[yocto] What are _virtual providers? and other Suffixes?
Brad Litterell
bradl at taser.com
Tue Aug 20 16:42:36 PDT 2013
Hi Paul,
Thanks - that makes it clearer. But now I have one other question to ask:
if virtual/xyz is added to overrides when the item is dealt with, then in that case P_P_virtual/xyz_am335 has two overrides hanging off of the base variable PREFERRED_PROVIDER.
You also said earlier that the latest override applies, so is there some rule for multiple conditionals on a variable?
E.g. What happens in a case like the following?
OVERRIDES="foo1:bar2:car3"
VARIABLE_foo1_bar2 = "both"
VARIABLE_car3 = "last one"
what does VARIABLE wind up? The first is "more specific" in that it matches two values in overrides, whereas car is last, but less specific.
Thanks & sorry if I'm missing something simple.
Brad
On Aug 20, 2013, at 4:33 PM, Paul Eggleton <paul.eggleton at linux.intel.com>
wrote:
> On Tuesday 20 August 2013 23:16:56 Brad Litterell wrote:
>> Thanks for taking the time to explain, very enlightening. I think I
>> understood it, please allow me to play back my understanding:
>>
>> 1. _virtual is part of the variable name, and is not a special type of
>> override.
>
> Actually, virtual/kernel is an override as well. The way a few variables,
> including PREFERRED_PROVIDER, are used is that OVERRIDES is set to include the
> item being dealt with when the variable is read, thus specifically with
> PREFERRED_PROVIDER you always override it with the name of the target you wish
> to select the provider for.
>
>> 2. PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/kernel_am335x-evm breaks into:
>> "PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/kernel" with an override condition of
>> "am335x-evm"
>
> Outside of the part of the code where it's actually read, yes. Within that
> code the override "virtual/kernel" will be applied when it's looking to see
> what the provider for "virtual/kernel" should be, and thus it will get the
> appropriate value for the PREFERRED_PROVIDER variable. So technically the
> variable is just PREFERRED_PROVIDER.
>
>> 3. So for the jpeg case:
>>>> PREFERRED_PROVIDER_jpeg = "libjpeg-turbo"
>>>>
>>>> PREFERRED_PROVIDER_jpeg_armv5te = "jpeg"
>>
>> Could this have also been _virtual/jpeg? It's just that some components use
>> the _virtual convention and others don't?
>
> The prefix is virtual/ not _virtual, and as I mentioned earlier virtual/ is
> just a convention (although there are a few isolated parts of the code that
> specifically look for the virtual/ prefix). The mechanism will work in the same
> way here; recipes that need jpeg decoding have "jpeg" in DEPENDS and providing
> libjpeg-turbo has jpeg in its PROVIDES, which it does, we can select between
> two different recipes providing that - jpeg and libjpeg-turbo (where the latter
> is provided at all of course, i.e. when you have the meta-oe layer in your
> configuration).
>
> I don't think there's any special reason we don't have virtual/jpeg rather
> than jpeg here other than that having multiple jpeg decoding libraries is a
> relatively new situation compared to others such as virtual/kernel, and there
> are already a bunch of recipes out there referring to "jpeg" in their DEPENDS.
> (One wonders why there is a need for multiple jpeg decoding libraries in the
> first place, but that's a different can of worms...)
>
> Cheers,
> Paul
>
> --
>
> Paul Eggleton
> Intel Open Source Technology Centre
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