On 10/1/2012 8:01 AM, andy pugh wrote: > On 29 September 2012 18:00, Kent A. Reed <[email protected]> wrote: > >> It was so easy to set up Yocto and then do a new kernel build that I >> kept thinking I must have done something wrong. > RP was pleased to hear a success story (he said he generally only > hears when it's gone wrong) > > What did you end up with? ie, what kernel setup, and for what? >
I started with armv5te and beagleboard-xm for my target architecture and machine, but that was just to get my feet wet using the configurations provided. I've run the resulting kernel only in a QEMU emulator so far. I have three different ARM machines I'm playing with on the bench: the BestBuy 7in Infocast with a Marvel PXA-168 cpu, the BeagleBoard-XM with a TI DM3730 cpu, and the Raspberry Pi with its Broadcom BCM2835 cpu. Each has a different set of intellectual cores and different generation of ARM instruction set (ARMv5, ARMv7, ARMv6) and different additional intellectual cores. Each has different hardware environments. It looks like Yocto will allow me easily to differentiate the software builds for these machines as little or as much as I like without me having to do so much bookkeeping. Regards, Kent ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Got visibility? Most devs has no idea what their production app looks like. Find out how fast your code is with AppDynamics Lite. http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;262219671;13503038;y? http://info.appdynamics.com/FreeJavaPerformanceDownload.html _______________________________________________ Emc-developers mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-developers
