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- <B>B u s y B o x</B>
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- <a href="/"><IMG SRC="images/busybox2.jpg" alt="BusyBox" border="0" width="360" height="230"</a><BR>
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-<!-- Begin Introduction section -->
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- <A NAME="intro"> <BIG><B>
- The Swiss Army Knife of Embedded Linux
- </font>
- </A></B></BIG>
-</TD></TR>
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
-
-BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX utilities into a single
-small executable. It provides minimalist replacements for most of the utilities
-you usually find in fileutils, shellutils, findutils, textutils, grep, gzip,
-tar, etc. BusyBox provides a fairly complete POSIX environment for any small
-or emdedded system. The utilities in BusyBox generally have fewer options then
-their full featured GNU cousins; however, the options that are included provide
-the expected functionality and behave very much like their GNU counterparts.
-<p>
-BusyBox has been written with size-optimization and limited resources in mind.
-It is also extremely modular so you can easily include or exclude commands (or
-features) at compile time. This makes it easy to customize your embedded
-systems. To create a working system, just add a kernel, a shell (such as ash),
-and an editor (such as elvis-tiny or ae).
-<p>
-
-BusyBox is now maintained by
-<a href="http://www.xmission.com/~andersen/erik/erik.html">
-Erik Andersen</a>, and its ongoing development is being sponsored by
-<a href="http://www.lineo.com/">Lineo</a>.
-<p>
-BusyBox is licensed under the
-<a href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html">GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE</a>
-
-
-<!-- Begin Download section -->
-
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
- <A NAME="download"><BIG><B>
- Download
- </A></B></BIG>
-</TD></TR>
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
-<ul>
- <li> Source for the latest release can always be downloaded from
- <a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox">ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox</a>.
-</ul>
-
-
-<!-- Begin Latest News section -->
-
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
- <A NAME="news">
- <BIG><B>
- Latest News</A>
- </B></BIG>
- </A>
-</TD></TR>
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
-
-<ul>
-
- <p> <li> <b>19 April 2000 -- syslogd bugfix</b>
- <br>
- Turns out that there was still a bug in busybox syslogd.
- For example, with the following test app:
-<pre>
- #include <syslog.h>
-
- int do_log(char* msg, int delay)
- {
- openlog("testlog", LOG_PID, LOG_DAEMON);
- while(1) {
- syslog(LOG_ERR, "%s: testing one, two, three\n", msg);
- sleep(delay);
- }
- closelog();
- return(0);
- };
-
- int main(void)
- {
- if (fork()==0)
- do_log("A", 2);
- do_log("B", 3);
- }
-</pre>
- it should be logging stuff from both "A" and "B". As released in 0.43 only stuff
- from "A" would have been logged. This means that if init tries to log something
- while say ppp has the syslog open, init would block (which is bad, bad, bad).
- <p>
- Karl M. Hegbloom has created a
- <a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox/busybox-0.43-syslog_patch">fix for the problem</a>.
- Thanks Karl!
-
-
- <p> <li> <b>18 April 2000 -- BusyBox 0.43 released (finally!)</b>
- <br>
- I have finally gotten everything into a state where I feel pretty
- good about things. This is definitely the most stable, solid release
- so far. A lot of bugs have been fixed, and the following new apps
- have been added: sh, basename, dirname, killall, uptime,
- freeramdisk, tr, echo, test, and usleep. Tar has been completely
- rewritten from scratch. Bss size has also been greatly reduced.
- More details are available in the
- <a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox/Changelog">changelog</a>.
- Oh, and as a special bonus, I wrote some fairly comprehensive
- <em>documentation</em>, complete with examples and full usage information.
-
- <p>
- Many thanks go out to the fine people that have helped by submitting patches
- and bug reports; particularly instrumental in helping for this release were
- Karl Hegbloom, Pavel Roskin, Friedrich Vedder, Emanuele Caratti,
- Bob Tinsley, Nicolas Pitre, Avery Pennarun, Arne Bernin, John Beppu, and Jim Gleason.
- There were others so if I somehow forgot to mention you, I'm very sorry.
- <p>
-
- You can grab BusyBox 0.43 tarballs <a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox/">here</a>.
-
- <p> <li> <b>9 April 2000 -- BusyBox 0.43 pre release</b>
- <br>
- Unfortunately, I have not yet finished all the things I want to
- do for BusyBox 0.43, so I am posting this pre-release for people
- to poke at. This contains my complete rewrite of tar, which now weighs in at
- 5k (7k with all options turned on) and works for reading and writing
- tarballs (which it does correctly for everything I have been able to throw
- at it). Tar also (optionally) supports the "--exclude" option (mainly because
- the Linux Router Project folks asked for it). This also has a pre-release
- of the micro shell I have been writing. This pre-release should be stable
- enough for production use -- it just isn't a release since I have some structural
- changes I still want to make.
- <p>
- The pre-release can be found <a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox/">here</a>.
- Please let me know ASAP if you find <em>any</em> bugs.
-
- <p> <li> <b>28 March 2000 -- Andersen Baby Boy release</b>
- <br>
- I am pleased to announce that on Tuesday March 28th at 5:48pm, weighing in at 7
- lbs. 12 oz, Micah Erik Andersen was born at LDS Hospital here in Salt Lake City.
- He was born in the emergency room less then 5 minutes after we arrived -- and
- it was such a relief that we even made it to the hospital at all. Despite the
- fact that I was driving at an amazingly unlawful speed and honking at everybody
- and thinking decidely unkind thoughts about the people in our way, my wife
- (inconsiderate of my feelings and complete lack of medical training) was lying
- down in the back seat saying things like "I think I need to start pushing now"
- (which she then proceeded to do despite my best encouraging statements to the
- contrary).
- <p>
- Anyway, I'm glad to note that despite the much-faster-than-we-were-expecting
- labor, both Shaunalei and our new baby boy are doing wonderfuly.
- <p>
- So now that I am done with my excuse for the slow release cycle...
- Progress on the next release of BusyBox has been slow but steady. I expect
- to have a release sometime during the first week of April. This release will
- include a number of important changes, including the addition of a shell, a
- re-write of tar (to accomodate the Linux Router Project), and syslogd can now
- accept multiple concurrent connections, fixing lots of unexpected blocking
- problems.
-
-
- <p> <li> <b>11 February 2000 -- BusyBox 0.42 released</b>
- <br>
-
- This is the most solid BusyBox release so far. Many, many
- bugs have been fixed. See the
-<a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox/Changelog">changelog</a> for details.
-
- Of particular interest, init will now cleanly unmount
- filesystems on reboot, cp and mv have been rewritten and
- behave much better, and mount and umount no longer leak
- loop devices. Many thanks go out to Randolph Chung,
- Karl M. Hegbloom, Taketoshi Sano, and Pavel Roskin for
- their hard work on this release of BusyBox. Please pound
- on it and let me know if you find any bugs.
-
- <p> <li> <b>19 January 2000 -- BusyBox 0.41 released</b>
- <br>
-
- This release includes bugfixes to cp, mv, logger, true, false,
- mkdir, syslogd, and init. New apps include wc, hostid,
- logname, tty, whoami, and yes. New features include loop device
- support in mount and umount, and better TERM handling by init.
- The changelog can be found <a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox/Changelog">here</a>.
-
- <p> <li> <b>7 January 2000 -- BusyBox 0.40 released</b>
- <br>
-
- This release includes bugfixes to init (now includes inittab support),
- syslogd, head, logger, du, grep, cp, mv, sed, dmesg, ls, kill, gunzip, and mknod.
- New apps include sort, uniq, lsmod, rmmod, fbset, and loadacm.
- In particular, this release fixes an important bug in tar which
- in some cases produced serious security problems.
- As always, the changelog can be found <a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox/Changelog">here</a>.
-
- <p> <li> <b>11 December 1999 -- BusyBox Website</b>
- <br>
- I have received permission from Bruce Perens (the original author of BusyBox)
- to set up this site as the new primary website for BusyBox. This website
- will always contain pointers to the latest and greatest, and will also
- contain the latest documentation on how to use BusyBox, what it can do,
- what arguments its apps support, etc.
-
- <p> <li> <b>10 December 1999 -- BusyBox 0.39 released</b>
- <br>
- This release includes fixes to init, reboot, halt, kill, and ls, and contains
- the new apps ping, hostname, mkfifo, free, tail, du, tee, and head. A full
- changelog can be found <a href="ftp://ftp.lineo.com/pub/busybox/Changelog">here</a>.
- <p> <li> <b>5 December 1999 -- BusyBox 0.38 released</b>
- <br>
- This release includes fixes to tar, cat, ls, dd, rm, umount, find, df,
- and make install, and includes new apps syslogd/klogd and logger.
-</ul>
-
-
-<!-- Begin Docs section -->
-
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
- <A NAME="docs"><BIG><B>
- Documentation
- </A></B></BIG>
-</TD></TR>
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
-Current documentation for BusyBox includes:
-<ul>
- <li> <a href="BusyBox.html">BusyBox.html</a>
- This is a list of the all the available commands in BusyBox with complete
- usage information and examples of how to use each app. I spent
- a <em>lot</em> of time updating these docs and trying to make them
- fairly comprehensive for the BusyBox 0.43 release. If you find any
- errors (factual, grammatical, whatever) please let me know.
-
- <li> More documentation will follow.
-</ul>
-
-
-<!-- Begin Links section -->
-
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
- <A NAME="related">
- <BIG><B>
- Related Software</A>
- </B></BIG>
- </A>
-</TD></TR>
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
-
-<ul>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.debian.org/Packages/unstable/shells/ash.html">ash</a>
- is a very small Bourne shell. If you need a shell for your embedded systems, this is it.
- <p>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.debian.org/Packages/unstable/base/ae.html">ae</a>
- is a tiny full-screen text editor with both modal (vi-like) and modeless
- (emacs-like) modes, determined by an ae.rc config file. It makes a nice editor
- if people that don't know "vi" will need to work on your embedded system.
- <p>
-
- <li> <a href="http://www.debian.org/Packages/unstable/base/elvis-tiny.html">elvis-tiny</a>
- is based on a 1991 Minix version of the elvis "vi" clone. It behaves as one would
- expect a minamalist vi to behave, and is very small.
- <p>
-
- <li> <a href="http://www.asty.org/nano/">nano</a>
- A small GPLed pico clone that makes a nice editor for people that don't know "vi".
- <p>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.debian.org/Packages/unstable/net/iproute.html">iproute</a>
- Much more flexible replacement for ifconfig, route, etc. It is quite small, and for
- most networking applications, it is all you need. It also provides support for extremely
- advanced networking and provides Quality of Service(QoS) support, but most people will
- just need to use the "ip" command and will not even need to install the rest.
- <p>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.debian.org/Packages/unstable/net/pump.html">Pump</a>
- This is the DHCP/BOOTP client written by RedHat. When compiled properly, it
- gives you dhcp client support for about 35k.
- <p>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.pcug.org.au/~dbell/">sash</a>
- The Stand Alone SHell. This is a small shell (not Bourne shell compatable)
- that is similar to busybox in that it provides a number of common utilities as built-ins.
- <p>
-
- <li><a href="http://sourceware.cygnus.com/newlib/">NewLib</a>
- This is a small C library intended for use on embedded systems. If you are finding
- GNU libc is a bit too big for your applications, try NewLib and it may help.
- <p>
-
- <li><a href="http://linuxassembly.org/asmutils.html">asmutils</a>
- asmutils is similar to BusyBox in that it provides a number of common application
- for embedded systems that are very tiny. In fact, they are a _lot_ smaller than the
- equivalent apps in busybox -- but the price you pay for the size is reduced portability
- (x86 only) and interfaces that are tied directly to a perticular kernel (no libc involved).
- <p>
-
- <li><a href="http://tinylogin.lineo.com/">TinyLogin</a>
- is a nice embedded tool for handling authentication, changing passwords,
- and similar tasks, and which nicely complements BusyBox.
- <p>
-
-</ul>
-
-<!-- Begin Projects section -->
-
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
- <A NAME="docs"><BIG><B>
- Projects using BusyBox
- </A></B></BIG>
-</TD></TR>
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
-I know of the following projects that use BusyBox
-<ul>
- <li> <a href="http://www.lineo.com/products/embedix.html">Lineo Embedix Linux</a>
- <li> <a href="http://cvs.debian.org/boot-floppies/">Debian boot floppies project</a>
- <li> <a href="http://www.linuxrouter.org/">Linux Router Project </a>
- <li> <a href="http://linux-embedded.org/">LEM</a>
- <li> <a href="http://www.toms.net/rb/">tomsrtbt</a>
-
-</ul>
-Do you use BusyBox? I'd love to know about it and I'd be happy to link to you.
-
-
-
-<!-- Begin Links section -->
-
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#ccccc0" ALIGN=center>
- <A NAME="links">
- <BIG><B>
- Important Links</A>
- </B></BIG>
- </A>
-</TD></TR>
-<TR><TD BGCOLOR="#eeeee0">
-
-<ul>
-
- <li> <A HREF="http://perens.com/FreeSoftware/">
- Free Software from Bruce Perens</A><br>
- The original idea for BusyBox, and all versions up to 0.26 were written
- by <A HREF="mailto:bruce@perens.com">Bruce Perens</a>. This is his BusyBox website.
- <p>
-
- <li> <A HREF="http://freshmeat.net/appindex/1999/04/11/923859921.html">
- Freshmeat AppIndex record for BusyBox</A>
- <p>
-
- <li> <A HREF="http://www.lineo.com/">Lineo</A> is sponsoring BusyBox development.
- <p>
-
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
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- Mail all comments, insults, suggestions and bribes to
- <a href="mailto:andersen@lineo.com">Erik Andersen</a><BR>
- The Busybox logo is copyright 1999,2000, Erik Andersen.
- </font>
- </TD>
-
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- <a href="http://www.vim.org"><img border=0 width=88 height=32
- src="images/anim.written.in.vi.gif"
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