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<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
    "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
    <chapter id="user-manual-intro">
    <title>BitBake User Manual</title>

    <section id="intro">
        <title>Introduction</title>
                    <para>
            BitBake is a tool for executing tasks commonly performed by software
            developers when building systems on a daily basis.
            BitBake can build Systems consisting of numerous individual pieces
            of software, or can be used to build a single application.
            Example tasks that BitBake can execute are fetching source code,
            applying patches to source code, configuring, compiling, and
            packaging applications into a complete system, and managing metadata.
            BitBake abstracts the information for completing individual tasks
            into files known as recipes.
            Recipes contain all of the relevant information required by BitBake
            to complete a given task including dependencies, source file
            locations, etc.
            BitBake is similar to
            <ulink url='http://www.gnu.org/software/make/'>GNU Make</ulink>
            and other build tools.
        </para>
    </section>
        <section id="history-and-goals">
            <title>History and Goals</title>
        <para>
            BitBake was originally a part of the OpenEmbedded project.
            It was inspired by the Portage package management system
            used by the Gentoo Linux distribution.
            On December 7, 2004, OpenEmbedded project team member,
            Chris Larson split the project into two distinct pieces:
            <itemizedlist>
                <listitem><para>BitBake, a generic task executor</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>OpenEmbedded, a metadata set utilized by
                    BitBake.</para></listitem>
            </itemizedlist>
            Today, BitBake is the primary basis of the
            <ulink url="http://www.openembedded.org/">OpenEmbedded</ulink>
            project, which is being used to build and maintain a
            number of projects and embedded Linux distributions
            such as the Angstrom Distribution and the Yocto
            Project.
        </para>
            <para>Prior to BitBake, no other build tool adequately met
the needs of an aspiring embedded Linux distribution.  All of the
buildsystems used by traditional desktop Linux distributions lacked
important functionality, and none of the ad-hoc
<emphasis>buildroot</emphasis> systems, prevalent in the
embedded space, were scalable or maintainable.</para>
      <para>Some important original goals for BitBake were:
            <itemizedlist>
                <listitem><para>Handle crosscompilation.</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Handle interpackage dependencies (build time on target architecture, build time on native architecture, and runtime).</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Support running any number of tasks within a given package, including, but not limited to, fetching upstream sources, unpacking them, patching them, configuring them, etc.</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Must be Linux distribution agnostic (both build and target).</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Must be architecture agnostic</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Must support multiple build and target operating systems (including Cygwin, the BSDs, etc).</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Must be able to be self contained, rather than tightly integrated into the build machine's root filesystem.</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>There must be a way to handle conditional metadata (on target architecture, operating system, distribution, machine).</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>It must be easy for the person using the tools to supply their own local metadata and packages to operate against.</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Must make it easy to collaborate
between multiple projects using BitBake for their
builds.</para></listitem>
		<listitem><para>Should provide an inheritance mechanism to
share common metadata between many packages.</para></listitem>
            </itemizedlist>
        </para>
        <para>Over time it has become apparent that some further requirements were necessary:
            <itemizedlist>
                <listitem><para>Handle variants of a base recipe (native, sdk, multilib).</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Able to split metadata into layers and allow layers to override each other.</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Allow representation of a given set of input variables to a task as a checksum. Based on that checksum, allow acceleration of builds with prebuilt components.</para></listitem>
            </itemizedlist>
        </para>

        <para>BitBake satisfies all the original requirements and many more with extensions being made to the basic functionality to reflect the additional requirements.  Flexibility and power have always been the priorities.  It is highly extensible, supporting embedded Python code and execution of any arbitrary tasks.</para>
        </section>
    </chapter>