image

One of the most common uses of Poky is the rootfs image generation. The rootfs image should be seen as a ready-to-use root filesystem for a target. The image can be composed of one or more filesystems. It may include other artifacts available during its generation, such as the Linux kernel, the device tree, and bootloader binaries. The process of generating the image is composed of several steps. Its most common uses are as follows:

  1. Generating the rootfs directory
  2. Creating the required files
  3. Wrapping the final filesystem according to the specific requirements (it may be a disk file with several partitions and contents)
  4. Finally, compressing it, if applicable

The sub-tasks of do_rootfs perform all these steps. rootfs is a directory with the desired packages installed, with the required tweaks applied afterward. The tweaks make minor adjustments to the rootfs contents – for example, when building a development...

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