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Here is the meta-intel-edison that builds, tries to stay up to date. This is where development happens so expect forced pushes and breakage. For more stable reviewed code turn to the upstream.

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meta-intel-edison Layer

This is the Intel Edison image layer for the Intel Edison Development Platform. It builds the boot loader, kernel and root file system for the Intel Edison.

You will find more (stale) details in the README file in this directory

What is here

This is a fork of http://git.yoctoproject.org/cgit/cgit.cgi/meta-intel-edison/

Sources and Documentation

You can find our latest sources on edison-fw/meta-intel-edison. The documentation can be found in the /docs directory or for the latest (master) on Intel Edison Image Builder.

What's in the branches

Currently we have Intel's original (factory) firmware: original and created additional branches for each Yocto version:

  • dizzy-uptodate tracks origin/dizzy with 3.10.98 kernel. This branch pulls https://github.com/htot/meta-intel-iot-middleware.git branch dizzy-uptodate with fixes for paho-mqtt relocated and iotkit-comm-js no longer supported.
  • dizzy-latest tracks origin/master as much as possible with 3.10.98 kernel. This branch pulls https://github.com/htot/meta-intel-iot-middleware.git branch dizzy-latest with fixes for paho-mqtt relocated and iotkit-comm-js no longer supported + java support removed. This gives mraa 0.9.0, upm 0.4.1 and mosquitto 1.4.
  • dizzy-rt same as dizzy-latest but with real time kernel. Switches the kernel to the PREEMPT_RT 3.10.17-rt kernel.
  • morty experimental branch based on Yocto Morty, vanilla kernel 4.13.
  • morty-64 experimental branch based on Yocto Morty, vanilla kernel 4.13 (64 bit).
  • pyro64 experimental branch based on Yocto Pyro, vanilla kernel 4.13 (64 bit). This version actually builds u-boot with bitbake -R conf/u-boot.conf lib32-u-boot (wiki to be updated).
  • rocko32 and rocko64-acpi based on Yocto Rocko with kernel 4.16.
  • sumo32 and sumo64-acpi based on Yocto Sumo with kernel 4.18
  • thud (64 bit) based on Yocto Thud with kernel 5.2.
  • warrior (64 bit) based on Yocto Warrior with kernel 5.4. This image now allows building Debian Buster as well.
  • zeus (64 bit) based on Yocto Warrior with kernel 5.6.
  • dunfell (64 bit) based on Yocto Dunfell with kernel 5.11.
  • gatesgarth (64 bit) based on Yocto Gatesgarth with LTS kernel 5.10, PREEMPT_RT kernel 5.10 and current kernel 5.14
  • hardknott (64 bit) based on Yocto Hardknott with LTS kernel 5.15.25, PREEMPT_RT kernel 5.15.25-rt33 and testing kernel 5.16.0
  • honister (64 bit) based on Yocto Honister with LTS kernel 5.15.81, PREEMPT_RT kernel 5.15.79-rt54 and testing kernel 6.0.0
    • kirkstone (64 bit) based on Yocto Honister with LTS kernel v6.1.55, PREEMPT_RT kernel v6.1.54-rt15 and testing kernel 6.6.0

See https://wiki.yoctoproject.org/wiki/Releases on Yocto releases and support status.

What to choose

Yocto Morty will build on Ubuntu Artful (17.10) while Kirkstone (the Yocto project LTS version) builds on Ubuntu Jammy (22.10).

Generally sumo32 will give best results if you rely on MRAA and UPM. In all other cases, use the latest, kirkstone.

kirkstone has a 64 bit kernel because we can, but may sometimes be actually slower than the 32bit kernel. master has the same as kirkstone, but 32 bits.

About

Here is the meta-intel-edison that builds, tries to stay up to date. This is where development happens so expect forced pushes and breakage. For more stable reviewed code turn to the upstream.

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