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LICENSE_FLAGS are a per-recipe replacement for the COMMERCIAL_LICENSE
mechanism.
In the COMMERCIAL_LICENSE mechanism, any package name mentioned in the
global COMMERCIAL_LICENSE list is 'blacklisted' from being included in
an image. To allow the blacklisted package into the image, the
corresponding packages need to be removed from the COMMERCIAL_LICENSE
list. This mechanism relies on a global list defined in
default-distrovars.inc.
The LICENSE_FLAGS mechanism essentially implements the same thing but
turns the global blacklist into a per-recipe whitelist. Any recipe
can optionally define one or more 'license flags'; if defined, each of
the license flags defined for a recipe must have matching entries in a
global LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST variable.
The definition of 'matching' is simple, but there are a couple things
users need to know in order to correctly and effectively use it.
Before we test a flag against the whitelist, we append _${PN} to it,
thus automatically making each LICENSE_FLAG recipe-specific. We then
try to match that string against the whitelist. So if the user
specifies LICENSE_FLAGS = 'commercial' for recipe 'foo', the string
'commercial_foo' should be specified in the whitelist in order for it
to match.
However, the user can also broaden the match by putting any
'_'-separated beginning subset of a LICENSE_FLAG in the whitelist,
which will also match e.g. simply specifying 'commercial' in the
whitelist would match any expanded LICENSE_FLAG starting with
'commercial' such as 'commercial_foo' and 'commercial_bar' which are
the strings that would have been automatically generated if those
recipes had simply specified LICENSE_FLAGS = 'commercial'
This allows for a range of specificity for the items in the whitelist,
from more general to perfectly specific. So users have the choice of
exhaustively enumerating each license flag in the whitelist to allow
only those specific recipes into the image, or of using a more general
string to pick up anything matching just the first component(s).
Note that this scheme works even if the flag already has _pn appended
- the extra _pn is redundant, but doesn't affect the outcome e.g. a
license flag of 'commercial_1.2_foo' would turn into
'commercial_1.2_foo_foo' and would match both the general 'commercial'
and the specific 'commercial_1.2_foo' as expected (it would also match
commercial_1.2_foo_foo' and 'commercial_1.2', which don't make much
sense as far as something a user would think of specifying in the
whitelist). For a versioned string, the user could instead specify
'commercial_foo_1.2', which would turn into 'commercial_foo_1.2_foo',
but which would as expected allow the user to pick up this package
along with anything else 'commercial' by specifying 'commercial' in
the whitelist, or anything with a 'commercial_foo' license regardless
of version by using 'commercial_foo' in the whitelist, or
'commercial_foo_1.1' to be completely specific about package and
version.
The current behavior of COMMERCIAL_LICENSE is replicated as mentioned
above by having the current set of COMMERCIAL_LICENSE flags
implemented using LICENSE_FLAGS = "commercial".
That being the case, the current COMMERCIAL_LICENSE can equivalently
be specified in the new scheme by putting the below in local.conf:
# This is a list of packages that require a commercial license to ship
# product. If shipped as part of an image these packages may have
# implications so they are disabled by default. To enable them,
# un-comment the below as appropriate.
#LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial_gst-fluendo-mp3 \
# commercial_gst-openmax \
# commercial_gst-plugins-ugly \
# commercial_lame \
# commercial_libmad \
# commercial_libomxil \
# commercial_mpeg2dec \
# commercial_qmmp"
The above allows all of the current COMMERCIAL_LICENSE packages in -
to disallow a particular package from appearing in the image, simply
remove it from the whitelist. To allow them all in, you could also
specify LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial".
(From OE-Core rev: a2760661b8c7a4a1b6f2e556853b3a9ae38cbcb5)
Signed-off-by: Tom Zanussi <tom.zanussi@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
Poky
====
Poky is an integration of various components to form a complete prepackaged
build system and development environment. It features support for building
customised embedded device style images. There are reference demo images
featuring a X11/Matchbox/GTK themed UI called Sato. The system supports
cross-architecture application development using QEMU emulation and a
standalone toolchain and SDK with IDE integration.
Additional information on the specifics of hardware that Poky supports
is available in README.hardware. Further hardware support can easily be added
in the form of layers which extend the systems capabilities in a modular way.
As an integration layer Poky consists of several upstream projects such as
BitBake, OpenEmbedded-Core, Yocto documentation and various sources of information
e.g. for the hardware support. Poky is in turn a component of the Yocto Project.
The Yocto Project has extensive documentation about the system including a
reference manual which can be found at:
http://yoctoproject.org/community/documentation
OpenEmbedded-Core is a layer containing the core metadata for current versions
of OpenEmbedded. It is distro-less (can build a functional image with
DISTRO = "") and contains only emulated machine support.
For information about OpenEmbedded, see the OpenEmbedded website:
http://www.openembedded.org/
Description