Remove all mention of core-image-lsb

core-image-lsb was removed in 2019[1], so remove all of the  incredibly
obsolete references in the documentation.

[1] oe-core fb064356af615d67d85b65942103bf943d84d290

(From yocto-docs rev: 05029257d0c5f090d5c0a96c6244bfaf40615178)

Signed-off-by: Ross Burton <ross.burton@arm.com>
Reviewed-by: Quentin Schulz <quentin.schulz@cherry.de>
Signed-off-by: Antonin Godard <antonin.godard@bootlin.com>
(cherry picked from commit 062445a49919eff117b5478c1fb18d125c1f895c)
Signed-off-by: Antonin Godard <antonin.godard@bootlin.com>
Signed-off-by: Steve Sakoman <steve@sakoman.com>
This commit is contained in:
Ross Burton
2025-03-03 17:20:21 +00:00
committed by Steve Sakoman
parent d62bca9240
commit 88bcd3c2c1
3 changed files with 13 additions and 36 deletions

View File

@@ -51,27 +51,6 @@ Here is a list of supported recipes:
- ``core-image-full-cmdline``: A console-only image with more
full-featured Linux system functionality installed.
- ``core-image-lsb``: An image that conforms to the Linux Standard Base
(LSB) specification. This image requires a distribution configuration
that enables LSB compliance (e.g. ``poky-lsb``). If you build
``core-image-lsb`` without that configuration, the image will not be
LSB-compliant.
- ``core-image-lsb-dev``: A ``core-image-lsb`` image that is suitable
for development work using the host. The image includes headers and
libraries you can use in a host development environment. This image
requires a distribution configuration that enables LSB compliance
(e.g. ``poky-lsb``). If you build ``core-image-lsb-dev`` without that
configuration, the image will not be LSB-compliant.
- ``core-image-lsb-sdk``: A ``core-image-lsb`` that includes everything
in the cross-toolchain but also includes development headers and
libraries to form a complete standalone SDK. This image requires a
distribution configuration that enables LSB compliance (e.g.
``poky-lsb``). If you build ``core-image-lsb-sdk`` without that
configuration, the image will not be LSB-compliant. This image is
suitable for development using the target.
- ``core-image-minimal``: A small image just capable of allowing a
device to boot.