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authorScott Rifenbark <scott.m.rifenbark@intel.com>2010-12-02 10:20:52 -0800
committerSaul Wold <Saul.Wold@intel.com>2010-12-10 22:01:25 -0800
commitfcbacff6837268e9ca94a9512029d826b44841b8 (patch)
tree2e78c0fd9a1808fd0b8a7c91adf5fdbd1e598c0e /documentation/poky-ref-manual/ref-bitbake.xml
parent252cecf3791cf8268b707c8b061bbe97a4524c86 (diff)
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documentation/poky-ref-manual: Changed spelling of bitbake to "BitBake" when used in text.
There is inconsistent use of how BitBake is spelled. Sometimes it uses no capitalization, just a leading "B", or "BitBake". I looked at the BitBake manual and it seems that "BitBake" is the correct way to refer to it. Signed-off-by: Scott Rifenbark <scott.m.rifenbark@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'documentation/poky-ref-manual/ref-bitbake.xml')
-rw-r--r--documentation/poky-ref-manual/ref-bitbake.xml16
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/documentation/poky-ref-manual/ref-bitbake.xml b/documentation/poky-ref-manual/ref-bitbake.xml
index ed6c8bc15b..6221a963d8 100644
--- a/documentation/poky-ref-manual/ref-bitbake.xml
+++ b/documentation/poky-ref-manual/ref-bitbake.xml
@@ -3,10 +3,10 @@
<appendix id='ref-bitbake'>
- <title>Reference: Bitbake</title>
+ <title>Reference: BitBake</title>
<para>
- Bitbake is a program written in Python that interprets the metadata
+ BitBake is a program written in Python that interprets the metadata
that makes up Poky. At some point, people wonder what actually happens
when you type <command>bitbake poky-image-sato</command>. This section
aims to give an overview of what happens behind the scenes from a
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
</para>
<para>
- It is worth noting that bitbake aims to be a generic "task" executor
+ It is worth noting that BitBake aims to be a generic "task" executor
capable of handling complex dependency relationships. As such it has no
real knowledge of what the tasks it is executing actually do. It just
considers a list of tasks with dependencies and handles metadata
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@
<para>
The first thing BitBake does is work out its configuration by
looking for a file called <filename>bitbake.conf</filename>.
- Bitbake searches through the <varname>BBPATH</varname> environment
+ BitBake searches through the <varname>BBPATH</varname> environment
variable looking for a <filename class="directory">conf/</filename>
directory containing a <filename>bitbake.conf</filename> file and
adds the first <filename>bitbake.conf</filename> file found in
@@ -83,12 +83,12 @@
<filename class="directory">meta-extras/</filename> can be included
too. Adding extra content to
<glossterm><link linkend='var-BBFILES'>BBFILES</link></glossterm> is best
- acheived through the use of Bitbake
+ acheived through the use of BitBake
<link linkend='usingpoky-changes-layers'>"layers"</link>.
</para>
<para>
- Bitbake parses each <filename class="extension">.bb</filename> file in
+ BitBake parses each <filename class="extension">.bb</filename> file in
<glossterm><link linkend='var-BBFILES'>BBFILES</link></glossterm> and
stores the values of various variables. In summary, for each
<filename class="extension">.bb</filename>
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@
<para>
Understanding how providers are chosen is complicated by the fact
- multiple versions might be present. Bitbake defaults to the highest
+ multiple versions might be present. BitBake defaults to the highest
version of a provider by default. Version comparisons are made using
the same method as Debian. The <glossterm><link
linkend='var-PREFERRED_VERSION'>PREFERRED_VERSION</link></glossterm>
@@ -316,7 +316,7 @@ Options:
<para>
As well as the containing the parsing and task/dependency handling
- code, bitbake also contains a set of "fetcher" modules which allow
+ code, BitBake also contains a set of "fetcher" modules which allow
fetching of source code from various types of sources. Example
sources might be from disk with the metadata, from websites, from
remote shell accounts or from SCM systems like cvs/subversion/git.