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Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +00001<!--#include file="header.html" -->
2
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +00003<h3>Frequently Asked Questions</h3>
4
5This is a collection of some of the more frequently asked questions
6about BusyBox. Some of the questions even have answers. If you
7have additions to this FAQ document, we would love to add them,
8
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +00009<h2>General questions</h2>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +000010<ol>
Rob Landleyac4c92d2006-05-11 17:21:13 +000011<li><a href="#getting_started">How can I get started using BusyBox?</a></li>
12<li><a href="#configure">How do I configure busybox?</a></li>
13<li><a href="#build_system">How do I build a BusyBox-based system?</a></li>
14<li><a href="#kernel">Which Linux kernel versions are supported?</a></li>
15<li><a href="#arch">Which architectures does BusyBox run on?</a></li>
16<li><a href="#libc">Which C libraries are supported?</a></li>
17<li><a href="#commercial">Can I include BusyBox as part of the software on my device?</a></li>
18<li><a href="#external">Where can I find other small utilities since busybox does not include the features I want?</a></li></li>
19<li><a href="#demanding">I demand that you to add &lt;favorite feature&gt; right now! How come you don't answer all my questions on the mailing list instantly? I demand that you help me with all of my problems <em>Right Now</em>!</a></li>
20<li><a href="#helpme">I need help with BusyBox! What should I do?</a></li>
21<li><a href="#contracts">I need you to add &lt;favorite feature&gt;! Are the BusyBox developers willing to be paid in order to fix bugs or add in &lt;favorite feature&gt;? Are you willing to provide support contracts?</a></li>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +000022</ol>
Rob Landleyde7f9b72005-07-31 04:27:19 +000023
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +000024<h2>Troubleshooting</h2>
25<ol>
26<li><a href="#bugs">I think I found a bug in BusyBox! What should I do?!</a></li>
27<li><a href="#init">Busybox init isn't working!</a></li>
28<li><a href="#sed">I can't configure busybox on my system.</a></li>
29<li><a href="#job_control">Why do I keep getting "sh: can't access tty; job control turned off" errors? Why doesn't Control-C work within my shell?</a></li>
30</ol>
31
32<h2>Programming questions</h2>
33<ol>
34 <li><a href="#goals">What are the goals of busybox?</a></li>
35 <li><a href="#design">What is the design of busybox?</a></li>
36 <li><a href="#source">How is the source code organized?</a></li>
37 <ul>
38 <li><a href="#source_applets">The applet directories.</a></li>
39 <li><a href="#source_libbb">The busybox shared library (libbb)</a></li>
40 </ul>
41 <li><a href="#optimize">I want to make busybox even smaller, how do I go about it?</a></li>
42 <li><a href="#adding">Adding an applet to busybox</a></li>
43 <li><a href="#standards">What standards does busybox adhere to?</a></li>
44 <li><a href="#portability">Portability.</a></li>
45 <li><a href="#tips">Tips and tricks.</a></li>
46 <ul>
47 <li><a href="#tips_encrypted_passwords">Encrypted Passwords</a></li>
48 <li><a href="#tips_vfork">Fork and vfork</a></li>
49 <li><a href="#tips_short_read">Short reads and writes</a></li>
50 <li><a href="#tips_memory">Memory used by relocatable code, PIC, and static linking.</a></li>
51 <li><a href="#tips_kernel_headers">Including Linux kernel headers.</a></li>
52 </ul>
53 <li><a href="#who">Who are the BusyBox developers?</a></li>
54</ul>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +000055
56
57</ol>
58
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +000059<h1>General questions</h1>
60
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +000061<hr />
62<p>
63<h2><a name="getting_started">How can I get started using BusyBox?</a></h2>
64<p> If you just want to try out busybox without installing it, download the
Rob Landleyac4c92d2006-05-11 17:21:13 +000065 tarball, extract it, run "make defconfig", and then run "make".
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +000066</p>
67<p>
Rob Landleyac4c92d2006-05-11 17:21:13 +000068 This will create a busybox binary with almost all features enabled. To try
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +000069 out a busybox applet, type "./busybox [appletname] [options]", for
70 example "./busybox ls -l" or "./busybox cat LICENSE". Type "./busybox"
71 to see a command list, and "busybox appletname --help" to see a brief
72 usage message for a given applet.
73</p>
74<p>
75 BusyBox uses the name it was invoked under to determine which applet is
76 being invoked. (Try "mv busybox ls" and then "./ls -l".) Installing
77 busybox consists of creating symlinks (or hardlinks) to the busybox
Rob Landley3d283dd2005-11-03 22:11:00 +000078 binary for each applet in busybox, and making sure these links are in
79 the shell's command $PATH. The special applet name "busybox" (or with
80 any optional suffix, such as "busybox-static") uses the first argument
81 to determine which applet to run, as shown above.
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +000082</p>
83<p>
84 BusyBox also has a feature called the "standalone shell", where the busybox
85 shell runs any built-in applets before checking the command path. This
86 feature is also enabled by "make allyesconfig", and to try it out run
87 the command line "PATH= ./busybox ash". This will blank your command path
88 and run busybox as your command shell, so the only commands it can find
89 (without an explicit path such as /bin/ls) are the built-in busybox ones.
90 This is another good way to see what's built into busybox. (Note that the
91 standalone shell is dependent on the existence of /proc/self/exe, so before
92 using it in a chroot environment you must mount /proc.)
93</p>
Rob Landleyac4c92d2006-05-11 17:21:13 +000094
95<hr />
96<p>
97<h2><a name="configure">How do I configure busybox?</a></h2>
98<p> Busybox is configured similarly to the linux kernel. Create a default
99 configuration and then run "make menuconfig" to modify it. The end
100 result is a .config file that tells the busybox build process what features
101 to include. So instead of "./configure; make; make install" the equivalent
102 busybox build would be "make defconfig; make; make install".
103</p>
104
105<p> Busybox configured with all features enabled is a little under a megabyte
106 dynamically linked on x86. To create a smaller busybox, configure it with
107 fewer features. Individual busybox applets cost anywhere from a few
108 hundred bytes to tens of kilobytes. Disable unneeded applets to save,
109 space, using menuconfig.
110</p>
111
112<p>The most important busybox configurators are:</p>
113
114<ul>
115<li><p>make <b>defconfig</b> - Create the maximum "sane" configuration. This
116enables almost all features, minus things like debugging options and features
117that require changes to the rest of the system to work (such as selinux or
118devfs device names). Use this if you want to start from a full-featured
119busybox and remove features until it's small enough.</p></li>
120<li><p>make <b>allnoconfig</b> - Disable everything. This creates a tiny version
121of busybox that doesn't do anything. Start here if you know exactly what
122you want and would like to select only those features.</p></li>
123<li><p>make <b>menuconfig</b> - Interactively modify a .config file through a
124multi-level menu interface. Use this after one of the previous two.</p></li>
125</ul>
126
127<p>Some other configuration options are:</p>
128<ul>
129<li><p>make <b>oldconfig</b> - Update an old .config file for a newer version
130of busybox.</p></li>
131<li><p>make <b>allyesconfig</b> - Select absolutely everything. This creates
132a statically linked version of busybox full of debug code, with dependencies on
133selinux, using devfs names... This makes sure everything compiles. Whether
134or not the result would do anything useful is an open question.</p></li>
135<li><p>make <b>allbareconfig</b> - Select all applets but disable all sub-features
136within each applet. More build coverage testing.</p></li>
137<li><p>make <b>randconfig</b> - Create a random configuration for test purposes.</p></li>
138</ul>
139
140<p> Menuconfig modifies your .config file through an interactive menu where you can enable or disable
141 busybox features, and get help about each feature.
142
143
144
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000145<p>
146 To build a smaller busybox binary, run "make menuconfig" and disable the
147 features you don't need. (Or run "make allnoconfig" and then use
148 menuconfig to add just the features you need. Don't forget to recompile
149 with "make" once you've finished configuring.)
150</p>
151<hr/>
152<p/>
153<h2><a name="build_system">How do I build a BusyBox-based system?</a></h2>
154<p>
155 BusyBox is a package that replaces a dozen standard packages, but it is
156 not by itself a complete bootable system. Building an entire Linux
157 distribution from source is a bit beyond the scope of this FAQ, but it
158 understandably keeps cropping up on the mailing list, so here are some
159 pointers.
160</p>
161<p>
162 Start by learning how to strip a working system down to the bare essentials
163 needed to run one or two commands, so you know what it is you actually
164 need. An excellent practical place to do
165 this is the <a href="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Bootdisk-HOWTO/">Linux
166 BootDisk Howto</a>, or for a more theoretical approach try
167 <a href="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/From-PowerUp-To-Bash-Prompt-HOWTO.html">From
168 PowerUp to Bash Prompt</a>.
169</p>
170<p>
171 To learn how to build a working Linux system entirely from source code,
172 the place to go is the <a href="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org">Linux
173 From Scratch</a> project. They have an entire book of step-by-step
174 instructions you can
175 <a href="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/view/stable/">read online</a>
176 or
177 <a href="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/downloads/stable/">download</a>.
178 Be sure to check out the other sections of their main page, including
179 Beyond Linux From Scratch, Hardened Linux From Scratch, their Hints
180 directory, and their LiveCD project. (They also have mailing lists which
181 are better sources of answers to Linux-system building questions than
182 the busybox list.)
183</p>
184<p>
185 If you want an automated yet customizable system builder which produces
186 a BusyBox and uClibc based system, try
187 <a href="http://buildroot.uclibc.org">buildroot</a>, which is
Rob Landleya253e732006-02-14 08:29:48 +0000188 another project by the maintainer of the uClibc (Erik Andersen).
189 Download the tarball, extract it, unset CC, make.
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000190 For more instructions, see the website.
191</p>
192
Rob Landleyd48633f2006-03-09 18:03:21 +0000193<hr />
194<p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000195<h2><a name="kernel">Which Linux kernel versions are supported?</a></h2>
196<p>
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000197 Full functionality requires Linux 2.4.x or better. (Earlier versions may
198 still work, but are no longer regularly tested.) A large fraction of the
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000199 code should run on just about anything. While the current code is fairly
200 Linux specific, it should be fairly easy to port the majority of the code
201 to support, say, FreeBSD or Solaris, or Mac OS X, or even Windows (if you
202 are into that sort of thing).
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000203</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000204<hr />
205<p>
206<h2><a name="arch">Which architectures does BusyBox run on?</a></h2>
207<p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000208 BusyBox in general will build on any architecture supported by gcc.
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000209 Kernel module loading for 2.4 Linux kernels is currently
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000210 limited to ARM, CRIS, H8/300, x86, ia64, x86_64, m68k, MIPS, PowerPC,
211 S390, SH3/4/5, Sparc, v850e, and x86_64 for 2.4.x kernels.
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000212</p>
213<p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000214 With 2.6.x kernels, module loading support should work on all architectures.
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000215</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000216<hr />
217<p>
218<h2><a name="libc">Which C libraries are supported?</a></h2>
219<p>
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000220 On Linux, BusyBox releases are tested against uClibc (0.9.27 or later) and
221 glibc (2.2 or later). Both should provide full functionality with busybox,
222 and if you find a bug we want to hear about it.
223</p>
Mike Frysingerd505e3e2005-10-29 08:03:54 +0000224<p>
Rob Landley380ad122005-09-23 16:52:09 +0000225 Linux-libc5 is no longer maintained (and has no known advantages over
226 uClibc), dietlibc is known to have numerous unfixed bugs, and klibc is
227 missing too many features to build BusyBox. If you require a small C
228 library for Linux, the busybox developers recommend uClibc.
229</p>
230<p>
231 Some BusyBox applets have been built and run under a combination
232 of newlib and libgloss (see
233 <a href="http://www.busybox.net/lists/busybox/2005-March/013759.html">this thread</a>).
234 This is still experimental, but may be supported in a future release.
235</p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000236
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000237<hr />
238<p>
Mike Frysinger86097b32005-09-15 01:37:36 +0000239<h2><a name="commercial">Can I include BusyBox as part of the software on my device?</a></h2>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000240<p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000241
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000242<p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000243 Yes. As long as you <a href="http://busybox.net/license.html">fully comply
244 with the generous terms of the GPL BusyBox license</a> you can ship BusyBox
245 as part of the software on your device.
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000246</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000247
248<hr />
249<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000250<h2><a name="external">where can i find other small utilities since busybox
251 does not include the features i want?</a></h2>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000252<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000253 we maintain such a <a href="tinyutils.html">list</a> on this site!
254</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000255
256<hr />
257<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000258<h2><a name="demanding">I demand that you to add &lt;favorite feature&gt; right now! How come you don't answer all my questions on the mailing list instantly? I demand that you help me with all of my problems <em>Right Now</em>!</a></h2>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000259<p>
260
261 You have not paid us a single cent and yet you still have the product of
262 many years of our work. We are not your slaves! We work on BusyBox
263 because we find it useful and interesting. If you go off flaming us, we
264 will ignore you.
265
266
267<hr />
268<p>
269<h2><a name="helpme">I need help with BusyBox! What should I do?</a></h2>
270<p>
271
272 If you find that you need help with BusyBox, you can ask for help on the
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000273 BusyBox mailing list at busybox@busybox.net.</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000274
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000275<p> In addition to the mailing list, Erik Andersen (andersee), Manuel Nova
276 (mjn3), Rob Landley (landley), Mike Frysinger (SpanKY), Bernhard Fischer
277 (blindvt), and other long-time BusyBox developers are known to hang out
278 on the uClibc IRC channel: #uclibc on irc.freenode.net. There is a
279 <a href="http://ibot.Rikers.org/%23uclibc/">web archive of
280 daily logs of the #uclibc IRC channel</a> going back to 2002.
281</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000282
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000283<p>
Rob Landleya253e732006-02-14 08:29:48 +0000284 <b>Please do not send private email to Rob, Erik, Manuel, or the other
285 BusyBox contributors asking for private help unless you are planning on
286 paying for consulting services.</b>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000287</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000288
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000289<p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000290 When we answer questions on the BusyBox mailing list, it helps everyone
291 since people with similar problems in the future will be able to get help
292 by searching the mailing list archives. Private help is reserved as a paid
293 service. If you need to use private communication, or if you are serious
294 about getting timely assistance with BusyBox, you should seriously consider
295 paying for consulting services.
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000296</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000297
298<hr />
299<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000300<h2><a name="contracts">I need you to add &lt;favorite feature&gt;! Are the BusyBox developers willing to be paid in order to fix bugs or add in &lt;favorite feature&gt;? Are you willing to provide support contracts?</a></h2>
301</p>
302
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000303<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000304 Yes we are. The easy way to sponsor a new feature is to post an offer on
305 the mailing list to see who's interested. You can also email the project's
306 maintainer and ask them to recommend someone.
307</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000308
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000309<p> If you prefer to deal with an organization rather than an individual, Rob
310 Landley (the current BusyBox maintainer) works for
311 <a http://www.timesys.com>TimeSys</a>, and Eric Andersen (the previous
312 busybox maintainer and current uClibc maintainer) owns
313 <a href="http://codepoet-consulting.com/">CodePoet Consulting</a>. Both
314 companies offer support contracts and handle new development, and there
315 are plenty of other companies that do the same.
316</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000317
318
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000319
320
321<h1>Troubleshooting</h1>
322
323<hr />
324<p></p>
325<h2><a name="bugs">I think I found a bug in BusyBox! What should I do?</a></h2>
326<p></p>
327
328<p>
329 If you simply need help with using or configuring BusyBox, please submit a
330 detailed description of your problem to the BusyBox mailing list at <a
331 href="mailto:busybox@busybox.net"> busybox@busybox.net</a>.
332 Please do not send email to individual developers asking
333 for private help unless you are planning on paying for consulting services.
334 When we answer questions on the BusyBox mailing list, it helps everyone,
335 while private answers help only you...
336</p>
337
338<p>
339 The developers of BusyBox are busy people, and have only so much they can
340 keep in their brains at a time. As a result, bug reports and new feature
341 patches sometimes get lost when posted to the mailing list. To prevent
342 your bug report from getting lost, if you find a bug in BusyBox that isn't
343 immediately addressed, please use the <a
344 href="http://bugs.busybox.net/">BusyBox Bug and Patch Tracking System</a>
345 to submit a detailed explanation and we'll get to it as soon as we can.
346</p>
347
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000348<hr />
349<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000350<h2><a name="init">Busybox init isn't working!</a></h2>
Mike Frysinger77dbe732005-04-17 04:32:22 +0000351<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000352 Build a statically linked version of the following "hello world" program
353 with your cross compiler toolchain.
354</p>
355<pre>
356#include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
Mike Frysinger77dbe732005-04-17 04:32:22 +0000357
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000358int main(int argc, char *argv)
359{
360 printf("Hello world!\n");
361 sleep(999999999);
362}
363</pre>
364
365<p>
366 Now try to boot your device with an "init=" argument pointing to your
367 hello world program. Did you see the hello world message? Until you
368 do, don't bother messing with busybox init.
369</p>
370
371<p>
372 Once you've got it working statically linked, try getting it to work
373 dynamically linked. Then read the FAQ entry <a href="#build_system">How
374 do I build a BusyBox-based system?</a>
375</p>
Mike Frysinger77dbe732005-04-17 04:32:22 +0000376
377<hr />
378<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000379<h2><a name="sed">I can't configure busybox on my system.</a></h2>
380<p>
381 Configuring Busybox depends on a recent version of sed. Older
382 distributions (Red Hat 7.2, Debian 3.0) may not come with a
383 usable version. Luckily BusyBox can use its own sed to configure itself,
384 although this leads to a bit of a chicken and egg problem.
385 You can work around this by hand-configuring busybox to build with just
386 sed, then putting that sed in your path to configure the rest of busybox
387 with, like so:
388</p>
389
390<pre>
391 tar xvjf sources/busybox-x.x.x.tar.bz2
392 cd busybox-x.x.x
393 make allnoconfig
394 make include/bb_config.h
395 echo "CONFIG_SED=y" >> .config
396 echo "#undef ENABLE_SED" >> include/bb_config.h
397 echo "#define ENABLE_SED 1" >> include/bb_config.h
398 make
399 mv busybox sed
400 export PATH=`pwd`:"$PATH"
401</pre>
402
403<p>Then you can run "make defconfig" or "make menuconfig" normally.</p>
404
405<hr />
406<p>
407<h2><a name="job_control">Why do I keep getting "sh: can't access tty; job control turned off" errors? Why doesn't Control-C work within my shell?</a></h2>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000408<p>
409
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000410 Job control will be turned off since your shell can not obtain a controlling
411 terminal. This typically happens when you run your shell on /dev/console.
412 The kernel will not provide a controlling terminal on the /dev/console
413 device. Your should run your shell on a normal tty such as tty1 or ttyS0
414 and everything will work perfectly. If you <em>REALLY</em> want your shell
415 to run on /dev/console, then you can hack your kernel (if you are into that
416 sortof thing) by changing drivers/char/tty_io.c to change the lines where
417 it sets "noctty = 1;" to instead set it to "0". I recommend you instead
418 run your shell on a real console...
419</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000420
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000421<h1>Development</h1>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000422
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000423<h2><b><a name="goals">What are the goals of busybox?</a></b></h2>
424
425<p>Busybox aims to be the smallest and simplest correct implementation of the
426standard Linux command line tools. First and foremost, this means the
427smallest executable size we can manage. We also want to have the simplest
428and cleanest implementation we can manage, be <a href="#standards">standards
429compliant</a>, minimize run-time memory usage (heap and stack), run fast, and
430take over the world.</p>
431
432<h2><b><a name="design">What is the design of busybox?</a></b></h2>
433
434<p>Busybox is like a swiss army knife: one thing with many functions.
435The busybox executable can act like many different programs depending on
436the name used to invoke it. Normal practice is to create a bunch of symlinks
437pointing to the busybox binary, each of which triggers a different busybox
438function. (See <a href="FAQ.html#getting_started">getting started</a> in the
439FAQ for more information on usage, and <a href="BusyBox.html">the
440busybox documentation</a> for a list of symlink names and what they do.)
441
442<p>The "one binary to rule them all" approach is primarily for size reasons: a
443single multi-purpose executable is smaller then many small files could be.
444This way busybox only has one set of ELF headers, it can easily share code
445between different apps even when statically linked, it has better packing
446efficiency by avoding gaps between files or compression dictionary resets,
447and so on.</p>
448
449<p>Work is underway on new options such as "make standalone" to build separate
450binaries for each applet, and a "libbb.so" to make the busybox common code
451available as a shared library. Neither is ready yet at the time of this
452writing.</p>
453
454<a name="source"></a>
455
456<h2><a name="source_applets"><b>The applet directories</b></a></h2>
457
458<p>The directory "applets" contains the busybox startup code (applets.c and
459busybox.c), and several subdirectories containing the code for the individual
460applets.</p>
461
462<p>Busybox execution starts with the main() function in applets/busybox.c,
463which sets the global variable bb_applet_name to argv[0] and calls
464run_applet_by_name() in applets/applets.c. That uses the applets[] array
465(defined in include/busybox.h and filled out in include/applets.h) to
466transfer control to the appropriate APPLET_main() function (such as
467cat_main() or sed_main()). The individual applet takes it from there.</p>
468
469<p>This is why calling busybox under a different name triggers different
470functionality: main() looks up argv[0] in applets[] to get a function pointer
471to APPLET_main().</p>
472
473<p>Busybox applets may also be invoked through the multiplexor applet
474"busybox" (see busybox_main() in applets/busybox.c), and through the
475standalone shell (grep for STANDALONE_SHELL in applets/shell/*.c).
476See <a href="FAQ.html#getting_started">getting started</a> in the
477FAQ for more information on these alternate usage mechanisms, which are
478just different ways to reach the relevant APPLET_main() function.</p>
479
480<p>The applet subdirectories (archival, console-tools, coreutils,
481debianutils, e2fsprogs, editors, findutils, init, loginutils, miscutils,
482modutils, networking, procps, shell, sysklogd, and util-linux) correspond
483to the configuration sub-menus in menuconfig. Each subdirectory contains the
484code to implement the applets in that sub-menu, as well as a Config.in
485file defining that configuration sub-menu (with dependencies and help text
486for each applet), and the makefile segment (Makefile.in) for that
487subdirectory.</p>
488
489<p>The run-time --help is stored in usage_messages[], which is initialized at
490the start of applets/applets.c and gets its help text from usage.h. During the
491build this help text is also used to generate the BusyBox documentation (in
492html, txt, and man page formats) in the docs directory. See
493<a href="#adding">adding an applet to busybox</a> for more
494information.</p>
495
496<h2><a name="source_libbb"><b>libbb</b></a></h2>
497
498<p>Most non-setup code shared between busybox applets lives in the libbb
499directory. It's a mess that evolved over the years without much auditing
500or cleanup. For anybody looking for a great project to break into busybox
501development with, documenting libbb would be both incredibly useful and good
502experience.</p>
503
504<p>Common themes in libbb include allocation functions that test
505for failure and abort the program with an error message so the caller doesn't
506have to test the return value (xmalloc(), xstrdup(), etc), wrapped versions
507of open(), close(), read(), and write() that test for their own failures
508and/or retry automatically, linked list management functions (llist.c),
509command line argument parsing (getopt_ulflags.c), and a whole lot more.</p>
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000510
511<hr />
Rob Landleyc7a3e1b2005-07-31 04:25:00 +0000512<p>
513<h2><a name="optimize">I want to make busybox even smaller, how do I go about it?</a></h2>
514<p>
515 To conserve bytes it's good to know where they're being used, and the
516 size of the final executable isn't always a reliable indicator of
517 the size of the components (since various structures are rounded up,
518 so a small change may not even be visible by itself, but many small
519 savings add up).
520</p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000521
522<p> The busybox Makefile builds two versions of busybox, one of which
523 (busybox_unstripped) has extra information that various analysis tools
524 can use. (This has nothing to do with CONFIG_DEBUG, leave that off
525 when trying to optimize for size.)
526</p>
527
528<p> The <b>"make bloatcheck"</b> option uses Matt Mackall's bloat-o-meter
529 script to compare two versions of busybox (busybox_unstripped vs
530 busybox_old), and report which symbols changed size and by how much.
531 To use it, first build a base version, rename busybox_unstripped to
532 busybox_old, and then build a new version with your changes and run
533 "make bloatcheck" to see the size differences from the old version.
534</p>
Rob Landleyc7a3e1b2005-07-31 04:25:00 +0000535<p>
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000536 The first line of output has totals: how many symbols were added or
537 removed, how many symbols grew or shrank, the number of bytes added
538 and number of bytes removed by these changes, and finally the total
539 number of bytes difference between the two files. The remaining
540 lines show each individual symbol, the old and new sizes, and the
541 increase or decrease in size (which results are sorted by).
542</p>
543<p>
544 The <b>"make sizes"</b> option produces raw symbol size information for
545 busybox_unstripped. This is the output from the "nm --size-sort"
546 command (see "man nm" for more information), and is the information
547 bloat-o-meter parses to produce the comparison report above. For
548 defconfig, this is a good way to find the largest symbols in the tree
549 (which is a good place to start when trying to shrink the code). To
550 take a closer look at individual applets, configure busybox with just
551 one applet (run "make allnoconfig" and then switch on a single applet
552 with menuconfig), and then use "make sizes" to see the size of that
553 applet's components.
554</p>
555<p>
556 The "showasm" command (in the scripts directory) produces an assembly
557 dump of a function, providing a closer look at what changed. Try
558 "scripts/showasm busybox_unstripped" to list available symbols, and
559 "scripts/showasm busybox_unstripped symbolname" to see the assembly
560 for a sepecific symbol.
Rob Landleyc7a3e1b2005-07-31 04:25:00 +0000561</p>
562<hr />
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +0000563
Rob Landleyc7a3e1b2005-07-31 04:25:00 +0000564
565
Rob Landleyb73d2bf2006-05-11 15:00:32 +0000566<h2><a name="adding"><b>Adding an applet to busybox</b></a></h2>
567
568<p>To add a new applet to busybox, first pick a name for the applet and
569a corresponding CONFIG_NAME. Then do this:</p>
570
571<ul>
572<li>Figure out where in the busybox source tree your applet best fits,
573and put your source code there. Be sure to use APPLET_main() instead
574of main(), where APPLET is the name of your applet.</li>
575
576<li>Add your applet to the relevant Config.in file (which file you add
577it to determines where it shows up in "make menuconfig"). This uses
578the same general format as the linux kernel's configuration system.</li>
579
580<li>Add your applet to the relevant Makefile.in file (in the same
581directory as the Config.in you chose), using the existing entries as a
582template and the same CONFIG symbol as you used for Config.in. (Don't
583forget "needlibm" or "needcrypt" if your applet needs libm or
584libcrypt.)</li>
585
586<li>Add your applet to "include/applets.h", using one of the existing
587entries as a template. (Note: this is in alphabetical order. Applets
588are found via binary search, and if you add an applet out of order it
589won't work.)</li>
590
591<li>Add your applet's runtime help text to "include/usage.h". You need
592at least appname_trivial_usage (the minimal help text, always included
593in the busybox binary when this applet is enabled) and appname_full_usage
594(extra help text included in the busybox binary with
595CONFIG_FEATURE_VERBOSE_USAGE is enabled), or it won't compile.
596The other two help entry types (appname_example_usage and
597appname_notes_usage) are optional. They don't take up space in the binary,
598but instead show up in the generated documentation (BusyBox.html,
599BusyBox.txt, and the man page BusyBox.1).</li>
600
601<li>Run menuconfig, switch your applet on, compile, test, and fix the
602bugs. Be sure to try both "allyesconfig" and "allnoconfig" (and
603"allbareconfig" if relevant).</li>
604
605</ul>
606
607<h2><a name="standards">What standards does busybox adhere to?</a></h2>
608
609<p>The standard we're paying attention to is the "Shell and Utilities"
610portion of the <a href="http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/">Open
611Group Base Standards</a> (also known as the Single Unix Specification version
6123 or SUSv3). Note that paying attention isn't necessarily the same thing as
613following it.</p>
614
615<p>SUSv3 doesn't even mention things like init, mount, tar, or losetup, nor
616commonly used options like echo's '-e' and '-n', or sed's '-i'. Busybox is
617driven by what real users actually need, not the fact the standard believes
618we should implement ed or sccs. For size reasons, we're unlikely to include
619much internationalization support beyond UTF-8, and on top of all that, our
620configuration menu lets developers chop out features to produce smaller but
621very non-standard utilities.</p>
622
623<p>Also, Busybox is aimed primarily at Linux. Unix standards are interesting
624because Linux tries to adhere to them, but portability to dozens of platforms
625is only interesting in terms of offering a restricted feature set that works
626everywhere, not growing dozens of platform-specific extensions. Busybox
627should be portable to all hardware platforms Linux supports, and any other
628similar operating systems that are easy to do and won't require much
629maintenance.</p>
630
631<p>In practice, standards compliance tends to be a clean-up step once an
632applet is otherwise finished. When polishing and testing a busybox applet,
633we ensure we have at least the option of full standards compliance, or else
634document where we (intentionally) fall short.</p>
635
636<h2><a name="portability">Portability.</a></h2>
637
638<p>Busybox is a Linux project, but that doesn't mean we don't have to worry
639about portability. First of all, there are different hardware platforms,
640different C library implementations, different versions of the kernel and
641build toolchain... The file "include/platform.h" exists to centralize and
642encapsulate various platform-specific things in one place, so most busybox
643code doesn't have to care where it's running.</p>
644
645<p>To start with, Linux runs on dozens of hardware platforms. We try to test
646each release on x86, x86-64, arm, power pc, and mips. (Since qemu can handle
647all of these, this isn't that hard.) This means we have to care about a number
648of portability issues like endianness, word size, and alignment, all of which
649belong in platform.h. That header handles conditional #includes and gives
650us macros we can use in the rest of our code. At some point in the future
651we might grow a platform.c, possibly even a platform subdirectory. As long
652as the applets themselves don't have to care.</p>
653
654<p>On a related note, we made the "default signedness of char varies" problem
655go away by feeding the compiler -funsigned-char. This gives us consistent
656behavior on all platforms, and defaults to 8-bit clean text processing (which
657gets us halfway to UTF-8 support). NOMMU support is less easily separated
658(see the tips section later in this document), but we're working on it.</p>
659
660<p>Another type of portability is build environments: we unapologetically use
661a number of gcc and glibc extensions (as does the Linux kernel), but these have
662been picked up by packages like uClibc, TCC, and Intel's C Compiler. As for
663gcc, we take advantage of newer compiler optimizations to get the smallest
664possible size, but we also regression test against an older build environment
665using the Red Hat 9 image at "http://busybox.net/downloads/qemu". This has a
6662.4 kernel, gcc 3.2, make 3.79.1, and glibc 2.3, and is the oldest
667build/deployment environment we still put any effort into maintaining. (If
668anyone takes an interest in older kernels you're welcome to submit patches,
669but the effort would probably be better spent
670<a href="http://www.selenic.com/linux-tiny/">trimming
671down the 2.6 kernel</a>.) Older gcc versions than that are uninteresting since
672we now use c99 features, although
673<a href="http://fabrice.bellard.free.fr/tcc/">tcc</a> might be worth a
674look.</p>
675
676<p>We also test busybox against the current release of uClibc. Older versions
677of uClibc aren't very interesting (they were buggy, and uClibc wasn't really
678usable as a general-purpose C library before version 0.9.26 anyway).</p>
679
680<p>Other unix implementations are mostly uninteresting, since Linux binaries
681have become the new standard for portable Unix programs. Specifically,
682the ubiquity of Linux was cited as the main reason the Intel Binary
683Compatability Standard 2 died, by the standards group organized to name a
684successor to ibcs2: <a href="http://www.telly.org/86open/">the 86open
685project</a>. That project disbanded in 1999 with the endorsement of an
686existing standard: Linux ELF binaries. Since then, the major players at the
687time (such as <a
688href=http://www-03.ibm.com/servers/aix/products/aixos/linux/index.html>AIX</a>, <a
689href=http://www.sun.com/software/solaris/ds/linux_interop.jsp#3>Solaris</a>, and
690<a href=http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/bsd/2000/03/17/linuxapps.html>FreeBSD</a>)
691have all either grown Linux support or folded.</p>
692
693<p>The major exceptions are newcomer MacOS X, some embedded environments
694(such as newlib+libgloss) which provide a posix environment but not a full
695Linux environment, and environments like Cygwin that provide only partial Linux
696emulation. Also, some embedded Linux systems run a Linux kernel but amputate
697things like the /proc directory to save space.</p>
698
699<p>Supporting these systems is largely a question of providing a clean subset
700of BusyBox's functionality -- whichever applets can easily be made to
701work in that environment. Annotating the configuration system to
702indicate which applets require which prerequisites (such as procfs) is
703also welcome. Other efforts to support these systems (swapping #include
704files to build in different environments, adding adapter code to platform.h,
705adding more extensive special-case supporting infrastructure such as mount's
706legacy mtab support) are handled on a case-by-case basis. Support that can be
707cleanly hidden in platform.h is reasonably attractive, and failing that
708support that can be cleanly separated into a separate conditionally compiled
709file is at least worth a look. Special-case code in the body of an applet is
710something we're trying to avoid.</p>
711
712<h2><a name="tips" />Programming tips and tricks.</a></h2>
713
714<p>Various things busybox uses that aren't particularly well documented
715elsewhere.</p>
716
717<h2><a name="tips_encrypted_passwords">Encrypted Passwords</a></h2>
718
719<p>Password fields in /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow are in a special format.
720If the first character isn't '$', then it's an old DES style password. If
721the first character is '$' then the password is actually three fields
722separated by '$' characters:</p>
723<pre>
724 <b>$type$salt$encrypted_password</b>
725</pre>
726
727<p>The "type" indicates which encryption algorithm to use: 1 for MD5 and 2 for SHA1.</p>
728
729<p>The "salt" is a bunch of ramdom characters (generally 8) the encryption
730algorithm uses to perturb the password in a known and reproducible way (such
731as by appending the random data to the unencrypted password, or combining
732them with exclusive or). Salt is randomly generated when setting a password,
733and then the same salt value is re-used when checking the password. (Salt is
734thus stored unencrypted.)</p>
735
736<p>The advantage of using salt is that the same cleartext password encrypted
737with a different salt value produces a different encrypted value.
738If each encrypted password uses a different salt value, an attacker is forced
739to do the cryptographic math all over again for each password they want to
740check. Without salt, they could simply produce a big dictionary of commonly
741used passwords ahead of time, and look up each password in a stolen password
742file to see if it's a known value. (Even if there are billions of possible
743passwords in the dictionary, checking each one is just a binary search against
744a file only a few gigabytes long.) With salt they can't even tell if two
745different users share the same password without guessing what that password
746is and decrypting it. They also can't precompute the attack dictionary for
747a specific password until they know what the salt value is.</p>
748
749<p>The third field is the encrypted password (plus the salt). For md5 this
750is 22 bytes.</p>
751
752<p>The busybox function to handle all this is pw_encrypt(clear, salt) in
753"libbb/pw_encrypt.c". The first argument is the clear text password to be
754encrypted, and the second is a string in "$type$salt$password" format, from
755which the "type" and "salt" fields will be extracted to produce an encrypted
756value. (Only the first two fields are needed, the third $ is equivalent to
757the end of the string.) The return value is an encrypted password in
758/etc/passwd format, with all three $ separated fields. It's stored in
759a static buffer, 128 bytes long.</p>
760
761<p>So when checking an existing password, if pw_encrypt(text,
762old_encrypted_password) returns a string that compares identical to
763old_encrypted_password, you've got the right password. When setting a new
764password, generate a random 8 character salt string, put it in the right
765format with sprintf(buffer, "$%c$%s", type, salt), and feed buffer as the
766second argument to pw_encrypt(text,buffer).</p>
767
768<h2><a name="tips_vfork">Fork and vfork</a></h2>
769
770<p>On systems that haven't got a Memory Management Unit, fork() is unreasonably
771expensive to implement (and sometimes even impossible), so a less capable
772function called vfork() is used instead. (Using vfork() on a system with an
773MMU is like pounding a nail with a wrench. Not the best tool for the job, but
774it works.)</p>
775
776<p>Busybox hides the difference between fork() and vfork() in
777libbb/bb_fork_exec.c. If you ever want to fork and exec, use bb_fork_exec()
778(which returns a pid and takes the same arguments as execve(), although in
779this case envp can be NULL) and don't worry about it. This description is
780here in case you want to know why that does what it does.</p>
781
782<p>Implementing fork() depends on having a Memory Management Unit. With an
783MMU then you can simply set up a second set of page tables and share the
784physical memory via copy-on-write. So a fork() followed quickly by exec()
785only copies a few pages of the parent's memory, just the ones it changes
786before freeing them.</p>
787
788<p>With a very primitive MMU (using a base pointer plus length instead of page
789tables, which can provide virtual addresses and protect processes from each
790other, but no copy on write) you can still implement fork. But it's
791unreasonably expensive, because you have to copy all the parent process'
792memory into the new process (which could easily be several megabytes per fork).
793And you have to do this even though that memory gets freed again as soon as the
794exec happens. (This is not just slow and a waste of space but causes memory
795usage spikes that can easily cause the system to run out of memory.)</p>
796
797<p>Without even a primitive MMU, you have no virtual addresses. Every process
798can reach out and touch any other process' memory, because all pointers are to
799physical addresses with no protection. Even if you copy a process' memory to
800new physical addresses, all of its pointers point to the old objects in the
801old process. (Searching through the new copy's memory for pointers and
802redirect them to the new locations is not an easy problem.)</p>
803
804<p>So with a primitive or missing MMU, fork() is just not a good idea.</p>
805
806<p>In theory, vfork() is just a fork() that writeably shares the heap and stack
807rather than copying it (so what one process writes the other one sees). In
808practice, vfork() has to suspend the parent process until the child does exec,
809at which point the parent wakes up and resumes by returning from the call to
810vfork(). All modern kernel/libc combinations implement vfork() to put the
811parent to sleep until the child does its exec. There's just no other way to
812make it work: the parent has to know the child has done its exec() or exit()
813before it's safe to return from the function it's in, so it has to block
814until that happens. In fact without suspending the parent there's no way to
815even store separate copies of the return value (the pid) from the vfork() call
816itself: both assignments write into the same memory location.</p>
817
818<p>One way to understand (and in fact implement) vfork() is this: imagine
819the parent does a setjmp and then continues on (pretending to be the child)
820until the exec() comes around, then the _exec_ does the actual fork, and the
821parent does a longjmp back to the original vfork call and continues on from
822there. (It thus becomes obvious why the child can't return, or modify
823local variables it doesn't want the parent to see changed when it resumes.)
824
825<p>Note a common mistake: the need for vfork doesn't mean you can't have two
826processes running at the same time. It means you can't have two processes
827sharing the same memory without stomping all over each other. As soon as
828the child calls exec(), the parent resumes.</p>
829
830<p>If the child's attempt to call exec() fails, the child should call _exit()
831rather than a normal exit(). This avoids any atexit() code that might confuse
832the parent. (The parent should never call _exit(), only a vforked child that
833failed to exec.)</p>
834
835<p>(Now in theory, a nommu system could just copy the _stack_ when it forks
836(which presumably is much shorter than the heap), and leave the heap shared.
837Even with no MMU at all
838In practice, you've just wound up in a multi-threaded situation and you can't
839do a malloc() or free() on your heap without freeing the other process' memory
840(and if you don't have the proper locking for being threaded, corrupting the
841heap if both of you try to do it at the same time and wind up stomping on
842each other while traversing the free memory lists). The thing about vfork is
843that it's a big red flag warning "there be dragons here" rather than
844something subtle and thus even more dangerous.)</p>
845
846<h2><a name="tips_sort_read">Short reads and writes</a></h2>
847
848<p>Busybox has special functions, bb_full_read() and bb_full_write(), to
849check that all the data we asked for got read or written. Is this a real
850world consideration? Try the following:</p>
851
852<pre>while true; do echo hello; sleep 1; done | tee out.txt</pre>
853
854<p>If tee is implemented with bb_full_read(), tee doesn't display output
855in real time but blocks until its entire input buffer (generally a couple
856kilobytes) is read, then displays it all at once. In that case, we _want_
857the short read, for user interface reasons. (Note that read() should never
858return 0 unless it has hit the end of input, and an attempt to write 0
859bytes should be ignored by the OS.)</p>
860
861<p>As for short writes, play around with two processes piping data to each
862other on the command line (cat bigfile | gzip &gt; out.gz) and suspend and
863resume a few times (ctrl-z to suspend, "fg" to resume). The writer can
864experience short writes, which are especially dangerous because if you don't
865notice them you'll discard data. They can also happen when a system is under
866load and a fast process is piping to a slower one. (Such as an xterm waiting
867on x11 when the scheduler decides X is being a CPU hog with all that
868text console scrolling...)</p>
869
870<p>So will data always be read from the far end of a pipe at the
871same chunk sizes it was written in? Nope. Don't rely on that. For one
872counterexample, see <a href="http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc896.html">rfc 896
873for Nagle's algorithm</a>, which waits a fraction of a second or so before
874sending out small amounts of data through a TCP/IP connection in case more
875data comes in that can be merged into the same packet. (In case you were
876wondering why action games that use TCP/IP set TCP_NODELAY to lower the latency
877on their their sockets, now you know.)</p>
878
879<h2><a name="tips_memory">Memory used by relocatable code, PIC, and static linking.</a></h2>
880
881<p>The downside of standard dynamic linking is that it results in self-modifying
882code. Although each executable's pages are mmaped() into a process' address
883space from the executable file and are thus naturally shared between processes
884out of the page cache, the library loader (ld-linux.so.2 or ld-uClibc.so.0)
885writes to these pages to supply addresses for relocatable symbols. This
886dirties the pages, triggering copy-on-write allocation of new memory for each
887processes' dirtied pages.</p>
888
889<p>One solution to this is Position Independent Code (PIC), a way of linking
890a file so all the relocations are grouped together. This dirties fewer
891pages (often just a single page) for each process' relocations. The down
892side is this results in larger executables, which take up more space on disk
893(and a correspondingly larger space in memory). But when many copies of the
894same program are running, PIC dynamic linking trades a larger disk footprint
895for a smaller memory footprint, by sharing more pages.</p>
896
897<p>A third solution is static linking. A statically linked program has no
898relocations, and thus the entire executable is shared between all running
899instances. This tends to have a significantly larger disk footprint, but
900on a system with only one or two executables, shared libraries aren't much
901of a win anyway.</p>
902
903<p>You can tell the glibc linker to display debugging information about its
904relocations with the environment variable "LD_DEBUG". Try
905"LD_DEBUG=help /bin/true" for a list of commands. Learning to interpret
906"LD_DEBUG=statistics cat /proc/self/statm" could be interesting.</p>
907
908<p>For more on this topic, here's Rich Felker:</p>
909<blockquote>
910<p>Dynamic linking (without fixed load addresses) fundamentally requires
911at least one dirty page per dso that uses symbols. Making calls (but
912never taking the address explicitly) to functions within the same dso
913does not require a dirty page by itself, but will with ELF unless you
914use -Bsymbolic or hidden symbols when linking.</p>
915
916<p>ELF uses significant additional stack space for the kernel to pass all
917the ELF data structures to the newly created process image. These are
918located above the argument list and environment. This normally adds 1
919dirty page to the process size.</p>
920
921<p>The ELF dynamic linker has its own data segment, adding one or more
922dirty pages. I believe it also performs relocations on itself.</p>
923
924<p>The ELF dynamic linker makes significant dynamic allocations to manage
925the global symbol table and the loaded dso's. This data is never
926freed. It will be needed again if libdl is used, so unconditionally
927freeing it is not possible, but normal programs do not use libdl. Of
928course with glibc all programs use libdl (due to nsswitch) so the
929issue was never addressed.</p>
930
931<p>ELF also has the issue that segments are not page-aligned on disk.
932This saves up to 4k on disk, but at the expense of using an additional
933dirty page in most cases, due to a large portion of the first data
934page being filled with a duplicate copy of the last text page.</p>
935
936<p>The above is just a partial list of the tiny memory penalties of ELF
937dynamic linking, which eventually add up to quite a bit. The smallest
938I've been able to get a process down to is 8 dirty pages, and the
939above factors seem to mostly account for it (but some were difficult
940to measure).</p>
941</blockquote>
942
943<h2><a name="tips_kernel_headers"></a>Including kernel headers</h2>
944
945<p>The "linux" or "asm" directories of /usr/include contain Linux kernel
946headers, so that the C library can talk directly to the Linux kernel. In
947a perfect world, applications shouldn't include these headers directly, but
948we don't live in a perfect world.</p>
949
950<p>For example, Busybox's losetup code wants linux/loop.c because nothing else
951#defines the structures to call the kernel's loopback device setup ioctls.
952Attempts to cut and paste the information into a local busybox header file
953proved incredibly painful, because portions of the loop_info structure vary by
954architecture, namely the type __kernel_dev_t has different sizes on alpha,
955arm, x86, and so on. Meaning we either #include <linux/posix_types.h> or
956we hardwire #ifdefs to check what platform we're building on and define this
957type appropriately for every single hardware architecture supported by
958Linux, which is simply unworkable.</p>
959
960<p>This is aside from the fact that the relevant type defined in
961posix_types.h was renamed to __kernel_old_dev_t during the 2.5 series, so
962to cut and paste the structure into our header we have to #include
963<linux/version.h> to figure out which name to use. (What we actually do is
964check if we're building on 2.6, and if so just use the new 64 bit structure
965instead to avoid the rename entirely.) But we still need the version
966check, since 2.4 didn't have the 64 bit structure.</p>
967
968<p>The BusyBox developers spent <u>two years</u> trying to figure
969out a clean way to do all this. There isn't one. The losetup in the
970util-linux package from kernel.org isn't doing it cleanly either, they just
971hide the ugliness by nesting #include files. Their mount/loop.h
972#includes "my_dev_t.h", which #includes <linux/posix_types.h> and
973<linux/version.h> just like we do. There simply is no alternative.</p>
974
975<p>Just because directly #including kernel headers is sometimes
976unavoidable doesn't me we should include them when there's a better
977way to do it. However, block copying information out of the kernel headers
978is not a better way.</p>
979
980<h2><a name="who">Who are the BusyBox developers?</a></h2>
981
982<p>The following login accounts currently exist on busybox.net. (I.E. these
983people can commit <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/patches">patches</a>
984into subversion for the BusyBox, uClibc, and buildroot projects.)</p>
985
986<pre>
987aldot :Bernhard Fischer
988andersen :Erik Andersen <- uClibc and BuildRoot maintainer.
989bug1 :Glenn McGrath
990davidm :David McCullough
991gkajmowi :Garrett Kajmowicz <- uClibc++ maintainer
992jbglaw :Jan-Benedict Glaw
993jocke :Joakim Tjernlund
994landley :Rob Landley <- BusyBox maintainer
995lethal :Paul Mundt
996mjn3 :Manuel Novoa III
997osuadmin :osuadmin
998pgf :Paul Fox
999pkj :Peter Kjellerstedt
1000prpplague :David Anders
1001psm :Peter S. Mazinger
1002russ :Russ Dill
1003sandman :Robert Griebl
1004sjhill :Steven J. Hill
1005solar :Ned Ludd
1006timr :Tim Riker
1007tobiasa :Tobias Anderberg
1008vapier :Mike Frysinger
1009</pre>
1010
1011<p>The following accounts used to exist on busybox.net, but don't anymore so
1012I can't ask /etc/passwd for their names. (If anybody would like to make
1013a stab at it...)</p>
1014
1015<pre>
1016aaronl
1017beppu
1018dwhedon
1019erik : Also Erik Andersen?
1020gfeldman
1021jimg
1022kraai
1023markw
1024miles
1025proski
1026rjune
1027tausq
1028vodz :Vladimir N. Oleynik
1029</pre>
1030
1031
Eric Andersen6c4a6b12004-10-08 10:50:08 +00001032<br>
1033<br>
1034<br>
1035
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