* BOARD_KERNEL_CMDLINE_FACTORY_BOOT can be set to
add kernel commandline items to the factory ramdisk,
such as fiq_debugger.console_enable=Y
Change-Id: Iee4060b96eaeecc517975c56342fd5445b1feabf
Signed-off-by: Nick Sanders <nsanders@google.com>
We'll need a special case to set device properties on the factory ramdisk
Change-Id: I146d5c503e8c97005caa1ab1dbaca7ee9ab30faf
Signed-off-by: Nick Sanders <nsanders@google.com>
With this change, if a module name is associated with multiple modules,
you can specify multiple install paths in
PRODUCT_FACTORY_RAMDISK_MODULES.
For example, if we have 2 modules named "foo", one is Java library and
the other is executable, then you can write:
PRODUCT_FACTORY_RAMDISK_MODULES += \
foo:system/bin/foo:system/framework/foo.jar
Or:
PRODUCT_FACTORY_RAMDISK_MODULES += \
foo:system/bin/foo \
foo:system/framework/foo.jar
The build system will choose the correct built files based on the
install paths.
Change-Id: I6efc72e8abd1e81710ada16731b6792989aefd85
Bug: 5769921
With this change, to build factory_ramdisk.img, set
PRODUCT_FACTORY_RAMDISK_MODULES in your product config.
PRODUCT_FACTORY_RAMDISK_MODULES consists of
"<module_name>:<install_path>" pairs.
<install_path> is relative to the root of the factory ramdisk output.
For example:
PRODUCT_FACTORY_RAMDISK_MODULES := \
toolbox:bin/toolbox adbd:sbin/adbd adb:bin/adb
On the other hand you can use PRODUCT_COPY_FILES to copy prebuilt files
to the factory ramdisk.
Or you can define modules that are specific for the factory ramdisk
(with LOCAL_MODULE_PATH pointing to TARGET_FACTORY_RAMDISK_OUT) and add
the module names to PRODUCT_PACKAGES.
Change-Id: I3778e3d091979261cb476628da1365f931e11f49