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authorKhang Nguyen <khang.nguyen.xw@renesas.com>2019-09-04 14:49:16 +0700
committerKhang Nguyen <khang.nguyen.xw@renesas.com>2019-09-24 08:16:28 +0700
commit190236cfc4e781004fc66c3388802fdc39cde3c2 (patch)
treee0350d0bff9fbc309525c95dae5a458c61a53182 /meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample
parent4c0fe15f041854718955a64671299e8c626d8a7e (diff)
rcar-gen3: conf: Remove Linaro-gcc build configuration samples
The Linaro-gcc build configuration samples are no longer used, this removes them to avoid confusion. Signed-off-by: Khang Nguyen <khang.nguyen.xw@renesas.com> Signed-off-by: Takamitsu Honda <takamitsu.honda.pv@renesas.com> Change-Id: I53940fc4c33ae048b9750d8818b8357048fadabb
Diffstat (limited to 'meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample')
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf271
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf264
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf280
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf383
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf271
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf264
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf280
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf383
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf268
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf261
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf277
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf380
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf271
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf264
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf280
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf383
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-ltp.conf274
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf280
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf273
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf289
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf16
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf395
-rw-r--r--meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/patch/patch-for-linaro-gcc/0001-rcar-gen3-add-readme-for-building-with-Linaro-Gcc.patch186
37 files changed, 0 insertions, 6717 deletions
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 51d1e75..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,271 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "ebisu"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston weston-laucher
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Mask the wayland related to GFX
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Mask the gstreamer recipe for MMP
-BBMASK .= "|meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3/recipes-multimedia/gstreamer"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 52a23fe..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,264 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "ebisu"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Mask graphic Pkgs
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Enable pam distro feature
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 978550e..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,280 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "ebisu"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Fix the Warning of gstreamer plugins
-RDEPENDS_gstreamer1.0-plugins-bad = "libwayland-egl"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 2ad6044..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/ebisu/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,383 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "ebisu"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-
-# Enable Multimedia features
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " multimedia"
-
-# for gstreamer omx plugins
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-# for mmp test program
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mm-test"
-
-# for weston v4l2 renderer
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " v4l2-renderer"
-
-# OMX H263 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV263D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h263dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264D30SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264enc_lib"
-
-# OMX H265 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV265D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h265dec_lib"
-
-# OMX MPEG2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM2VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg2dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component MPEG4 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM4VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg4dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VC-1 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVC1D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vc1dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component DivXD Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVDVXD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " divxdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component RealVideo Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVRLVD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " rvdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component ALAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAALAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " alacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component FLAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAFLAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " flacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACD30SL41C),
-# AAC-LC 2ch decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAACMZ1SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_lib"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_mdw"
-
-# OMX aacPlus V2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAAPD30SL41C),
-# aacPlus V2 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAAPMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX MP3 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAMP3D30SL41C),
-# MP3 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADMP3MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX WMA decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAWMAD30SL41C),
-# WMA decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADWMAMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_mdw"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACE30SL41C)
-# AAC-LC encoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000AEAACMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_mdw"
-
-# OMX Dolby(R) Digital decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XADD5D30SL41C),
-# Dolby(R) Digital decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADDD5MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_mdw"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Encoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8enc_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP9 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP9D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp9dec_lib"
-
-# CMS Basic Color Management Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBCV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsbcm"
-
-# CMS CMM3 Backlight Control Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBLC0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsblc"
-
-# CMS VSP2 Dynamic Gamma Correction Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMDGV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsdgc"
-
-# DVD Core-Middleware for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDC301SL41C)
-# DVD Encryption Library for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDF301SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd_encryption_library"
-
-# ADSP Driver for Linux (RCG3AHPDL4101ZDO)
-# ADSP Interface for Linux (RCG3AHIFL4101ZDP)
-# ADSP Framework (RCG3AHFWN0201ZDP)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " adsp"
-
-# AVB Software Package for Linux
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " avb"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Evaluation packages
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " use_eva_pkg"
-
-# Configuration for ivi-shell and ivi-extension
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " ivi-shell"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index cfc98c0..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,271 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "h3ulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston weston-laucher
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Mask the wayland related to GFX
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Mask the gstreamer recipe for MMP
-BBMASK .= "|meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3/recipes-multimedia/gstreamer"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index c7b7b53..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,264 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "h3ulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Mask graphic Pkgs
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Enable pam distro feature
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 776ae1f..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,280 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "h3ulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Fix the Warning of gstreamer plugins
-RDEPENDS_gstreamer1.0-plugins-bad = "libwayland-egl"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 14f4c60..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/h3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,383 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "h3ulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-
-# Enable Multimedia features
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " multimedia"
-
-# for gstreamer omx plugins
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-# for mmp test program
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mm-test"
-
-# for weston v4l2 renderer
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " v4l2-renderer"
-
-# OMX H263 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV263D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h263dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264D30SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264enc_lib"
-
-# OMX H265 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV265D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h265dec_lib"
-
-# OMX MPEG2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM2VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg2dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component MPEG4 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM4VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg4dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VC-1 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVC1D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vc1dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component DivXD Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVDVXD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " divxdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component RealVideo Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVRLVD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " rvdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component ALAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAALAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " alacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component FLAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAFLAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " flacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACD30SL41C),
-# AAC-LC 2ch decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAACMZ1SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_lib"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_mdw"
-
-# OMX aacPlus V2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAAPD30SL41C),
-# aacPlus V2 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAAPMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX MP3 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAMP3D30SL41C),
-# MP3 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADMP3MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX WMA decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAWMAD30SL41C),
-# WMA decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADWMAMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_mdw"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACE30SL41C)
-# AAC-LC encoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000AEAACMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_mdw"
-
-# OMX Dolby(R) Digital decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XADD5D30SL41C),
-# Dolby(R) Digital decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADDD5MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_mdw"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Encoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8enc_lib"
-
-# CMS Basic Color Management Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBCV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsbcm"
-
-# CMS CMM3 Backlight Control Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBLC0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsblc"
-
-# CMS VSP2 Dynamic Gamma Correction Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMDGV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsdgc"
-
-# ISDB-T DTV Software Package for Linux (RTM0RC0000TE020000SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dtv"
-
-# DVD Core-Middleware for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDC301SL41C)
-# DVD Encryption Library for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDF301SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd_encryption_library"
-
-# ADSP Driver for Linux (RCG3AHPDL4101ZDO)
-# ADSP Interface for Linux (RCG3AHIFL4101ZDP)
-# ADSP Framework (RCG3AHFWN0201ZDP)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " adsp"
-
-# AVB Software Package for Linux
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " avb"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Evaluation packages
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " use_eva_pkg"
-
-# Configuration for ivi-shell and ivi-extension
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " ivi-shell"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 7e71ed0..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,268 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "m3nulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston weston-laucher
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Mask the wayland related to GFX
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Mask the gstreamer recipe for MMP
-BBMASK .= "|meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3/recipes-multimedia/gstreamer"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 087a3a3..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,261 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "m3nulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Mask graphic Pkgs
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Enable pam distro feature
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 68b3f5a..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,277 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "m3nulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Fix the Warning of gstreamer plugins
-RDEPENDS_gstreamer1.0-plugins-bad = "libwayland-egl"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index b0eedb1..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3nulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,380 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "m3nulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-
-# Enable Multimedia features
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " multimedia"
-
-# for gstreamer omx plugins
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-# for mmp test program
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mm-test"
-
-# for weston v4l2 renderer
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " v4l2-renderer"
-
-# OMX H263 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV263D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h263dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264D30SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264enc_lib"
-
-# OMX H265 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV265D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h265dec_lib"
-
-# OMX MPEG2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM2VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg2dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component MPEG4 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM4VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg4dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VC-1 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVC1D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vc1dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component DivXD Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVDVXD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " divxdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component RealVideo Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVRLVD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " rvdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component ALAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAALAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " alacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component FLAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAFLAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " flacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACD30SL41C),
-# AAC-LC 2ch decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAACMZ1SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_lib"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_mdw"
-
-# OMX aacPlus V2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAAPD30SL41C),
-# aacPlus V2 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAAPMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX MP3 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAMP3D30SL41C),
-# MP3 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADMP3MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX WMA decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAWMAD30SL41C),
-# WMA decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADWMAMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_mdw"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACE30SL41C)
-# AAC-LC encoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000AEAACMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_mdw"
-
-# OMX Dolby(R) Digital decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XADD5D30SL41C),
-# Dolby(R) Digital decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADDD5MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_mdw"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Encoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8enc_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP9 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP9D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp9dec_lib"
-
-# CMS Basic Color Management Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBCV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsbcm"
-
-# CMS CMM3 Backlight Control Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBLC0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsblc"
-
-# CMS VSP2 Dynamic Gamma Correction Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMDGV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsdgc"
-
-# ISDB-T DTV Software Package for Linux (RTM0RC0000TE020000SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dtv"
-
-# DVD Core-Middleware for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDC301SL41C)
-# DVD Encryption Library for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDF301SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd_encryption_library"
-
-# ADSP Driver for Linux (RCG3AHPDL4101ZDO)
-# ADSP Interface for Linux (RCG3AHIFL4101ZDP)
-# ADSP Framework (RCG3AHFWN0201ZDP)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " adsp"
-
-# AVB Software Package for Linux
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " avb"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Configuration for ivi-shell and ivi-extension
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " ivi-shell"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 0b6f13c..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,271 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "m3ulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston weston-laucher
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Mask the wayland related to GFX
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Mask the gstreamer recipe for MMP
-BBMASK .= "|meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3/recipes-multimedia/gstreamer"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 3c63eff..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,264 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "m3ulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Mask graphic Pkgs
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Enable pam distro feature
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 498c256..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,280 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "m3ulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Fix the Warning of gstreamer plugins
-RDEPENDS_gstreamer1.0-plugins-bad = "libwayland-egl"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index a96df78..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/m3ulcb/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,383 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "m3ulcb"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-
-# Enable Multimedia features
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " multimedia"
-
-# for gstreamer omx plugins
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-# for mmp test program
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mm-test"
-
-# for weston v4l2 renderer
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " v4l2-renderer"
-
-# OMX H263 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV263D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h263dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264D30SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264enc_lib"
-
-# OMX H265 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV265D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h265dec_lib"
-
-# OMX MPEG2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM2VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg2dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component MPEG4 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM4VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg4dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VC-1 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVC1D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vc1dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component DivXD Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVDVXD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " divxdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component RealVideo Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVRLVD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " rvdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component ALAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAALAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " alacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component FLAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAFLAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " flacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACD30SL41C),
-# AAC-LC 2ch decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAACMZ1SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_lib"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_mdw"
-
-# OMX aacPlus V2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAAPD30SL41C),
-# aacPlus V2 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAAPMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX MP3 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAMP3D30SL41C),
-# MP3 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADMP3MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX WMA decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAWMAD30SL41C),
-# WMA decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADWMAMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_mdw"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACE30SL41C)
-# AAC-LC encoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000AEAACMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_mdw"
-
-# OMX Dolby(R) Digital decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XADD5D30SL41C),
-# Dolby(R) Digital decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADDD5MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_mdw"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Encoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8enc_lib"
-
-# CMS Basic Color Management Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBCV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsbcm"
-
-# CMS CMM3 Backlight Control Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBLC0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsblc"
-
-# CMS VSP2 Dynamic Gamma Correction Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMDGV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsdgc"
-
-# ISDB-T DTV Software Package for Linux (RTM0RC0000TE020000SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dtv"
-
-# DVD Core-Middleware for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDC301SL41C)
-# DVD Encryption Library for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDF301SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd_encryption_library"
-
-# ADSP Driver for Linux (RCG3AHPDL4101ZDO)
-# ADSP Interface for Linux (RCG3AHIFL4101ZDP)
-# ADSP Framework (RCG3AHFWN0201ZDP)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " adsp"
-
-# AVB Software Package for Linux
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " avb"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Evaluation packages
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " use_eva_pkg"
-
-# Configuration for ivi-shell and ivi-extension
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " ivi-shell"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-ltp.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-ltp.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 9dd4d90..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-ltp.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,274 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "salvator-x"
-
-# This sets the SoC
-# H3: r8a7795, M3: r8a7796, M3N: r8a77965
-SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7795"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7796"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a77965"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks tools-sdk"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Mask graphic Pkgs
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-#MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
-
-# Additional packages for LTP
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-CORE_IMAGE_EXTRA_INSTALL_append = " ltp"
-IMAGE_INSTALL_append = " binutils elfutils file quota tar bzip2 sudo shadow glibc-utils net-tools procps cdrkit kernel-modules"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index ab2e815..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,280 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "salvator-x"
-
-# This sets the SoC
-# H3: r8a7795, M3: r8a7796, M3N: r8a77965
-SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7795"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7796"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a77965"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston weston-laucher
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Mask the wayland related to GFX
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Mask the gstreamer recipe for MMP
-BBMASK .= "|meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3/recipes-multimedia/gstreamer"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-#MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 29c0f5d..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/bsp/local.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,273 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "salvator-x"
-
-# This sets the SoC
-# H3: r8a7795, M3: r8a7796, M3N: r8a77965
-SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7795"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7796"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a77965"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Mask graphic Pkgs
-BBMASK .= "|gles-user-module|kernel-module-gles|wayland-kms|libgbm"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Enable pam distro feature
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-#MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index f25e34c..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/gfx-only/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,289 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "salvator-x"
-
-# This sets the SoC
-# H3: r8a7795, M3: r8a7796, M3N: r8a77965
-SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7795"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7796"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a77965"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-# Mask MMP recipes
-BBMASK .= "|kernel-module-uvcs-drv|omx-user-module"
-
-# Add for gstreamer plugins ugly
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-
-# Fix the Warning of gstreamer plugins
-RDEPENDS_gstreamer1.0-plugins-bad = "libwayland-egl"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-#MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 96ff8ad..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/mmp/bblayers.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-# POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/bblayers.conf
-# changes incompatibly
-POKY_BBLAYERS_CONF_VERSION = "2"
-
-BBPATH = "${TOPDIR}"
-BBFILES ?= ""
-
-BBLAYERS ?= " \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-poky \
- ${TOPDIR}/../poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-linaro/meta-optee \
- ${TOPDIR}/../meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
- "
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
deleted file mode 100644
index 085d911..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/conf/salvator-x/linaro-gcc/mmp/local-wayland.conf
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,395 +0,0 @@
-#
-# This file is your local configuration file and is where all local user settings
-# are placed. The comments in this file give some guide to the options a new user
-# to the system might want to change but pretty much any configuration option can
-# be set in this file. More adventurous users can look at local.conf.extended
-# which contains other examples of configuration which can be placed in this file
-# but new users likely won't need any of them initially.
-#
-# Lines starting with the '#' character are commented out and in some cases the
-# default values are provided as comments to show people example syntax. Enabling
-# the option is a question of removing the # character and making any change to the
-# variable as required.
-
-#
-# Machine Selection
-#
-# You need to select a specific machine to target the build with. There are a selection
-# of emulated machines available which can boot and run in the QEMU emulator:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuarm64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemumips64"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemuppc"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86"
-#MACHINE ?= "qemux86-64"
-#
-# There are also the following hardware board target machines included for
-# demonstration purposes:
-#
-#MACHINE ?= "beaglebone"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86"
-#MACHINE ?= "genericx86-64"
-#MACHINE ?= "mpc8315e-rdb"
-#MACHINE ?= "edgerouter"
-#
-# This sets the default machine to be qemux86 if no other machine is selected:
-MACHINE ??= "salvator-x"
-
-# This sets the SoC
-# H3: r8a7795, M3: r8a7796, M3N: r8a77965
-SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7795"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7796"
-#SOC_FAMILY = "r8a77965"
-
-#
-# Where to place downloads
-#
-# During a first build the system will download many different source code tarballs
-# from various upstream projects. This can take a while, particularly if your network
-# connection is slow. These are all stored in DL_DIR. When wiping and rebuilding you
-# can preserve this directory to speed up this part of subsequent builds. This directory
-# is safe to share between multiple builds on the same machine too.
-#
-# The default is a downloads directory under TOPDIR which is the build directory.
-#
-#DL_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/downloads"
-
-#
-# Where to place shared-state files
-#
-# BitBake has the capability to accelerate builds based on previously built output.
-# This is done using "shared state" files which can be thought of as cache objects
-# and this option determines where those files are placed.
-#
-# You can wipe out TMPDIR leaving this directory intact and the build would regenerate
-# from these files if no changes were made to the configuration. If changes were made
-# to the configuration, only shared state files where the state was still valid would
-# be used (done using checksums).
-#
-# The default is a sstate-cache directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#SSTATE_DIR ?= "${TOPDIR}/sstate-cache"
-
-#
-# Where to place the build output
-#
-# This option specifies where the bulk of the building work should be done and
-# where BitBake should place its temporary files and output. Keep in mind that
-# this includes the extraction and compilation of many applications and the toolchain
-# which can use Gigabytes of hard disk space.
-#
-# The default is a tmp directory under TOPDIR.
-#
-#TMPDIR = "${TOPDIR}/tmp"
-
-#
-# Default policy config
-#
-# The distribution setting controls which policy settings are used as defaults.
-# The default value is fine for general Yocto project use, at least initially.
-# Ultimately when creating custom policy, people will likely end up subclassing
-# these defaults.
-#
-DISTRO ?= "poky"
-# As an example of a subclass there is a "bleeding" edge policy configuration
-# where many versions are set to the absolute latest code from the upstream
-# source control systems. This is just mentioned here as an example, its not
-# useful to most new users.
-# DISTRO ?= "poky-bleeding"
-
-#
-# Package Management configuration
-#
-# This variable lists which packaging formats to enable. Multiple package backends
-# can be enabled at once and the first item listed in the variable will be used
-# to generate the root filesystems.
-# Options are:
-# - 'package_deb' for debian style deb files
-# - 'package_ipk' for ipk files are used by opkg (a debian style embedded package manager)
-# - 'package_rpm' for rpm style packages
-# E.g.: PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm package_deb package_ipk"
-# We default to rpm:
-PACKAGE_CLASSES ?= "package_rpm"
-
-#
-# SDK target architecture
-#
-# This variable specifies the architecture to build SDK items for and means
-# you can build the SDK packages for architectures other than the machine you are
-# running the build on (i.e. building i686 packages on an x86_64 host).
-# Supported values are i686 and x86_64
-#SDKMACHINE ?= "i686"
-
-#
-# Extra image configuration defaults
-#
-# The EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES variable allows extra packages to be added to the generated
-# images. Some of these options are added to certain image types automatically. The
-# variable can contain the following options:
-# "dbg-pkgs" - add -dbg packages for all installed packages
-# (adds symbol information for debugging/profiling)
-# "dev-pkgs" - add -dev packages for all installed packages
-# (useful if you want to develop against libs in the image)
-# "ptest-pkgs" - add -ptest packages for all ptest-enabled packages
-# (useful if you want to run the package test suites)
-# "tools-sdk" - add development tools (gcc, make, pkgconfig etc.)
-# "tools-debug" - add debugging tools (gdb, strace)
-# "eclipse-debug" - add Eclipse remote debugging support
-# "tools-profile" - add profiling tools (oprofile, lttng, valgrind)
-# "tools-testapps" - add useful testing tools (ts_print, aplay, arecord etc.)
-# "debug-tweaks" - make an image suitable for development
-# e.g. ssh root access has a blank password
-# There are other application targets that can be used here too, see
-# meta/classes/image.bbclass and meta/classes/core-image.bbclass for more details.
-# We default to enabling the debugging tweaks.
-EXTRA_IMAGE_FEATURES ?= "debug-tweaks"
-
-#
-# Additional image features
-#
-# The following is a list of additional classes to use when building images which
-# enable extra features. Some available options which can be included in this variable
-# are:
-# - 'buildstats' collect build statistics
-# - 'image-mklibs' to reduce shared library files size for an image
-# - 'image-prelink' in order to prelink the filesystem image
-# NOTE: if listing mklibs & prelink both, then make sure mklibs is before prelink
-# NOTE: mklibs also needs to be explicitly enabled for a given image, see local.conf.extended
-USER_CLASSES ?= "buildstats image-mklibs image-prelink"
-
-#
-# Runtime testing of images
-#
-# The build system can test booting virtual machine images under qemu (an emulator)
-# after any root filesystems are created and run tests against those images. To
-# enable this uncomment this line. See classes/testimage(-auto).bbclass for
-# further details.
-#TEST_IMAGE = "1"
-#
-# Interactive shell configuration
-#
-# Under certain circumstances the system may need input from you and to do this it
-# can launch an interactive shell. It needs to do this since the build is
-# multithreaded and needs to be able to handle the case where more than one parallel
-# process may require the user's attention. The default is iterate over the available
-# terminal types to find one that works.
-#
-# Examples of the occasions this may happen are when resolving patches which cannot
-# be applied, to use the devshell or the kernel menuconfig
-#
-# Supported values are auto, gnome, xfce, rxvt, screen, konsole (KDE 3.x only), none
-# Note: currently, Konsole support only works for KDE 3.x due to the way
-# newer Konsole versions behave
-#OE_TERMINAL = "auto"
-# By default disable interactive patch resolution (tasks will just fail instead):
-PATCHRESOLVE = "noop"
-
-#
-# Disk Space Monitoring during the build
-#
-# Monitor the disk space during the build. If there is less that 1GB of space or less
-# than 100K inodes in any key build location (TMPDIR, DL_DIR, SSTATE_DIR), gracefully
-# shutdown the build. If there is less that 100MB or 1K inodes, perform a hard abort
-# of the build. The reason for this is that running completely out of space can corrupt
-# files and damages the build in ways which may not be easily recoverable.
-# It's necesary to monitor /tmp, if there is no space left the build will fail
-# with very exotic errors.
-BB_DISKMON_DIRS ??= "\
- STOPTASKS,${TMPDIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${DL_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,${SSTATE_DIR},1G,100K \
- STOPTASKS,/tmp,100M,100K \
- ABORT,${TMPDIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${DL_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,${SSTATE_DIR},100M,1K \
- ABORT,/tmp,10M,1K"
-
-#
-# Shared-state files from other locations
-#
-# As mentioned above, shared state files are prebuilt cache data objects which can
-# used to accelerate build time. This variable can be used to configure the system
-# to search other mirror locations for these objects before it builds the data itself.
-#
-# This can be a filesystem directory, or a remote url such as http or ftp. These
-# would contain the sstate-cache results from previous builds (possibly from other
-# machines). This variable works like fetcher MIRRORS/PREMIRRORS and points to the
-# cache locations to check for the shared objects.
-# NOTE: if the mirror uses the same structure as SSTATE_DIR, you need to add PATH
-# at the end as shown in the examples below. This will be substituted with the
-# correct path within the directory structure.
-#SSTATE_MIRRORS ?= "\
-#file://.* http://someserver.tld/share/sstate/PATH;downloadfilename=PATH \n \
-#file://.* file:///some/local/dir/sstate/PATH"
-
-
-#
-# Qemu configuration
-#
-# By default qemu will build with a builtin VNC server where graphical output can be
-# seen. The two lines below enable the SDL backend too. By default libsdl-native will
-# be built, if you want to use your host's libSDL instead of the minimal libsdl built
-# by libsdl-native then uncomment the ASSUME_PROVIDED line below.
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-qemu-native = " sdl"
-PACKAGECONFIG_append_pn-nativesdk-qemu = " sdl"
-#ASSUME_PROVIDED += "libsdl-native"
-
-# CONF_VERSION is increased each time build/conf/ changes incompatibly and is used to
-# track the version of this file when it was generated. This can safely be ignored if
-# this doesn't mean anything to you.
-CONF_VERSION = "1"
-
-# Add systemd configuration
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-
-# Linaro GCC
-GCCVERSION = "linaro-7.2"
-
-# add the static lib to SDK toolchain
-SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-
-# Disable optee in meta-linaro layer
-BBMASK = "meta-linaro/meta-optee/recipes-security/optee"
-
-# Enable Gfx Pkgs
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " gsx"
-MULTI_PROVIDER_WHITELIST += "virtual/libgl virtual/egl virtual/libgles1 virtual/libgles2"
-
-# for Wayland/Weston
-DISTRO_FEATURES_NATIVESDK_append = " wayland"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " pam"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles1 = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgles2 = "gles-user-module"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/egl = "libegl"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/libgl = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_virtual/mesa = ""
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm = "libgbm"
-PREFERRED_PROVIDER_libgbm-dev = "libgbm"
-BBMASK .= "|mesa-gl"
-
-# Enable Multimedia features
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " multimedia"
-
-# for gstreamer omx plugins
-LICENSE_FLAGS_WHITELIST = "commercial"
-# for mmp test program
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mm-test"
-
-# for weston v4l2 renderer
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " v4l2-renderer"
-
-# OMX H263 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV263D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h263dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264D30SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264dec_lib"
-
-# OMX H264 encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV264E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h264enc_lib"
-
-# OMX H265 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XV265D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " h265dec_lib"
-
-# OMX MPEG2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM2VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg2dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component MPEG4 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVM4VD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mpeg4dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VC-1 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVC1D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vc1dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component DivXD Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVDVXD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " divxdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component RealVideo Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVRLVD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " rvdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component ALAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAALAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " alacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component FLAC Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAFLAD30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " flacdec_lib"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACD30SL41C),
-# AAC-LC 2ch decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAACMZ1SL41C)
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_lib"
-DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcdec_mdw"
-
-# OMX aacPlus V2 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAAPD30SL41C),
-# aacPlus V2 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADAAPMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aacpv2dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX MP3 decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAMP3D30SL41C),
-# MP3 decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADMP3MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " mp3dec_mdw"
-
-# OMX WMA decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAWMAD30SL41C),
-# WMA decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADWMAMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " wmadec_mdw"
-
-# OMX AAC-LC encoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XAAACE30SL41C)
-# AAC-LC encoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000AEAACMZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " aaclcenc_mdw"
-
-# OMX Dolby(R) Digital decoder library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XADD5D30SL41C),
-# Dolby(R) Digital decoder middleware library for Linux (RTM0AC0000ADDD5MZ1SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_lib"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dddec_mdw"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8dec_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP8 Encoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP8E30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp8enc_lib"
-
-# OMX Media Component VP9 Decoder Library for Linux (RTM0AC0000XVVP9D30SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " vp9dec_lib"
-
-# CMS Basic Color Management Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBCV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsbcm"
-
-# CMS CMM3 Backlight Control Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMBLC0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsblc"
-
-# CMS VSP2 Dynamic Gamma Correction Middleware for Linux (RTM0AC0000JRCMDGV0SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " cmsdgc"
-
-# ISDB-T DTV Software Package for Linux (RTM0RC0000TE020000SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dtv"
-
-# DVD Core-Middleware for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDC301SL41C)
-# DVD Encryption Library for Linux (RTM0RC0000XDVDF301SL41C)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd"
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " dvd_encryption_library"
-
-# ADSP Driver for Linux (RCG3AHPDL4101ZDO)
-# ADSP Interface for Linux (RCG3AHIFL4101ZDP)
-# ADSP Framework (RCG3AHFWN0201ZDP)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " adsp"
-
-# AVB Software Package for Linux
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " avb"
-
-# Linux ICCOM driver (RCG3ZLIDL4101ZNO)
-# Linux ICCOM library (RCG3ZLILL4101ZNO)
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " iccom"
-
-# Evaluation packages
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " use_eva_pkg"
-
-# Configuration for ivi-shell and ivi-extension
-#DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " ivi-shell"
-
-# Configuration for USB 3.0
-#MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
-
-# Add Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/patch/patch-for-linaro-gcc/0001-rcar-gen3-add-readme-for-building-with-Linaro-Gcc.patch b/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/patch/patch-for-linaro-gcc/0001-rcar-gen3-add-readme-for-building-with-Linaro-Gcc.patch
deleted file mode 100644
index 0ca1017..0000000
--- a/meta-rcar-gen3/docs/sample/patch/patch-for-linaro-gcc/0001-rcar-gen3-add-readme-for-building-with-Linaro-Gcc.patch
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,186 +0,0 @@
-From a217313adcfb331634c99be786b93516d38d943a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
-From: Thuy Tran <thuy.tran.xh@rvc.renesas.com>
-Date: Tue, 24 Oct 2017 14:39:24 +0700
-Subject: [PATCH] rcar-gen3: Add readme for building with Linaro Gcc
-
-This patch add the dependent layer information, build instructions
-for using Linaro Gcc.
-
-Updated on Dec, 2016:
-- Add H3ULCB
-- Change supported branch from jethro to krogoth
-- Change Maintainer information.
-
-Updated on Oct, 2017:
-- Add M3N
-- Add M3ULCB
-- Add meta-optee layer
-
-Updated on Feb, 2018:
-- Add E3
-- Add elinux.org reference
-
-Signed-off-by: Phong Man Tran <phong.tran.wh@rvc.renesas.com>
-Signed-off-by: Thao Nguyen <thao.nguyen.yb@rvc.renesas.com>
-Signed-off-by: Thuy Tran <thuy.tran.xh@rvc.renesas.com>
-Signed-off-by: Takamitsu Honda <takamitsu.honda.pv@renesas.com>
----
- meta-rcar-gen3/README.linaro | 127 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
- 1 file changed, 127 insertions(+)
- create mode 100644 meta-rcar-gen3/README.linaro
-
-diff --git a/meta-rcar-gen3/README.linaro b/meta-rcar-gen3/README.linaro
-new file mode 100644
-index 0000000..e1fe40a
---- /dev/null
-+++ b/meta-rcar-gen3/README.linaro
-@@ -0,0 +1,127 @@
-+meta-rcar-gen3
-+==============
-+
-+This layer provides that evaluation board is mounted ARM SoCs of Renesas
-+Electronics, called the R-Car Generation 3. Currently, this supports
-+board and the SoCs of the following:
-+ - Board: Salvator-X / SoC: R8A7795 (R-Car H3), R8A7796 (R-Car M3), R8A77965 (R-Car M3N)
-+ - Board: R-Car Starter Kit premier(H3ULCB) / SoC: R8A7795
-+ - Board: R-Car Starter Kit pro(M3ULCB) / SoC: R8A7796
-+ - Board: Ebisu / SoC: R8A77990 (R-Car E3)
-+
-+Patches
-+=======
-+
-+Please submit any patches for this layer to: takamitsu.honda.pv@renesas.com
-+Please see the MAINTAINERS file for more details.
-+
-+Dependencies
-+============
-+
-+This layer depends on:
-+
-+ URI: git://git.yoctoproject.org/poky
-+ layers: meta, meta-yocto, meta-yocto-bsp
-+ branch: rocko
-+
-+ URI: https://git.linaro.org/openembedded/meta-linaro.git
-+ layers: meta-linaro-toolchain, meta-optee
-+ branch: rocko
-+
-+ URI: git://git.openembedded.org/meta-openembedded
-+ layers: meta-oe
-+ branch: rocko
-+
-+Build Instructions
-+==================
-+
-+The following instructions require a Poky installation (or equivalent).
-+
-+Initialize a build using the 'oe-init-build-env' script in Poky. e.g.:
-+
-+ $ source poky/oe-init-build-env
-+
-+After that, initialized configure bblayers.conf by adding meta-rcar-gen3 layer. e.g.:
-+
-+ BBLAYERS ?= " \
-+ <path to layer>/poky/meta \
-+ <path to layer>/poky/meta-yocto \
-+ <path to layer>/poky/meta-yocto-bsp \
-+ <path to layer>/meta-renesas/meta-rcar-gen3 \
-+ <path to layer>/meta-linaro/meta-linaro-toolchain \
-+ <path to layer>/meta-linaro/meta-optee \
-+ <path to layer>/meta-openembedded/meta-oe \
-+ "
-+
-+To build a specific target BSP, configure the associated machine in local.conf:
-+
-+ MACHINE ??= "<supported board name>"
-+
-+Select the SOC
-+
-+ For H3: r8a7795
-+ SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7795"
-+
-+ For M3: r8a7796
-+ SOC_FAMILY = "r8a7796"
-+
-+ For M3N: r8a77965
-+ SOC_FAMILY = "r8a77965"
-+
-+ For E3: r8a77990
-+ SOC_FAMILY = "r8a77990"
-+ Already added in machine config: ebisu.conf
-+
-+Must Change the Gcc version in local.conf.
-+
-+ GCCVERSION="linaro-7.2"
-+
-+Configure for systemd init in local.conf:
-+
-+ DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " systemd"
-+ VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_init_manager = "systemd"
-+Configure for ivi-shell and ivi-extension
-+
-+ DISTRO_FEATURES_append = " ivi-shell"
-+
-+Configure for USB 3.0
-+
-+ MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " usb3"
-+
-+Enable tuning support for Capacity Aware migration Strategy (CAS)
-+
-+ MACHINE_FEATURES_append = " cas"
-+
-+Build the target file system image using bitbake:
-+
-+ $ bitbake core-image-minimal
-+
-+After completing the images for the target machine will be available in the output
-+directory 'tmp/deploy/images/<supported board name>'.
-+
-+Images generated:
-+ * Image (generic Linux Kernel binary image file)
-+ * Image-<machine name>.dtb (DTB for target machine)
-+ * core-image-minimal-<machine name>.tar.bz2 (rootfs tar+bzip2)
-+ * core-image-minimal-<machine name>.ext4 (rootfs ext4 format)
-+
-+Build Instructions for SDK
-+==========================
-+This may be changed in the near feature. These instructions are tentative.
-+
-+Should define the staticdev in SDK image feature for installing the static libs
-+to SDK in local.conf.
-+
-+ SDKIMAGE_FEATURES_append = " staticdev-pkgs"
-+
-+Use bitbake -c populate_sdk for generating the toolchain SDK:
-+For 64-bit target SDK (aarch64):
-+
-+ $ bitbake core-image-minimal -c populate_sdk
-+
-+The SDK can be found in the output directory 'tmp/deploy/sdk'
-+ * poky-glibc-x86_64-core-image-minimal-aarch64-toolchain-x.x.sh
-+
-+Usage of toolchain SDK:
-+Install the SDK to the default: /opt/poky/x.x
-+(x.x is YP version, i.e. 2.1.)
-+For 64-bit target SDK:
-+
-+ $ sh poky-glibc-x86_64-core-image-minimal-aarch64-toolchain-x.x.sh
-+
-+For 64-bit application use environment script in /opt/poky/x.x
-+
-+ $ source /opt/poky/x.x/environment-setup-aarch64-poky-linux
-+
-+ULCB Information
-+================
-+Refer to the following for more information of ULCB:
-+
-+ http://elinux.org/R-Car
-+
-+The information on building and running Yocto on R-Car Generation 3
-+=========================
-+Refer to the following for more information:
-+
-+ https://elinux.org/R-Car/Boards/Yocto-Gen3
---
-1.9.1
-