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      1 <html><head><title>toybox roadmap</title>
      2 <!--#include file="header.html" -->
      3 <title>Toybox Roadmap</title>
      4 
      5 <h2>Goals and use cases</h2>
      6 
      7 <p>We have several potential use cases for a new set of command line
      8 utilities, and are using those to determine which commands to implement
      9 for Toybox's 1.0 release.</p>
     10 
     11 <p>The most interesting standards are POSIX-2008 (also known as the Single
     12 Unix Specification version 4) and the Linux Standard Base (version 4.1).
     13 The main test harness including toybox in Aboriginal Linux and if that can
     14 build itself using the result to build Linux From Scratch (version 6.8).
     15 We also aim to replace Android's Toolbox.</p>
     16 
     17 <p>At a secondary level we'd like to meet other use cases. We've analyzed
     18 the commands provided by similar projects (klibc, sash, sbase, s6, embutils,
     19 nash, and beastiebox), along with various vendor configurations of busybox,
     20 and some end user requests.</p>
     21 
     22 <p>Finally, we'd like to provide a good replacement for the Bash shell,
     23 which was the first program Linux ever ran and remains the standard shell
     24 of Linux no matter what Ubuntu says. This doesn't mean including the full
     25 set of Bash 4.x functionality, but does involve {various,features} beyond
     26 posix.</p>
     27 
     28 <p>See the <a href=status.html>status page</a> for the combined list
     29 and progress towards implementing it.</p>
     30 
     31 <ul>
     32 <li><a href=#susv4>POSIX-2008/SUSv4</a></li>
     33 <li><a href=#sigh>Linux "Standard" Base</a></li>
     34 <li><a href=#dev_env>Development Environment</a></li>
     35 <li><a href=#android>Android Toolbox</a></li>
     36 <li><a href=#tizen>Tizen Core</a></li>
     37 <li>Miscelaneous: <a href=#klibc>klibc</a>, <a href=#glibc>glibc</a>,
     38 <a href=#sash>sash</a>, <a href=#sbase>sbase</a>, <a href=#s6>s6</a>,
     39 <a href=#uclinux>uclinux</a>...</li>
     40 </ul>
     41 
     42 <hr />
     43 <a name="standards">
     44 <h2>Use case: standards compliance.</h2>
     45 
     46 <h3><a name=susv4 /><a href="#susv4">POSIX-2008/SUSv4</a></h3>
     47 <p>The best standards are the kind that describe reality, rather than
     48 attempting to impose a new one.  (I.E. a good standard should document, not
     49 legislate.)</p>
     50 
     51 <p>The kind of standards which describe existing reality tend to be approved by
     52 more than one standards body, such ANSI and ISO both approving C.  That's why
     53 the IEEE POSIX committee's 2008 standard, the Single Unix Specification version
     54 4, and the Open Group Base Specification edition 7 are all the same standard
     55 from three sources.</p>
     56 
     57 <p>The <a href="http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/idx/utilities.html">"utilities"
     58 section</a>
     59 of these standards is devoted to the unix command line, and are the best such
     60 standard for our purposes.  (My earlier work on BusyBox was implemented with
     61 regard to SUSv3, an earlier version of this standard.)</p>
     62 
     63 <h3>Problems with the standard</h3>
     64 
     65 <p>Unfortunately, these standards describe a subset of reality, lacking any
     66 mention of commands such as init, login, or mount required to actually boot a
     67 system. It provides ipcrm and ipcs, but not ipcmk, so you can use System V IPC
     68 resources but not create them.</p>
     69 
     70 <p>These standards also contain a large number of commands that are
     71 inappropriate for toybox to implement in its 1.0 release.  (Perhaps some of
     72 these could be reintroduced in later releases, but not now.)</p>
     73 
     74 <p>Starting with the full "utilities" list, we first remove generally obsolete
     75 commands (compess ed ex pr uncompress uccp uustat uux), commands for the
     76 pre-CVS "SCCS" source control system (admin delta get prs rmdel sact sccs unget
     77 val what), fortran support (asa fort77), and batch processing support (batch
     78 qalter qdel qhold qmove qmsg qrerun qrls qselect qsig qstat qsub).</p>
     79 
     80 <p>Some commands are for a compiler toolchain (ar c99 cflow ctags cxref gencat
     81 iconv lex m4 make nm strings strip tsort yacc), which is outside of toybox's
     82 mandate and should be supplied externally.  (Again, some of these may be
     83 revisited later, but not for toybox 1.0.)</p>
     84 
     85 <p>Some commands are part of a command shell, and cannot be implemented as
     86 separate executables (alias bg cd command fc fg getopts hash jobs kill read
     87 type ulimit umask unalias wait).  These may be revisited as part of a built-in
     88 toybox shell, but are not exported into $PATH via symlinks.  (If you fork a
     89 child process and have it "cd" then exit, you've accomplished nothing.
     90 This is not a complete list, a shell also needs exit, if, while, for, case,
     91 export, set, unset, trap, exec... And for bash compatability, function and
     92 source.)</p>
     93 
     94 <blockquote><b>
     95 <span id=shell>
     96 alias bg cd command fc fg getopts hash jobs kill read type ulimit umask
     97 unalias wait exit if while for case export set unset trap exec function source
     98 </span>
     99 <b></blockquote>
    100 
    101 <p>A few other commands are judgement calls, providing command-line
    102 internationalization support (iconv locale localedef), System V inter-process
    103 communication (ipcrm ipcs), and cross-tty communication from the minicomputer
    104 days (talk mesg write).  The "pax" utility was supplanted by tar, "mailx" is
    105 a command line email client, and "lp" submits files for printing to... what
    106 exactly?  (cups?)  The standard defines crontab but not crond.</p>
    107 
    108 <p>Removing all of that leaves the following commands, which toybox should
    109 implement:</p>
    110 
    111 <blockquote><b>
    112 <span id=posix>
    113 at awk basename bc cal cat chgrp chmod chown cksum cmp comm cp
    114 csplit cut date dd df diff dirname du echo env expand expr false file find
    115 fold fuser getconf grep head id join kill link ln logger logname ls man
    116 mkdir mkfifo more mv newgrp nice nl nohup od paste patch pathchk printf ps
    117 pwd renice rm rmdir sed sh sleep sort split stty tabs tail tee test time
    118 touch tput tr true tty uname unexpand uniq unlink uudecode uuencode vi wc
    119 who xargs zcat
    120 </span>
    121 </b></blockquote>
    122 
    123 <h3><a name=sigh /><a href="#sigh">Linux Standard Base</a></h3>
    124 
    125 <p>One attempt to supplement POSIX towards an actual usable system was the
    126 Linux Standard Base. Unfortunately, the quality of this "standard" is
    127 fairly low.</p>
    128 
    129 <p>POSIX allowed its standards process to be compromised
    130 by leaving things out, thus allowing IBM mainframes and Windows NT to drive
    131 a truck through the holes and declare themselves compilant. But it means what
    132 they DID standardize tends to be respected (if sometimes obsolete).</p>
    133 
    134 <p>The Linux Standard Base's failure mode is different, they respond to
    135 pressure by including special-case crap, such as allowing Red Hat to shoehorn
    136 RPM into the standard even though all sorts of distros (Debian, Slackware, Arch,
    137 Gentoo) don't use it and probably never will. This means anything in the LSB is
    138 at best a suggestion: arbitrary portions of this standard are widely
    139 ignored.</p>
    140 
    141 <p>The community perception seems to be that the Linux Standard Base is
    142 the best standard money can buy, I.E. the Linux Foundation is supported by
    143 financial donations form large companies and the LSB represents the interests
    144 of those donors more than technical merit. Debian officially
    145 <a href=http://lwn.net/Articles/658809>washed its hands of LSB</a> when 5.0
    146 came out in 2015, and no longer even pretends to support it (which may affect
    147 Debian derivatives like Ubuntu and Knoppix). Toybox hasn't moved to 5.0 for
    148 similar reasons.</p>
    149 
    150 <p>That said, Posix by itself isn't enough, and this is the next most
    151 comprehensive standards effort for Linux so far.</p>
    152 
    153 <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
    154 utilities</a>:</p>
    155 
    156 <blockquote><b>
    157 ar at awk batch bc chfn chsh col cpio crontab df dmesg du echo egrep 
    158 fgrep file fuser gettext grep groupadd groupdel groupmod groups 
    159 gunzip gzip hostname install install_initd ipcrm ipcs killall lpr ls 
    160 lsb_release m4 md5sum mknod mktemp more mount msgfmt newgrp od passwd 
    161 patch pidof remove_initd renice sed sendmail seq sh shutdown su sync 
    162 tar umount useradd userdel usermod xargs zcat
    163 </b></blockquote>
    164 
    165 <p>Where posix specifies one of those commands, LSB's deltas tend to be
    166 accomodations for broken tool versions which aren't up to date with the
    167 standard 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>
    168 for examples.)</p>
    169 
    170 <p>Since we've already committed to using our own judgement to skip bits of
    171 POSIX, and LSB's "judgement" in this regard is purely bug workarounds to declare
    172 various legacy tool implementations "compliant", this means we're mostly
    173 interested in the set of tools that aren't specified in posix at all.</p>
    174 
    175 <p>Of these, gettext and msgfmt are internationalization, install_initd and
    176 remove_initd aren't present on ubuntu 10.04, lpr is out of scope, and
    177 lsb_release is a distro issue (it's a nice command, but the output of
    178 lsb_release -a is the name and version number of the linux distro you're
    179 running, which toybox doesn't know).</p>
    180 
    181 <p>This leaves:</p>
    182 
    183 <blockquote><b>
    184 <span id=lsb>
    185 chfn chsh dmesg egrep fgrep groupadd groupdel groupmod groups
    186 gunzip gzip hostname install killall md5sum
    187 mknod mktemp mount passwd pidof sendmail seq shutdown
    188 su sync tar umount useradd userdel usermod zcat
    189 </span>
    190 </b></blockquote>
    191 
    192 <hr />
    193 <a name="dev_env">
    194 <h2><a href="#dev_env">Use case: provide a self-hosting development environment</a></h2>
    195 
    196 <p>The following commands are enough to build the Aboriginal Linux development
    197 environment, boot it to a shell prompt, and build Linux From Scratch 6.8 under
    198 it. (Aboriginal Linux currently uses BusyBox for this, thus provides a
    199 drop-in test environment for toybox. We install both implementations side
    200 by side, redirecting the symlinks a command at a time until the older
    201 package is no longer used, and can be removed.)</p>
    202 
    203 <p>This use case includes running init scripts and other shell scripts, running
    204 configure, make, and install in each package, and providing basic command line
    205 facilities such as a text editor. (It does not include a compiler toolchain or
    206 C library, those are outside the scope of this project.)</p>
    207 
    208 <blockquote><b>
    209 <span id=development>
    210 bzcat cat cp dirname echo env patch rmdir sha1sum sleep sort sync
    211 true uname wc which yes zcat
    212 awk basename chmod chown cmp cut date dd diff
    213 egrep expr fdisk find grep gzip head hostname id install ln ls
    214 mkdir mktemp mv od readlink rm sed sh tail tar touch tr uniq
    215 wget whoami xargs chgrp comm gunzip less logname split
    216 tee test time bunzip2 chgrp chroot comm cpio dmesg
    217 dnsdomainname ftpd ftpget ftpput gunzip ifconfig init less
    218 logname losetup mdev mount mountpoint nc pgrep pkill 
    219 pwd route split stat switch_root tac umount vi
    220 resize2fs tune2fs fsck.ext2 genext2fs mke2fs xzcat
    221 </span>
    222 </b></blockquote>
    223 
    224 <p>Note: Aboriginal Linux installs bash 2.05b as #!/bin/sh and its scripts
    225 require bash extensions not present in shells such as busybox ash.
    226 This means that toysh needs to supply several bash extensions _and_ work
    227 when called under the name "bash".</p>
    228 
    229 <p>The <a href=http://landley.net/aboriginal>Aboriginal Linux</a>
    230 self-bootstrapping build still uses the following busybox commands,
    231 not yet supplied by toybox:</p>
    232 
    233 <blockquote><p>
    234 awk bunzip2 bzcat dd diff expr fdisk ftpd ftpget
    235 ftpput gunzip gzip less ping route sh
    236 sha512sum tar test tr unxz vi wget xzcat zcat
    237 </p></blockquote>
    238 
    239 <p>Many of those are in "pending". The remaining "difficult"
    240 commands are vi, awk, and sh.</p>
    241 
    242 <p>Building Linux From Scratch is not the same as building the
    243 <a href=https://source.android.com>Android Open Source Project</a>,
    244 but after toybox 1.0 focus may shift to <a href=http://landley.net/aboriginal/about.html#hairball>modifying the AOSP build</a>
    245 to reduce dependencies. (It's fairly likely we'll have to add at least
    246 a read-only git utility so repo can download the build's source code,
    247 but that's actually <a href=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7n6G2IL6eo>not
    248 that hard</a>. We'll probably also need our own "make" at some point after
    249 1.0.)</p>
    250 
    251 <hr />
    252 <h2><a name=android /><a href="#android">Use case: Replacing Android Toolbox</a></h2>
    253 
    254 <p>Android has a policy against GPL in userspace, so even though BusyBox
    255 predates Android by many years, they couldn't use it. Instead they grabbed
    256 an old version of ash and implemented their own command line utility set
    257 called "toolbox". ash was later replaced by
    258 <a href="https://www.mirbsd.org/mksh.htm">mksh</a>; toolbox is being
    259 replaced by toybox.</p>
    260 
    261 <p>Toolbox doesn't have its own repository, instead it's part of Android's
    262 <a href=https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/core>system/core
    263 git repository</a>.</p>
    264 
    265 <h3>Toolbox commands:</h3>
    266 
    267 <p>According to <a href=https://android.googlesource.com/platform/system/core/+/master/toolbox/Android.mk>
    268 system/core/toolbox/Android.mk</a> the toolbox directory builds the
    269 following commands:</p>
    270 
    271 <blockquote><b>
    272 dd getevent iftop ioctl log
    273 nandread newfs_msdos ps prlimit
    274 sendevent start stop top
    275 </b></blockquote>
    276 
    277 <h3>Other Android core commands</h3>
    278 
    279 <p>Other than the toolbox directory, the currently interesting
    280 subdirectories in the core repository are init,
    281 logcat, logwrapper, reboot, and run-as.</p>
    282 
    283 <ul>
    284 <li><b>init</b> - Android's PID 1</li>
    285 <li><b>logcat</b> - read android log format</li>
    286 <li><b>logwrapper</b> - redirect stdio to android log</li>
    287 <li><b>reboot</b> - Android's reboot(1)</li>
    288 <li><b>run-as</b> - subset of sudo</li>
    289 </ul>
    290 
    291 <p>Almost all of these reinvent an existing wheel with less functionality and a
    292 different user interface. We may want to provide that interface, but
    293 implementing the full commands (fdisk, init, and sudo) come first.</p>
    294 
    295 <h3>Analysis</h3>
    296 
    297 <p>For reference, combining everything listed above, we get:</p>
    298 
    299 <blockquote><b>
    300 dd getevent iftop init ioctl
    301 log logcat logwrapper nandread
    302 newfs_msdos ps prlimit reboot run-as
    303 sendevent start stop top
    304 </b></blockquote>
    305 
    306 <p>We may eventually implement all of that, but for toybox 1.0 we need to
    307 focus a bit. For our first pass, let's grab just logcat and logwrapper
    308 from the "core" commands (since the rest have some full/standard version
    309 providing that functionality, which we can implement a shim interface
    310 for later).</p>
    311 
    312 <p>This means toybox should implement (or finish implementing):</p>
    313 <blockquote><b>
    314 <span id=toolbox>
    315 dd getevent iftop ioctl log logcat logwrapper
    316 nandread newfs_msdos ps prlimit sendevent
    317 start stop top
    318 </span>
    319 </b></blockquote>
    320 
    321 <p>Update: Android.mk is currently building the following toybox files out
    322 of "pending". These should be a priority for cleanup:</p>
    323 
    324 <blockquote><b>
    325 dd expr lsof more netstat route tar tr traceroute
    326 </b></blockquote>
    327 
    328 <hr />
    329 <h2><a name=tizen /><a href="#tizen">Use case: Tizen Core</a></h2>
    330 
    331 <p>The Tizen project has expressed a desire to eliminate GPLv3 software
    332 from its core system, and is installing toybox as
    333 <a href=https://wiki.tizen.org/wiki/Toybox>part of this process</a>.</p>
    334 
    335 <p>They have a fairly long list of new commands they'd like to see in toybox:</p>
    336 
    337 <blockquote><b>
    338 <span id=tizen>
    339 arch base64 users dir vdir unexpand shred join csplit
    340 hostid nproc runcon sha224sum sha256sum sha384sum sha512sum sha3sum mkfs.vfat fsck.vfat 
    341 dosfslabel uname stdbuf pinky diff3 sdiff zcmp zdiff zegrep zfgrep zless zmore
    342 </span>
    343 </b></blockquote>
    344 
    345 <p>In addition, they'd like to use several commands currently in pending:</p>
    346 
    347 <blockquote><b>
    348 <span id=tizen>
    349 tar diff printf wget rsync fdisk vi less tr test stty fold expr dd
    350 </span>
    351 </b></blockquote>
    352 
    353 <p>Also, tizen uses a different Linux Security Module called SMACK, so
    354 many of the SELinux options ala ls -Z need smack alternatives in an
    355 if/else setup.</p>
    356 
    357 <hr /><a name=klibc />
    358 <h2>klibc:</h2>
    359 
    360 <p>Long ago some kernel developers came up with a project called
    361 <a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klibc>klibc</a>.
    362 After a decade of development it still has no web page or HOWTO,
    363 and nobody's quite sure if the license is BSD or GPL. It inexplicably
    364 <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
    365 replacement.</p>
    366 
    367 <p>In addition to a C library even less capable than bionic (obsoleted by
    368 musl), klibc builds a random assortment of executables to run init scripts
    369 with. There's no multiplexer command, these are individual executables:</p>
    370 
    371 <blockquote><p><b>
    372 cat chroot cpio dd dmesg false fixdep fstype gunzip gzip halt ipconfig kill
    373 kinit ln losetup ls minips mkdir mkfifo mknodes
    374 mksyntax mount mv nfsmount nuke pivot_root poweroff readlink reboot resume
    375 run-init sh sha1hash sleep sync true umount uname zcat
    376 </b></p></blockquote>
    377 
    378 <p>To get that list, build klibc according to the instructions (I
    379 <a href=http://landley.net/notes-2013.html#23-01-2013>looked at</a> version
    380 2.0.2 and did cd klibc-*; ln -s /output/of/kernel/make/headers_install
    381 linux; make) then <b>echo $(for i in $(find . -type f); do file $i | grep -q
    382 executable && basename $i; done | grep -v '[.]g$' | sort -u)</b> to find
    383 executables, then eliminate the *.so files and *.shared duplicates.</p>
    384 
    385 <p>Some of those binaries are build-time tools that don't get installed,
    386 which removes mknodes, mksyntax, sha1hash, and fixdep from the list.
    387 (And sha1hash is just an unpolished sha1sum anyway.)</p>
    388 
    389 <p>The run-init command is more commonly called switch_root, nuke is just
    390 "rm -rf -- $@", and minips is more commonly called "ps". I'm not doing aliases
    391 for the oddball names.</p>
    392 
    393 <p>Yet more stale forks of dash and gzip sucked in here (see "dubious
    394 license terms" above), adding nothing to the other projects we've looked at.
    395 But we still need sh, gunzip, gzip, and zcat to replace this package.</p>
    396 
    397 <p>At the time I did the initial analysis toybox already had cat, chroot, dmesg, false,
    398 kill, ln, losetup, ls, mkdir, mkfifo, readlink, rm, switch_root, sleep, sync,
    399 true, and uname.</p>
    400 
    401 <p>The low hanging fruit is cpio, dd, ps, mv, and pivot_root.</p>
    402 
    403 <p>The "kinit" command is another gratuitous rename, it's init running as PID 1.
    404 The halt, poweroff, and reboot commands work with it.</p>
    405 
    406 <p>I've got mount and umount queued up already, fstype and nfsmount go with
    407 those. (And probably smbmount and p9mount, but this hasn't got one. Those
    408 are all about querying for login credentials, probably workable into the
    409 base mount command.)</p>
    410 
    411 <p>The ipconfig command here has a built in dhcp client, so it's ifconfig
    412 and dhcpcd and maybe some other stuff.</p>
    413 
    414 <p>The resume command is... weird. It finds a swap partition and reads data
    415 from it into a /proc file, something the kernel is capable of doing itself.
    416 (Even though the klibc author
    417 <a href=http://www.zytor.com/pipermail/klibc/2006-June/001748.html>attempted
    418 to remove</a> that capability from the kernel, current kernel/power/hibernate.c
    419 still parses "resume=" on the command line). And yet various distros seem to
    420 make use of klibc for this.
    421 Given the history of swsusp/hibernate (and 
    422 <a href=http://lwn.net/Articles/333007>TuxOnIce</a>
    423 and <a href=http://lwn.net/Articles/242107>kexec jump</a>) I've lost track
    424 of the current state of the art here. Ah, Documentation/power/userland-swsusp.txt
    425 has the API docs, and <a href=http://suspend.sf.net>here's a better
    426 tool</a>...</p>
    427 
    428 <p>So the list of things actually in klibc are:</p>
    429 
    430 <blockquote><b>
    431 <span id=klibc_cmd>
    432 cat chroot dmesg false kill ln losetup ls mkdir mkfifo readlink rm switch_root
    433 sleep sync true uname
    434 
    435 cpio dd ps mv pivot_root
    436 mount nfsmount fstype umount
    437 sh gunzip gzip zcat
    438 kinit halt poweroff reboot
    439 ipconfig
    440 resume
    441 </span>
    442 </b></blockquote>
    443 
    444 <hr />
    445 <a name=glibc />
    446 <h2>glibc</h2>
    447 
    448 <p>Rather a lot of command line utilities come bundled with glibc:</p>
    449 
    450 <blockquote><b>
    451 catchsegv getconf getent iconv iconvconfig ldconfig ldd locale localedef
    452 mtrace nscd rpcent rpcinfo tzselect zdump zic
    453 </b></blockquote>
    454 
    455 <p>Of those, musl libc only implements ldd.</p>
    456 
    457 <p>catchsegv is a rudimentary debugger, probably out of scope for toybox.</p>
    458 
    459 <p>iconv has been <a href="#susv4">previously discussed</a>.</p>
    460 
    461 <p>iconvconfig is only relevant if iconv is user-configurable; musl uses a
    462 non-configurable iconv.</p>
    463 
    464 <p>getconf is a posix utility which displays several variables from 
    465 unistd.h; it probably belongs in the development toolchain.</p>
    466 
    467 <p>getent handles retrieving entries from passwd-style databases
    468 (in a rather lame way) and is trivially replacable by grep.</p>
    469 
    470 <p>locale was discussed under <a href=#susv4>posix</a>.
    471 localedef compiles locale definitions, which musl currently does not use.</p>
    472 
    473 <p>mtrace is a perl script to use the malloc debugging that glibc has built-in;
    474 this is not relevant for musl, and would necessarily vary with libc. </p>
    475 
    476 <p>nscd is a name service caching daemon, which is not yet relevant for musl.
    477 rpcinfo and rpcent are related to rpc, which musl does not include.</p>
    478 
    479 <p>The remaining commands involve glibc's bundled timezone database,
    480 which seems to be derived from the <a href=http://www.iana.org/time-zones>IANA
    481 timezone database</a>. Unless we want to maintain our own fork of the
    482 standards body's database like glibc does, these are of no interest,
    483 but for completeness:</p>
    484 
    485 <p>tzselect outputs a TZ variable correponding to user input. 
    486 The documentation does not indicate how to use it in a script, but it seems
    487 that Debian may have done so.
    488 zdump prints current time in each of several timezones, optionally
    489 outputting a great deal of extra information about each timezone.
    490 zic converts a description of a timezone to a file in tz format.</p>
    491 
    492 <p>None of glibc's bundled commands are currently of interest to toybox.</p>
    493 
    494 </b></blockquote>
    495 
    496 <hr />
    497 <a name=sash />
    498 <h2>Stand-Alone Shell</h2>
    499 
    500 <p>Wikipedia has <a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stand-alone_shell>a good
    501 summary of sash</a>, with links. The original Stand-Alone Shell project reached
    502 a stopping point, and then <a href=http://www.baiti.net/sash>"sash plus
    503 patches"</a> extended it a bit further. The result is a megabyte executable
    504 that provides 40 commands.</p>
    505 
    506 <p>Sash is a shell with built-in commands. It doesn't have a multiplexer
    507 command, meaning "sash ls -l" doesn't work (you have to go "sash -c 'ls -l'").
    508 </p>
    509 
    510 <p>The list of commands can be obtained via building it and doing
    511 "echo help | ./sash | awk '{print $1}' | sed 's/^-//' | xargs echo", which
    512 gives us:</p>
    513 
    514 <blockquote><b>
    515 alias aliasall ar cd chattr chgrp chmod chown cmp cp chroot dd echo ed exec
    516 exit file find grep gunzip gzip help kill losetup losetup ln ls lsattr mkdir
    517 mknod more mount mv pivot_root printenv prompt pwd quit rm rmdir setenv source
    518 sum sync tar touch umask umount unalias where
    519 </b></blockquote>
    520 
    521 <p>Plus sh because it's a shell. A dozen or so commands can only sanely be
    522 implemented as shell builtins (alias aliasall cd exec exit prompt quit setenv
    523 source umask unalias), where is an alias for which, and at triage time toybox
    524 already has chgrp, chmod, chown, cmp, cp, chroot, echo, help, kill, losetup,
    525 ln, ls, mkdir, mknod, printenv, pwd, rm, rmdir, sync, and touch.</p>
    526 
    527 <p>This leaves:</p>
    528 
    529 <blockquote><b>
    530 <span id=sash_cmd>
    531 ar chattr dd ed file find grep gunzip gzip lsattr more mount mv pivot_root
    532 sh sum tar umount
    533 </span>
    534 </b></blockquote>
    535 
    536 <p>(For once, this project doesn't include a fork of gzip, instead
    537 it sucks in -lz from the host.)</p>
    538 
    539 <hr />
    540 <a name=sbase />
    541 <h2>sbase:</h2>
    542 
    543 <p>It's <a href=http://git.suckless.org/sbase>on suckless</a> in
    544 <a href=http://git.suckless.org/ubase>two parts</a>. As of November 2015 it's
    545 implemented the following (renaming "cron" to "crond" for
    546 consistency, and yanking "sponge", "mesg", "pagesize", "respawn", and
    547 "vtallow"):</p>
    548 
    549 <blockquote><p>
    550 <span id=sbase_cmd>
    551 basename cal cat chgrp chmod chown chroot cksum cmp cols comm cp crond cut date
    552 dirname du echo env expand expr false find flock fold getconf grep head
    553 hostname join kill link ln logger logname ls md5sum mkdir mkfifo mktemp mv
    554 nice nl nohup od paste printenv printf pwd readlink renice rm rmdir sed seq
    555 setsid sha1sum sha256sum sha512sum sleep sort split strings sync tail
    556 tar tee test tftp time touch tr true tty uname unexpand uniq unlink uudecode
    557 uuencode wc which xargs yes
    558 </span>
    559 </p></blockquote>
    560 
    561 <p>and<p>
    562 
    563 <blockquote><p>
    564 <span id=sbase_cmd>
    565 chvt clear dd df dmesg eject fallocate free id login mknod mountpoint
    566 passwd pidof ps stat su truncate unshare uptime watch
    567 who
    568 </span>
    569 </p></blockquote>
    570 
    571 <hr />
    572 <a name=s6 />
    573 <h2>s6</h2>
    574 
    575 <p>The website <a href=http://skarnet.org/software/>skarnet</a> has a bunch
    576 of small utilities as part of something called "s6". This includes the
    577 <a href=http://skarnet.org/software/s6-portable-utils>s6-portabile-utils</a>
    578 and the <a href=http://skarnet.org/software/s6-linux-utils>s6-linux-utils</a>.
    579 </p>
    580 
    581 <p>Both packages rely on multiple bespoke external libraries without which
    582 they can't compile. The source is completely uncommented and doesn't wrap at
    583 80 characters. Doing a find for *.c files brings up the following commands:</p>
    584 
    585 <blockquote><b>
    586 <span id=s6>
    587 basename cat chmod chown chroot clock cut devd dirname echo env expr false
    588 format-filter freeramdisk grep halt head hiercopy hostname linkname ln
    589 logwatch ls maximumtime memoryhog mkdir mkfifo mount nice nuke pause
    590 pivotchroot poweroff printenv quote quote-filter reboot rename rmrf sleep
    591 sort swapoff swapon sync tail test touch true umount uniquename unquote
    592 unquote-filter update-symlinks
    593 </span>
    594 </b></blockquote>
    595 
    596 <p>Triage: memoryhog isn't even listed on the website nor does it have
    597 a documentation file, clock seems like a subset
    598 of date, devd is some sort of netlink wrapper that spawns its command line
    599 every time it gets a message (maybe this is meant to implement part of
    600 udev/mdev?), format-filter is sort of awk's '{print $2}' function split out
    601 into its own command, hiercopy a subset of "cp -r", maximumtime is something
    602 I implemented as a shell script (more/timeout.sh in Aboriginal Linux),
    603 nuke isn't the same as klibc (this one's "kill SIG -1" only with hardwared
    604 SIG options), pause is a program that literally waits to be killed (I
    605 generally sleep 999999999 which is a little over 30 years),
    606 pivotchroot is a subset of switch_root, rmrf is rm -rf...</p>
    607 
    608 <p>I see "nuke" resurface, and if "rmrf" wasn't also here I might think
    609 klibc had a point.</b>
    610 
    611 <blockquote>
    612 basename cat chmod chown chroot cut dirname echo env expr false
    613 freeramdisk grep halt head hostname linkname ln
    614 logwatch ls mkdir mkfifo mount nice
    615 pivotchroot poweroff printenv quote quote-filter reboot rename sleep
    616 sort swapoff swapon sync tail test touch true umount uniquename unquote
    617 unquote-filter update-symlinks
    618 </blockquote>
    619 
    620 
    621 <hr />
    622 <a name=nash />
    623 <h2>nash:</h2>
    624 
    625 <p>Red Hat's nash was part of its "mkinitrd" package, replacement for a shell
    626 and utilities on the boot floppy back in the 1990's (the same general idea
    627 as BusyBox, developed independently). Red Hat discontinued nash development
    628 in 2010, replacing it with dracut (which collects together existing packages,
    629 including busybox).</p>
    630 
    631 <p>I couldn't figure out how to beat source code out of
    632 <a href=http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/git/mkinitrd>Fedora's current git</a>
    633 repository. The last release version that used it was Fedora Core 12
    634 which 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>
    635 that can be unwound with "rpm2cpio mkinitrd.src.rpm | cpio -i -d -H newc
    636 --no-absolute-filenames" and in there is a mkinitrd-6.0.93.tar.bz2 which
    637 has the source.</p>
    638 
    639 <p>In addition to being a bit like a command shell, the nash man page lists the
    640 following commands:</p>
    641 
    642 <blockquote><p>
    643 access echo find losetup mkdevices mkdir mknod mkdmnod mkrootdev mount
    644 pivot_root readlink raidautorun setquiet showlabels sleep switchroot umount
    645 </p></blockquote>
    646 
    647 <p>Oddly, the only occurrence of the string pivot_root in the nash source code
    648 is in the man page, the command isn't there. (It seems to have been removed
    649 when the underscoreless switchroot went in.)</p>
    650 
    651 <p>A more complete list seems to be the handlers[] array in nash.c:</p>
    652 
    653 <blockquote><p>
    654 access buildEnv cat cond cp daemonize dm echo exec exit find kernelopt
    655 loadDrivers loadpolicy mkchardevs mkblktab mkblkdevs mkdir mkdmnod mknod
    656 mkrootdev mount netname network null plymouth hotplug killplug losetup
    657 ln ls raidautorun readlink resume resolveDevice rmparts setDeviceEnv
    658 setquiet setuproot showelfinterp showlabels sleep stabilized status switchroot
    659 umount waitdev
    660 </p></blockquote>
    661 
    662 <p>This list is nuts: "plymouth" is an alias for "null" which is basically
    663 "true" (which thie above list doesn't have). Things like buildEnv and
    664 loadDrivers are bespoke Red Hat behavior that might as well be hardwired in
    665 to nash's main() without being called.</p>
    666 
    667 <p>Instead of eliminating items
    668 from the list with an explanation for each, I'm just going to cherry pick
    669 a few: the device mapper (dm, raidautorun) is probably interesting,
    670 hotplug (may be obsolete due to kernel changes that now load firmware
    671 directly), and another "resume" ala klibc.</p>
    672 
    673 <p>But mostly: I don't care about this one. And neither does Red Hat anymore.</p>
    674 
    675 <p>Verdict: ignore</p>
    676 
    677 <hr />
    678 <a name=beastiebox />
    679 <h2>Beastiebox</h2>
    680 
    681 <p>Back in 2008, the BSD guys vented some busybox-envy
    682 <a href=http://beastiebox.sourceforge.net>on sourceforge</a>. Then stopped.
    683 Their repository is still in CVS, hasn't been touched in years, it's a giant
    684 hairball of existing code sucked together. (The web page says the author
    685 is aware of crunchgen, but decided to do this by hand anyway. This is not
    686 a collection of new code, it's a katamari of existing code rolled up in a
    687 ball.)</p>
    688 
    689 <p>Combining the set of commands listed on the web page with the set of
    690 man pages in the source gives us:</P>
    691 
    692 <blockquote><p>
    693 [ cat chmod cp csh date df disklabel dmesg echo ex fdisk fsck fsck_ffs getty
    694 halt hostname ifconfig init kill less lesskey ln login ls lv mksh more mount
    695 mount_ffs mv pfctl ping poweroff ps reboot rm route sed sh stty sysctl tar test
    696 traceroute umount vi wiconfig
    697 </p></blockquote>
    698 
    699 <p>Apparently lv is the missing link between ed and vi, copyright 1982-1997 (do
    700 not want), ex is another obsolete vi mode, lesskey is "used to
    701 specify a set of key bindings to be used with less", and csh is a shell they
    702 sucked in (even though they have mksh?), [ is an alias for test. Several more bsd-isms that don't have Linux
    703 equivalents (even in the ubuntu "install this package" search) are
    704 disklabel, fsck_ffs, mount_ffs, and pfctl. And wiconfig is a
    705 wavelan interface network card driver utility. Subtracting all that and the
    706 commands toybox already implements at triage time, we get:</p>
    707 
    708 <blockquote><p>
    709 <span id=beastiebox_cmd>
    710 fdisk fsck getty halt ifconfig init kill less more mount mv ping poweroff
    711 ps reboot route sed sh stty sysctl tar test traceroute umount vi
    712 </span>
    713 </p></blockquote>
    714 
    715 <p>Not a hugely interesting list, but eh.</p>
    716 
    717 <p>Verdict: ignore</p>
    718 
    719 <hr />
    720 <a name=BsdBox />
    721 <h2>BsdBox</h2>
    722 
    723 <p>Somebody decided to do a <a href=https://wiki.freebsd.org/AdrianChadd/BsdBox>multicall binary for freebsd</a>.</p>
    724 
    725 <p>They based it on crunchgen, a tool that glues existing programs together
    726 into an archive and uses the name to execute the right one. It has no
    727 simplification or code sharing benefits whatsoever, it's basically an
    728 archiver that produces executables.</p>
    729 
    730 <p>That's about where I stopped reading.</p>
    731 
    732 <p>Verdict: ignore.</p>
    733 
    734 <hr />
    735 <a name=slowaris />
    736 <h2>OpenSolaris Busybox</h2>
    737 
    738 <p>Somebody <a href=http://hub.opensolaris.org/bin/view/Project+busybox/>wrote
    739 a wiki page</a> saying that Busybox for OpenSolaris would be a good idea.</p>
    740 
    741 <p>The corresponding "files" tab is an auto-generated stub. The project never
    742 even got as far as suggesting commands to include before Oracle discontinued
    743 OpenSolaris.</p>
    744 
    745 <p>Verdict: ignore.</p>
    746 
    747 <hr />
    748 <a name=uclinux />
    749 <h2>uClinux</h2>
    750 
    751 <p>Long ago a hardware developer named Jeff Dionne put together a
    752 nommu Linux distribution, which involved rewriting a lot of command line
    753 utilities that relied on <a href=http://nommu.org/memory-faq.txt>features
    754 unavailable on nommu</a> hardware.</p>
    755 
    756 <p>In 2003 Jeff moved to Japan and handed
    757 the project off to people who allowed it to roll to a stop. The website
    758 turned into a mess of 404 links, the navigation indexes stopped being
    759 updated over a decade ago, and the project's CVS repository suffered a
    760 hard drive failure for which there were no backups. The project continued
    761 to put out "releases" through 2014 (you have to scroll down in the "news"
    762 section to find them, the "HTTP download" section in the nav bar on the
    763 left hasn't been updated in over a decade), which were hand-updated tarball
    764 snapshots mostly consisting of software from the 1990's. For example the
    765 2014 release still contained ipfwadm, the package which predated ipchains,
    766 which predated iptables, which is in the process of being replaced by
    767 nftables.</p>
    768 
    769 <p>Nevertheless, people still try to use this because (at least until the
    770 launch of <a href=http://nommu.org>nommu.org</a>) the project was viewed
    771 as the place to discuss, develop, and learn about nommu Linux.
    772 The role of uclinux.org as an educational resource kept people coming
    773 to it long after it had collapsed as a Linux distro.</p>
    774 
    775 <p>Starting around 0.6.0 toybox began to address nommu support with the goal
    776 of putting uClinux out of its misery.</p>
    777 
    778 <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
    779 subdirectories under "user".</p>
    780 
    781 <h3>Taking out the trash</h3>
    782 
    783 <p>A bunch of packages (<b>inotify-tools, input-event-demon, ipsec-tools, netifd,
    784 keepalived, mobile-broadband-provider-info, nuttp, readline, snort,
    785 snort-barnyard, socat, sqlite, sysklogd, sysstat, tcl, ubus, uci, udev,
    786 unionfs, uqmi, usb_modeswitch, usbutils, util-linux</b>)
    787 are hard to evaluate because
    788 uclinux has directories for them, but their source isn't actually in the
    789 uclinux tree. In some of these the makefiles download a git repo during
    790 the build, so I'm assuming you can build the external package if you really
    791 care. (Even when I know what these packages do, I'm skipping them
    792 because uclinux doesn't actually contain them, and any given snapshot
    793 of the build system will bitrot as external web links change over time.)</p>
    794 
    795 <p>Other packages are orphaned, meaning they're not mentioned from any Kconfig
    796 or Makefiles outside of their directory, so uclinux can't actually build
    797 them: <b>mbus</b> is an orphaned i2c test program expecting to run in some sort
    798 of hardwired hardware context, <b>mkeccbin</b> is an orphaned "ECC annotated
    799 binary file" generator (meaning it's half of a flash writer),
    800 <b>wsc_upnp</b> is a "Ralink WPS" driver (some sort of stale wifi chip)...</p>
    801 
    802 <p>The majority of the remaining packages are probably not of interest to
    803 toybox due to being so obsolete or special purpose they may not actually be
    804 of interest to anybody anymore. (This list also includes a lot of
    805 special-purpose network back-end stuff that's hard for anybody but
    806 datacenter admins to evaluate the current relevance of.)</p>
    807 
    808 <blockquote><b><p>
    809 arj asterisk boottools bpalogin br2684ctl camserv can4linux cgi_generic
    810 cgihtml clamav clamsmtp conntrack-tools cramfs crypto-tools cxxtest
    811 ddns3-client de2ts-cal debug demo diald discard dnsmasq dnsmasq2
    812 ethattach expat-examples ez-ipupdate fakeidentd
    813 fconfig ferret flatfs flthdr freeradius freeswan frob-led frox fswcert
    814 game gettyd gnugk haserl horch
    815 hostap hping httptunnel ifattach ipchains
    816 ipfwadm ipmasqadm ipportfw ipredir ipset iso_client
    817 jamvm jffs-tools jpegview jquery-ui kendin-config kismet klaxon kmod
    818 l2tpd lcd ledcmd ledcon lha lilo lirc lissa load loattach
    819 lpr lrpstat lrzsz mail mbus mgetty microwin ModemManager msntp musicbox
    820 nooom null openswan openvpn palmbot pam_* pcmcia-cs playrt plugdaemon pop3proxy
    821 potrace qspitest quagga radauth
    822 ramimage readprofile rdate readprofile routed rrdtool rtc-ds1302
    823 sendip ser sethdlc setmac setserial sgutool sigs siproxd slattach
    824 smtpclient snmpd net-snmp snortrules speedtouch squashfs scep sslwrap stp
    825 stunnel tcpblast tcpdump tcpwrappers threaddemos tinylogin tinyproxy
    826 tpt tripwire unrar unzoo version vpnled w3cam xl2tpd zebra
    827 </p></b></blockquote>
    828     
    829 <p>This stuff is all over the place: arj, lha, rar, and zoo are DOS archivers,
    830 ethattach describes itself as just "a network tool",
    831 mail is a textmode smtp mailer literally described as "Some kind of mail
    832 proggy" in uclinux's kconfig (as opposed to clamsmtp and smtpclient and
    833 so on), this gettyd isn't a generic version but specifically a
    834 hardwired ppp dialin utility, mgetty isn't a generic version but is combined
    835 with "sendfax", hostap is an intersil prism driver, wlan-ng is also an
    836 intersil prism dirver, null is a program to intentionally dereference a
    837 null pointer (in case you needed one), iso_client is a
    838 "Demo Application for the USB Device Driver", kendin-config is
    839 "for configuring the Micrel Kendin KS8995M over QSPI", speedtouch configures
    840 a specific brand of asdl modem, portmap is part of Anfs,
    841 ferret, linux-igd, and miniupnp are all upnp packages,
    842 lanbypass "can be used to control the LAN
    843 bypass switches on the Advantech x86 based hardware platforms", lcd is
    844 "test of lcddma device driver" (an out-of-tree Coldfire driver apparently
    845 lost to history, the uclinux linux-2.4.x directory has a config symbol for
    846 it, but nothing in the code actually _uses_ it...), qspitest is another
    847 coldfire thing, mii-tool-fec is
    848 "strictly for the FEC Ethernet driver as implemented (and modified) for
    849 the uCdimm5272", rtc-ds1302 and rtc-m41t11 are usermode drivers for specific
    850 clock chips, stunnel is basically "openssl s_client -quiet -connect",
    851 potrace is a bitmap to vector graphic converter, radauth performs command line
    852 authentication against a radius server,
    853 clamav, klaxon, ferret, l7-protocols, and nessus are very old network security
    854 software (it's got a stale snapshot of nmap too), xl2tpd is a PPP over UDP
    855 tunnel (rfc 2661), zebra is the package quagga replaced,
    856 lilo is the x86-only bootloader that predated grub (and recently discontinued
    857 development), lissa is a "framebuffer graphics demo" from
    858 1998, the squashfs package here is the out of tree patches for 2.4 kernels
    859 and such before the filesystem was merged upstream (as opposed to the
    860 squashfs-new package which is a snapshot of the userspace tool from 2011),
    861 load is basically "dd file /dev/spi", version is basically "cat /proc/version",
    862 microwin is a port of the WinCE graphics API to Linux, scep is a 2003
    863 implementation of an IETF draft abandoned in 2010, tpt depends on
    864 Andrew Morton's 15 year old unmerged "timepegs" kernel patch using the pentium
    865 cycle counter, vpnled controls a light that reboots systems (what?),
    866 w3cam is a video4linux 1.0 client (v4l2 showed up during 2.5 and support for
    867 the old v4l1 was removed in 2.6.38 back in 2011), busybox ate tinylogin
    868 over a decade ago, lrpstat is a java network monitor
    869 from 2001, lrzsz is zmodem/ymodem/zmodem, msntp and stp implement rfc2030
    870 meaning it overflows in 2036 (the package was last updated in 2000), rdate
    871 is rfc 868 meaning it also overflows in 2036 (which is why ntp was invented
    872 a few decades back), reiserfsprogs development stopped abruptly after
    873 Hans Reiser was convicted of murdering his wife Nina (denying it on the
    874 stand and then leading them to the body as part of his plea bargain during
    875 sentencing)...
    876 </p>
    877 
    878 <p>Seriously, there's a lot of crap in there. It's hard to analyze most
    879 of it far enough to prove it _doesn't_ do anything.</p>
    880 
    881 <h3>Non-toybox programs</h3>
    882 
    883 <p>The following software may actually still do something intelligible
    884 (although the package versions tend to be years out of date), but
    885 it's not a direction toybox has chosen to go in.</p>
    886 
    887 <p>There are several programming languages (<b>bash, lua, jamvm, tinytcl,
    888 perl, python</b>) in there. Maybe someone somewhere wants a 2008 release of a
    889 java virtual machine tested to work on nommu systems (jamvm), but it's out
    890 of scope for toybox.</p>
    891 
    892 <p>A bunch of benchmark programs: <b>cpu, dhrystone, mathtest, nbench, netperf,
    893 netpipe, and whetstone</b>.</p>
    894 
    895 <p>A bunch of web servers: <b>appWeb, boa, fnord (via tcpserver), goahead, httpd,
    896 mini_httpd, and thttpd</b>.</p>
    897 
    898 <p>A bunch of shells: <b>msh</b> is a clever (I.E. obfuscated) little shell,
    899 <b>nwsh</b> is "new shell" (that's what it called itself in 1999 anyway),
    900 <b>sash</b> is another shell with a bunch of builtins (ls, ps, df, cp, date, reboot,
    901 and shutdown, this roadmap analyzes it <a href="#sash">elsewhere</a>),
    902 <b>sh</b> is a very old minix shell fork, and <b>tcsh</b> is also a shell.</p>
    903 
    904 <p>Also in this category, we have:</p>
    905 
    906 <blockquote><b><p>
    907 dropbear jffs-tools jpegview kexec-tools bind ctorrent
    908 iperf iproute2 ip-sentinel iptables kexec
    909 nmap oggplay openssl oprofile p7zip pppd pptp play vplay
    910 hdparm mp3play at clock
    911 mtd-utils mysql logrotate brcfg bridge-utils flashw
    912 ebtables etherwake ethtool expect gdb gdbserver hostapd
    913 lm_sensors load netflash netstat-nat
    914 radvd recover rootloader resolveip rp-pppoe
    915 rsyslog rsyslogd samba smbmount squashfs-new squid ssh strace tip
    916 uboot-envtools ulogd usbhubctrl vconfig vixie-cron watchdogd
    917 wireless_tools wpa_supplicant
    918 </p></b></blockquote>
    919 
    920 <p>An awful lot of those are borderline: play and vplay are wav file
    921 audio players, there's oprofile _and_ readprofile (which just reads kernel
    922 profiling data from /proc/profile),
    923 radvd is a "routr advertisement daemon" (ipv6 stateless autoconf),
    924 ctorrent is a bittorent client, 
    925 lm_sensors is hardware (heat?) monitoring,
    926 resolveip is dig only less so,
    927 rp-pppoe is ppp over ethernet,
    928 ebtables is an ethernet version of iptables (for bridging),
    929 their dropbear is from 2012, and that ssh version is from 2011
    930 (which means it's about nine months too _old_ to have the heartbleed bug).
    931 There's both ulogd and ulogd2 (no idea why), and pppd is version 2.4 but
    932 there's a ppd-2.3 directory also.</p>
    933 
    934 <p>Lots of flash stuff:
    935 flashw is a flash writer, load is an spi flash loader, netflash writes
    936 to flash via tftp,
    937 recover is also a reflash daemon intended to come up when the system can't boot,
    938 rootloader seems to be another reflash daemon but without dhcp.</p>
    939 
    940 <h3>Already in roadmap</h3>
    941 
    942 <p>The following packages contain commands already in the toybox roadmap:</p>
    943 
    944 <blockquote><b><p>
    945 agetty cal cksum cron dhcpcd dhcpcd-new dhcpd dhcp-isc dosfstools e2fsprogs
    946 elvis-tiny levee fdisk fileutils ftp ftpd grep hd hwclock inetd init ntp
    947 iputils login module-init-tools netcat shutils ntpdate lspci ping procps
    948 proftpd rsync shadow shutils stty sysutils telnet telnetd tftp tftpd traceroute
    949 unzip wget mawk net-tools
    950 </p></b></blockquote>
    951 
    952 <p>There are some duplicates in there, levee is a tiny vi implementation
    953 like elvis-tiny, ntp and ntpdate overlap, etc.</p>
    954 
    955 <p>Verdict: We don't really need to do a whole lot special for nommu
    956 systems, just get the existing toybox roadmap working on nommu and
    957 we're good. The uClinux project can rest in peace.</p>
    958 
    959 <hr />
    960 <h2>Requests:</h2>
    961 
    962 <p>The following additional commands have been requested (and often submitted)
    963 by various users. I _really_ need to clean up this section.</p>
    964 
    965 <p>Also:</p>
    966 <blockquote><b>
    967 <span id=request>
    968 dig freeramdisk getty halt hexdump hwclock klogd modprobe ping ping6 pivot_root
    969 poweroff readahead rev sfdisk sudo syslogd taskset telnet telnetd tracepath
    970 traceroute unzip usleep vconfig zip free login modinfo unshare netcat help w
    971 ntpd iwconfig iwlist rdate
    972 dos2unix unix2dos catv clear
    973 pmap realpath setsid timeout truncate
    974 mkswap swapon swapoff
    975 count oneit fstype
    976 acpi blkid eject pwdx
    977 sulogin rfkill bootchartd
    978 arp makedevs sysctl killall5 crond crontab deluser last mkpasswd watch
    979 blockdev rpm2cpio arping brctl dumpleases fsck
    980 tcpsvd tftpd
    981 factor fallocate fsfreeze inotifyd lspci nbd-client partprobe strings
    982 base64 mix
    983 reset hexedit nsenter shred
    984 fsync insmod ionice lsmod lsusb rmmod vmstat xxd iotop
    985 lsof ionice compress dhcp dhcpd addgroup delgroup host iconv ip
    986 ipcrm ipcs netstat openvt
    987 deallocvt iorenice
    988 udpsvd adduser
    989 </span>
    990 </b></blockquote>
    991 
    992 <!-- #include "footer.html" -->
    993 
    994