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You're reading from  Embedded Linux Development using Yocto Projects - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2017
Publisher
ISBN-139781788470469
Edition2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
Otavio Salvador
Otavio Salvador
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Otavio Salvador

Otavio Salvador loves technology and started his free software activities in 1999. In 2002, he founded O.S. Systems, a company focused on embedded system development services and consultancy worldwide, creating and maintaining customized BSPs, and helping companies with their product developments challenges. This resulted in his joining the OpenEmbedded community in 2008, when he became an active contributor to the OpenEmbedded project.
Read more about Otavio Salvador

Daiane Angolini
Daiane Angolini
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Daiane Angolini

Daiane Angolini has been working with embedded Linux since 2008. She has been working as an application engineer at NXP, acting on internal development, porting custom applications from Android, and on-site customer support for i.MX architectures in areas such as the Linux kernel, u-boot, Android, Yocto Project, and user-space applications. However, it was on the Yocto Project that she found her place.
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Powering flexibility with layers


Poky contains a great amount of metadata spread over machine definition files, classes, and recipes. This metadata covers everything from simple applications to full graphical stacks and frameworks. BitBake has the ability to load metadata from multiple places, and those multiple metadata sets are known as metadata layers.

The biggest strength of using layers is the ability to split the metadata into logical units, which enables users to pick only the metadata set needed for the project. Using metadata layers improves the reuse of code and the ability to share work across different teams, communities, and vendors, increasing the code quality of the Yocto Project community as multiple entities are working together on the same metadata.

We may want to configure the system for different reasons, such as the need to enable/disable a feature or change build flags to enable architecture-specific optimizations. These are examples of customizations that can be done...

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Embedded Linux Development using Yocto Projects - Second Edition
Published in: Nov 2017Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781788470469

Authors (2)

author image
Otavio Salvador

Otavio Salvador loves technology and started his free software activities in 1999. In 2002, he founded O.S. Systems, a company focused on embedded system development services and consultancy worldwide, creating and maintaining customized BSPs, and helping companies with their product developments challenges. This resulted in his joining the OpenEmbedded community in 2008, when he became an active contributor to the OpenEmbedded project.
Read more about Otavio Salvador

author image
Daiane Angolini

Daiane Angolini has been working with embedded Linux since 2008. She has been working as an application engineer at NXP, acting on internal development, porting custom applications from Android, and on-site customer support for i.MX architectures in areas such as the Linux kernel, u-boot, Android, Yocto Project, and user-space applications. However, it was on the Yocto Project that she found her place.
Read more about Daiane Angolini