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The configuration files that systemd installs are just skeletons detailing the available options and their default values. The recommended means of changing the configuration is to provide snippets in configuration directories. For example, journald.conf settings are best set in /usr/lib/system.d/journald.conf.d/ and can be overridden by the user by providing overriding snippets in /etc/systemd/journald.conf.d/. The systemd-conf package is just providing machine-specific overrides for some systemd defaults. This patch restores the installation of config files by systemd and reduces systemd-conf to just providing the config snippets in /usr/lib/systemd/*.conf.d. This simpilfies the systemd-conf recipe considerably since it now just sets up a couple of text files and doesn't even need access to the systemd source anymore. License-Update: configuration snippets licensing is independent of systemd licensing (From OE-Core rev: 3150253898babce70333376d22090b56b4a70bfb) Signed-off-by: Alex Kiernan <alex.kiernan@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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QEMU Emulation Targets ====================== To simplify development, the build system supports building images to work with the QEMU emulator in system emulation mode. Several architectures are currently supported in 32 and 64 bit variants: * ARM (qemuarm + qemuarm64) * x86 (qemux86 + qemux86-64) * PowerPC (qemuppc only) * MIPS (qemumips + qemumips64) Use of the QEMU images is covered in the Yocto Project Reference Manual. The appropriate MACHINE variable value corresponding to the target is given in brackets.
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