%poky; ] > Introduction Welcome to the Yocto Project Application Developer's Guide. This manual provides information that lets you begin developing applications using the Yocto Project. The Yocto Project provides an application development environment based on an Application Development Toolkit (ADT) and the availability of stand-alone cross-development toolchains and other tools. This manual describes the ADT and how you can configure and install it, how to access and use the cross-development toolchains, how to customize the development packages installation, how to use command line development for both Autotools-based and Makefile-based projects, and an introduction to the Eclipse Yocto Plug-in.
The Application Development Toolkit (ADT) Part of the Yocto Project development solution is an Application Development Toolkit (ADT). The ADT provides you with a custom-built, cross-development platform suited for developing a user-targeted product application. Fundamentally, the ADT consists of the following: An architecture-specific cross-toolchain and matching sysroot both built by the OpenEmbedded build system, which uses Poky. The toolchain and sysroot are based on a metadata configuration and extensions, which allows you to cross-develop on the host machine for the target hardware. The Eclipse IDE Yocto Plug-in. The Quick EMUlator (QEMU), which lets you simulate target hardware. Various user-space tools that greatly enhance your application development experience.
The Cross-Toolchain The cross-toolchain consists of a cross-compiler, cross-linker, and cross-debugger that are used to develop user-space applications for targeted hardware. This toolchain is created either by running the ADT Installer script, a toolchain installer script, or through a Build Directory that is based on your metadata configuration or extension for your targeted device. The cross-toolchain works with a matching target sysroot.
Sysroot The matching target sysroot contains needed headers and libraries for generating binaries that run on the target architecture. The sysroot is based on the target root filesystem image that is built by the OpenEmbedded build system Poky and uses the same metadata configuration used to build the cross-toolchain.
Eclipse Yocto Plug-in The Eclipse IDE is a popular development environment and it fully supports development using the Yocto Project. When you install and configure the Eclipse Yocto Project Plug-in into the Eclipse IDE, you maximize your Yocto Project experience. Installing and configuring the Plug-in results in an environment that has extensions specifically designed to let you more easily develop software. These extensions allow for cross-compilation, deployment, and execution of your output into a QEMU emulation session. You can also perform cross-debugging and profiling. The environment also supports a suite of tools that allows you to perform remote profiling, tracing, collection of power data, collection of latency data, and collection of performance data. For information about the application development workflow that uses the Eclipse IDE and for a detailed example of how to install and configure the Eclipse Yocto Project Plug-in, see the "Working Within Eclipse" section of the Yocto Project Development Manual.
The QEMU Emulator The QEMU emulator allows you to simulate your hardware while running your application or image. QEMU is made available a number of ways: If you use the ADT Installer script to install ADT, you can specify whether or not to install QEMU. If you have downloaded a Yocto Project release and unpacked it to create a Source Directory and you have sourced the environment setup script, QEMU is installed and automatically available. If you have installed the cross-toolchain tarball and you have sourcing the toolchain's setup environment script, QEMU is also installed and automatically available.
User-Space Tools User-space tools are included as part of the distribution. You will find these tools helpful during development. The tools include LatencyTOP, PowerTOP, OProfile, Perf, SystemTap, and Lttng-ust. These tools are common development tools for the Linux platform. LatencyTOP: LatencyTOP focuses on latency that causes skips in audio, stutters in your desktop experience, or situations that overload your server even when you have plenty of CPU power left. You can find out more about LatencyTOP at . PowerTOP: Helps you determine what software is using the most power. You can find out more about PowerTOP at . OProfile: A system-wide profiler for Linux systems that is capable of profiling all running code at low overhead. You can find out more about OProfile at . Perf: Performance counters for Linux used to keep track of certain types of hardware and software events. For more information on these types of counters see and click on “Perf tools.” SystemTap: A free software infrastructure that simplifies information gathering about a running Linux system. This information helps you diagnose performance or functional problems. SystemTap is not available as a user-space tool through the Eclipse IDE Yocto Plug-in. See for more information on SystemTap. Lttng-ust: A User-space Tracer designed to provide detailed information on user-space activity. See for more information on Lttng-ust.