Hi Rizwan,

> 1. Since the user is required to edit local.conf file if he wants to change 
> the machine, why does Toaster again asks the user to configure the machine 
> via GUI in "Local Yocto Project" type?
When you did this step, what you are doing is setting up a shell and 
environment to start and stop Toaster. This has nothing to do with projects, 
since you create and define projects from within Toaster directly.
> 2. If the user selects different machines in local.conf and Toaster GUI, 
> which one is selected for building?
The local.conf in the Toaster’s “build” directory is never used. Toaster 
creates a unique build directory for each “project”, so that they are all kept 
clean from each other. When you set the project configuration in Toaster for a 
project, Toaster will update the respective conf information (via a 
“conf/toaster.conf” file actually) to reflect your selections.

> 3. I also just want to know, what are your future plans with Toaster. As in, 
> is it going to stay for a long period? hopefully?
Yes, I am in it for the log period :-)

- David


From: Rizwan Md [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2016 9:04 PM
To: Reyna, David
Subject: RE: [Toaster] Understanding Toaster


Hi David,

Thank you so much for the reply, now I have better understanding on Toaster.
Sorry for bothering you again, but there is one more scenario which has kept me 
thinking.
I did the following:
1. Cloned the latest poky from Yocto repository.
2. I sourced the oe-init-build-env script.
3. I edited my local.conf file and changed the MACHINE variable from qemux86 to 
qemuarm.
4. I started Toaster in Port 8000.
5. In Toaster, I again selected machine as "qemumips"and started building 
core-image-minimal image.
I have following queries:
1. Since the user is required to edit local.conf file if he wants to change the 
machine, why does Toaster again asks the user to configure the machine via GUI 
in "Local Yocto Project" type?
2. If the user selects different machines in local.conf and Toaster GUI, which 
one is selected for building?
3. I also just want to know, what are your future plans with Toaster. As in, is 
it going to stay for a long period? hopefully?
Thanks,
Rizwan.
On Nov 23, 2016 10:23 AM, "Reyna, David" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi Rizwan,

Thank you for your questions!

1. What is the exact difference between Toaster with Local yocto project and 
Toaster with any other release such as krogoth or Morty.
The “local” option uses whatever version and source of Yocto Project that you 
had installed and started Toaster with. The advantage is speed since it local 
and control since you set up your clone.
The “release” options use the public release git repositories, and not the 
local content (beyond starting Toaster). The advantage is full access to a 
tested release, with all their layers and packages, so you do not need to worry 
about making sure your local installation is complete.
2. In the Local yocto project in Toaster, will the user be able to add 
published  OE layers to his project?
No, unless you add them yourself.
3. If by using krogoth or Morty branch for development, the user will be able 
to access all the layers/recipes published, why would he use Local development 
with Toaster?
See above. It comes down to control and speed. If you know what you want and 
can manage the installation, then go for it. If you are exploring, then use the 
official repos.
4. What is exact difference between setting up Toaster locally and as a hosted 
Toaster?
If you only want to access the Toaster server on the machine you are hosting it 
on, then go simple and start Toaster with the webport=<port>.

If you (and others!) would like to access the Toaster server across the network 
from any other host, then start Toaster with webport=<IP>:<port>.

5. Will you be providing Toaster GUI along with Eclipse IDE? Which I now see is 
not available.

Toaster is its own GUI leveraging HTTP and web browsers and is focused on 
building and analyzing working projects, so there is no need for integration or 
connection with Eclipse.

The Yocto Project support for Eclipse is more related around developing and 
debugging applications, something Toaster will not be doing.

- David



From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of Rizwan Md
Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2016 8:29 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [Toaster] Understanding Toaster

Hello,
I am new to Yocto project, I have been learning about it. I thought of using 
Toaster for the same. I find Toaster to be appealing. But, I have some doubts 
regarding toaster. I have listed them below.
1. What is the exact difference between Toaster with Local yocto project and 
Toaster with any other release such as krogoth or Morty.
2. In the Local yocto project in Toaster, will the user be able to add 
published  OE layers to his project?
3. If by using krogoth or Morty branch for development, the user will be able 
to access all the layers/recipes published, why would he use Local development 
with Toaster?
4. What is exact difference between setting up Toaster locally and as a hosted 
Toaster?
5. Will you be providing Toaster GUI along with Eclipse IDE? Which I now see is 
not available.
Please help me understand it better.
Thanks in advance.
Rizwan.

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