Operating systems that can't handle filenames containing anything but
uppercase letters don't like to see 'strange' characters in filenames
such as the file and directory names yocto-bsp uses as part of its
templating mechanism. To fix this, we essentially add another level
of metadata into the template files themselves rather than into their
names, and add a processing pass that internally gives us what we had
before. Specifically:
- strange characters in filenames are moved inside the files they
apply to, to the first line of the file prepended with '#
yocto-bsp-filename {{...}} filename | this'
- strange characters in directory names are moved inside a new file
of the same name but ending in .noinstall and with the first (and
only) line of the file prepended with '# yocto-bsp-dirname {{...}}
dirname'
If the new filename contained in the yocto-bsp-* tag is 'this', the
filename is the existing name of the file. For a dirname, this would
be the filename with .noinstall removed.
"Fixes" [YOCTO #5312].
(From meta-yocto rev: 3dad2decbd682713f717950fc39fa0f63f1b8c98)
Signed-off-by: Tom Zanussi <tom.zanussi@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>