TipsAndTricks/Tinfoil
NOTE: This is currently a draft, needs additional content & editing - PaulEggleton (talk) 18:22, 30 May 2017 (PDT) |
Writing simple utility scripts using Tinfoil
The tinfoil API, which was introduced to BitBake a number of years ago and underwent a major rework in the 2.3 (pyro) release, provides a way for scripts to interact with the metadata and call into BitBake/OpenEmbedded code. It's intended to be an easier-to-use wrapper around BitBake's internal code, hence the name. Some of the scripts that come with BitBake / OpenEmbedded make heavy use of it - bitbake-layers
, devtool
, recipetool
and oe-pkgdata-util
are examples.
Getting a variable value
Let's take a look at a simple example which reads a configuration-level variable value - TMPDIR
to be specific. This script needs to be placed in the scripts
subdirectory to work as-is, although you can modify the import code to make it work from anywhere:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 import os import sys # Set up sys.path to let us import tinfoil scripts_path = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)) lib_path = scripts_path + '/lib' sys.path.insert(0, lib_path) import scriptpath scriptpath.add_bitbake_lib_path() import bb.tinfoil with bb.tinfoil.Tinfoil() as tinfoil: tinfoil.prepare(config_only=True) tmpdir = tinfoil.config_data.getVar('TMPDIR') print('TMPDIR is "%s"' % tmpdir)
If you are querying multiple variable values this is much more efficient than calling out to "bitbake -e" and parsing its output, which was the old way of getting this kind of information.
Parsing recipes
Here's another example where we parse a couple of recipes:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 import os import sys # Set up sys.path to let us import tinfoil scripts_path = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)) lib_path = scripts_path + '/lib' sys.path.insert(0, lib_path) import scriptpath scriptpath.add_bitbake_lib_path() import bb.tinfoil with bb.tinfoil.Tinfoil() as tinfoil: tinfoil.prepare(config_only=False) # Parse the gzip recipe rd = tinfoil.parse_recipe('gzip') print('gzip SRC_URI = "%s"' % rd.getVar('SRC_URI')) # Parse the kernel recipe (whichever is selected in your configuration) rd = tinfoil.parse_recipe('virtual/kernel') print('Kernel recipe is %s' % rd.getVar('PN')) # Check if the kernel recipe inherits the kernel class - we'd expect True print('Kernel recipe inherits kernel class: %s' % bb.data.inherits_class('kernel', rd)) # Check if the kernel recipe inherits the cmake class - we'd expect False print('Kernel recipe inherits cmake class: %s' % bb.utils.inherits_class('cmake', rd))
Notice that in this second example we pass config_only=False
- this tells tinfoil to load the data for all recipes enabled in your configuration, just as bitbake does every time you run a normal build. You don't have to specify config_only=False
to parse a recipe file if you know the path to it, but it is required if you want to specify it simply by name and get the preferred version / provider.
The parse_recipe()
function will accept recipe names, or providers such as virtual/kernel
in the second call above. It returns a datastore (usually seen as d
within recipes and other python code within OE) which you can then use to get variable values, check inheritance etc.
Enumerating available recipes
#!/usr/bin/env python3 import os import sys # Set up sys.path to let us import tinfoil scripts_path = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)) lib_path = scripts_path + '/lib' sys.path.insert(0, lib_path) import scriptpath scriptpath.add_bitbake_lib_path() import bb.tinfoil with bb.tinfoil.Tinfoil() as tinfoil: tinfoil.prepare(config_only=False) for pn in tinfoil.cooker.recipecaches[""].pkg_pn: print(pn)
A few notes about pkg_pn
:
- It's actually a dictionary and so the keys aren't sorted alphabetically
- It contains every target, not just every recipe file - i.e. there will be variants created through
BBCLASSEXTEND
in there as well. - There's a corresponding
pkg_fn
dict that maps files toPN
values, but bear in mind this also containsvirtual:...
entries, again created throughBBCLASSEXTEND
. - This doesn't yet work with multiconfig - just the main configuration
Other useful functions
The bitbake/lib/bb/utils.py, meta/lib/oe/utils.py, and meta/lib/oe/recipeutils.py files all contain useful functions that will help you perform various tasks that might be interesting from a script that uses tinfoil.