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authorScott Rifenbark <scott.m.rifenbark@intel.com>2012-09-14 13:04:42 -0700
committerRichard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>2012-09-24 16:36:05 +0100
commit7bff7a05c63b1c25b7488afcd64a4e83d491f0a7 (patch)
treed2d4955a5aca6c58e28ea011ec4f0e4419cc407a /documentation/yocto-project-qs
parent21ce4e481ee812aa17ba5a08b327d91fa241c4c5 (diff)
downloadopenembedded-core-contrib-7bff7a05c63b1c25b7488afcd64a4e83d491f0a7.tar.gz
documentation/yocto-project-qs/yocto-project-qs.xml: Minor corrections
A few minor corrections to fix some wordings. (From yocto-docs rev: de71001992150da685a70389e28313df609d6521) Signed-off-by: Scott Rifenbark <scott.m.rifenbark@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'documentation/yocto-project-qs')
-rw-r--r--documentation/yocto-project-qs/yocto-project-qs.xml20
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/documentation/yocto-project-qs/yocto-project-qs.xml b/documentation/yocto-project-qs/yocto-project-qs.xml
index 3fde5b7d08..9800338e90 100644
--- a/documentation/yocto-project-qs/yocto-project-qs.xml
+++ b/documentation/yocto-project-qs/yocto-project-qs.xml
@@ -537,9 +537,9 @@
Toolchains are available for 32-bit and 64-bit development systems from the
<filename>i686</filename> and <filename>x86-64</filename> directories, respectively.
Each type of development system supports five target architectures.
- The names of the tarballs are such that a string representing the host system appears
- first in the filename and then is immediately followed by a string representing
- the target architecture.
+ The names of the tarball installer scripts are such that a string representing the
+ host system appears first in the filename and then is immediately followed by a
+ string representing the target architecture.
</para>
<literallayout class='monospaced'>
@@ -735,7 +735,7 @@
pages.
</para>
</footnote>
- gives you a very fast description of how to use the Yocto Project to build images
+ gives you a minimal description of how to use the Yocto Project to build images
for a BeagleBoard xM starting from scratch.
The steps were performed on a 64-bit Ubuntu 10.04 system.
</para>
@@ -777,16 +777,18 @@
<title>Initializing the Build Environment</title>
<para>
- From the parent directory of local source directory, initialize your environment
- and provide a meaningful
+ From the parent directory your
+ <ulink url='&YOCTO_DOCS_DEV_URL;#source-directory'>source directory</ulink>,
+ initialize your environment and provide a meaningful
<ulink url='&YOCTO_DOCS_DEV_URL;#build-directory'>build directory</ulink>
name:
<literallayout class='monospaced'>
- $ source poky/oe-init-build-env mybuilds
+ $ source poky/&OE_INIT_FILE; mybuilds
</literallayout>
At this point, the <filename>mybuilds</filename> directory has been created for you
and it is now your current working directory.
- If you don't provide your own directory name it defaults to <filename>build</filename>.
+ If you don't provide your own directory name it defaults to <filename>build</filename>,
+ which is inside the source directory.
</para>
</section>
@@ -851,7 +853,7 @@
$ bitbake -c fetchall core-image-minimal
</literallayout>
This variation guarantees that you have all the sources for that BitBake target
- should you to disconnect from the net and want to do the build later offline.
+ should you disconnect from the net and want to do the build later offline.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>Specify to continue the build even if BitBake encounters an error.
By default, BitBake aborts the build when it encounters an error.