+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<h3>Frequently Asked Questions</h3>
-
-This is a collection of some of the more frequently asked questions
-about BusyBox. Some of the questions even have answers. If you
-have additions to this FAQ document, we would love to add them,
-
-<h2>General questions</h2>
-<ol>
-<li><a href="#getting_started">How can I get started using BusyBox?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#configure">How do I configure busybox?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#build">How do I build BusyBox with a cross-compiler?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#build_system">How do I build a BusyBox-based system?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#kernel">Which Linux kernel versions are supported?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#arch">Which architectures does BusyBox run on?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#libc">Which C libraries are supported?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#commercial">Can I include BusyBox as part of the software on my device?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#external">Where can I find other small utilities since busybox does not include the features I want?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#demanding">I demand that you to add <favorite feature> 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>
-<li><a href="#helpme">I need help with BusyBox! What should I do?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#contracts">I need you to add <favorite feature>! Are the BusyBox developers willing to be paid in order to fix bugs or add in <favorite feature>? Are you willing to provide support contracts?</a></li>
-</ol>
-
-<h2>Troubleshooting</h2>
-<ol>
-<li><a href="#bugs">I think I found a bug in BusyBox! What should I do?!</a></li>
-<li><a href="#backporting">I'm using an ancient version from the dawn of time and something's broken. Can you backport fixes for free?</a></li>
-<li><a href="#init">Busybox init isn't working!</a></li>
-<li><a href="#sed">I can't configure busybox on my system.</a></li>
-<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>
-</ol>
-
-<h2>Misc. questions</h2>
-<ol>
- <li><a href="#tz">How do I change the time zone in busybox?</a></li>
-</ol>
-
-<h2>Programming questions</h2>
-<ol>
- <li><a href="#goals">What are the goals of busybox?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#design">What is the design of busybox?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#source">How is the source code organized?</a>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#source_applets">The applet directories.</a></li>
- <li><a href="#source_libbb">The busybox shared library (libbb)</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><a href="#optimize">I want to make busybox even smaller, how do I go about it?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#adding">Adding an applet to busybox</a></li>
- <li><a href="#standards">What standards does busybox adhere to?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#portability">Portability.</a></li>
- <li><a href="#tips">Tips and tricks.</a>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#tips_encrypted_passwords">Encrypted Passwords</a></li>
- <li><a href="#tips_vfork">Fork and vfork</a></li>
- <li><a href="#tips_short_read">Short reads and writes</a></li>
- <li><a href="#tips_memory">Memory used by relocatable code, PIC, and static linking.</a></li>
- <li><a href="#tips_kernel_headers">Including Linux kernel headers.</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><a href="#who">Who are the BusyBox developers?</a></li>
-</ol>
-
-
-<hr />
-<h1>General questions</h1>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="getting_started">How can I get started using BusyBox?</a></h2>
-
-<p> If you just want to try out busybox without installing it, download the
- tarball, extract it, run "make defconfig", and then run "make".
-</p>
-<p>
- This will create a busybox binary with almost all features enabled. To try
- out a busybox applet, type "./busybox [appletname] [options]", for
- example "./busybox ls -l" or "./busybox cat LICENSE". Type "./busybox"
- to see a command list, and "busybox appletname --help" to see a brief
- usage message for a given applet.
-</p>
-<p>
- BusyBox uses the name it was invoked under to determine which applet is
- being invoked. (Try "mv busybox ls" and then "./ls -l".) Installing
- busybox consists of creating symlinks (or hardlinks) to the busybox
- binary for each applet in busybox, and making sure these links are in
- the shell's command $PATH. The special applet name "busybox" (or with
- any optional suffix, such as "busybox-static") uses the first argument
- to determine which applet to run, as shown above.
-</p>
-<p>
- BusyBox also has a feature called the
- <a name="standalone_shell">"standalone shell"</a>, where the busybox
- shell runs any built-in applets before checking the command path. This
- feature is also enabled by "make allyesconfig", and to try it out run
- the command line "PATH= ./busybox ash". This will blank your command path
- and run busybox as your command shell, so the only commands it can find
- (without an explicit path such as /bin/ls) are the built-in busybox ones.
- This is another good way to see what's built into busybox.
- Note that the standalone shell requires CONFIG_BUSYBOX_EXEC_PATH
- to be set appropriately, depending on whether or not /proc/self/exe is
- available or not. If you do not have /proc, then point that config option
- to the location of your busybox binary, usually /bin/busybox.
- (So if you set it to /proc/self/exe, and happen to be able to chroot into
- your rootfs, you must mount /proc beforehand.)
-</p>
-<p>
- A typical indication that you set CONFIG_BUSYBOX_EXEC_PATH to proc but
- forgot to mount proc is:
-<pre>
-$ /bin/echo $PATH
-/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin/X11
-$ echo $PATH
-/bin/sh: echo: not found
-</pre>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="configure">How do I configure busybox?</a></h2>
-
-<p> Busybox is configured similarly to the linux kernel. Create a default
- configuration and then run "make menuconfig" to modify it. The end
- result is a .config file that tells the busybox build process what features
- to include. So instead of "./configure; make; make install" the equivalent
- busybox build would be "make defconfig; make; make install".
-</p>
-
-<p> Busybox configured with all features enabled is a little under a megabyte
- dynamically linked on x86. To create a smaller busybox, configure it with
- fewer features. Individual busybox applets cost anywhere from a few
- hundred bytes to tens of kilobytes. Disable unneeded applets to save,
- space, using menuconfig.
-</p>
-
-<p>The most important busybox configurators are:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li><p>make <b>defconfig</b> - Create the maximum "sane" configuration. This
-enables almost all features, minus things like debugging options and features
-that require changes to the rest of the system to work (such as selinux or
-devfs device names). Use this if you want to start from a full-featured
-busybox and remove features until it's small enough.</p></li>
-<li><p>make <b>allnoconfig</b> - Disable everything. This creates a tiny version
-of busybox that doesn't do anything. Start here if you know exactly what
-you want and would like to select only those features.</p></li>
-<li><p>make <b>menuconfig</b> - Interactively modify a .config file through a
-multi-level menu interface. Use this after one of the previous two.</p></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Some other configuration options are:</p>
-<ul>
-<li><p>make <b>oldconfig</b> - Update an old .config file for a newer version
-of busybox.</p></li>
-<li><p>make <b>allyesconfig</b> - Select absolutely everything. This creates
-a statically linked version of busybox full of debug code, with dependencies on
-selinux, using devfs names... This makes sure everything compiles. Whether
-or not the result would do anything useful is an open question.</p></li>
-<li><p>make <b>allbareconfig</b> - Select all applets but disable all sub-features
-within each applet. More build coverage testing.</p></li>
-<li><p>make <b>randconfig</b> - Create a random configuration for test purposes.</p></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p> Menuconfig modifies your .config file through an interactive menu where you can enable or disable
- busybox features, and get help about each feature.
-
-<p>
- To build a smaller busybox binary, run "make menuconfig" and disable the
- features you don't need. (Or run "make allnoconfig" and then use
- menuconfig to add just the features you need. Don't forget to recompile
- with "make" once you've finished configuring.)
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="build">How do I build BusyBox with a cross-compiler?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- To build busybox with a cross-compiler, specify CROSS_COMPILE=<prefix>.
-</p>
-<p>
- CROSS_COMPILE specifies the prefix used for all executables used
- during compilation. Only gcc and related binutils executables
- are prefixed with $(CROSS_COMPILE) in the makefiles.
- CROSS_COMPILE can be set on the command line:
-</p>
-<pre>
- make CROSS_COMPILE=arm-linux-uclibcgnueabi-
-</pre>
-<p>
- Alternatively CROSS_COMPILE can be set in the environment.
- Default value for CROSS_COMPILE is not to prefix executables.
-</p>
-<p>
- To store the cross-compiler in your .config, set the variable
- CONFIG_CROSS_COMPILER_PREFIX accordingly in menuconfig or by
- editing the .config file.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="build_system">How do I build a BusyBox-based system?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- BusyBox is a package that replaces a dozen standard packages, but it is
- not by itself a complete bootable system. Building an entire Linux
- distribution from source is a bit beyond the scope of this FAQ, but it
- understandably keeps cropping up on the mailing list, so here are some
- pointers.
-</p>
-<p>
- Start by learning how to strip a working system down to the bare essentials
- needed to run one or two commands, so you know what it is you actually
- need. An excellent practical place to do
- this is the <a href="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Bootdisk-HOWTO/">Linux
- BootDisk Howto</a>, or for a more theoretical approach try
- <a href="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/From-PowerUp-To-Bash-Prompt-HOWTO.html">From
- PowerUp to Bash Prompt</a>.
-</p>
-<p>
- To learn how to build a working Linux system entirely from source code,
- the place to go is the <a href="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/">Linux
- From Scratch</a> project. They have an entire book of step-by-step
- instructions you can
- <a href="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/view/stable/">read online</a>
- or
- <a href="http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/downloads/stable/">download</a>.
- Be sure to check out the other sections of their main page, including
- Beyond Linux From Scratch, Hardened Linux From Scratch, their Hints
- directory, and their LiveCD project. (They also have mailing lists which
- are better sources of answers to Linux-system building questions than
- the busybox list.)
-</p>
-<p>
- If you want an automated yet customizable system builder which produces
- a BusyBox and uClibc based system, try
- <a href="http://buildroot.uclibc.org/">buildroot</a>, which is
- another project by the maintainer of the uClibc (Erik Andersen).
- Download the tarball, extract it, unset CC, make.
- For more instructions, see the website.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="kernel">Which Linux kernel versions are supported?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- Full functionality requires Linux 2.4.x or better. (Earlier versions may
- still work, but are no longer regularly tested.) A large fraction of the
- code should run on just about anything. While the current code is fairly
- Linux specific, it should be fairly easy to port the majority of the code
- to support, say, FreeBSD or Solaris, or Mac OS X, or even Windows (if you
- are into that sort of thing).
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="arch">Which architectures does BusyBox run on?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- BusyBox in general will build on any architecture supported by gcc.
- Kernel module loading for 2.4 Linux kernels is currently
- limited to ARM, CRIS, H8/300, x86, ia64, x86_64, m68k, MIPS, PowerPC,
- S390, SH3/4/5, Sparc, v850e, and x86_64 for 2.4.x kernels.
-</p>
-<p>
- With 2.6.x kernels, module loading support should work on all architectures.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="libc">Which C libraries are supported?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- On Linux, BusyBox releases are tested against uClibc (0.9.27 or later) and
- glibc (2.2 or later). Both should provide full functionality with busybox,
- and if you find a bug we want to hear about it.
-</p>
-<p>
- Linux-libc5 is no longer maintained (and has no known advantages over
- uClibc), dietlibc is known to have numerous unfixed bugs, and klibc is
- missing too many features to build BusyBox. If you require a small C
- library for Linux, the busybox developers recommend uClibc.
-</p>
-<p>
- Some BusyBox applets have been built and run under a combination
- of newlib and libgloss (see
- <a href="http://www.busybox.net/lists/busybox/2005-March/013759.html">this thread</a>).
- This is still experimental, but may be supported in a future release.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="commercial">Can I include BusyBox as part of the software on my device?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- Yes. As long as you <a href="http://busybox.net/license.html">fully comply
- with the generous terms of the GPL BusyBox license</a> you can ship BusyBox
- as part of the software on your device.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="external">Where can I find other small utilities since busybox
- does not include the features i want?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- we maintain such a <a href="tinyutils.html">list</a> on this site!
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="demanding">I demand that you to add <favorite feature> 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>
-
-<p>
- You have not paid us a single cent and yet you still have the product of
- many years of our work. We are not your slaves! We work on BusyBox
- because we find it useful and interesting. If you go off flaming us, we
- will ignore you.
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="helpme">I need help with BusyBox! What should I do?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- If you find that you need help with BusyBox, you can ask for help on the
- BusyBox mailing list at busybox@busybox.net.</p>
-
-<p> In addition to the mailing list, Erik Andersen (andersee), Manuel Nova
- (mjn3), Rob Landley (landley), Mike Frysinger (SpanKY),
- Bernhard Reutner-Fischer (blindvt), and other long-time BusyBox developers
- are known to hang out on the uClibc IRC channel: #uclibc on
- irc.freenode.net. There is a
- <a href="http://ibot.Rikers.org/%23uclibc/">web archive of
- daily logs of the #uclibc IRC channel</a> going back to 2002.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- <b>Please do not send private email to Rob, Erik, Manuel, or the other
- BusyBox contributors asking for private help unless you are planning on
- paying for consulting services.</b>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- When we answer questions on the BusyBox mailing list, it helps everyone
- since people with similar problems in the future will be able to get help
- by searching the mailing list archives. Private help is reserved as a paid
- service. If you need to use private communication, or if you are serious
- about getting timely assistance with BusyBox, you should seriously consider
- paying for consulting services.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="contracts">I need you to add <favorite feature>! Are the BusyBox developers willing to be paid in order to fix bugs or add in <favorite feature>? Are you willing to provide support contracts?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- Yes we are. The easy way to sponsor a new feature is to post an offer on
- the mailing list to see who's interested. You can also email the project's
- maintainer and ask them to recommend someone.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h1>Troubleshooting</h1>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="bugs">I think I found a bug in BusyBox! What should I do?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- If you simply need help with using or configuring BusyBox, please submit a
- detailed description of your problem to the BusyBox mailing list at <a
- href="mailto:busybox@busybox.net">busybox@busybox.net</a>.
- Please do not send email to individual developers asking
- for private help unless you are planning on paying for consulting services.
- When we answer questions on the BusyBox mailing list, it helps everyone,
- while private answers help only you...
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Bug reports and new feature patches sometimes get lost when posted to the
- mailing list, because the developers of BusyBox are busy people and have
- only so much they can keep in their brains at a time. You can post a
- polite reminder after 2-3 days without offending anybody. If that doesn't
- result in a solution, please use the
- <a href="https://bugs.busybox.net/">BusyBox Bug
- and Patch Tracking System</a> to submit a detailed explanation and we'll
- get to it as soon as we can.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Note that bugs entered into the bug system without being mentioned on the
- mailing list first may languish there for months before anyone even notices
- them. We generally go through the bug system when preparing for new
- development releases, to see what fell through the cracks while we were
- off writing new features. (It's a fast/unreliable vs slow/reliable thing.
- Saves retransits, but the latency sucks.)
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="backporting">I'm using an ancient version from the dawn of time and something's broken. Can you backport fixes for free?</a></h2>
-
-<p>Variants of this one get asked a lot.</p>
-
-<p>The purpose of the BusyBox mailing list is to develop and improve BusyBox,
-and we're happy to respond to our users' needs. But if you're coming to the
-list for free tech support we're going to ask you to upgrade to a current
-version before we try to diagnose your problem.</p>
-
-<p>If you're building BusyBox 0.50 with uClibc 0.9.19 and gcc 1.27 there's a
-fairly large chance that whatever problem you're seeing has already been fixed.
-To get that fix, all you have to do is upgrade to a newer version. If you
-don't at least _try_ that, you're wasting our time.</p>
-
-<p>The volunteers are happy to fix any bugs you point out in the current
-versions because doing so helps everybody and makes the project better. We
-want to make the current version work for you. But diagnosing, debugging, and
-backporting fixes to old versions isn't something we do for free, because it
-doesn't help anybody but you. The cost of volunteer tech support is using a
-reasonably current version of the project.</p>
-
-<p>If you don't want to upgrade, you have the complete source code and thus
-the ability to fix it yourself, or hire a consultant to do it for you. If you
-got your version from a vendor who still supports the older version, they can
-help you. But there are limits as to what the volunteers will feel obliged to
-do for you.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule of thumb, volunteers will generally answer polite questions about
-a given version for about three years after its release before it's so old
-we don't remember the answer off the top of our head. And if you want us to
-put any _effort_ into tracking it down, we want you to put in a little effort
-of your own by confirming it's still a problem with the current version. It's
-also hard for us to fix a problem of yours if we can't reproduce it because
-we don't have any systems running an environment that old.</p>
-
-<p>A consultant will happily set up a special environment just to reproduce
-your problem, and you can always ask on the list if any of the developers
-have consulting rates.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="init">Busybox init isn't working!</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- Init is the first program that runs, so it might be that no programs are
- working on your new system because of a problem with your cross-compiler,
- kernel, console settings, shared libraries, root filesystem... To rule all
- that out, first build a statically linked version of the following "hello
- world" program with your cross compiler toolchain:
-</p>
-<pre>
-#include <stdio.h>
-
-int main(int argc, char *argv)
-{
- printf("Hello world!\n");
- sleep(999999999);
-}
-</pre>
-
-<p>
- Now try to boot your device with an "init=" argument pointing to your
- hello world program. Did you see the hello world message? Until you
- do, don't bother messing with busybox init.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Once you've got it working statically linked, try getting it to work
- dynamically linked. Then read the FAQ entry <a href="#build_system">How
- do I build a BusyBox-based system?</a>, and the
- <a href="/downloads/BusyBox.html#item_init">documentation for BusyBox
- init</a>.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="sed">I can't configure busybox on my system.</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- Configuring Busybox depends on a recent version of sed. Older
- distributions (Red Hat 7.2, Debian 3.0) may not come with a
- usable version. Luckily BusyBox can use its own sed to configure itself,
- although this leads to a bit of a chicken and egg problem.
- You can work around this by hand-configuring busybox to build with just
- sed, then putting that sed in your path to configure the rest of busybox
- with, like so:
-</p>
-
-<pre>
- tar xvjf sources/busybox-x.x.x.tar.bz2
- cd busybox-x.x.x
- make allnoconfig
- make include/bb_config.h
- echo "CONFIG_SED=y" >> .config
- echo "#undef ENABLE_SED" >> include/bb_config.h
- echo "#define ENABLE_SED 1" >> include/bb_config.h
- make
- mv busybox sed
- export PATH=`pwd`:"$PATH"
-</pre>
-
-<p>Then you can run "make defconfig" or "make menuconfig" normally.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<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>
-
-<p>
- Job control will be turned off since your shell can not obtain a controlling
- terminal. This typically happens when you run your shell on /dev/console.
- The kernel will not provide a controlling terminal on the /dev/console
- device. Your should run your shell on a normal tty such as tty1 or ttyS0
- and everything will work perfectly. If you <em>REALLY</em> want your shell
- to run on /dev/console, then you can hack your kernel (if you are into that
- sortof thing) by changing drivers/char/tty_io.c to change the lines where
- it sets "noctty = 1;" to instead set it to "0". I recommend you instead
- run your shell on a real console...
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h1>Misc. questions</h1>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="tz">How do I change the time zone in busybox?</a></h2>
-
-<p>Busybox has nothing to do with the timezone. Please consult your libc
-documentation. (<a href="http://google.com/search?q=uclibc+glibc+timezone">http://google.com/search?q=uclibc+glibc+timezone</a>).</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h1>Development</h1>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="goals">What are the goals of busybox?</a></h2>
-
-<p>Busybox aims to be the smallest and simplest correct implementation of the
-standard Linux command line tools. First and foremost, this means the
-smallest executable size we can manage. We also want to have the simplest
-and cleanest implementation we can manage, be <a href="#standards">standards
-compliant</a>, minimize run-time memory usage (heap and stack), run fast, and
-take over the world.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="design">What is the design of busybox?</a></h2>
-
-<p>Busybox is like a swiss army knife: one thing with many functions.
-The busybox executable can act like many different programs depending on
-the name used to invoke it. Normal practice is to create a bunch of symlinks
-pointing to the busybox binary, each of which triggers a different busybox
-function. (See <a href="FAQ.html#getting_started">getting started</a> in the
-FAQ for more information on usage, and <a href="BusyBox.html">the
-busybox documentation</a> for a list of symlink names and what they do.)
-
-<p>The "one binary to rule them all" approach is primarily for size reasons: a
-single multi-purpose executable is smaller then many small files could be.
-This way busybox only has one set of ELF headers, it can easily share code
-between different apps even when statically linked, it has better packing
-efficiency by avoding gaps between files or compression dictionary resets,
-and so on.</p>
-
-<p>Work is underway on new options such as "make standalone" to build separate
-binaries for each applet, and a "libbb.so" to make the busybox common code
-available as a shared library. Neither is ready yet at the time of this
-writing.</p>
-
-<a name="source"></a>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="source_applets">The applet directories</a></h2>
-
-<p>The directory "applets" contains the busybox startup code (applets.c and
-busybox.c), and several subdirectories containing the code for the individual
-applets.</p>
-
-<p>Busybox execution starts with the main() function in applets/busybox.c,
-which sets the global variable applet_name to argv[0] and calls
-run_applet_and_exit() in applets/applets.c. That uses the applets[] array
-(defined in include/busybox.h and filled out in include/applets.h) to
-transfer control to the appropriate APPLET_main() function (such as
-cat_main() or sed_main()). The individual applet takes it from there.</p>
-
-<p>This is why calling busybox under a different name triggers different
-functionality: main() looks up argv[0] in applets[] to get a function pointer
-to APPLET_main().</p>
-
-<p>Busybox applets may also be invoked through the multiplexor applet
-"busybox" (see busybox_main() in libbb/appletlib.c), and through the
-standalone shell (grep for STANDALONE_SHELL in applets/shell/*.c).
-See <a href="FAQ.html#getting_started">getting started</a> in the
-FAQ for more information on these alternate usage mechanisms, which are
-just different ways to reach the relevant APPLET_main() function.</p>
-
-<p>The applet subdirectories (archival, console-tools, coreutils,
-debianutils, e2fsprogs, editors, findutils, init, loginutils, miscutils,
-modutils, networking, procps, shell, sysklogd, and util-linux) correspond
-to the configuration sub-menus in menuconfig. Each subdirectory contains the
-code to implement the applets in that sub-menu, as well as a Config.in
-file defining that configuration sub-menu (with dependencies and help text
-for each applet), and the makefile segment (Makefile.in) for that
-subdirectory.</p>
-
-<p>The run-time --help is stored in usage_messages[], which is initialized at
-the start of applets/applets.c and gets its help text from usage.h. During the
-build this help text is also used to generate the BusyBox documentation (in
-html, txt, and man page formats) in the docs directory. See
-<a href="#adding">adding an applet to busybox</a> for more
-information.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="source_libbb"><b>libbb</b></a></h2>
-
-<p>Most non-setup code shared between busybox applets lives in the libbb
-directory. It's a mess that evolved over the years without much auditing
-or cleanup. For anybody looking for a great project to break into busybox
-development with, documenting libbb would be both incredibly useful and good
-experience.</p>
-
-<p>Common themes in libbb include allocation functions that test
-for failure and abort the program with an error message so the caller doesn't
-have to test the return value (xmalloc(), xstrdup(), etc), wrapped versions
-of open(), close(), read(), and write() that test for their own failures
-and/or retry automatically, linked list management functions (llist.c),
-command line argument parsing (getopt32.c), and a whole lot more.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="optimize">I want to make busybox even smaller, how do I go about it?</a></h2>
-
-<p>
- To conserve bytes it's good to know where they're being used, and the
- size of the final executable isn't always a reliable indicator of
- the size of the components (since various structures are rounded up,
- so a small change may not even be visible by itself, but many small
- savings add up).
-</p>
-
-<p> The busybox Makefile builds two versions of busybox, one of which
- (busybox_unstripped) has extra information that various analysis tools
- can use. (This has nothing to do with CONFIG_DEBUG, leave that off
- when trying to optimize for size.)
-</p>
-
-<p> The <b>"make bloatcheck"</b> option uses Matt Mackall's bloat-o-meter
- script to compare two versions of busybox (busybox_unstripped vs
- busybox_old), and report which symbols changed size and by how much.
- To use it, first build a base version with <b>"make baseline"</b>.
- (This creates busybox_old, which should have the original sizes for
- comparison purposes.) Then build the new version with your changes
- and run "make bloatcheck" to see the size differences from the old
- version.
-</p>
-<p>
- The first line of output has totals: how many symbols were added or
- removed, how many symbols grew or shrank, the number of bytes added
- and number of bytes removed by these changes, and finally the total
- number of bytes difference between the two files. The remaining
- lines show each individual symbol, the old and new sizes, and the
- increase or decrease in size (which results are sorted by).
-</p>
-<p>
- The <b>"make sizes"</b> option produces raw symbol size information for
- busybox_unstripped. This is the output from the "nm --size-sort"
- command (see "man nm" for more information), and is the information
- bloat-o-meter parses to produce the comparison report above. For
- defconfig, this is a good way to find the largest symbols in the tree
- (which is a good place to start when trying to shrink the code). To
- take a closer look at individual applets, configure busybox with just
- one applet (run "make allnoconfig" and then switch on a single applet
- with menuconfig), and then use "make sizes" to see the size of that
- applet's components.
-</p>
-<p>
- The "showasm" command (in the scripts directory) produces an assembly
- dump of a function, providing a closer look at what changed. Try
- "scripts/showasm busybox_unstripped" to list available symbols, and
- "scripts/showasm busybox_unstripped symbolname" to see the assembly
- for a sepecific symbol.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="adding">Adding an applet to busybox</a></h2>
-
-<p>To add a new applet to busybox, first pick a name for the applet and
-a corresponding CONFIG_NAME. Then do this:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Figure out where in the busybox source tree your applet best fits,
-and put your source code there. Be sure to use APPLET_main() instead
-of main(), where APPLET is the name of your applet.</li>
-
-<li>Add your applet to the relevant Config.in file (which file you add
-it to determines where it shows up in "make menuconfig"). This uses
-the same general format as the linux kernel's configuration system.</li>
-
-<li>Add your applet to the relevant Makefile.in file (in the same
-directory as the Config.in you chose), using the existing entries as a
-template and the same CONFIG symbol as you used for Config.in. (Don't
-forget "needlibm" or "needcrypt" if your applet needs libm or
-libcrypt.)</li>
-
-<li>Add your applet to "include/applets.h", using one of the existing
-entries as a template. (Note: this is in alphabetical order. Applets
-are found via binary search, and if you add an applet out of order it
-won't work.)</li>
-
-<li>Add your applet's runtime help text to "include/usage.h". You need
-at least appname_trivial_usage (the minimal help text, always included
-in the busybox binary when this applet is enabled) and appname_full_usage
-(extra help text included in the busybox binary with
-CONFIG_FEATURE_VERBOSE_USAGE is enabled), or it won't compile.
-The other two help entry types (appname_example_usage and
-appname_notes_usage) are optional. They don't take up space in the binary,
-but instead show up in the generated documentation (BusyBox.html,
-BusyBox.txt, and the man page BusyBox.1).</li>
-
-<li>Run menuconfig, switch your applet on, compile, test, and fix the
-bugs. Be sure to try both "allyesconfig" and "allnoconfig" (and
-"allbareconfig" if relevant).</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="standards">What standards does busybox adhere to?</a></h2>
-
-<p>The standard we're paying attention to is the "Shell and Utilities"
-portion of the <a href="http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/">Open
-Group Base Standards</a> (also known as the Single Unix Specification version
-3 or SUSv3). Note that paying attention isn't necessarily the same thing as
-following it.</p>
-
-<p>SUSv3 doesn't even mention things like init, mount, tar, or losetup, nor
-commonly used options like echo's '-e' and '-n', or sed's '-i'. Busybox is
-driven by what real users actually need, not the fact the standard believes
-we should implement ed or sccs. For size reasons, we're unlikely to include
-much internationalization support beyond UTF-8, and on top of all that, our
-configuration menu lets developers chop out features to produce smaller but
-very non-standard utilities.</p>
-
-<p>Also, Busybox is aimed primarily at Linux. Unix standards are interesting
-because Linux tries to adhere to them, but portability to dozens of platforms
-is only interesting in terms of offering a restricted feature set that works
-everywhere, not growing dozens of platform-specific extensions. Busybox
-should be portable to all hardware platforms Linux supports, and any other
-similar operating systems that are easy to do and won't require much
-maintenance.</p>
-
-<p>In practice, standards compliance tends to be a clean-up step once an
-applet is otherwise finished. When polishing and testing a busybox applet,
-we ensure we have at least the option of full standards compliance, or else
-document where we (intentionally) fall short.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="portability">Portability.</a></h2>
-
-<p>Busybox is a Linux project, but that doesn't mean we don't have to worry
-about portability. First of all, there are different hardware platforms,
-different C library implementations, different versions of the kernel and
-build toolchain... The file "include/platform.h" exists to centralize and
-encapsulate various platform-specific things in one place, so most busybox
-code doesn't have to care where it's running.</p>
-
-<p>To start with, Linux runs on dozens of hardware platforms. We try to test
-each release on x86, x86-64, arm, power pc, and mips. (Since qemu can handle
-all of these, this isn't that hard.) This means we have to care about a number
-of portability issues like endianness, word size, and alignment, all of which
-belong in platform.h. That header handles conditional #includes and gives
-us macros we can use in the rest of our code. At some point in the future
-we might grow a platform.c, possibly even a platform subdirectory. As long
-as the applets themselves don't have to care.</p>
-
-<p>On a related note, we made the "default signedness of char varies" problem
-go away by feeding the compiler -funsigned-char. This gives us consistent
-behavior on all platforms, and defaults to 8-bit clean text processing (which
-gets us halfway to UTF-8 support). NOMMU support is less easily separated
-(see the tips section later in this document), but we're working on it.</p>
-
-<p>Another type of portability is build environments: we unapologetically use
-a number of gcc and glibc extensions (as does the Linux kernel), but these have
-been picked up by packages like uClibc, TCC, and Intel's C Compiler. As for
-gcc, we take advantage of newer compiler optimizations to get the smallest
-possible size, but we also regression test against an older build environment
-using the Red Hat 9 image at "http://busybox.net/downloads/qemu". This has a
-2.4 kernel, gcc 3.2, make 3.79.1, and glibc 2.3, and is the oldest
-build/deployment environment we still put any effort into maintaining. (If
-anyone takes an interest in older kernels you're welcome to submit patches,
-but the effort would probably be better spent
-<a href="http://www.selenic.com/linux-tiny/">trimming
-down the 2.6 kernel</a>.) Older gcc versions than that are uninteresting since
-we now use c99 features, although
-<a href="http://fabrice.bellard.free.fr/tcc/">tcc</a> might be worth a
-look.</p>
-
-<p>We also test busybox against the current release of uClibc. Older versions
-of uClibc aren't very interesting (they were buggy, and uClibc wasn't really
-usable as a general-purpose C library before version 0.9.26 anyway).</p>
-
-<p>Other unix implementations are mostly uninteresting, since Linux binaries
-have become the new standard for portable Unix programs. Specifically,
-the ubiquity of Linux was cited as the main reason the Intel Binary
-Compatability Standard 2 died, by the standards group organized to name a
-successor to ibcs2: <a href="http://www.telly.org/86open/">the 86open
-project</a>. That project disbanded in 1999 with the endorsement of an
-existing standard: Linux ELF binaries. Since then, the major players at the
-time (such as <a
-href="http://www-03.ibm.com/servers/aix/products/aixos/linux/index.html">AIX</a>, <a
-href="http://www.sun.com/software/solaris/ds/linux_interop.jsp#3">Solaris</a>, and
-<a href="http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/bsd/2000/03/17/linuxapps.html">FreeBSD</a>)
-have all either grown Linux support or folded.</p>
-
-<p>The major exceptions are newcomer MacOS X, some embedded environments
-(such as newlib+libgloss) which provide a posix environment but not a full
-Linux environment, and environments like Cygwin that provide only partial Linux
-emulation. Also, some embedded Linux systems run a Linux kernel but amputate
-things like the /proc directory to save space.</p>
-
-<p>Supporting these systems is largely a question of providing a clean subset
-of BusyBox's functionality -- whichever applets can easily be made to
-work in that environment. Annotating the configuration system to
-indicate which applets require which prerequisites (such as procfs) is
-also welcome. Other efforts to support these systems (swapping #include
-files to build in different environments, adding adapter code to platform.h,
-adding more extensive special-case supporting infrastructure such as mount's
-legacy mtab support) are handled on a case-by-case basis. Support that can be
-cleanly hidden in platform.h is reasonably attractive, and failing that
-support that can be cleanly separated into a separate conditionally compiled
-file is at least worth a look. Special-case code in the body of an applet is
-something we're trying to avoid.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="tips">Programming tips and tricks.</a></h2>
-
-<p>Various things busybox uses that aren't particularly well documented
-elsewhere.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="tips_encrypted_passwords">Encrypted Passwords</a></h2>
-
-<p>Password fields in /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow are in a special format.
-If the first character isn't '$', then it's an old DES style password. If
-the first character is '$' then the password is actually three fields
-separated by '$' characters:</p>
-<pre>
- <b>$type$salt$encrypted_password</b>
-</pre>
-
-<p>The "type" indicates which encryption algorithm to use: 1 for MD5 and 2 for SHA1.</p>
-
-<p>The "salt" is a bunch of ramdom characters (generally 8) the encryption
-algorithm uses to perturb the password in a known and reproducible way (such
-as by appending the random data to the unencrypted password, or combining
-them with exclusive or). Salt is randomly generated when setting a password,
-and then the same salt value is re-used when checking the password. (Salt is
-thus stored unencrypted.)</p>
-
-<p>The advantage of using salt is that the same cleartext password encrypted
-with a different salt value produces a different encrypted value.
-If each encrypted password uses a different salt value, an attacker is forced
-to do the cryptographic math all over again for each password they want to
-check. Without salt, they could simply produce a big dictionary of commonly
-used passwords ahead of time, and look up each password in a stolen password
-file to see if it's a known value. (Even if there are billions of possible
-passwords in the dictionary, checking each one is just a binary search against
-a file only a few gigabytes long.) With salt they can't even tell if two
-different users share the same password without guessing what that password
-is and decrypting it. They also can't precompute the attack dictionary for
-a specific password until they know what the salt value is.</p>
-
-<p>The third field is the encrypted password (plus the salt). For md5 this
-is 22 bytes.</p>
-
-<p>The busybox function to handle all this is pw_encrypt(clear, salt) in
-"libbb/pw_encrypt.c". The first argument is the clear text password to be
-encrypted, and the second is a string in "$type$salt$password" format, from
-which the "type" and "salt" fields will be extracted to produce an encrypted
-value. (Only the first two fields are needed, the third $ is equivalent to
-the end of the string.) The return value is an encrypted password in
-/etc/passwd format, with all three $ separated fields. It's stored in
-a static buffer, 128 bytes long.</p>
-
-<p>So when checking an existing password, if pw_encrypt(text,
-old_encrypted_password) returns a string that compares identical to
-old_encrypted_password, you've got the right password. When setting a new
-password, generate a random 8 character salt string, put it in the right
-format with sprintf(buffer, "$%c$%s", type, salt), and feed buffer as the
-second argument to pw_encrypt(text,buffer).</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="tips_vfork">Fork and vfork</a></h2>
-
-<p>On systems that haven't got a Memory Management Unit, fork() is unreasonably
-expensive to implement (and sometimes even impossible), so a less capable
-function called vfork() is used instead. (Using vfork() on a system with an
-MMU is like pounding a nail with a wrench. Not the best tool for the job, but
-it works.)</p>
-
-<p>Busybox hides the difference between fork() and vfork() in
-libbb/bb_fork_exec.c. If you ever want to fork and exec, use bb_fork_exec()
-(which returns a pid and takes the same arguments as execve(), although in
-this case envp can be NULL) and don't worry about it. This description is
-here in case you want to know why that does what it does.</p>
-
-<p>Implementing fork() depends on having a Memory Management Unit. With an
-MMU then you can simply set up a second set of page tables and share the
-physical memory via copy-on-write. So a fork() followed quickly by exec()
-only copies a few pages of the parent's memory, just the ones it changes
-before freeing them.</p>
-
-<p>With a very primitive MMU (using a base pointer plus length instead of page
-tables, which can provide virtual addresses and protect processes from each
-other, but no copy on write) you can still implement fork. But it's
-unreasonably expensive, because you have to copy all the parent process'
-memory into the new process (which could easily be several megabytes per fork).
-And you have to do this even though that memory gets freed again as soon as the
-exec happens. (This is not just slow and a waste of space but causes memory
-usage spikes that can easily cause the system to run out of memory.)</p>
-
-<p>Without even a primitive MMU, you have no virtual addresses. Every process
-can reach out and touch any other process' memory, because all pointers are to
-physical addresses with no protection. Even if you copy a process' memory to
-new physical addresses, all of its pointers point to the old objects in the
-old process. (Searching through the new copy's memory for pointers and
-redirect them to the new locations is not an easy problem.)</p>
-
-<p>So with a primitive or missing MMU, fork() is just not a good idea.</p>
-
-<p>In theory, vfork() is just a fork() that writeably shares the heap and stack
-rather than copying it (so what one process writes the other one sees). In
-practice, vfork() has to suspend the parent process until the child does exec,
-at which point the parent wakes up and resumes by returning from the call to
-vfork(). All modern kernel/libc combinations implement vfork() to put the
-parent to sleep until the child does its exec. There's just no other way to
-make it work: the parent has to know the child has done its exec() or exit()
-before it's safe to return from the function it's in, so it has to block
-until that happens. In fact without suspending the parent there's no way to
-even store separate copies of the return value (the pid) from the vfork() call
-itself: both assignments write into the same memory location.</p>
-
-<p>One way to understand (and in fact implement) vfork() is this: imagine
-the parent does a setjmp and then continues on (pretending to be the child)
-until the exec() comes around, then the _exec_ does the actual fork, and the
-parent does a longjmp back to the original vfork call and continues on from
-there. (It thus becomes obvious why the child can't return, or modify
-local variables it doesn't want the parent to see changed when it resumes.)
-
-<p>Note a common mistake: the need for vfork doesn't mean you can't have two
-processes running at the same time. It means you can't have two processes
-sharing the same memory without stomping all over each other. As soon as
-the child calls exec(), the parent resumes.</p>
-
-<p>If the child's attempt to call exec() fails, the child should call _exit()
-rather than a normal exit(). This avoids any atexit() code that might confuse
-the parent. (The parent should never call _exit(), only a vforked child that
-failed to exec.)</p>
-
-<p>(Now in theory, a nommu system could just copy the _stack_ when it forks
-(which presumably is much shorter than the heap), and leave the heap shared.
-Even with no MMU at all
-In practice, you've just wound up in a multi-threaded situation and you can't
-do a malloc() or free() on your heap without freeing the other process' memory
-(and if you don't have the proper locking for being threaded, corrupting the
-heap if both of you try to do it at the same time and wind up stomping on
-each other while traversing the free memory lists). The thing about vfork is
-that it's a big red flag warning "there be dragons here" rather than
-something subtle and thus even more dangerous.)</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="tips_sort_read">Short reads and writes</a></h2>
-
-<p>Busybox has special functions, bb_full_read() and bb_full_write(), to
-check that all the data we asked for got read or written. Is this a real
-world consideration? Try the following:</p>
-
-<pre>while true; do echo hello; sleep 1; done | tee out.txt</pre>
-
-<p>If tee is implemented with bb_full_read(), tee doesn't display output
-in real time but blocks until its entire input buffer (generally a couple
-kilobytes) is read, then displays it all at once. In that case, we _want_
-the short read, for user interface reasons. (Note that read() should never
-return 0 unless it has hit the end of input, and an attempt to write 0
-bytes should be ignored by the OS.)</p>
-
-<p>As for short writes, play around with two processes piping data to each
-other on the command line (cat bigfile | gzip > out.gz) and suspend and
-resume a few times (ctrl-z to suspend, "fg" to resume). The writer can
-experience short writes, which are especially dangerous because if you don't
-notice them you'll discard data. They can also happen when a system is under
-load and a fast process is piping to a slower one. (Such as an xterm waiting
-on x11 when the scheduler decides X is being a CPU hog with all that
-text console scrolling...)</p>
-
-<p>So will data always be read from the far end of a pipe at the
-same chunk sizes it was written in? Nope. Don't rely on that. For one
-counterexample, see <a href="http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc896.html">rfc 896
-for Nagle's algorithm</a>, which waits a fraction of a second or so before
-sending out small amounts of data through a TCP/IP connection in case more
-data comes in that can be merged into the same packet. (In case you were
-wondering why action games that use TCP/IP set TCP_NODELAY to lower the latency
-on their their sockets, now you know.)</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="tips_memory">Memory used by relocatable code, PIC, and static linking.</a></h2>
-
-<p>The downside of standard dynamic linking is that it results in self-modifying
-code. Although each executable's pages are mmaped() into a process' address
-space from the executable file and are thus naturally shared between processes
-out of the page cache, the library loader (ld-linux.so.2 or ld-uClibc.so.0)
-writes to these pages to supply addresses for relocatable symbols. This
-dirties the pages, triggering copy-on-write allocation of new memory for each
-processes' dirtied pages.</p>
-
-<p>One solution to this is Position Independent Code (PIC), a way of linking
-a file so all the relocations are grouped together. This dirties fewer
-pages (often just a single page) for each process' relocations. The down
-side is this results in larger executables, which take up more space on disk
-(and a correspondingly larger space in memory). But when many copies of the
-same program are running, PIC dynamic linking trades a larger disk footprint
-for a smaller memory footprint, by sharing more pages.</p>
-
-<p>A third solution is static linking. A statically linked program has no
-relocations, and thus the entire executable is shared between all running
-instances. This tends to have a significantly larger disk footprint, but
-on a system with only one or two executables, shared libraries aren't much
-of a win anyway.</p>
-
-<p>You can tell the glibc linker to display debugging information about its
-relocations with the environment variable "LD_DEBUG". Try
-"LD_DEBUG=help /bin/true" for a list of commands. Learning to interpret
-"LD_DEBUG=statistics cat /proc/self/statm" could be interesting.</p>
-
-<p>For more on this topic, here's Rich Felker:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Dynamic linking (without fixed load addresses) fundamentally requires
-at least one dirty page per dso that uses symbols. Making calls (but
-never taking the address explicitly) to functions within the same dso
-does not require a dirty page by itself, but will with ELF unless you
-use -Bsymbolic or hidden symbols when linking.</p>
-
-<p>ELF uses significant additional stack space for the kernel to pass all
-the ELF data structures to the newly created process image. These are
-located above the argument list and environment. This normally adds 1
-dirty page to the process size.</p>
-
-<p>The ELF dynamic linker has its own data segment, adding one or more
-dirty pages. I believe it also performs relocations on itself.</p>
-
-<p>The ELF dynamic linker makes significant dynamic allocations to manage
-the global symbol table and the loaded dso's. This data is never
-freed. It will be needed again if libdl is used, so unconditionally
-freeing it is not possible, but normal programs do not use libdl. Of
-course with glibc all programs use libdl (due to nsswitch) so the
-issue was never addressed.</p>
-
-<p>ELF also has the issue that segments are not page-aligned on disk.
-This saves up to 4k on disk, but at the expense of using an additional
-dirty page in most cases, due to a large portion of the first data
-page being filled with a duplicate copy of the last text page.</p>
-
-<p>The above is just a partial list of the tiny memory penalties of ELF
-dynamic linking, which eventually add up to quite a bit. The smallest
-I've been able to get a process down to is 8 dirty pages, and the
-above factors seem to mostly account for it (but some were difficult
-to measure).</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="tips_kernel_headers"></a>Including kernel headers</h2>
-
-<p>The "linux" or "asm" directories of /usr/include
-contain Linux kernel
-headers, so that the C library can talk directly to the Linux kernel. In
-a perfect world, applications shouldn't include these headers directly, but
-we don't live in a perfect world.</p>
-
-<p>For example, Busybox's losetup code wants linux/loop.c because nothing else
-#defines the structures to call the kernel's loopback device setup ioctls.
-Attempts to cut and paste the information into a local busybox header file
-proved incredibly painful, because portions of the loop_info structure vary by
-architecture, namely the type __kernel_dev_t has different sizes on alpha,
-arm, x86, and so on. Meaning we either #include <linux/posix_types.h> or
-we hardwire #ifdefs to check what platform we're building on and define this
-type appropriately for every single hardware architecture supported by
-Linux, which is simply unworkable.</p>
-
-<p>This is aside from the fact that the relevant type defined in
-posix_types.h was renamed to __kernel_old_dev_t during the 2.5 series, so
-to cut and paste the structure into our header we have to #include
-<linux/version.h> to figure out which name to use. (What we actually
-do is
-check if we're building on 2.6, and if so just use the new 64 bit structure
-instead to avoid the rename entirely.) But we still need the version
-check, since 2.4 didn't have the 64 bit structure.</p>
-
-<p>The BusyBox developers spent <u>two years</u> trying to figure
-out a clean way to do all this. There isn't one. The losetup in the
-util-linux package from kernel.org isn't doing it cleanly either, they just
-hide the ugliness by nesting #include files. Their mount/loop.h
-#includes "my_dev_t.h", which #includes <linux/posix_types.h>
-and <linux/version.h> just like we do. There simply is no alternative.
-</p>
-
-<p>Just because directly #including kernel headers is sometimes
-unavoidable doesn't me we should include them when there's a better
-way to do it. However, block copying information out of the kernel headers
-is not a better way.</p>
-
-<hr />
-<h2><a name="who">Who are the BusyBox developers?</a></h2>
-
-<p>The following login accounts currently exist on busybox.net. (I.E. these
-people can commit <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/patches/">patches</a>
-into subversion for the BusyBox, uClibc, and buildroot projects.)</p>
-
-<pre>
-aldot :Bernhard Reutner-Fischer
-andersen :Erik Andersen - uClibc and BuildRoot maintainer.
-bug1 :Glenn McGrath
-davidm :David McCullough
-gkajmowi :Garrett Kajmowicz - uClibc++ maintainer
-jbglaw :Jan-Benedict Glaw
-jocke :Joakim Tjernlund
-landley :Rob Landley
-lethal :Paul Mundt
-mjn3 :Manuel Novoa III
-osuadmin :osuadmin
-pgf :Paul Fox
-pkj :Peter Kjellerstedt
-prpplague :David Anders
-psm :Peter S. Mazinger
-russ :Russ Dill
-sandman :Robert Griebl
-sjhill :Steven J. Hill
-solar :Ned Ludd
-timr :Tim Riker
-tobiasa :Tobias Anderberg
-vapier :Mike Frysinger
-vda :Denys Vlasenko - BusyBox maintainer
-</pre>
-
-<p>The following accounts used to exist on busybox.net, but don't anymore so
-I can't ask /etc/passwd for their names. Rob Wentworth
-<robwen at gmail.com> asked Google and recovered the names:</p>
-
-<pre>
-aaronl :Aaron Lehmann
-beppu :John Beppu
-dwhedon :David Whedon
-erik :Erik Andersen
-gfeldman :Gennady Feldman
-jimg :Jim Gleason
-kraai :Matt Kraai
-markw :Mark Whitley
-miles :Miles Bader
-proski :Pavel Roskin
-rjune :Richard June
-tausq :Randolph Chung
-vodz :Vladimir N. Oleynik
-</pre>
-
-
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<h3>BusyBox: The Swiss Army Knife of Embedded Linux</h3>
-
-<p>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX utilities into a single
-small executable. It provides replacements for most of the utilities you
-usually find in GNU fileutils, shellutils, etc. The utilities in BusyBox
-generally have fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however,
-the options that are included provide the expected functionality and behave
-very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a fairly complete
-environment for any small or embedded system.</p>
-
-<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 some device
-nodes in /dev, a few configuration files in /etc, and a Linux kernel.</p>
-
-<p>BusyBox is maintained by
-<a href="mailto:vda.linux@googlemail.com">Denys Vlasenko</a>,
-and licensed under the <a href="license.html">GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE</a>
-version 2.</p>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
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-
-The code and graphics on this website (and it's mirror sites, if any) are
-Copyright (c) 1999-2004 by Erik Andersen. All rights reserved.
-Copyright (c) 2005-2006 Rob Landley.
-
-Documents on this Web site including their graphical elements, design, and
-layout are protected by trade dress and other laws and MAY BE COPIED OR
-IMITATED IN WHOLE OR IN PART. THIS WEBSITE IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE
-IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE WEBSITE TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW.
-SHOULD THIS WEBSITE PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU MAY ASSUME THAT SOMEONE MIGHT GET
-AROUND TO SERVICING, REPAIRING OR CORRECTING IT SOMETIME WHEN THEY HAVE NOTHING
-BETTER TO DO. REGARDLESS, YOU GET TO KEEP BOTH PIECES.
-
-IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY
-COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE THIS
-WEBSITE AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY
-GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR
-INABILITY TO USE THIS WEBSITE (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR
-LOSS OF HAIR, LOSS OF LIFE, LOSS OF MEMORY, LOSS OF YOUR CARKEYS, MISPLACEMENT
-OF YOUR PAYCHECK, OR COMMANDER DATA BEING RENDERED UNABLE TO ASSIST THE
-STARFLEET OFFICERS ABORD THE STARSHIP ENTERPRISE TO RECALIBRATE THE MAIN
-DEFLECTOR ARRAY, LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE
-WEBSITE TO OPERATE WITH YOUR WEBBROWSER), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY
-HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
-
-You have been warned.
-
-You can contact the webmaster at <rob@landley.net> if you have some sort
-of problem with this.
-
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<h3>Prerequisites</h3>
-<p>
-<ul>
-<li>Send several <em>sensible</em> patches to the <a href="lists.html" title="Mailing list">Mailing list</a>.</li>
-<li>Help <em>users</em>, answer their questions, guide them, be helpful and friendly.</li>
-<li>Repeat above.
-</ul>
-</p>
-<p>
-If you feel comfortable with the above and have proven to continually
-fulfill these requirements, or somebody asks you to apply for write-access
-to the repository who itself is maintainer of a project, then please apply
-for an account (if needed).
-</p>
-<h3>Morris Dancing</h3>
-
-<p>Subversion commit access requires an account on Morris. The server
-behind busybox.net and uclibc.org. If you want to be able to commit things to
-Subversion, first contribute some stuff to show you are serious, can handle
-some responsibility, and that your patches don't generally need a lot of
-cleanup. Then, very nicely ask one of us
-(<a href="mailto:vda.linux@googlemail.com">Denys Vlasenko</a> for primarily BusyBox, or
-<a href="mailto:rep.<literal>dot</>.nop@gmail.com">Bernhard Reutner-Fischer</a> primarily for uClibc)
-for an account.</p>
-
-<p>If you're approved for an account, you'll need to send an email from your
-preferred contact email address with the username you'd like to use when
-committing changes to GIT, and attach a public ssh key to access your account
-with.</p>
-
-<p>If you don't currently have an ssh version 2 DSA key at least 4096 bits
-long, you can generate a key using the command
-<b>ssh-keygen -b 4096 -t dsa</b>
-and hitting enter at the prompts.
-This will create the files <b>~/.ssh/id_dsa</b> and <b>~/.ssh/id_dsa.pub</b>
-You must then send the content of 'id_dsa.pub' to me so I can set up your
-account. (The content of 'id_dsa' should of course be kept secret, anyone
-who has that can access any account that's installed your public key in
-its <b>.ssh/authorized_keys</b> file.)</p>
-
-<p>Note that if you would prefer to keep your communications with us
-private, you can encrypt your email using
-<a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/vda_pubkey.gpg">Denys' public key</a> or
-<a href="http://uClibc.org/~aldot/gpg.asc">Bernhard's public key</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p>Once you are setup with an account, you will need to use your account to
-checkout a copy of BusyBox from GIT:</p>
-
-<p><b>git+ssh://username@git.busybox.net/git/busybox busybox.mine</b></p>
-<p>or</p>
-<p><b>git+ssh://username@git.uClibc.org/git/uClibc uClibc.tmp</b></p>
-
-<p>You must change <em>username</em> to your own username, or omit
-it if it's the same as your local username.</p>
-
-<p>You can then enter the newly checked out project directory, make changes,
-check your changes, diff your changes, revert your changes, and and commit your
-changes using commands such as:</p>
-
-<b><pre>
-git diff
-git format-patch -s
-git status
-git revert <revert-hash>
-EDITOR=vi git commit -s
-git log
-git push -v --thin
-git help
-</pre></b>
-
-<p>For additional detail on how to use
-<a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/">GIT</a>, please visit the
-<a href="http://git.or.cz/">GIT overview</a> site.
-You might also want to read online the <a
-href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs">manpages</a>
-or
-<a href="http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/gittutorial.html">tutorial</a>.
-</p>
-
-<p>A morris account also gives you a personal web page
-(http://busybox.net/~username comes from ~/public_html on morris), and of
-course a shell prompt you can ssh into (as a regular user, root access is
-reserved for folks doing maintenancy stuff only). But keep in mind an
-account on Morris is a
-priviledge, not a requirement. Most contributors to busybox and uClibc
-haven't got one, and accounts are handed out to make the project maintainers'
-lives easier, not because "you deserve it".</p>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-
-
-<h3>Download</h3>
-
-<p>
-Source for the latest release can always be
-downloaded from <a href="downloads/">http://www.busybox.net/downloads/</a>.
-
-<p>
-Each 1.x branch has bug fix releases after initial 1.x.0 release.
-Also there are patches on top of latest bug fix release.
-<p>
-Latest releases and patch directories for each branch:
-<br>
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.10.1.tar.bz2">1.10.1</a>,
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.10.1/">patches</a>,
-<br>
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.9.2.tar.bz2">1.9.2</a>,
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.9.2/">patches</a>,
-<br>
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.8.3.tar.bz2">1.8.3</a>,
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.8.3/">patches</a>,
-<br>
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.7.5.tar.bz2">1.7.5</a>,
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.7.5/">patches</a>,
-<br>
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.6.2.tar.bz2">1.6.2</a>,
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.6.2/">patches</a>,
-<br>
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.5.2.tar.bz2">1.5.2</a>,
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.5.2/">patches</a>,
-<br>
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.4.2.tar.bz2">1.4.2</a>,
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.4.2/">patches</a>,
-<br>
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.3.2.tar.bz2">1.3.2</a>,
-<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.3.2/">patches</a>.
-
-<p>
-You can also obtain <a href="downloads/snapshots/">Daily Snapshots</a> of
-the latest development source tree for those wishing to follow BusyBox development,
-but cannot or do not wish to use Subversion (svn).
-
-<ul>
- <li> Click here to <a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/trunk/busybox/">browse the source tree</a>.
- </li>
-
- <li>Anonymous <a href="subversion.html">Subversion access</a> is available.
- </li>
-
- <li>For those that are actively contributing obtaining
- <a href="developer.html">Subversion read/write access</a> is also possible.
- </li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
-
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<h3>How to get your patch added to "hot fixes"</h3>
-
-<p> If you found a regression or severe bug in busybox, and you have a patch
- for it, and you want to see it added to "hot fixes", please rediff your
- patch against corresponding unmodified busybox source and send it to
- <a href="mailto:busybox@busybox.net">the mailing list</a>.
-</p>
-
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!-- Footer -->
-
-
- </td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<hr />
-
-
- <table width="100%">
- <tr>
- <td width="60%">
- <font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif" size="-1">
- <!--div style="font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 80%;" -->
- <a href="/copyright.txt">Copyright © 1999-2008 Erik Andersen</a>
- <br>
- Mail all comments, insults, suggestions and bribes to
- <br>
- Denys Vlasenko <a href="mailto:vda.linux@googlemail.com">vda.linux@googlemail.com</a><br>
- </font>
- <!--/div-->
- </td>
-
- <td>
- <a href="http://www.vim.org/"><img border="0"
- width="88" height="31"
- src="images/written.in.vi.png"
- alt="This site created with the vi editor" /></a>
- </td>
-
- <td>
- <a href="http://osuosl.org/"><img border="0"
- width="114" height="63"
- src="images/osuosl.png"
- alt="This site is kindly hosted by OSL" /></a>
- </td>
-<!--
- <td>
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- border="0" height="31" width="88"
- src="images/valid-html401.png"
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- </td>
--->
- </tr>
- </table>
-
- </body>
-</html>
-
+++ /dev/null
-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC '-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN'>
-
-<html>
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv='Content-Type' content='text/html; charset=iso-8859-1'>
- <title>BusyBox</title>
- <style type="text/css">
- body {
- background-color: #DEE2DE;
- color: #000000;
- font-family: lucida, helvetica, arial;
- font-size: 100%;
- }
- :link { color: #660000 }
- :visited { color: #660000 }
- :active { color: #660000 }
- td.c2 {font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 80%}
- td.c1 {font-family: lucida, helvetica; font-size: 248%}
- </style>
- </head>
-
- <body>
- <!--basefont face="lucida, helvetica, arial" size="3"-->
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
-<tr>
-<td>
- <div class="c3">
- <table border="0" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="2">
- <tr>
- <td class="c1">BUSYBOX</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </div>
-
- <a href="/"><img src="images/busybox1.png" alt="BusyBox" border="0" /></a><br>
-</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td valign="top">
- <b>About</b>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="about.html">About BusyBox</a></li>
- <li><a href="screenshot.html">Screenshot</a></li>
- <li><a href="news.html">Announcements</a></li>
- </ul>
- <b>Documentation</b>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="FAQ.html">FAQ</a></li>
- <li><a href="downloads/BusyBox.html">Command Help</a></li>
- <li><a href="downloads/README">README</a></li>
- </ul>
- <b>Get BusyBox</b>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="download.html">Download Source</a></li>
- <li><a href="license.html">License</a></li>
- <li><a href="products.html">Products</a></li>
- </ul>
- <b>Development</b>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/trunk/busybox/">Browse Source</a></li>
- <li><a href="subversion.html">Source Control</a></li>
- <!--li><a href="/downloads/patches/recent.html">Recent Changes</a></li-->
- <li><a href="lists.html">Mailing Lists</a></li>
- <li><a href="https://bugs.busybox.net/">Bug Tracking</a></li>
- <li><a href="developer.html">Contributing</a></li>
- </ul>
- <p><b>Links</b>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="links.html">Related Sites</a></li>
- <li><a href="tinyutils.html">Tiny Utilities</a></li>
- <li><a href="sponsors.html">Sponsors</a></li>
- </ul>
- <p><b>Developer Pages</b>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="http://busybox.net/~landley/">Rob</a></li>
- <li><a href="http://busybox.net/~aldot/">Bernhard</a></li>
- <li><a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/">Denys</a>
- <br>- <a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/resume/denys_vlasenko.htm">resume</a>
- <br>- <a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/mboot/">mboot</a>
- <br>- <a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/linld/">linld</a>
- <br>- <a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/init_vs_runsv.html">init must die</a>
- <br>- <a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/no_ifup.txt">no ifup</a>
- <br>- <a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/unscd/">unscd</a>
- </li>
- </ul>
-</td>
-
-<td valign="top">
-
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="news.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<p>
-<h3><a name="license">BusyBox is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2</a></h3>
-
-<p>BusyBox is licensed under <a href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html#SEC1">the
-GNU General Public License</a> version 2, which is often abbreviated as GPLv2.
-(This is the same license the Linux kernel is under, so you may be somewhat
-familiar with it by now.)</p>
-
-<p>A complete copy of the license text is included in the file LICENSE in
-the BusyBox source code.</p>
-
-<p><a href="products.html">Anyone thinking of shipping BusyBox as part of a
-product</a> should be familiar with the licensing terms under which they are
-allowed to use and distribute BusyBox. Read the full test of the GPL (either
-through the above link, or in the file LICENSE in the busybox tarball), and
-also read the <a href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html">Frequently
-Asked Questions about the GPL</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Basically, if you distribute GPL software the license requires that you also
-distribute the source code to that GPL-licensed software. So if you distribute
-BusyBox without making the source code to the version you distribute available,
-you violate the license terms, and thus infringe on the copyrights of BusyBox.
-(This requirement applies whether or not you modified BusyBox; either way the
-license terms still apply to you.) Read the license text for the details.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="version">A note on GPL versions</a></h3>
-
-<p>Version 2 of the GPL is the only version of the GPL which current versions
-of BusyBox may be distributed under. New code added to the tree is licensed
-GPL version 2, and the project's license is GPL version 2.</p>
-
-<p>Older versions of BusyBox (versions 1.2.2 and earlier, up through about svn
-16112) included variants of the recommended
-"GPL version 2 or (at your option) later versions" boilerplate
-permission grant. Ancient versions of BusyBox
-(before svn 49) did not specify any version at all, and section 9 of GPLv2
-(the most recent version at that time) says those old versions may be
-redistributed under any version of GPL (including the obsolete V1). This was
-conceptually similar to a dual license, except that the different licenses were
-different versions of the GPL.</p>
-
-<p>However, BusyBox has apparently always contained chunks of code that were
-licensed under GPL version 2 only. Examples include applets written by Linus
-Torvalds (util-linux/mkfs_minix.c and util_linux/mkswap.c) which stated they
-"may be redistributed as per the Linux copyright" (which Linus
-clarified in the
-2.4.0-pre8 release announcement in 2000 was GPLv2 only), and Linux kernel code
-copied into libbb/loop.c (after Linus's announcement). There are probably
-more, because all we used to check was that the code was GPL, not which
-version. (Before the GPLv3 draft proceedings in 2006, it was a purely
-theoretical issue that didn't come up much.)</p>
-
-<p>To summarize: every version of BusyBox may be distributed under the terms of
-GPL version 2. New versions (after 1.2.2) may <b>only</b> be distributed under
-GPLv2, not under other versions of the GPL. Older versions of BusyBox might
-(or might not) be distributable under other versions of the GPL. If you
-want to use a GPL version other than 2, you should start with one of the old
-versions such as release 1.2.2 or SVN 16112, and do your own homework to
-identify and remove any code that can't be licensed under the GPL version you
-want to use. New development is all GPLv2.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="enforce">License enforcement</a></h3>
-
-<p>BusyBox's copyrights are enforced by the <a
-href="http://www.softwarefreedom.org/">Software Freedom Law Center</a>
-(you can contact them at gpl@busybox.net), which
-"accepts primary responsibility for enforcement of US copyrights on the
-software... and coordinates international copyright enforcement efforts for
-such works as necessary." If you distribute BusyBox in a way that doesn't
-comply with the terms of the license BusyBox is distributed under, expect to
-hear from these guys. Their entire reason for existing is to do pro-bono
-legal work for free/open source software projects. (We used to list people who
-violate the BusyBox license in <a href="shame.html">The Hall of Shame</a>,
-but these days we find it much more effective to hand them over to the
-lawyers.)</p>
-
-<p>Our enforcement efforts are aimed at bringing people into compliance with
-the BusyBox license. Open source software is under a different license from
-proprietary software, but if you violate that license you're still a software
-pirate and the law gives the vendor (us) some big sticks to play with. We
-don't want monetary awards, injunctions, or to generate bad PR for a company,
-unless that's the only way to get somebody that repeatedly ignores us to comply
-with the license on our code.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="good">A Good Example</a></h3>
-
-<p>These days, <a href="http://www.linksys.com/">Linksys</a> is
-doing a good job at complying with the GPL, they get to be an
-example of how to do things right. Please take a moment and
-check out what they do with
-<a href="http://www.linksys.com/servlet/Satellite?c=L_Content_C1&childpagename=US%2FLayout&cid=1115416836002&pagename=Linksys%2FCommon%2FVisitorWrapper">
-distributing the firmware for their WRT54G Router.</a>
-Following their example would be a fine way to ensure that you
-have also fulfilled your licensing obligations.</p>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
-
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<h3>Related Sites</h3>
-
-<br><a href="http://uclibc.org/">uClibc.org</a>
-<br><a href="http://cxx.uclibc.org/">uClibc++</a>
-<!--br><a href="http://udhcp.busybox.net/">udhcp</a -->
-<br><a href="http://buildroot.uclibc.org/">buildroot</a>
-<br><a href="http://www.scratchbox.org/">Scratchbox</a>
-<br><a href="http://openembedded.org/">OpenEmbedded</a>
-<br><a href="http://www.ucdot.org/">uCdot</a>
-<br><a href="http://www.linuxdevices.com/">LinuxDevices</a>
-<br><a href="http://slashdot.org/">Slashdot</a>
-<br><a href="http://freshmeat.net/">Freshmeat</a>
-<br><a href="http://linuxtoday.com/">Linux Today</a>
-<br><a href="http://lwn.net/">Linux Weekly News</a>
-<br><a href="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO">Linux HOWTOs</a>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-
-<!-- Begin Introduction section -->
-
-<h3>Mailing List Information</h3>
-BusyBox has a <a href="/lists/busybox/">mailing list</a> for discussion and
-development. You can subscribe by visiting
-<a href="http://lists.busybox.net/mailman/listinfo/busybox">this page</a>.
-Only subscribers to the BusyBox mailing list are allowed to post
-to this list.
-
-<p>
-There is also a mailing list for <a href="/lists/busybox-cvs/">active developers</a>
-wishing to read the complete diff of each and every change to busybox -- not for the
-faint of heart. Active developers can subscribe by visiting
-<a href="http://lists.busybox.net/mailman/listinfo/busybox-cvs">this page</a>.
-The Subversion server is the only one permtted to post to this list. And yes,
-this list name uses the word 'cvs' even though we don't use that anymore...
-
-<p>
-
-
-<h3>Search the List Archives</h3>
-Please search the mailing list archives before asking questions on the mailing
-list, since there is a good chance someone else has asked the same question
-before. Checking the archives is a great way to avoid annoying everyone on the
-list with frequently asked questions...
-<p>
-
-<center>
-<form method="GET" action="http://www.google.com/custom">
-<input type="hidden" name="domains" value="busybox.net">
-<input type="hidden" name="sitesearch" value="busybox.net">
-<input type="text" name="q" size="31" maxlength="255" value="">
-<br>
-<input type="submit" name="sa" value="search the mailing list archives">
-<br>
-<a href="http://www.google.com"><img src="http://www.google.com/logos/Logo_25wht.gif" border="0" alt="Google" height="32" width="75" align="middle"></a>
-<br>
-</form>
-</center>
-
-
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<ul>
-
- <li>
- <p>We want to thank the following companies which are providing support for the BusyBox project:
- <ul>
- <li>AOE media, a <a href="http://www.aoemedia.com/typo3-development.html">
- TYPO3 development agency</a> contributes financially.</li>
- <li><a href="http://www.analog.com/en/">Analog Devices, Inc.</a> provided
- a <a href="http://docs.blackfin.uclinux.org/doku.php?id=bf537_quick_start">
- Blackfin development board</a> free of charge.
- <a href="http://www.analog.com/blackfin">Blackfin</a>
- is a NOMMU processor, and its availability for testing is invaluable.
- If you are an embedded device developer,
- please note that Analog Devices has entire Linux distribution available
- for download for this board. Visit
- <a href="http://blackfin.uclinux.org/">http://blackfin.uclinux.org/</a>
- for more information.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>15 April 2009 -- BusyBox 1.14.0 (unstable), BusyBox 1.13.4 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.14.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.14.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_14_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.14.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.13.4.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.13.4</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_13_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.13.4/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Sizes of busybox-1.13.4 and busybox-1.14.0 (with equivalent config, static uclibc build):<pre>
- text data bss dec hex filename
- 785501 483 7036 793020 c19bc busybox.1.13.4/busybox
- 788380 467 6960 795807 c249f busybox.1.14.0/busybox
- 15361 0 0 15361 3c01 busybox.1.13.4/shell/hush.o
- 20724 0 0 20724 50f4 busybox.1.14.0/shell/hush.o
-</pre>
- <p>Most of growth is in hush. The rest shrank a bit.
-
- <p>New applets:
- <ul>
- <li>flash_eraseall: by Sebastian Andrzej Siewior (bigeasy AT linutronix.de)</li>
- <li>acpid, mkdosfs, tunctl: by Vladimir</li>
- <li>ftpd: by Adam Tkac (vonsch AT gmail.com)</li>
- <li>timeout: by Roberto Foglietta</li>
- <li>ionice: adapted from Linux kernel example by Walter Harms</li>
- <li>mkpasswd: synonym to cryptpw. mkpasswd is in Debian, OTOH cryptpw was added to busybox earlier. Trying to make both camps happy by making those two applets just aliases. They are command-line compatible</li>
- </ul>
-
- <p>Changes since previous release:
-
- <p>lash and msh are deprecated, please migrate to hush.
-
- <p>hush had many, many fixes and features added: here documents, arithmetic evaluation, function support, and all this works on NOMMU too, safely, including 100kb-sized `command` and here documents. Here document support, arithmetic evaluation, improved ${var} operations, other fixes are by Mike Frysinger (vapier AT gentoo.org).
-
- <p>Other changes:
- <ul>
- <li>libbb: unify concurrent-safe update of /etc/{passwd,group,[g]shadow}. By Tito (farmatito AT tiscali.it)</li>
- <li>libbb/sha{1,256,512}: major code shrink</li>
- <li>libbb/lineedit: make history saving/loading concurrent-safe</li>
- <li>libbb: shrink linked list ops. By xmaks AT email.cz</li>
- <li>libbb: str2sockaddr should accept [IPv6] addr without port - wget 'ftp://[::1]/file' needs that to work</li>
- <li>libbb: make bb_info_msg do atomic, unbuffered writes</li>
- <li>util-linux/volumeid: abort early on read failures. Should help with probing missing fdd's</li>
- <li>util-linux/volumeid: fix bug 249 "findfs finds the wrong partition"</li>
- <li>adduser: allow adding to group 0; don't _create_ /etc/shadow, only append data if it exists</li>
- <li>ash: fix mishandled ^C and SIGINT (several cases)</li>
- <li>ash: fix "ash -c 'exec 1>&0'" complaining that fd 0 is busy</li>
- <li>ash: fix $IFS handling in read. Closes bug 235</li>
- <li>ash: fix a case where we were closing wrong descriptor</li>
- <li>ash: fix bad interaction between ash -c '....&' and bash compat</li>
- <li>ash: fix miscalculation of memory needed for eval tree. Found by Timo Teras (timo.teras AT iki.fi)</li>
- <li>ash: make dot command search current directory first, as bash does</li>
- <li>ash: printf builtin with no arguments should not exit</li>
- <li>awk: fix long field separators case. By Ian Wienand (ianw AT vmware.com)</li>
- <li>awk: in BEGIN section $0 should be "", not "0"</li>
- <li>awk: make "struct global" hack more robust wrt alignment. Closes bug 131</li>
- <li>brctl: fix compilation on 2.4.x kernels</li>
- <li>chat: treat timeout more correctly</li>
- <li>chat: recognize RECORD directive</li>
- <li>cksum, head, printenv: report errors via exitcode</li>
- <li>cpio: add -p, -0 and -L options</li>
- <li>crond, crontab: make cron directory location configurable</li>
- <li>crond: correct more of logfile to 0666 (as usual, umask allows user to remove unwanted bits)</li>
- <li>crond: put tasks in separate process groups</li>
- <li>dc: fix the "base 2" patch omission of base not being set</li>
- <li>depmod: accept and ignore -r. Linux kernel build needs this</li>
- <li>depmod: fix -b option. By timo.teras AT iki.fi</li>
- <li>udhcpc: fix a problem where we don't open listening socket fast enough</li>
- <li>udhcpc: stop filtering environment passed to the script</li>
- <li>udhcpd: disable option to have absolute lease times in lease file (that does not work with dumpleases)</li>
- <li>udhcpd: write 64-bit current time in lease file. Without it, determination of remaining lease time is unreliable</li>
- <li>udhcpd: remember hostnames of clients</li>
- <li>dumpleases: fix -a option, use recorded current time in lease file, show hostnames</li>
- <li>dnsd: fix a number of bugs. Ideas by Ming-Ching Tiew (mctiew AT yahoo.com)</li>
- <li>dpkg: better and shorter code to compare versions. Taken from "official" dpkg by Eugene T. Bordenkircher (eugebo AT gmail.com)</li>
- <li>du: fix "du /dir /dir" case</li>
- <li>env: support -uVAR=VAL</li>
- <li>expand, unexpand: fix incorrect expansion in some cases</li>
- <li>expr: a bit more robust handling of regexps with groups. Closes bug 87</li>
- <li>find: support --mindepth</li>
- <li>getty: make speed 0 mean "don't change speed", stop using non-portable way of setting speeds</li>
- <li>grep: support -z</li>
- <li>gzip: fix gzip -dc bug caused by using stale getopt state</li>
- <li>httpd: set $HOST to Host: header value. By Tobias Poschwatta (tp AT fonz.de)</li>
- <li>ifupdown: allow options to udhcpc to be configurable from .config</li>
- <li>init: do not eat last char in messages; do not print duplicate "init:" prefix to syslog</li>
- <li>init: fix a bug where on reload order of entries might be wrong</li>
- <li>init: major improvement in documentation and signal handling. Lots of nasty, but hard to trip, races are fixed</li>
- <li>init: reinstate proper handling of !ENABLE_FEATURE_USE_INITTAB</li>
- <li>init: remove wait loop on restart, it may be dangerous</li>
- <li>init: test for vt terminal with VT_OPENQRY, assume that anything else is TERM=vt102, not TERM=linux. Closes bug 195</li>
- <li>inotifyd: add x, o, and u events</li>
- <li>inotifyd: fix buffer overflow and "unreaped zombies" problem</li>
- <li>inotifyd: conserve resourses by closing unused inotify descriptors</li>
- <li>insmod/modprobe: do not pass NULL to kernel as module parameter</li>
- <li>ip: in "ip rule add from all table 1", "all" is taken as 0.0.0.0/32, whereas "any" and "default" would be 0.0.0.0/0. They must be all 0.0.0.0/0. Closes bug 57</li>
- <li>iproute: fix ipXXX utilities trying to parse their applet name as their 1st parameter</li>
- <li>klogctl: fix a problem where we don't terminate read data with '\0' and then misinterpret it</li>
- <li>ls: do not follow links with -s. Closes bug 33</li>
- <li>ls: implement -Q and -g (-g was accepted but ignored)</li>
- <li>ls: make readlink error to not disrupt output (try ls -l /proc/self/fd)</li>
- <li>man: better check for duplicated MANPATH</li>
- <li>mdev: add support for - ("dont stop here") char</li>
- <li>mdev: if /sys/class/block exists, don't scan /sys/block</li>
- <li>mdev: ignore events with "$SUBSYSTEM" == "firmware" && "$ACTION" == "remove"</li>
- <li>mdev: provide $SUBSYSTEM. By Vladimir</li>
- <li>modprobe/insmod for 2.4: support compressed modules. By Guenter (lists AT gknw.net)</li>
- <li>modprobe: rework/speedup by Timo Teras (timo.teras AT iki.fi)</li>
- <li>modutils-24: fix bad interaction of xzalloc with xrealloc_vector</li>
- <li>mount: support "-O option", stop trying to mount swap partitions, fix CIFS support</li>
- <li>mountpoint: add -n option. By Vladimir</li>
- <li>nslookup: allow usage of IPv6 addresses or hostnames for DNS server name; allow for port specification. Tested to work on uclibc svn: "nslookup google.com [::1]:5353". glibc + IPv6 address of DNS server still does not work</li>
- <li>popmaildir: fix several grave bugs with using memory past end of malloc block</li>
- <li>printf: fix 1.12.0 breakage (from %*d fix), it was misinterpreting "*"</li>
- <li>printf: make integer format strings print long long-sized values</li>
- <li>rmmod: fix bug 263 "modutils/rmmod can't remove modules with dash in name on 2.4 kernels"</li>
- <li>sendmail: document and fix usage of fd #4, fix check for helper failure</li>
- <li>sendmail: update by Vladimir</li>
- <li>seq: add -w support. By Natanael Copa</li>
- <li>seq: add support for "-s separator"</li>
- <li>stat: make stat -f show filesystem "ID:" as coreutils does</li>
- <li>sysctl: fix another corner case with "dots and slashes"</li>
- <li>sysctl: fix broken -p [file]. Closes bug 231</li>
- <li>sysctl: support recursing if name is a directory: "sysctl net.ipv4.conf". Patch by xmaks AT email.cz</li>
- <li>syslogd: make signal handling syncronous</li>
- <li>syslogd: create logfile with 0666 (affected by umask as usual), not 0600</li>
- <li>tail: fix tail +N syntax not working. Closes bug 221</li>
- <li>tar: do not change new tarfile's mode, GNU tar doesn't do it</li>
- <li>tar: support GNU tar's "base256" encoding</li>
- <li>telnetd: correctly output 0xff char</li>
- <li>telnetd: do not advertise TELNET_LFLOW, we do not support it properly</li>
- <li>tftp: when we infer local name from remote (-r [/]path/path/file), strip path. This mimics wget and is generally more intuitive</li>
- <li>timeout: fix parsing of -t NUM on MMU</li>
- <li>top: make it work again on 2.4 kernels. Closes bug 125</li>
- <li>tr: fix overflow in expand and complement, fix stop after [:class:], fix handling of ranges and [x]'s</li>
- <li>tr: support -C as synonym to -c, support [:xdigit:]</li>
- <li>traceroute: rewrite. Do not emit raw IP packets, instead send UDP or ICMP packets and rely on the kernel to form IP headers, select source IP and interface</li>
- <li>uname: add support for -i and -o, fix printing of unknown -p value with -a option, support long options</li>
- <li>unzip: fix thinko with le/be conv and size. Closes bug 129</li>
- <li>vi: fix several instances of major goof: when text grows, text[] might get reallocated! We were keeping around pointers to old place</li>
- <li>vi: speedup and code shrink. By Walter Harms</li>
- <li>wget: --post-data support. By Harald Kuthe (harald-tuxbox AT arcor.de)</li>
- <li>wget: fix --header handling, more robust EINTR detection</li>
- </ul>
- </p>
-
- <li><b>8 March 2009 -- BusyBox 1.13.3 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.13.3.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.13.3</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_13_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.13.3/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>1.13.3 is a bug fix release. It has fixes for awk, depmod, init, killall, mdev,
- modprobe, printf, syslogd, tar, top, unzip, wget.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>31 December 2008 -- BusyBox 1.13.2 (stable), BusyBox 1.12.4 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.13.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.13.2</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_13_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.13.2/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.12.4.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.12.4</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_12_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.12.4/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Bug fix releases. 1.13.2 has fixes for crond, dc, init, ip, printf.
- 1.12.4 has fixes for ip and printf.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>29 November 2008 -- BusyBox 1.13.1 (stable), BusyBox 1.12.3 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.13.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.13.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_13_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.13.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.12.3.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.12.3</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_12_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.12.3/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Bug fix releases. 1.13.1 has fixes for ash, option parsing, id, init,
- inotifyd, klogd, line editing and modprobe. 1.12.3 has fixes
- for option parsing and line editing.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>10 November 2008 -- BusyBox 1.13.0 (unstable), BusyBox 1.12.2 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.13.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.13.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_13_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.13.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.12.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.12.2</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_12_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.12.2/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Sizes of busybox-1.12.2 and busybox-1.13.0 (with equivalent config, static uclibc build):<pre>
- text data bss dec hex filename
- 778291 551 7856 786698 c010a busybox-1.12.2/busybox
- 778981 551 7852 787384 c03b8 busybox-1.13.0/busybox
-</pre>
-
- <p>New applets: blkid, devmem
-
- <p>Changes since previous release:
- <ul>
- <li>mail applets: total overhaul. Vladimir as usual</li>
- <li>ash: fix "while kill -0 $child; do true; done" looping forever</li>
- <li>ash: fix NOEXEC mode - we were forgetting to pass environment</li>
- <li>ash: fix a bug in standalone mode (corrupted getopt state)</li>
- <li>ash: optionally support ">&file" and "&>file" redirections</li>
- <li>awk: bitwise ops cast oprands and results to unsigned long, not signed. closes bug 4774</li>
- <li>awk: fix typo in atan2 code. closes bug 5594</li>
- <li>awk: improve handling of negative numbers in bitwise ops; fix handling of octal costants</li>
- <li>awk: support hex constants</li>
- <li>basename: fix error code (again)</li>
- <li>cpio: emit TRAILER even when hard links were found. By Pascal Bellard (pascal.bellard AT ads-lu.com)</li>
- <li>crontab: do not destroy STDIN_FILENO, editor may need it (crontab -e)</li>
- <li>dc: support for bases 2 and 8, by Nate Case (ncase AT xes-inc.com)</li>
- <li>dhcpc: treat "discover...select...discover..." loop the same way as "discover...discover...discover..."</li>
- <li>dpkg: add dpkg -l PACKAGE_PATTERN. By Peter Korsgaard</li>
- <li>fbset: fix mode matching code: original code may trigger false positive.</li>
- <li>findfs: fix LUKS and FAT detection routines; do not exit if corrupted FAT fs makes us try to seek past the end</li>
- <li>grep: fix 'echo aaa | grep -o a' + ENABLE_EXTRA_COMPAT case. By Natanael Copa</li>
- <li>grep: fix EXTRA_COMPAT grep to honor -E and -i</li>
- <li>gunzip: restore mtime</li>
- <li>halt: reinstate -w even if !FEATURE_WTMP</li>
- <li>hexdump: fix SEGV in hexdump -e ""</li>
- <li>httpd: pass "Accept:" and "Accept-Language:" header to CGI scripts (Alina Friedrichsen)</li>
- <li>hush: fix environment and memory leaks</li>
- <li>hush: fix trashing of environment by local env vars: a=a; a=b cmd; - a was unset</li>
- <li>id: improve compatibility with coreutils. By Tito Ragusa</li>
- <li>inetd: fix a case when we have zero services</li>
- <li>inetd: use config parser. by Vladimir</li>
- <li>init: set stderr to NONBLOCK</li>
- <li>insmod: fix detection of open failure</li>
- <li>install: support -D</li>
- <li>ip: fix ip route rejecting dotted quads as prefix</li>
- <li>ip: route metric support (Natanael Copa)</li>
- <li>iplink: accept shorthands for "address" keyword: "ip link set address 00:11:22:33:44:55"</li>
- <li>kbd_mode: support -C TTY</li>
- <li>kill[all[5]]: accept -s SIG too. By Steve Bennett (steveb AT workware.net.au)</li>
- <li>klogd: handle many lines at once. By Steve Bennett (steveb AT workware.net.au)</li>
- <li>less: support -I to be able to search case-insensitively</li>
- <li>less: add optional line number toggle and resizing on window resize</li>
- <li>libbb: do not reject floating point strings like ".15"</li>
- <li>lineedit: fix bug 5824 "since rev 23530 fdisk and ed don't work any more"</li>
- <li>lineedit: fix problems with empty commands in history</li>
- <li>login: fix /etc/nologin handling</li>
- <li>man: fix inconsistencies in handling $MANPATH</li>
- <li>mdev: support match by major,minor. See bug 4714</li>
- <li>modprobe-small: make insmod command line compatible</li>
- <li>modprobe-small: support "blacklist" keyword in /etc/modules/MODULE_NAME</li>
- <li>modprobe: fix a segfault when modprobe is called with no arguments at all</li>
- <li>modutils/*: rewrite by Timo Teras (timo.teras AT iki.fi)</li>
- <li>mount: fix "-o parm1 -o parm2" not accumulating</li>
- <li>nmeter: 4k buffers are too small for /proc files, make them dynamically sized with 16k upper limit</li>
- <li>ping: SO_RCVBUF must be bigger than packet size, otherwise large ping packets might fail to be received</li>
- <li>route: fix for 64-bit BE machines by Seonghun Lim (wariua AT gmail.com)</li>
- <li>rpm: fix incompatibilities which prevented rpm -i foo.src.rpm</li>
- <li>runsvdir: support runsvdir-as-init</li>
- <li>setarch: do not try to use non-existent data in argv[]</li>
- <li>setfont: support -m and -C, support -m TEXTUAL_MAP (by Vladimir)</li>
- <li>setup_environment: cd $HOME regardless of clear_env value</li>
- <li>slattach: preserve speed in non-raw mode. By Matthieu Castet (matthieu.castet AT parrot.com)</li>
- <li>start_stop_daemon: accept (and ignore) -R PARAM</li>
- <li>sv: make default service dir configurable (Vladimir wants it)</li>
- <li>sysctl: fix bug 3894 (by Kryzhanovskyy Maksym)</li>
- <li>tar: fix bug 3844: non-root tar does not preserve perms</li>
- <li>telnetd: handle emacs M-DEL and IAC-NOP. by Jim Cathey (jcathey AT ciena.com)</li>
- <li>top: fix "top -d 1" (bug 5144)</li>
- <li>top: optional SMP support by Vineet Gupta (vineetg76 AT gmail.com)</li>
- <li>trylink: make messages less confusing</li>
- <li>unzip: handle "central directory". needed for OpenOffice, gmail attachment .zips etc</li>
- <li>vi: Rob's algorithm of reading and matching ESC sequences (nice work btw!)</li>
- <li>vi: deal with EOF/error on stdin and with input NULs</li>
- <li>vi: fix uninitialized last_search_pattern (bug 5794)</li>
- <li>vi: handle chars 0x80, 0x81 etc correctly</li>
- <li>volume identification: abolish /proc/partitions and /proc/cdroms scanning. It does not catch volume managers and such. Simply scan /dev/* for any block devices</li>
- <li>watchdog: WDIOC_SETTIMEOUT accepts seconds, not milliseconds</li>
- <li>watchdog: add -T option</li>
- </ul>
- <p>
- The email address gpl@busybox.net is the recommended way to contact
- the Software Freedom Law Center to report BusyBox license violations.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>28 September 2008 -- BusyBox 1.12.1 (stable), BusyBox 1.11.3 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.12.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.12.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_12_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.12.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.11.3.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.11.3</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_11_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.11.3/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p>
- Bugfix-only releases for 1.11.x and 1.12.x branches.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>21 August 2008 -- BusyBox 1.12.0 (unstable), BusyBox 1.11.2 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.12.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.12.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_12_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.12.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.11.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.11.2</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_11_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.11.2/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Sizes of busybox-1.11.2 and busybox-1.12.0 (with equivalent config, static uclibc build):<pre>
- text data bss dec hex filename
- 829687 617 7052 837356 cc6ec busybox-1.11.2/busybox
- 822961 594 6832 830387 cabb3 busybox-1.12.0/busybox
-</pre>
-
- <p>New applets: rdev (Grant Erickson), setfont, showkey (both by Vladimir)
-
- <p>Most significant changes since previous release (please report any regression):
- <ul>
- <li>ash: bash compat: "shift $BIGNUM" is equivalent to "shift 1"</li>
- <li>ash: dont allow e.g. exec <&10 to attach to script's fd! </li>
- <li>ash: fix a bug where redirection fds were not closed afterwards. optimize close+fcntl(DUPFD) into dup2</li>
- <li>ash: fix segfault in "command -v"</li>
- <li>ash: fix very weak $RANDOM generator</li>
- <li>ash: prevent exec NN>&- from closing fd used for script reading</li>
- <li>ash: teach ash about 123>file. It could take only 0..9 before</li>
- <li>hush: fix a case where "$@" must expand to no word at all</li>
- <li>hush: fix mishandling of a'b'c=fff as assignments. They are not</li>
- <li>hush: fix non-detection of builtins and applets in "v=break; ...; $v; ..." case</li>
- <li>hush: fix "while false; ..." exitcode; add testsuites</li>
- <li>hush: support "case...esac" statements (~350 bytes of code)</li>
- <li>hush: support "break [N]" and "continue [N]" statements</li>
- <li>hush: support "for if in do done then; do echo $if; done" case</li>
- <li>hush: support "for v; do ... done" syntax (implied 'in "$@"')</li>
- <li>hush: support $_NUMBERS variable names</li>
- <li>libbb: unified config parser (by Vladimir). This change affected many applets</li>
- </ul>
-
- <p>Other changes:
- <ul>
- <li>libbb: dump: do not use uninitialized memory (closes bug 4364)</li>
- <li>libbb: fix bb_strtol[l]'s check for "-" (closes bug 4174)</li>
- <li>libbb: fix --help to not affect "test --help"</li>
- <li>libbb: fix mishandling of "all argv are opts" in getopt32()</li>
- <li>libbb: getopt32() should not ever touch argv[0] (even read)</li>
- <li>libbb: introduce and use xrealloc_vector</li>
- <li>libbb: [x]fopen_for_{read,write} introduced and used (by Vladimir)</li>
- <li>lineedit: fix use-after-free</li>
- <li>libunarchive: refactor handling of archived files. "tar f file.tar.lzma" now works too</li>
- <li>bb_strtoXXX: close bug 4174 (potential use of buf[-1])</li>
- <li>open_transformer: don't leak file descriptor</li>
- <li>open_transformer: fix bug of calling exit instead of _exit</li>
- <li>arp: without -H type, assume "ether" (closes bug 4564)</li>
- <li>ar: reuse existing ar unpacking code</li>
- <li>awk: fix a case with multiple -f options. Simplify -f file reading. </li>
- <li>build system: introduce and use FAST_FUNC: regparm on i386, otherwise no-op</li>
- <li>bunzip2: fix an uncompression error (by Rob Landley rob AT landley.net)</li>
- <li>b[un]zip2, g[un]zip: unlink destination if -f is given (closes bug 3854)</li>
- <li>comm: almost total rewrite</li>
- <li>cpio: fix -m to actually work as expected (by Pascal Bellard)</li>
- <li>cpio: internalize archive_xread_all_eof, add a few paranoia checks for corrupted cpio files</li>
- <li>cpio: make long opts depend only on ENABLE_GETOPT_LONG</li>
- <li>cpio: on unpack, limit filename length to 8k</li>
- <li>cpio: support some long options</li>
- <li>crond: use execlp instead of execl</li>
- <li>cut: fix buffer overflow (closes bug 4544)</li>
- <li>envdir: fix "envdir" (no params at all) and "envdir dir" cases</li>
- <li>findfs: make it use setuid-ness of busybox binary</li>
- <li>fsck: use getmntent_r instead of open-coded parsing (by Vladimir)</li>
- <li>fuser: a bit of safety in scanf</li>
- <li>grep: option to use GNU regex matching instead of POSIX one. This fixes problems with NULs in files being scanned, but costs +800 bytes</li>
- <li>halt: signal init regardless of ENABLE_INIT</li>
- <li>httpd: add homedir directive specially for (and by) Walter Harms wharms AT bfs.de</li>
- <li>ifupdown: /etc/network/interfaces can have comments with leading blanks</li>
- <li>ifupdown: fixes for custom MAC address (by Wade Berrier wberrier AT gmail.com)</li>
- <li>ifupdown: fixes for shutdown of DHCP-managed interfaces (by Wade Berrier wberrier AT gmail.com)</li>
- <li>inetd: do not trash errno in signal handlers; in CHLD handler, stop looping through services when pid is found</li>
- <li>insmod: users report that "|| defined(__powerpc__)" is missing</li>
- <li>install: do not chown intermediate directories with install -d (by Natanael Copa)</li>
- <li>install: fix long option not taking params (closes bug 4584)</li>
- <li>lpd,lpr: send/receive ACKs after filenames, not only after file bodies</li>
- <li>ls: fix a bug where we may use uninintialized variable</li>
- <li>man: add handling of "man links", by Ivana Varekova varekova AT redhat.com</li>
- <li>man: fix a case when a full pathname to manpage is given</li>
- <li>man: fix inverted cat/man bool variable</li>
- <li>man: fix missed NULL termination of an array</li>
- <li>man: mimic "no manual entry for 'bogus'" message and exitcode</li>
- <li>man: support cat pages too (by Jason Curl jcurlnews AT arcor.de)</li>
- <li>man: teach it to use .lzma if requested by .config</li>
- <li>mdev: check for "/block/" substring for block dev detection</li>
- <li>mdev: do not complain if mdev.conf does not exist</li>
- <li>mdev: if device was moved at creation, at removal correctly remove it from moved location and also remove symlinks to it</li>
- <li>mdev: support for serializing hotplug</li>
- <li>mdev, init: use shared code for fd sanitization</li>
- <li>mkdir: fix "uname 0222; mkdir -p foo/bar" case (by Doug Graham dgraham AT nortel.com)</li>
- <li>modprobe: support for /etc/modprobe.d (by Timo Teras)</li>
- <li>modprobe: use buffering line reads (fgets()) instead of reads()</li>
- <li>modutils: optional modprobe-small (by Vladimir), 15kb smaller than standard one</li>
- <li>mount: support for "-o mand" and "[no]relatime"</li>
- <li>mount: support nfs mount option "nordiplus" (by Octavian Purdila opurdila AT ixiacom.com)</li>
- <li>mount: support "relatime" / "norelatime"</li>
- <li>mount: testsuite for "-o mand"</li>
- <li>msh: fix "while... continue; ..." (closes bug 3884)</li>
- <li>mv: fix a case when we move dangling symlink across mountpoints</li>
- <li>netstat: optional -p support (by L. Gabriel Somlo somlo AT cmu.edu)</li>
- <li>nmeter: fix read past the end of a buffer (closes bug 4594)</li>
- <li>od, hexdump: fix bug where xrealloc may move pointer, leaving other pointers dangling (closes bug 4104)</li>
- <li>pidof/killall: allow find_pid_by_name to find running processes started as scripts_with_name_longer_than_15_bytes.sh (closes bug 4054)</li>
- <li>printf: do not print garbage on "%Ld" (closes bug 4214)</li>
- <li>printf: fix %b, fix several bugs in %*.*, fix compat issues with aborting too early, support %zd; expand testsuite</li>
- <li>printf: protect against bogus format specifiers (closes bug 4184)</li>
- <li>sendmail: updates from Vladimir:</li>
- <li>sendmail: do not discard all headers</li>
- <li>sendmail: do not ignore CC; accept to: and cc: case-insensitively. +20 bytes</li>
- <li>sendmail: fixed mail recipient address</li>
- <li>sendmail: fixed SEGV if sender address is missed</li>
- <li>sendmail: use HOSTNAME instead of HOST when no server is explicitly specified</li>
- <li>sleep: if FANCY && DESKTOP, support fractional seconds, minutes, hours and so on (coreutils compat)</li>
- <li>ssd: CLOSE_EXTRA_FDS in MMU case too</li>
- <li>ssd: do not stat -x EXECUTABLE, it is not needed anymore</li>
- <li>ssd: fix -a without -x case</li>
- <li>ssd: use $PATH</li>
- <li>tar: fix handling of tarballs with symlinks with size field != 0</li>
- <li>tar: handle autodetection for tiny .tar.gz files too, simplify autodetection</li>
- <li>taskset: fix some careless code in both fancy and non-fancy cases. -5 bytes for fancy, +5 for non-fancy</li>
- <li>tee: fix infinite looping on open error (echo asd | tee "")</li>
- <li>tee: "-" is a name for stdout, handle it that way</li>
- <li>telnetd: fix issue file printing</li>
- <li>test: fix parser to prefer binop over unop, as coreutils does</li>
- <li>testsuite: uniformly use $ECHO with -n -e</li>
- <li>time: don't segfault with no arguments</li>
- <li>touch: support -r REF_FILE if ENABLE_DESKTOP (needed for blackfin compile)</li>
- <li>tr: fix "access past the end of a string" bug 4354</li>
- <li>tr: fix "tr [=" case (closes bug 4374)</li>
- <li>tr: fix yet another access past the end of a string (closes bug 4374)</li>
- <li>unlzma: fix memory leak (by Pascal Bellard)</li>
- <li>vi: fix reversed checks for underflow</li>
- <li>vi: using array data after it fell out of scope is stupid</li>
- <li>xargs: fix -e default to match newer GNU xargs, add SUS mandated -E (closes bug 4414)</li>
- <li>other fixes and code size reductions in many applets</li>
- </ul>
- </p>
-
- <li><b>12 July 2008 -- BusyBox 1.11.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.11.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.11.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_11_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.11.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p>
- Bugfix-only release for 1.11.x branch. It contains fixes for awk,
- bunzip2, cpio, ifupdown, ip, man, start-stop-daemon, uname and vi.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>11 July 2008 -- HOWTO is updated</b>
- <p>
- <a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/HOWTO/i486-linux-uclibc/HOWTO.txt">
- "How to build static busybox for i486-linux-uclibc"</a> is updated
- and tested on a fresh Fedora 9 install. Please report if it doesn't
- work for you.
- </p>
- </li>
-
-
-
- <li><b>Old News</b><p>
- Click here to read <a href="oldnews.html">older news</a>
- </p>
- </li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
-
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<h3>News archive</h3>
-
-<ul>
-
- <li><b>25 June 2008 -- BusyBox 1.11.0 (unstable), BusyBox 1.10.4 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.11.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.11.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_11_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.11.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.10.4.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.10.4</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_10_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.10.4/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p>Sizes of busybox-1.10.4 and busybox-1.11.0 (with equivalent config, static uclibc build):<pre>
- text data bss dec hex filename
- 800675 636 7080 808391 c55c7 busybox-1.10.4
- 798392 611 6900 805903 c4c0f busybox-1.11.0
-</pre>
-
- <p>New applets: inotify (Vladimir Dronnikov), man (Ivana Varekova),
- fbsplash (Michele Sanges), depmod (Bernhard Reutner-Fischer)
-
- <p>Changes since previous release:
- <ul>
- <li>build system: reinstate CONFIG_CROSS_COMPILE_PREFIX</li>
- <li>ash: optional bash compatibility features added; other fixes</li>
- <li>hush: lots and lots of fixes</li>
- <li>msh: fix the case where the file has exec bit but can't be run directly (runs "$SHELL file" instead)</li>
- <li>msh: fix exit codes when command is not found or can't be execed</li>
- <li>udhcpc: added workaround for buggy kernels</li>
- <li>mount: fix mishandling of proto=tcp/udp</li>
- <li>diff: make it work on non-seekable streams</li>
- <li>openvt: made more compatible with "standard" one</li>
- <li>mdev: fix block/char device detection</li>
- <li>ping: add -w, -W support (James Simmons)</li>
- <li>crond: add handling of "MAILTO=user" lines</li>
- <li>start-stop-daemon: make --exec follow symlinks (Joakim Tjernlund)</li>
- <li>date: make it accept ISO date format</li>
- <li>echo: fix echo -e -n "msg\n\0" (David Pinedo)</li>
- <li>httpd: fix several bugs triggered by relative path in -h DIR</li>
- <li>printf: fix printf -%s- foo, printf -- -%s- foo</li>
- <li>syslogd: do not error out on missing files to rotate</li>
- <li>ls: support Unicode in names</li>
- <li>ip: support for the LOWER_UP flag (Natanael Copa)</li>
- <li>mktemp: make argument optional (coreutil 6.12 compat)</li>
- <li>libiproute: fix option parsing, so that "ip -o link" works again</li>
- <li>other fixes and code size reductions in many applets</li>
- </ul>
- <p>
- The email address gpl@busybox.net is the recommended way to contact
- the Software Freedom Law Center to report BusyBox license violations.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>12 June 2008 -- Sponsors!</b>
- <p>We want to thank the following companies which are providing support
- for the BusyBox project:
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li>AOE media, a <a href="http://www.aoemedia.com/typo3-development.html">
- TYPO3 development agency</a> contributes financially.</li>
- <li><a href="http://www.analog.com/en/">Analog Devices, Inc.</a> provided
- a <a href="http://docs.blackfin.uclinux.org/doku.php?id=bf537_quick_start">
- Blackfin development board</a> free of charge.
- <a href="http://www.analog.com/blackfin">Blackfin</a>
- is a NOMMU processor, and its availability for testing is invaluable.
- If you are an embedded device developer,
- please note that Analog Devices has entire Linux distribution available
- for download for this board. Visit
- <a href="http://blackfin.uclinux.org/">http://blackfin.uclinux.org/</a>
- for more information.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>5 June 2008 -- BusyBox 1.10.3 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.10.3.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.10.3</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_10_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.10.3/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p>
- Bugfix-only release for 1.10.x branch. It contains fixes for dnsd, fuser, hush,
- ip, mdev and syslogd.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>8 May 2008 -- BusyBox 1.10.2 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.10.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.10.2</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_10_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.10.2/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p>
- Bugfix-only release for 1.10.x branch. It contains fixes for echo, httpd, pidof,
- start-stop-daemon, tar, taskset, tab completion in shells, build system.
- <p>Please note that mdev was backported from current svn trunk. Please
- report if you encounter any problems with it.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>19 April 2008 -- BusyBox 1.10.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.10.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.10.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_10_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.10.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p>
- Bugfix-only release for 1.10.x branch. It contains fixes for
- fuser, init, less, nameif, tail, taskset, tcpudp, top, udhcp.
- </li>
-
- <li><b>21 March 2008 -- BusyBox 1.10.0 (unstable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.10.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.10.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_10_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.10.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Sizes of busybox-1.9.2 and busybox-1.10.0 (with almost full config, static uclibc build):<pre>
- text data bss dec hex filename
- 781405 679 7500 789584 c0c50 busybox-1.9.2
- 773551 640 7372 781563 becfb busybox-1.10.0
-</pre>
- <p>Top 10 stack users:<pre>
-busybox-1.9.2: busybox-1.10.0:
-echo_dg 4116 bb_full_fd_action 4112
-bb_full_fd_action 4112 find_list_entry2 4096
-discard_dg 4108 readlink_main 4096
-discard_dg 4096 ipaddr_list_or_flush 3900
-echo_stream 4096 iproute_list_or_flush 3680
-discard_stream 4096 insmod_main 3152
-find_list_entry2 4096 fallbackSort 2952
-readlink_main 4096 do_iproute 2492
-ipaddr_list_or_flush 3900 cal_main 2464
-iproute_list_or_flush 3680 readhere 2308
-</pre>
-
- <p>New applets: brctl, chat (by Vladimir Dronnikov <dronnikov AT gmail.com>),
- findfs, ifenslave (closes bug 115), lpd (by Vladimir Dronnikov <dronnikov AT gmail.com>),
- lpr+lpq (by Walter Harms), script (by Pascal Bellard <pascal.bellard AT ads-lu.com>),
- sendmail (Vladimir Dronnikov <dronnikov AT gmail.com>), tac, tftpd.
- </p>
- <p>Made NOMMU-compatible: crond, crontab, ifupdown, inetd, init, runsv, svlogd, tcpsvd, udpsvd.
- </p>
- <p>Changes since previous release:
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li>globally: add -Wunused-parameter</li>
- <li>globally: add optimization barrier to all "G trick" locations</li>
- <li>adduser/addgroup: check username for invalid chars (by Tito <farmatito AT tiscali.it>)</li>
- <li>adduser: optional support for long options. Closes bug 2134</li>
- <li>ash: handle "A=1 A=2 B=$A; echo $B". Closes bug 947</li>
- <li>ash: make ash -c "if set -o barfoo 2>/dev/null; then echo foo; else echo bar; fi" work. Closes bug 1142</li>
- <li>build system: don't use "gcc -o /dev/null", old gcc can delete /dev/null in this case</li>
- <li>build system: fixes for cross-compiling on an OS X host</li>
- <li>build system: make it do without "od -t"</li>
- <li>build system: pass CFLAGS to link stage too. Closes bug 1376</li>
- <li>build system: add CONFIG_NOMMU</li>
- <li>cp: add ENABLE_FEATURE_VERBOSE_CP_MESSAGE. Closes bug 1470</li>
- <li>crontab: almost complete rewrite</li>
- <li>dnsd: properly set _src_ IP:port on outgoing UDP packets</li>
- <li>dpkg: fix bug where existence check was reversed</li>
- <li>eject: add -s for SCSI- and USB-devices (Nico Erfurth)</li>
- <li>fdisk: fix a case where break was reached only for DOS labels</li>
- <li>fsck: don't kill pid -1! (Roy Marples <roy at marples.name>)</li>
- <li>fsck_minix: fix bug in map_block2: s/(blknr >= 256 * 256)/(blknr < 256 * 256)/</li>
- <li>fuser: substantial rewrite</li>
- <li>getopt: add support for "a+" specifier for nonnegative int parameters. By Vladimir Dronnikov <dronnikov at gmail.com></li>
- <li>getty: don't try to detect parity on local lines (Joakim Tjernlund <Joakim.Tjernlund at transmode.se>)</li>
- <li>halt: write wtmp entry if wtmp support is enabled</li>
- <li>httpd: "HEAD" support. Closes bug 1530</li>
- <li>httpd: fix bug 2004: wrong argv when interpreter is invoked</li>
- <li>httpd: fix bug where we did chdir("") if CGI path had only one "/"</li>
- <li>httpd: fix for POST upload</li>
- <li>httpd: support for "I:index.xml" syntax (Peter Korsgaard <jacmet AT uclibc.org>)</li>
- <li>hush: fix a case where none of pipe members could be started because of fork failure</li>
- <li>hush: more correct handling of piping</li>
- <li>hush: reinstate `cmd` handling for NOMMU</li>
- <li>hush: report [v]fork failures</li>
- <li>hush: set CLOEXEC on script file being executed</li>
- <li>hush: try to add a bit more of vfork-friendliness</li>
- <li>inetd: make "udp nowait" work</li>
- <li>inetd: make inetd IPv6-capable</li>
- <li>init: add FEATURE_KILL_REMOVED (Eugene Bordenkircher <eugebo AT gmail.com>)</li>
- <li>init: allow last line of config file to be not terminated by "\n"</li>
- <li>init: do not die if "/dev/null" is missing</li>
- <li>init: fix bug 1111: restart actions were not splitting words</li>
- <li>init: wait for orphaned children too while waiting for sysinit-like processes (harald-tuxbox AT arcor.de)</li>
- <li>ip route: "ip route" was misbehaving (extra argv+1 ate 1st env var)</li>
- <li>last: do not go into endless loop on read error</li>
- <li>less,klogd,syslogd,nc,tcpudp: exit on signal by killing itself, not exit(1)</li>
- <li>less: "examine" command will not bomb out on bad file name now</li>
- <li>less: fix bug where backspace wasn't actually deleting chars</li>
- <li>less: make it a bit more resistant against status line corruption</li>
- <li>less: improve search when data is not supplied fast enough by stdin - now will try reading for 1-2 seconds before declaring that there is no match. This fixes a very common annoyance with long manpages</li>
- <li>less: update line input so that it doesn't interfere with screen update. Makes "man bash", [enter], [/], <enter search pattern>, [enter] more usable - manpage now draws even as you enter the pattern!</li>
- <li>libbb: filename completion matches dangling symlinks too</li>
- <li>libbb: fix getopt state corruption for NOFORK applets</li>
- <li>libbb: full_read/write now will report partial data counts prior to error</li>
- <li>libbb: intrduce and use safe_gethostname. By Tito <farmatito AT tiscali.it></li>
- <li>libbb: introduce and use nonblock_safe_read(). Yay! Our shells are immune from this nasty O_NONBLOCK now!</li>
- <li>login,su: avoid clearing environment with some options, as was intended</li>
- <li>microcom: read more than 1 byte from device, if possible</li>
- <li>microcom: split -d (delay) option away from -t</li>
- <li>mktemp: support -p DIR (Timo Teras <timo.teras at iki.fi>)</li>
- <li>mount: #ifdef out MOUNT_LABEL code parts if it is not selected</li>
- <li>mount: add another mount helper call method</li>
- <li>mount: allow and ignore _netdev option</li>
- <li>mount: make -f work even without mtab support (Cristian Ionescu-Idbohrn <cristian.ionescu-idbohrn at axis.com>)</li>
- <li>mount: optional support for -vv verbosity</li>
- <li>mount: plug a hole where FEATURE_MOUNT_HELPERS could allow execution of arbitrary command</li>
- <li>mount: recognize "dirsync" (closes bug 835)</li>
- <li>mount: sanitize environment if called by non-root</li>
- <li>mount: support for mount by label. Closes bug 1143</li>
- <li>mount: with -vv -f, say what mount() calls we were going to make</li>
- <li>msh: create testsuite (based on hush one)</li>
- <li>msh: don't use floating point in "times" builtin</li>
- <li>msh: fix Ctrl-C handling with line editing</li>
- <li>msh: fix for bug 846 ("break" didn't work second time)</li>
- <li>msh: glob0/glob1/glob2/glob3 were just a sorting routine, removed</li>
- <li>msh: instead of fixing "ls | cd", "cd | ls" etc disallow builtins in pipes. They make no sense there anyway</li>
- <li>msh: stop trying to parse variables in "msh SCRIPT VAR=val param". They are passed as ordinary parameters</li>
- <li>netstat: print control chars as "^C" etc</li>
- <li>nmeter: fix bug where %[mf] behaves as %[mt]</li>
- <li>nohup: compat patch by Christoph Gysin <mailinglist.cache at gmail.com></li>
- <li>od: handle /proc files (which have filesize 0) correctly</li>
- <li>patch: don't trash permissions of patched file</li>
- <li>ps: add conditional support for -o [e]time</li>
- <li>ps: fix COMMAND column adjustment; overflow in USER and VSZ columns</li>
- <li>reset: call "stty sane". Closes bug 1414</li>
- <li>rmdir: optional long options support for Debian users. By Roberto Gordo Saez <roberto.gordo AT gmail.com></li>
- <li>run-parts: add --reverse</li>
- <li>script: correctly handle buffered "tail" of output</li>
- <li>sed: "n" command must reset "we had successful subst" flag. Closes bug 1214</li>
- <li>sort: -z outputs NUL terminated lines. Closes bug 1591</li>
- <li>stty: fix mishandling of control keywords (Ralf Friedl <Ralf.Friedl AT online.de>)</li>
- <li>switch_root: stop at first non-option. Closes bug 1425</li>
- <li>syslogd: avoid excessive time() system calls</li>
- <li>syslogd: don't die if remote host's IP cannot be resolved. Retry resolutions every two minutes instead</li>
- <li>syslogd: fix shmat error check</li>
- <li>syslogd: optional support for dropping dups. Closes bug 436</li>
- <li>syslogd: send "\n"-terminated messages over the network. Fully closes bug 1574</li>
- <li>syslogd: tighten up hostname handling</li>
- <li>tail: fix "tail -c 20 /dev/huge_disk" (was taking ages)</li>
- <li>tar: compat: handle tarballs with only one zero block at the end</li>
- <li>tar: autodetection of gz/bz2 compressed tarballs. Closes bug 992</li>
- <li>tar: real support for -p. By Natanael Copa <natanael.copa at gmail.com></li>
- <li>tcpudp: narrow down time window where we have no wildcard socket</li>
- <li>telnetd: use login always, not "sometimes login, sometimes shell"</li>
- <li>test: fix mishandling of "test ! arg1 op arg2 more args"</li>
- <li>trylink: instead of build error, disable --gc-sections if GLIBC and STATIC are selected</li>
- <li>udhcp: make file paths configurable</li>
- <li>udhcp: optional support for non-standard DHCP ports</li>
- <li>udhcp: set correct op byte in the packet for DHCPDECLINE</li>
- <li>udhcpc: filter unwanted packets in kernel (Cristian Ionescu-Idbohrn <cristian.ionescu-idbohrn AT axis.com>)</li>
- <li>udhcpc: fix wrong options in decline and release packets (Jonas Danielsson <jonas.danielsson AT axis.com>)</li>
- <li>umount: do not complain several times about the same mountpoint</li>
- <li>umount: do not try to free loop device or erase mtab if remounted ro</li>
- <li>umount: instead of non-standard -D, use -d with opposite meaning. Closes bug 1604</li>
- <li>unlzma: shrink by Pascal Bellard <pascal.bellard AT ads-lu.com></li>
- <li>unzip: do not try to read entire compressed stream at once (it can be huge)</li>
- <li>unzip: handle short reads correctly</li>
- <li>vi: many fixes</li>
- <li>zcip: don't chdir to root</li>
- <li>zcip: open ARP socket before openlog (else we can trash syslog socket)</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>21 March 2008 -- BusyBox old stable releases</b>
- <p>
- Bugfix-only releases for four past branches. Links to locations
- for future hot patches are in parentheses.
- <p>
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.9.2.tar.bz2">1.9.2</a>
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.9.2/">patches</a>),
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.8.3.tar.bz2">1.8.3</a>
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.8.3/">patches</a>),
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.7.5.tar.bz2">1.7.5</a>
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.7.5/">patches</a>),
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.5.2.tar.bz2">1.5.2</a>
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.5.2/">patches</a>).
- <p>
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">How to add a patch.</a>
- </p>
-
-
- <li><b>12 February 2008 -- BusyBox 1.9.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.9.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.9.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_9_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.9.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This is a bugfix-only release, with fixes to fsck,
- iproute, mdev, mkswap, msh, nameif, stty, test, zcip.</p>
- <p>hush has `command` expansion re-enabled for NOMMU, although it is
- inherently unsafe (by virtue of NOMMU's use of vfork instead of fork).
- The plan is to make this less likely to bite people in future versions.</p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>24 December 2007 -- BusyBox 1.9.0 (unstable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.9.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.9.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_9_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.9.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Sizes of busybox-1.8.2 and busybox-1.9.0 (with almost full config, static uclibc build):<pre>
- text data bss dec hex filename
- 792796 978 9724 803498 c42aa busybox-1.8.2
- 783803 683 7508 791994 c15ba busybox-1.9.0
-</pre>
- <p>Top 10 stack users:<pre>
-busybox-1.8.2: busybox-1.9.0:
-input_tab 10428 echo_dg 4116
-umount_main 8252 bb_full_fd_action 4112
-rtnl_talk 8240 discard_dg 4096
-xrtnl_dump_filter 8240 echo_stream 4096
-sendMTFValues 5316 discard_stream 4096
-mainSort 4700 find_list_entry2 4096
-mkfs_minix_main 4288 readlink_main 4096
-grave 4260 ipaddr_list_or_flush 3900
-unix_do_one 4156 iproute_list_or_flush 3680
-parse_prompt 4132 insmod_main 3152
-</pre>
-
- <p>lash is deleted from this release. hush can be configured down to almost
- the same size, but it is significantly less buggy. It even works
- on NOMMU machines (interactive mode and backticks are not working on NOMMU,
- though). "lash" applet is still available, but it runs hush.
-
- <p>init has some changes in this release, please report if it causes
- problems for you.
-
- <p>Changes since previous release:
- <ul>
- <li>Build system improvements
- <li>Testsuite additions
- <li>Stack size reductions, code size reductions, data/bss reductions
- <li>An option to prefer IPv4 address if host has both
- <li>New applets: hd, sestatus
- <li>Removed applets: lash
- <li>hush: fixed a few bugs, wired up echo and test to be builtins
- <li>init: simplify forking of children
- <li>getty: special handling of '#' and '@' is removed
- <li>[su]login: sanitize environment if called by non-root
- <li>udhcpc: support "bad" servers which send oversized packets
- (Cristian Ionescu-Idbohrn <cristian.ionescu-idbohrn at axis.com>)
- <li>udhcpc: -O option allows to specify which options to ask for
- (Stefan Hellermann <stefan at the2masters.de>)
- <li>udhcpc: optionally check whether given IP is really free (by ARP ping)
- (Jonas Danielsson <jonas.danielsson at axis.com>)
- <li>vi: now handles files with unlimited line length
- <li>vi: speedup for huge line lengths
- <li>vi: Del key works
- <li>sed: support GNUism '\t'
- <li>cp/mv/install: optionally use bigger buffer for bulk copying
- <li>line editing: don't eat stack like crazy
- <li>passwd: follows symlinked /etc/passwd
- <li>renice: accepts priority with +N too
- <li>netstat: wide output mode
- <li>nameif: extended matching (Nico Erfurth <masta at perlgolf.de>)
- <li>test: become NOFORK applet
- <li>find: -iname (Alexander Griesser <alexander.griesser at lkh-vil.or.at>)
- <li>df: -i option (show inode info) (Pascal Bellard <pascal.bellard at ads-lu.com>)
- <li>hexdump: -R option (Pascal Bellard <pascal.bellard at ads-lu.com>)
- </ul>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>23 November 2007 -- BusyBox 1.8.2 (stable), BusyBox 1.7.4 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.8.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.8.2</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_8_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.8.2/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.7.4.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.7.4</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_7_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.7.4/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>These are bugfix-only releases.
- 1.8.2 contains fixes for inetd, lash, tar, tr, and build system.
- 1.7.4 contains a fix for inetd.</p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>9 November 2007 -- BusyBox 1.8.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.8.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.8.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_8_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.8.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This is a bugfix-only release, with fixes to login (PAM), modprobe, syslogd, telnetd, unzip.</p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>4 November 2007 -- BusyBox 1.8.0 (unstable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.8.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.8.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_8_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.8.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Note: this is probably the very last release with lash. It will be dropped. Please migrate to hush.
-
- <p>Applets which had many changes since 1.7.x:
- <p>httpd:
- <ul>
- <li>does not clear environment, CGIs will see all environment variables which were set for httpd
- <li>fix bug where we were trying to read more POSTDATA than content-length
- <li>fix trivial bug (spotted by Alex Landau)
- <li>optional support for partial downloads
- <li>simplified CGI i/o loop (now it looks good to me)
- <li>small auth and IPv6 fixes (Kim B. Heino <Kim.Heino at bluegiga.com>)
- <li>support for proxying connection to other http server (by Alex Landau <landau_alex at yahoo.com>)
- </ul>
-
- <p>top:
- <ul>
- <li>TOPMEM feature - 's(how sizes)' command
- <li>don't wait before final bailout (try top -b -n1)
- <li>fix for command line wrapping
- </ul>
-
- <p>Build system improvements: libbusybox mode restored (it was lost in transition to new makefiles).
-
- <p>Code and data size in comparison with 1.7.3:<pre>
-Equivalent .config, i386 uclibc static builds:
- text data bss dec hex filename
- 768123 1055 10768 779946 be6aa busybox-1.7.3/busybox
- 759693 974 9420 770087 bc027 busybox-1.8.0/busybox</pre>
-
- <p>New applets:
- <ul>
- <li>microcom: new applet by Vladimir Dronnikov <dronnikov at gmail.ru>
- <li>kbd_mode: new applet by Loic Grenie <loic.grenie at gmail.com>
- <li>bzip2: port bzip2 1.0.4 to busybox, 9 kb of code
- <li>pgrep, pkill: new applets by Loic Grenie <loic.grenie at gmail.com>
- <li>setsebool: new applet (Yuichi Nakamura <ynakam at hitachisoft.jp>)
- </ul>
-
- <p>Other changes since previous release (abridged):
- <ul>
- <li>cp: -r and -R imply -d (coreutils compat)
- <li>cp: detect and prevent infinite recursion
- <li>cp: make it a bit closer to POSIX, but still refuse to open and overwrite symbolic link
- <li>hdparm: reduce possibility of numeric overflow in -T
- <li>hdparm: simplify timing measurement
- <li>wget: -O FILE is allowed to overwrite existing file (compat)
- <li>wget: allow dots in header field names
- <li>telnetd: add -K option to close sessions as soon as child exits
- <li>telnetd: don't SIGKILL child when closing the session, kernel will send SIGHUP for us
- <li>ed: large cleanup, add line editing
- <li>hush: feeble attempt at making it more NOMMU-friendly
- <li>hush: fix glob()
- <li>hush: stop doing manual accounting of open fd's, kernel can do it for us
- <li>adduser: implement -S and fix uid selection
- <li>ash: fix prompt expansion (Natanael Copa <natanael.copa at gmail.com>)
- <li>ash: revert "cat | jobs" fix, it causes more problems than good
- <li>find: fix -xdev behavior in the presence of two or more nested mount points
- <li>grep: fix grep -F -e str1 -e str2 (was matching str2 only)
- <li>grep: optimization: stop on first -e match
- <li>gunzip: support concatenated gz files
- <li>inetd: fix bug 1562 "inetd does not set argv[0] properly" (fix by Ilya Panfilov)
- <li>install: 'support' (by ignoring) -v and -b
- <li>install: fix bug in "install -c file dir" (tried to copy dir into dir too)
- <li>ip: tunnel parameter parsing fix by Jean Wolter <jw5 at os.inf.tu-dresden.de>
- <li>isrv: use monotonic_sec
- <li>less: make 'f' key page forward
- <li>libiproute: add missing break statements
- <li>load_policy: update (Yuichi Nakamura <ynakam at hitachisoft.jp>)
- <li>logger: fix a problem of losing all argv except first
- <li>login: do reject wrong passwords with PAM auth
- <li>losetup: support -f (Loic Grenie <loic.grenie at gmail.com>)
- <li>fdisk: make fdisk compile on libc without llseek64
- <li>libbb: by popular request allow PATH to be customized at build time
- <li>mkswap: selinux support by KaiGai Kohei <kaigai at ak.jp.nec.com>
- <li>mount: allow (and ignore) -i
- <li>mount: ignore NFS bg option on NOMMU machines
- <li>mount: mount helpers support (by Vladimir Dronnikov <dronnikov at gmail.ru>)
- <li>passwd: handle Ctrl-C, restore termios on Ctrl-C
- <li>passwd: SELinux support by KaiGai Kohei <kaigai at ak.jp.nec.com>
- <li>ping: make -I ethN work too (-I addr already worked)
- <li>ps: fix RSS parsing (rss field in /proc/PID/stat is in pages, not bytes)
- <li>read_line_input: fix it to not do any fancy editing if echoing is disabled
- <li>run_parts: make it sort executables by name (required by API)
- <li>runsv: do not use clock_gettime if !MONOTONIC_CLOCK
- <li>runsvdir: fix "linear wait time" bug
- <li>sulogin: remove alarm handling, it is redundant there
- <li>svlogd: compat: svlogd -tt should timestamp stderr too
- <li>syslogd: bail out if you see null read from Unix socket
- <li>syslogd: do not need to poll(), we can just block in read()
- <li>tail: work correctly on /proc files (Kazuo TAKADA <kztakada at sm.sony.co.jp>)
- <li>tar + gzip/bzip2/etc: support NOMMU machines (by Alex Landau <landau_alex at yahoo.com>)
- <li>tar: strip leading '/' BEFORE memorizing hardlink's name
- <li>tftp: fix infinite retry bug
- <li>umount: support (by ignoring) -i; style fixes
- <li>unzip: fix endianness bugs
- <li>vi: don't wait 50 ms before reading ESC sequences
- <li>watchdog: allow millisecond spec (-t 250ms)
- <li>zcip: fix unaligned trap on ARM
- </ul>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>4 November 2007 -- BusyBox 1.7.3 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.7.3.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.7.3</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_7_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.7.3/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This is a bugfix-only release, with fixes to ash, httpd, inetd, iptun, logger, login, tail.</p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>30 September 2007 -- BusyBox 1.7.2 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.7.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.7.2</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_7_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.7.2/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This is a bugfix-only release, with fixes to install, find, login, httpd, runsvdir, chcon, setfiles, fdisk and line editing.</p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>16 September 2007 -- BusyBox 1.7.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.7.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.7.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_7_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.7.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This is a bugfix-only release, with fixes to cp, runsv, tar, busybox --install and build system.</p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>24 August 2007 -- BusyBox 1.7.0 (unstable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.7.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.7.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_7_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.7.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Applets which had many changes since 1.6.x:
- <p>httpd:
- <ul>
- <li>works in standalone mode on NOMMU machines now (partly by Alex Landau <landau_alex at yahoo.com>)
- <li>indexer example is rewritten in C
- <li>optional support for error pages (by Pierre Metras <genepi at sympatico.ca>)
- <li>stop reading headers using 1-byte reads
- <li>new option -v[v]: prints client addresses, HTTP codes returned, URLs
- <li>extended -p PORT to -p [IP[v6]:]PORT
- <li>sendfile support (by Pierre Metras <genepi at sympatico.ca>)
- <li>add support for Status: CGI header
- <li>fix CGI handling bug (we were closing wrong fd)
- <li>CGI I/O loop still doesn't look 100% ok to me...
- </ul>
-
- <p>udhcp[cd]:
- <ul>
- <li>add -f "foreground" and -S "syslog" options
- <li>fixed "ifupdown + udhcpc_without_pidfile_creation" bug
- <li>new config option "Rewrite the lease file at every new acknowledge" (Mats Erik Andersson <mats at blue2net.com> (Blue2Net AB))
- <li>consistently treat server_config.start/end IPs as host-order
- <li>fix IP parsing for 64bit machines
- <li>fix unsafe hton macro usage in read_opt()
- <li>do not chdir to / when daemonizing
- </ul>
-
- <p>top, ps, killall, pidof:
- <ul>
- <li>simpler loadavg processing
- <li>truncate usernames to 8 chars
- <li>fix non-CONFIG_DESKTOP ps -ww (by rockeychu)
- <li>improve /proc/PID/cmdinfo reading code
- <li>use cmdline, not comm field (fixes problems with re-execed applets showing as processes with name "exe", and not being found by pidof/killall by applet name)
- <li>reduce CPU usage in decimal conversion (optional) (corresponding speedup on kernel side is accepted in mainline Linux kernel, yay!)
- <li>make percentile (0.1%) calculations configurable
- <li>add config option and code for global CPU% display
- <li>reorder columns, so that [P]PIDs are together and VSZ/%MEM are together - makes more sense
- </ul>
-
- <p>Build system improvements: doesn't link against libraries we don't need,
- generates verbose link output and map file, allows for custom link
- scripts (useful for removing extra padding, among other things).
-
- <p>Code and data size in comparison with 1.6.1:<pre>
-Equivalent .config, i386 glibc dynamic builds:
- text data bss dec hex filename
- 672671 2768 16808 692247 a9017 busybox-1.6.1/busybox
- 662948 2660 13528 679136 a5ce0 busybox-1.7.0/busybox
- 662783 2631 13416 678830 a5bae busybox-1.7.0/busybox.customld
-
-Same .config built against static uclibc:
- 765021 1059 11020 777100 bdb8c busybox-1.7.0/busybox_uc</pre>
-
- <p>Code/data shrink done in applets: crond, hdparm, dd, cal, od, nc, expr, uuencode,
- test, slattach, diff, ping, tr, syslogd, hwclock, zcip, find, pidof, ash, uudecode,
- runit/*, in libbb.
-
- <p>New applets:
- <ul>
- <li>pscan, expand, unexpand (from Tito <farmatito at tiscali.it>)
- <li>setfiles, restorecon (by Yuichi Nakamura <ynakam at hitachisoft.jp>)
- <li>chpasswd (by Alexander Shishkin <virtuoso at slind.org>)
- <li>slattach, ttysize
- </ul>
-
- <p>Unfortunately, not much work is done on shells. This was mostly stalled
- by lack of time (read: laziness) on my part to learn how to adapt existing
- qemu-runnable image for a NOMMU architechture (available on qemu website)
- for local testing of cross-compiled busybox on my machine.
-
- <p>Other changes since previous release (abridged):
- <ul>
- <li>addgroup: disallow addgroup -g num user group; make -g 0 work (Tito <farmatito at tiscali.it>)
- <li>adduser: close /etc/{passwd,shadow} before calling passwd etc. Spotted by Natanael Copa <natanael.copa at gmail.com>
- <li>arping: -i should be -I, fixed
- <li>ash: make "jobs | cat" work like in bash (was giving empty output)
- <li>ash: recognize -l as --login equivalent; do not recognize +-login
- <li>ash: fix buglet in DEBUG code (Nguyen Thai Ngoc Duy <pclouds at gmail.com>)
- <li>ash: fix SEGV if type has zero parameters
- <li>awk: fix -F 'regex' bug (miscounted fields if last field is empty)
- <li>catv: catv without arguments was trying to use environ as argv (Alex Landau <landau_alex at yahoo.com>)
- <li>catv: don't die on open error (emit warning)
- <li>chown/chgrp: completely match coreutils 6.8 wrt symlink handling
- <li>correct_password: do not print "no shadow passwd..." message
- <li>crond: don't start sendmail with absolute path, don't report obsolete version (report true bbox version)
- <li>dd: fix bug where we assume count=INT_MAX when count is unspecified
- <li>devfsd: sanitization by Tito <farmatito at tiscali.it>
- <li>echo: fix non-fancy echo
- <li>fdisk: make it work with big disks (read: typical today's disks) even if CONFIG_LFS is unset
- <li>find: -context support for SELinux (KaiGai Kohei <kaigai at kaigai.gr.jp>)
- <li>find: add conditional support for -maxdepth and -regex, make -size match GNU find
- <li>find: fix build failure on certain configs (found by Cristian Ionescu-Idbohrn <cristian.ionescu-idbohrn at axis.com>)
- <li>fsck_minix: make it print bb version, not it's own (outdated/irrelevant) one
- <li>grep: implement -m MAX_MATCHES, fix buglets with context printing
- <li>grep: fix selection done by FEATURE_GREP_EGREP_ALIAS (Maxime Bizon <mbizon at freebox.fr> (Freebox))
- <li>hush: add missing dependencies (Maxime Bizon <mbizon at freebox.fr> (Freebox))
- <li>hush: fix read builtin to not read ahead past EOL and to not use insane amounts of stack
- <li>ifconfig: make it work with ifaces with interface no. > 255
- <li>ifup/ifdown: make location of ifstate configurable
- <li>ifupdown: make netmask parsing smaller and more strict (was accepting 255.0.255.0, 255.1234.0.0 etc...)
- <li>install: fix -s (strip) option, fix install a b /a/link/to/dir
- <li>libbb: consolidate ARRAY_SIZE macro (Walter Harms <wharms at bfs.de>)
- <li>libbb: make /etc/network parsing configurable. -200 bytes when off
- <li>libbb: nuke BB_GETOPT_ERROR, always die if there are mutually exclusive options
- <li>libbb: xioctl and friends by Tito <farmatito at tiscali.it>
- <li>login: optional support for PAM
- <li>login: make /etc/nologin support configurable (-240 bytes)
- <li>login: ask passwords even for wrong usernames
- <li>md5_sha1_sum: fix mishandling when run as /bin/md5sum
- <li>mdev: add support for firmware loading
- <li>mdev: work even when CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED in kernel is off
- <li>modprobe: add scanning of /lib/modules/`uname -r`/modules.symbols (by Yann E. MORIN <yann.morin.1998 at anciens.enib.fr>)
- <li>more: fixes by Tristan Schmelcher <tpkschme at engmail.uwaterloo.ca>
- <li>nc: make connecting to IPv4 from IPv6-enabled hosts easier (was requiring -s local_addr)
- <li>passwd: fix bug "updating shadow even if user's record is in passwd"
- <li>patch: fix -p -1 handling
- <li>patch: fix bad line ending handling (Nguyen Thai Ngoc Duy <pclouds at gmail.com>)
- <li>ping: display roundtrip times with 1/1000th of ms, not 1/10 ms precision.
- <li>ping: fix incorrect handling of -I (Iouri Kharon <bc-info at styx.cabel.net>)
- <li>ping: fix non-fancy ping6
- <li>printenv: fix "printenv VAR1 VAR2" bug (spotted by Kalyanatejaswi Balabhadrapatruni <kalyanatejaswi at yahoo.co.in>)
- <li>ps: fix -Z (by Yuichi Nakamura <ynakam at hitachisoft.jp>)
- <li>rpm: add optional support for bz2 data. +50 bytes of code
- <li>rpm: fix bogus "package is not installed" case
- <li>sed: fix 'q' command handling (by Nguyen Thai Ngoc Duy <pclouds at gmail.com>)
- <li>start_stop_daemon: NOMMU fixes by Alex Landau <landau_alex at yahoo.com>
- <li>stat: fix option -Z SEGV
- <li>strings: strings a b was processing a twice, fix that
- <li>svlogd: fix timestamping, do not warn if config is missing
- <li>syslogd, logread: get rid of head pointer, fix logread bug in the process
- <li>syslogd: do not convert tabs to ^I, set syslog IPC buffer to mode 0644
- <li>tar: improve OLDGNU compat, make old SUN compat configurable
- <li>test: fix testing primary expressions like '"-u" = "-u"'
- <li>uudecode: fix to base64 decode by Jorgen Cederlof <jcz at google.com>
- <li>vi: multiple fixes by Natanael Copa <natanael.copa at gmail.com>
- <li>wget: fix bug in base64 encoding (bug 1404). +10 bytes
- <li>wget: lift 256 chars limitation on terminal width
- <li>wget, zcip: use monotonic_sec instead of gettimeofday
- </ul>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>30 June 2007 -- BusyBox 1.6.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.6.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.6.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_6_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.6.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This is a bugfix-only release, with fixes to echo, hush, and wget.</p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>1 June 2007 -- BusyBox 1.6.0 (unstable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.6.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.6.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/branches/busybox_1_6_stable/">svn</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.6.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Since this is a x.x.0 release, it probably does not deserve "stable"
- label. Please help making 1.6.1 stable by testing 1.6.0.</p>
- <p>Note that hush shell had many changes and (hopefully) is much improved now,
- but there is a possibility that it regressed in some obscure cases. Please
- report any such cases.</p>
- <p>lash users please note: lash is going to be deprecated in busybox 1.7.0
- and removed in the more distant future. Please migrate to hush.</p>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/~vda/mem_usage-1.6.0.txt">Memory usage has decreased, but we can do better still</a></p>
- <p>Other changes since previous release:
- <ul>
-<li>NOFORK: audit small applets and mark some of them as NOFORK. Put big scary warnings in relevant places
-<li>NOFORK: factor out NOFORK/NOEXEC code from find. Use NOFORK/NOEXEC in find and xargs
-<li>NOFORK: remove potential xmalloc from NOFORK path in bb_full_fd_action
-<li>NOMMU: random fixes; compressed --help now works for NOMMU
-<li>SELinux: load_policy applet
-<li>[u]mount: extend -t option (Roy Marples <uberlord at gentoo.org>)
-<li>addgroup: clean up, fix adding users to existing groups and make it optional (Tito)
-<li>adduser: don't bomb out if shadow password file doesn't exist (from Tito <farmatito at tiscali.it>)
-<li>applet.c: do not even try to read config if run by real root; fix suid config handling
-<li>ash: fix infinite loop on exit if tty is not there anymore
-<li>ash: fix kill -l (by Mats Erik Andersson <mats.andersson64 at comhem.se>)
-<li>ash: implement type -p, costs less than 10 bytes (patch by Mats Erik Andersson <mats.andersson64 at comhem.se>)
-<li>awk: don't segfault on printf(%*s). Closes bug 1337
-<li>awk: guard against empty environment
-<li>awk: some 'lineno' vars were shorts, made them ints (code got smaller)
-<li>cat: stop using stdio.h opens
-<li>config system: clarify PREFER_APPLETS/SH_STANDALONE effects in help text
-<li>cryptpw: new applet (by Thomas Lundquist <lists at zelow.no>)
-<li>cttyhack: new applet
-<li>dd: NOEXEC fix; fix skip= parse error (spotted by Dirk Clemens <develop at cle-mens.de>)
-<li>deluser: add optional support for removing users from groups (by Tito <farmatito at tiscali.it>)
-<li>diff: fix SEGV (NULL deref) in diff -N
-<li>diff: fix segfault on empty dirs (Peter Korsgaard <peter.korsgaard at barco.com>)
-<li>dnsd: fix several buglets, make smaller; openlog(), so that applet's name is logged
-<li>dpkg: run_package_script() returns 0 if all ok and non-zero if failure. The result code was checked incorrectly in two places. (from Kim B. Heino <Kim.Heino at bluegiga.com>)
-<li>dpkg: use bitfields which are a bit closer to typical short/char. Code size -800 bytes
-<li>dumpleases: getopt32()-ization (from Mats Erik Andersson <mats.andersson64 at comhem.se>)
-<li>e2fsprogs: stop using statics in chattr. Minor code shrinkage (-130 bytes)
-<li>ether-wake: close bug 1317. Reorder fuctions to avoid forward refs while at it
-<li>ether-wake: save a few more bytes of code
-<li>find: -group, -depth (Natanael Copa <natanael.copa at gmail.com>)
-<li>find: add support for -delete, -path (by Natanael Copa)
-<li>find: fix -prune. Add big comment about it
-<li>find: improve usage text (Natanael Copa <natanael.copa at gmail.com>)
-<li>find: missed 'static' on const data; size and prune were mixed up; use index_in_str_array
-<li>find: un-DESKTOPize (Kai Schwenzfeier <niteblade at gmx.net>)
-<li>find_root_device: teach to deal with /dev/ subdirs (by Kirill K. Smirnov <lich at math.spbu.ru>)
-<li>find_root_device: use lstat - don't follow links
-<li>getopt32: fix llist_t options ordering. llist_rev is now unused
-<li>getopt: use getopt32 for option parsing - inspired by patch by Mats Erik Andersson <mats.andersson64 at comhem.se>
-<li>hdparm: fix multisector mode setting (from Toni Mirabete <amirabete at catix.cat>)
-<li>hdparm: make -T -t code smaller (-194 bytes), and output prettier
-<li>ifupdown: make it possible to use DHCP clients different from udhcp
-<li>ifupdown: reread state file before rewriting it. Fixes "ifup started another ifup" state corruption bug. Patch by Natanael Copa <natanael.copa at gmail.com>
-<li>ifupdown: small optimization (avoid doing useless work if we are not going to update state file)
-<li>ip: fix compilation if FEATURE_TR_CLASSES is off
-<li>ip: mv ip*_main into ip.c; use a dispatcher to save on needless duplication. Saves a minor 12b
-<li>ip: rewrite the ip applet to be less bloaty. Convert to index_in_(sub)str_array()
-<li>ip: set the scope properly. Thanks to Jean Wolter
-<li>iplink: shrink iplink; sanitize libiproute a bit (-916 bytes)
-<li>iproute: shrink a bit (-200 bytes)
-<li>kill: know much more signals; make code smaller; use common code for kill applet and ash kill builtin
-<li>klogd: remove dependency on syslogd
-<li>lash: "forking" applets are actually can be treated the same way as "non-forked". Also save a bit of space on trailing NULL array elements.
-<li>lash: fix kill buglet (didn't properly recognize ESRCH)
-<li>lash: make -c work; crush buffer overrun and free of non-malloced ptr (from Mats Erik Andersson <mats.andersson64 at comhem.se>)
-<li>lash: recognize and use NOFORK applets
-<li>less: fix case when regex search finds nothing; fix very obscure memory corruption bug; fix less <HUGEFILE + [End] busy loop
-<li>libbb: add xsendto, xunlink, xpipe
-<li>libbb: fix segfault in reset_ino_dev_hashtable() when *hashtable was NULL
-<li>libbb: make pidfile writing configurable
-<li>libbb: make xsocket die with address family printed (if VERBOSE_RESOLUTION_ERRORS=y)
-<li>libbb: rework NOMMU helper API so that it makes more sense and easier to use
-<li>libiproute: audit callgraph, shortcut error paths into die() functions
-<li>lineedit: do not try to open NULL history file
-<li>lineedit: nuke two unused variables and code which sets them
-<li>login: remove setpgrp call (makes it work from shell prompt again); sanitize stdio descriptors (we are suid, need to be careful!)
-<li>login: shrink login and set_environment by ~100 bytes
-<li>mount: fix incorrect usage of strtok (inadvertently used NULL sometimes)
-<li>mount: fix mounting of symlinks (mount from util-linux allows that)
-<li>msh: data/bss reduction (more than 9k of it); fix "underscore bug" (a_b=1111 didn't work); fix obscure case with backticks and closed fd 1
-<li>nc: port nc 1.10 to busybox
-<li>netstat: fix for bogus state value for raw sockets
-<li>netstat: introduce -W: wide, ipv6-friendly output; shrink by ~500 bytes
-<li>nmeter: should die if stdout doesn't like him anymore
-<li>patch: do not try to delete same file twice
-<li>ping: fix wrong sign extension of packet id (bug 1373)
-<li>ps: add -o tty and -o rss support; make a bit smaller; work around libc bug: printf("%.*s\n", MAX_INT, buffer)
-<li>run_parts: rewrite
-<li>run_parts: do not check path portion of a name for "bad chars". Needed for ifupdown. Patch by Gabriel L. Somlo <somlo at cmu.edu>
-<li>sed: fix escaped newlines in -f
-<li>split: new applet
-<li>stat: remove superfluous bss user (flags) and manually unswitch some areas
-<li>stty: fix option parsing bug (spotted by Sascha Hauer <s.hauer at pengutronix.de>)
-<li>svlogd: fix 'SEGV on uninitialized data' and make it honor TERM
-<li>tail: fix SEGV on "tail -N"
-<li>ipsvd: tcpsvd,udpsvd are new applets, GPL-ed 'clones' of Dan Bernstein's tcpserver. Author: Gerrit Pape <pape at smarden.org>, http://smarden.sunsite.dk/ipsvd/
-<li>test: close bug 1371; plug a memory leak; code size reduction
-<li>tftp: code diet, and I think retransmits were broken
-<li>tr: fix bug where we did not reject invalid classes like '[[:alpha'. debloat while at it
-<li>udhcp: MAC_BCAST_ADDR and blank_chaddr are in fact constant, move to rodata; use pipe instead of socketpair
-<li>udhcp[cd]: stop using atexit magic fir pidfile removal; stop deleting our own pidfile if we daemonize
-<li>xargs: shrink code, ~80 bytes; simplify word list management
-<li>zcip: make it work on NOMMU (+ improve NOMMU support machinery)
- </ul>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>20 May 2007 -- BusyBox 1.5.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.5.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.5.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.5.1/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This is a bugfix-only release, with fixes to hdparm, hush, ifupdown, ps
- and sed.</p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>23 March 2007 -- BusyBox 1.5.0 (unstable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.5.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.5.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.5.0/">patches</a>,
- <a href="http://busybox.net/fix.html">how to add a patch</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Since this is a x.x.0 release, it probably does not deserve "stable"
- label. Please help making 1.5.1 stable by testing 1.5.0.</p>
- <p>Notable changes since previous release:
- <ul>
- <li>find: added support for -user, -not, fixed -mtime, -mmin, -perm
- <li>[de]archivers: merge common logic into one module
- <li>ping[6]: unified code for both
- <li>less: regex search improved
- <li>ash: more readable code, testsuite added
- <li>sed: several very obscure bugs fixed
- <li>chown: -H, -L, -P support (required by POSIX)
- <li>tar: handle (broken) checksums a-la Sun; tar restores mode again
- <li>grep: implement -w, "implement" -a and -I by ignoring them
- <li>cp: more sane behavior when overwriting existing files
- <li>init: stop doing silly things with the console (-400 bytes)
- <li>httpd: make httpd usable for NOMMU CPUs; fix POSTDATA handling bugs
- <li>httpd: run interpreter for configured file extensions in any dir,
- not only in /cgi-bin/
- <li>chrt: new applet
- <li>SELinux: SELinux-related code and -Z option added to several applets,
- new SELinux-specific applets: chcon, runcon.
- <li>Build system: produces link map, uses -Wwrite-strings to catch
- improper usage of string constants.
- <li>Data and bss section usage audited and reduced - should help NOMMU
- targets.
- <li>Applets with bug fixes: gunzip, vi, syslogd, dpkg, ls, adjtimex, resize,
- sv, printf, diff, awk, sort, dpkg, diff, tftp
- <li>Applets with usability improvements: swapon, more, ifup/ifdown, hwclock,
- udhcpd, start_stop_daemon, cmp
- <li>Applets with code cleaned up: telnet, fdisk, fsck_minix, mkfs_minix,
- syslogd, swapon, runsv, svlogd, klogd
- </ul>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>18 March 2007 -- BusyBox 1.4.2 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.4.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.4.2</a>.
- </p>
-
- <p>This release includes only trivial fixes accumulated since 1.4.1.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>25 January 2007 -- BusyBox 1.4.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.4.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.4.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.4.1/">patches</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This release includes only trivial fixes accumulated since 1.4.0.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>20 January 2007 -- BusyBox 1.4.0 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.4.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.4.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.4.0/">patches</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Since this is a x.x.0 release, it probably is a bit less "stable"
- than usual.</p>
- <p>Changes since previous release:
- <ul>
- <li>e2fsprogs are mostly removed from busybox. Some smaller parts remain,
- the rest of it sits disabled in e2fsprogs/old_e2fsprogs/*, because
- it's too bloated. Really. I'm afraid it's about the only way we can
- ever get e2fsprogs cleaned up.
- <li>less: many improvements. Now can display binary files
- (although I expect it to have trouble with displays where 8bit chars
- don't have 1-to-1 char/glyph relationship). Regexp search is not buggy
- anymore. Less does not read entire input up-front. Reads input
- as it appears (yay!). Works rather nice as man pager. I recommend it
- for general use now.
- <li>IPv6: generic support is in place, many networking applets are
- upgraded to be IPv6 capable. Probably some work remains, but it is
- already much better than what we had previously.
- <li>arp: new applet (thanks to Eric Spakman).
- <li>fakeidentd: non-forking standalone server part was taking ~90%
- of the applet. Factored it out (in fact, rewrote it).
- <li>syslogd: mostly rewritten.
- <li>decompress_unzip, gzip: sanitized a bit.
- <li>sed: better hadling of NULs
- <li>httpd: stop adding our own "Content-type:" to CGI output
- <li>chown: user.grp works again.
- <li>minor bugfixes to: passwd, date, tftp, start_stop_daemon, tar,
- ps, ifupdown, time, su, stty, awk, ping[6], sort,...
- </ul>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>20 January 2007 -- BusyBox 1.3.2 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.3.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.3.2</a>.</p>
-
- <p>This release includes only one trivial fix accumulated since 1.3.1
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>27 December 2006 -- BusyBox 1.3.1 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.3.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.3.1</a>.
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.3.1/">patches</a>)</p>
-
- <p>Closing 2006 with new release. It includes only trivial fixes accumulated since 1.3.0
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>14 December 2006 -- BusyBox 1.3.0 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.3.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.3.0</a>.
- (<a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/fixes-1.3.0/">patches</a>)</p>
-
- <p>This release has CONFIG_DESKTOP option which enables features
- needed for busybox usage on desktop machine. For example, find, chmod
- and chown get several less frequently used options, od is significantly
- bigger but matches GNU coreutils, etc. Intended to eventually make
- busybox a viable alternative for "standard" utilities for slightly
- adventurous desktop users.
- <p>Changes since previous release:
- <ul>
- <li>find: taking many more of standard options
- <li>ps: POSIX-compliant -o implemented
- <li>cp: added -s, -l
- <li>grep: added -r, fixed -h
- <li>watch: make it exec child like standard one does (was totally
- incompatible)
- <li>tar: fix limitations which were preventing bbox tar usage
- on big directories: long names and linknames, pax headers
- (Linux kernel tarballs have that). Fixed a number of obscure bugs.
- Raised max file limit (now 64Gb). Security fixes (/../ attacks).
- <li>httpd: added -i (inetd), -f (foreground), support for
- directory indexer CGI (example is included), bugfixes.
- <li>telnetd: fixed/improved IPv6 support, inetd+standalone support,
- other fixes. Useful IPv6 stuff factored out into libbb.
- <li>runit/*: new applets adapted from http://smarden.sunsite.dk/runit/
- (these are my personal favorite small-and-beautiful toys)
- <li>minor bugfixes to: login, dd, mount, umount, chmod, chown, ln, udhcp,
- fdisk, ifconfig, sort, tee, mkswap, wget, insmod.
- </ul>
- <p>Note that GnuPG key used to sign this release is different.
- 1.2.2.1 is also signed post-factum now. Sorry for the mess.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>29 October 2006 -- BusyBox 1.2.2.1 (fix)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.2.2.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.2.2.1</a>.</p>
-
- <p>Added compile-time warning that static linking against glibc
- produces buggy executables.
- </li>
-
- <li><b>24 October 2006 -- BusyBox 1.2.2 (stable)</b>
- <p>It's a bit overdue, but
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.2.2.tar.bz2">here is
- BusyBox 1.2.2</a>.</p>
-
- <p>This release has dozens of fixes backported from the ongoing development
- branch. There are a couple of bugfixes to sed, two fixes to documentation
- generation (BusyBox.html shouldn't have USE() macros in it anymore), fix
- umount to report the right errno on failure and to umount block devices by
- name with newer kernels, fix mount to handle symlinks properly, make mdev
- delete device nodes when called for hotplug remove, fix a segfault
- in traceroute, a minor portability fix to md5sum option parsing, a build
- fix for httpd with old gccs, an options parsing tweak to hdparm, make test
- fail gracefully when getgroups() returns -1, fix a race condition in
- modprobe when two instances run at once (hotplug does this), make "tar xf
- foo.tar dir/dir" extract all subdirectories, make our getty initialize the
- terminal more like mingetty, an selinux build fix, an endianness fix in
- ping6, fix for zcip defending addresses, clean up some global variables in
- gzip to save memory, fix sulogin -tNNN, a help text tweak, several warning
- fixes and build fixes, fixup dnsd a bit, and a partridge in a pear tree.</p>
-
- <p>As <a href="http://lwn.net/Articles/202106/">Linux Weekly News noted</a>,
- this is my (Rob's) last release of BusyBox. The new maintainer is Denis
- Vlasenko, I'm off to do <a href="http://landley.net/code">other things</a>.
- </p>
- </li>
-
- <li><b>29 September 2006 -- New license email address.</b>
- <p>The email address gpl@busybox.net is now the recommended way to contact
- the Software Freedom Law Center to report BusyBox license violations.</p>
-
- <li><b>31 July 2006 -- BusyBox 1.2.1 (stable)</b>
- <p>Since nobody seems to have objected too loudly over the weekend, I
- might as well point you all at
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.2.1.tar.bz2">Busybox
- 1.2.1</a>, a bugfix-only release with no new features.</p>
-
- <p>It has three shell fixes (two to lash: going "var=value" without
- saying "export" should now work, plus a missing null pointer check, and
- one to ash when redirecting output to a file that fills up.) Fix three
- embarassing thinkos in the new dmesg command. Two build tweaks
- (dependencies for the compressed usage messages and running make in the
- libbb subdirectory). One fix to tar so it can extract git-generated
- tarballs (rather than barfing on the pax extensions). And a partridge
- in a pear... Ahem.</p>
-
- <p>But wait, there's more! A passwd changing fix so an empty
- gecos field doesn't trigger a false objection that the new passwd contains
- the gecos field. Make all our setuid() and setgid() calls check the return
- value in case somebody's using per-process resource limits that prevent
- a user from having too many processes (and thus prevent a process from
- switching away from root, in which case the process will now _die_ rather
- than continue with root privileges). A fix to adduser to make sure that
- /etc/group gets updated. And a fix to modprobe to look for modules.conf
- in the right place on 2.6 kernels.</p>
-
- <li><b>30 June 2006 -- BusyBox 1.2.0</b>
- <p>The -devel branch has been stabilized and the result is
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.2.0.tar.bz2">Busybox
- 1.2.0</a>. Lots of stuff changed, I need to work up a decent changelog
- over the weekend.</p>
-
- <p>I'm still experimenting with how long is best for the development
- cycle, and since we've got some largeish projects queued up I'm going to
- try a longer one. Expect 1.3.0 in December. (Expect 1.2.1 any time
- we fix enough bugs. :)</p>
-
- <p>Update: Here are <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.2.0.fixes.patch">the first few bug fixes</a> that will go into 1.2.1.</p>
-
- <li><b>17 May 2006 -- BusyBox 1.1.3 (stable)</b>
- <p><a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.1.3.tar.bz2">BusyBox
- 1.1.3</a> is another bugfix release. It makes passwd use salt, fixes a
- memory freeing bug in ls, fixes "build all sources at once" mode, makes
- mount -a not abort on the first failure, fixes msh so ctrl-c doesn't kill
- background processes, makes patch work with patch hunks that don't have a
- timestamp, make less's text search a lot more robust (the old one could
- segfault), and fixes readlink -f when built against uClibc.</p>
-
- <p>Expect 1.2.0 sometime next month, which won't be a bugfix release.</p>
-
- <li><b>10 April 2006 -- BusyBox 1.1.2 (stable)</b>
- <p>You can now download <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.1.2.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.1.2</a>, a bug fix release consisting of 11 patches
- backported from the development branch: Some build fixes, several fixes
- for mount and nfsmount, a fix for insmod on big endian systems, a fix for
- find -xdev, and a fix for comm. Check the file "changelog" in the tarball
- for more info.</p>
-
- <p>The next new development release (1.2.0) is slated for June. A 1.1.3
- will be released before then if more bug fixes crop up. (The new plan is
- to have a 1.x.0 new development release every 3 months, with 1.x.y stable
- bugfix only releases based on that as appropriate.)</p>
-
- <li><b>27 March 2006 -- Software Freedom Law Center representing BusyBox and uClibc</b>
- <p>One issue Erik Andersen wanted to resolve when handing off BusyBox
- maintainership to Rob Landley was license enforcement. BusyBox and
- uClibc's existing license enforcement efforts (pro-bono representation
- by Erik's father's law firm, and the
- <a href="http://www.busybox.net/shame.html">Hall of Shame</a>), haven't
- scaled to match the popularity of the projects. So we put our heads
- together and did the obvious thing: ask Pamela Jones of
- <a href="http://www.groklaw.net">Groklaw</a> for suggestions. She
- referred us to the fine folks at softwarefreedom.org.</p>
-
- <p>As a result, we're pleased to announce that the
- <a href="http://www.softwarefreedom.org">Software Freedom Law Center</a>
- has agreed to represent BusyBox and uClibc. We join a number of other
- free and open source software projects (such as
- <a href="http://lwn.net/Articles/141806/">X.org</a>,
- <a href="http://lwn.net/Articles/135413/">Wine</a>, and
- <a href="http://plone.org/foundation/newsitems/software-freedom-law-center-support/">Plone</a>
- in being represented by a fairly cool bunch of lawyers, which is not a
- phrase you get to use every day.</p>
-
- <li><b>22 March 2006 -- BusyBox 1.1.1</b>
- <p>The new maintainer is Rob Landley, and the new release is <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.1.1.tar.bz2">BusyBox 1.1.1</a>. Expect a "what's new" document in a few days. (Also, Erik and I have have another announcement pending...)</p>
- <p>Update: Rather than put out an endless stream of 1.1.1.x releases,
- the various small fixes have been collected together into a
- <a href="http://busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.1.1.fixes.patch">patch</a>,
- and new fixes will be appended to that as needed. Expect 1.1.2 around
- June.</p>
- </li>
- <li><b>11 January 2006 -- 1.1.0 is out</b>
- <p>The new stable release is
- <a href="http://www.busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.1.0.tar.bz2">BusyBox
- 1.1.0</a>. It has a number of improvements, including several new applets.
- (It also has <a href="http://www.busybox.net/lists/busybox/2006-January/017733.html">a few rough spots</a>,
- but we're trying out a "release early, release often" strategy to see how
- that works. Expect 1.1.1 sometime in March.)</p>
-
- <li><b>31 October 2005 -- 1.1.0-pre1</b>
- <p>The development branch of busybox is stable enough for wider testing, so
- you can now
- <a href="http://www.busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.1.0-pre1.tar.bz2">download</a>,
- the first prerelease of 1.1.0. This prerelease includes a lot of
- <a href="http://www.busybox.net/downloads/BusyBox.html">new
- functionality</a>: new applets, new features, and extensive rewrites of
- several existing applets. This prerelease should be noticeably more
- <a href="http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/">standards
- compliant</a> than earlier versions of busybox, although we're
- still working out the <a href="https://bugs.busybox.net">bugs</a>.</p>
-
- <li><b>16 August 2005 -- 1.01 is out</b>
-
- <p>A new stable release (<a href="http://www.busybox.net/downloads/busybox-1.01.tar.bz2">BusyBox
- 1.01</a>) is now available for download, containing over a hundred
- <a href="http://www.busybox.net/lists/busybox/2005-August/015424.html">small
- fixes</a> that have cropped up since the 1.00 release.</p>
-
- <li><b>13 January 2005 -- Bug and Patch Tracking</b><p>
-
- Bug reports sometimes get lost when posted to the mailing list. The
- developers of BusyBox are busy people, and have only so much they can keep
- in their brains at a time. In my case, I'm lucky if I can remember my own
- name, much less a bug report posted last week... To prevent your bug report
- from getting lost, if you find a bug in BusyBox, please use the
- <a href="https://bugs.busybox.net/">shiny new Bug and Patch Tracking System</a>
- to post all the gory details.
-
- <p>
-
- The same applies to patches... Regardless of whether your patch
- is a bug fix or adds spiffy new features, please post your patch
- to the Bug and Patch Tracking System to make certain it is
- properly considered.
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>13 October 2004 -- BusyBox 1.00 released</b><p>
-
- When you take a careful look at nearly every embedded Linux device or
- software distribution shipping today, you will find a copy of BusyBox.
- With countless routers, set top boxes, wireless access points, PDAs, and
- who knows what else, the future for Linux and BusyBox on embedded devices
- is looking very bright.
-
- <p>
-
- It is therefore with great satisfaction that I declare each and every
- device already shipping with BusyBox is now officially out of date.
- The highly anticipated release of BusyBox 1.00 has arrived!
-
- <p>
-
- Over three years in development, BusyBox 1.00 represents a tremendous
- improvement over the old 0.60.x stable series. Now featuring a Linux
- KernelConf based configuration system (as used by the Linux kernel),
- Linux 2.6 kernel support, many many new applets, and the development
- work and testing of thousands of people from around the world.
-
- <p>
-
- If you are already using BusyBox, you are strongly encouraged to upgrade to
- BusyBox 1.00. If you are considering developing an embedded Linux device
- or software distribution, you may wish to investigate if using BusyBox is
- right for your application. If you need help getting started using
- BusyBox, if you wish to donate to help cover expenses, or if you find a bug
- and need help reporting it, you are invited to visit the <a
- href="FAQ.html">BusyBox FAQ</a>.
-
- <p>
-
- As usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
-
- <p>
- <li><b>Old News</b><p>
- <a href="/oldnews.html">Click here to read older news</a>
-
-
- <li><b>16 August 2004 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-rc3 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes release candidate 3...
- <p>
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all the details.
- And as usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
-
- <p>
- <li><b>26 July 2004 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-rc2 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes release candidate 2...
- <p>
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all the details.
- And as usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
-
- <p>
- <li><b>20 July 2004 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-rc1 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes release candidate 1... This fixes all (most?) of the problems
- that have turned up since -pre10. In particular, loading and unloading of
- kernel modules with 2.6.x kernels should be working much better.
- <p>
-
- I <b>really</b> want to get BusyBox 1.0.0 released soon and I see no real
- reason why the 1.0.0 release shouldn't happen with things pretty much as
- is. BusyBox is in good shape at the moment, and it works nicely for
- everything that I'm doing with it. And from the reports I've been getting,
- it works nicely for what most everyone else is doing with it as well.
- There will eventually be a 1.0.1 anyway, so we might as well get on with
- it. No, BusyBox is not perfect. No piece of software ever is. And while
- there is still plenty that can be done to improve things, most of that work
- is waiting till we can get a solid 1.0.0 release out the door....
- <p>
-
- Please do not bother to send in patches adding cool new features at this
- time. Only bug-fix patches will be accepted. If you have submitted a
- bug-fixing patch to the busybox mailing list and no one has emailed you
- explaining why your patch was rejected, it is safe to say that your patch
- has been lost or forgotten. That happens sometimes. Please re-submit your
- bug-fixing patch to the BusyBox mailing list, and be sure to put "[PATCH]"
- at the beginning of the email subject line!
-
- <p>
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all the details.
- And as usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
-
- <p>
- On a less happy note, My 92 year old grandmother (my dad's mom) passed away
- yesterday (June 19th). The funeral will be Thursday in a little town about
- 2 hours south of my home. I've checked and there is absolutely no way I
- could be back in time for the funeral if I attend <a
- href="http://www.linuxsymposium.org/2004/">OLS</a> and give my presentation
- as scheduled.
- <p>
- As such, it is with great reluctance and sadness that I have come
- to the conclusion I will have to make my appologies and skip OLS
- this year.
- <p>
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>13 April 2004 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre10 released</b><p>
-
- Ok, I lied. It turns out that -pre9 will not be the final BusyBox
- pre-release. With any luck however -pre10 will be, since I <b>really</b>
- want to get BusyBox 1.0.0 released very soon. As usual, please do not
- bother to send in patches adding cool new features at this time. Only
- bug-fix patches will be accepted. It would also be <b>very</b> helpful if
- people could continue to review the BusyBox documentation and submit
- improvements.
-
- <p>
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all the details.
- And as usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>6 April 2004 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre9 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes the final BusyBox pre-release... This is your last chance for
- bug fixes. With luck this will be released as BusyBox 1.0.0 later this
- week. Please do not bother to send in patches adding cool new features at
- this time. Only bug-fix patches will be accepted. It would also be
- <b>very</b> helpful if people could help review the BusyBox documentation
- and submit improvements. I've spent a lot of time updating the
- documentation to make it better match reality, but I could really use some
- assistance in checking that the features supported by the various applets
- match the features listed in the documentation.
-
- <p>
- I had hoped to get this released a month ago, but
- <a href="http://codepoet.org/gallery/baby_peter/img_1796">
- another release on 1 March 2004</a> has kept me busy...
-
- <p>
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all the details.
- And as usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>23 February 2004 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre8 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes yet another BusyBox pre-release... Please do not bother to send
- in patches supplying new features at this time. Only bug-fix patches will
- be accepted. If you have a cool new feature you would like to see
- supported, or if you have an amazing new applet you would like to submit,
- please wait and submit such things later. We really want to get a release
- out we can all be proud of. We are still aiming to finish off the -pre
- series in February and move on to the final 1.0.0 release... So if you
- spot any bugs, now would be an excellent time to send in a fix to the
- busybox mailing list. It would also be <b>very</b> helpful if people could
- help review the BusyBox documentation and submit improvements. It would be
- especially helpful if people could check that the features supported by the
- various applets match the features listed in the documentation.
-
- <p>
-
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all the details.
- And as usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
- <li><b>4 February 2004 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre7 released</b><p>
-
- There was a bug in -pre6 that broke argument parsing for a
- number of applets, since a variable was not being zeroed out
- properly. This release is primarily intended to fix that one
- problem. In addition, this release fixes several other
- problems, including a rewrite by mjn3 of the code for parsing
- the busybox.conf file used for suid handling, some shell updates
- from vodz, and a scattering of other small fixes. We are still
- aiming to finish off the -pre series in February and move on to
- the final 1.0.0 release... If you see any problems, of have
- suggestions to make, as always, please feel free to email the
- busybox mailing list.
-
- <p>
-
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. And as usual you can
- <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>30 January 2004 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre6 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes the next pre-release for the new BusyBox stable
- series. This release adds a number of size optimizations,
- updates udhcp, fixes up 2.6 modutils support, updates ash
- and the shell command line editing, and the usual pile of
- bug fixes both large and small. Things appear to be
- settling down now, so with a bit of luck and some testing
- perhaps we can finish off the -pre series in February and
- move on to the final 1.0.0 release... If you see any
- problems, of have suggestions to make, as always, please
- feel free to email the busybox mailing list.
-
- <p>
-
- People who rely on the <a href="downloads/snapshots/">daily BusyBox snapshots</a>
- should be aware that snapshots of the old busybox 0.60.x
- series are no longer available. Daily snapshots are now
- only available for the BusyBox 1.0.0 series and now use
- the naming scheme "busybox-<date>.tar.bz2". Please
- adjust any build scripts using the old naming scheme accordingly.
-
- <p>
-
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. And as usual you can
- <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>23 December 2003 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre5 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes the next pre-release for the new BusyBox stable
- series. The most obvious thing in this release is a fix for
- a terribly stupid bug in mount that prevented it from working
- properly unless you specified the filesystem type. This
- release also fixes a few compile problems, updates udhcp,
- fixes a silly bug in fdisk, fixes ifup/ifdown to behave like
- the Debian version, updates devfsd, updates the 2.6.x
- modutils support, add a new 'rx' applet, removes the obsolete
- 'loadacm' applet, fixes a few tar bugs, fixes a sed bug, and
- a few other odd fixes.
-
- <p>
-
- If you see any problems, of have suggestions to make, as
- always, please feel free to send an email to the busybox
- mailing list.
-
- <p>
-
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. And as usual you can
- <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
-
- <li><b>10 December 2003 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre4 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes the fourth pre-release for the new BusyBox stable
- series. This release includes major rework to sed, lots of
- rework on tar, a new tiny implementation of bunzip2, a new
- devfsd applet, support for 2.6.x kernel modules, updates to
- the ash shell, sha1sum and md5sum have been merged into a
- common applet, the dpkg applets has been cleaned up, and tons
- of random bugs have been fixed. Thanks everyone for all the
- testing, bug reports, and patches! Once again, a big
- thank-you goes to Glenn McGrath (bug1) for stepping in and
- helping get patches merged!
-
- <p>
-
- And of course, if you are reading this, you might have noticed
- the busybox website has been completely reworked. Hopefully
- things are now somewhat easier to navigate... If you see any
- problems, of have suggestions to make, as always, please feel
- free to send an email to the busybox mailing list.
-
- <p>
-
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. And as usual you can
- <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
-
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>12 Sept 2003 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre3 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes the third pre-release for the new BusyBox stable
- series. The last prerelease has held up quite well under
- testing, but a number of problems have turned up as the number
- of people using it has increased. Thanks everyone for all
- the testing, bug reports, and patches!
-
- <p>
-
- If you have submitted a patch or a bug report to the busybox
- mailing list and no one has emailed you explaining why your
- patch was rejected, it is safe to say that your patch has
- somehow gotten lost or forgotten. That happens sometimes.
- Please re-submit your patch or bug report to the BusyBox
- mailing list!
-
- <p>
-
- The point of the "-preX" versions is to get a larger group of
- people and vendors testing, so any problems that turn up can be
- fixed prior to the final 1.0.0 release. The main feature
- (besides additional testing) that is still still on the TODO
- list before the final BusyBox 1.0.0 release is sorting out the
- modutils issues. For the new 2.6.x kernels, we already have
- patches adding insmod and rmmod support and those need to be
- integrated. For 2.4.x kernels, for which busybox only supports
- a limited number of architectures, we may want to invest a bit
- more work before we cut 1.0.0. Or we may just leave 2.4.x
- module loading alone.
-
- <p>
-
- I had hoped this release would be out a month ago. And of
- course, it wasn't since Erik became busy getting a release of
- <a href="http://www.uclibc.org/">uClibc</a>
- out the door. Many thanks to Glenn McGrath (bug1) for
- stepping in and helping get a bunch of patches merged! I am
- not even going to state a date for releasing BusyBox 1.0.0
- -pre4 (or the final 1.0.0). We're aiming for late September...
- But if this release proves as to be exceptionally stable (or
- exceptionally unstable!), the next release may be very soon
- indeed.
-
- <p>
-
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. And as usual you can
- <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>30 July 2003 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre2 released</b><p>
-
- Here goes another pre release for the new BusyBox stable
- series. The last prerelease (pre1) was given quite a lot of
- testing (thanks everyone!) which has helped turn up a number of
- bugs, and these problems have now been fixed.
-
- <p>
-
- Highlights of -pre2 include updating the 'ash' shell to sync up
- with the Debian 'dash' shell, a new 'hdparm' applet was added,
- init again supports pivot_root, The 'reboot' 'halt' and
- 'poweroff' applets can now be used without using busybox init.
- an ifconfig buffer overflow was fixed, losetup now allows
- read-write loop devices, uClinux daemon support was added, the
- 'watchdog', 'fdisk', and 'kill' applets were rewritten, there were
- tons of doc updates, and there were many other bugs fixed.
- <p>
-
- If you have submitted a patch and it is not included in this
- release and Erik has not emailed you explaining why your patch
- was rejected, it is safe to say that he has lost your patch.
- That happens sometimes. Please re-submit your patch to the
- BusyBox mailing list.
- <p>
-
- The point of the "-preX" versions is to get a larger group of
- people and vendors testing, so any problems that turn up can be
- fixed prior to the final 1.0.0 release. The main feature that
- is still still on the TODO list before the final BusyBox 1.0.0
- release is adding module support for the new 2.6.x kernels. If
- necessary, a -pre3 BusyBox release will happen on August 6th.
- Hopefully (i.e. unless some horrible catastrophic problem
- turns up) the final BusyBox 1.0.0 release will be ready by
- then...
- <p>
-
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. As usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
- <p>
- <li><b>15 July 2003 -- BusyBox 1.0.0-pre1 released</b><p>
-
- The busybox development series has been under construction for
- nearly two years now. Which is just entirely too long... So
- it is with great pleasure that I announce the imminent release
- of a new stable series. Due to the huge number of changes
- since the last stable release (and the usual mindless version
- number inflation) I am branding this new stable series verison
- 1.0.x...
- <p>
-
- The point of "-preX" versions is to get a larger group of
- people and vendors testing, so any problems that turn up can be
- fixed prior to the magic 1.0.0 release (which should happen
- later this month)... I plan to release BusyBox 1.0.0-pre2 next
- Monday (July 21st), and, if necessary, -pre3 on July 28th.
- Hopefully (i.e. unless some horrible catastrophic problem turns
- up) the final BusyBox 1.0.0 release should be ready by the end
- of July.
- <p>
-
- If you have submitted patches, and they are not in this release
- and I have not emailed you explaining why your patch was
- rejected, it is safe to say that I have lost your patch. That
- happens sometimes. Please do <b>NOT</b> send all your patches,
- support questions, etc, directly to Erik. I get hundreds of
- emails every day (which is why I end up losing patches
- sometimes in the flood)... The busybox mailing list is the
- right place to send your patches, support questions, etc.
- <p>
-
- I would like to especially thank Vladimir Oleynik (vodz), Glenn
- McGrath (bug1), Robert Griebl (sandman), and Manuel Novoa III
- (mjn3) for their significant efforts and contributions that
- have made this release possible.
- <p>
-
- As usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
- You don't really need to bother with the
- <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a>, as the changes
- vs the stable version are way too extensive to easily enumerate.
- But you can take a look if you really want too.
-
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>26 October 2002 -- BusyBox 0.60.5 released</b><p>
-
- I am very pleased to announce that the BusyBox 0.60.5 (stable)
- is now available for download. This is a bugfix release for
- the stable series to address all the problems that have turned
- up since the last release. Unfortunately, the previous release
- had a few nasty bugs (i.e. init could deadlock, gunzip -c tried
- to delete source files, cp -a wouldn't copy symlinks, and init
- was not always providing controlling ttys when it should have).
- I know I said that the previous release would be the end of the
- 0.60.x series. Well, it turns out I'm a liar. But this time I
- mean it (just like last time ;-). This will be the last
- release for the 0.60.x series -- all further development work
- will be done for the development busybox tree. Expect the development
- version to have its first real release very very soon now...
-
- <p>
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog.full">changelog</a> has all
- the details. As usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
- <p>
- <li><b>18 September 2002 -- BusyBox 0.60.4 released</b><p>
-
- I am very pleased to announce that the BusyBox 0.60.4
- (stable) is now available for download. This is primarily
- a bugfix release for the stable series to address all
- the problems that have turned up since the last
- release. This will be the last release for the 0.60.x series.
- I mean it this time -- all further development work will be done
- on the development busybox tree, which is quite solid now and
- should soon be getting its first real release.
-
- <p>
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog.full">changelog</a> has all
- the details. As usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>27 April 2002 -- BusyBox 0.60.3 released</b><p>
-
- I am very pleased to announce that the BusyBox 0.60.3 (stable) is
- now available for download. This is primarily a bugfix release
- for the stable series. A number of problems have turned up since
- the last release, and this should address most of those problems.
- This should be the last release for the 0.60.x series. The
- development busybox tree has been progressing nicely, and will
- hopefully be ready to become the next stable release.
-
- <p>
- The <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. As usual you can <a href="downloads">download busybox here</a>.
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
- <p>
- <li><b>6 March 2002 -- busybox.net now has mirrors!</b><p>
-
- Busybox.net is now much more available, thanks to
- the fine folks at <a href="http://i-netinnovations.com/">http://i-netinnovations.com/</a>
- who are providing hosting for busybox.net and
- uclibc.org. In addition, we now have two mirrors:
- <a href="http://busybox.linuxmagic.com/">http://busybox.linuxmagic.com/</a>
- in Canada and
- <a href="http://busybox.csservers.de/">http://busybox.csservers.de/</a>
- in Germany. I hope this makes things much more
- accessible for everyone!
-
-
-<li>
-<b>3 January 2002 -- Welcome to busybox.net!</b>
-
-<p>Thanks to the generosity of a number of busybox
-users, we have been able to purchase busybox.net
-(which is where you are probably reading this).
-Right now, busybox.net and uclibc.org are both
-living on my home system (at the end of my DSL
-line). I apologize for the abrupt move off of
-busybox.lineo.com. Unfortunately, I no longer have
-the access needed to keep that system updated (for
-example, you might notice the daily snapshots there
-stopped some time ago).</p>
-
-<p>Busybox.net is currently hosted on my home
-server, at the end of a DSL line. Unfortunately,
-the load on them is quite heavy. To address this,
-I'm trying to make arrangements to get busybox.net
-co-located directly at an ISP. To assist in the
-co-location effort, <a href=
-"http://www.codepoet.org/~markw">Mark Whitley</a>
-(author of busybox sed, cut, and grep) has donated
-his <a href=
-"http://www.netwinder.org/">NetWinder</a> computer
-for hosting busybox.net and uclibc.org. Once this
-system is co-located, the current speed problems
-should be completely eliminated. Hopefully, too,
-some of you will volunteer to set up some mirror
-sites, to help to distribute the load a bit.</p>
-
-<p><!--
- <center>
- Click here to help support busybox.net!
- <form action="https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr" method="post">
- <input type="hidden" name="cmd" value="_xclick">
- <input type="hidden" name="business" value="andersen@codepoet.org">
- <input type="hidden" name="item_name" value="Support Busybox">
- <input type="hidden" name="image_url" value="https://codepoet-consulting.com/images/busybox2.jpg">
- <input type="hidden" name="no_shipping" value="1">
- <input type="image" src="images/donate.png" border="0" name="submit" alt="Make donation using PayPal">
- </form>
- </center>
- -->
- Since some people expressed concern over BusyBox
-donations, let me assure you that no one is getting
-rich here. All BusyBox and uClibc donations will be
-spent paying for bandwidth and needed hardware
-upgrades. For example, Mark's NetWinder currently
-has just 64Meg of memory. As demonstrated when
-google spidered the site the other day, 64 Megs in
-not enough, so I'm going to be ordering 256Megs of
-ram and a larger hard drive for the box today. So
-far, donations received have been sufficient to
-cover almost all expenses. In the future, we may
-have co-location fees to worry about, but for now
-we are ok. A <b>HUGE thank-you</b> goes out to
-everyone that has contributed!<br>
- -Erik</p>
-</li>
-
-<li>
-<b>20 November 2001 -- BusyBox 0.60.2 released</b>
-
-<p>We am very pleased to announce that the BusyBox
-0.60.2 (stable) is now released to the world. This
-one is primarily a bugfix release for the stable
-series, and it should take care of most everyone's
-needs till we can get the nice new stuff we have
-been working on in CVS ready to release (with the
-wonderful new buildsystem). The biggest change in
-this release (beyond bugfixes) is the fact that msh
-(the minix shell) has been re-worked by Vladimir N.
-Oleynik (vodz) and so it no longer crashes when
-told to do complex things with backticks.</p>
-
-<p>This release has been tested on x86, ARM, and
-powerpc using glibc 2.2.4, libc5, and uClibc, so it
-should work with just about any Linux system you
-throw it at. See the <a href=
-"downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> for <small>most
-of</small> the details. The last release was
-<em>very</em> solid for people, and this one should
-be even better.</p>
-
-<p>As usual BusyBox 0.60.2 can be downloaded from
-<a href=
-"downloads">http://www.busybox.net/downloads</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Have Fun.<br>
- -Erik</p>
-</li>
-
-<li> <b>18 November 2001 -- Help us buy busybox.net!</b>
-
-<!-- Begin PayPal Logo -->
-<center>
-Click here to help buy busybox.net!
-<form action="https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr" method="post">
-<input type="hidden" name="cmd" value="_xclick">
-<input type="hidden" name="business" value="andersen@codepoet.org">
-<input type="hidden" name="item_name" value="Support Busybox">
-<input type="hidden" name="image_url" value="https://busybox.net/images/busybox2.jpg">
-<input type="hidden" name="no_shipping" value="1">
-<input type="image" src="images/donate.png" name="submit" alt="Make donation using PayPal">
-</form>
-</center>
-<!-- End PayPal Logo -->
-
-I've contacted the current owner of busybox.net and he is willing
-to sell the domain name -- for $250. He also owns busybox.org but
-will not part with it... I will then need to pay the registry fee
-for a couple of years and start paying for bandwidth, so this will
-initially cost about $300. I would like to host busybox.net on my
-home machine (codepoet.org) so I have full control over the system,
-but to do that would require that I increase the level of bandwidth
-I am paying for. Did you know that so far this month, there
-have been over 1.4 Gigabytes of busybox ftp downloads? I don't
-even <em>know</em> how much CVS bandwidth it requires. For the
-time being, Lineo has continued to graciously provide this
-bandwidth, despite the fact that I no longer work for them. If I
-start running this all on my home machine, paying for the needed bandwidth
-will start costing some money.
-<p>
-
-I was going to pay it all myself, but my wife didn't like that
-idea at all (big surprise). It turns out <insert argument
-where she wins and I don't> she has better ideas
-about what we should spend our money on that don't involve
-busybox. She suggested I should ask for contributions on the
-mailing list and web page. So...
-<p>
-
-I am hoping that if everyone could contribute a bit, we could pick
-up the busybox.net domain name and cover the bandwidth costs. I
-know that busybox is being used by a lot of companies as well as
-individuals -- hopefully people and companies that are willing to
-contribute back a bit. So if everyone could please help out, that
-would be wonderful!
-<p>
-
-
-<li> <b>23 August 2001 -- BusyBox 0.60.1 released</b>
-<br>
-
- This is a relatively minor bug fixing release that fixes
- up the bugs that have shown up in the stable release in
- the last few weeks. Fortunately, nothing <em>too</em>
- serious has shown up. This release only fixes bugs -- no
- new features, no new applets. So without further ado,
- here it is. Come and get it.
- <p>
- The
- <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. As usual BusyBox 0.60.1 can be downloaded from
- <a href="downloads">http://busybox.net/downloads</a>.
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
-<li> <b>2 August 2001 -- BusyBox 0.60.0 released</b>
-<br>
- I am very pleased to announce the immediate availability of
- BusyBox 0.60.0. I have personally tested this release with libc5, glibc,
- and <a href="http://uclibc.org/">uClibc</a> on
- x86, ARM, and powerpc using linux 2.2 and 2.4, and I know a number
- of people using it on everything from ia64 to m68k with great success.
- Everything seems to be working very nicely now, so getting a nice
- stable bug-free(tm) release out seems to be in order. This releases fixes
- a memory leak in syslogd, a number of bugs in the ash and msh shells, and
- cleans up a number of things.
-
- <p>
-
- Those wanting an easy way to test the 0.60.0 release with uClibc can
- use <a href="http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/">User-Mode Linux</a>
- to give it a try by downloading and compiling
- <a href="ftp://busybox.net/buildroot.tar.gz">buildroot.tar.gz</a>.
- You don't have to be root or reboot your machine to run test this way.
- Preconfigured User-Mode Linux kernel source is also on busybox.net.
- <p>
- Another cool thing is the nifty <a href="downloads/tutorial/index.html">
- BusyBox Tutorial</a> contributed by K Computing. This requires
- a ShockWave plugin (or standalone viewer), so you may want to grab the
- the GPLed shockwave viewer from <a href="http://www.swift-tools.com/Flash/flash-0.4.10.tgz">here</a>
- to view the tutorial.
- <p>
-
- Finally, In case you didn't notice anything odd about the
- version number of this release, let me point out that this release
- is <em>not</em> 0.53, because I bumped the version number up a
- bit. This reflects the fact that this release is intended to form
- a new stable BusyBox release series. If you need to rely on a
- stable version of BusyBox, you should plan on using the stable
- 0.60.x series. If bugs show up then I will release 0.60.1, then
- 0.60.2, etc... This is also intended to deal with the fact that
- the BusyBox build system will be getting a major overhaul for the
- next release and I don't want that to break products that people
- are shipping. To avoid that, the new build system will be
- released as part of a new BusyBox development series that will
- have some not-yet-decided-on odd version number. Once things
- stabilize and the new build system is working for everyone, then
- I will release that as a new stable release series.
-
- <p>
- The
- <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> has all
- the details. As usual BusyBox 0.60.0 can be downloaded from
- <a href="downloads">http://busybox.net/downloads</a>.
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
-<li> <b>7 July 2001 -- BusyBox 0.52 released</b>
-<br>
-
- I am very pleased to announce the immediate availability of
- BusyBox 0.52 (the "new-and-improved rock-solid release"). This
- release is the result of <em>many</em> hours of work and has tons
- of bugfixes, optimizations, and cleanups. This release adds
- several new applets, including several new shells (such as hush, msh,
- and ash).
-
- <p>
- The
- <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> covers
- some of the more obvious details, but there are many many things that
- are not mentioned, but have been improved in subtle ways. As usual,
- BusyBox 0.52 can be downloaded from
- <a href="downloads">http://busybox.net/downloads</a>.
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-
-<li> <b>10 April 2001 - Graph of Busybox Growth </b>
-<br>
-The illustrious Larry Doolittle has made a PostScript chart of the growth
-of the Busybox tarball size over time. It is available for downloading /
-viewing <a href="busybox-growth.ps"> right here</a>.
-
-<p> (Note that while the number of applets in Busybox has increased, you
-can still configure Busybox to be as small as you want by selectively
-turning off whichever applets you don't need.)
-<p>
-
-
-<li> <b>10 April 2001 -- BusyBox 0.51 released</b>
-<br>
-
- BusyBox 0.51 (the "rock-solid release") is now out there. This
- release adds only 2 new applets: env and vi. The vi applet,
- contributed by Sterling Huxley, is very functional, and is only
- 22k. This release fixes 3 critical bugs in the 0.50 release.
- There were 2 potential segfaults in lash (the busybox shell) in
- the 0.50 release which are now fixed. Another critical bug in
- 0.50 which is now fixed: syslogd from 0.50 could potentially
- deadlock the init process and thereby break your entire system.
- <p>
-
- There are a number of improvements in this release as well. For
- one thing, the wget applet is greatly improved. Dmitry Zakharov
- added FTP support, and Laurence Anderson make wget fully RFC
- compliant for HTTP 1.1. The mechanism for including utility
- functions in previous releases was clumsy and error prone. Now
- all utility functions are part of a new libbb library, which makes
- maintaining utility functions much simpler. And BusyBox now
- compiles on itanium systems (thanks to the Debian itanium porters
- for letting me use their system!).
- <p>
- You can read the
- <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> for
- complete details. BusyBox 0.51 can be downloaded from
- <a href="downloads">http://busybox.net/downloads</a>.
- <p>Have Fun!
- <p>
-
-<li> <b>Busybox Boot-Floppy Image</b>
-
-<p>Because you asked for it, we have made available a <a href=
-"downloads/busybox.floppy.img"> Busybox boot floppy
-image</a>. Here's how you use it:
-
-<ol>
-
- <li> <a href="downloads/busybox.floppy.img">
- Download the image</a>
-
- <li> dd it onto a floppy like so: <tt> dd if=busybox.floppy.img
- of=/dev/fd0 ; sync </tt>
-
- <li> Pop it in a machine and boot up.
-
-</ol>
-
-<p> If you want to look at the contents of the initrd image, do this:
-
-<pre>
- mount ./busybox.floppy.img /mnt -o loop -t msdos
- cp /mnt/initrd.gz /tmp
- umount /mnt
- gunzip /tmp/initrd.gz
- mount /tmp/initrd /mnt -o loop -t minix
-</pre>
-
-
-<li> <b>15 March 2001 -- BusyBox 0.50 released</b>
-<br>
-
- This release adds several new applets including ifconfig, route, pivot_root, stty,
- and tftp, and also fixes tons of bugs. Tab completion in the
- shell is now working very well, and the shell's environment variable
- expansion was fixed. Tons of other things were fixed or made
- smaller. For a fairly complete overview, see the
- <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a>.
- <p>
- lash (the busybox shell) is still with us, fixed up a bit so it
- now behaves itself quite nicely. It really is quite usable as
- long as you don't expect it to provide Bourne shell grammer.
- Standard things like pipes, redirects, command line editing, and
- environment variable expansion work great. But we have found that
- this shell, while very usable, does not provide an extensible
- framework for adding in full Bourne shell behavior. So the first order of
- business as we begin working on the next BusyBox release will be to merge in the new shell
- currently in progress at
- <a href="http://doolittle.faludi.com/~larry/parser.html">Larry Doolittle's website</a>.
- <p>
-
-
-<li> <b>27 January 2001 -- BusyBox 0.49 released</b>
-<br>
-
- Several new applets, lots of bug fixes, cleanups, and many smaller
- things made nicer. Several cleanups and improvements to the shell.
- For a list of the most interesting changes
- you might want to look at the <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a>.
- <p>
- Special thanks go out to Matt Kraai and Larry Doolittle for all their
- work on this release, and for keeping on top of things while I've been
- out of town.
- <p>
- <em>Special Note</em><br>
-
- BusyBox 0.49 was supposed to have replaced lash, the BusyBox
- shell, with a new shell that understands full Bourne shell/Posix shell grammer.
- Well, that simply didn't happen in time for this release. A new
- shell that will eventually replace lash is already under
- construction. This new shell is being developed by Larry
- Doolittle, and could use all of our help. Please see the work in
- progress on <a href="http://doolittle.faludi.com/~larry/parser.html">Larry's website</a>
- and help out if you can. This shell will be included in the next
- release of BusyBox.
- <p>
-
-<li> <b>13 December 2000 -- BusyBox 0.48 released</b>
-<br>
-
- This release fixes lots and lots of bugs. This has had some very
- rigorous testing, and looks very, very clean. The usual tar
- update of course: tar no longer breaks hardlinks, tar -xzf is
- optionally supported, and the LRP folks will be pleased to know
- that 'tar -X' and 'tar --exclude' are both now in. Applets are
- now looked up using a binary search making lash (the busybox
- shell) much faster. For the new debian-installer (for Debian
- woody) a .udeb can now be generated.
- <p>
- The curious can get a list of some of the more interesting changes by reading
- the <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a>.
- <p>
- Many thanks go out to the many many people that have contributed to
- this release, especially Matt Kraai, Larry Doolittle, and Kent Robotti.
- <p>
-<p> <li> <b>26 September 2000 -- BusyBox 0.47 released</b>
-<br>
-
- This release fixes lots of bugs (including an ugly bug in 0.46
- syslogd that could fork-bomb your system). Added several new
- apps: rdate, wget, getopt, dos2unix, unix2dos, reset, unrpm,
- renice, xargs, and expr. syslogd now supports network logging.
- There are the usual tar updates. Most apps now use getopt for
- more correct option parsing.
- See the <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a>
- for complete details.
-
-
-<p> <li> <b>11 July 2000 -- BusyBox 0.46 released</b>
-<br>
-
- This release fixes several bugs (including a ugly bug in tar,
- and fixes for NFSv3 mount support). Added a dumpkmap to allow
- people to dump a binary keymaps for use with 'loadkmap', and a
- completely reworked 'grep' and 'sed' which should behave better.
- BusyBox shell can now also be used as a login shell.
- See the <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a>
- for complete details.
-
-
-<p> <li> <b>21 June 2000 -- BusyBox 0.45 released</b>
-<br>
-
- This release has been slow in coming, but is very solid at this
- point. BusyBox now supports libc5 as well as GNU libc. This
- release provides the following new apps: cut, tr, insmod, ar,
- mktemp, setkeycodes, md5sum, uuencode, uudecode, which, and
- telnet. There are bug fixes for just about every app as well (see
- the <a href="downloads/Changelog">changelog</a> for
- details).
- <p>
- Also, some exciting infrastructure news! Busybox now has its own
- <a href="lists/busybox/">mailing list</a>,
- publically browsable
- <a href="http://sources.busybox.net/index.py/trunk/busybox/">CVS tree</a>,
- anonymous
- <a href="cvs_anon.html">CVS access</a>, and
- for those that are actively contributing there is even
- <a href="cvs_write.html">CVS write access</a>.
- I think this will be a huge help to the ongoing development of BusyBox.
- <p>
- Also, for the curious, there is no 0.44 release. Somehow 0.44 got announced
- a few weeks ago prior to its actually being released. To avoid any confusion
- we are just skipping 0.44.
- <p>
- Many thanks go out to the many people that have contributed to this release
- of BusyBox (esp. Pavel Roskin)!
-
-
-<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 fix for the problem.
-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="downloads/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="downloads">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="downloads">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 decidedly 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 wonderfully.
-<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 accommodate 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="downloads/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="downloads/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="downloads/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="downloads/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>
-
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
-
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-
-<h3>Products/Projects Using BusyBox</h3>
-
-Do you use BusyBox? I'd love to know about it and
-I'd be happy to link to you.
-
-<p>
-I know of the following projects that use BusyBox --
-listed in the order I happen to add them to the web page:
-
-<ul>
-
-<li><a href="http://buildroot.uclibc.org/">buildroot</a><br>A configurable
-means for building your own busybox/uClibc based system systems, maintained
-by the uClibc developers.
-
-<li><a href="http://openwrt.org">OpenWrt</a> a Linux distribution for embedded
-devices, based on buildroot.
-
-<li><a href="http://www.pengutronix.de/software/ptxdist_en.html">PTXdist</a>
- <br>another configurable means for building your own busybox based systems.
-
-<li><a href=
-"http://cvs.debian.org/boot-floppies/">
-Debian installer (boot floppies) project</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://redhat.com/">Red Hat installer</a>
-
-<li><a href=
-"http://distro.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/distributions/slackware/slackware-current/source/rootdisks/">
-Slackware Installer</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.gentoo.org/">Gentoo Linux install/boot CDs</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.mandriva.com/">The Mandriva installer</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://Leaf.SourceForge.net">Linux Embedded Appliance Firewall</a>
- <br>The sucessor of the Linux Router Project, supporting all sorts
- of embedded Linux gateways, routers, wireless routers, and firewalls.
-
-<li><a href=
-"http://www.toms.net/rb/">tomsrtbt</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.stormix.com/">Stormix Installer</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.emacinc.com/linux2_sbc.htm">EMAC Linux 2.0 SBC</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.trinux.org/">Trinux</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://oddas.sourceforge.net/">ODDAS project</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://byld.sourceforge.net/">Build Your Linux Disk</a>
-
-<li><a href=
-"http://ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/system/recovery">Zdisk</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.adtran.com">AdTran -
-VPN/firewall VPN Linux Distribution</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://mkcdrec.ota.be/">mkCDrec - make CD-ROM recovery</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://recycle.lbl.gov/~ldoolitt/bse/">Linux on nanoEngine</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.zelow.no/floppyfw/">Floppyfw</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.ltsp.org/">Linux Terminal Server Project</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.devil-linux.org/">Devil-Linux</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://dutnux.sourceforge.net/">DutNux</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.microwerks.net/~hugo/mindi/">Mindi</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.minimalinux.org/ttylinux/">ttylinux</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.coyotelinux.com/">Coyote Linux</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.partimage.org/">Partition Image</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.fli4l.de/">fli4l the on(e)-disk-router</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://tinfoilhat.cultists.net/">Tinfoil Hat Linux</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/gp32linux/">gp32linux</a>
-<li><a href="http://familiar.handhelds.org/">Familiar Linux</a><br>A linux distribution for handheld computers
-<li><a href="http://rescuecd.sourceforge.net/">Timo's Rescue CD Set</a>
-<li><a href="http://sf.net/projects/netstation/">Netstation</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.fiwix.org/">GNU/Fiwix Operating System</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.softcraft.com/">Generations Linux</a>
-<li><a href="http://systemimager.org/relatedprojects/">SystemImager / System Installation Suite</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.bablokb.de/gendist/">GENDIST distribution generator</a>
-<li><a href="http://diet-pc.sourceforge.net/">DIET-PC embedded Linux thin client distribution</a>
-<li><a href="http://byzgl.sourceforge.net/">BYZantine Gnu/Linux</a>
-<li><a href="http://dban.sourceforge.net/">Darik's Boot and Nuke</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.timesys.com/">TimeSys real-time Linux</a>
-<li><a href="http://movix.sf.net/">MoviX</a><br>Boots from CD and automatically plays every video file on the CD
-<li><a href="http://katamaran.sourceforge.net">katamaran</a><br>Linux, X11, xfce windowmanager, based on BusyBox
-<li><a href="http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/simplygnustep">Prometheus SimplyGNUstep</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.renyi.hu/~ekho/lowlife/">lowlife</a><br>A documentation project on how to make your own uClibc-based systems and floppy.
-<li><a href="http://metadistros.hispalinux.es/">Metadistros</a><br>a project to allow you easily make Live-CD distributions.
-<li><a href="http://salvare.sourceforge.net/">Salvare</a><br>More Linux than tomsrtbt but less than Knoppix, aims to provide a useful workstation as well as a rescue disk.
-<li><a href="http://www.stresslinux.org/">stresslinux</a><br>minimal linux distribution running from a bootable cdrom or via PXE.
-<li><a href="http://thinstation.sourceforge.net/">thinstation</a><br>convert standard PCs into full-featured diskless thinclients.
-<li><a href="http://www.uhulinux.hu/">UHU-Linux Hungary</a>
-<li><a href="http://deep-water.berlios.de/">Deep-Water Linux</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.freesco.org/">Freesco router</a>
-<li><a href="http://Sentry.SourceForge.net/">Sentry Firewall CD</a>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p>
-And here are products that use BusyBox --
-
-<ul>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.dream-multimedia-tv.de/">Dreambox (Linux based PVR)</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.elpa.it/eng/rd129gb.html">RD129 embedded board from ELPA</a>
-<li>EMTEC MovieCube R700 uses Busybox 1.1.3.
-<li><a href="http://tuxscreen.net">Tuxscreen Linux Phone</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.kerbango.com/">The Kerbango Internet Radio</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.linuxmagic.com/vpn/">LinuxMagic VPN Firewall</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.isilver-inc.com/">I-Silver Linux appliance servers</a>
-<li><a href="http://zaurus.sourceforge.net/">Sharp Zaurus PDA</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.cyclades.com/">Cyclades-TS and other Cyclades products</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.linksys.com/products/product.asp?prid=508">Linksys WRT54G - Wireless-G Broadband Router</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.dell.com/us/en/biz/topics/sbtopic_005_truemobile.htm">Dell TrueMobile 1184</a>
-<li><a href="http://actiontec.com/products/modems/dual_pcmodem/dpm_overview.html">Actiontec Dual PC Modem</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.kiss-technology.com/">Kiss DP Series DVD players</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.netgear.com/products/prod_details.asp?prodID=170">NetGear WG602 wireless router</a>
- <br>with sources <a href="http://www.netgear.com/support/support_details.asp?dnldID=453">here</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.trendware.com/products/TEW-411BRP.htm">TRENDnet TEW-411BRP 802.11g Wireless AP/Router/Switch</a>
- <br>Source for busybox and udhcp <a href="http://www.trendware.com/asp/download/fileinfo.asp?file_id=277&B1=Search">here</a> though no kernel source is provided.
-<li><a href="http://www.buffalo-technology.com/webcontent/products/wireless/wbr-g54.htm">Buffalo WBR-G54 wireless router</a>
- <li><a href="http://www.asus.com/products/communication/wireless/wl-300g/overview.htm">ASUS WL-300g Wireless LAN Access Point</a>
- <br>with source<a href="http://www.asus.com.tw/support/download/item.aspx?ModelName=WL-300G">here</a>
- <li><a href="http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProductPage.process?Merchant_Id=&Section_Id=201522&pcount=&Product_Id=136493">Belkin 54g Wireless DSL/Cable Gateway Router</a>
- <br>with source<a href="http://web.belkin.com/support/gpl.asp">here</a>
- <li><a href="http://www.acronis.com/products/partitionexpert/">Acronis PartitionExpert 2003</a>
- <br>includes a heavily modified BusyBox v0.60.5 with built in
- cardmgr, device detection, gpm, lspci, etc. Also includes udhcp,
- uClibc 0.9.26, a heavily patched up linux kernel, etc. Source
- can only be obtained <a href="http://www.acronis.com/files/gpl/linux.tar.bz2">here</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.usr.com/">U.S. Robotics Sureconnect 4-port ADSL router</a><br>
- with source <a href="http://www.usr.com/support/s-gpl-code.asp">here</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.actiontec.com/products/broadband/54mbps_wireless_gateway_1p/index.html">
- ActionTec GT701-WG Wireless Gateway/DSL Modem</a>
- with source <a href="http://opensource.actiontec.com/">here</a>
-<li><a href="http://smartlinux.sourceforge.net/">S.M.A.R.T. Linux</a>
-<li><a href="http://www.dlink.com/">DLink - Model GSL-G604T, DSL-300T, and possibly other models</a>
- with source <a href="ftp://ftp.dlink.co.uk/dsl_routers_modems/">here,</a>
- with source <a href="ftp://ftp.dlink.de/dsl-products/">and here,</a>
- and quite possibly other places as well. You may need to dig down a bit
- to find the source, but it does seem to be there.
-<li><a href="http://www.siemens-mobile.de/cds/frontdoor/0,2241,de_de_0_42931_rArNrNrNrN,00.html">Siemens SE515 DSL router</a>
- with source <a href="http://now-portal.c-lab.de/projects/gigaset/">here, I think...</a>
- with some details <a href="http://heinz.hippenstiel.org/familie/hp/hobby/gigaset_se515dsl.html">here.</a>
-<li><a href="http://freeterm.spb.ru/frwt/">Free Remote Windows Terminal</a>
-
-<li><a href="http://www.zyxel.com/">ZyXEL Routers</a>
-
-</ul>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-
-<!-- Begin Screenshot -->
-
-<h3> Busybox Screenshot! </h3>
-
-
-Everybody loves to look at screenshots, so here is a live action screenshot of BusyBox.
-
-<pre style="background-color: black; color: lightgreen; padding: 5px;
-font-family: monospace; font-size: smaller;" width="100">
-
-$ busybox
-BusyBox v1.10.1 (2008-04-24 11:30:07 CEST) multi-call binary
-Copyright (C) 1998-2007 Erik Andersen, Rob Landley, Denys Vlasenko
-and others. Licensed under GPLv2.
-See source distribution for full notice.
-
-Usage: busybox [function] [arguments]...
- or: function [arguments]...
-
- BusyBox is a multi-call binary that combines many common Unix
- utilities into a single executable. Most people will create a
- link to busybox for each function they wish to use and BusyBox
- will act like whatever it was invoked as!
-
-Currently defined functions:
- [, [[, addgroup, adduser, adjtimex, ar, arp, arping, ash,
- awk, basename, bbconfig, brctl, bunzip2, bzcat, bzip2,
- cal, cat, catv, chat, chattr, chcon, chgrp, chmod, chown,
- chpasswd, chpst, chroot, chrt, chvt, cksum, clear, cmp,
- comm, cp, cpio, crond, crontab, cryptpw, cttyhack, cut,
- date, dc, dd, deallocvt, delgroup, deluser, devfsd, df,
- dhcprelay, diff, dirname, dmesg, dnsd, dos2unix, dpkg,
- dpkg-deb, du, dumpkmap, dumpleases, echo, ed, egrep, eject,
- env, envdir, envuidgid, ether-wake, expand, expr, fakeidentd,
- false, fbset, fdflush, fdformat, fdisk, fetchmail, fgrep,
- find, findfs, fold, free, freeramdisk, fsck, fsck.minix,
- ftpget, ftpput, fuser, getenforce, getopt, getsebool,
- getty, grep, gunzip, gzip, halt, hd, hdparm, head, hexdump,
- hostid, hostname, httpd, hush, hwclock, id, ifconfig,
- ifdown, ifenslave, ifup, inetd, init, insmod, install,
- ip, ipaddr, ipcalc, ipcrm, ipcs, iplink, iproute, iprule,
- iptunnel, kbd_mode, kill, killall, killall5, klogd, lash,
- last, length, less, linux32, linux64, linuxrc, ln, load_policy,
- loadfont, loadkmap, logger, login, logname, logread, losetup,
- lpd, lpq, lpr, ls, lsattr, lsmod, lzmacat, makedevs, matchpathcon,
- md5sum, mdev, mesg, microcom, mkdir, mkfifo, mkfs.minix,
- mknod, mkswap, mktemp, modprobe, more, mount, mountpoint,
- msh, mt, mv, nameif, nc, netstat, nice, nmeter, nohup,
- nslookup, od, openvt, passwd, patch, pgrep, pidof, ping,
- ping6, pipe_progress, pivot_root, pkill, poweroff, printenv,
- printf, ps, pscan, pwd, raidautorun, rdate, readahead,
- readlink, readprofile, realpath, reboot, renice, reset,
- resize, restorecon, rm, rmdir, rmmod, route, rpm, rpm2cpio,
- rtcwake, run-parts, runcon, runlevel, runsv, runsvdir,
- rx, script, sed, selinuxenabled, sendmail, seq, sestatus,
- setarch, setconsole, setenforce, setfiles, setkeycodes,
- setlogcons, setsebool, setsid, setuidgid, sha1sum, slattach,
- sleep, softlimit, sort, split, start-stop-daemon, stat,
- strings, stty, su, sulogin, sum, sv, svlogd, swapoff,
- swapon, switch_root, sync, sysctl, syslogd, tac, tail,
- tar, taskset, tcpsvd, tee, telnet, telnetd, test, tftp,
- tftpd, time, top, touch, tr, traceroute, true, tty, ttysize,
- udhcpc, udhcpd, udpsvd, umount, uname, uncompress, unexpand,
- uniq, unix2dos, unlzma, unzip, uptime, usleep, uudecode,
- uuencode, vconfig, vi, vlock, watch, watchdog, wc, wget,
- which, who, whoami, xargs, yes, zcat, zcip
-
-$ <span style="text-decoration:blink;">_</span>
-
-</pre>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-
-<h3>Hall of Shame!!!</h3>
-
-<p>This page is no longer updated, these days we forward this sort of
-thing to the <a href="http://www.softwarefreedom.org">Software Freedom Law
-Center</a> instead.</p>
-
-<p>The following products and/or projects appear to use BusyBox, but do not
-appear to release source code as required by the <a
-href="/license.html">BusyBox license</a>. This is a violation of the law!
-The distributors of these products are invited to contact <a href=
-"mailto:andersen@codepoet.org">Erik Andersen</a> if they have any confusion
-as to what is needed to bring their products into compliance, or if they have
-already brought their product into compliance and wish to be removed from the
-Hall of Shame.
-
-<p>
-
-Here are the details of <a href="/license.html">exactly how to comply
-with the BusyBox license</a>, so there should be no question as to
-exactly what is expected.
-Complying with the Busybox license is easy and completely free, so the
-companies listed below should be ashamed of themselves. Furthermore, each
-product listed here is subject to being legally ordered to cease and desist
-distribution for violation of copyright law, and the distributor of each
-product is subject to being sued for statutory copyright infringement damages
-of up to $150,000 per work plus legal fees. Nobody wants to be sued, and <a
-href="mailto:andersen@codepoet.org">Erik</a> certainly would prefer to spend
-his time doing better things than sue people. But he will sue if forced to
-do so to maintain compliance.
-
-<p>
-
-Do everyone a favor and don't break the law -- if you use busybox, comply with
-the busybox license by releasing the source code with your product.
-
-<p>
-
-<ul>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.trittontechnologies.com/products.html">Tritton Technologies NAS120</a>
- <br>see <a href="http://www.ussg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0404.0/1611.html">here for details</a>
- <li><a href="http://www.macsense.com/product/homepod/">Macsense HomePod</a>
- <br>with details
- <a href="http://developer.gloolabs.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Forums&file=viewtopic&topic=123&forum=7">here</a>
- <li><a href="http://www.cpx.com/products.asp?c=Wireless+Products">Compex Wireless Products</a>
- <br>appears to be running v0.60.5 with Linux version 2.4.20-uc0 on ColdFire,
- but no source code is mentioned or offered.
- <li><a href="http://www.inventel.com/en/product/datasheet/10/">Inventel DW 200 wireless/ADSL router</a>
- <li><a href="http://www.sweex.com/product.asp">Sweex DSL router</a>
- <br>appears to be running BusyBox v1.00-pre2 and udhcpd, but no source
- code is mentioned or offered.
- <li><a href="http://www.trendware.com/products/TEW-410APB.htm">TRENDnet TEW-410APB</a>
- </li><li><a href="http://www.hauppauge.com/Pages/products/data_mediamvp.html">Hauppauge Media MVP</a>
- <br>Hauppauge contacted me on 16 Dec 2003, and claims to be working on resolving this problem.
- </li><li><a href="http://www.hitex.com/download/adescom/data/">TriCore</a>
- </li><li><a href="http://www.allnet.de/">ALLNET 0186 wireless router</a>
- </li><li><a href="http://www.dmmtv.com/">Dreambox DM7000S DVB Satellite Receiver</a>
- <br> Dream Multimedia contacted me on 22 Dec 2003 and is working on resolving this problem.
- <br> Source _may_ be here: http://cvs.tuxbox.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/tuxbox/cdk/
- </li><li><a href="http://testing.lkml.org/slashdot.php?mid=331690">Sigma Designs EM8500 based DVD players</a>
- <br>Source for the Sigma Designs reference platform is found here<br>
- <a href="http://www.uclinux.org/pub/uClinux/ports/arm/EM8500/uClinux-2.4-sigma.tar.gz">uClinux-2.4-sigma.tar.gz</a>, so while Sigma Designs itself appears to be in compliance, as far as I can tell,
- no vendors of Sigma Designs EM8500 based devices actually comply with the GPL....
- </li><li><a href="http://testing.lkml.org/slashdot.php?mid=433790">Liteon LVD2001 DVD player using the Sigma Designs EM8500</a>
- </li><li><a href="http://www.rimax.net/">Rimax DVD players using the Sigma Designs EM8500</a>
- </li><li><a href="http://www.vinc.us/">Bravo DVD players using the Sigma Designs EM8500</a>
- </li><li><a href="http://www.hb-direct.com/">H&B DX3110 Divx player based on Sigma Designs EM8500</a>
- </li><li><a href="http://www.recospa.it/mdpro1/index.php">United *DVX4066 mpeg4 capable DVD players</a>
- </li><li><a href="http://www.a-link.com/RR64AP.html">Avaks alink Roadrunner 64</a>
- <br> Partial source available, based on source distributed under NDA from <a href="http://www.lsilogic.com/products/dsl_platform_solutions/hb_linuxr2_2.html"> LSILogic</a>. Why the NDA LSILogic, what are you hiding ?
- <br>To verify the Avaks infrigment see my slashdot <a href="http://slashdot.org/~bug1/journal/">journal</a>.
- <br>The ZipIt wireless IM device appears to be using Busybox-1.00-pre1 in the ramdisk, however no source has been made available.
- </li><li>Undoubtedly there are others... Please report them so we can shame them (or if necessary sue them) into compliance.
-
-</ul>
-
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
-
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<h3>Sponsors</h3>
-
-<p>Please visit our sponsors and thank them for their support! They have
-provided money for equipment and bandwidth. Next time you need help with a
-project, consider these fine companies!</p>
-
-
-<ul>
- <li><a href="http://osuosl.org/">OSU OSL</a><br>
- OSU OSL kindly provides hosting for BusyBox and uClibc.
- </li>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.codepoet-consulting.com/">Codepoet Consulting</a><br>
- Custom Linux, embedded Linux, BusyBox, and uClibc development.
- </li>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.laptopcomputers.org/">Laptop Computers</a> contributes
- financially.
- </li>
-
- <li>AOE media, a <a href="http://www.aoemedia.com/typo3-development.html">
- TYPO3 development agency</a> contributes financially.
- </li>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.analog.com/en/">Analog Devices, Inc.</a> provided
- a <a href="http://docs.blackfin.uclinux.org/doku.php?id=bf537_quick_start">
- Blackfin development board</a> free of charge.
- <a href="http://www.analog.com/blackfin">Blackfin</a>
- is a NOMMU processor, and its availability for testing is invaluable.
- If you are an embedded device developer,
- please note that Analog Devices has entire Linux distribution available
- for download for this board. Visit
- <a href="http://blackfin.uclinux.org/">http://blackfin.uclinux.org/</a>
- for more information.
- </li>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.timesys.com/">TimeSys</a><br>
- Embedded Linux development, cross-compilers, real-time, KGDB, tsrpm and cygwin.
- </li>
-
- <li><a href="http://www.penguru.net/">Penguru Consulting</a><br>
- Custom development for embedded Linux systems and multimedia platforms.
- </li>
-
- <li><a href="http://opensource.se/">opensource.se</a><br>
- Embedded open source consulting in Europe.
- </li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p>If you wish to be a sponsor, or if you have already contributed and would
-like your name added here, email <a href="mailto:vda.linux@gmail.com">Denys</a>.</p>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-<h3>Accessing Source</h3>
-
-
-
-<h3>Patches</h3>
-
-<p>You can <a href="downloads/">download</a> fixes for particular releases
-of busybox, e.g. downloads/fixes-<em>major</em>-<em>minor</em>-<em>patch</em>/
-
-<h3>Anonymous Subversion Access</h3>
-
-We allow anonymous (read-only) Subversion (svn) access to everyone. To
-grab a copy of the latest version of BusyBox using anonymous svn access:
-
-<pre>
-svn co svn://busybox.net/trunk/busybox</pre>
-
-<p>
-The <em>stable branches</em> can be obtained with
-<pre>
-svn co svn://busybox.net/branches/busybox_1_NN_stable
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-
-If you are not already familiar with using Subversion, I recommend you visit <a
-href="http://subversion.tigris.org/">the Subversion website</a>. You might
-also want to read online or buy a copy of <a
-href="http://svnbook.red-bean.com/">the Subversion Book</a>. If you are
-already comfortable with using CVS, you may want to skip ahead to the <a
-href="http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.1/apa.html">Subversion for CVS Users</a>
-part of the Subversion Book.
-
-<p>
-
-Once you've checked out a copy of the source tree, you can update your source
-tree at any time so it is in sync with the latest and greatest by entering your
-BusyBox directory and running the command:
-
-<pre>
-svn update</pre>
-
-Because you've only been granted anonymous access to the tree, you won't be
-able to commit any changes. Changes can be submitted for inclusion by posting
-them to the BusyBox mailing list. For those that are actively contributing
-<a href="developer.html">Subversion commit access</a> can be made available.
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
-
+++ /dev/null
-/* A sample style sheet for displaying the Subversion directory listing
- that is generated by mod_dav_svn and "svnindex.xsl". */
-
-body{
- margin: 0;
- padding: 0;
-}
-
-a {
- color: navy;
-}
-
-.header {
- padding-top: 5px;
- text-align: center;
-}
-
-.footer {
- margin-top: 8em;
- padding: 0.5em 1em 0.5em;
- border: 1px solid;
- border-width: 1px 0;
- clear: both;
- border-color: rgb(30%,30%,50%) navy rgb(75%,80%,85%) navy;
- background: rgb(88%,90%,92%);
- font-size: 80%;
-}
-
-.svn {
- margin: 3em;
-}
-
-.rev {
- margin-right: 3px;
- padding-left: 3px;
- text-align: left;
- font-size: 120%;
-}
-
-.dir a {
- text-decoration: none;
- color: black;
-}
-
-.file a {
- text-decoration: none;
- color: black;
-}
-
-.path {
- margin: 3px;
- padding: 3px;
- background: #FFCC66;
- font-size: 120%;
-}
-
-.updir {
- margin: 3px;
- padding: 3px;
- margin-left: 3em;
- background: #FFEEAA;
-}
-
-.file {
- margin: 3px;
- padding: 3px;
- margin-left: 3em;
- background: rgb(95%,95%,95%);
-}
-
-.file:hover {
- margin: 3px;
- padding: 3px;
- margin-left: 3em;
- background: rgb(100%,100%,90%);
-/* border: 1px black solid; */
-}
-
-.dir {
- margin: 3px;
- padding: 3px;
- margin-left: 3em;
- background: rgb(90%,90%,90%);
-}
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-.dir:hover {
- margin: 3px;
- padding: 3px;
- margin-left: 3em;
- background: rgb(100%,100%,80%);
-/* border: 1px black solid; */
-}
+++ /dev/null
-<?xml version="1.0"?>
-
-<!-- A sample XML transformation style sheet for displaying the Subversion
- directory listing that is generated by mod_dav_svn when the "SVNIndexXSLT"
- directive is used. -->
-<xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" version="1.0">
-
- <xsl:output method="html"/>
-
- <xsl:template match="*"/>
-
- <xsl:template match="svn">
- <html>
- <head>
- <title>
- <xsl:if test="string-length(index/@name) != 0">
- <xsl:value-of select="index/@name"/>
- <xsl:text>: </xsl:text>
- </xsl:if>
- <xsl:value-of select="index/@path"/>
- </title>
- <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/svnindex.css"/>
- </head>
- <body>
- <div class="header" style="font-family: lucida, helvetica; font-size: 248%">
- <xsl:text>BUSYBOX</xsl:text>
- </div>
- <div class="header">
- <a href="http://www.busybox.net"><img src="/images/busybox1.png" border="0" /></a>
- </div>
- <div class="svn">
- <xsl:apply-templates/>
- </div>
- <div class="footer">
- <xsl:text>Powered by </xsl:text>
- <xsl:element name="a">
- <xsl:attribute name="href">
- <xsl:value-of select="@href"/>
- </xsl:attribute>
- <xsl:text>Subversion</xsl:text>
- </xsl:element>
- <xsl:text> </xsl:text>
- <xsl:value-of select="@version"/>
- </div>
- </body>
- </html>
- </xsl:template>
-
- <xsl:template match="index">
- <div class="rev">
- <xsl:value-of select="@name"/>
- <xsl:if test="@base">
- <xsl:if test="@name">
- <xsl:text>:  </xsl:text>
- </xsl:if>
- <xsl:value-of select="@base" />
- </xsl:if>
- <xsl:if test="@rev">
- <xsl:if test="@base | @name">
- <xsl:text> — </xsl:text>
- </xsl:if>
- <xsl:text>Revision </xsl:text>
- <xsl:value-of select="@rev"/>
- </xsl:if>
- </div>
- <div class="path">
- <xsl:value-of select="@path"/>
- </div>
- <xsl:apply-templates select="updir"/>
- <xsl:apply-templates select="dir"/>
- <xsl:apply-templates select="file"/>
- </xsl:template>
-
- <xsl:template match="updir">
- <div class="updir">
- <xsl:text>[</xsl:text>
- <xsl:element name="a">
- <xsl:attribute name="href">..</xsl:attribute>
- <xsl:text>Parent Directory</xsl:text>
- </xsl:element>
- <xsl:text>]</xsl:text>
- </div>
- </xsl:template>
-
- <xsl:template match="dir">
- <div class="dir">
- <xsl:element name="a">
- <xsl:attribute name="href">
- <xsl:value-of select="@href"/>
- </xsl:attribute>
- <xsl:value-of select="@name"/>
- <xsl:text>/</xsl:text>
- </xsl:element>
- </div>
- </xsl:template>
-
- <xsl:template match="file">
- <div class="file">
- <xsl:element name="a">
- <xsl:attribute name="href">
- <xsl:value-of select="@href"/>
- </xsl:attribute>
- <xsl:value-of select="@name"/>
- </xsl:element>
- </div>
- </xsl:template>
-
-</xsl:stylesheet>
+++ /dev/null
-<!--#include file="header.html" -->
-
-
-<h3>External Tiny Utilities</h3>
-
-This is a list of tiny utilities whose functionality is not provided by
-busybox. If you have additional suggestions, please send an e-mail to our
-dev mailing list.
-
-<br><br>
-
-<table>
-<tr>
- <th>Feature</th>
- <th>Utilities</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>SSH</td>
- <td><a href="http://matt.ucc.asn.au/dropbear/">Dropbear</a> has both an ssh server and an ssh client that together come in around 100k. It has no external
-dependencies (I.E. it does not depend on OpenSSL, using a built-in copy of
-LibTomCrypt instead). It's actively maintained, with a quiet but responsive
-mailing list.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>SMTP</td>
- <td><a href="ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/s/ssmtp/">ssmtp</a> is an extremely simple Mail Transfer Agent.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>ntp</td>
- <td><a href="http://doolittle.icarus.com/ntpclient/">ntpclient</a> is a
-tiny ntp client. BusyBox has rdate to set the date from a remote server, but
-if you want a daemon to repeatedly adjust the clock over time, try that.</td>
-</table>
-
-<p>In a gui environment, you'll probably want a web browser.
-<a href="http://www.konqueror.org/embedded/">Konqueror Embedded</a> requires QT
-(or QT Embedded), but not KDE. The <a href="http://www.dillo.org/">Dillo</a>
-requires GTK+, but not Gnome. Or you can try the <a href="http://links.twibright.com/">graphical
-version of links</a>.</p>
-
-<h3>SCRIPTING LANGUAGES</h3>
-<p>Although busybox has built-in support for shell scripts, plenty of other
-small scripting languages are available on the net. A few examples:</p>
-<table>
-<tr>
-<th>language</th>
-<th>description</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td> <a href="http://www.foo.be/docs/tpj/issues/vol5_3/tpj0503-0003.html">microperl</a> </td>
-<td> A small standalone perl interpreter that can be built from the perl source
-s via "make -f Makefile.micro". If you really feel the need for perl on an embe
-dded system, this is where to start.
-</tr>
-<tr>
-
-<td><a href="http://www.lua.org/pil/">Lua</a></td>
-<td>If you just want a small embedded scripting language to write <em>new</em>
-code in, this Brazilian import is lightweight, fairly popular, and has
-a complete book about it online.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><a href="http://www.star.le.ac.uk/%7Etjg/rc/">rc</a></td>
-<td>The PLAN9 shell. Not compatible with conventional bourne shell syntax,
-but fairly lightweight and small.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><a href="http://www.forth.org/">forth</a></td>
-<td>A well known language for fast and small programs, decades old but still
-in use for everything from OpenBIOS to computer controlled engine timing.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>For more information, you probably want to look at
-<a href="http://buildroot.uclibc.org/">buildroot</a> and
-<a href="http://gentoo-wiki.com/TinyGentoo">TinyGentoo</a>, which
-build and use tiny utilities for all sorts of things.</p>
-
-<!--#include file="footer.html" -->
-