summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorScott Rifenbark <scott.m.rifenbark@intel.com>2011-11-04 14:22:05 -0700
committerRichard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>2011-11-08 16:26:32 +0000
commite8f5b17e86818ae6346ed40f0330cb19946ab626 (patch)
tree3fdf626dd43fa2b0648a2af7f61e402a13f31846
parent02e5570bc1435ce357624a209bc0a584da27b097 (diff)
downloadast2050-yocto-poky-e8f5b17e86818ae6346ed40f0330cb19946ab626.zip
ast2050-yocto-poky-e8f5b17e86818ae6346ed40f0330cb19946ab626.tar.gz
documentation/dev-manual/dev-manual-bsp-appendix.xml: Tom Zanussi edits.
Some wording changes to keep things accurate. Also inserted some "&nbsp" characters in some headings to force an extra space between normal font and courier font words. It appears the PDF version of the generated manual shoves these words together with no intervening space. Looks like hell. Reported by: Tom Zanussi (From yocto-docs rev: 5dcb9ae99f1752599fd56a276ccafd79a52334f8) Signed-off-by: Scott Rifenbark <scott.m.rifenbark@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
-rw-r--r--documentation/dev-manual/dev-manual-bsp-appendix.xml16
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/documentation/dev-manual/dev-manual-bsp-appendix.xml b/documentation/dev-manual/dev-manual-bsp-appendix.xml
index 987941c..eecca8e 100644
--- a/documentation/dev-manual/dev-manual-bsp-appendix.xml
+++ b/documentation/dev-manual/dev-manual-bsp-appendix.xml
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@
<para>
You need to have the base BSP layer on your development system.
Similar to the local Yocto Project files, you can get the BSP
- layer a couple of different ways:
+ layer in a couple of different ways:
download the BSP tarball and extract it, or set up a local Git repository that
has the Yocto Project BSP layers.
You should use the same method that you used to get the local Yocto Project files earlier.
@@ -282,7 +282,7 @@
</para>
<section id='changing-recipes-bsp'>
- <title>Changing <filename>recipes-bsp</filename></title>
+ <title>Changing&nbsp;&nbsp;<filename>recipes-bsp</filename></title>
<para>
First, let's look at <filename>recipes-bsp</filename>.
@@ -299,7 +299,7 @@
</section>
<section id='changing-recipes-graphics'>
- <title>Changing <filename>recipes-graphics</filename></title>
+ <title>Changing&nbsp;&nbsp;<filename>recipes-graphics</filename></title>
<para>
Now let's look at <filename>recipes-graphics</filename>.
@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@
</section>
<section id='changing-recipes-core'>
- <title>Changing <filename>recipes-core</filename></title>
+ <title>Changing&nbsp;&nbsp;<filename>recipes-core</filename></title>
<para>
Now let's look at changes in <filename>recipes-core</filename>.
@@ -349,7 +349,7 @@
</section>
<section id='changing-recipes-kernel'>
- <title>Changing <filename>recipes-kernel</filename></title>
+ <title>Changing&nbsp;&nbsp;<filename>recipes-kernel</filename></title>
<para>
Finally, let's look at <filename>recipes-kernel</filename> changes.
@@ -611,7 +611,7 @@
Finally, once you have an image, you can try booting it from a device
(e.g. a USB device).
To prepare a bootable USB device, insert a USB flash drive into your build system and
- copy the <filename>.hddimage</filename>, located in the
+ copy the <filename>.hddimg</filename> file, located in the
<filename>poky/build/tmp/deploy/images</filename>
directory after a successful build to the flash drive.
Assuming the USB flash drive takes device <filename>/dev/sdf</filename>,
@@ -659,8 +659,8 @@
contents with the contents of <filename>atom-pc.conf</filename> and replace
<filename>xorg.conf</filename> with <filename>atom-pc xorg.conf</filename>
in <filename>meta-yocto</filename> and see if it fares any better.
- In any case, following the previous steps should
- probably give you a buildable and bootable image.
+ In any case, following the previous steps will give you a buildable image that
+ will probably boot on most systems.
Getting things working like you want
them to for your hardware will normally require some amount of experimentation with
configuration settings.
OpenPOWER on IntegriCloud