When you using a qemuppc target and sstate you might end up with
the problem:
qemu-system-ppc: error while loading shared libraries:
libfdt.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
The way you can force this to happen assuming you are using sstate is
as follows:
bitbake dtc-native
bitbake -c cleansstate qemu-native
bitbake qemu-native
bitbake -c clean dtc-native
Now go start qemu and it will fail. The solution is to always build
the dtc libraries since they are used and needed by the qemuppc
simulator.
Signed-off-by: Jason Wessel <jason.wessel@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Saul Wold <sgw@linux.intel.com>
HOMEPAGE = "http://qemu.org"
LICENSE = "GPLv2 & LGPLv2.1"
DEPENDS = "glib-2.0 zlib alsa-lib virtual/libx11 pixman"
-DEPENDS_class-native = "zlib-native alsa-lib-native glib-2.0-native pixman-native"
-DEPENDS_class-nativesdk = "nativesdk-zlib nativesdk-libsdl nativesdk-glib-2.0 nativesdk-pixman"
+DEPENDS_class-native = "zlib-native alsa-lib-native glib-2.0-native pixman-native dtc-native"
+DEPENDS_class-nativesdk = "nativesdk-zlib nativesdk-libsdl nativesdk-glib-2.0 nativesdk-pixman nativesdk-dtc"
RDEPENDS_${PN}_class-nativesdk = "nativesdk-libsdl"
require qemu-targets.inc