| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This adds SPDX license headers in place of the wide assortment of things
currently in our script headers. We default to GPL-2.0-only except for the
oeqa code where it was clearly submitted and marked as MIT on the most part
or some scripts which had the "or later" GPL versioning.
The patch also drops other obsolete bits of file headers where they were
encoountered such as editor modelines, obsolete maintainer information or
the phrase "All rights reserved" which is now obsolete and not required in
copyright headers (in this case its actually confusing for licensing as all
rights were not reserved).
More work is needed for OE-Core but this takes care of the bulk of the scripts
and meta/lib directories.
The top level LICENSE files are tweaked to match the new structure and the
SPDX naming.
(From OE-Core rev: f8c9c511b5f1b7dbd45b77f345cb6c048ae6763e)
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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- Prefer collections.abc (new in Python 3.3) over collections for abstract base classes
- In Python 3.8, the abstract base classes in collections.abc will no longer be exposed in
the regular collections module. This will help create a clearer distinction between
the concrete classes and the abstract base classes."
- https://docs.python.org/3.7/whatsnew/3.7.html#deprecated
- see https://github.com/python/cpython/commit/c66f9f8d3909f588c251957d499599a1680e2320
(From OE-Core rev: e763151e1f7cfe9ea56de06f41769f8a3d74d219)
Signed-off-by: Khem Raj <raj.khem@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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This patch contains all the other misc pieces of the transition to
python3 which didn't make sense to be broken into individual patches.
(From OE-Core rev: fcd6b38bab8517d83e1ed48eef1bca9a9a190f57)
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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The bb and os modules are always imported so having these extra import calls
are a waste of space/execution time. They also set a bad example for people
copy and pasting code so clean them up.
(From OE-Core rev: 7d674820958be3a7051ea619effe1a6061d9cbe2)
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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This implementation consists of two components:
- Type creation python modules, whose job it is to construct objects of the
defined type for a given variable in the metadata
- typecheck.bbclass, which iterates over all configuration variables with a
type defined and uses oe.types to check the validity of the values
This gives us a few benefits:
- Automatic sanity checking of all configuration variables with a defined type
- Avoid duplicating the "how do I make use of the value of this variable"
logic between its users. For variables like PATH, this is simply a split(),
for boolean variables, the duplication can result in confusing, or even
mismatched semantics (is this 0/1, empty/nonempty, what?)
- Make it easier to create a configuration UI, as the type information could
be used to provide a better interface than a text edit box (e.g checkbox for
'boolean', dropdown for 'choice')
This functionality is entirely opt-in right now. To enable the configuration
variable type checking, simply INHERIT += "typecheck". Example of a failing
type check:
BAZ = "foo"
BAZ[type] = "boolean"
$ bitbake -p
FATAL: BAZ: Invalid boolean value 'foo'
$
Examples of leveraging oe.types in a python snippet:
PACKAGES[type] = "list"
python () {
import oe.data
for pkg in oe.data.typed_value("PACKAGES", d):
bb.note("package: %s" % pkg)
}
LIBTOOL_HAS_SYSROOT = "yes"
LIBTOOL_HAS_SYSROOT[type] = "boolean"
python () {
import oe.data
assert(oe.data.typed_value("LIBTOOL_HAS_SYSROOT", d) == True)
}
(From OE-Core rev: a04ce490e933fc7534db33f635b025c25329c564)
Signed-off-by: Chris Larson <chris_larson@mentor.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
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