Adding yocto packages: Difference between revisions

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= Adding a package to the local build of the BSP=
= Adding a package to the local build of the BSP=


Search for the corresponding recipe and which layer the recipe is in. This link is a useful tool for doing so: http://layers.openembedded.org/layerindex/branch/rocko/layers/
Search for the corresponding recipe and which layer the recipe is in. This link is a useful tool for doing so: http://layers.openembedded.org/layerindex/branch/morty/layers/


If the package is in the meta-openembedded layer, the recipe is already available in your build tree.
If the package is in the meta-openembedded layer, the recipe is already available in your build tree.

Revision as of 09:56, 10 July 2018

Adding packages to the Yocto build

General

Packages and package groups can be added to image recipes. See the Yocto Development manual for how to customize an image: http://www.yoctoproject.org/docs/current/dev-manual/dev-manual.html#usingpoky-extend-customimage-imagefeatures

Adding a package to the local build of the BSP

Search for the corresponding recipe and which layer the recipe is in. This link is a useful tool for doing so: http://layers.openembedded.org/layerindex/branch/morty/layers/

If the package is in the meta-openembedded layer, the recipe is already available in your build tree.

Add the following line to YOCTO_DIR/BUILD_DIR/conf/local.conf:

 IMAGE_INSTALL_append = " <package>"

Note: The leading white-space between the " and the package name is necessary for the append command.

If you need to add a layer to the BSP, clone or extract it to the YOCTO_DIR/sources/ directory. Then, modify YOCTO_DIR/BUILD_DIR/conf/bblayers.conf to include this new layer in BBLAYERS:

 BBLAYERS += "${BSPDIR}/sources/<new_layer>"

Webserver support

Recipes in meta-openembedded/meta-webserver/recipes-httpd:
- apache2
- cherokee
- hiawatha
- monkey
- nginx
- nostromo
- sthttpd
Recipes in poky/meta/recipes-extended/lighttpd:
- lighttpd

Although full of capabilities and features, Apache is commonly considered quite heavy, so is not generally used for embedded devices.
Nostromo and sthttpd are commonly considered ultralight webserver, with a very small set of capabilities and features, with very limited resource requirements.
The usual choice is usually between the following 5:
- cherokee
- hiawatha
- monkey
- nginx
- lighttpd
Here you can find an article comparing the above 5 webserver:
https://www.linux.com/news/which-light-weight-open-source-web-server-right-you


Accelerated browsers support

Yocto build system allow integrating browsers that support iMX6 GPU accelerations.

The common used browsers are:

  • qtwebkit based browsers: QtWebKit is the WebKit porting to QT. WebKit is an open source web browser engine. QT5 provide some demo implementations in webkitwidgets examples.
  • qtwebengine based browsers: QtWebEngine integrates chromium's fast moving web capabilities into QT. QT5 provide some demo implementations in webenginewidgets examples.
  • chromium based browsers: Chromium is an open-source browser project.

While FSL released a customized chromium integration of GPU and VPU integration for iMX6 CPUs, QT based browsers directly rely on QT integration with iMX6 accelerations.

The minimum requirements to use chromium or qtwebengine based browsers is X11 or Wayland.

QtWebKit has been superseded by QtWebEngine, mainly because QtWebKit has not been actively synchronized with the upstream WebKit code since Qt 5.2 and has been deprecated in Qt 5.5. Further details are available in Qt WebEngine Overview

The performance of each browser is strictly related to the features to be used, so different html applications can provide better performance with different browsers.

The following table try to summarize some benchmark for Wayland backend:

website QtWebKit QtWebEngine Chromium
http://peacekeeper.futuremark.com crash 623 n/a
http://www.kevs3d.co.uk/dev/canvasmark n/a 4796 3780
http://webglsamples.org/blob/blob.html 2 fps 32 fps 34 fps

Add QtWebKit examples to the build

Add the following line to YOCTO_DIR/BUILD_DIR/conf/local.conf:

IMAGE_INSTALL_append = " qtwebkit-examples-examples \
			qtbase-fonts-ttf-vera \
			qtbase-fonts-ttf-dejavu \
			qtbase-fonts-pfa \
			qtbase-fonts-pfb \
			qtbase-fonts-qpf"

The demo browser used for the above tests is available as

/usr/share/qt5/examples/webkitwidgets/fancybrowser/fancybrowser

Add QtWebEngine examples to the build

Add the following line to YOCTO_DIR/BUILD_DIR/conf/local.conf:

IMAGE_INSTALL_append = " qtwebengine-examples \
			qtbase-fonts-ttf-vera \
			qtbase-fonts-ttf-dejavu \
			qtbase-fonts-pfa \
			qtbase-fonts-pfb \
			qtbase-fonts-qpf"

The demo browser used for the above tests is available as

/usr/share/qt5/examples/webenginewidgets/fancybrowser/fancybrowser

Add Chromium to the build

Add the following line to YOCTO_DIR/BUILD_DIR/conf/local.conf:

 IMAGE_INSTALL_append = " chromium"
 LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST += "commercial_libav commercial_x264"

If you plan to use Chromium, please take care of the specific requirements for commercial license of libav and x264 packages.

The demo browser used for the above tests is available as

 /usr/bin/google-chrome