5 Classes
Class files are used to abstract common functionality and share it
amongst multiple recipe (.bb
) files. To use a class file, you simply
make sure the recipe inherits the class. In most cases, when a recipe
inherits a class it is enough to enable its features. There are cases,
however, where in the recipe you might need to set variables or override
some default behavior.
Any Metadata usually found in a recipe can also be
placed in a class file. Class files are identified by the extension
.bbclass
and are usually placed in a classes/
directory beneath
the meta*/
directory found in the Source Directory.
Class files can also be pointed to by
BUILDDIR (e.g. build/
) in the same way as
.conf
files in the conf
directory. Class files are searched for
in BBPATH using the same method by which .conf
files are searched.
This chapter discusses only the most useful and important classes. Other
classes do exist within the meta/classes
directory in the Source
Directory. You can reference the .bbclass
files directly for more
information.
5.1 allarch.bbclass
The allarch
class is inherited by recipes that do not produce
architecture-specific output. The class disables functionality that is
normally needed for recipes that produce executable binaries (such as
building the cross-compiler and a C library as pre-requisites, and
splitting out of debug symbols during packaging).
Note
Unlike some distro recipes (e.g. Debian), OpenEmbedded recipes that
produce packages that depend on tunings through use of the
RDEPENDS and
TUNE_PKGARCH variables, should never be
configured for all architectures using allarch
. This is the case
even if the recipes do not produce architecture-specific output.
Configuring such recipes for all architectures causes the
do_package_write_*
tasks to
have different signatures for the machines with different tunings.
Additionally, unnecessary rebuilds occur every time an image for a
different MACHINE is built even when the recipe never changes.
By default, all recipes inherit the base and
package classes, which enable
functionality needed for recipes that produce executable output. If your
recipe, for example, only produces packages that contain configuration
files, media files, or scripts (e.g. Python and Perl), then it should
inherit the allarch
class.
5.2 archiver.bbclass
The archiver
class supports releasing source code and other
materials with the binaries.
For more details on the source archiver, see the “Maintaining Open Source License Compliance During Your Product’s Lifecycle” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual. You can also see the ARCHIVER_MODE variable for information about the variable flags (varflags) that help control archive creation.
5.3 autotools*.bbclass
The autotools*
classes support Autotooled packages.
The autoconf
, automake
, and libtool
packages bring
standardization. This class defines a set of tasks (e.g. configure
,
compile
and so forth) that work for all Autotooled packages. It
should usually be enough to define a few standard variables and then
simply inherit autotools
. These classes can also work with software
that emulates Autotools. For more information, see the
“Autotooled Package” section
in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
By default, the autotools*
classes use out-of-tree builds (i.e.
autotools.bbclass
building with B != S
).
If the software being built by a recipe does not support using
out-of-tree builds, you should have the recipe inherit the
autotools-brokensep
class. The autotools-brokensep
class behaves
the same as the autotools
class but builds with B
== S. This method is useful when out-of-tree build
support is either not present or is broken.
Note
It is recommended that out-of-tree support be fixed and used if at all possible.
It’s useful to have some idea of how the tasks defined by the
autotools*
classes work and what they do behind the scenes.
do_configure - Regenerates the configure script (using
autoreconf
) and then launches it with a standard set of arguments used during cross-compilation. You can pass additional parameters toconfigure
through the EXTRA_OECONF or PACKAGECONFIG_CONFARGS variables.do_compile - Runs
make
with arguments that specify the compiler and linker. You can pass additional arguments through the EXTRA_OEMAKE variable.do_install - Runs
make install
and passes in${
D}
asDESTDIR
.
5.4 base.bbclass
The base
class is special in that every .bb
file implicitly
inherits the class. This class contains definitions for standard basic
tasks such as fetching, unpacking, configuring (empty by default),
compiling (runs any Makefile
present), installing (empty by default)
and packaging (empty by default). These classes are often overridden or
extended by other classes such as the
autotools class or the
package class.
The class also contains some commonly used functions such as
oe_runmake
, which runs make
with the arguments specified in
EXTRA_OEMAKE variable as well as the
arguments passed directly to oe_runmake
.
5.5 bash-completion.bbclass
Sets up packaging and dependencies appropriate for recipes that build software that includes bash-completion data.
5.6 bin_package.bbclass
The bin_package
class is a helper class for recipes that extract the
contents of a binary package (e.g. an RPM) and install those contents
rather than building the binary from source. The binary package is
extracted and new packages in the configured output package format are
created. Extraction and installation of proprietary binaries is a good
example use for this class.
Note
For RPMs and other packages that do not contain a subdirectory, you
should specify an appropriate fetcher parameter to point to the
subdirectory. For example, if BitBake is using the Git fetcher (git://
),
the “subpath” parameter limits the checkout to a specific subpath
of the tree. Here is an example where ${BP}
is used so that the files
are extracted into the subdirectory expected by the default value of
S:
SRC_URI = "git://example.com/downloads/somepackage.rpm;branch=main;subpath=${BP}"
See the “Fetchers” section in the BitBake User Manual for more information on supported BitBake Fetchers.
5.7 binconfig.bbclass
The binconfig
class helps to correct paths in shell scripts.
Before pkg-config
had become widespread, libraries shipped shell
scripts to give information about the libraries and include paths needed
to build software (usually named LIBNAME-config
). This class assists
any recipe using such scripts.
During staging, the OpenEmbedded build system installs such scripts into
the sysroots/
directory. Inheriting this class results in all paths
in these scripts being changed to point into the sysroots/
directory
so that all builds that use the script use the correct directories for
the cross compiling layout. See the
BINCONFIG_GLOB variable for more
information.
5.8 binconfig-disabled.bbclass
An alternative version of the binconfig
class, which disables binary configuration scripts by making them return
an error in favor of using pkg-config
to query the information. The
scripts to be disabled should be specified using the
BINCONFIG variable within the recipe inheriting
the class.
5.9 buildhistory.bbclass
The buildhistory
class records a history of build output metadata,
which can be used to detect possible regressions as well as used for
analysis of the build output. For more information on using Build
History, see the
“Maintaining Build Output Quality”
section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
5.10 buildstats.bbclass
The buildstats
class records performance statistics about each task
executed during the build (e.g. elapsed time, CPU usage, and I/O usage).
When you use this class, the output goes into the
BUILDSTATS_BASE directory, which defaults
to ${TMPDIR}/buildstats/
. You can analyze the elapsed time using
scripts/pybootchartgui/pybootchartgui.py
, which produces a cascading
chart of the entire build process and can be useful for highlighting
bottlenecks.
Collecting build statistics is enabled by default through the
USER_CLASSES variable from your
local.conf
file. Consequently, you do not have to do anything to
enable the class. However, if you want to disable the class, simply
remove “buildstats” from the USER_CLASSES list.
5.11 buildstats-summary.bbclass
When inherited globally, prints statistics at the end of the build on sstate re-use. In order to function, this class requires the buildstats class be enabled.
5.12 ccache.bbclass
The ccache
class enables the C/C++ Compiler Cache for the build.
This class is used to give a minor performance boost during the build.
See https://ccache.samba.org/ for information on the C/C++ Compiler
Cache, and the ccache.bbclass
file for details about how to enable this mechanism in your configuration
file, how to disable it for specific recipes, and how to share ccache
files between builds.
However, using the class can lead to unexpected side-effects. Thus, using this class is not recommended.
5.13 chrpath.bbclass
The chrpath
class is a wrapper around the “chrpath” utility, which
is used during the build process for nativesdk
, cross
, and
cross-canadian
recipes to change RPATH
records within binaries
in order to make them relocatable.
5.14 cmake.bbclass
The cmake
class allows for recipes that need to build software using
the CMake build system. You can use
the EXTRA_OECMAKE variable to specify
additional configuration options to be passed using the cmake
command line.
On the occasion that you would be installing custom CMake toolchain
files supplied by the application being built, you should install them
to the preferred CMake Module directory: ${D}${datadir}/cmake/
Modules during
do_install.
5.15 cml1.bbclass
The cml1
class provides basic support for the Linux kernel style
build configuration system.
5.16 compress_doc.bbclass
Enables compression for man pages and info pages. This class is intended to be inherited globally. The default compression mechanism is gz (gzip) but you can select an alternative mechanism by setting the DOC_COMPRESS variable.
5.17 copyleft_compliance.bbclass
The copyleft_compliance
class preserves source code for the purposes
of license compliance. This class is an alternative to the archiver
class and is still used by some users even though it has been deprecated
in favor of the archiver class.
5.18 copyleft_filter.bbclass
A class used by the archiver and
copyleft_compliance classes
for filtering licenses. The copyleft_filter
class is an internal
class and is not intended to be used directly.
5.19 core-image.bbclass
The core-image
class provides common definitions for the
core-image-*
image recipes, such as support for additional
IMAGE_FEATURES.
5.20 cpan*.bbclass
The cpan*
classes support Perl modules.
Recipes for Perl modules are simple. These recipes usually only need to point to the source’s archive and then inherit the proper class file. Building is split into two methods depending on which method the module authors used.
Modules that use old
Makefile.PL
-based build system requirecpan.bbclass
in their recipes.Modules that use
Build.PL
-based build system require usingcpan_build.bbclass
in their recipes.
Both build methods inherit the cpan-base
class for basic Perl
support.
5.21 cross.bbclass
The cross
class provides support for the recipes that build the
cross-compilation tools.
5.22 cross-canadian.bbclass
The cross-canadian
class provides support for the recipes that build
the Canadian Cross-compilation tools for SDKs. See the
“Cross-Development Toolchain Generation”
section in the Yocto Project Overview and Concepts Manual for more
discussion on these cross-compilation tools.
5.23 crosssdk.bbclass
The crosssdk
class provides support for the recipes that build the
cross-compilation tools used for building SDKs. See the
“Cross-Development Toolchain Generation”
section in the Yocto Project Overview and Concepts Manual for more
discussion on these cross-compilation tools.
5.24 cve-check.bbclass
The cve-check
class looks for known CVEs (Common Vulnerabilities
and Exposures) while building an image. This class is meant to be
inherited globally from a configuration file:
INHERIT += "cve-check"
You can also look for vulnerabilities in specific packages by passing
-c cve_check
to BitBake. You will find details in the
“Checking for Vulnerabilities”
section in the Development Tasks Manual.
5.25 debian.bbclass
The debian
class renames output packages so that they follow the
Debian naming policy (i.e. glibc
becomes libc6
and
glibc-devel
becomes libc6-dev
.) Renaming includes the library
name and version as part of the package name.
If a recipe creates packages for multiple libraries (shared object files
of .so
type), use the LEAD_SONAME
variable in the recipe to specify the library on which to apply the
naming scheme.
5.26 deploy.bbclass
The deploy
class handles deploying files to the
DEPLOY_DIR_IMAGE directory. The main
function of this class is to allow the deploy step to be accelerated by
shared state. Recipes that inherit this class should define their own
do_deploy function to copy the files to be
deployed to DEPLOYDIR, and use addtask
to
add the task at the appropriate place, which is usually after
do_compile or
do_install. The class then takes care of
staging the files from DEPLOYDIR to DEPLOY_DIR_IMAGE.
5.27 devshell.bbclass
The devshell
class adds the do_devshell
task. Distribution
policy dictates whether to include this class. See the “Using a Development Shell”
section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual for more
information about using devshell
.
5.28 devupstream.bbclass
The devupstream
class uses
BBCLASSEXTEND to add a variant of the
recipe that fetches from an alternative URI (e.g. Git) instead of a
tarball. Following is an example:
BBCLASSEXTEND = "devupstream:target"
SRC_URI:class-devupstream = "git://git.example.com/example;branch=main"
SRCREV:class-devupstream = "abcd1234"
Adding the above statements to your recipe creates a variant that has
DEFAULT_PREFERENCE set to “-1”.
Consequently, you need to select the variant of the recipe to use it.
Any development-specific adjustments can be done by using the
class-devupstream
override. Here is an example:
DEPENDS:append:class-devupstream = " gperf-native"
do_configure:prepend:class-devupstream() {
touch ${S}/README
}
The class
currently only supports creating a development variant of the target
recipe, not native
or nativesdk
variants.
The BBCLASSEXTEND syntax (i.e. devupstream:target
) provides
support for native
and nativesdk
variants. Consequently, this
functionality can be added in a future release.
Support for other version control systems such as Subversion is limited
due to BitBake’s automatic fetch dependencies (e.g.
subversion-native
).
5.29 externalsrc.bbclass
The externalsrc
class supports building software from source code
that is external to the OpenEmbedded build system. Building software
from an external source tree means that the build system’s normal fetch,
unpack, and patch process is not used.
By default, the OpenEmbedded build system uses the S
and B variables to locate unpacked recipe source code
and to build it, respectively. When your recipe inherits the
externalsrc
class, you use the
EXTERNALSRC and
EXTERNALSRC_BUILD variables to
ultimately define S and B.
By default, this class expects the source code to support recipe builds that use the B variable to point to the directory in which the OpenEmbedded build system places the generated objects built from the recipes. By default, the B directory is set to the following, which is separate from the source directory (S):
${WORKDIR}/${BPN}-{PV}/
See these variables for more information: WORKDIR, BPN, and PV,
For more information on the externalsrc
class, see the comments in
meta/classes/externalsrc.bbclass
in the Source Directory.
For information on how to use the
externalsrc
class, see the
“Building Software from an External Source”
section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
5.30 extrausers.bbclass
The extrausers
class allows additional user and group configuration
to be applied at the image level. Inheriting this class either globally
or from an image recipe allows additional user and group operations to
be performed using the
EXTRA_USERS_PARAMS variable.
Note
The user and group operations added using the extrausers class are not tied to a specific recipe outside of the recipe for the image. Thus, the operations can be performed across the image as a whole. Use the useradd class to add user and group configuration to a specific recipe.
Here is an example that uses this class in an image recipe:
inherit extrausers
EXTRA_USERS_PARAMS = "\
useradd -p '' tester; \
groupadd developers; \
userdel nobody; \
groupdel -g video; \
groupmod -g 1020 developers; \
usermod -s /bin/sh tester; \
"
Here is an example that adds two users named “tester-jim” and “tester-sue” and assigns passwords. First on host, create the (escaped) password hash:
printf "%q" $(mkpasswd -m sha256crypt tester01)
The resulting hash is set to a variable and used in useradd
command parameters:
inherit extrausers
PASSWD = "\$X\$ABC123\$A-Long-Hash"
EXTRA_USERS_PARAMS = "\
useradd -p '${PASSWD}' tester-jim; \
useradd -p '${PASSWD}' tester-sue; \
"
Finally, here is an example that sets the root password:
inherit extrausers
EXTRA_USERS_PARAMS = "\
usermod -p '${PASSWD}' root; \
"
5.31 features_check.bbclass
The features_check
class allows individual recipes to check
for required and conflicting
DISTRO_FEATURES, MACHINE_FEATURES or COMBINED_FEATURES.
This class provides support for the following variables:
REQUIRED_MACHINE_FEATURES
CONFLICT_MACHINE_FEATURES
ANY_OF_MACHINE_FEATURES
REQUIRED_COMBINED_FEATURES
CONFLICT_COMBINED_FEATURES
ANY_OF_COMBINED_FEATURES
If any conditions specified in the recipe using the above variables are not met, the recipe will be skipped, and if the build system attempts to build the recipe then an error will be triggered.
5.32 fontcache.bbclass
The fontcache
class generates the proper post-install and
post-remove (postinst and postrm) scriptlets for font packages. These
scriptlets call fc-cache
(part of Fontconfig
) to add the fonts
to the font information cache. Since the cache files are
architecture-specific, fc-cache
runs using QEMU if the postinst
scriptlets need to be run on the build host during image creation.
If the fonts being installed are in packages other than the main package, set FONT_PACKAGES to specify the packages containing the fonts.
5.33 fs-uuid.bbclass
The fs-uuid
class extracts UUID from
${
ROOTFS}
, which must have been built
by the time that this function gets called. The fs-uuid
class only
works on ext
file systems and depends on tune2fs
.
5.34 gconf.bbclass
The gconf
class provides common functionality for recipes that need
to install GConf schemas. The schemas will be put into a separate
package (${
PN}-gconf
) that is created
automatically when this class is inherited. This package uses the
appropriate post-install and post-remove (postinst/postrm) scriptlets to
register and unregister the schemas in the target image.
5.35 gettext.bbclass
The gettext
class provides support for building software that uses
the GNU gettext
internationalization and localization system. All
recipes building software that use gettext
should inherit this
class.
5.36 gnomebase.bbclass
The gnomebase
class is the base class for recipes that build
software from the GNOME stack. This class sets
SRC_URI to download the source from the GNOME
mirrors as well as extending FILES with the typical
GNOME installation paths.
5.37 gobject-introspection.bbclass
Provides support for recipes building software that supports GObject introspection. This functionality is only enabled if the “gobject-introspection-data” feature is in DISTRO_FEATURES as well as “qemu-usermode” being in MACHINE_FEATURES.
Note
This functionality is backfilled by default and, if not applicable, should be disabled through DISTRO_FEATURES_BACKFILL_CONSIDERED or MACHINE_FEATURES_BACKFILL_CONSIDERED, respectively.
5.38 grub-efi.bbclass
The grub-efi
class provides grub-efi
-specific functions for
building bootable images.
This class supports several variables:
INITRD: Indicates list of filesystem images to concatenate and use as an initial RAM disk (initrd) (optional).
ROOTFS: Indicates a filesystem image to include as the root filesystem (optional).
GRUB_GFXSERIAL: Set this to “1” to have graphics and serial in the boot menu.
LABELS: A list of targets for the automatic configuration.
APPEND: An override list of append strings for each
LABEL
.GRUB_OPTS: Additional options to add to the configuration (optional). Options are delimited using semi-colon characters (
;
).GRUB_TIMEOUT: Timeout before executing the default
LABEL
(optional).
5.39 gsettings.bbclass
The gsettings
class provides common functionality for recipes that
need to install GSettings (glib) schemas. The schemas are assumed to be
part of the main package. Appropriate post-install and post-remove
(postinst/postrm) scriptlets are added to register and unregister the
schemas in the target image.
5.40 gtk-doc.bbclass
The gtk-doc
class is a helper class to pull in the appropriate
gtk-doc
dependencies and disable gtk-doc
.
5.41 gtk-icon-cache.bbclass
The gtk-icon-cache
class generates the proper post-install and
post-remove (postinst/postrm) scriptlets for packages that use GTK+ and
install icons. These scriptlets call gtk-update-icon-cache
to add
the fonts to GTK+’s icon cache. Since the cache files are
architecture-specific, gtk-update-icon-cache
is run using QEMU if
the postinst scriptlets need to be run on the build host during image
creation.
5.42 gtk-immodules-cache.bbclass
The gtk-immodules-cache
class generates the proper post-install and
post-remove (postinst/postrm) scriptlets for packages that install GTK+
input method modules for virtual keyboards. These scriptlets call
gtk-update-icon-cache
to add the input method modules to the cache.
Since the cache files are architecture-specific,
gtk-update-icon-cache
is run using QEMU if the postinst scriptlets
need to be run on the build host during image creation.
If the input method modules being installed are in packages other than the main package, set GTKIMMODULES_PACKAGES to specify the packages containing the modules.
5.43 gzipnative.bbclass
The gzipnative
class enables the use of different native versions of
gzip
and pigz
rather than the versions of these tools from the
build host.
5.44 icecc.bbclass
The icecc
class supports
Icecream, which facilitates
taking compile jobs and distributing them among remote machines.
The class stages directories with symlinks from gcc
and g++
to
icecc
, for both native and cross compilers. Depending on each
configure or compile, the OpenEmbedded build system adds the directories
at the head of the PATH
list and then sets the ICECC_CXX
and
ICEC_CC
variables, which are the paths to the g++
and gcc
compilers, respectively.
For the cross compiler, the class creates a tar.gz
file that
contains the Yocto Project toolchain and sets ICECC_VERSION
, which
is the version of the cross-compiler used in the cross-development
toolchain, accordingly.
The class handles all three different compile stages (i.e native
,cross-kernel and target) and creates the necessary environment
tar.gz
file to be used by the remote machines. The class also
supports SDK generation.
If ICECC_PATH is not set in your
local.conf
file, then the class tries to locate the icecc
binary
using which
. If ICECC_ENV_EXEC is set
in your local.conf
file, the variable should point to the
icecc-create-env
script provided by the user. If you do not point to
a user-provided script, the build system uses the default script
provided by the recipe icecc-create-env-native.bb
.
Note
This script is a modified version and not the one that comes with icecc.
If you do not want the Icecream distributed compile support to apply to
specific recipes or classes, you can ask them to be ignored by Icecream
by listing the recipes and classes using the
ICECC_RECIPE_DISABLE and
ICECC_CLASS_DISABLE variables,
respectively, in your local.conf
file. Doing so causes the
OpenEmbedded build system to handle these compilations locally.
Additionally, you can list recipes using the
ICECC_RECIPE_ENABLE variable in
your local.conf
file to force icecc
to be enabled for recipes
using an empty PARALLEL_MAKE variable.
Inheriting the icecc
class changes all sstate signatures.
Consequently, if a development team has a dedicated build system that
populates SSTATE_MIRRORS and they want to
reuse sstate from SSTATE_MIRRORS, then all developers and the build
system need to either inherit the icecc
class or nobody should.
At the distribution level, you can inherit the icecc
class to be
sure that all builders start with the same sstate signatures. After
inheriting the class, you can then disable the feature by setting the
ICECC_DISABLED variable to “1” as follows:
INHERIT_DISTRO:append = " icecc"
ICECC_DISABLED ??= "1"
This practice
makes sure everyone is using the same signatures but also requires
individuals that do want to use Icecream to enable the feature
individually as follows in your local.conf
file:
ICECC_DISABLED = ""
5.45 image.bbclass
The image
class helps support creating images in different formats.
First, the root filesystem is created from packages using one of the
rootfs*.bbclass
files (depending on the package format used) and
then one or more image files are created.
The IMAGE_FSTYPES variable controls the types of images to generate.
The IMAGE_INSTALL variable controls the list of packages to install into the image.
For information on customizing images, see the “Customizing Images” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual. For information on how images are created, see the “Images” section in the Yocto Project Overview and Concepts Manual.
5.46 image-buildinfo.bbclass
The image-buildinfo
class writes information to the target
filesystem on /etc/build
.
5.47 image_types.bbclass
The image_types
class defines all of the standard image output types
that you can enable through the
IMAGE_FSTYPES variable. You can use this
class as a reference on how to add support for custom image output
types.
By default, the image class automatically
enables the image_types
class. The image
class uses the
IMGCLASSES
variable as follows:
IMGCLASSES = "rootfs_${IMAGE_PKGTYPE} image_types ${IMAGE_CLASSES}"
IMGCLASSES += "${@['populate_sdk_base', 'populate_sdk_ext']['linux' in d.getVar("SDK_OS")]}"
IMGCLASSES += "${@bb.utils.contains_any('IMAGE_FSTYPES', 'live iso hddimg', 'image-live', '', d)}"
IMGCLASSES += "${@bb.utils.contains('IMAGE_FSTYPES', 'container', 'image-container', '', d)}"
IMGCLASSES += "image_types_wic"
IMGCLASSES += "rootfs-postcommands"
IMGCLASSES += "image-postinst-intercepts"
inherit ${IMGCLASSES}
The image_types
class also handles conversion and compression of images.
Note
To build a VMware VMDK image, you need to add “wic.vmdk” to IMAGE_FSTYPES. This would also be similar for Virtual Box Virtual Disk Image (“vdi”) and QEMU Copy On Write Version 2 (“qcow2”) images.
5.48 image-live.bbclass
This class controls building “live” (i.e. HDDIMG and ISO) images. Live images contain syslinux for legacy booting, as well as the bootloader specified by EFI_PROVIDER if MACHINE_FEATURES contains “efi”.
Normally, you do not use this class directly. Instead, you add “live” to IMAGE_FSTYPES.
5.49 insane.bbclass
The insane
class adds a step to the package generation process so
that output quality assurance checks are generated by the OpenEmbedded
build system. A range of checks are performed that check the build’s
output for common problems that show up during runtime. Distribution
policy usually dictates whether to include this class.
You can configure the sanity checks so that specific test failures either raise a warning or an error message. Typically, failures for new tests generate a warning. Subsequent failures for the same test would then generate an error message once the metadata is in a known and good condition. See the “QA Error and Warning Messages” Chapter for a list of all the warning and error messages you might encounter using a default configuration.
Use the WARN_QA and
ERROR_QA variables to control the behavior of
these checks at the global level (i.e. in your custom distro
configuration). However, to skip one or more checks in recipes, you
should use INSANE_SKIP. For example, to skip
the check for symbolic link .so
files in the main package of a
recipe, add the following to the recipe. You need to realize that the
package name override, in this example ${PN}
, must be used:
INSANE_SKIP:${PN} += "dev-so"
Please keep in mind that the QA checks are meant to detect real or potential problems in the packaged output. So exercise caution when disabling these checks.
Here are the tests you can list with the WARN_QA and ERROR_QA variables:
already-stripped:
Checks that produced binaries have not already been stripped prior to the build system extracting debug symbols. It is common for upstream software projects to default to stripping debug symbols for output binaries. In order for debugging to work on the target using-dbg
packages, this stripping must be disabled.arch:
Checks the Executable and Linkable Format (ELF) type, bit size, and endianness of any binaries to ensure they match the target architecture. This test fails if any binaries do not match the type since there would be an incompatibility. The test could indicate that the wrong compiler or compiler options have been used. Sometimes software, like bootloaders, might need to bypass this check.buildpaths:
Checks for paths to locations on the build host inside the output files. Currently, this test triggers too many false positives and thus is not normally enabled.build-deps:
Determines if a build-time dependency that is specified through DEPENDS, explicit RDEPENDS, or task-level dependencies exists to match any runtime dependency. This determination is particularly useful to discover where runtime dependencies are detected and added during packaging. If no explicit dependency has been specified within the metadata, at the packaging stage it is too late to ensure that the dependency is built, and thus you can end up with an error when the package is installed into the image during the do_rootfs task because the auto-detected dependency was not satisfied. An example of this would be where the update-rc.d class automatically adds a dependency on theinitscripts-functions
package to packages that install an initscript that refers to/etc/init.d/functions
. The recipe should really have an explicit RDEPENDS for the package in question oninitscripts-functions
so that the OpenEmbedded build system is able to ensure that theinitscripts
recipe is actually built and thus theinitscripts-functions
package is made available.compile-host-path:
Checks the do_compile log for indications that paths to locations on the build host were used. Using such paths might result in host contamination of the build output.debug-deps:
Checks that all packages except-dbg
packages do not depend on-dbg
packages, which would cause a packaging bug.debug-files:
Checks for.debug
directories in anything but the-dbg
package. The debug files should all be in the-dbg
package. Thus, anything packaged elsewhere is incorrect packaging.dep-cmp:
Checks for invalid version comparison statements in runtime dependency relationships between packages (i.e. in RDEPENDS, RRECOMMENDS, RSUGGESTS, RPROVIDES, RREPLACES, and RCONFLICTS variable values). Any invalid comparisons might trigger failures or undesirable behavior when passed to the package manager.desktop:
Runs thedesktop-file-validate
program against any.desktop
files to validate their contents against the specification for.desktop
files.dev-deps:
Checks that all packages except-dev
or-staticdev
packages do not depend on-dev
packages, which would be a packaging bug.dev-so:
Checks that the.so
symbolic links are in the-dev
package and not in any of the other packages. In general, these symlinks are only useful for development purposes. Thus, the-dev
package is the correct location for them. In very rare cases, such as dynamically loaded modules, these symlinks are needed instead in the main package.file-rdeps:
Checks that file-level dependencies identified by the OpenEmbedded build system at packaging time are satisfied. For example, a shell script might start with the line#!/bin/bash
. This line would translate to a file dependency on/bin/bash
. Of the three package managers that the OpenEmbedded build system supports, only RPM directly handles file-level dependencies, resolving them automatically to packages providing the files. However, the lack of that functionality in the other two package managers does not mean the dependencies do not still need resolving. This QA check attempts to ensure that explicitly declared RDEPENDS exist to handle any file-level dependency detected in packaged files.files-invalid:
Checks for FILES variable values that contain “//”, which is invalid.host-user-contaminated:
Checks that no package produced by the recipe contains any files outside of/home
with a user or group ID that matches the user running BitBake. A match usually indicates that the files are being installed with an incorrect UID/GID, since target IDs are independent from host IDs. For additional information, see the section describing the do_install task.incompatible-license:
Report when packages are excluded from being created due to being marked with a license that is in INCOMPATIBLE_LICENSE.install-host-path:
Checks the do_install log for indications that paths to locations on the build host were used. Using such paths might result in host contamination of the build output.installed-vs-shipped:
Reports when files have been installed withindo_install
but have not been included in any package by way of the FILES variable. Files that do not appear in any package cannot be present in an image later on in the build process. Ideally, all installed files should be packaged or not installed at all. These files can be deleted at the end ofdo_install
if the files are not needed in any package.invalid-chars:
Checks that the recipe metadata variables DESCRIPTION, SUMMARY, LICENSE, and SECTION do not contain non-UTF-8 characters. Some package managers do not support such characters.invalid-packageconfig:
Checks that no undefined features are being added to PACKAGECONFIG. For example, any name “foo” for which the following form does not exist:PACKAGECONFIG[foo] = "..."
la:
Checks.la
files for any TMPDIR paths. Any.la
file containing these paths is incorrect sincelibtool
adds the correct sysroot prefix when using the files automatically itself.ldflags:
Ensures that the binaries were linked with the LDFLAGS options provided by the build system. If this test fails, check that the LDFLAGS variable is being passed to the linker command.libdir:
Checks for libraries being installed into incorrect (possibly hardcoded) installation paths. For example, this test will catch recipes that install/lib/bar.so
when${base_libdir}
is “lib32”. Another example is when recipes install/usr/lib64/foo.so
when${libdir}
is “/usr/lib”.libexec:
Checks if a package contains files in/usr/libexec
. This check is not performed if thelibexecdir
variable has been set explicitly to/usr/libexec
.packages-list:
Checks for the same package being listed multiple times through the PACKAGES variable value. Installing the package in this manner can cause errors during packaging.perm-config:
Reports lines infs-perms.txt
that have an invalid format.perm-line:
Reports lines infs-perms.txt
that have an invalid format.perm-link:
Reports lines infs-perms.txt
that specify ‘link’ where the specified target already exists.perms:
Currently, this check is unused but reserved.pkgconfig:
Checks.pc
files for any TMPDIR/WORKDIR paths. Any.pc
file containing these paths is incorrect sincepkg-config
itself adds the correct sysroot prefix when the files are accessed.pkgname:
Checks that all packages in PACKAGES have names that do not contain invalid characters (i.e. characters other than 0-9, a-z, ., +, and -).pkgv-undefined:
Checks to see if the PKGV variable is undefined during do_package.pkgvarcheck:
Checks through the variables RDEPENDS, RRECOMMENDS, RSUGGESTS, RCONFLICTS, RPROVIDES, RREPLACES, FILES, ALLOW_EMPTY,pkg_preinst
,pkg_postinst
,pkg_prerm
andpkg_postrm
, and reports if there are variable sets that are not package-specific. Using these variables without a package suffix is bad practice, and might unnecessarily complicate dependencies of other packages within the same recipe or have other unintended consequences.pn-overrides:
Checks that a recipe does not have a name (PN) value that appears in OVERRIDES. If a recipe is named such that its PN value matches something already in OVERRIDES (e.g. PN happens to be the same as MACHINE or DISTRO), it can have unexpected consequences. For example, assignments such asFILES:${PN} = "xyz"
effectively turn intoFILES = "xyz"
.rpaths:
Checks for rpaths in the binaries that contain build system paths such as TMPDIR. If this test fails, bad-rpath
options are being passed to the linker commands and your binaries have potential security issues.split-strip:
Reports that splitting or stripping debug symbols from binaries has failed.staticdev:
Checks for static library files (*.a
) in non-staticdev
packages.symlink-to-sysroot:
Checks for symlinks in packages that point into TMPDIR on the host. Such symlinks will work on the host, but are clearly invalid when running on the target.textrel:
Checks for ELF binaries that contain relocations in their.text
sections, which can result in a performance impact at runtime. See the explanation for theELF binary
message in “QA Error and Warning Messages” for more information regarding runtime performance issues.unlisted-pkg-lics:
Checks that all declared licenses applying for a package are also declared on the recipe level (i.e. any license inLICENSE:*
should appear in LICENSE).useless-rpaths:
Checks for dynamic library load paths (rpaths) in the binaries that by default on a standard system are searched by the linker (e.g./lib
and/usr/lib
). While these paths will not cause any breakage, they do waste space and are unnecessary.var-undefined:
Reports when variables fundamental to packaging (i.e. WORKDIR, DEPLOY_DIR, D, PN, and PKGD) are undefined during do_package.version-going-backwards:
If Build History is enabled, reports when a package being written out has a lower version than the previously written package under the same name. If you are placing output packages into a feed and upgrading packages on a target system using that feed, the version of a package going backwards can result in the target system not correctly upgrading to the “new” version of the package.Note
This is only relevant when you are using runtime package management on your target system.
xorg-driver-abi:
Checks that all packages containing Xorg drivers have ABI dependencies. Thexserver-xorg
recipe provides driver ABI names. All drivers should depend on the ABI versions that they have been built against. Driver recipes that includexorg-driver-input.inc
orxorg-driver-video.inc
will automatically get these versions. Consequently, you should only need to explicitly add dependencies to binary driver recipes.
5.50 insserv.bbclass
The insserv
class uses the insserv
utility to update the order
of symbolic links in /etc/rc?.d/
within an image based on
dependencies specified by LSB headers in the init.d
scripts
themselves.
5.51 kernel.bbclass
The kernel
class handles building Linux kernels. The class contains
code to build all kernel trees. All needed headers are staged into the
STAGING_KERNEL_DIR directory to allow out-of-tree module builds
using the module class.
This means that each built kernel module is packaged separately and
inter-module dependencies are created by parsing the modinfo
output.
If all modules are required, then installing the kernel-modules
package installs all packages with modules and various other kernel
packages such as kernel-vmlinux
.
The kernel
class contains logic that allows you to embed an initial
RAM filesystem (initramfs) image when you build the kernel image. For
information on how to build an initramfs, see the
“Building an Initial RAM Filesystem (initramfs) Image” section in
the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
Various other classes are used by the kernel
and module
classes
internally including the kernel-arch,
module-base, and
linux-kernel-base classes.
5.52 kernel-arch.bbclass
The kernel-arch
class sets the ARCH
environment variable for
Linux kernel compilation (including modules).
5.53 kernel-devicetree.bbclass
The kernel-devicetree
class, which is inherited by the
kernel class, supports device tree
generation.
5.54 kernel-fitimage.bbclass
The kernel-fitimage
class provides support to pack a kernel image,
device trees, a U-boot script, a Initramfs bundle and a RAM disk
into a single FIT image. In theory, a FIT image can support any number
of kernels, U-boot scripts, Initramfs bundles, RAM disks and device-trees.
However, kernel-fitimage
currently only supports
limited usescases: just one kernel image, an optional U-boot script,
an optional Initramfs bundle, an optional RAM disk, and any number of
device tree.
To create a FIT image, it is required that KERNEL_CLASSES is set to include “kernel-fitimage” and KERNEL_IMAGETYPE is set to “fitImage”.
The options for the device tree compiler passed to mkimage -D
when creating the FIT image are specified using the
UBOOT_MKIMAGE_DTCOPTS variable.
Only a single kernel can be added to the FIT image created by
kernel-fitimage
and the kernel image in FIT is mandatory. The
address where the kernel image is to be loaded by U-Boot is
specified by UBOOT_LOADADDRESS and the entrypoint by
UBOOT_ENTRYPOINT.
Multiple device trees can be added to the FIT image created by
kernel-fitimage
and the device tree is optional.
The address where the device tree is to be loaded by U-Boot is
specified by UBOOT_DTBO_LOADADDRESS for device tree overlays
and by UBOOT_DTB_LOADADDRESS for device tree binaries.
Only a single RAM disk can be added to the FIT image created by
kernel-fitimage
and the RAM disk in FIT is optional.
The address where the RAM disk image is to be loaded by U-Boot
is specified by UBOOT_RD_LOADADDRESS and the entrypoint by
UBOOT_RD_ENTRYPOINT. The ramdisk is added to FIT image when
INITRAMFS_IMAGE is specified and that INITRAMFS_IMAGE_BUNDLE
is set to 0.
Only a single Initramfs bundle can be added to the FIT image created by
kernel-fitimage
and the Initramfs bundle in FIT is optional.
In case of Initramfs, the kernel is configured to be bundled with the root filesystem
in the same binary (example: zImage-initramfs-MACHINE.bin).
When the kernel is copied to RAM and executed, it unpacks the Initramfs root filesystem.
The Initramfs bundle can be enabled when INITRAMFS_IMAGE
is specified and that INITRAMFS_IMAGE_BUNDLE is set to 1.
The address where the Initramfs bundle is to be loaded by U-boot is specified
by UBOOT_LOADADDRESS and the entrypoint by UBOOT_ENTRYPOINT.
Only a single U-boot boot script can be added to the FIT image created by
kernel-fitimage
and the boot script is optional.
The boot script is specified in the ITS file as a text file containing
U-boot commands. When using a boot script the user should configure the
U-boot do_install
task to copy the script to sysroot.
So the script can be included in the FIT image by the kernel-fitimage
class. At run-time, U-boot CONFIG_BOOTCOMMAND define can be configured to
load the boot script from the FIT image and executes it.
The FIT image generated by kernel-fitimage
class is signed when the
variables UBOOT_SIGN_ENABLE, UBOOT_MKIMAGE_DTCOPTS,
UBOOT_SIGN_KEYDIR and UBOOT_SIGN_KEYNAME are set
appropriately. The default values used for FIT_HASH_ALG and
FIT_SIGN_ALG in kernel-fitimage
are “sha256” and
“rsa2048” respectively. The keys for signing fitImage can be generated using
the kernel-fitimage
class when both FIT_GENERATE_KEYS and
UBOOT_SIGN_ENABLE are set to “1”.
5.55 kernel-grub.bbclass
The kernel-grub
class updates the boot area and the boot menu with
the kernel as the priority boot mechanism while installing a RPM to
update the kernel on a deployed target.
5.56 kernel-module-split.bbclass
The kernel-module-split
class provides common functionality for
splitting Linux kernel modules into separate packages.
5.57 kernel-uboot.bbclass
The kernel-uboot
class provides support for building from
vmlinux-style kernel sources.
5.58 kernel-uimage.bbclass
The kernel-uimage
class provides support to pack uImage.
5.59 kernel-yocto.bbclass
The kernel-yocto
class provides common functionality for building
from linux-yocto style kernel source repositories.
5.60 kernelsrc.bbclass
The kernelsrc
class sets the Linux kernel source and version.
5.61 lib_package.bbclass
The lib_package
class supports recipes that build libraries and
produce executable binaries, where those binaries should not be
installed by default along with the library. Instead, the binaries are
added to a separate ${
PN}-bin
package to
make their installation optional.
5.62 libc*.bbclass
The libc*
classes support recipes that build packages with libc
:
The
libc-common
class provides common support for building withlibc
.The
libc-package
class supports packaging upglibc
andeglibc
.
5.63 license.bbclass
The license
class provides license manifest creation and license
exclusion. This class is enabled by default using the default value for
the INHERIT_DISTRO variable.
5.64 linux-kernel-base.bbclass
The linux-kernel-base
class provides common functionality for
recipes that build out of the Linux kernel source tree. These builds
goes beyond the kernel itself. For example, the Perf recipe also
inherits this class.
5.65 linuxloader.bbclass
Provides the function linuxloader()
, which gives the value of the
dynamic loader/linker provided on the platform. This value is used by a
number of other classes.
5.66 logging.bbclass
The logging
class provides the standard shell functions used to log
messages for various BitBake severity levels (i.e. bbplain
,
bbnote
, bbwarn
, bberror
, bbfatal
, and bbdebug
).
This class is enabled by default since it is inherited by the base
class.
5.67 metadata_scm.bbclass
The metadata_scm
class provides functionality for querying the
branch and revision of a Source Code Manager (SCM) repository.
The base class uses this class to print the
revisions of each layer before starting every build. The
metadata_scm
class is enabled by default because it is inherited by
the base
class.
5.68 migrate_localcount.bbclass
The migrate_localcount
class verifies a recipe’s localcount data and
increments it appropriately.
5.69 mime.bbclass
The mime
class generates the proper post-install and post-remove
(postinst/postrm) scriptlets for packages that install MIME type files.
These scriptlets call update-mime-database
to add the MIME types to
the shared database.
5.70 mirrors.bbclass
The mirrors
class sets up some standard
MIRRORS entries for source code mirrors. These
mirrors provide a fall-back path in case the upstream source specified
in SRC_URI within recipes is unavailable.
This class is enabled by default since it is inherited by the base class.
5.71 module.bbclass
The module
class provides support for building out-of-tree Linux
kernel modules. The class inherits the
module-base and
kernel-module-split classes,
and implements the do_compile and
do_install tasks. The class provides
everything needed to build and package a kernel module.
For general information on out-of-tree Linux kernel modules, see the “Incorporating Out-of-Tree Modules” section in the Yocto Project Linux Kernel Development Manual.
5.72 module-base.bbclass
The module-base
class provides the base functionality for building
Linux kernel modules. Typically, a recipe that builds software that
includes one or more kernel modules and has its own means of building
the module inherits this class as opposed to inheriting the
module class.
5.73 multilib*.bbclass
The multilib*
classes provide support for building libraries with
different target optimizations or target architectures and installing
them side-by-side in the same image.
For more information on using the Multilib feature, see the “Combining Multiple Versions of Library Files into One Image” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
5.74 native.bbclass
The native
class provides common functionality for recipes that
build tools to run on the Build Host (i.e. tools that use the compiler
or other tools from the build host).
You can create a recipe that builds tools that run natively on the host a couple different ways:
Create a
myrecipe-native.bb
recipe that inherits thenative
class. If you use this method, you must order the inherit statement in the recipe after all other inherit statements so that thenative
class is inherited last.Note
When creating a recipe this way, the recipe name must follow this naming convention:
myrecipe-native.bb
Not using this naming convention can lead to subtle problems caused by existing code that depends on that naming convention.
Create or modify a target recipe that contains the following:
BBCLASSEXTEND = "native"
Inside the recipe, use
:class-native
and:class-target
overrides to specify any functionality specific to the respective native or target case.
Although applied differently, the native
class is used with both
methods. The advantage of the second method is that you do not need to
have two separate recipes (assuming you need both) for native and
target. All common parts of the recipe are automatically shared.
5.75 nativesdk.bbclass
The nativesdk
class provides common functionality for recipes that
wish to build tools to run as part of an SDK (i.e. tools that run on
SDKMACHINE).
You can create a recipe that builds tools that run on the SDK machine a couple different ways:
Create a
nativesdk-myrecipe.bb
recipe that inherits thenativesdk
class. If you use this method, you must order the inherit statement in the recipe after all other inherit statements so that thenativesdk
class is inherited last.Create a
nativesdk
variant of any recipe by adding the following:BBCLASSEXTEND = "nativesdk"
Inside the recipe, use
:class-nativesdk
and:class-target
overrides to specify any functionality specific to the respective SDK machine or target case.
Note
When creating a recipe, you must follow this naming convention:
nativesdk-myrecipe.bb
Not doing so can lead to subtle problems because there is code that depends on the naming convention.
Although applied differently, the nativesdk
class is used with both
methods. The advantage of the second method is that you do not need to
have two separate recipes (assuming you need both) for the SDK machine
and the target. All common parts of the recipe are automatically shared.
5.76 nopackages.bbclass
Disables packaging tasks for those recipes and classes where packaging is not needed.
5.77 npm.bbclass
Provides support for building Node.js software fetched using the node package manager (NPM).
Note
Currently, recipes inheriting this class must use the npm://
fetcher to have dependencies fetched and packaged automatically.
For information on how to create NPM packages, see the “Creating Node Package Manager (NPM) Packages” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
5.78 oelint.bbclass
The oelint
class is an obsolete lint checking tool available in
meta/classes
in the Source Directory.
There are some classes that could be generally useful in OE-Core but
are never actually used within OE-Core itself. The oelint
class is
one such example. However, being aware of this class can reduce the
proliferation of different versions of similar classes across multiple
layers.
5.79 overlayfs.bbclass
It’s often desired in Embedded System design to have a read-only root filesystem.
But a lot of different applications might want to have read-write access to
some parts of a filesystem. It can be especially useful when your update mechanism
overwrites the whole root filesystem, but you may want your application data to be preserved
between updates. The overlayfs class provides a way
to achieve that by means of overlayfs
and at the same time keeping the base
root filesystem read-only.
To use this class, set a mount point for a partition overlayfs
is going to use as upper
layer in your machine configuration. The underlying file system can be anything that
is supported by overlayfs
. This has to be done in your machine configuration:
OVERLAYFS_MOUNT_POINT[data] = "/data"
Note
QA checks fail to catch file existence if you redefine this variable in your recipe!
Only the existence of the systemd mount unit file is checked, not its contents.
To get more details on
overlayfs
, its internals and supported operations, please refer to the official documentation of the Linux kernel.
The class assumes you have a data.mount
systemd unit defined elsewhere in your BSP
(e.g. in systemd-machine-units
recipe) and it’s installed into the image.
Then you can specify writable directories on a recipe basis (e.g. in my-application.bb):
OVERLAYFS_WRITABLE_PATHS[data] = "/usr/share/my-custom-application"
To support several mount points you can use a different variable flag. Assuming we
want to have a writable location on the file system, but do not need that the data
survives a reboot, then we could have a mnt-overlay.mount
unit for a tmpfs
file system.
In your machine configuration:
OVERLAYFS_MOUNT_POINT[mnt-overlay] = "/mnt/overlay"
and then in your recipe:
OVERLAYFS_WRITABLE_PATHS[mnt-overlay] = "/usr/share/another-application"
On a practical note, your application recipe might require multiple
overlays to be mounted before running to avoid writing to the underlying
file system (which can be forbidden in case of read-only file system)
To achieve that overlayfs provides a systemd
helper service for mounting overlays. This helper service is named
${PN}-overlays.service
and can be depended on in your application recipe
(named application
in the following example) systemd
unit by adding
to the unit the following:
[Unit]
After=application-overlays.service
Requires=application-overlays.service
Note
The class does not support the /etc
directory itself, because systemd
depends on it.
In order to get /etc
in overlayfs, see overlayfs-etc.
5.80 overlayfs-etc.bbclass
In order to have the /etc
directory in overlayfs a special handling at early
boot stage is required. The idea is to supply a custom init script that mounts
/etc
before launching the actual init program, because the latter already
requires /etc
to be mounted.
Example usage in image recipe:
IMAGE_FEATURES += "overlayfs-etc"
Note
This class must not be inherited directly. Use IMAGE_FEATURES or EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES
Your machine configuration should define at least the device, mount point, and file system type
you are going to use for overlayfs
:
OVERLAYFS_ETC_MOUNT_POINT = "/data"
OVERLAYFS_ETC_DEVICE = "/dev/mmcblk0p2"
OVERLAYFS_ETC_FSTYPE ?= "ext4"
To control more mount options you should consider setting mount options
(defaults
is used by default):
OVERLAYFS_ETC_MOUNT_OPTIONS = "wsync"
The class provides two options for /sbin/init
generation:
The default option is to rename the original
/sbin/init
to/sbin/init.orig
and place the generated init under original name, i.e./sbin/init
. It has an advantage that you won’t need to change any kernel parameters in order to make it work, but it poses a restriction that package-management can’t be used, because updating the init manager would remove the generated script.If you wish to keep original init as is, you can set:
OVERLAYFS_ETC_USE_ORIG_INIT_NAME = "0"
Then the generated init will be named
/sbin/preinit
and you would need to extend your kernel parameters manually in your bootloader configuration.
5.81 own-mirrors.bbclass
The own-mirrors
class makes it easier to set up your own
PREMIRRORS from which to first fetch source
before attempting to fetch it from the upstream specified in
SRC_URI within each recipe.
To use this class, inherit it globally and specify SOURCE_MIRROR_URL. Here is an example:
INHERIT += "own-mirrors"
SOURCE_MIRROR_URL = "http://example.com/my-source-mirror"
You can specify only a single URL in SOURCE_MIRROR_URL.
5.82 package.bbclass
The package
class supports generating packages from a build’s
output. The core generic functionality is in package.bbclass
. The
code specific to particular package types resides in these
package-specific classes:
package_deb,
package_rpm,
package_ipk, and
package_tar.
Note
The package_tar class is broken and not supported. It is recommended that you do not use this class.
You can control the list of resulting package formats by using the
PACKAGE_CLASSES variable defined in your conf/local.conf
configuration file, which is located in the Build Directory.
When defining the variable, you can
specify one or more package types. Since images are generated from
packages, a packaging class is needed to enable image generation. The
first class listed in this variable is used for image generation.
If you take the optional step to set up a repository (package feed) on the development host that can be used by DNF, you can install packages from the feed while you are running the image on the target (i.e. runtime installation of packages). For more information, see the “Using Runtime Package Management” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
The package-specific class you choose can affect build-time performance and has space ramifications. In general, building a package with IPK takes about thirty percent less time as compared to using RPM to build the same or similar package. This comparison takes into account a complete build of the package with all dependencies previously built. The reason for this discrepancy is because the RPM package manager creates and processes more Metadata than the IPK package manager. Consequently, you might consider setting PACKAGE_CLASSES to “package_ipk” if you are building smaller systems.
Before making your package manager decision, however, you should consider some further things about using RPM:
RPM starts to provide more abilities than IPK due to the fact that it processes more Metadata. For example, this information includes individual file types, file checksum generation and evaluation on install, sparse file support, conflict detection and resolution for Multilib systems, ACID style upgrade, and repackaging abilities for rollbacks.
For smaller systems, the extra space used for the Berkeley Database and the amount of metadata when using RPM can affect your ability to perform on-device upgrades.
You can find additional information on the effects of the package class at these two Yocto Project mailing list links:
5.83 package_deb.bbclass
The package_deb
class provides support for creating packages that
use the Debian (i.e. .deb
) file format. The class ensures the
packages are written out in a .deb
file format to the
${
DEPLOY_DIR_DEB}
directory.
This class inherits the package class and
is enabled through the PACKAGE_CLASSES
variable in the local.conf
file.
5.84 package_ipk.bbclass
The package_ipk
class provides support for creating packages that
use the IPK (i.e. .ipk
) file format. The class ensures the packages
are written out in a .ipk
file format to the
${
DEPLOY_DIR_IPK}
directory.
This class inherits the package class and
is enabled through the PACKAGE_CLASSES
variable in the local.conf
file.
5.85 package_rpm.bbclass
The package_rpm
class provides support for creating packages that
use the RPM (i.e. .rpm
) file format. The class ensures the packages
are written out in a .rpm
file format to the
${
DEPLOY_DIR_RPM}
directory.
This class inherits the package class and
is enabled through the PACKAGE_CLASSES
variable in the local.conf
file.
5.86 package_tar.bbclass
The package_tar
class provides support for creating tarballs. The
class ensures the packages are written out in a tarball format to the
${
DEPLOY_DIR_TAR}
directory.
This class inherits the package class and
is enabled through the PACKAGE_CLASSES
variable in the local.conf
file.
Note
You cannot specify the package_tar
class first using the
PACKAGE_CLASSES variable. You must use .deb
, .ipk
, or .rpm
file formats for your image or SDK.
5.87 packagedata.bbclass
The packagedata
class provides common functionality for reading
pkgdata
files found in PKGDATA_DIR. These
files contain information about each output package produced by the
OpenEmbedded build system.
This class is enabled by default because it is inherited by the package class.
5.88 packagegroup.bbclass
The packagegroup
class sets default values appropriate for package
group recipes (e.g. PACKAGES, PACKAGE_ARCH, ALLOW_EMPTY, and
so forth). It is highly recommended that all package group recipes
inherit this class.
For information on how to use this class, see the “Customizing Images Using Custom Package Groups” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
Previously, this class was called the task
class.
5.89 patch.bbclass
The patch
class provides all functionality for applying patches
during the do_patch task.
This class is enabled by default because it is inherited by the base class.
5.90 perlnative.bbclass
When inherited by a recipe, the perlnative
class supports using the
native version of Perl built by the build system rather than using the
version provided by the build host.
5.91 python_flit_core.bbclass
The python_flit_core
class enables building Python modules which declare
the PEP-517 compliant
flit_core.buildapi
build-backend
in the [build-system]
section of pyproject.toml
(See PEP-518).
Python modules built with flit_core.buildapi
are pure Python (no
C
or Rust
extensions).
Internally this uses the python_pep517 class.
5.92 python_pep517.bbclass
The python_pep517
class builds and installs a Python wheel
binary
archive (see PEP-517).
Recipes wouldn’t inherit this directly, instead typically another class will inherit this, add the relevant native dependencies, and set PEP517_BUILD_API to the Python class which implements the PEP-517 build API.
Examples of classes which do this are python_flit_core, python_setuptools_build_meta, and python_poetry_core.
5.93 python_poetry_core.bbclass
The python_poetry_core
class enables building Python modules which use the
Poetry Core build system.
Internally this uses the python_pep517 class.
5.94 pixbufcache.bbclass
The pixbufcache
class generates the proper post-install and
post-remove (postinst/postrm) scriptlets for packages that install
pixbuf loaders, which are used with gdk-pixbuf
. These scriptlets
call update_pixbuf_cache
to add the pixbuf loaders to the cache.
Since the cache files are architecture-specific, update_pixbuf_cache
is run using QEMU if the postinst scriptlets need to be run on the build
host during image creation.
If the pixbuf loaders being installed are in packages other than the recipe’s main package, set PIXBUF_PACKAGES to specify the packages containing the loaders.
5.95 pkgconfig.bbclass
The pkgconfig
class provides a standard way to get header and
library information by using pkg-config
. This class aims to smooth
integration of pkg-config
into libraries that use it.
During staging, BitBake installs pkg-config
data into the
sysroots/
directory. By making use of sysroot functionality within
pkg-config
, the pkgconfig
class no longer has to manipulate the
files.
5.96 populate_sdk.bbclass
The populate_sdk
class provides support for SDK-only recipes. For
information on advantages gained when building a cross-development
toolchain using the do_populate_sdk
task, see the “Building an SDK Installer”
section in the Yocto Project Application Development and the Extensible
Software Development Kit (eSDK) manual.
5.97 populate_sdk_*.bbclass
The populate_sdk_*
classes support SDK creation and consist of the
following classes:
populate_sdk_base
: The base class supporting SDK creation under all package managers (i.e. DEB, RPM, and opkg).populate_sdk_deb
: Supports creation of the SDK given the Debian package manager.populate_sdk_rpm
: Supports creation of the SDK given the RPM package manager.populate_sdk_ipk
: Supports creation of the SDK given the opkg (IPK format) package manager.populate_sdk_ext
: Supports extensible SDK creation under all package managers.
The populate_sdk_base
class inherits the appropriate
populate_sdk_*
(i.e. deb
, rpm
, and ipk
) based on
IMAGE_PKGTYPE.
The base class ensures all source and destination directories are
established and then populates the SDK. After populating the SDK, the
populate_sdk_base
class constructs two sysroots:
${
SDK_ARCH}-nativesdk
, which
contains the cross-compiler and associated tooling, and the target,
which contains a target root filesystem that is configured for the SDK
usage. These two images reside in SDK_OUTPUT,
which consists of the following:
${SDK_OUTPUT}/${SDK_ARCH}-nativesdk-pkgs
${SDK_OUTPUT}/${SDKTARGETSYSROOT}/target-pkgs
Finally, the base populate SDK class creates the toolchain environment setup script, the tarball of the SDK, and the installer.
The respective populate_sdk_deb
, populate_sdk_rpm
, and
populate_sdk_ipk
classes each support the specific type of SDK.
These classes are inherited by and used with the populate_sdk_base
class.
For more information on the cross-development toolchain generation, see the “Cross-Development Toolchain Generation” section in the Yocto Project Overview and Concepts Manual. For information on advantages gained when building a cross-development toolchain using the do_populate_sdk task, see the “Building an SDK Installer” section in the Yocto Project Application Development and the Extensible Software Development Kit (eSDK) manual.
5.98 prexport.bbclass
The prexport
class provides functionality for exporting
PR values.
Note
This class is not intended to be used directly. Rather, it is enabled
when using “bitbake-prserv-tool export
”.
5.99 primport.bbclass
The primport
class provides functionality for importing
PR values.
Note
This class is not intended to be used directly. Rather, it is enabled
when using “bitbake-prserv-tool import
”.
5.100 prserv.bbclass
The prserv
class provides functionality for using a PR
service in order to
automatically manage the incrementing of the PR
variable for each recipe.
This class is enabled by default because it is inherited by the package class. However, the OpenEmbedded build system will not enable the functionality of this class unless PRSERV_HOST has been set.
5.101 ptest.bbclass
The ptest
class provides functionality for packaging and installing
runtime tests for recipes that build software that provides these tests.
This class is intended to be inherited by individual recipes. However, the class’ functionality is largely disabled unless “ptest” appears in DISTRO_FEATURES. See the “Testing Packages With ptest” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual for more information on ptest.
5.102 ptest-gnome.bbclass
Enables package tests (ptests) specifically for GNOME packages, which
have tests intended to be executed with gnome-desktop-testing
.
For information on setting up and running ptests, see the “Testing Packages With ptest” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
5.103 python3-dir.bbclass
The python3-dir
class provides the base version, location, and site
package location for Python 3.
5.104 python3native.bbclass
The python3native
class supports using the native version of Python
3 built by the build system rather than support of the version provided
by the build host.
5.105 python3targetconfig.bbclass
The python3targetconfig
class supports using the native version of Python
3 built by the build system rather than support of the version provided
by the build host, except that the configuration for the target machine
is accessible (such as correct installation directories). This also adds a
dependency on target python3
, so should only be used where appropriate
in order to avoid unnecessarily lengthening builds.
5.106 qemu.bbclass
The qemu
class provides functionality for recipes that either need
QEMU or test for the existence of QEMU. Typically, this class is used to
run programs for a target system on the build host using QEMU’s
application emulation mode.
5.107 recipe_sanity.bbclass
The recipe_sanity
class checks for the presence of any host system
recipe prerequisites that might affect the build (e.g. variables that
are set or software that is present).
5.108 relocatable.bbclass
The relocatable
class enables relocation of binaries when they are
installed into the sysroot.
This class makes use of the chrpath class and is used by both the cross and native classes.
5.109 remove-libtool.bbclass
The remove-libtool
class adds a post function to the
do_install task to remove all .la
files
installed by libtool
. Removing these files results in them being
absent from both the sysroot and target packages.
If a recipe needs the .la
files to be installed, then the recipe can
override the removal by setting REMOVE_LIBTOOL_LA
to “0” as follows:
REMOVE_LIBTOOL_LA = "0"
Note
The remove-libtool
class is not enabled by default.
5.110 report-error.bbclass
The report-error
class supports enabling the error reporting
tool”,
which allows you to submit build error information to a central database.
The class collects debug information for recipe, recipe version, task,
machine, distro, build system, target system, host distro, branch,
commit, and log. From the information, report files using a JSON format
are created and stored in
${
LOG_DIR}/error-report
.
5.111 rm_work.bbclass
The rm_work
class supports deletion of temporary workspace, which
can ease your hard drive demands during builds.
The OpenEmbedded build system can use a substantial amount of disk space
during the build process. A portion of this space is the work files
under the ${TMPDIR}/work
directory for each recipe. Once the build
system generates the packages for a recipe, the work files for that
recipe are no longer needed. However, by default, the build system
preserves these files for inspection and possible debugging purposes. If
you would rather have these files deleted to save disk space as the
build progresses, you can enable rm_work
by adding the following to
your local.conf
file, which is found in the Build Directory.
INHERIT += "rm_work"
If you are
modifying and building source code out of the work directory for a
recipe, enabling rm_work
will potentially result in your changes to
the source being lost. To exclude some recipes from having their work
directories deleted by rm_work
, you can add the names of the recipe
or recipes you are working on to the RM_WORK_EXCLUDE variable, which
can also be set in your local.conf
file. Here is an example:
RM_WORK_EXCLUDE += "busybox glibc"
5.112 rootfs*.bbclass
The rootfs*
classes support creating the root filesystem for an
image and consist of the following classes:
The
rootfs-postcommands
class, which defines filesystem post-processing functions for image recipes.The
rootfs_deb
class, which supports creation of root filesystems for images built using.deb
packages.The
rootfs_rpm
class, which supports creation of root filesystems for images built using.rpm
packages.The
rootfs_ipk
class, which supports creation of root filesystems for images built using.ipk
packages.The
rootfsdebugfiles
class, which installs additional files found on the build host directly into the root filesystem.
The root filesystem is created from packages using one of the
rootfs*.bbclass
files as determined by the
PACKAGE_CLASSES variable.
For information on how root filesystem images are created, see the “Image Generation” section in the Yocto Project Overview and Concepts Manual.
5.113 sanity.bbclass
The sanity
class checks to see if prerequisite software is present
on the host system so that users can be notified of potential problems
that might affect their build. The class also performs basic user
configuration checks from the local.conf
configuration file to
prevent common mistakes that cause build failures. Distribution policy
usually determines whether to include this class.
5.114 scons.bbclass
The scons
class supports recipes that need to build software that
uses the SCons build system. You can use the
EXTRA_OESCONS variable to specify
additional configuration options you want to pass SCons command line.
5.115 sdl.bbclass
The sdl
class supports recipes that need to build software that uses
the Simple DirectMedia Layer (SDL) library.
5.116 python_setuptools_build_meta.bbclass
The python_setuptools_build_meta
class enables building Python modules which
declare the
PEP-517 compliant
setuptools.build_meta
build-backend
in the [build-system]
section of pyproject.toml
(See PEP-518).
Python modules built with setuptools.build_meta
can be pure Python or
include C
or Rust
extensions).
Internally this uses the python_pep517 class.
5.117 setuptools3.bbclass
The setuptools3
class supports Python version 3.x extensions that
use build systems based on setuptools
(e.g. only have a setup.py
and
have not migrated to the official pyproject.toml
format). If your recipe
uses these build systems, the recipe needs to inherit the setuptools3
class.
Note
The
setuptools3
classdo_compile()
task now callssetup.py bdist_wheel
to build thewheel
binary archive format (See PEP-427).A consequence of this is that legacy software still using deprecated
distutils
from the Python standard library cannot be packaged aswheels
. A common solution is the replacefrom distutils.core import setup
withfrom setuptools import setup
.Note
The
setuptools3
classdo_install()
task now installs thewheel
binary archive. In current versions ofsetuptools
the legacysetup.py install
method is deprecated. If thesetup.py
cannot be used with wheels, for example it creates files outside of the Python module or standard entry points, then setuptools3_legacy should be used.
5.118 setuptools3_legacy.bbclass
The setuptools3_legacy
class supports Python version 3.x extensions that use
build systems based on setuptools
(e.g. only have a setup.py
and have
not migrated to the official pyproject.toml
format). Unlike
setuptools3.bbclass
, this uses the traditional setup.py
build
and
install
commands and not wheels. This use of setuptools
like this is
deprecated
but still relatively common.
5.119 setuptools3-base.bbclass
The setuptools3-base
class provides a reusable base for other classes
that support building Python version 3.x extensions. If you need
functionality that is not provided by the setuptools3 class, you may
want to inherit setuptools3-base
. Some recipes do not need the tasks
in the setuptools3 class and inherit this class instead.
5.120 sign_rpm.bbclass
The sign_rpm
class supports generating signed RPM packages.
5.121 sip.bbclass
The sip
class supports recipes that build or package SIP-based
Python bindings.
5.122 siteconfig.bbclass
The siteconfig
class provides functionality for handling site
configuration. The class is used by the
autotools class to accelerate the
do_configure task.
5.123 siteinfo.bbclass
The siteinfo
class provides information about the targets that might
be needed by other classes or recipes.
As an example, consider Autotools, which can require tests that must
execute on the target hardware. Since this is not possible in general
when cross compiling, site information is used to provide cached test
results so these tests can be skipped over but still make the correct
values available. The meta/site directory
contains test results
sorted into different categories such as architecture, endianness, and
the libc
used. Site information provides a list of files containing
data relevant to the current build in the CONFIG_SITE variable that
Autotools automatically picks up.
The class also provides variables like SITEINFO_ENDIANNESS and SITEINFO_BITS that can be used elsewhere in the metadata.
5.124 sstate.bbclass
The sstate
class provides support for Shared State (sstate). By
default, the class is enabled through the
INHERIT_DISTRO variable’s default value.
For more information on sstate, see the “Shared State Cache” section in the Yocto Project Overview and Concepts Manual.
5.125 staging.bbclass
The staging
class installs files into individual recipe work
directories for sysroots. The class contains the following key tasks:
The do_populate_sysroot task, which is responsible for handing the files that end up in the recipe sysroots.
The do_prepare_recipe_sysroot task (a “partner” task to the
populate_sysroot
task), which installs the files into the individual recipe work directories (i.e. WORKDIR).
The code in the staging
class is complex and basically works in two
stages:
Stage One: The first stage addresses recipes that have files they want to share with other recipes that have dependencies on the originating recipe. Normally these dependencies are installed through the do_install task into
${
D}
. Thedo_populate_sysroot
task copies a subset of these files into${SYSROOT_DESTDIR}
. This subset of files is controlled by the SYSROOT_DIRS, SYSROOT_DIRS_NATIVE, and SYSROOT_DIRS_IGNORE variables.Note
Additionally, a recipe can customize the files further by declaring a processing function in the SYSROOT_PREPROCESS_FUNCS variable.
A shared state (sstate) object is built from these files and the files are placed into a subdirectory of build/tmp/sysroots-components/. The files are scanned for hardcoded paths to the original installation location. If the location is found in text files, the hardcoded locations are replaced by tokens and a list of the files needing such replacements is created. These adjustments are referred to as “FIXMEs”. The list of files that are scanned for paths is controlled by the SSTATE_SCAN_FILES variable.
Stage Two: The second stage addresses recipes that want to use something from another recipe and declare a dependency on that recipe through the DEPENDS variable. The recipe will have a do_prepare_recipe_sysroot task and when this task executes, it creates the
recipe-sysroot
andrecipe-sysroot-native
in the recipe work directory (i.e. WORKDIR). The OpenEmbedded build system creates hard links to copies of the relevant files fromsysroots-components
into the recipe work directory.Note
If hard links are not possible, the build system uses actual copies.
The build system then addresses any “FIXMEs” to paths as defined from the list created in the first stage.
Finally, any files in
${bindir}
within the sysroot that have the prefix “postinst-
” are executed.Note
Although such sysroot post installation scripts are not recommended for general use, the files do allow some issues such as user creation and module indexes to be addressed.
Because recipes can have other dependencies outside of DEPENDS (e.g.
do_unpack[depends] += "tar-native:do_populate_sysroot"
), the sysroot creation functionextend_recipe_sysroot
is also added as a pre-function for those tasks whose dependencies are not through DEPENDS but operate similarly.When installing dependencies into the sysroot, the code traverses the dependency graph and processes dependencies in exactly the same way as the dependencies would or would not be when installed from sstate. This processing means, for example, a native tool would have its native dependencies added but a target library would not have its dependencies traversed or installed. The same sstate dependency code is used so that builds should be identical regardless of whether sstate was used or not. For a closer look, see the
setscene_depvalid()
function in the sstate class.The build system is careful to maintain manifests of the files it installs so that any given dependency can be installed as needed. The sstate hash of the installed item is also stored so that if it changes, the build system can reinstall it.
5.126 syslinux.bbclass
The syslinux
class provides syslinux-specific functions for building
bootable images.
The class supports the following variables:
INITRD: Indicates list of filesystem images to concatenate and use as an initial RAM disk (initrd). This variable is optional.
ROOTFS: Indicates a filesystem image to include as the root filesystem. This variable is optional.
AUTO_SYSLINUXMENU: Enables creating an automatic menu when set to “1”.
LABELS: Lists targets for automatic configuration.
APPEND: Lists append string overrides for each label.
SYSLINUX_OPTS: Lists additional options to add to the syslinux file. Semicolon characters separate multiple options.
SYSLINUX_SPLASH: Lists a background for the VGA boot menu when you are using the boot menu.
SYSLINUX_DEFAULT_CONSOLE: Set to “console=ttyX” to change kernel boot default console.
SYSLINUX_SERIAL: Sets an alternate serial port. Or, turns off serial when the variable is set with an empty string.
SYSLINUX_SERIAL_TTY: Sets an alternate “console=tty…” kernel boot argument.
5.127 systemd.bbclass
The systemd
class provides support for recipes that install systemd
unit files.
The functionality for this class is disabled unless you have “systemd” in DISTRO_FEATURES.
Under this class, the recipe or Makefile (i.e. whatever the recipe is
calling during the do_install task)
installs unit files into
${
D}${systemd_unitdir}/system
. If the unit
files being installed go into packages other than the main package, you
need to set SYSTEMD_PACKAGES in your
recipe to identify the packages in which the files will be installed.
You should set SYSTEMD_SERVICE to the
name of the service file. You should also use a package name override to
indicate the package to which the value applies. If the value applies to
the recipe’s main package, use ${
PN}
. Here
is an example from the connman recipe:
SYSTEMD_SERVICE:${PN} = "connman.service"
Services are set up to start on boot automatically unless you have set SYSTEMD_AUTO_ENABLE to “disable”.
For more information on systemd
, see the
“Selecting an Initialization Manager”
section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
5.128 systemd-boot.bbclass
The systemd-boot
class provides functions specific to the
systemd-boot bootloader for building bootable images. This is an
internal class and is not intended to be used directly.
Note
The systemd-boot
class is a result from merging the gummiboot
class
used in previous Yocto Project releases with the systemd
project.
Set the EFI_PROVIDER variable to “systemd-boot” to use this class. Doing so creates a standalone EFI bootloader that is not dependent on systemd.
For information on more variables used and supported in this class, see the SYSTEMD_BOOT_CFG, SYSTEMD_BOOT_ENTRIES, and SYSTEMD_BOOT_TIMEOUT variables.
You can also see the Systemd-boot documentation for more information.
5.129 terminal.bbclass
The terminal
class provides support for starting a terminal session.
The OE_TERMINAL variable controls which
terminal emulator is used for the session.
Other classes use the terminal
class anywhere a separate terminal
session needs to be started. For example, the
patch class assuming
PATCHRESOLVE is set to “user”, the
cml1 class, and the
devshell class all use the terminal
class.
5.130 testimage*.bbclass
The testimage*
classes support running automated tests against
images using QEMU and on actual hardware. The classes handle loading the
tests and starting the image. To use the classes, you need to perform
steps to set up the environment.
Note
Best practices include using IMAGE_CLASSES rather than
INHERIT to inherit the testimage
class for automated image
testing.
The tests are commands that run on the target system over ssh
. Each
test is written in Python and makes use of the unittest
module.
The testimage.bbclass
runs tests on an image when called using the
following:
$ bitbake -c testimage image
The testimage-auto
class
runs tests on an image after the image is constructed (i.e.
TESTIMAGE_AUTO must be set to “1”).
For information on how to enable, run, and create new tests, see the “Performing Automated Runtime Testing” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
5.131 testsdk.bbclass
This class supports running automated tests against software development
kits (SDKs). The testsdk
class runs tests on an SDK when called
using the following:
$ bitbake -c testsdk image
Note
Best practices include using IMAGE_CLASSES rather than
INHERIT to inherit the testsdk
class for automated SDK
testing.
5.132 texinfo.bbclass
This class should be inherited by recipes whose upstream packages invoke
the texinfo
utilities at build-time. Native and cross recipes are
made to use the dummy scripts provided by texinfo-dummy-native
, for
improved performance. Target architecture recipes use the genuine
Texinfo utilities. By default, they use the Texinfo utilities on the
host system.
Note
If you want to use the Texinfo recipe shipped with the build system, you can remove “texinfo-native” from ASSUME_PROVIDED and makeinfo from SANITY_REQUIRED_UTILITIES.
5.133 toaster.bbclass
The toaster
class collects information about packages and images and
sends them as events that the BitBake user interface can receive. The
class is enabled when the Toaster user interface is running.
This class is not intended to be used directly.
5.134 toolchain-scripts.bbclass
The toolchain-scripts
class provides the scripts used for setting up
the environment for installed SDKs.
5.135 typecheck.bbclass
The typecheck
class provides support for validating the values of
variables set at the configuration level against their defined types.
The OpenEmbedded build system allows you to define the type of a
variable using the “type” varflag. Here is an example:
IMAGE_FEATURES[type] = "list"
5.136 uboot-config.bbclass
The uboot-config
class provides support for U-Boot configuration for
a machine. Specify the machine in your recipe as follows:
UBOOT_CONFIG ??= <default>
UBOOT_CONFIG[foo] = "config,images"
You can also specify the machine using this method:
UBOOT_MACHINE = "config"
See the UBOOT_CONFIG and UBOOT_MACHINE variables for additional information.
5.137 uninative.bbclass
Attempts to isolate the build system from the host distribution’s C
library in order to make 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. In the Poky reference distribution this is enabled by default
through meta/conf/distro/include/yocto-uninative.inc
. Other
distributions that do not derive from poky can also
“require conf/distro/include/yocto-uninative.inc
” to use this.
Alternatively if you prefer, you can build the uninative-tarball recipe
yourself, publish the resulting tarball (e.g. via HTTP) and set
UNINATIVE_URL
and UNINATIVE_CHECKSUM
appropriately. For an
example, see the meta/conf/distro/include/yocto-uninative.inc
.
The uninative
class is also used unconditionally by the extensible
SDK. When building the extensible SDK, uninative-tarball
is built
and the resulting tarball is included within the SDK.
5.138 update-alternatives.bbclass
The update-alternatives
class helps the alternatives system when
multiple sources provide the same command. This situation occurs when
several programs that have the same or similar function are installed
with the same name. For example, the ar
command is available from
the busybox
, binutils
and elfutils
packages. The
update-alternatives
class handles renaming the binaries so that
multiple packages can be installed without conflicts. The ar
command
still works regardless of which packages are installed or subsequently
removed. The class renames the conflicting binary in each package and
symlinks the highest priority binary during installation or removal of
packages.
To use this class, you need to define a number of variables:
These variables list alternative commands needed by a package, provide pathnames for links, default links for targets, and so forth. For details on how to use this class, see the comments in the update-alternatives.bbclass file.
Note
You can use the update-alternatives
command directly in your recipes.
However, this class simplifies things in most cases.
5.139 update-rc.d.bbclass
The update-rc.d
class uses update-rc.d
to safely install an
initialization script on behalf of the package. The OpenEmbedded build
system takes care of details such as making sure the script is stopped
before a package is removed and started when the package is installed.
Three variables control this class: INITSCRIPT_PACKAGES, INITSCRIPT_NAME and INITSCRIPT_PARAMS. See the variable links for details.
5.140 useradd*.bbclass
The useradd*
classes support the addition of users or groups for
usage by the package on the target. For example, if you have packages
that contain system services that should be run under their own user or
group, you can use these classes to enable creation of the user or
group. The meta-skeleton/recipes-skeleton/useradd/useradd-example.bb
recipe in the Source Directory provides a simple
example that shows how to add three users and groups to two packages.
The useradd_base
class provides basic functionality for user or
groups settings.
The useradd*
classes support the
USERADD_PACKAGES,
USERADD_PARAM,
GROUPADD_PARAM, and
GROUPMEMS_PARAM variables.
The useradd-staticids
class supports the addition of users or groups
that have static user identification (uid
) and group identification
(gid
) values.
The default behavior of the OpenEmbedded build system for assigning
uid
and gid
values when packages add users and groups during
package install time is to add them dynamically. This works fine for
programs that do not care what the values of the resulting users and
groups become. In these cases, the order of the installation determines
the final uid
and gid
values. However, if non-deterministic
uid
and gid
values are a problem, you can override the default,
dynamic application of these values by setting static values. When you
set static values, the OpenEmbedded build system looks in
BBPATH for files/passwd
and files/group
files for the values.
To use static uid
and gid
values, you need to set some
variables. See the USERADDEXTENSION,
USERADD_UID_TABLES,
USERADD_GID_TABLES, and
USERADD_ERROR_DYNAMIC variables.
You can also see the useradd class for
additional information.
Note
You do not use the useradd-staticids
class directly. You either enable
or disable the class by setting the USERADDEXTENSION variable. If you
enable or disable the class in a configured system, TMPDIR might
contain incorrect uid
and gid
values. Deleting the TMPDIR
directory will correct this condition.
5.141 utility-tasks.bbclass
The utility-tasks
class provides support for various “utility” type
tasks that are applicable to all recipes, such as
do_clean and
do_listtasks.
This class is enabled by default because it is inherited by the base class.
5.142 utils.bbclass
The utils
class provides some useful Python functions that are
typically used in inline Python expressions (e.g. ${@...}
). One
example use is for bb.utils.contains()
.
This class is enabled by default because it is inherited by the base class.
5.143 vala.bbclass
The vala
class supports recipes that need to build software written
using the Vala programming language.
5.144 waf.bbclass
The waf
class supports recipes that need to build software that uses
the Waf build system. You can use the
EXTRA_OECONF or
PACKAGECONFIG_CONFARGS variables
to specify additional configuration options to be passed on the Waf
command line.