11 Features
This chapter provides a reference of shipped machine and distro features you can include as part of your image, a reference on image features you can select, and a reference on feature backfilling.
Features provide a mechanism for working out which packages should be
included in the generated images. Distributions can select which
features they want to support through the DISTRO_FEATURES variable,
which is set or appended to in a distribution’s configuration file such
as poky.conf
, poky-tiny.conf
, poky-lsb.conf
and so forth.
Machine features are set in the MACHINE_FEATURES variable, which is
set in the machine configuration file and specifies the hardware
features for a given machine.
These two variables combine to work out which kernel modules, utilities, and other packages to include. A given distribution can support a selected subset of features so some machine features might not be included if the distribution itself does not support them.
One method you can use to determine which recipes are checking to see if
a particular feature is contained or not is to grep
through the
Metadata for the feature. Here is an example that
discovers the recipes whose build is potentially changed based on a
given feature:
$ cd poky
$ git grep 'contains.*MACHINE_FEATURES.*feature'
11.1 Machine Features
The items below are features you can use with MACHINE_FEATURES. Features do not have a one-to-one correspondence to packages, and they can go beyond simply controlling the installation of a package or packages. Sometimes a feature can influence how certain recipes are built. For example, a feature might determine whether a particular configure option is specified within the do_configure task for a particular recipe.
This feature list only represents features as shipped with the Yocto Project metadata:
acpi: Hardware has ACPI (x86/x86_64 only)
alsa: Hardware has ALSA audio drivers
apm: Hardware uses APM (or APM emulation)
bluetooth: Hardware has integrated BT
efi: Support for booting through EFI
ext2: Hardware HDD or Microdrive
keyboard: Hardware has a keyboard
numa: Hardware has non-uniform memory access
pcbios: Support for booting through BIOS
pci: Hardware has a PCI bus
pcmcia: Hardware has PCMCIA or CompactFlash sockets
phone: Mobile phone (voice) support
qvga: Machine has a QVGA (320x240) display
rtc: Machine has a Real-Time Clock
screen: Hardware has a screen
serial: Hardware has serial support (usually RS232)
touchscreen: Hardware has a touchscreen
usbgadget: Hardware is USB gadget device capable
usbhost: Hardware is USB Host capable
vfat: FAT file system support
wifi: Hardware has integrated WiFi
11.2 Distro Features
The items below are features you can use with DISTRO_FEATURES to enable features across your distribution. Features do not have a one-to-one correspondence to packages, and they can go beyond simply controlling the installation of a package or packages. In most cases, the presence or absence of a feature translates to the appropriate option supplied to the configure script during the do_configure task for the recipes that optionally support the feature. Appropriate options must be supplied, and enabling/disabling PACKAGECONFIG for the concerned packages is one way of supplying such options.
Some distro features are also machine features. These select features make sense to be controlled both at the machine and distribution configuration level. See the COMBINED_FEATURES variable for more information.
This list only represents features as shipped with the Yocto Project metadata, as extra layers can define their own:
3g: Include support for cellular data.
acl: Include Access Control List support.
alsa: Include Advanced Linux Sound Architecture support (OSS compatibility kernel modules installed if available).
api-documentation: Enables generation of API documentation during recipe builds. The resulting documentation is added to SDK tarballs when the
bitbake -c populate_sdk
command is used. See the “Adding API Documentation to the Standard SDK” section in the Yocto Project Application Development and the Extensible Software Development Kit (eSDK) manual.bluetooth: Include bluetooth support (integrated BT only).
cramfs: Include CramFS support.
debuginfod: Include support for getting ELF debugging information through a debuginfod server.
directfb: Include DirectFB support.
ext2: Include tools for supporting for devices with internal HDD/Microdrive for storing files (instead of Flash only devices).
ipsec: Include IPSec support.
ipv4: Include IPv4 support.
ipv6: Include IPv6 support.
keyboard: Include keyboard support (e.g. keymaps will be loaded during boot).
largefile: Enable building applications with argefile support.
multiarch: Enable building applications with multiple architecture support.
ldconfig: Include support for ldconfig and
ld.so.conf
on the target.nfc: Include support for Near Field Communication.
nfs: Include NFS client support (for mounting NFS exports on device).
opengl: Include the Open Graphics Library, which is a cross-language, multi-platform application programming interface used for rendering two and three-dimensional graphics.
pci: Include PCI bus support.
pcmcia: Include PCMCIA/CompactFlash support.
ppp: Include PPP dialup support.
ptest: Enables building the package tests where supported by individual recipes. For more information on package tests, see the “Testing Packages With ptest” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual.
seccomp: Enables building applications with seccomp support, to allow them to strictly restrict the system calls that they are allowed to invoke.
smbfs: Include SMB networks client support (for mounting Samba/Microsoft Windows shares on device).
systemd: Include support for this
init
manager, which is a full replacement of forinit
with parallel starting of services, reduced shell overhead, and other features. Thisinit
manager is used by many distributions.usbgadget: Include USB Gadget Device support (for USB networking/serial/storage).
usbhost: Include USB Host support (allows to connect external keyboard, mouse, storage, network etc).
usrmerge: Merges the
/bin
,/sbin
,/lib
, and/lib64
directories into their respective counterparts in the/usr
directory to provide better package and application compatibility.vfat: Include FAT filesystem support.
vulkan: Include support for the Vulkan API.
wayland: Include the Wayland display server protocol and the library that supports it.
wifi: Include WiFi support (integrated only).
x11: Include the X server and libraries.
xattr: Include support for extended file attributes.
zeroconf: Include support for zero configuration networking.
11.3 Image Features
The contents of images generated by the OpenEmbedded build system can be controlled by the IMAGE_FEATURES and EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variables that you typically configure in your image recipes. Through these variables, you can add several different predefined packages such as development utilities or packages with debug information needed to investigate application problems or profile applications.
Here are the image features available for all images:
allow-empty-password: Allows Dropbear and OpenSSH to accept logins from accounts having an empty password string.
allow-root-login: Allows Dropbear and OpenSSH to accept root logins.
dbg-pkgs: Installs debug symbol packages for all packages installed in a given image.
debug-tweaks: Makes an image suitable for development (e.g. allows root logins, logins without passwords —including root ones, and enables post-installation logging). See the
allow-empty-password
,allow-root-login
,empty-root-password
, andpost-install-logging
features in this list for additional information.dev-pkgs: Installs development packages (headers and extra library links) for all packages installed in a given image.
doc-pkgs: Installs documentation packages for all packages installed in a given image.
empty-root-password: This feature or
debug-tweaks
is required if you want to allow root login with an empty password. If these features are not present in IMAGE_FEATURES, a non-empty password is forced in/etc/passwd
and/etc/shadow
if such files exist.Note
empty-root-passwd
doesn’t set an empty root password by itself. You get an initial empty root password thanks to the base-passwd and shadow recipes, and the presence ofempty-root-passwd
ordebug-tweaks
just disables the mechanism which forces an non-empty password for the root user.overlayfs-etc: Configures the
/etc
directory to be inoverlayfs
. This allows to store device specific information elsewhere, especially if the root filesystem is configured to be read-only.package-management: Installs package management tools and preserves the package manager database.
post-install-logging: Enables logging postinstall script runs to the
/var/log/postinstall.log
file on first boot of the image on the target system.Note
To make the
/var/log
directory on the target persistent, use the VOLATILE_LOG_DIR variable by setting it to “no”.ptest-pkgs: Installs ptest packages for all ptest-enabled recipes.
read-only-rootfs: Creates an image whose root filesystem is read-only. See the “Creating a Read-Only Root Filesystem” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual for more information.
splash: Enables showing a splash screen during boot. By default, this screen is provided by
psplash
, which does allow customization. If you prefer to use an alternative splash screen package, you can do so by setting theSPLASH
variable to a different package name (or names) within the image recipe or at the distro configuration level.staticdev-pkgs: Installs static development packages, which are static libraries (i.e.
*.a
files), for all packages installed in a given image.
Some image features are available only when you inherit the core-image class. The current list of these valid features is as follows:
hwcodecs: Installs hardware acceleration codecs.
nfs-server: Installs an NFS server.
perf: Installs profiling tools such as
perf
,systemtap
, andLTTng
. For general information on user-space tools, see the Yocto Project Application Development and the Extensible Software Development Kit (eSDK) manual.ssh-server-dropbear: Installs the Dropbear minimal SSH server.
ssh-server-openssh: Installs the OpenSSH SSH server, which is more full-featured than Dropbear. Note that if both the OpenSSH SSH server and the Dropbear minimal SSH server are present in IMAGE_FEATURES, then OpenSSH will take precedence and Dropbear will not be installed.
tools-debug: Installs debugging tools such as
strace
andgdb
. For information on GDB, see the “Debugging With the GNU Project Debugger (GDB) Remotely” section in the Yocto Project Development Tasks Manual. For information on tracing and profiling, see the Yocto Project Profiling and Tracing Manual.tools-sdk: Installs a full SDK that runs on the device.
tools-testapps: Installs device testing tools (e.g. touchscreen debugging).
x11: Installs the X server.
x11-base: Installs the X server with a minimal environment.
x11-sato: Installs the OpenedHand Sato environment.
11.4 Feature Backfilling
Sometimes it is necessary in the OpenEmbedded build system to extend
MACHINE_FEATURES or
DISTRO_FEATURES to control functionality
that was previously enabled and not able to be disabled. For these
cases, we need to add an additional feature item to appear in one of
these variables, but we do not want to force developers who have
existing values of the variables in their configuration to add the new
feature in order to retain the same overall level of functionality.
Thus, the OpenEmbedded build system has a mechanism to automatically
“backfill” these added features into existing distro or machine
configurations. You can see the list of features for which this is done
by finding the
DISTRO_FEATURES_BACKFILL and
MACHINE_FEATURES_BACKFILL
variables in the meta/conf/bitbake.conf
file.
Because such features are backfilled by default into all configurations as described in the previous paragraph, developers who wish to disable the new features need to be able to selectively prevent the backfilling from occurring. They can do this by adding the undesired feature or features to the DISTRO_FEATURES_BACKFILL_CONSIDERED or MACHINE_FEATURES_BACKFILL_CONSIDERED variables for distro features and machine features respectively.
Here are two examples to help illustrate feature backfilling:
The “pulseaudio” distro feature option: Previously, PulseAudio support was enabled within the Qt and GStreamer frameworks. Because of this, the feature is backfilled and thus enabled for all distros through the DISTRO_FEATURES_BACKFILL variable in the
meta/conf/bitbake.conf
file. However, your distro needs to disable the feature. You can disable the feature without affecting other existing distro configurations that need PulseAudio support by adding “pulseaudio” to DISTRO_FEATURES_BACKFILL_CONSIDERED in your distro’s.conf
file. Adding the feature to this variable when it also exists in the DISTRO_FEATURES_BACKFILL variable prevents the build system from adding the feature to your configuration’s DISTRO_FEATURES, effectively disabling the feature for that particular distro.The “rtc” machine feature option: Previously, real time clock (RTC) support was enabled for all target devices. Because of this, the feature is backfilled and thus enabled for all machines through the MACHINE_FEATURES_BACKFILL variable in the
meta/conf/bitbake.conf
file. However, your target device does not have this capability. You can disable RTC support for your device without affecting other machines that need RTC support by adding the feature to your machine’s MACHINE_FEATURES_BACKFILL_CONSIDERED list in the machine’s.conf
file. Adding the feature to this variable when it also exists in the MACHINE_FEATURES_BACKFILL variable prevents the build system from adding the feature to your configuration’s MACHINE_FEATURES, effectively disabling RTC support for that particular machine.