source: MondoRescue/branches/2.2.9/mindi-busybox/Config.in@ 2725

Last change on this file since 2725 was 2725, checked in by Bruno Cornec, 13 years ago
  • Update mindi-busybox to 1.18.3 to avoid problems with the tar command which is now failing on recent versions with busybox 1.7.3
File size: 24.3 KB
Line 
1#
2# For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,
3# see scripts/kbuild/config-language.txt.
4#
5
6mainmenu "BusyBox Configuration"
7
8config HAVE_DOT_CONFIG
9 bool
10 default y
11
12menu "Busybox Settings"
13
14menu "General Configuration"
15
16config DESKTOP
17 bool "Enable options for full-blown desktop systems"
18 default y
19 help
20 Enable options and features which are not essential.
21 Select this only if you plan to use busybox on full-blown
22 desktop machine with common Linux distro, not on an embedded box.
23
24config EXTRA_COMPAT
25 bool "Provide compatible behavior for rare corner cases (bigger code)"
26 default n
27 help
28 This option makes grep, sed etc handle rare corner cases
29 (embedded NUL bytes and such). This makes code bigger and uses
30 some GNU extensions in libc. You probably only need this option
31 if you plan to run busybox on desktop.
32
33config INCLUDE_SUSv2
34 bool "Enable obsolete features removed before SUSv3"
35 default y
36 help
37 This option will enable backwards compatibility with SuSv2,
38 specifically, old-style numeric options ('command -1 <file>')
39 will be supported in head, tail, and fold. (Note: should
40 affect renice too.)
41
42config USE_PORTABLE_CODE
43 bool "Avoid using GCC-specific code constructs"
44 default n
45 help
46 Use this option if you are trying to compile busybox with
47 compiler other than gcc.
48 If you do use gcc, this option may needlessly increase code size.
49
50config PLATFORM_LINUX
51 bool "Enable Linux-specific applets and features"
52 default y
53 help
54 For the most part, busybox requires only POSIX compatibility
55 from the target system, but some applets and features use
56 Linux-specific interfaces.
57
58 Answering 'N' here will disable such applets and hide the
59 corresponding configuration options.
60
61choice
62 prompt "Buffer allocation policy"
63 default FEATURE_BUFFERS_USE_MALLOC
64 help
65 There are 3 ways BusyBox can handle buffer allocations:
66 - Use malloc. This costs code size for the call to xmalloc.
67 - Put them on stack. For some very small machines with limited stack
68 space, this can be deadly. For most folks, this works just fine.
69 - Put them in BSS. This works beautifully for computers with a real
70 MMU (and OS support), but wastes runtime RAM for uCLinux. This
71 behavior was the only one available for BusyBox versions 0.48 and
72 earlier.
73
74config FEATURE_BUFFERS_USE_MALLOC
75 bool "Allocate with Malloc"
76
77config FEATURE_BUFFERS_GO_ON_STACK
78 bool "Allocate on the Stack"
79
80config FEATURE_BUFFERS_GO_IN_BSS
81 bool "Allocate in the .bss section"
82
83endchoice
84
85config SHOW_USAGE
86 bool "Show terse applet usage messages"
87 default y
88 help
89 All BusyBox applets will show help messages when invoked with
90 wrong arguments. You can turn off printing these terse usage
91 messages if you say no here.
92 This will save you up to 7k.
93
94config FEATURE_VERBOSE_USAGE
95 bool "Show verbose applet usage messages"
96 default y
97 depends on SHOW_USAGE
98 help
99 All BusyBox applets will show more verbose help messages when
100 busybox is invoked with --help. This will add a lot of text to the
101 busybox binary. In the default configuration, this will add about
102 13k, but it can add much more depending on your configuration.
103
104config FEATURE_COMPRESS_USAGE
105 bool "Store applet usage messages in compressed form"
106 default y
107 depends on SHOW_USAGE
108 help
109 Store usage messages in compressed form, uncompress them on-the-fly
110 when <applet> --help is called.
111
112 If you have a really tiny busybox with few applets enabled (and
113 bunzip2 isn't one of them), the overhead of the decompressor might
114 be noticeable. Also, if you run executables directly from ROM
115 and have very little memory, this might not be a win. Otherwise,
116 you probably want this.
117
118config FEATURE_INSTALLER
119 bool "Support --install [-s] to install applet links at runtime"
120 default y
121 help
122 Enable 'busybox --install [-s]' support. This will allow you to use
123 busybox at runtime to create hard links or symlinks for all the
124 applets that are compiled into busybox.
125
126config INSTALL_NO_USR
127 bool "Don't use /usr"
128 default n
129 depends on FEATURE_INSTALLER
130 help
131 Disable use of /usr. busybox --install and "make install"
132 will install applets only to /bin and /sbin,
133 never to /usr/bin or /usr/sbin.
134
135config LOCALE_SUPPORT
136 bool "Enable locale support (system needs locale for this to work)"
137 default n
138 help
139 Enable this if your system has locale support and you would like
140 busybox to support locale settings.
141
142config UNICODE_SUPPORT
143 bool "Support Unicode"
144 default y
145 help
146 This makes various applets aware that one byte is not
147 one character on screen.
148
149 Busybox aims to eventually work correctly with Unicode displays.
150 Any older encodings are not guaranteed to work.
151 Probably by the time when busybox will be fully Unicode-clean,
152 other encodings will be mainly of historic interest.
153
154config UNICODE_USING_LOCALE
155 bool "Use libc routines for Unicode (else uses internal ones)"
156 default n
157 depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT && LOCALE_SUPPORT
158 help
159 With this option on, Unicode support is implemented using libc
160 routines. Otherwise, internal implementation is used.
161 Internal implementation is smaller.
162
163config FEATURE_CHECK_UNICODE_IN_ENV
164 bool "Check $LANG environment variable"
165 default n
166 depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT && !UNICODE_USING_LOCALE
167 help
168 With this option on, Unicode support is activated
169 only if LANG variable has the value of the form "xxxx.utf8"
170
171 Otherwise, Unicode support will be always enabled and active.
172
173config SUBST_WCHAR
174 int "Character code to substitute unprintable characters with"
175 depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT
176 default 63
177 help
178 Typical values are 63 for '?' (works with any output device),
179 30 for ASCII substitute control code,
180 65533 (0xfffd) for Unicode replacement character.
181
182config LAST_SUPPORTED_WCHAR
183 int "Range of supported Unicode characters"
184 depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT
185 default 767
186 help
187 Any character with Unicode value bigger than this is assumed
188 to be non-printable on output device. Many applets replace
189 such chars with substitution character.
190
191 The idea is that many valid printable Unicode chars are
192 nevertheless are not displayed correctly. Think about
193 combining charachers, double-wide hieroglyphs, obscure
194 characters in dozens of ancient scripts...
195 Many terminals, terminal emulators, xterms etc will fail
196 to handle them correctly. Choose the smallest value
197 which suits your needs.
198
199 Typical values are:
200 126 - ASCII only
201 767 (0x2ff) - there are no combining chars in [0..767] range
202 (the range includes Latin 1, Latin Ext. A and B),
203 code is ~700 bytes smaller for this case.
204 4351 (0x10ff) - there are no double-wide chars in [0..4351] range,
205 code is ~300 bytes smaller for this case.
206 12799 (0x31ff) - nearly all non-ideographic characters are
207 available in [0..12799] range, including
208 East Asian scripts like katakana, hiragana, hangul,
209 bopomofo...
210 0 - off, any valid printable Unicode character will be printed.
211
212config UNICODE_COMBINING_WCHARS
213 bool "Allow zero-width Unicode characters on output"
214 default n
215 depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT
216 help
217 With this option off, any Unicode char with width of 0
218 is substituted on output.
219
220config UNICODE_WIDE_WCHARS
221 bool "Allow wide Unicode characters on output"
222 default n
223 depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT
224 help
225 With this option off, any Unicode char with width > 1
226 is substituted on output.
227
228config UNICODE_BIDI_SUPPORT
229 bool "Bidirectional character-aware line input"
230 default n
231 depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT && !UNICODE_USING_LOCALE
232 help
233 With this option on, right-to-left Unicode characters
234 are treated differently on input (e.g. cursor movement).
235
236config UNICODE_NEUTRAL_TABLE
237 bool "In bidi input, support non-ASCII neutral chars too"
238 default n
239 depends on UNICODE_BIDI_SUPPORT
240 help
241 In most cases it's enough to treat only ASCII non-letters
242 (i.e. punctuation, numbers and space) as characters
243 with neutral directionality.
244 With this option on, more extensive (and bigger) table
245 of neutral chars will be used.
246
247config UNICODE_PRESERVE_BROKEN
248 bool "Make it possible to enter sequences of chars which are not Unicode"
249 default n
250 depends on UNICODE_SUPPORT
251 help
252 With this option on, invalid UTF-8 bytes are not substituted
253 with the selected substitution character.
254 For example, this means that entering 'l', 's', ' ', 0xff, [Enter]
255 at shell prompt will list file named 0xff (single char name
256 with char value 255), not file named '?'.
257
258config LONG_OPTS
259 bool "Support for --long-options"
260 default y
261 help
262 Enable this if you want busybox applets to use the gnu --long-option
263 style, in addition to single character -a -b -c style options.
264
265config FEATURE_DEVPTS
266 bool "Use the devpts filesystem for Unix98 PTYs"
267 default y
268 help
269 Enable if you want BusyBox to use Unix98 PTY support. If enabled,
270 busybox will use /dev/ptmx for the master side of the pseudoterminal
271 and /dev/pts/<number> for the slave side. Otherwise, BSD style
272 /dev/ttyp<number> will be used. To use this option, you should have
273 devpts mounted.
274
275config FEATURE_CLEAN_UP
276 bool "Clean up all memory before exiting (usually not needed)"
277 default n
278 help
279 As a size optimization, busybox normally exits without explicitly
280 freeing dynamically allocated memory or closing files. This saves
281 space since the OS will clean up for us, but it can confuse debuggers
282 like valgrind, which report tons of memory and resource leaks.
283
284 Don't enable this unless you have a really good reason to clean
285 things up manually.
286
287config FEATURE_WTMP
288 bool "Support wtmp file"
289 default y
290 select FEATURE_UTMP
291 help
292 The file /var/run/wtmp is used to track when users have logged into
293 and logged out of the system.
294 With this option on, certain applets (getty, login, telnetd etc)
295 will append new entries there.
296 "last" applet requires this option.
297
298config FEATURE_UTMP
299 bool "Support utmp file"
300 default y
301 help
302 The file /var/run/utmp is used to track who is currently logged in.
303 With this option on, certain applets (getty, login, telnetd etc)
304 will create and delete entries there.
305 "who" applet requires this option.
306
307config FEATURE_PIDFILE
308 bool "Support writing pidfiles"
309 default y
310 help
311 This option makes some applets (e.g. crond, syslogd, inetd) write
312 a pidfile in /var/run. Some applications rely on them.
313
314config FEATURE_SUID
315 bool "Support for SUID/SGID handling"
316 default y
317 help
318 With this option you can install the busybox binary belonging
319 to root with the suid bit set, enabling some applets to perform
320 root-level operations even when run by ordinary users
321 (for example, mounting of user mounts in fstab needs this).
322
323 Busybox will automatically drop priviledges for applets
324 that don't need root access.
325
326 If you are really paranoid and don't want to do this, build two
327 busybox binaries with different applets in them (and the appropriate
328 symlinks pointing to each binary), and only set the suid bit on the
329 one that needs it.
330
331 The applets currently marked to need the suid bit are:
332
333 crontab, dnsd, findfs, ipcrm, ipcs, login, passwd, ping, su,
334 traceroute, vlock.
335
336config FEATURE_SUID_CONFIG
337 bool "Runtime SUID/SGID configuration via /etc/busybox.conf"
338 default y if FEATURE_SUID
339 depends on FEATURE_SUID
340 help
341 Allow the SUID / SGID state of an applet to be determined at runtime
342 by checking /etc/busybox.conf. (This is sort of a poor man's sudo.)
343 The format of this file is as follows:
344
345 <applet> = [Ssx-][Ssx-][x-] (<username>|<uid>).(<groupname>|<gid>)
346
347 An example might help:
348
349 [SUID]
350 su = ssx root.0 # applet su can be run by anyone and runs with
351 # euid=0/egid=0
352 su = ssx # exactly the same
353
354 mount = sx- root.disk # applet mount can be run by root and members
355 # of group disk and runs with euid=0
356
357 cp = --- # disable applet cp for everyone
358
359 The file has to be owned by user root, group root and has to be
360 writeable only by root:
361 (chown 0.0 /etc/busybox.conf; chmod 600 /etc/busybox.conf)
362 The busybox executable has to be owned by user root, group
363 root and has to be setuid root for this to work:
364 (chown 0.0 /bin/busybox; chmod 4755 /bin/busybox)
365
366 Robert 'sandman' Griebl has more information here:
367 <url: http://www.softforge.de/bb/suid.html >.
368
369config FEATURE_SUID_CONFIG_QUIET
370 bool "Suppress warning message if /etc/busybox.conf is not readable"
371 default y
372 depends on FEATURE_SUID_CONFIG
373 help
374 /etc/busybox.conf should be readable by the user needing the SUID,
375 check this option to avoid users to be notified about missing
376 permissions.
377
378config SELINUX
379 bool "Support NSA Security Enhanced Linux"
380 default n
381 depends on PLATFORM_LINUX
382 help
383 Enable support for SELinux in applets ls, ps, and id. Also provide
384 the option of compiling in SELinux applets.
385
386 If you do not have a complete SELinux userland installed, this stuff
387 will not compile. Go visit
388 http://www.nsa.gov/selinux/index.html
389 to download the necessary stuff to allow busybox to compile with
390 this option enabled. Specifially, libselinux 1.28 or better is
391 directly required by busybox. If the installation is located in a
392 non-standard directory, provide it by invoking make as follows:
393 CFLAGS=-I<libselinux-include-path> \
394 LDFLAGS=-L<libselinux-lib-path> \
395 make
396
397 Most people will leave this set to 'N'.
398
399config FEATURE_PREFER_APPLETS
400 bool "exec prefers applets"
401 default n
402 help
403 This is an experimental option which directs applets about to
404 call 'exec' to try and find an applicable busybox applet before
405 searching the PATH. This is typically done by exec'ing
406 /proc/self/exe.
407 This may affect shell, find -exec, xargs and similar applets.
408 They will use applets even if /bin/<applet> -> busybox link
409 is missing (or is not a link to busybox). However, this causes
410 problems in chroot jails without mounted /proc and with ps/top
411 (command name can be shown as 'exe' for applets started this way).
412
413config BUSYBOX_EXEC_PATH
414 string "Path to BusyBox executable"
415 default "/proc/self/exe"
416 help
417 When Busybox applets need to run other busybox applets, BusyBox
418 sometimes needs to exec() itself. When the /proc filesystem is
419 mounted, /proc/self/exe always points to the currently running
420 executable. If you haven't got /proc, set this to wherever you
421 want to run BusyBox from.
422
423# These are auto-selected by other options
424
425config FEATURE_SYSLOG
426 bool #No description makes it a hidden option
427 default n
428 #help
429 # This option is auto-selected when you select any applet which may
430 # send its output to syslog. You do not need to select it manually.
431
432config FEATURE_HAVE_RPC
433 bool #No description makes it a hidden option
434 default n
435 #help
436 # This is automatically selected if any of enabled applets need it.
437 # You do not need to select it manually.
438
439endmenu
440
441menu 'Build Options'
442
443config STATIC
444 bool "Build BusyBox as a static binary (no shared libs)"
445 default n
446 help
447 If you want to build a static BusyBox binary, which does not
448 use or require any shared libraries, then enable this option.
449 This can cause BusyBox to be considerably larger, so you should
450 leave this option false unless you have a good reason (i.e.
451 your target platform does not support shared libraries, or
452 you are building an initrd which doesn't need anything but
453 BusyBox, etc).
454
455 Most people will leave this set to 'N'.
456
457config PIE
458 bool "Build BusyBox as a position independent executable"
459 default n
460 depends on !STATIC
461 help
462 (TODO: what is it and why/when is it useful?)
463 Most people will leave this set to 'N'.
464
465config NOMMU
466 bool "Force NOMMU build"
467 default n
468 help
469 Busybox tries to detect whether architecture it is being
470 built against supports MMU or not. If this detection fails,
471 or if you want to build NOMMU version of busybox for testing,
472 you may force NOMMU build here.
473
474 Most people will leave this set to 'N'.
475
476# PIE can be made to work with BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX, but currently
477# build system does not support that
478config BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX
479 bool "Build shared libbusybox"
480 default n
481 depends on !FEATURE_PREFER_APPLETS && !PIE && !STATIC
482 help
483 Build a shared library libbusybox.so.N.N.N which contains all
484 busybox code.
485
486 This feature allows every applet to be built as a tiny
487 separate executable. Enabling it for "one big busybox binary"
488 approach serves no purpose and increases code size.
489 You should almost certainly say "no" to this.
490
491### config FEATURE_FULL_LIBBUSYBOX
492### bool "Feature-complete libbusybox"
493### default n if !FEATURE_SHARED_BUSYBOX
494### depends on BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX
495### help
496### Build a libbusybox with the complete feature-set, disregarding
497### the actually selected config.
498###
499### Normally, libbusybox will only contain the features which are
500### used by busybox itself. If you plan to write a separate
501### standalone application which uses libbusybox say 'Y'.
502###
503### Note: libbusybox is GPL, not LGPL, and exports no stable API that
504### might act as a copyright barrier. We can and will modify the
505### exported function set between releases (even minor version number
506### changes), and happily break out-of-tree features.
507###
508### Say 'N' if in doubt.
509
510config FEATURE_INDIVIDUAL
511 bool "Produce a binary for each applet, linked against libbusybox"
512 default y
513 depends on BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX
514 help
515 If your CPU architecture doesn't allow for sharing text/rodata
516 sections of running binaries, but allows for runtime dynamic
517 libraries, this option will allow you to reduce memory footprint
518 when you have many different applets running at once.
519
520 If your CPU architecture allows for sharing text/rodata,
521 having single binary is more optimal.
522
523 Each applet will be a tiny program, dynamically linked
524 against libbusybox.so.N.N.N.
525
526 You need to have a working dynamic linker.
527
528config FEATURE_SHARED_BUSYBOX
529 bool "Produce additional busybox binary linked against libbusybox"
530 default y
531 depends on BUILD_LIBBUSYBOX
532 help
533 Build busybox, dynamically linked against libbusybox.so.N.N.N.
534
535 You need to have a working dynamic linker.
536
537### config BUILD_AT_ONCE
538### bool "Compile all sources at once"
539### default n
540### help
541### Normally each source-file is compiled with one invocation of
542### the compiler.
543### If you set this option, all sources are compiled at once.
544### This gives the compiler more opportunities to optimize which can
545### result in smaller and/or faster binaries.
546###
547### Setting this option will consume alot of memory, e.g. if you
548### enable all applets with all features, gcc uses more than 300MB
549### RAM during compilation of busybox.
550###
551### This option is most likely only beneficial for newer compilers
552### such as gcc-4.1 and above.
553###
554### Say 'N' unless you know what you are doing.
555
556config LFS
557 bool "Build with Large File Support (for accessing files > 2 GB)"
558 default y
559 select FDISK_SUPPORT_LARGE_DISKS
560 help
561 If you want to build BusyBox with large file support, then enable
562 this option. This will have no effect if your kernel or your C
563 library lacks large file support for large files. Some of the
564 programs that can benefit from large file support include dd, gzip,
565 cp, mount, tar, and many others. If you want to access files larger
566 than 2 Gigabytes, enable this option. Otherwise, leave it set to 'N'.
567
568config CROSS_COMPILER_PREFIX
569 string "Cross Compiler prefix"
570 default ""
571 help
572 If you want to build BusyBox with a cross compiler, then you
573 will need to set this to the cross-compiler prefix, for example,
574 "i386-uclibc-".
575
576 Note that CROSS_COMPILE environment variable or
577 "make CROSS_COMPILE=xxx ..." will override this selection.
578
579 Native builds leave this empty.
580
581config EXTRA_CFLAGS
582 string "Additional CFLAGS"
583 default ""
584 help
585 Additional CFLAGS to pass to the compiler verbatim.
586
587endmenu
588
589menu 'Debugging Options'
590
591config DEBUG
592 bool "Build BusyBox with extra Debugging symbols"
593 default n
594 help
595 Say Y here if you wish to examine BusyBox internals while applets are
596 running. This increases the size of the binary considerably, and
597 should only be used when doing development. If you are doing
598 development and want to debug BusyBox, answer Y.
599
600 Most people should answer N.
601
602config DEBUG_PESSIMIZE
603 bool "Disable compiler optimizations"
604 default n
605 depends on DEBUG
606 help
607 The compiler's optimization of source code can eliminate and reorder
608 code, resulting in an executable that's hard to understand when
609 stepping through it with a debugger. This switches it off, resulting
610 in a much bigger executable that more closely matches the source
611 code.
612
613config WERROR
614 bool "Abort compilation on any warning"
615 default n
616 help
617 Selecting this will add -Werror to gcc command line.
618
619 Most people should answer N.
620
621choice
622 prompt "Additional debugging library"
623 default NO_DEBUG_LIB
624 help
625 Using an additional debugging library will make BusyBox become
626 considerable larger and will cause it to run more slowly. You
627 should always leave this option disabled for production use.
628
629 dmalloc support:
630 ----------------
631 This enables compiling with dmalloc ( http://dmalloc.com/ )
632 which is an excellent public domain mem leak and malloc problem
633 detector. To enable dmalloc, before running busybox you will
634 want to properly set your environment, for example:
635 export DMALLOC_OPTIONS=debug=0x34f47d83,inter=100,log=logfile
636 The 'debug=' value is generated using the following command
637 dmalloc -p log-stats -p log-non-free -p log-bad-space \
638 -p log-elapsed-time -p check-fence -p check-heap \
639 -p check-lists -p check-blank -p check-funcs -p realloc-copy \
640 -p allow-free-null
641
642 Electric-fence support:
643 -----------------------
644 This enables compiling with Electric-fence support. Electric
645 fence is another very useful malloc debugging library which uses
646 your computer's virtual memory hardware to detect illegal memory
647 accesses. This support will make BusyBox be considerable larger
648 and run slower, so you should leave this option disabled unless
649 you are hunting a hard to find memory problem.
650
651
652config NO_DEBUG_LIB
653 bool "None"
654
655config DMALLOC
656 bool "Dmalloc"
657
658config EFENCE
659 bool "Electric-fence"
660
661endchoice
662
663### config PARSE
664### bool "Uniform config file parser debugging applet: parse"
665
666endmenu
667
668menu 'Installation Options ("make install" behavior)'
669
670choice
671 prompt "What kind of applet links to install"
672 default INSTALL_APPLET_SYMLINKS
673 help
674 Choose what kind of links to applets are created by "make install".
675
676config INSTALL_APPLET_SYMLINKS
677 bool "as soft-links"
678 help
679 Install applets as soft-links to the busybox binary. This needs some
680 free inodes on the filesystem, but might help with filesystem
681 generators that can't cope with hard-links.
682
683config INSTALL_APPLET_HARDLINKS
684 bool "as hard-links"
685 help
686 Install applets as hard-links to the busybox binary. This might
687 count on a filesystem with few inodes.
688
689config INSTALL_APPLET_SCRIPT_WRAPPERS
690 bool "as script wrappers"
691 help
692 Install applets as script wrappers that call the busybox binary.
693
694config INSTALL_APPLET_DONT
695 bool "not installed"
696 depends on FEATURE_INSTALLER || FEATURE_SH_STANDALONE || FEATURE_PREFER_APPLETS
697 help
698 Do not install applet links. Useful when you plan to use
699 busybox --install for installing links, or plan to use
700 a standalone shell and thus don't need applet links.
701
702endchoice
703
704choice
705 prompt "/bin/sh applet link"
706 default INSTALL_SH_APPLET_SYMLINK
707 depends on INSTALL_APPLET_SCRIPT_WRAPPERS
708 help
709 Choose how you install /bin/sh applet link.
710
711config INSTALL_SH_APPLET_SYMLINK
712 bool "as soft-link"
713 help
714 Install /bin/sh applet as soft-link to the busybox binary.
715
716config INSTALL_SH_APPLET_HARDLINK
717 bool "as hard-link"
718 help
719 Install /bin/sh applet as hard-link to the busybox binary.
720
721config INSTALL_SH_APPLET_SCRIPT_WRAPPER
722 bool "as script wrapper"
723 help
724 Install /bin/sh applet as script wrapper that calls
725 the busybox binary.
726
727endchoice
728
729config PREFIX
730 string "BusyBox installation prefix"
731 default "./_install"
732 help
733 Define your directory to install BusyBox files/subdirs in.
734
735endmenu
736
737source libbb/Config.in
738
739endmenu
740
741comment "Applets"
742
743source archival/Config.in
744source coreutils/Config.in
745source console-tools/Config.in
746source debianutils/Config.in
747source editors/Config.in
748source findutils/Config.in
749source init/Config.in
750source loginutils/Config.in
751source e2fsprogs/Config.in
752source modutils/Config.in
753source util-linux/Config.in
754source miscutils/Config.in
755source networking/Config.in
756source printutils/Config.in
757source mailutils/Config.in
758source procps/Config.in
759source runit/Config.in
760source selinux/Config.in
761source shell/Config.in
762source sysklogd/Config.in
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