Loading...
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 | # # For a description of the syntax of this configuration file, # see scripts/kbuild/config-language.txt. # mainmenu "BusyBox Configuration" config HAVE_DOT_CONFIG bool default y menu "Busybox Settings" menu "General Configuration" config DESKTOP bool "Enable options for full-blown desktop systems" default y help Enable options and features which are not essential. Select this only if you plan to use busybox on full-blown desktop machine with common Linux distro, not on an embedded box. config EXTRA_COMPAT bool "Provide compatible behavior for rare corner cases (bigger code)" default n help This option makes grep, sed etc handle rare corner cases (embedded NUL bytes and such). This makes code bigger and uses some GNU extensions in libc. You probably only need this option if you plan to run busybox on desktop. config INCLUDE_SUSv2 bool "Enable obsolete features removed before SUSv3" default y help This option will enable backwards compatibility with SuSv2, specifically, old-style numeric options ('command -1 <file>') will be supported in head, tail, and fold. (Note: should affect renice too.) config USE_PORTABLE_CODE bool "Avoid using GCC-specific code constructs" default n help Use this option if you are trying to compile busybox with compiler other than gcc. If you do use gcc, this option may needlessly increase code size. choice prompt "Buffer allocation policy" default FEATURE_BUFFERS_USE_MALLOC help There are 3 ways BusyBox can handle buffer allocations: - Use malloc. This costs code size for the call to xmalloc. - Put them on stack. For some very small machines with limited stack space, this can be deadly. For most folks, this works just fine. - Put them in BSS. This works beautifully for computers with a real MMU (and OS support), but wastes runtime RAM for uCLinux. This behavior was the only one available for BusyBox versions 0.48 and earlier. config FEATURE_BUFFERS_USE_MALLOC bool "Allocate with Malloc" config FEATURE_BUFFERS_GO_ON_STACK bool "Allocate on the Stack" config FEATURE_BUFFERS_GO_IN_BSS bool "Allocate in the .bss section" endchoice config SHOW_USAGE bool "Show terse applet usage messages" default y help All BusyBox applets will show help messages when invoked with wrong arguments. You can turn off printing these terse usage messages if you say no here. This will save you up to 7k. config FEATURE_VERBOSE_USAGE bool "Show verbose applet usage messages" default y depends on SHOW_USAGE help All BusyBox applets will show more verbose help messages when busybox is invoked with --help. This will add a lot of text to the busybox binary. In the default configuration, this will add about 13k, but it can add much more depending on your configuration. config FEATURE_COMPRESS_USAGE bool "Store applet usage messages in compressed form" default y depends on SHOW_USAGE help Store usage messages in compressed form, uncompress them on-the-fly when <applet> --help is called. If you have a really tiny busybox with few applets enabled (and bunzip2 isn't one of them), the overhead of the decompressor might be noticeable. Also, if you run executables directly from ROM and have very little memory, this might not be a win. Otherwise, you probably want this. config FEATURE_INSTALLER bool "Support --install [-s] to install applet links at runtime" default y help Enable 'busybox --install [-s]' support. This will allow you to use busybox at runtime to create hard links or symlinks for all the applets that are compiled into busybox. config LOCALE_SUPPORT bool "Enable locale support (system needs locale for this to work)" default n help Enable this if your system has locale support and you would like busybox to support locale settings. config UNICODE_SUPPORT bool "Support Unicode" default y help This makes various applets aware that one byte is not one character on screen. Busybox aims to eventually work correctly with Unicode displays. Any older encodings are not guaranteed to work. Probably by the time when busybox will be fully Unicode-clean, other encodings will be mainly of historic interest. config UNICODE_USING_LOCALE bool "Use libc routines for Unicode (else uses internal ones)" default n depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT && LOCALE_SUPPORT help With this option on, Unicode support is implemented using libc routines. Otherwise, internal implementation is used. Internal implementation is smaller. config FEATURE_CHECK_UNICODE_IN_ENV bool "Check $LANG environment variable" default n depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT && !UNICODE_USING_LOCALE help With this option on, Unicode support is activated only if LANG variable has the value of the form "xxxx.utf8" Otherwise, Unicode support will be always enabled and active. config SUBST_WCHAR int "Character code to substitute unprintable characters with" depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT default 63 help Typical values are 63 for '?' (works with any output device), 30 for ASCII substitute control code, 65533 (0xfffd) for Unicode replacement character. config LAST_SUPPORTED_WCHAR int "Range of supported Unicode characters" depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT default 767 help Any character with Unicode value bigger than this is assumed to be non-printable on output device. Many applets replace such chars with substitution character. The idea is that many valid printable Unicode chars are nevertheless are not displayed correctly. Think about combining charachers, double-wide hieroglyphs, obscure characters in dozens of ancient scripts... Many terminals, terminal emulators, xterms etc will fail to handle them correctly. Choose the smallest value which suits your needs. Typical values are: 126 - ASCII only 767 (0x2ff) - there are no combining chars in [0..767] range (the range includes Latin 1, Latin Ext. A and B), code is ~700 bytes smaller for this case. 4351 (0x10ff) - there are no double-wide chars in [0..4351] range, code is ~300 bytes smaller for this case. 12799 (0x31ff) - nearly all non-ideographic characters are available in [0..12799] range, including East Asian scripts like katakana, hiragana, hangul, bopomofo... 0 - off, any valid printable Unicode character will be printed. config UNICODE_COMBINING_WCHARS bool "Allow zero-width Unicode characters on output" default n depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT help With this option off, any Unicode char with width of 0 is substituted on output. config UNICODE_WIDE_WCHARS bool "Allow wide Unicode characters on output" default n depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT help With this option off, any Unicode char with width > 1 is substituted on output. config UNICODE_BIDI_SUPPORT bool "Bidirectional character-aware line input" default n depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT && !UNICODE_USING_LOCALE help With this option on, right-to-left Unicode characters are treated differently on input (e.g. cursor movement). config UNICODE_NEUTRAL_TABLE bool "In bidi input, support non-ASCII neutral chars too" default n depends on UNICODE_BIDI_SUPPORT help In most cases it's enough to treat only ASCII non-letters (i.e. punctuation, numbers and space) as characters with neutral directionality. With this option on, more extensive (and bigger) table of neutral chars will be used. config UNICODE_PRESERVE_BROKEN bool "Make it possible to enter sequences of chars which are not Unicode" default n depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT help With this option on, invalid UTF-8 bytes are not substituted with the selected substitution character. For example, this means that entering 'l', 's', ' ', 0xff, [Enter] at shell prompt will list file named 0xff (single char name with char value 255), not file named '?'. config LONG_OPTS bool "Support for --long-options" default y help Enable this if you want busybox applets to use the gnu --long-option style, in addition to single character -a -b -c style options. config FEATURE_DEVPTS bool "Use the devpts filesystem for Unix98 PTYs" default y help Enable if you want BusyBox to use Unix98 PTY support. If enabled, busybox will use /dev/ptmx for the master side of the pseudoterminal and /dev/pts/<number> for the slave side. Otherwise, BSD style /dev/ttyp<number> will be used. To use this option, you should have devpts mounted. config FEATURE_CLEAN_UP bool "Clean up all memory before exiting (usually not needed)" default n help As a size optimization, busybox normally exits without explicitly freeing dynamically allocated memory or closing files. This saves space since the OS will clean up for us, but it can confuse debuggers like valgrind, which report tons of memory and resource leaks. Don't enable this unless you have a really good reason to clean things up manually. config FEATURE_UTMP bool "Support utmp file" default y help The file /var/run/utmp is used to track who is currently logged in. With this option on, certain applets (getty, login, telnetd etc) will create and delete entries there. "who" applet requires this option. config FEATURE_WTMP bool "Support wtmp file" default y select FEATURE_UTMP help The file /var/run/wtmp is used to track when users have logged into and logged out of the system. With this option on, certain applets (getty, login, telnetd etc) will append new entries there. "last" applet requires this option. config FEATURE_PIDFILE bool "Support writing pidfiles" default y help This option makes some applets (e.g. crond, syslogd, inetd) write a pidfile in /var/run. Some applications rely on them. config FEATURE_SUID bool "Support for SUID/SGID handling" default y help With this option you can install the busybox binary belonging to root with the suid bit set, and it will automatically drop priviledges for applets that don't need root access. If you are really paranoid and don't want to do this, build two busybox binaries with different applets in them (and the appropriate symlinks pointing to each binary), and only set the suid bit on the one that needs it. The applets currently marked to need the suid bit are: crontab, dnsd, findfs, ipcrm, ipcs, login, passwd, ping, su, traceroute, vlock. config FEATURE_SUID_CONFIG bool "Runtime SUID/SGID configuration via /etc/busybox.conf" default y if FEATURE_SUID depends on FEATURE_SUID help Allow the SUID / SGID state of an applet to be determined at runtime by checking /etc/busybox.conf. (This is sort of a poor man's sudo.) The format of this file is as follows: <applet> = [Ssx-][Ssx-][x-] (<username>|<uid>).(<groupname>|<gid>) An example might help: [SUID] su = ssx root.0 # applet su can be run by anyone and runs with # euid=0/egid=0 su = ssx # exactly the same mount = sx- root.disk # applet mount can be run by root and members # of group disk and runs with euid=0 cp = --- # disable applet cp for everyone The file has to be owned by user root, group root and has to be writeable only by root: (chown 0.0 /etc/busybox.conf; chmod 600 /etc/busybox.conf) The busybox executable has to be owned by user root, group root and has to be setuid root for this to work: (chown 0.0 /bin/busybox; chmod 4755 /bin/busybox) Robert 'sandman' Griebl has more information here: <url: http://www.softforge.de/bb/suid.html >. config FEATURE_SUID_CONFIG_QUIET bool "Suppress warning message if /etc/busybox.conf is not readable" default y depends on FEATURE_SUID_CONFIG help /etc/busybox.conf should be readable by the user needing the SUID, check this option to avoid users to be notified about missing permissions. config SELINUX bool "Support NSA Security Enhanced Linux" default n help Enable support for SELinux in applets ls, ps, and id. Also provide the option of compiling in SELinux applets. If you do not have a complete SELinux userland installed, this stuff will not compile. Go visit http://www.nsa.gov/selinux/index.html to download the necessary stuff to allow busybox to compile with this option enabled. Specifially, libselinux 1.28 or better is directly required by busybox. If the installation is located in a non-standard directory, provide it by invoking make as follows: CFLAGS=-I<libselinux-include-path> \ LDFLAGS=-L<libselinux-lib-path> \ make Most people will leave this set to 'N'. config FEATURE_PREFER_APPLETS bool "exec prefers applets" default n help This is an experimental option which directs applets about to call 'exec' to try and find an applicable busybox applet before searching the PATH. This is typically done by exec'ing /proc/self/exe. This may affect shell, find -exec, xargs and similar applets. They will use applets even if /bin/<applet> -> busybox link is missing (or is not a link to busybox). However, this causes problems in chroot jails without mounted /proc and with ps/top (command name can be shown as 'exe' for applets started this way). config BUSYBOX_EXEC_PATH string "Path to BusyBox executable" default "/proc/self/exe" help When Busybox applets need to run other busybox applets, BusyBox sometimes needs to exec() itself. When the /proc filesystem is mounted, /proc/self/exe always points to the currently running executable. If you haven't got /proc, set this to wherever you want to run BusyBox from. # These are auto-selected by other options config FEATURE_SYSLOG bool #No description makes it a hidden option default n #help # This option is auto-selected when you select any applet which may # send its output to syslog. You do not need to select it manually. config FEATURE_HAVE_RPC bool #No description makes it a hidden option default n #help # This is automatically selected if any of enabled applets need it. # You do not need to select it manually. endmenu menu 'Build Options' config STATIC bool "Build BusyBox as a static binary (no shared libs)" default n help If you want to build a static BusyBox binary, which does not use or require any shared libraries, then enable this option. This can cause BusyBox to be considerably larger, so you should leave this option false unless you have a good reason (i.e. your target platform does not support shared libraries, or you are building an initrd which doesn't need anything but BusyBox, etc). Most people will leave this set to 'N'. config PIE bool "Build BusyBox as a position independent executable" default n depends on !STATIC help (TODO: what is it and why/when is it useful?) Most people will leave this set to 'N'. config NOMMU bool "Force NOMMU build" default n help Busybox tries to detect whether architecture it is being built against supports MMU or not. If this detection fails, or if you want to build NOMMU version of busybox for testing, you may force NOMMU build here. Most people will leave this set to 'N'. # PIE can be made to work with BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX, but currently # build system does not support that config BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX bool "Build shared libbusybox" default n depends on !FEATURE_PREFER_APPLETS && !PIE && !STATIC help Build a shared library libbusybox.so.N.N.N which contains all busybox code. This feature allows every applet to be built as a tiny separate executable. Enabling it for "one big busybox binary" approach serves no purpose and increases code size. You should almost certainly say "no" to this. ### config FEATURE_FULL_LIBBUSYBOX ### bool "Feature-complete libbusybox" ### default n if !FEATURE_SHARED_BUSYBOX ### depends on BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX ### help ### Build a libbusybox with the complete feature-set, disregarding ### the actually selected config. ### ### Normally, libbusybox will only contain the features which are ### used by busybox itself. If you plan to write a separate ### standalone application which uses libbusybox say 'Y'. ### ### Note: libbusybox is GPL, not LGPL, and exports no stable API that ### might act as a copyright barrier. We can and will modify the ### exported function set between releases (even minor version number ### changes), and happily break out-of-tree features. ### ### Say 'N' if in doubt. config FEATURE_INDIVIDUAL bool "Produce a binary for each applet, linked against libbusybox" default y depends on BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX help If your CPU architecture doesn't allow for sharing text/rodata sections of running binaries, but allows for runtime dynamic libraries, this option will allow you to reduce memory footprint when you have many different applets running at once. If your CPU architecture allows for sharing text/rodata, having single binary is more optimal. Each applet will be a tiny program, dynamically linked against libbusybox.so.N.N.N. You need to have a working dynamic linker. config FEATURE_SHARED_BUSYBOX bool "Produce additional busybox binary linked against libbusybox" default y depends on BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX help Build busybox, dynamically linked against libbusybox.so.N.N.N. You need to have a working dynamic linker. ### config BUILD_AT_ONCE ### bool "Compile all sources at once" ### default n ### help ### Normally each source-file is compiled with one invocation of ### the compiler. ### If you set this option, all sources are compiled at once. ### This gives the compiler more opportunities to optimize which can ### result in smaller and/or faster binaries. ### ### Setting this option will consume alot of memory, e.g. if you ### enable all applets with all features, gcc uses more than 300MB ### RAM during compilation of busybox. ### ### This option is most likely only beneficial for newer compilers ### such as gcc-4.1 and above. ### ### Say 'N' unless you know what you are doing. config LFS bool "Build with Large File Support (for accessing files > 2 GB)" default y select FDISK_SUPPORT_LARGE_DISKS help If you want to build BusyBox with large file support, then enable this option. This will have no effect if your kernel or your C library lacks large file support for large files. Some of the programs that can benefit from large file support include dd, gzip, cp, mount, tar, and many others. If you want to access files larger than 2 Gigabytes, enable this option. Otherwise, leave it set to 'N'. config CROSS_COMPILER_PREFIX string "Cross Compiler prefix" default "" help If you want to build BusyBox with a cross compiler, then you will need to set this to the cross-compiler prefix, for example, "i386-uclibc-". Note that CROSS_COMPILE environment variable or "make CROSS_COMPILE=xxx ..." will override this selection. Native builds leave this empty. config EXTRA_CFLAGS string "Additional CFLAGS" default "" help Additional CFLAGS to pass to the compiler verbatim. endmenu menu 'Debugging Options' config DEBUG bool "Build BusyBox with extra Debugging symbols" default n help Say Y here if you wish to examine BusyBox internals while applets are running. This increases the size of the binary considerably, and should only be used when doing development. If you are doing development and want to debug BusyBox, answer Y. Most people should answer N. config DEBUG_PESSIMIZE bool "Disable compiler optimizations" default n depends on DEBUG help The compiler's optimization of source code can eliminate and reorder code, resulting in an executable that's hard to understand when stepping through it with a debugger. This switches it off, resulting in a much bigger executable that more closely matches the source code. config WERROR bool "Abort compilation on any warning" default n help Selecting this will add -Werror to gcc command line. Most people should answer N. choice prompt "Additional debugging library" default NO_DEBUG_LIB help Using an additional debugging library will make BusyBox become considerable larger and will cause it to run more slowly. You should always leave this option disabled for production use. dmalloc support: ---------------- This enables compiling with dmalloc ( http://dmalloc.com/ ) which is an excellent public domain mem leak and malloc problem detector. To enable dmalloc, before running busybox you will want to properly set your environment, for example: export DMALLOC_OPTIONS=debug=0x34f47d83,inter=100,log=logfile The 'debug=' value is generated using the following command dmalloc -p log-stats -p log-non-free -p log-bad-space \ -p log-elapsed-time -p check-fence -p check-heap \ -p check-lists -p check-blank -p check-funcs -p realloc-copy \ -p allow-free-null Electric-fence support: ----------------------- This enables compiling with Electric-fence support. Electric fence is another very useful malloc debugging library which uses your computer's virtual memory hardware to detect illegal memory accesses. This support will make BusyBox be considerable larger and run slower, so you should leave this option disabled unless you are hunting a hard to find memory problem. config NO_DEBUG_LIB bool "None" config DMALLOC bool "Dmalloc" config EFENCE bool "Electric-fence" endchoice ### config PARSE ### bool "Uniform config file parser debugging applet: parse" endmenu menu 'Installation Options' config INSTALL_NO_USR bool "Don't use /usr" default n help Disable use of /usr. Don't activate this option if you don't know that you really want this behaviour. choice prompt "Applets links" default INSTALL_APPLET_SYMLINKS help Choose how you install applets links. config INSTALL_APPLET_SYMLINKS bool "as soft-links" help Install applets as soft-links to the busybox binary. This needs some free inodes on the filesystem, but might help with filesystem generators that can't cope with hard-links. config INSTALL_APPLET_HARDLINKS bool "as hard-links" help Install applets as hard-links to the busybox binary. This might count on a filesystem with few inodes. config INSTALL_APPLET_SCRIPT_WRAPPERS bool "as script wrappers" help Install applets as script wrappers that call the busybox binary. config INSTALL_APPLET_DONT bool "not installed" depends on FEATURE_INSTALLER || FEATURE_SH_STANDALONE || FEATURE_PREFER_APPLETS help Do not install applet links. Useful when using the -install feature or a standalone shell for rescue purposes. endchoice choice prompt "/bin/sh applet link" default INSTALL_SH_APPLET_SYMLINK depends on INSTALL_APPLET_SCRIPT_WRAPPERS help Choose how you install /bin/sh applet link. config INSTALL_SH_APPLET_SYMLINK bool "as soft-link" help Install /bin/sh applet as soft-link to the busybox binary. config INSTALL_SH_APPLET_HARDLINK bool "as hard-link" help Install /bin/sh applet as hard-link to the busybox binary. config INSTALL_SH_APPLET_SCRIPT_WRAPPER bool "as script wrapper" help Install /bin/sh applet as script wrapper that call the busybox binary. endchoice config PREFIX string "BusyBox installation prefix" default "./_install" help Define your directory to install BusyBox files/subdirs in. endmenu source libbb/Config.in endmenu comment "Applets" source archival/Config.in source coreutils/Config.in source console-tools/Config.in source debianutils/Config.in source editors/Config.in source findutils/Config.in source init/Config.in source loginutils/Config.in source e2fsprogs/Config.in source modutils/Config.in source util-linux/Config.in source miscutils/Config.in source networking/Config.in source printutils/Config.in source mailutils/Config.in source procps/Config.in source runit/Config.in source selinux/Config.in source shell/Config.in source sysklogd/Config.in |