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authorRobert Yang <liezhi.yang@windriver.com>2013-08-22 15:54:44 +0800
committerRichard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>2013-08-26 11:50:49 +0100
commit6a78e22aaede80cd4e0bcbc06b878574766d7b7c (patch)
tree4c83b4e6831879fd5db8d13ce73a7f2dfb5eee17 /scripts/contrib
parent2dfc0e1cc72491d24536792d4bc1d5f978634671 (diff)
downloadpoky-6a78e22aaede80cd4e0bcbc06b878574766d7b7c.tar.gz
image_types.bbclass: replace genext2fs with populate-extfs.sh
* The benefits: - Really support ext4 - Support the sparse file (we lost the sparse file in the image in the past, the sparse file became into the common file) - Fix the error reported by fsck: (ext2/ext3) Inode 1025, i_size is 16384, should be 17408. - Have a uniform code for ext2/3/4 generation * Comments from Darren Hart: Basically, genext2fs doesn't support creating ext4 filesystems. It creates, as I understand it, an ext2 filesystem, then adds a journal, and sets some bits. It can't support the newer features like extents. So what we end up with is a bit of a hack for a filesystem. The ext tools (e2fsprogs) unfortunately don't provide an integrated solution for generating prepopulated filesystem images as many other mkfs* tools do. One thing missing was symlink support in libext2fs. I added that support and demonstrated a script which uses the e2fsprogs debugfs tool that can populate the newly formatted filesystem from a directory and without root privileges. [YOCTO #3848] (From OE-Core rev: 40c3e18f43b2f074cec97d21aeb8d21f26dd5048) Signed-off-by: Robert Yang <liezhi.yang@windriver.com> Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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