On 10/05/13 12:32, Richard Purdie wrote: > On Fri, 2013-05-10 at 11:56 +0100, Tomas Frydrych wrote: >> On 10/05/13 10:05, Richard Purdie wrote: > The closely track upstream is the key part and I think the core can do > this, apart from the ~six week stabilisation window.
If you mean you are prepared to do frequent point releases to keep up with clutter, that could work. But if you mean that those interested can closely track oe-core master, then that is not that useful, there are too many other changes happening at the same time. A small single purpose layer means updates (and breakages) can be very contained. > My argument for this is that I really do want to stress out the graphics > stack we have, clutter provides a good way to test some of those > components, particularly some of the more unusual parts. Currently its > mostly build test however we do have plans to make that runtime too. I > do think that clutters unusual usage of the stack makes it particular > useful in this role. I'd appreciate help from anyone who can help make > this all work. I am all for this, but does using clutter for automated tests require for the clutter packages to be in oe-core? The only thing you can stress test in oe-core using clutter is mesa, which is only applicable to the i915/i965 chip sets. I think it would be useful if any such tests could be applied to other graphics stacks provided by BSPs; I think all of the BSPs would benefit from this. I'd really like for people to be able to just pick up uptodate and working clutter packages for the major platforms the actively maintained BSPs support. Every so often someone asks about clutter for XYZ (usually the Beagleboard or RPi) on the clutter list: this should be readily available somewhere. have a good weekend everyone, Tomas -- http://sleepfive.com _______________________________________________ Openembedded-core mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxtogo.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openembedded-core
