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3******************************
4Customizing the Extensible SDK
5******************************
6
7This appendix describes customizations you can apply to the extensible
8SDK.
9
10Configuring the Extensible SDK
11==============================
12
13The extensible SDK primarily consists of a pre-configured copy of the
14OpenEmbedded build system from which it was produced. Thus, the SDK's
15configuration is derived using that build system and the filters shown
16in the following list. When these filters are present, the OpenEmbedded
17build system applies them against ``local.conf`` and ``auto.conf``:
18
19- Variables whose values start with "/" are excluded since the
20 assumption is that those values are paths that are likely to be
21 specific to the :term:`Build Host`.
22
23- Variables listed in
24 :term:`SDK_LOCAL_CONF_BLACKLIST`
25 are excluded. These variables are not allowed through from the
26 OpenEmbedded build system configuration into the extensible SDK
27 configuration. Typically, these variables are specific to the machine
28 on which the build system is running and could be problematic as part
29 of the extensible SDK configuration.
30
31 For a list of the variables excluded by default, see the
32 :term:`SDK_LOCAL_CONF_BLACKLIST`
33 in the glossary of the Yocto Project Reference Manual.
34
35- Variables listed in
36 :term:`SDK_LOCAL_CONF_WHITELIST`
37 are included. Including a variable in the value of
38 ``SDK_LOCAL_CONF_WHITELIST`` overrides either of the previous two
39 filters. The default value is blank.
40
41- Classes inherited globally with
42 :term:`INHERIT` that are listed in
43 :term:`SDK_INHERIT_BLACKLIST`
44 are disabled. Using ``SDK_INHERIT_BLACKLIST`` to disable these
45 classes is the typical method to disable classes that are problematic
46 or unnecessary in the SDK context. The default value blacklists the
47 :ref:`buildhistory <ref-classes-buildhistory>`
48 and :ref:`icecc <ref-classes-icecc>` classes.
49
50Additionally, the contents of ``conf/sdk-extra.conf``, when present, are
51appended to the end of ``conf/local.conf`` within the produced SDK,
52without any filtering. The ``sdk-extra.conf`` file is particularly
53useful if you want to set a variable value just for the SDK and not the
54OpenEmbedded build system used to create the SDK.
55
56Adjusting the Extensible SDK to Suit Your Build Host's Setup
57============================================================
58
59In most cases, the extensible SDK defaults should work with your :term:`Build
William A. Kennington IIIac69b482021-06-02 12:28:27 -070060Host`'s setup. However, there are cases when you might consider making
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -050061adjustments:
62
63- If your SDK configuration inherits additional classes using the
64 :term:`INHERIT` variable and you
65 do not need or want those classes enabled in the SDK, you can
66 blacklist them by adding them to the
67 :term:`SDK_INHERIT_BLACKLIST`
68 variable as described in the fourth bullet of the previous section.
69
70 .. note::
71
72 The default value of
73 SDK_INHERIT_BLACKLIST
74 is set using the "?=" operator. Consequently, you will need to
75 either define the entire list by using the "=" operator, or you
76 will need to append a value using either "_append" or the "+="
77 operator. You can learn more about these operators in the "
78 Basic Syntax
79 " section of the BitBake User Manual.
80
81 .
82
83- If you have classes or recipes that add additional tasks to the
84 standard build flow (i.e. the tasks execute as the recipe builds as
85 opposed to being called explicitly), then you need to do one of the
86 following:
87
88 - After ensuring the tasks are :ref:`shared
Andrew Geissler09209ee2020-12-13 08:44:15 -060089 state <overview-manual/concepts:shared state cache>` tasks (i.e. the
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -050090 output of the task is saved to and can be restored from the shared
91 state cache) or ensuring the tasks are able to be produced quickly
92 from a task that is a shared state task, add the task name to the
93 value of
94 :term:`SDK_RECRDEP_TASKS`.
95
96 - Disable the tasks if they are added by a class and you do not need
97 the functionality the class provides in the extensible SDK. To
98 disable the tasks, add the class to the ``SDK_INHERIT_BLACKLIST``
99 variable as described in the previous section.
100
101- Generally, you want to have a shared state mirror set up so users of
102 the SDK can add additional items to the SDK after installation
Andrew Geissler3b8a17c2021-04-15 15:55:55 -0500103 without needing to build the items from source. See the
104 ":ref:`sdk-manual/appendix-customizing:providing additional installable extensible sdk content`"
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500105 section for information.
106
107- If you want users of the SDK to be able to easily update the SDK, you
108 need to set the
109 :term:`SDK_UPDATE_URL`
Andrew Geissler3b8a17c2021-04-15 15:55:55 -0500110 variable. For more information, see the
111 ":ref:`sdk-manual/appendix-customizing:providing updates to the extensible sdk after installation`"
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500112 section.
113
114- If you have adjusted the list of files and directories that appear in
115 :term:`COREBASE` (other than
116 layers that are enabled through ``bblayers.conf``), then you must
117 list these files in
118 :term:`COREBASE_FILES` so
119 that the files are copied into the SDK.
120
121- If your OpenEmbedded build system setup uses a different environment
122 setup script other than
123 :ref:`structure-core-script`, then you must
124 set
125 :term:`OE_INIT_ENV_SCRIPT`
126 to point to the environment setup script you use.
127
128 .. note::
129
130 You must also reflect this change in the value used for the
131 COREBASE_FILES
132 variable as previously described.
133
134Changing the Extensible SDK Installer Title
135===========================================
136
137You can change the displayed title for the SDK installer by setting the
138:term:`SDK_TITLE` variable and then
Andrew Geissler3b8a17c2021-04-15 15:55:55 -0500139rebuilding the SDK installer. For information on how to build an SDK
140installer, see the ":ref:`sdk-manual/appendix-obtain:building an sdk installer`"
141section.
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500142
143By default, this title is derived from
144:term:`DISTRO_NAME` when it is
145set. If the ``DISTRO_NAME`` variable is not set, the title is derived
146from the :term:`DISTRO` variable.
147
148The
149:ref:`populate_sdk_base <ref-classes-populate-sdk-*>`
150class defines the default value of the ``SDK_TITLE`` variable as
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -0500151follows::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500152
153 SDK_TITLE ??= "${@d.getVar('DISTRO_NAME') or d.getVar('DISTRO')} SDK"
154
William A. Kennington IIIac69b482021-06-02 12:28:27 -0700155While there are several ways of changing this variable, an efficient method is
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500156to set the variable in your distribution's configuration file. Doing so
157creates an SDK installer title that applies across your distribution. As
158an example, assume you have your own layer for your distribution named
159"meta-mydistro" and you are using the same type of file hierarchy as
160does the default "poky" distribution. If so, you could update the
161``SDK_TITLE`` variable in the
162``~/meta-mydistro/conf/distro/mydistro.conf`` file using the following
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -0500163form::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500164
165 SDK_TITLE = "your_title"
166
167Providing Updates to the Extensible SDK After Installation
168==========================================================
169
170When you make changes to your configuration or to the metadata and if
171you want those changes to be reflected in installed SDKs, you need to
172perform additional steps. These steps make it possible for anyone using
173the installed SDKs to update the installed SDKs by using the
174``devtool sdk-update`` command:
175
1761. Create a directory that can be shared over HTTP or HTTPS. You can do
177 this by setting up a web server such as an `Apache HTTP
178 Server <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_HTTP_Server>`__ or
179 `Nginx <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nginx>`__ server in the cloud
180 to host the directory. This directory must contain the published SDK.
181
1822. Set the
183 :term:`SDK_UPDATE_URL`
184 variable to point to the corresponding HTTP or HTTPS URL. Setting
185 this variable causes any SDK built to default to that URL and thus,
186 the user does not have to pass the URL to the ``devtool sdk-update``
Andrew Geissler3b8a17c2021-04-15 15:55:55 -0500187 command as described in the
188 ":ref:`sdk-manual/extensible:applying updates to an installed extensible sdk`"
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500189 section.
190
1913. Build the extensible SDK normally (i.e., use the
192 ``bitbake -c populate_sdk_ext`` imagename command).
193
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -05001944. Publish the SDK using the following command::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500195
196 $ oe-publish-sdk some_path/sdk-installer.sh path_to_shared_http_directory
197
198 You must
199 repeat this step each time you rebuild the SDK with changes that you
200 want to make available through the update mechanism.
201
202Completing the above steps allows users of the existing installed SDKs
203to simply run ``devtool sdk-update`` to retrieve and apply the latest
Andrew Geissler3b8a17c2021-04-15 15:55:55 -0500204updates. See the
205":ref:`sdk-manual/extensible:applying updates to an installed extensible sdk`"
206section for further information.
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500207
208Changing the Default SDK Installation Directory
209===============================================
210
211When you build the installer for the Extensible SDK, the default
212installation directory for the SDK is based on the
213:term:`DISTRO` and
214:term:`SDKEXTPATH` variables from
215within the
216:ref:`populate_sdk_base <ref-classes-populate-sdk-*>`
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -0500217class as follows::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500218
219 SDKEXTPATH ??= "~/${@d.getVar('DISTRO')}_sdk"
220
221You can
222change this default installation directory by specifically setting the
223``SDKEXTPATH`` variable.
224
William A. Kennington IIIac69b482021-06-02 12:28:27 -0700225While there are several ways of setting this variable,
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500226the method that makes the most sense is to set the variable in your
227distribution's configuration file. Doing so creates an SDK installer
228default directory that applies across your distribution. As an example,
229assume you have your own layer for your distribution named
230"meta-mydistro" and you are using the same type of file hierarchy as
231does the default "poky" distribution. If so, you could update the
232``SDKEXTPATH`` variable in the
233``~/meta-mydistro/conf/distro/mydistro.conf`` file using the following
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -0500234form::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500235
236 SDKEXTPATH = "some_path_for_your_installed_sdk"
237
238After building your installer, running it prompts the user for
239acceptance of the some_path_for_your_installed_sdk directory as the
240default location to install the Extensible SDK.
241
242Providing Additional Installable Extensible SDK Content
243=======================================================
244
245If you want the users of an extensible SDK you build to be able to add
246items to the SDK without requiring the users to build the items from
247source, you need to do a number of things:
248
2491. Ensure the additional items you want the user to be able to install
250 are already built:
251
252 - Build the items explicitly. You could use one or more "meta"
253 recipes that depend on lists of other recipes.
254
255 - Build the "world" target and set
256 ``EXCLUDE_FROM_WORLD_pn-``\ recipename for the recipes you do not
257 want built. See the
258 :term:`EXCLUDE_FROM_WORLD`
259 variable for additional information.
260
2612. Expose the ``sstate-cache`` directory produced by the build.
262 Typically, you expose this directory by making it available through
263 an `Apache HTTP
264 Server <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_HTTP_Server>`__ or
265 `Nginx <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nginx>`__ server.
266
2673. Set the appropriate configuration so that the produced SDK knows how
268 to find the configuration. The variable you need to set is
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -0500269 :term:`SSTATE_MIRRORS`::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500270
271 SSTATE_MIRRORS = "file://.* http://example.com/some_path/sstate-cache/PATH"
272
273 You can set the
274 ``SSTATE_MIRRORS`` variable in two different places:
275
276 - If the mirror value you are setting is appropriate to be set for
277 both the OpenEmbedded build system that is actually building the
278 SDK and the SDK itself (i.e. the mirror is accessible in both
279 places or it will fail quickly on the OpenEmbedded build system
280 side, and its contents will not interfere with the build), then
281 you can set the variable in your ``local.conf`` or custom distro
282 configuration file. You can then "whitelist" the variable through
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -0500283 to the SDK by adding the following::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500284
285 SDK_LOCAL_CONF_WHITELIST = "SSTATE_MIRRORS"
286
287 - Alternatively, if you just want to set the ``SSTATE_MIRRORS``
288 variable's value for the SDK alone, create a
289 ``conf/sdk-extra.conf`` file either in your
290 :term:`Build Directory` or within any
291 layer and put your ``SSTATE_MIRRORS`` setting within that file.
292
293 .. note::
294
295 This second option is the safest option should you have any
296 doubts as to which method to use when setting
297 SSTATE_MIRRORS
298 .
299
300Minimizing the Size of the Extensible SDK Installer Download
301============================================================
302
303By default, the extensible SDK bundles the shared state artifacts for
304everything needed to reconstruct the image for which the SDK was built.
305This bundling can lead to an SDK installer file that is a Gigabyte or
306more in size. If the size of this file causes a problem, you can build
307an SDK that has just enough in it to install and provide access to the
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -0500308``devtool command`` by setting the following in your configuration::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500309
310 SDK_EXT_TYPE = "minimal"
311
312Setting
313:term:`SDK_EXT_TYPE` to
314"minimal" produces an SDK installer that is around 35 Mbytes in size,
315which downloads and installs quickly. You need to realize, though, that
316the minimal installer does not install any libraries or tools out of the
317box. These libraries and tools must be installed either "on the fly" or
318through actions you perform using ``devtool`` or explicitly with the
319``devtool sdk-install`` command.
320
321In most cases, when building a minimal SDK you need to also enable
322bringing in the information on a wider range of packages produced by the
323system. Requiring this wider range of information is particularly true
324so that ``devtool add`` is able to effectively map dependencies it
325discovers in a source tree to the appropriate recipes. Additionally, the
326information enables the ``devtool search`` command to return useful
327results.
328
329To facilitate this wider range of information, you would need to set the
Andrew Geisslerc926e172021-05-07 16:11:35 -0500330following::
Andrew Geisslerc9f78652020-09-18 14:11:35 -0500331
332 SDK_INCLUDE_PKGDATA = "1"
333
334See the :term:`SDK_INCLUDE_PKGDATA` variable for additional information.
335
336Setting the ``SDK_INCLUDE_PKGDATA`` variable as shown causes the "world"
337target to be built so that information for all of the recipes included
338within it are available. Having these recipes available increases build
339time significantly and increases the size of the SDK installer by 30-80
340Mbytes depending on how many recipes are included in your configuration.
341
342You can use ``EXCLUDE_FROM_WORLD_pn-``\ recipename for recipes you want
343to exclude. However, it is assumed that you would need to be building
344the "world" target if you want to provide additional items to the SDK.
345Consequently, building for "world" should not represent undue overhead
346in most cases.
347
348.. note::
349
350 If you set
351 SDK_EXT_TYPE
352 to "minimal", then providing a shared state mirror is mandatory so
353 that items can be installed as needed. See the "
354 Providing Additional Installable Extensible SDK Content
355 " section for more information.
356
357You can explicitly control whether or not to include the toolchain when
358you build an SDK by setting the
359:term:`SDK_INCLUDE_TOOLCHAIN`
360variable to "1". In particular, it is useful to include the toolchain
361when you have set ``SDK_EXT_TYPE`` to "minimal", which by default,
362excludes the toolchain. Also, it is helpful if you are building a small
363SDK for use with an IDE or some other tool where you do not want to take
364extra steps to install a toolchain.