| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| This guide provides a list of the backwards-incompatible changes you |
| might need to adapt to in your existing Yocto Project configuration |
| when upgrading to a new release. |
| |
| If you are upgrading over multiple releases, you will need to follow |
| the sections from the version following the one you were previously |
| using up to the new version you are upgrading to. |
| |
| |
| General Migration Considerations |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Some considerations are not tied to a specific Yocto Project release. |
| This section presents information you should consider when migrating to |
| any new Yocto Project release. |
| |
| - *Dealing with Customized Recipes*: |
| |
| Issues could arise if you take |
| older recipes that contain customizations and simply copy them |
| forward expecting them to work after you migrate to new Yocto Project |
| metadata. For example, suppose you have a recipe in your layer that |
| is a customized version of a core recipe copied from the earlier |
| release, rather than through the use of an append file. When you |
| migrate to a newer version of Yocto Project, the metadata (e.g. |
| perhaps an include file used by the recipe) could have changed in a |
| way that would break the build. Say, for example, a function is |
| removed from an include file and the customized recipe tries to call |
| that function. |
| |
| You could "forward-port" all your customizations in your recipe so |
| that everything works for the new release. However, this is not the |
| optimal solution as you would have to repeat this process with each |
| new release if changes occur that give rise to problems. |
| |
| The better solution (where practical) is to use append files |
| (``*.bbappend``) to capture any customizations you want to make to a |
| recipe. Doing so isolates your changes from the main recipe, making |
| them much more manageable. However, sometimes it is not practical to |
| use an append file. A good example of this is when introducing a |
| newer or older version of a recipe in another layer. |
| |
| |
| - *Updating Append Files*: |
| |
| Since append (``.bbappend``) files generally only contain |
| your customizations, they often do not need to be adjusted for new |
| releases. However, if the append file is specific to a |
| particular version of the recipe (i.e. its name does not use the % |
| wildcard) and the version of the recipe to which it is appending has |
| changed, then you will at a minimum need to rename the append file to |
| match the name of the recipe file. A mismatch between an append file |
| and its corresponding recipe file (``.bb``) will trigger an error |
| during parsing. |
| |
| Depending on the type of customization the append file applies, other |
| incompatibilities might occur when you upgrade. For example, if your |
| append file applies a patch and the recipe to which it is appending |
| is updated to a newer version, the patch might no longer apply. If |
| this is the case and assuming the patch is still needed, you must |
| modify the patch file so that it does apply. |
| |
| .. tip:: |
| |
| You can list all append files used in your configuration by running: |
| |
| bitbake-layers show-appends |
| |
| |
| .. _migration-general-buildhistory: |
| |
| - *Checking Image / SDK Changes*: |
| |
| The :ref:`buildhistory <ref-classes-buildhistory>` class can be used |
| if you wish to check the impact of changes to images / SDKs across |
| the migration (e.g. added/removed packages, added/removed files, size |
| changes etc.). To do this, follow these steps: |
| |
| 1. Enable buildhistory before the migration |
| |
| 2. Run a pre-migration build |
| |
| 3. Capture the buildhistory output (as specified by :term:`BUILDHISTORY_DIR`) |
| and ensure it is preserved for subsequent builds. How you would do this |
| depends on how you are running your builds - if you are doing this all on |
| one workstation in the same build directory you may not need to do |
| anything other than not deleting the buildhistory output directory. For |
| builds in a pipeline it may be more complicated. |
| |
| 4. Set a tag in the buildhistory output (which is a git repository) before |
| migration, to make the commit from the pre-migration build easy to find |
| as you may end up running multiple builds during the migration. |
| |
| 5. Perform the migration |
| |
| 6. Run a build |
| |
| 7. Check the output changes between the previously set tag and HEAD in the |
| buildhistory output using ``git diff`` or ``buildhistory-diff``. |
| |
| For more information on using buildhistory, see |
| :ref:`dev-manual/common-tasks:maintaining build output quality`. |