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1<html><head><title>toybox roadmap</title>
2<!--#include file="header.html" -->
3<title>Toybox Roadmap</title>
4
5<h2>Roadmap sections</h2>
6
7<ul>
8<li><a href=#goals>Introduction</a></li>
9<li><a href=#susv4>POSIX-2008/SUSv4</a></li>
10<li><a href=#sigh>Linux "Standard" Base</a></li>
11<li><a href=#rfc>IETF RFCs and Man Pages</a></li>
12<li><a href=#dev_env>Development Environment</a></li>
13<li><a href=#android>Android Toolbox</a></li>
14<li><a href=#aosp>Building AOSP</a></li>
15<li><a href=#tizen>Tizen Core</a></li>
16<li><a href=#yocto>Yocto</a></li>
17<li><a href=#fhs>Filesystem Hierachy Standard</a></li>
18<li><a href=#buildroot>buildroot</a></li>
19<li>Miscelaneous: <a href=#klibc>klibc</a>, <a href=#glibc>glibc</a>,
20<a href=#sash>sash</a>, <a href=#sbase>sbase</a>,
21<a href=#uclinux>uclinux</a>...</li>
22<li><a href=#packages>Other Packages</a></li>
23</ul>
24
25<a name="goals" />
26<h2>Introduction (Goals and use cases)</h2>
27
28<p>We have several potential use cases for a new set of command line
29utilities, and are using those to determine which commands to implement
30for Toybox's 1.0 release. Most of these have their own section in the
31<a href=status.html>status page</a>, showing current progress towards
32commplation.</p>
33
34<p>The most interesting publicly available standards are A) POSIX-2008 (also
35known as SUSv4), B) the Linux Standard Base version 4.1, and C) the official
36<a href=https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/>Linux man pages</a>.
37But they include commands we've decided not implement, exclude
38commands or features we have, and don't always entirely match reality.</p>
39
40<p>The most thorough real world test (other than a large interactive
41userbase) is using toybox as the command line in a build system such as
42<a href=https://landley.net/aboriginal/about.html>Aboriginal
43Linux</a>, having it rebuild itself from source code, and using the result
44to <a href=https://github.com/landley/control-images>build Linux From Scratch</a>.
45The current "minimal native development system" goal is to use
46<a href=faq.html#mkroot>mkroot</a>
47plus <a href=faq.html#cross>musl-cross-make</a> to hermetically build
48<a href=https://source.android.com>AOSP</a>.</p>
49
50<p>We've also checked what commands were provided by similar projects
51(klibc, sash, sbase, embutils,
52nash, and beastiebox), looked at various vendor configurations of busybox,
53and collected end user requests.</p>
54
55<p>Finally, we'd like to provide a good replacement for the Bash shell,
56which was the first program Linux ever ran and remains the standard shell
57of Linux (no matter what Ubuntu says). This doesn't necessarily mean including
58every last Bash 5.x feature, but does involve {various,features} &lt(beyond)
59posix.</p>
60
61<p>See the <a href=status.html>status page</a> for the categorized command list
62and progress towards implementing it. There's also a
63<a href=todo.html>historical todo list</a> from the project's 2011 relaunch.</p>
64
65<hr />
66<a name="standards">
67<h2>Use case: standards compliance.</h2>
68
69<h3><a name=susv4 /><a href="#susv4">POSIX-2008/SUSv4</a></h3>
70<p>The best standards describe reality rather than attempting to impose a
71new one. A good standard should document, not legislate.
72Standards which document existing reality tend to be approved by
73more than one standards body, such ANSI and ISO both approving <a href=https://landley.net/c99-draft.html>C99</a>. That's why IEEE 1003.1-2008,
74the Single Unix Specification version 4, and the Open Group Base Specification
75edition 7 are all the same standard from three sources, but most people just
76call it "posix" (portable operating system derived from unix).
77It's available <a href=https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799>online in full</a>, and may be downloaded as a tarball.
78Previous versions (<a href=https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/>SUSv3</a> and
79<a href=https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7990989775/>SUSv2</a>)
80are also available.
81(Note:
82<a href=https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799.2008edition/>Posix
832008</a> was reissued in 2013 and 2018, the first was minor wordsmithing
84with no behavioral changes, the second was to renew a ten year timeout
85to still be considered a "current standard" by some government regulations.
86It's still posix-2008/SUSv4/issue 7.)</p>
87
88<h3>Why not just use posix for everything?</h3>
89
90<p>Unfortunately, Posix describes an incomplete subset of reality, because
91it was designed to. It started with proprietary unix vendors collaborating to
92describe the functionality their fragmented APIs could agree on, which was then
93incorporated into <a href=https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/Legacy/FIPS/fipspub151-2-1993.pdf>US federal procurement standards</a>
94as a <a href=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwrTTXOg-KI>compliance requirement</a>
95for things like navy contracts, giving large corporations
96like IBM and Microsoft millions of dollars of incentive
97to punch holes in the standard big enough to drive
98<a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_POSIX_subsystem>Windows NT</a> and
99<a href=http://www.naspa.net/magazine/1996/May/T9605006.PDF>OS/360</a> through.
100When open source projects like Linux started developing on the internet
101(enabled by the 1993 relaxation of the National Science Foundation's
102"Acceptable Use Policy" allowing everyone to connect to the internet,
103previously restricted to approved government/military/university organizations),
104Posix <a href=http://www.opengroup.org/testing/fips/policy_info.html>ignored
105the upstarts</a> and Linux eventually
106<a href=https://www.linuxjournal.com/article/3417>returned the favor</a>,
107leaving Posix behind.</p>
108
109<p>The result is a "standard" that lacks any mention of commands like
110"init" or "mount" required to actually boot a system.
111It describes logname but not login. It provides ipcrm
112and ipcs, but not ipcmk, so you can use System V IPC resources but not create
113them. And widely used real-world commands such as tar and cpio (the basis
114of initramfs and RPM) which were present in earlier
115versions of the standard have been removed, while obsolete commands like
116cksum, compress, sccs and uucp remain with no mention of modern counterparts
117like crc32/sha1sum, gzip/xz, svn/git or scp/rsync. Meanwhile posix' description
118of the commands
119themselves are missing dozens of features and specify silly things like ebcdic
120support in dd or that wc should use %d (not %lld) for byte counts. So
121we have to extensively filter posix to get a useful set of recommendations.</p>
122
123<h3>Analysis</h3>
124
125<p>Starting with the
126<a href="http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799.2008edition/idx/utilities.html">full "utilities" list</a>,
127we first remove generally obsolete
128commands (compress ed ex pr uncompress uccp uustat uux), commands for the
129pre-CVS "SCCS" source control system (admin delta get prs rmdel sact sccs unget
130val what), fortran support (asa fort77), and batch processing support (batch
131qalter qdel qhold qmove qmsg qrerun qrls qselect qsig qstat qsub).</p>
132
133<p>Some commands are for a compiler toolchain (ar c99 cflow ctags cxref gencat
134iconv lex m4 make nm strings strip tsort yacc) which is out of scope for
135toybox and should be supplied externally. (Some of these might be
136revisited later, but not for toybox 1.0.)</p>
137
138<p>Some commands are part of a command shell, and can't be implemented as
139separate executables (alias bg cd command fc fg getopts hash jobs kill read
140type ulimit umask unalias wait). These may be implemented as part of the
141built-in toybox shell, but are not exported into $PATH via symlinks and
142thus are not part of toybox's main command list. (If you fork a
143child process and have it "cd" then exit, you've accomplished nothing.)
144Again, what posix provides is incomplete: a shell also needs exit, if, while,
145for, case, export, set, unset, trap, exec... (And for bash compatibility
146function, source, declare...)</p>
147
148<p>A few other commands are judgement calls, providing command-line
149internationalization support (iconv locale localedef), System V inter-process
150communication (ipcrm ipcs), and cross-tty communication from the minicomputer
151days (talk mesg write). The "pax" utility <a href=https://slashdot.org/story/06/09/04/1335226/debian-kicks-jrg-schilling>failed</a> to replace tar,
152"mailx" is
153a command line email client, and "lp" submits files for printing to... what
154exactly? (cups?) The standard defines crontab but not crond. What is
155pathchk supposed to be portable _to_? (Linux accepts 255 byte path components
156with any char except NUL or / and no max length on the total path, and
157<a href=https://yarchive.net/comp/linux/utf8.html>EXPLICITLY</a>
158doesn't care if it's an invalid utf8 sequence.)</p>
159
160<p>Removing all of that leaves the following commands, which toybox should
161implement:</p>
162
163<blockquote><b>
164<span id=posix>
165at awk basename bc cal cat chgrp chmod chown cksum cmp comm cp
166csplit cut date dd df diff dirname du echo env expand expr false file find
167fold fuser getconf grep head id join kill link ln logger logname ls man
168mkdir mkfifo more mv newgrp nice nl nohup od paste patch printf ps
169pwd renice rm rmdir sed sh sleep sort split stty tabs tail tee test time
170touch tput tr true tty uname unexpand uniq unlink uudecode uuencode vi wc
171who xargs zcat
172</span>
173</b></blockquote>
174
175<h3><a name=sigh /><a href="#sigh">Linux Standard Base</a></h3>
176
177<p>One attempt to supplement POSIX towards an actual usable system was the
178Linux Standard Base. Unfortunately, the quality of this "standard" is
179fairly low, largely due to the Free Standards Group that maintained it
180being consumed by <a href=https://landley.net/notes-2010.html#18-07-2010>the Linux Foundation</a> in 2007.</p>
181
182<p>Where POSIX allowed its standards process to be compromised
183by leaving things out (but what
184they DID standardize tends to be respected, if sometimes obsolete),
185the Linux Standard Base's failure mode is different. They respond to
186pressure by including anything their members pay them enough to promote,
187such as allowing Red Hat to push
188RPM into the standard even though all sorts of distros (Debian, Slackware, Arch,
189Gentoo, Android) don't use it and never will. This means anything in the LSB is
190at best a suggestion: arbitrary portions of this standard are widely
191ignored.</p>
192
193<p>The <a href=https://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/39546.html>community perception</a>
194seems to be that the Linux Standard Base is
195the best standard money can buy: the Linux Foundation is supported by
196financial donations from large companies and the LSB
197<a href=https://www.softwarefreedom.org/blog/2016/apr/11/lf/>represents the interests
198of those donors</a> regardless of technical merit. (The Linux Foundation, which
199maintains the LSB, is NOT a 501c3. It's a 501c6, the
200same kind of legal entity as the Tobacco Institute and
201<a href=https://lwn.net/Articles/706585/>Microsoft's</a>
202old "<a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%27t_Copy_That_Floppy>Don't Copy That Floppy</a>" program.) Debian officially
203<a href=http://lwn.net/Articles/658809>washed its hands of LSB</a> by
204refusing to adopt release 5.0 in 2015, and no longer even pretends to support
205it (which affects Debian derivatives like Ubuntu and Knoppix). Toybox has
206stayed on 4.1 for similar reasons: a lot of historical effort went into
207producing the standard before the Linux Foundation took over.</p>
208
209<p>That said, Posix by itself isn't enough, and this is the next most
210comprehensive standards effort for Linux so far, so we salvage what we can.</p>
211
212<h3>Analysis</h3>
213
214<p>The LSB specifies a <a href=http://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/LSB_4.1.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/cmdbehav.html>list of command line
215utilities</a>:</p>
216
217<blockquote><b>
218ar at awk batch bc chfn chsh col cpio crontab df dmesg du echo egrep
219fgrep file fuser gettext grep groupadd groupdel groupmod groups
220gunzip gzip hostname install install_initd ipcrm ipcs killall lpr ls
221lsb_release m4 md5sum mknod mktemp more mount msgfmt newgrp od passwd
222patch pidof remove_initd renice sed sendmail seq sh shutdown su sync
223tar umount useradd userdel usermod xargs zcat
224</b></blockquote>
225
226<p>Where posix specifies one of those commands, LSB's deltas tend to be
227accomodations for broken tool versions which aren't up to date with the
228standard yet. (See <a href=http://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/LSB_4.1.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/more.html>more</a> and <a href=http://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/LSB_4.1.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/xargs.html>xargs</a>
229for examples.)</p>
230
231<p>Since we've already committed to using our own judgement to skip bits of
232POSIX, and LSB's "judgement" in this regard is purely bug workarounds to declare
233various legacy tool implementations "compliant", this means we're mostly
234interested in the set of LSB tools that aren't mentioned in posix.</p>
235
236<p>Of these, gettext and msgfmt are internationalization, install_initd and
237remove_initd weren't present in Ubuntu 10.04, lpr is out of scope,
238lsb_release just reports information in /etc/os-release, and sendmail's
239turned into a pile of cryptographic verification and DNS shenanigans due
240to spammers.</p>
241
242<p>This leaves:</p>
243
244<blockquote><b>
245<span id=lsb>
246chfn chsh dmesg egrep fgrep groupadd groupdel groupmod groups
247gunzip gzip hostname install killall md5sum
248mknod mktemp mount passwd pidof seq shutdown
249su sync tar umount useradd userdel usermod zcat
250</span>
251</b></blockquote>
252
253<h3><a name=rfc /><a href="#rfc">IETF RFCs and Man Pages</a></h3>
254
255<p>They're very nice, but there's thousands of them.</p>
256
257<p>Discussion of standards wouldn't be complete without the Internet
258Engineering Task Force's "<a href=https://www.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc-index.txt>Request For Comments</a>" collection and Michael Kerrisk's
259<a href=https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/>Linux man-pages project</a>.
260Except these aren't standards, they're collections of documentation with
261low barriers to inclusion. They're not saying "you should support
262X", they're saying "if you do, here's how".
263Thus neither really helps us select which commands to include.</p>
264
265<p>The man pages website includes the commands in git, yum, perf, postgres,
266flatpack... Great for examining the features of a command you've
267already decided to include, useless for deciding _what_ to include.</p>
268
269<p>The RFCs are more about protocols than commands. The noise level is
270extremely high: there's thousands of RFCs, many describing a proposed idea
271that never took off, and less than 1% of the resulting documents are
272currently relevant to toybox. The documents are numbered based on the
273order they were received, with no real attempt at coherently indexing
274the result. As with man pages they can be <a href=https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc0610.txt>long and complicated</a> or
275<a href=https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1951.txt>terse and impenetrable</a>,
276have developed a certain amount of <a href=https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc8179.txt>bureaucracy</a> over the years, and often the easiest way to understand what
277they <a href=https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4330.txt>document</a> is to find an <a href=https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1769.txt>earlier version</a> to read first.
278(The greybeard community problem where all documentation is written by people
279who don't remember NOT already knowing this stuff.)</p>
280
281<p>That said, RFC documents can be useful (especially for networking protocols)
282and the four URL templates the recommended starting files
283for new commands (toys/example/{skeleton,hello}.c) provide point to posix, lsb,
284man, and rfc pages.</p>
285
286<hr />
287<a name="dev_env">
288<h2><a href="#dev_env">Use case: provide a self-hosting development environment</a></h2>
289
290<p>Once upon a time, the following commands were enough to build the <a href=http://landley.net/aboriginal/about.html>Aboriginal Linux</a> development
291environment, boot it to a shell prompt, and build <a href=http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/view/6.8/>Linux From Scratch 6.8</a> under it.</p>
292
293<blockquote><b>
294<span id=development>
295bzcat cat cp dirname echo env patch rmdir sha1sum sleep sort sync
296true uname wc which yes zcat
297awk basename chmod chown cmp cut date dd diff
298egrep expr fdisk find grep gzip head hostname id install ln ls
299mkdir mktemp mv od readlink rm sed sh tail tar touch tr uniq
300wget whoami xargs chgrp comm gunzip less logname split
301tee test time bunzip2 chgrp chroot comm cpio dmesg
302dnsdomainname ftpget ftpput gunzip ifconfig init less
303logname losetup mdev mount mountpoint nc pgrep pkill
304pwd route split stat switch_root tac umount vi
305resize2fs tune2fs fsck.ext2 genext2fs mke2fs xzcat
306</span>
307</b></blockquote>
308
309<p>This use case includes running init scripts and other shell scripts, running
310configure, make, and install in each package, and providing basic command line
311facilities such as a text editor. (It does not include a compiler toolchain or
312C library, those are outside the scope of the toybox project, although mkroot
313has a <a href=https://landley.net/code/qcc>potentialy follow-up project</a>.
314For now we use distro toolchains,
315<a href=https://github.com/richfelker/musl-cross-make>musl-cross-make</a>,
316and the Android NDK for build testing.)
317That build system also instaled bash 2.05b as #!/bin/sh and its scripts
318required bash extensions not present in shells such as busybox ash.
319To replace that toysh needs to supply several bash extensions _and_ work
320when called under the name "bash".</p>
321
322<p>The above command list was collected using a command line recording wrapper
323(scripts/record-commands and toys/example/logpath.c) which scripts/mkroot.sh
324also uses to populate root/log/*-commands.txt. Try
325<b>awk '{print $1}' root/build/log/*-commands.txt | sort -u | grep -v musl | xargs</b>
326after building a mkroot target to see the list of commands called out
327of the $PATH during that build.</p>
328
329<h3>Stages and moving targets</h3>
330
331<p>The development environment use case has two stages, achieving:
3321) a bootable system that can rebuild itself from source, and 2)
333a build environment capable
334of bootstrapping up to arbitrary complexity (by building
335Linux From Scratch and Beyond Linux From Scratch under the resulting
336system, or the Android Open Source Project). To accomplish just the first
337goal (a minimal system that can rebuild _itself_ from source), the old
338build still needs the following busybox commands for which toybox does
339not yet supply adequate replacements:</p>
340
341<blockquote><b>
342awk dd diff expr fdisk gzip less route sh tr unxz vi xzcat
343</b></blockquote>
344
345<p>All of those except awk and less have partial implementations
346in "pending".</p>
347
348<p>In 2017 Aboriginal Linux development ended, replaced by a much simpler
349project ("mkroot") designed to use an existing cross+native toolchain (such as
350<a href=https://github.com/richfelker/musl-cross-make>musl-cross-make</a>
351or the Android NDK) instead of building its own cross and native compilers
352from source. In 2019 the still-incomplete
353mkroot was merged into toybox as the "make root" target (which runs
354scripts/mkroot.sh). This is intended
355as a simpler way of providing essentially the same build environment, and doesn't
356significantly affect the rest of this analysis (although the "rebuild itself
357from source" test should now include building musl-cross-make under either
358mkroot or toybox's "make airlock" host environment).</p>
359
360<p>Building Linux From Scratch is not the same as building the
361<a href=https://source.android.com>Android Open Source Project</a>,
362but after toybox 1.0 we plan to try
363<a href=http://landley.net/aboriginal/about.html#hairball>modifying the AOSP build</a>
364to reduce dependencies. (It's fairly likely we'll have to add at least
365a read-only git utility so repo can download the build's source code,
366but that's actually <a href=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-lGyn3PHP4>not
367that hard</a>. We'll probably also need our own "make" at some point after
3681.0, which is its own moving target thanks to cmake and ninja and so on.)
369The ongoing Android <a href=http://lists.landley.net/pipermail/toybox-landley.net/2018-January/009330.html>hermetic build</a> work is already advancing
370this goal.</p>
371
372<hr />
373<h2><a name=android /><a href="#android">Use case: Replacing Android Toolbox</a></h2>
374
375<p>Android has a policy against GPL in userspace, so even though BusyBox
376predates Android by many years, they couldn't use it. Instead they grabbed
377an old version of ash (later replaced by
378<a href="https://www.mirbsd.org/mksh.htm">mksh</a>)
379and implemented their own command line utility set
380called "toolbox" (which toybox has already mostly replaced).</p>
381
382<p>Toolbox doesn't have its own repository, instead it's part of Android's
383<a href=https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/core>system/core
384git repository</a>. Android's Native Development Kit (their standalone
385downloadable toolchain)  has its own
386<a href=https://android.googlesource.com/platform/ndk/+/master/docs/Roadmap.md>roadmap</a>, and each version has
387<a href=https://developer.android.com/ndk/downloads/revision_history>release
388notes</a>.</p>
389
390<h3>Toolbox commands:</h3>
391
392<p>According to <a href=https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/core/+/master/toolbox/Android.bp>
393system/core/toolbox/Android.bp</a> the toolbox directory builds the
394following commands:</p>
395
396<blockquote><b>
397getevent getprop modprobe setprop start
398</b></blockquote>
399
400<p>getprop/setprop/start were in toybox and moved back because they're so
401tied to non-public system interfaces. modprobe shares the implementation
402used in init. getevent is a board bringup tool built with a python script
403that pulls all the constants from the latest kernel headers.</p>
404
405<h3>Other Android /system/bin commands</h3>
406
407<p>Other than the toolbox links, the currently interesting
408binaries in /system/bin are:</p>
409
410<ul>
411<li><b>arping</b> - ARP REQUEST tool (iputils)</li>
412<li><b>blkid</b> - identify block devices (e2fsprogs)</li>
413<li><b>e2fsck</b> - fsck for ext2/ext3/ext4 (e2fsprogs)</li>
414<li><b>fsck.f2fs</b> - fsck for f2fs (f2fs-tools)</li>
415<li><b>fsck_msdos</b> - fsck for FAT (BSD)</li>
416<li><b>gzip</b> - compression/decompression tool (zlib)</li>
417<li><b>ip</b> - network routing tool (iproute2)</li>
418<li><b>iptables/ip6tables</b> - IPv4/IPv6 NAT admin (iptables)</li>
419<li><b>iw</b> - wireless device config tool (iw)</li>
420<li><b>logwrapper</b> - redirect stdio to android log (Android)</li>
421<li><b>make_ext4fs</b> - make ext4 fs (Android)</li>
422<li><b>make_f2fs</b> - make f2fs fs (f2fs-tools)</li>
423<li><b>ping/ping6</b> - ICMP ECHO_REQUEST tool (iputils)</li>
424<li><b>reboot</b> - reboot (Android)</li>
425<li><b>resize2fs</b> - resize ext2/ext3/ext4 fs (e2fsprogs)</li>
426<li><b>sh</b> - mksh (BSD)</li>
427<li><b>ss</b> - socket statistics (iproute2)</li>
428<li><b>tc</b> - traffic control (iproute2)</li>
429<li><b>tracepath/tracepath6</b> - trace network path (iputils)</li>
430<li><b>traceroute/traceroute6</b> - trace network route (iputils)</li>
431</ul>
432
433<p>The names in parentheses are the upstream source of the command.</p>
434
435<h3>Analysis</h3>
436
437<p>For reference, combining everything listed above that's still "fair game"
438for toybox, we get:</p>
439
440<blockquote><b>
441arping blkid e2fsck dd fsck.f2fs fsck_msdos gzip ip iptables
442ip6tables iw logwrapper make_ext4fs make_f2fs modpobe newfs_msdos ping ping6
443reboot resize2fs sh ss tc tracepath tracepath6 traceroute traceroute6
444</b></blockquote>
445
446<p>We may eventually implement all of that, but for toybox 1.0 we need to
447focus a bit. If Android has an acceptable external package, and the command
448isn't needed for system bootstrapping, replacing the external package is
449not a priority.</p>
450
451<p>However, several commands toybox plans to implement anyway could potentially
452replace existing Android versions, so we should take into account Android's use
453cases when doing so. This includes:</p>
454<blockquote><b>
455<span id=toolbox>
456dd getevent gzip modprobe newfs_msdos sh
457</span>
458</b></blockquote>
459
460<p>Update: <a href=https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/core/+/master/system/core/Android.bp>
461external/toybox/Android.bp</a> has symlinks for the following toys out
462of "pending". (The toybox modprobe is also built for the device, but
463it isn't actually used and is only there for sanity checking against
464the libmodprobe-based implementation.) These should be a priority for
465cleanup:</p>
466
467<blockquote><b>
468bc dd diff expr getfattr lsof more stty tr traceroute
469</b></blockquote>
470
471<p>Android wishlist:</p>
472
473<blockquote><b>
474mtools genvfatfs mke2fs gene2fs
475</b></blockquote>
476
477<hr />
478<h2><a name=aosp /><a href="#aosp">Use case: Building AOSP</a></h2>
479
480<p>The list of external tools used to build AOSP was
481<a href="https://android.googlesource.com/platform/build/soong/+/master/ui/build/paths/config.go">here</a>,
482but as they're switched over to toybox they disappear and reappear
483<a href="https://android.googlesource.com/platform/prebuilts/build-tools/+/refs/heads/master/path/linux-x86/">here</a>.</p>
484
485<blockquote><b>
486awk basename bash bc bzip2 cat chmod cmp comm cp cut date dd diff dirname du
487echo egrep env expr find fuser getconf getopt git grep gzip head hexdump
488hostname id jar java javap ln ls lsof m4 make md5sum mkdir mktemp mv od openssl
489paste patch pgrep pkill ps pstree pwd python python2.7 python3 readlink
490realpath rm rmdir rsync sed setsid sh sha1sum sha256sum sha512sum
491sleep sort stat tar tail tee touch tr true uname uniq unix2dos unzip
492wc which whoami xargs xxd xz zip zipinfo
493</b></blockquote>
494
495<p>The following are already in the tree and will be used directly:</p>
496
497<blockquote><b>
498awk bc bzip2 jar java javap m4 make python python2.7 python3 xz
499</b></blockquote>
500
501<p>Subtracting what's already in toybox (including the following toybox toys
502that are still in pending: <code>dd diff expr getopt gzip lsof tr</code>),
503that leaves:</p>
504
505<blockquote><b>
506bash dlv fuser git hexdump openssl pstree rsync sh unzip zip zipinfo
507</b></blockquote>
508
509<p>For AOSP, zip/zipinfo/unzip are likely to be libziparchive based.
510git/openssl seem like they should just be brought in to the tree. rsync is
511used to work around a Mac <code>cp -Rf</code> bug with broken symbolic links.
512That leaves:</p>
513
514<blockquote><b>
515bash fuser hexdump pstree
516</b></blockquote>
517
518<p>(Why are fuser and pstree used during the AOSP build? They're used for
519diagnostics if something goes wrong. So it's really just bash and hexdump
520that are actually used to build.)</p>
521
522<hr />
523<h2><a name=tizen /><a href="#tizen">Use case: Tizen Core</a></h2>
524
525<p>A side effect of the Linux Foundation following the money to the
526exclusion of all else is they "support" their donors' myriad often
527contradictory pet projects with elaborate announcements and press releases.
528Long ago when Nokia's Maemo merged
529with Intel's Moblin to form <a href=https://www.linuxfoundation.org/press-release/linux-foundation-to-host-meego-project/>MeeGo</a>, there were believable <a href=https://www.linuxfoundation.org/press-release/public-support-for-the-meego-project/>statements</a>
530about unifying fragmented vendor efforts. Then MeeGo merged with
531<a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LiMo_Foundation>LiMo</a> to
532<a href=notes-2012.html#16-05-2012>form Tizen</a>,
533which became a Samsung-only project (that <a href=https://www.androidheadlines.com/2021/05/samsung-tvs-continue-use-tizen-os.html>still ships</a>
534inside <a href=https://twitter.com/cstross/status/1453747613686288385>televisions</a>,
535but was otherwise subsumed into <a href=https://www.theverge.com/2021/5/18/22440483/samsung-smartwatch-google-wearos-tizen-watch>Android GO</a>).</p>
536
537<p>Along the way, the Tizen project expressed a desire to eliminate GPLv3 software
538from its core system, and in installing toybox as
539<a href=https://wiki.tizen.org/wiki/Toybox>part of this process</a>.</p>
540
541<p>They had a fairly long list of new commands they wanted to see in toybox:</p>
542
543<blockquote><b>
544<span id=tizen_cmd>
545arch base64 users unexpand shred join csplit
546hostid nproc runcon sha224sum sha256sum sha384sum sha512sum sha3sum mkfs.vfat fsck.vfat
547dosfslabel uname pinky diff3 sdiff zcmp zdiff zegrep zfgrep zless zmore
548</span>
549</b></blockquote>
550
551<p>In addition, they wanted to use several commands then in pending:</p>
552
553<blockquote><b>
554<span id=tizen>
555tar diff printf wget rsync fdisk vi less tr test stty fold expr dd
556</span>
557</b></blockquote>
558
559<p>Also, tizen uses a different Linux Security Module called SMACK, so
560many of the SELinux options ala ls -Z needed smack alternatives in an
561if/else setup. We added lib/lsm.h to abstract this, but haven't heard
562from Tizen in years and have started implementing SELinux support without
563Smack support in places like tar.c. At some point, lib/lsm.h may go away
564due to lack of expressed interest.</p>
565
566<hr />
567<h2><a name=yocto /><a href="#yocto">Use case: Yocto</a></h2>
568
569<p>Another project the Linux Foundation is paid to appreciate is Yocto,
570which was designed to fix the ongoing proprietary fragmentation problem
571(now in Linux build systems instead of vendor unix forks) by being the
572build system equivalent of a glue trap. While proclaiming that having the
573"minimum level of standardization" contributes to a "strong ecosystem",
574Yocto uses a "<a href=https://www.yoctoproject.org/software-overview/layers/>layered</a>"
575design where everybody who touches it is encouraged to add more and more layers
576of metadata on top of what came before, until they wind up <a href=https://github.com/varigit/variscite-bsp-platform>using repo</a> just to manage
577the layers (let alone their contents). But -- and this is the
578important bit -- all these dispirate forks are called "yocto" and built on
579top of giant piles of code the Linux Foundation can take credit for
580since they filed the serial numbers off OpenEmbedded. (And THEN users
581are encouraged to check the result into their own repository as one
582big initial commit, discarding all layers and history.)</p>
583
584<p>Yocto's "core-image-minimal" target (only 3,106 build steps in the 3.3
585release, which includes building host versions of gnome packages and
586<a href=https://landley.net/notes-2019.html#06-02-2019>something called</a>
587the "uninative binary shim") builds a busybox-based system with the following commands:</p>
588
589<blockquote><b>
590<span id=yocto_cmd>
591addgroup adduser ascii sh awk base32 basename blkid bunzip2 bzcat bzip2 cat
592chattr chgrp chmod chown chroot chvt clear cmp cp cpio crc32 cut date dc dd
593deallocvt delgroup deluser depmod df diff dirname dmesg dnsdomainname du
594dumpkmap dumpleases echo egrep env expr false fbset fdisk fgrep find flock
595free fsck fstrim fuser getopt getty grep groups gunzip gzip head hexdump
596hostname hwclock id ifconfig ifdown ifup insmod ip kill killall klogd less
597ln loadfont loadkmap logger logname logread losetup ls lsmod lzcat md5sum
598mesg microcom mkdir mkfifo mknod mkswap mktemp modprobe more mount mountpoint
599mv nc netstat nohup nproc nslookup od openvt patch pgrep pidof pivot_root
600printf ps pwd rdate readlink realpath reboot renice reset resize rev rfkill
601rm rmdir rmmod route run-parts sed seq setconsole setsid sh sha1sum sha256sum
602shuf sleep sort start-stop-daemon stat strings stty sulogin swapoff swapon
603switch_root sync sysctl syslogd tail tar tee telnet test tftp time top touch
604tr true ts tty udhcpc udhcpd umount uname uniq unlink unzip uptime users
605usleep vi watch wc wget which who whoami xargs xzcat yes zcat
606</span>
607</b></blockquote>
608
609
610
611<a name="fhs" />
612<hr /><a href=fhs>Filesystem Hierachy Standard</a>
613<h2>Filesystem Hierarchy Standard:</h2>
614
615<p>Another standard taken over by the Linux Foundation. (At least the
616links to this one didn't <a href=http://lanana.org/>go 404</a> the
617instant they took it over). Of historical interest due to what it
618managed to achieve before they chased away the hobbyists maintaining it.
619Only one version (3.0 in 2015) has been released since the Linux Foundation
620absorbed the FHS. The previous release, Version 2.3, was released in 2004.
621The Linux Foundation did not retain earlier versions. The contents of
622the relevant sections appear identical between the two versions, the
623Linux Foundation just added section numbers.</p>
624
625<p><a href=https://refspects.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs-3.0.html>FHS 3.0</a>
626section 3.4.2 requires commands to be in the /bin directory, and then 3.4.3
627has an optional list,
628and then 3.16.2 and 3.16.3 similarly cover /sbin. There are linux
629specific sections in 6.1.2 and 6.1.6 but everything in them is obsolete.</p>
630
631<p>The /bin options include csh but not bash, and ed but not vi.
632The /sbin options have update which seems obsolete (filesystem
633buffers haven't needed a userspace process to flush them for DECADES),
634fastboot and fasthalt (reboot and halt have -nf), and
635fsck.* and mkfs.* that don't actually specify any specific filesystems.
636Removing that gives us:</p>
637
638<blockquote><b>
639<span id=fhs_cmd>
640cat chgrp chmod chown cp date dd df dmesg echo false hostname kill ln
641login ls mkdir mknod more mount mv ps pwd rm rmdir sed sh stty su sync true
642umount uname tar cpio gzip gunzip zcat netstat ping
643shutdown fdisk getty halt ifconfig init mkswap reboot route swapon swapoff
644</span>
645</b></blockquote>
646
647<hr /><a name=buildroot />
648<h2>buildroot:</h2>
649
650<p>If a toybox-based development environment is to support running
651buildroot under it, the <a href=https://buildroot.org/downloads/manual/manual.html#requirement-mandatory>mandatory packages</a>
652section of the buildroot manual lists:</p>
653
654<blockquote><p><b>
655which sed make bash patch gzip bzip2 tar cpio unzip rsync file bc wget
656</b></p></blockquote>
657
658<p>(It also lists binutils gcc g++ perl python, and for debian it wants
659build-essential. And it wants file to be in /usr/bin because
660<a href=https://git.busybox.net/buildroot/tree/support/dependencies/dependencies.sh?h=2018.02.x#n84>libtool
661breaks otherwise</a>.)</p>
662
663<p>Oddly, buildroot can't NOT cross compile. Buildroot does not support a cross toolchain that lives in "/usr/bin"
664with a prefix of "" (if you try, and chop out the test for a blank prefix,
665it dies trying to run "/usr/bin/-gcc"). You can patch your way to
666making it work if you try, but buildroot's developers explicitly do not
667support this.</p>
668
669<hr /><a name=klibc />
670<h2>klibc:</h2>
671
672<p>Long ago some kernel developers came up with a project called
673<a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klibc>klibc</a>.
674After a decade of development it still has no web page or HOWTO,
675and nobody's quite sure if the license is BSD or GPL. It inexplicably
676<a href=http://www.infoworld.com/d/data-center/perl-isnt-going-anywhere-better-or-worse-211580>requires perl to build</a>, and seems like an ideal candidate for
677replacement.</p>
678
679<p>In addition to a C library less general-purpose than old versions of bionic
680(let alone musl), klibc builds a random assortment of executables to run init scripts
681with. There's no multiplexer command, these are individual executables:</p>
682
683<blockquote><p><b>
684cat chroot cpio dd dmesg false fixdep fstype gunzip gzip halt ipconfig kill
685kinit ln losetup ls minips mkdir mkfifo mknodes
686mksyntax mount mv nfsmount nuke pivot_root poweroff readlink reboot resume
687run-init sh sha1hash sleep sync true umount uname zcat
688</b></p></blockquote>
689
690<p>To get that list, build klibc according to the instructions (I
691<a href=http://landley.net/notes-2013.html#23-01-2013>looked at</a> version
6922.0.2 and did cd klibc-*; ln -s /output/of/kernel/make/headers_install
693linux; make) then <b>echo $(for i in $(find . -type f); do file $i | grep -q
694executable && basename $i; done | grep -v '[.]g$' | sort -u)</b> to find
695executables, then eliminate the *.so files and *.shared duplicates.</p>
696
697<p>Some of those binaries are build-time tools that don't get installed,
698which removes mknodes, mksyntax, sha1hash, and fixdep from the list.
699(And sha1hash is just an unpolished sha1sum anyway.)</p>
700
701<p>The run-init command is more commonly called switch_root, nuke is just
702"rm -rf -- $@", and minips is more commonly called "ps": I'm not doing aliases
703for these oddball names.
704The "kinit" command is another gratuitous rename, it's init running as PID 1.
705The halt, poweroff, and reboot commands work with it.</p>
706
707<p>Yet more stale forks of dash and gzip got sucked in here (see "dubious
708license terms" above).</p>
709
710<p>In theory "blkid" or "file" handle fstype (and df for mounted filesystems),
711but we could do fstype.</p>
712
713<p>We should implement nfsmount, and probably smbmount
714and p9mount even though this hasn't got one. The reason these aren't
715in the base "mount" command is they interactively query login credentials.</p>
716
717<p>The ipconfig command here has a built in dhcp client, so it's ifconfig
718and dhcpcd and maybe some other stuff.</p>
719
720<p>The resume command is... weird. It finds a swap partition and reads data
721from it into a /proc file, something the kernel is capable of doing itself.
722(Even though the klibc author
723<a href=http://www.zytor.com/pipermail/klibc/2006-June/001748.html>attempted
724to remove</a> that capability from the kernel, current kernel/power/hibernate.c
725still parses "resume=" on the command line). And yet various distros seem to
726make use of klibc for this.
727Given the history of swsusp/hibernate (and
728<a href=http://lwn.net/Articles/333007>TuxOnIce</a>
729and <a href=http://lwn.net/Articles/242107>kexec jump</a>...) I've lost track
730of the current state of the art here. Ah, Documentation/power/userland-swsusp.txt
731has the API docs, and <a href=http://suspend.sf.net>here's a better
732tool</a>...</p>
733
734<p>This gives us a klibc command list:</p>
735
736<blockquote><b>
737<span id=klibc_cmd>
738cat chroot dmesg false kill ln losetup ls mkdir mkfifo readlink rm switch_root
739sleep sync true uname
740
741cpio dd ps mv pivot_root
742mount nfsmount fstype umount
743sh gunzip gzip zcat
744kinit halt poweroff reboot
745ipconfig
746resume
747</span>
748</b></blockquote>
749
750<hr />
751<a name=glibc />
752<h2>glibc</h2>
753
754<p>Rather a lot of command line utilities come bundled with glibc:</p>
755
756<blockquote><b>
757catchsegv getconf getent iconv iconvconfig ldconfig ldd locale localedef
758mtrace nscd rpcent rpcinfo tzselect zdump zic
759</b></blockquote>
760
761<p>Of those, musl libc only implements ldd. Of the rest:</p>
762
763<ul>
764<li><b>catchsegv</b> is a rudimentary debugger, probably out of scope for toybox.</li>
765<li><b>iconv</b> has been <a href="#susv4">previously discussed</a>.</li>
766<li><b>iconvconfig</b> is only relevant if iconv is user-configurable; musl uses a
767non-configurable iconv now that utf8+unicode exist.</li>
768<li><b>getconf</b> is a posix utility which displays several variables from
769unistd.h; it probably belongs in the development toolchain.</li>
770<li><b>getent</b> handles retrieving entries from passwd-style databases
771(in a rather lame way) and is trivially replacable by grep.</li>
772<li><b>locale</b> was discussed under <a href=#susv4>posix</a>.
773localedef compiles locale definitions, which musl currently does not use.</li>
774<li><b>mtrace</b> is a perl script to use the malloc debugging that glibc has built-in;
775this is not relevant for musl, and would necessarily vary with libc.</li>
776<li><b>nscd</b> is a name service caching daemon, which is not yet relevant for musl.</li>
777<li><b>rpcinfo</b> and <b>rpcent</b> are related to the Remote Procedure Calls
778layer (an old sun technology used by some userspace NFS implementations),
779which musl does not include and debian does not install by default.</li>
780</ul>
781
782<p>The remaining commands involve glibc's bundled timezone database,
783which seems to be derived from the <a href=http://www.iana.org/time-zones>IANA
784timezone database</a>. Unless we want to maintain our own fork of the
785standards body's database like glibc does, these are of no interest,
786but for completeness:</p>
787
788<ul>
789<li><b>tzselect</b> outputs a TZ variable correponding to user input.
790The documentation does not indicate how to use it in a script, but it seems
791that Debian may have done so.</li>
792<li><b>zdump</b> prints current time in each of several timezones, optionally
793outputting a great deal of extra information about each timezone.</li>
794<li><b>zic</b> converts a description of a timezone to a file in tz format.</li>
795</ul>
796
797<p>We implemented getconf, and I could see maybe arguing for ncsd.
798The rest are not relevant to toybox.</p>
799
800</b></blockquote>
801
802<hr />
803<a name=sash />
804<h2>Stand-Alone Shell</h2>
805
806<p>Wikipedia has <a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stand-alone_shell>a good
807summary of sash</a>, with links. The original Stand-Alone Shell project reached
808a stopping point, and then <a href=http://www.baiti.net/sash>"sash plus
809patches"</a> extended it a bit further. The result is a megabyte executable
810that provides 40 commands.</p>
811
812<p>Sash is a shell with built-in commands. It doesn't have a multiplexer
813command, meaning "sash ls -l" doesn't work (you have to go "sash -c 'ls -l'").
814</p>
815
816<p>The list of commands can be obtained via building it and doing
817"echo help | ./sash | awk '{print $1}' | sed 's/^-//' | xargs echo", which
818gives us:</p>
819
820<blockquote><b>
821alias aliasall ar cd chattr chgrp chmod chown cmp cp chroot dd echo ed exec
822exit file find grep gunzip gzip help kill losetup losetup ln ls lsattr mkdir
823mknod more mount mv pivot_root printenv prompt pwd quit rm rmdir setenv source
824sum sync tar touch umask umount unalias where
825</b></blockquote>
826
827<p>Plus sh because it's a shell. A dozen or so commands can only sanely be
828implemented as shell builtins (alias aliasall cd exec exit prompt quit setenv
829source umask unalias), and where is an alias for which.</p>
830
831<p>This leaves:</p>
832
833<blockquote><b>
834<span id=sash_cmd>
835chgrp chmod chown cmp cp chroot echo find grep help kill losetup
836ln ls mkdir mknod mount mv pivot_root printenv pwd rm rmdir sync tar touch umount
837ar chattr dd ed file gunzip gzip lsattr more sh
838</span>
839</b></blockquote>
840
841<p>(For once, this project doesn't include a fork of gzip, instead
842it sucks in -lz from the host.)</p>
843
844<hr />
845<a name=sbase />
846<h2>sbase:</h2>
847
848<p>It's <a href=http://git.suckless.org/sbase>on suckless</a> in
849<a href=http://git.suckless.org/ubase>two parts</a>. As of November 2015 it's
850implemented the following (renaming "cron" to "crond" for
851consistency, and yanking "sponge", "mesg", "pagesize", "respawn", and
852"vtallow"):</p>
853
854<blockquote><p>
855<span id=sbase_cmd>
856basename cal cat chgrp chmod chown chroot cksum cmp comm cp crond cut date
857dirname du echo env expand expr false find flock fold getconf grep head
858hostname join kill link ln logger logname ls md5sum mkdir mkfifo mktemp mv
859nice nl nohup od paste printenv printf pwd readlink renice rm rmdir sed seq
860setsid sha1sum sha256sum sha512sum sleep sort split strings sync tail
861tar tee test tftp time touch tr true tty uname unexpand uniq unlink uudecode
862uuencode wc which xargs yes
863</span>
864</p></blockquote>
865
866<p>and<p>
867
868<blockquote><p>
869<span id=sbase_cmd>
870chvt clear dd df dmesg eject fallocate free id login mknod mountpoint
871passwd pidof ps stat su truncate unshare uptime watch
872who
873</span>
874</p></blockquote>
875
876<hr />
877<a name=nash />
878<h2>nash:</h2>
879
880<p>Red Hat's nash was part of its "mkinitrd" package, replacement for a shell
881and utilities on the boot floppy back in the 1990's (the same general idea
882as BusyBox, developed independently). Red Hat discontinued nash development
883in 2010, replacing it with dracut (which collects together existing packages,
884including busybox).</p>
885
886<p>I couldn't figure out how to beat source code out of
887<a href=http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/git/mkinitrd>Fedora's current git</a>
888repository. The last release version that used it was Fedora Core 12
889which has <a href=http://archive.fedoraproject.org/pub/archive/fedora/linux/releases/12/Fedora/source/SRPMS/mkinitrd-6.0.93-1.fc12.src.rpm>a source rpm</a>
890that can be unwound with "rpm2cpio mkinitrd.src.rpm | cpio -i -d -H newc
891--no-absolute-filenames" and in there is a mkinitrd-6.0.93.tar.bz2 which
892has the source.</p>
893
894<p>In addition to being a bit like a command shell, the nash man page lists the
895following commands:</p>
896
897<blockquote><p>
898access echo find losetup mkdevices mkdir mknod mkdmnod mkrootdev mount
899pivot_root readlink raidautorun setquiet showlabels sleep switchroot umount
900</p></blockquote>
901
902<p>Oddly, the only occurrence of the string pivot_root in the nash source code
903is in the man page, the command isn't there. (It seems to have been removed
904when the underscoreless switchroot went in.)</p>
905
906<p>A more complete list seems to be the handlers[] array in nash.c:</p>
907
908<blockquote><p>
909access buildEnv cat cond cp daemonize dm echo exec exit find kernelopt
910loadDrivers loadpolicy mkchardevs mkblktab mkblkdevs mkdir mkdmnod mknod
911mkrootdev mount netname network null plymouth hotplug killplug losetup
912ln ls raidautorun readlink resume resolveDevice rmparts setDeviceEnv
913setquiet setuproot showelfinterp showlabels sleep stabilized status switchroot
914umount waitdev
915</p></blockquote>
916
917<p>This list is nuts: "plymouth" is an alias for "null" which is basically
918"true" (which the above list doesn't have). Things like buildEnv and
919loadDrivers are bespoke Red Hat behavior that might as well be hardwired in
920to nash's main() without being called.</p>
921
922<p>Instead of eliminating items
923from the list with an explanation for each, I'm just going to cherry pick
924a few: the device mapper (dm, raidautorun) is probably interesting,
925hotplug (may be obsolete due to kernel changes that now load firmware
926directly), and another "resume" ala klibc.</p>
927
928<p>But mostly: I don't care about this one. And neither does Red Hat anymore.</p>
929
930<p>Verdict: ignore</p>
931
932<hr />
933<a name=beastiebox />
934<h2>Beastiebox</h2>
935
936<p>Back in 2008, the BSD guys vented some busybox-envy
937<a href=http://beastiebox.sourceforge.net>on sourceforge</a>. Then stopped.
938Their repository is still in CVS, hasn't been touched in years, it's a giant
939hairball of existing code sucked together. (The web page says the author
940is aware of crunchgen, but decided to do this by hand anyway. This is not
941a collection of new code, it's a katamari of existing code rolled up in a
942ball.)</p>
943
944<p>Combining the set of commands listed on the web page with the set of
945man pages in the source gives us:</P>
946
947<blockquote><p>
948[ cat chmod cp csh date df disklabel dmesg echo ex fdisk fsck fsck_ffs getty
949halt hostname ifconfig init kill less lesskey ln login ls lv mksh more mount
950mount_ffs mv pfctl ping poweroff ps reboot rm route sed sh stty sysctl tar test
951traceroute umount vi wiconfig
952</p></blockquote>
953
954<p>Apparently lv is the missing link between ed and vi, copyright 1982-1997 (do
955not want), ex is another obsolete vi mode, lesskey is "used to
956specify a set of key bindings to be used with less", and csh is a shell they
957sucked in (even though they have mksh?), [ is an alias for test. Several more bsd-isms that don't have Linux
958equivalents (even in the ubuntu "install this package" search) are
959disklabel, fsck_ffs, mount_ffs, and pfctl. And wiconfig is a
960wavelan interface network card driver utility. Subtracting all that and the
961commands toybox already implements at triage time, we get:</p>
962
963<blockquote><p>
964<span id=beastiebox_cmd>
965fdisk fsck getty halt ifconfig init kill less more mount mv ping poweroff
966ps reboot route sed sh stty sysctl tar test traceroute umount vi
967</span>
968</p></blockquote>
969
970<p>Not a hugely interesting list, but eh.</p>
971
972<p>Verdict: ignore</p>
973
974<hr />
975<a name=BsdBox />
976<h2>BsdBox</h2>
977
978<p>Somebody decided to do a <a href=https://wiki.freebsd.org/AdrianChadd/BsdBox>multicall binary for freebsd</a>.</p>
979
980<p>They based it on crunchgen, a tool that glues existing programs together
981into an archive and uses the name to execute the right one. It has no
982simplification or code sharing benefits whatsoever, it's basically an
983archiver that produces executables.</p>
984
985<p>That's about where I stopped reading.</p>
986
987<p>Verdict: ignore.</p>
988
989<hr />
990<a name=slowaris />
991<h2>OpenSolaris Busybox</h2>
992
993<p>Somebody <a href=http://hub.opensolaris.org/bin/view/Project+busybox/>wrote
994a wiki page</a> saying that Busybox for OpenSolaris would be a good idea.</p>
995
996<p>The corresponding "files" tab is an auto-generated stub. The project never
997even got as far as suggesting commands to include before Oracle discontinued
998OpenSolaris.</p>
999
1000<p>Verdict: ignore.</p>
1001
1002<hr />
1003<a name=uclinux />
1004<h2>uClinux</h2>
1005
1006<p>Long ago a hardware developer named Jeff Dionne put together a
1007nommu Linux distribution, which involved rewriting a lot of command line
1008utilities that relied on <a href=http://nommu.org/memory-faq.txt>features
1009unavailable on nommu</a> hardware.</p>
1010
1011<p>In 2003 Jeff moved to Japan and handed
1012the project off to people who allowed it to roll to a stop. The website
1013turned into a mess of 404 links, the navigation indexes stopped being
1014updated over a decade ago, and the project's CVS repository suffered a
1015hard drive failure for which there were no backups. The project continued
1016to put out "releases" through 2014 (you have to scroll down in the "news"
1017section to find them, the "HTTP download" section in the nav bar on the
1018left hasn't been updated in over a decade), which were hand-updated tarball
1019snapshots mostly consisting of software from the 1990's. For example the
10202014 release still contained ipfwadm, the package which predated ipchains,
1021which predated iptables, which is in the process of being replaced by
1022nftables.</p>
1023
1024<p>Nevertheless, people still try to use this because the project was viewed
1025as the place to discuss, develop, and learn about nommu Linux.
1026The role of uclinux.org as an educational resource kept people coming
1027to it long after it had collapsed as a Linux distro.</p>
1028
1029<p>Starting around 0.6.0 toybox began to address nommu support with the goal
1030of putting uClinux out of its misery.</p>
1031
1032<p>An analysis of <a href=http://www.uclinux.org/pub/uClinux/dist/uClinux-dist-20140504.tar.bz2>uClinux-dist-20140504</a> found 312 package
1033subdirectories under "user".</p>
1034
1035<h3>Taking out the trash</h3>
1036
1037<p>A bunch of packages (<b>inotify-tools, input-event-demon, ipsec-tools, netifd,
1038keepalived, mobile-broadband-provider-info, nuttp, readline, snort,
1039snort-barnyard, socat, sqlite, sysklogd, sysstat, tcl, ubus, uci, udev,
1040unionfs, uqmi, usb_modeswitch, usbutils, util-linux</b>)
1041are hard to evaluate because
1042uclinux has directories for them, but their source isn't actually in the
1043uclinux tree. In some of these the makefiles download a git repo during
1044the build, so I'm assuming you can build the external package if you really
1045care. (Even when I know what these packages do, I'm skipping them
1046because uclinux doesn't actually contain them, and any given snapshot
1047of the build system will bitrot as external web links change over time.)</p>
1048
1049<p>Other packages are orphaned, meaning they're not mentioned from any Kconfig
1050or Makefiles outside of their directory, so uclinux can't actually build
1051them: <b>mbus</b> is an orphaned i2c test program expecting to run in some sort
1052of hardwired hardware context, <b>mkeccbin</b> is an orphaned "ECC annotated
1053binary file" generator (meaning it's half of a flash writer),
1054<b>wsc_upnp</b> is a "Ralink WPS" driver (some sort of stale wifi chip)...</p>
1055
1056<p>The majority of the remaining packages are probably not of interest to
1057toybox due to being so obsolete or special purpose they may not actually be
1058of interest to anybody anymore. (This list also includes a lot of
1059special-purpose network back-end stuff that's hard for anybody but
1060datacenter admins to evaluate the current relevance of.)</p>
1061
1062<blockquote><b><p>
1063arj asterisk boottools bpalogin br2684ctl camserv can4linux cgi_generic
1064cgihtml clamav clamsmtp conntrack-tools cramfs crypto-tools cxxtest
1065ddns3-client de2ts-cal debug demo diald discard dnsmasq dnsmasq2
1066ethattach expat-examples ez-ipupdate fakeidentd
1067fconfig ferret flatfs flthdr freeradius freeswan frob-led frox fswcert
1068game gettyd gnugk haserl horch
1069hostap hping httptunnel ifattach ipchains
1070ipfwadm ipmasqadm ipportfw ipredir ipset iso_client
1071jamvm jffs-tools jpegview jquery-ui kendin-config kismet klaxon kmod
1072l2tpd lcd ledcmd ledcon lha lilo lirc lissa load loattach
1073lpr lrpstat lrzsz mail mbus mgetty microwin ModemManager msntp musicbox
1074nooom null openswan openvpn palmbot pam_* pcmcia-cs playrt plugdaemon pop3proxy
1075potrace qspitest quagga radauth
1076ramimage readprofile rdate readprofile routed rrdtool rtc-ds1302
1077sendip ser sethdlc setmac setserial sgutool sigs siproxd slattach
1078smtpclient snmpd net-snmp snortrules speedtouch squashfs scep sslwrap stp
1079stunnel tcpblast tcpdump tcpwrappers threaddemos tinylogin tinyproxy
1080tpt tripwire unrar unzoo version vpnled w3cam xl2tpd zebra
1081</p></b></blockquote>
1082
1083<p>This stuff is all over the place: arj, lha, rar, and zoo are DOS archivers,
1084ethattach describes itself as just "a network tool",
1085mail is a textmode smtp mailer literally described as "Some kind of mail
1086proggy" in uclinux's kconfig (as opposed to clamsmtp and smtpclient and
1087so on), this gettyd isn't a generic version but specifically a
1088hardwired ppp dialin utility, mgetty isn't a generic version but is combined
1089with "sendfax", hostap is an intersil prism driver, wlan-ng is also an
1090intersil prism dirver, null is a program to intentionally dereference a
1091null pointer (in case you needed one), iso_client is a
1092"Demo Application for the USB Device Driver", kendin-config is
1093"for configuring the Micrel Kendin KS8995M over QSPI", speedtouch configures
1094a specific brand of asdl modem, portmap is part of Anfs,
1095ferret, linux-igd, and miniupnp are all upnp packages,
1096lanbypass "can be used to control the LAN
1097bypass switches on the Advantech x86 based hardware platforms", lcd is
1098"test of lcddma device driver" (an out-of-tree Coldfire driver apparently
1099lost to history, the uclinux linux-2.4.x directory has a config symbol for
1100it, but nothing in the code actually _uses_ it...), qspitest is another
1101coldfire thing, mii-tool-fec is
1102"strictly for the FEC Ethernet driver as implemented (and modified) for
1103the uCdimm5272", rtc-ds1302 and rtc-m41t11 are usermode drivers for specific
1104clock chips, stunnel is basically "openssl s_client -quiet -connect",
1105potrace is a bitmap to vector graphic converter, radauth performs command line
1106authentication against a radius server,
1107clamav, klaxon, ferret, l7-protocols, and nessus are very old network security
1108software (it's got a stale snapshot of nmap too), xl2tpd is a PPP over UDP
1109tunnel (rfc 2661), zebra is the package quagga replaced,
1110lilo is the x86-only bootloader that predated grub (and recently discontinued
1111development), lissa is a "framebuffer graphics demo" from
11121998, the squashfs package here is the out of tree patches for 2.4 kernels
1113and such before the filesystem was merged upstream (as opposed to the
1114squashfs-new package which is a snapshot of the userspace tool from 2011),
1115load is basically "dd file /dev/spi", version is basically "cat /proc/version",
1116microwin is a port of the WinCE graphics API to Linux, scep is a 2003
1117implementation of an IETF draft abandoned in 2010, tpt depends on
1118Andrew Morton's 15 year old unmerged "timepegs" kernel patch using the pentium
1119cycle counter, vpnled controls a light that reboots systems (what?),
1120w3cam is a video4linux 1.0 client (v4l2 showed up during 2.5 and support for
1121the old v4l1 was removed in 2.6.38 back in 2011), busybox ate tinylogin
1122over a decade ago, lrpstat is a java network monitor
1123from 2001, lrzsz is zmodem/ymodem/zmodem, msntp and stp implement rfc2030
1124meaning it overflows in 2036 (the package was last updated in 2000), rdate
1125is rfc 868 meaning it also overflows in 2036 (which is why ntp was invented
1126a few decades back), reiserfsprogs development stopped abruptly after
1127Hans Reiser was convicted of murdering his wife Nina (denying it on the
1128stand and then leading them to the body as part of his plea bargain during
1129sentencing)...
1130</p>
1131
1132<p>Seriously, there's a lot of crap in there. It's hard to analyze most
1133of it far enough to prove it _doesn't_ do anything.</p>
1134
1135<h3>Non-toybox programs</h3>
1136
1137<p>The following software may actually still do something intelligible
1138(although the package versions tend to be years out of date), but
1139it's not a direction toybox has chosen to go in.</p>
1140
1141<p>There are several programming languages (<b>bash, lua, jamvm, tinytcl,
1142perl, python</b>) in there. Maybe someone somewhere wants a 2008 release of a
1143java virtual machine tested to work on nommu systems (jamvm), but it's out
1144of scope for toybox.</p>
1145
1146<p>A bunch of benchmark programs: <b>cpu, dhrystone, mathtest, nbench, netperf,
1147netpipe, and whetstone</b>.</p>
1148
1149<p>A bunch of web servers: <b>appWeb, boa, fnord (via tcpserver), goahead, httpd,
1150mini_httpd, and thttpd</b>.</p>
1151
1152<p>A bunch of shells: <b>msh</b> is a clever (I.E. obfuscated) little shell,
1153<b>nwsh</b> is "new shell" (that's what it called itself in 1999 anyway),
1154<b>sash</b> is another shell with a bunch of builtins (ls, ps, df, cp, date, reboot,
1155and shutdown, this roadmap analyzes it <a href="#sash">elsewhere</a>),
1156<b>sh</b> is a very old minix shell fork, and <b>tcsh</b> is also a shell.</p>
1157
1158<p>Also in this category, we have:</p>
1159
1160<blockquote><b><p>
1161dropbear jffs-tools jpegview kexec-tools bind ctorrent
1162iperf iproute2 ip-sentinel iptables kexec
1163nmap oggplay openssl oprofile p7zip pppd pptp play vplay
1164hdparm mp3play at clock
1165mtd-utils mysql logrotate brcfg bridge-utils flashw
1166ebtables etherwake ethtool expect gdb gdbserver hostapd
1167lm_sensors load netflash netstat-nat
1168radvd recover rootloader resolveip rp-pppoe
1169rsyslog rsyslogd samba smbmount squashfs-new squid ssh strace tip
1170uboot-envtools ulogd usbhubctrl vconfig vixie-cron watchdogd
1171wireless_tools wpa_supplicant
1172</p></b></blockquote>
1173
1174<p>An awful lot of those are borderline: play and vplay are wav file
1175audio players, there's oprofile _and_ readprofile (which just reads kernel
1176profiling data from /proc/profile),
1177radvd is a "routr advertisement daemon" (ipv6 stateless autoconf),
1178ctorrent is a bittorent client,
1179lm_sensors is hardware (heat?) monitoring,
1180resolveip is dig only less so,
1181rp-pppoe is ppp over ethernet,
1182ebtables is an ethernet version of iptables (for bridging),
1183their dropbear is from 2012, and that ssh version is from 2011
1184(which means it's about nine months too _old_ to have the heartbleed bug).
1185There's both ulogd and ulogd2 (no idea why), and pppd is version 2.4 but
1186there's a ppd-2.3 directory also. We used to be interested in ftpd/proftpd
1187as a way of uploading files out of a vm, but support for that has waned
1188over the years and there are lots of alternatives.</p>
1189
1190<p>Lots of flash stuff:
1191flashw is a flash writer, load is an spi flash loader, netflash writes
1192to flash via tftp,
1193recover is also a reflash daemon intended to come up when the system can't boot,
1194rootloader seems to be another reflash daemon but without dhcp.</p>
1195
1196<h3>Already in roadmap</h3>
1197
1198<p>The following packages contain commands already in the toybox roadmap:</p>
1199
1200<blockquote><b><p>
1201agetty cal cksum cron dhcpcd dhcpcd-new dhcpd dhcp-isc dosfstools e2fsprogs
1202elvis-tiny levee fdisk fileutils ftp grep hd hwclock inetd init ntp
1203iputils login module-init-tools netcat shutils ntpdate lspci ping procps
1204rsync shadow shutils stty sysutils telnet telnetd tftp tftpd traceroute
1205unzip wget mawk net-tools
1206</p></b></blockquote>
1207
1208<p>There are some duplicates in there, levee is a tiny vi implementation
1209like elvis-tiny, ntp and ntpdate overlap, etc.</p>
1210
1211<p>Verdict: We don't really need to do a whole lot special for nommu
1212systems, just get the existing toybox roadmap working on nommu and
1213we're good. The uClinux project can rest in peace.</p>
1214
1215<hr />
1216<h2>Requests:</h2>
1217
1218<p>The following additional commands have been requested (and often submitted)
1219by various users. I _really_ need to clean up this section.</p>
1220
1221<p>Also:</p>
1222<blockquote><b>
1223<span id=request>
1224dig freeramdisk getty halt hexdump hwclock klogd modprobe ping ping6 pivot_root
1225poweroff readahead rev sfdisk sudo syslogd taskset telnet telnetd tracepath
1226traceroute unzip usleep vconfig zip free login modinfo unshare netcat help w
1227iwconfig iwlist rdate
1228dos2unix unix2dos catv clear
1229pmap realpath setsid timeout truncate
1230mkswap swapon swapoff
1231count oneit fstype
1232acpi blkid eject pwdx
1233sulogin rfkill bootchartd
1234arp makedevs sysctl killall5 crond crontab deluser last mkpasswd watch
1235blockdev rpm2cpio arping brctl dumpleases fsck
1236tcpsvd tftpd
1237factor fallocate fsfreeze inotifyd lspci nbd-client partprobe strings
1238base32 base64 mix
1239reset hexedit nsenter shred
1240fsync insmod ionice lsmod lsusb rmmod vmstat xxd top iotop
1241lsof ionice compress dhcp dhcpd addgroup delgroup host iconv ip
1242ipcrm ipcs netstat openvt
1243deallocvt iorenice
1244udpsvd adduser
1245microcom tunctl chrt getfattr setfattr
1246kexec
1247ascii crc32 devmem fmt i2cdetect i2cdump i2cget i2cset mcookie prlimit sntp ulimit uuidgen dhcp6 ipaddr iplink iproute iprule iptunnel cd exit toysh bash traceroute6
1248blkdiscard rtcwake
1249watchdog
1250pwgen readelf unicode
1251rsync
1252linux32 hd strace
1253gpiodetect gpiofind gpioget gpioinfo gpioset httpd uclampset
1254</span>
1255</b></blockquote>
1256
1257<hr />
1258<a name=packages />
1259<h2>Other packages</h2>
1260
1261<p>System administrators have <a href=https://github.com/landley/toybox/issues/168#issuecomment-583725500>asked</a> what other Linux packages toybox commands
1262replace, so they can annotate alternatives in their package management system.</p>
1263
1264<p>This section uses the package definitions from Chapter 6 of
1265<a href=http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/downloads/9.0/LFS-BOOK-9.0-NOCHUNKS.html>Linux From Scratch 9.0</a>). Each package lists what we currently
1266replace, pending commands [in square brackets], and what we DON'T plan to
1267implement.</p>
1268
1269<p>Each "see also" note means the listed package also installs the listed shared
1270libraries. (While toybox contains equivalent functionality to a lot of these
1271shared libraries in its lib/ directory, it does not currently provide a shared
1272library interface.)</p>
1273
1274<h3>Packages toybox plans to provide complete-ish replacements for:</h3>
1275<ul>
1276<li><b>file</b>: file (see also: libmagic)</li>
1277<li><b>m4</b>: [m4]</li>
1278<li><b>bc</b>: [bc] [dc]</li>
1279<li><b>bison</b>: [yacc] (not: bison, see also: liby)</li>
1280<li><b>flex</b>: [lex] (not: flex flex++, see also: libfl)</li>
1281<li><b>make</b>: [make]</li>
1282<li><b>sed</b>: sed</li>
1283<li><b>grep</b>: grep egrep fgrep</li>
1284<li><b>bash</b>: bash sh (not: bashbug)</li>
1285<li><b>diffutils</b>: cmp [diff] [diff3] [sdiff]</li>
1286<li><b>gawk</b>: [awk] (not: gawk gawk-5.0.1)</li>
1287<li><b>findutils</b>: find xargs (not: locate updatedb)</li>
1288<li><b>less</b>: less (not: lessecho lesskey)</li>
1289<li><b>gzip</b>: zcat [gzip] [gunzip] [zcmp] [zdiff] [zegrep] [zfgrep] [zgrep] [zless] [zmore]
1290(not: gzexe uncompress zforce znew)</li>
1291<li><b>patch</b>: patch</li>
1292<li><b>tar</b>: tar</li>
1293<li><b>procps-ng</b>: free pgrep pidof pkill ps sysctl top uptime vmstat w watch
1294[pmap] [pwdx] [slabtop]
1295(not: tload, see also libprocps)</li>
1296<li><b>sysklogd</b>: [klogd] [syslogd]</li>
1297<li><b>sysvinit</b>: [init] halt poweroff reboot killall5 [shutdown]
1298(not telinit runlevel fstab-decode bootlogd)</li>
1299<li><b>man</b>: man (but not accessdb apropos catman lexgrog mandb manpath whatis,
1300see also libman libmandb)</li>
1301<li><b>vim</b>: vi xxd (but not ex, rview, rvim, view, vim, vimdiff, vimtutor)</li>
1302<li><b>sysvinit</b>: [init] halt poweroff reboot killall5 [shutdown]
1303(not telinit runlevel fstab-decode bootlogd)</li>
1304<li><b>kmod</b>: insmod lsmod rmmod modinfo [modprobe]
1305(not: depmod kmod)</li>
1306<li><b>attr</b>: [getfattr] setfattr (not: attr, see also: libattr)</li>
1307<li><b>shadow</b>: [chfn] [chpasswd] [chsh] [groupadd] [groupdel] [groupmod]
1308[newusers] passwd [su] [useradd] [userdel] [usermod]
1309[lastlog] [login] [newgidmap] [newuidmap]
1310(not: chage expiry faillog groupmems grpck logoutd newgrp nologin pwck sg
1311vigr vipw, grpconv grpunconv pwconv pwunconv, chgpasswd gpasswd)</li>
1312<li><b>psmisc</b>: killall [fuser] [pstree] [peekfd] [prtstat]
1313(not: pslog pstree.x11)</li>
1314<li><b>inetutils</b>: dnsdomainname [ftp] hostname ifconfig ping ping6 [telnet] [tftp] [traceroute] (not: talk)</li>
1315<li><b>coreutils</b>: [ base32 base64 basename cat chgrp chmod chown chroot cksum comm cp cut date
1316dd df dirname du echo env expand factor false fmt fold groups head hostid id install
1317link ln logname ls md5sum mkdir mkfifo mknod mktemp mv nice nl nohup nproc od
1318paste printenv printf pwd readlink realpath rm rmdir seq sha1sum shred
1319sleep sort split stat sync tac tail tee test timeout touch true truncate
1320tty uname uniq unlink wc who whoami yes
1321[expr] [fold] [join] [numfmt] [runcon] [sha224sum] [sha256sum] [sha384sum]
1322[sha512sum] [stty] [b2sum] [tr] [unexpand]
1323(not: basenc chcon csplit dir dircolors pathchk
1324pinky pr ptx shuf stdbuf sum tsort users vdir, see also libstdbuf)</li>
1325<li><b>util-linux</b>: blkid blockdev cal chrt dmesg eject fallocate flock hwclock
1326ionice kill logger losetup mcookie mkswap more mount mountpoint nsenter
1327pivot_root prlimit rename renice rev setsid swapoff swapon switch_root taskset
1328umount unshare uuidgen
1329[addpart] [fdisk] [findfs] [findmnt] [fsck] [fsfreeze] [fstrim] [getopt]
1330[hexdump] [linux32] [linux64] [lsblk] [lscpu] [lsns] [setarch]
1331(not: agetty blkdiscard blkzone cfdisk chcpu chmem choom col
1332colcrt colrm column ctrlaltdel delpart fdformat fincore fsck.cramfs
1333fsck.minix ipcmk ipcrm ipcs isosize last lastb ldattach look lsipc
1334lslocks lslogins lsmem mesg mkfs mkfs.bfs mkfs.cramfs mkfs.minix namei partx
1335raw readprofile resizepart rfkill rtcwake script scriptreplay
1336setterm sfdisk sulogin swaplabel ul
1337uname26 utmpdump uuidd uuidparse wall wdctl whereis wipefs
1338i386 x86_64 zramctl)</li>
1339</ul>
1340
1341<p>Commentary: toybox init doesn't do runlevels, man and vim are just the
1342relevant commands without the piles of strange overgrowth, and if you want
1343to call a toybox binary by another name you can create a symlink to a
1344symlink. If somebody really wants to argue for "gzexe" or similar, be
1345my guest, but there's a lot of obsolete crap in shadow, coreutils,
1346util-linux...</p>
1347
1348<p>No idea why LFS is installing inetutils instead of net-tools
1349(which contains arp route ifconfig mii-tool nameif netstat and rarp that
1350toybox does or might implement, and plipconfig slattach that it probably won't.)</p>
1351
1352<h3>Packages toybox plans to provide partial replacements for:</h3>
1353
1354<p>Toybox provides replacements for some binaries from these packages,
1355but there are other useful binaries which this package provides that toybox
1356currently considers out of scope for the project:</p>
1357
1358<ul>
1359<li><b>binutils</b>: strings [ar] [nm] [readelf] [size] [objcopy] [strip]
1360(not c++filt, dwp, elfedit, gprof. The following commands belong
1361in <a href=/code/qcc>qcc</a>: addr2line as ld objdump ranlib)</li>
1362<li><b>bzip2</b>: bunzip2 bzcat [bzcmp] [bzdiff] [bzegrep] [bzfgrep] [bzgrep] [bzless]
1363[bzmore] (not: bzip2, bzip2recover, see also libbz2)</li>
1364<li><b>xz</b>: [xzcat] [lzcat] [lzcmp] [lzdiff] [lzegrep] [lzfgrep] [lzgrep]
1365[lzless] [lzmadec, lzmainfo] [lzmore] [unlzma] [unxz] [xzcat]
1366[xzcmp] [xzdec] [xzdiff] [xzegrep] [xzfgrep] [xzgrep] [xzless] [xzmore]
1367(not: compression side, see also: liblzma)</li>
1368<li><b>ncurses</b>: clear reset (not: everything else, see also: libcurses)</li>
1369<li><b>e2fsprogs</b>: chattr lsattr [e2fsck] [mkfs.ext2] [mkfs.ext3]
1370[fsck.ext2] [fsck.ext3] [e2label] [resize2fs] [tune2fs]
1371(not badblocks compile_et debugfs dumpe2fse2freefrag e2image
1372e2mmpstatus e2scrub e2scrub_all e2undo e4crypt e4defrag filefrag
1373fsck.ext4 logsave mk_cmds mkfs.ext4 mklost+found)</li>
1374</ul>
1375
1376<p>Toybox provides several decompressors but compresses to a single format
1377(deflate, ala gzip/zlib). Our e2fsprogs doesn't currently plan to support
1378ext4 or defrag. The "qcc" reference is because someday an external project to glue
1379QEMU's <a href=https://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=blob;f=tcg/README;h=bfa2e4ed246c;hb=HEAD>Tiny Code Generator</a>
1380to Fabrice Bellard's old <a href=http://landley.net/hg/tinycc>Tiny C Compiler</a>
1381making a multicall binary that does cc/ld/as for all the targets QEMU
1382supports (then use the
1383<a href=https://github.com/JuliaComputing/llvm-cbe>LLVM C Backend</a>
1384to compile LLVM itself to C for use as a modern replacement for
1385<a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cfront>cfront</a> to bootstrap
1386C++ code) is under consideration
1387as a successor project to toybox. Until then things like objdump -d
1388(requiring target-specific disassembly for an unbounded number of architectures)
1389are out of scope for toybox. (This means drawing the line somewhere between
1390architecture-specific support in file and strace, and including a full
1391assembler for each architecture.)</p>
1392</span>
1393
1394<h3>Packages from LFS ch6 toybox does NOT plan to replace:</h3>
1395
1396<ul>
1397<li><b>linux-api-headers</b></li>
1398<li><b>man-pages glibc</b></li>
1399<li><b>zlib</b></li>
1400<li><b>readline</b></li>
1401<li><b>gmp</b></li>
1402<li><b>mpfr</b></li>
1403<li><b>mpc</b></li>
1404<li><b>gcc</b></li>
1405<li><b>pkg-config</b></li>
1406<li><b>ncurses</b></li>
1407<li><b>acl</b></li>
1408<li><b>libcap</b></li>
1409<li><b>psmisc</b></li>
1410<li><b>iana-etc</b></li>
1411<li><b>libtool</b></li>
1412<li><b>gdbm</b></li>
1413<li><b>gperf</b></li>
1414<li><b>expat</b></li>
1415<li><b>perl</b></li>
1416<li><b>XML::Parser</b></li>
1417<li><b>intltool</b></li>
1418<li><b>autoconf</b></li>
1419<li><b>automake</b></li>
1420<li><b>gettext</b></li>
1421<li><b>libelf</b></li>
1422<li><b>libffi</b></li>
1423<li><b>openssl</b></li>
1424<li><b>python</b></li>
1425<li><b>ninja</b></li>
1426<li><b>meson</b></li>
1427<li><b>check</b></li>
1428<li><b>groff</b></li>
1429<li><b>grub</b></li>
1430<li><b>libpipeline</b></li>
1431<li><b>texinfo</b></li>
1432</ul>
1433
1434<p>That said, we do implement our own zlib and readline replacements, and
1435presumably _could_ export them as library bindings. Plus we provide
1436our own version of a bunch of the section 1 man pages (as command help).
1437Possibly libcap and acl are interesting?</p>
1438
1439<h3>Misc</h3>
1440
1441<p>The kbd package has over a dozen commands, we only implement chvt. The
1442iproute2 package implements over a dozen commands, there's an "ip" in
1443pending but I'm not a fan (ifconfig and route and such should be extended
1444to work properly). We don't implement eudev, but toybox's maintainer
1445created busybox mdev way back when (which replaces it) and plans to do a
1446new one for toybox as soon as we work out what subset is still needed now that
1447devtmpfs is available.</p>
1448
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1450
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