Release 2.1 (krogoth)
This section provides migration information for moving to the Yocto Project 2.1 Release (codename “krogoth”) from the prior release.
Variable Expansion in Python Functions
Variable expressions, such as ${VARNAME}
no longer expand
automatically within Python functions. Suppressing expansion was done to
allow Python functions to construct shell scripts or other code for
situations in which you do not want such expressions expanded. For any
existing code that relies on these expansions, you need to change the
expansions to expand the value of individual variables through
d.getVar()
. To alternatively expand more complex expressions, use
d.expand()
.
Overrides Must Now be Lower-Case
The convention for overrides has always been for them to be lower-case
characters. This practice is now a requirement as BitBake’s datastore
now assumes lower-case characters in order to give a slight performance
boost during parsing. In practical terms, this requirement means that
anything that ends up in OVERRIDES must now
appear in lower-case characters (e.g. values for MACHINE,
TARGET_ARCH, DISTRO, and also recipe names if
_pn-
recipename overrides are to be effective).
Expand Parameter to getVar()
and getVarFlag()
is Now Mandatory
The expand parameter to getVar()
and getVarFlag()
previously
defaulted to False if not specified. Now, however, no default exists so
one must be specified. You must change any getVar()
calls that do
not specify the final expand parameter to calls that do specify the
parameter. You can run the following sed
command at the base of a
layer to make this change:
sed -e 's:\(\.getVar([^,()]*\)):\1, False):g' -i `grep -ril getVar *`
sed -e 's:\(\.getVarFlag([^,()]*,[^,()]*\)):\1, False):g' -i `grep -ril getVarFlag *`
Note
The reason for this change is that it prepares the way for changing the default to True in a future Yocto Project release. This future change is a much more sensible default than False. However, the change needs to be made gradually as a sudden change of the default would potentially cause side-effects that would be difficult to detect.
Makefile Environment Changes
EXTRA_OEMAKE now defaults to “” instead of
“-e MAKEFLAGS=”. Setting EXTRA_OEMAKE to “-e MAKEFLAGS=” by default
was a historical accident that has required many classes (e.g.
autotools
, module
) and recipes to override this default in order
to work with sensible build systems. When upgrading to the release, you
must edit any recipe that relies upon this old default by either setting
EXTRA_OEMAKE back to “-e MAKEFLAGS=” or by explicitly setting any
required variable value overrides using EXTRA_OEMAKE, which is
typically only needed when a Makefile sets a default value for a
variable that is inappropriate for cross-compilation using the “=”
operator rather than the “?=” operator.
libexecdir
Reverted to ${prefix}/libexec
The use of ${libdir}/${BPN}
as libexecdir
is different as
compared to all other mainstream distributions, which either uses
${prefix}/libexec
or ${libdir}
. The use is also contrary to the
GNU Coding Standards (i.e.
https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Directory-Variables.html)
that suggest ${prefix}/libexec
and also notes that any
package-specific nesting should be done by the package itself. Finally,
having libexecdir
change between recipes makes it very difficult for
different recipes to invoke binaries that have been installed into
libexecdir
. The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (i.e.
https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs/ch04s07.html) now
recognizes the use of ${prefix}/libexec/
, giving distributions the
choice between ${prefix}/lib
or ${prefix}/libexec
without
breaking FHS.
ac_cv_sizeof_off_t
is No Longer Cached in Site Files
For recipes inheriting the autotools
class, ac_cv_sizeof_off_t
is no longer cached in the site files for
autoconf
. The reason for this change is because the
ac_cv_sizeof_off_t
value is not necessarily static per architecture
as was previously assumed. Rather, the value changes based on whether
large file support is enabled. For most software that uses autoconf
,
this change should not be a problem. However, if you have a recipe that
bypasses the standard do_configure task
from the autotools
class and the software the recipe is building
uses a very old version of autoconf
, the recipe might be incapable
of determining the correct size of off_t
during do_configure
.
The best course of action is to patch the software as necessary to allow
the default implementation from the autotools
class to work such
that autoreconf
succeeds and produces a working configure script,
and to remove the overridden do_configure
task such that the default
implementation does get used.
Image Generation is Now Split Out from Filesystem Generation
Previously, for image recipes the do_rootfs task assembled the filesystem and then from that filesystem generated images. With this Yocto Project release, image generation is split into separate do_image tasks for clarity both in operation and in the code.
For most cases, this change does not present any problems. However, if
you have made customizations that directly modify the do_rootfs
task
or that mention do_rootfs
, you might need to update those changes.
In particular, if you had added any tasks after do_rootfs
, you
should make edits so that those tasks are after the
do_image_complete task rather than
after do_rootfs
so that your added tasks run at the correct
time.
A minor part of this restructuring is that the post-processing definitions and functions have been moved from the image class to the rootfs-postcommands class. Functionally, however, they remain unchanged.
Removed Recipes
The following recipes have been removed in the 2.1 release:
gcc
version 4.8: Versions 4.9 and 5.3 remain.qt4
: All support for Qt 4.x has been moved out to a separatemeta-qt4
layer because Qt 4 is no longer supported upstream.x11vnc
: Moved to themeta-oe
layer.linux-yocto-3.14
: No longer supported.linux-yocto-3.19
: No longer supported.libjpeg
: Replaced by thelibjpeg-turbo
recipe.pth
: Became obsolete.liboil
: Recipe is no longer needed and has been moved to themeta-multimedia
layer.gtk-theme-torturer
: Recipe is no longer needed and has been moved to themeta-gnome
layer.gnome-mime-data
: Recipe is no longer needed and has been moved to themeta-gnome
layer.udev
: Replaced by theeudev
recipe for compatibility when usingsysvinit
with newer kernels.python-pygtk
: Recipe became obsolete.adt-installer
: Recipe became obsolete. See the “ADT Removed” section for more information.
Class Changes
The following classes have changed:
autotools_stage
: Removed because the autotools class now provides its functionality. Recipes that inherited fromautotools_stage
should now inherit fromautotools
instead.boot-directdisk
: Merged into theimage-vm
class. Theboot-directdisk
class was rarely directly used. Consequently, this change should not cause any issues.bootimg
: Merged into the image-live class. Thebootimg
class was rarely directly used. Consequently, this change should not cause any issues.packageinfo
: Removed due to its limited use by the Hob UI, which has itself been removed.
Build System User Interface Changes
The following changes have been made to the build system user interface:
Hob GTK+-based UI: Removed because it is unmaintained and based on the outdated GTK+ 2 library. The Toaster web-based UI is much more capable and is actively maintained. See the “Using the Toaster Web Interface” section in the Toaster User Manual for more information on this interface.
“puccho” BitBake UI: Removed because is unmaintained and no longer useful.
ADT Removed
The Application Development Toolkit (ADT) has been removed because its functionality almost completely overlapped with the standard SDK and the extensible SDK. For information on these SDKs and how to build and use them, see the Yocto Project Application Development and the Extensible Software Development Kit (eSDK) manual.
Note
The Yocto Project Eclipse IDE Plug-in is still supported and is not affected by this change.
Poky Reference Distribution Changes
The following changes have been made for the Poky distribution:
The
meta-yocto
layer has been renamed tometa-poky
to better match its purpose, which is to provide the Poky reference distribution. Themeta-yocto-bsp
layer retains its original name since it provides reference machines for the Yocto Project and it is otherwise unrelated to Poky. References tometa-yocto
in yourconf/bblayers.conf
should automatically be updated, so you should not need to change anything unless you are relying on this naming elsewhere.The uninative class is now enabled by default in Poky. This class attempts to isolate the build system from the host distribution’s C library and makes re-use of native shared state artifacts across different host distributions practical. With this class enabled, a tarball containing a pre-built C library is downloaded at the start of the build.
The
uninative
class is enabled through themeta/conf/distro/include/yocto-uninative.inc
file, which for those not using the Poky distribution, can include to easily enable the same functionality.Alternatively, if you wish to build your own
uninative
tarball, you can do so by building theuninative-tarball
recipe, making it available to your build machines (e.g. over HTTP/HTTPS) and setting a similar configuration as the one set byyocto-uninative.inc
.Static library generation, for most cases, is now disabled by default in the Poky distribution. Disabling this generation saves some build time as well as the size used for build output artifacts.
Disabling this library generation is accomplished through a
meta/conf/distro/include/no-static-libs.inc
, which for those not using the Poky distribution can easily include to enable the same functionality.Any recipe that needs to opt-out of having the “–disable-static” option specified on the configure command line either because it is not a supported option for the configure script or because static libraries are needed should set the following variable:
DISABLE_STATIC = ""
The separate
poky-tiny
distribution now uses the musl C library instead of a heavily pared downglibc
. Using musl results in a smaller distribution and facilitates much greater maintainability because musl is designed to have a small footprint.If you have used
poky-tiny
and have customized theglibc
configuration you will need to redo those customizations with musl when upgrading to the new release.
Packaging Changes
The following changes have been made to packaging:
The
runuser
andmountpoint
binaries, which were previously in the mainutil-linux
package, have been split out into theutil-linux-runuser
andutil-linux-mountpoint
packages, respectively.The
python-elementtree
package has been merged into thepython-xml
package.
Tuning File Changes
The following changes have been made to the tuning files:
The “no-thumb-interwork” tuning feature has been dropped from the ARM tune include files. Because interworking is required for ARM EABI, attempting to disable it through a tuning feature no longer makes sense.
Note
Support for ARM OABI was deprecated in gcc 4.7.
The
tune-cortexm*.inc
andtune-cortexr4.inc
files have been removed because they are poorly tested. Until the OpenEmbedded build system officially gains support for CPUs without an MMU, these tuning files would probably be better maintained in a separate layer if needed.
Supporting GObject Introspection
This release supports generation of GLib Introspective Repository (GIR) files through GObject introspection, which is the standard mechanism for accessing GObject-based software from runtime environments. You can enable, disable, and test the generation of this data. See the “Enabling GObject Introspection Support” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual for more information.
Miscellaneous Changes
These additional changes exist:
The minimum Git version has been increased to 1.8.3.1. If your host distribution does not provide a sufficiently recent version, you can install the buildtools, which will provide it. See the Required Git, tar, Python and gcc Versions section for more information on the buildtools tarball.
The buggy and incomplete support for the RPM version 4 package manager has been removed. The well-tested and maintained support for RPM version 5 remains.
Previously, the following list of packages were removed if package-management was not in IMAGE_FEATURES, regardless of any dependencies:
update-rc.d base-passwd shadow update-alternatives run-postinsts
With the Yocto Project 2.1 release, these packages are only removed if “read-only-rootfs” is in IMAGE_FEATURES, since they might still be needed for a read-write image even in the absence of a package manager (e.g. if users need to be added, modified, or removed at runtime).
The devtool modify command now defaults to extracting the source since that is most commonly expected. The “-x” or “–extract” options are now no-ops. If you wish to provide your own existing source tree, you will now need to specify either the “-n” or “–no-extract” options when running
devtool modify
.If the formfactor for a machine is either not supplied or does not specify whether a keyboard is attached, then the default is to assume a keyboard is attached rather than assume no keyboard. This change primarily affects the Sato UI.
The
.debug
directory packaging is now automatic. If your recipe builds software that installs binaries into directories other than the standard ones, you no longer need to take care of settingFILES_${PN}-dbg
to pick up the resulting.debug
directories as these directories are automatically found and added.Inaccurate disk and CPU percentage data has been dropped from
buildstats
output. This data has been replaced withgetrusage()
data and corrected IO statistics. You will probably need to update any custom code that reads thebuildstats
data.The
meta/conf/distro/include/package_regex.inc
is now deprecated. The contents of this file have been moved to individual recipes.Note
Because this file will likely be removed in a future Yocto Project release, it is suggested that you remove any references to the file that might be in your configuration.
The
v86d/uvesafb
has been removed from thegenericx86
andgenericx86-64
reference machines, which are provided by themeta-yocto-bsp
layer. Most modern x86 boards do not rely on this file and it only adds kernel error messages during startup. If you do still need to supportuvesafb
, you can simply addv86d
to your image.Build sysroot paths are now removed from debug symbol files. Removing these paths means that remote GDB using an unstripped build system sysroot will no longer work (although this was never documented to work). The supported method to accomplish something similar is to set
IMAGE_GEN_DEBUGFS
to “1”, which will generate a companion debug image containing unstripped binaries and associated debug sources alongside the image.