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Several recipes reference the LICENSE file in their LIC_FILES_CHKSUM
variable as ${COREBASE}/LICENSE. This forces distribution providers to
keep this file verbatim or to overload the affected recipes. The section
"Moving to the Yocto Project 1.6 Release" in the Yocto manual suggests
removing the LICENSE file where possible.
Remove LICENSE in cases where COPYING.MIT is also given and replace
LICENSE with COPYING.MIT if the former was the only entry. All modified
recipes specify LICENSE = "MIT" and none of the in-tree files specify a
different license either.
As the packages do not change (the license files are not contained in
them), do not increase PR.
Signed-off-by: Olaf Mandel <o.mandel@menlosystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@intel.com>
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In cases where a target image wants prevent the recovery partition is mounted
automatically, but the recovery partition identifier moves with the device
(internal flash, sd card, usb stick, ...), device/machine dependend extra
blacklists might be desired.
The grep utility prints the file name for each match when there is more
than one file to search. Add -h to suppress the prefixing of file names
on output.
Signed-off-by: Jens Rehsack <sno@netbsd.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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After removal of auto-creating S we must ensure that all recipes are
using a proper value for S.
Fix all recipes that only need to set S equals to WORKDIR.
[YOCTO #5627]
Signed-off-by: Petter Mabäcker <petter@technux.se>
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This is done to work around the issue of auto-mounting block devices
(i.e. SD cards) when root filesystem is still in read-only mode and
creating /media/<device> mount-points by udev is not possible. That
is due to udev (/etc/rcS.d/S03udev) getting started earlier than
checkroot (/etc/rcS.d/S10checkroot.sh) gets a chance to re-mount the
rootfs as read-write.
Although, canonical FHS specifies /media/<device> as a mount point
for removable media devices, the latest 2.3 version was released in
2004 and since then FreeDesktop/udisks and other tools adopted the
new /run/media/<user>/<device> location. That was done to overcome
read-only rootfs limitation, since /run is usually a tmpfs mounted
partition, plus avoid name-clash between users.
For our embedded systems environment we assume single-user operation
and hence simplify mount point to just /run/media/<device>. But for
proper per-user mounting to /run/media/<user>/<device>, some sort of
session management is required along with the tool like udisks, that
is out of scope of this simple udev-based auto-mounting.
Signed-off-by: Denys Dmytriyenko <denys@ti.com>
Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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