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You're reading from  Using Yocto Project with BeagleBone Black

Product typeBook
Published inJun 2015
Reading LevelIntermediate
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ISBN-139781785289736
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Irfan Sadiq
Irfan Sadiq
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Irfan Sadiq

H M Irfan Sadiq was a Linux enthusiast as a graduate student. He started his career as an embedded system development engineer and has been working as an H.264 Decoder developer and optimizer for the VLIW architecture. He got an opportunity to work on multiple multimedia frameworks that are open source as well as proprietary. He tried to work in a start-up in the entirely different domain of web development. He has been working on OpenEmbedded and Yocto Project technologies since he joined Mentor Graphics as the technical lead back in 2010. He has been working on derivative technologies of Yocto Project and OpenEmbedded for quite some time now, spanning more than 4 years. He has also been working on various hardware platforms based on the ARM, PPC, and x86 architecture. The diverse nature of subsequent BSPs has challenges in the context of QA. One of the challenges was to keep the QA packages in one place in such a way that they could be applied to all different product/platform combinations. He addressed this by creating a Yocto Project-based layer for which he is a maintainer as well as a gatekeeper.
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Let's start the fun


Having discussed the strategy / action plan, we are ready to start the implementation. We have the tools ready with us. We can start using them. We have the Yocto Project directory structure available. Currently, we have the following layers added to our bblayers.conf file, which is present in our build directory under the conf subdirectory:

BBLAYERS ?= " \
        /home/irfan/yocto/poky/meta \
        /home/irfan/yocto/poky/meta-yocto \
        /home/irfan/yocto/poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
        /home/irfan/yocto/poky/meta-ybdevelop \
"

First, let's check whether we have GStreamer recipes provided by the existing layers. You can use find inside the Yocto Project directory to investigate this as follows:

$ find ./meta* -name gst*

The results show that we have GStreamer recipes available in meta/recipes-multimedia/.

If we have a look at this directory, we could find many recipes. At a higher level, these recipes can be broken into two type of recipes based on the GStreamer version...

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Using Yocto Project with BeagleBone Black
Published in: Jun 2015Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781785289736

Authors (2)

author image
Irfan Sadiq

H M Irfan Sadiq was a Linux enthusiast as a graduate student. He started his career as an embedded system development engineer and has been working as an H.264 Decoder developer and optimizer for the VLIW architecture. He got an opportunity to work on multiple multimedia frameworks that are open source as well as proprietary. He tried to work in a start-up in the entirely different domain of web development. He has been working on OpenEmbedded and Yocto Project technologies since he joined Mentor Graphics as the technical lead back in 2010. He has been working on derivative technologies of Yocto Project and OpenEmbedded for quite some time now, spanning more than 4 years. He has also been working on various hardware platforms based on the ARM, PPC, and x86 architecture. The diverse nature of subsequent BSPs has challenges in the context of QA. One of the challenges was to keep the QA packages in one place in such a way that they could be applied to all different product/platform combinations. He addressed this by creating a Yocto Project-based layer for which he is a maintainer as well as a gatekeeper.
Read more about Irfan Sadiq