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author | Rob Landley | 2006-01-22 01:44:29 +0000 |
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committer | Rob Landley | 2006-01-22 01:44:29 +0000 |
commit | aaffef4d338f6f3d554eb0428e572ebbd5e00476 (patch) | |
tree | 2b9261eea1e506036056b35da004b4f4b9bffee2 /docs/busybox.net | |
parent | f9d40d6815aedda4b950ee642c6b0ca139481e91 (diff) | |
download | busybox-aaffef4d338f6f3d554eb0428e572ebbd5e00476.zip busybox-aaffef4d338f6f3d554eb0428e572ebbd5e00476.tar.gz |
Start of developer documentation for busybox.
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-rw-r--r-- | docs/busybox.net/programming.html | 179 |
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diff --git a/docs/busybox.net/programming.html b/docs/busybox.net/programming.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e44f291 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/busybox.net/programming.html @@ -0,0 +1,179 @@ +<!--#include file="header.html" --> + +<h2>Rob's notes on programming busybox.</h2> + +<ul> + <li><a href="#goals">What are the goals of busybox?</a></li> + <li><a href="#design">What is the design of busybox?</a></li> + <li><a href="#source">How is the source code organized?</a></li> + <ul> + <li><a href="#source_applets">The applet directories.</a></li> + <li><a href="#source_libbb">The busybox shared library (libbb)</a></li> + </ul> + <li><a href="#adding">Adding an applet to busybox</a></li> + <li><a href="#standards">What standards does busybox adhere to?</a></li> +</ul> + +<h2><b><a name="goals" />What are the goals of busybox?</b></h2> + +<p>Busybox aims to be the smallest and simplest correct implementation of the +standard Linux command line tools. First and foremost, this means the +smallest executable size we can manage. We also want to have the simplest +and cleanest implementation we can manage, be <a href="#standards">standards +compliant</a>, minimize run-time memory usage (heap and stack), run fast, and +take over the world.</p> + +<h2><b><a name="design" />What is the design of busybox?</b></h2> + +<p>Busybox is like a swiss army knife: one thing with many functions. +The busybox executable can act like many different programs depending on +the name used to invoke it. Normal practice is to create a bunch of symlinks +pointing to the busybox binary, each of which triggers a different busybox +function. (See <a href="FAQ.html#getting_started">getting started</a> in the +FAQ for more information on usage, and <a href="BusyBox.html">the +busybox documentation</a> for a list of symlink names and what they do.) + +<p>The "one binary to rule them all" approach is primarily for size reasons: a +single multi-purpose executable is smaller then many small files could be. +This way busybox only has one set of ELF headers, it can easily share code +between different apps even when statically linked, it has better packing +efficiency by avoding gaps between files or compression dictionary resets, +and so on.</p> + +<p>Work is underway on new options such as "make standalone" to build separate +binaries for each applet, and a "libbb.so" to make the busybox common code +available as a shared library. Neither is ready yet at the time of this +writing.</p> + +<a name="source" /> + +<h2><a name="source_applets" /><b>The applet directories</b></h2> + +<p>The directory "applets" contains the busybox startup code (applets.c and +busybox.c), and several subdirectories containing the code for the individual +applets.</p> + +<p>Busybox execution starts with the main() function in applets/busybox.c, +which sets the global variable bb_applet_name to argv[0] and calls +run_applet_by_name() in applets/applets.c. That uses the applets[] array +(defined in include/busybox.h and filled out in include/applets.h) to +transfer control to the appropriate APPLET_main() function (such as +cat_main() or sed_main()). The individual applet takes it from there.</p> + +<p>This is why calling busybox under a different name triggers different +functionality: main() looks up argv[0] in applets[] to get a function pointer +to APPLET_main().</p> + +<p>Busybox applets may also be invoked through the multiplexor applet +"busybox" (see busybox_main() in applets/busybox.c), and through the +standalone shell (grep for STANDALONE_SHELL in applets/shell/*.c). +See <a href="FAQ.html#getting_started">getting started</a> in the +FAQ for more information on these alternate usage mechanisms, which are +just different ways to reach the relevant APPLET_main() function.</p> + +<p>The applet subdirectories (archival, console-tools, coreutils, +debianutils, e2fsprogs, editors, findutils, init, loginutils, miscutils, +modutils, networking, procps, shell, sysklogd, and util-linux) correspond +to the configuration sub-menus in menuconfig. Each subdirectory contains the +code to implement the applets in that sub-menu, as well as a Config.in +file defining that configuration sub-menu (with dependencies and help text +for each applet), and the makefile segment (Makefile.in) for that +subdirectory.</p> + +<p>The run-time --help is stored in usage_messages[], which is initialized at +the start of applets/applets.c and gets its help text from usage.h. During the +build this help text is also used to generate the BusyBox documentation (in +html, txt, and man page formats) in the docs directory. See +<a href="#adding">adding an applet to busybox</a> for more +information.</p> + +<h2><a name="source_libbb" /><b>libbb</b></h2> + +<p>Most non-setup code shared between busybox applets lives in the libbb +directory. It's a mess that evolved over the years without much auditing +or cleanup. For anybody looking for a great project to break into busybox +development with, documenting libbb would be both incredibly useful and good +experience.</p> + +<p>Common themes in libbb include allocation functions that test +for failure and abort the program with an error message so the caller doesn't +have to test the return value (xmalloc(), xstrdup(), etc), wrapped versions +of open(), close(), read(), and write() that test for their own failures +and/or retry automatically, linked list management functions (llist.c), +command line argument parsing (getopt_ulflags.c), and a whole lot more.</p> + +<h2><a name="adding" /><b>Adding an applet to busybox</b></h2> + +<p>To add a new applet to busybox, first pick a name for the applet and +a corresponding CONFIG_NAME. Then do this:</p> + +<ul> +<li>Figure out where in the busybox source tree your applet best fits, +and put your source code there. Be sure to use APPLET_main() instead +of main(), where APPLET is the name of your applet.</li> + +<li>Add your applet to the relevant Config.in file (which file you add +it to determines where it shows up in "make menuconfig"). This uses +the same general format as the linux kernel's configuration system.</li> + +<li>Add your applet to the relevant Makefile.in file (in the same +directory as the Config.in you chose), using the existing entries as a +template and the same CONFIG symbol as you used for Config.in. (Don't +forget "needlibm" or "needcrypt" if your applet needs libm or +libcrypt.)</li> + +<li>Add your applet to "include/applets.h", using one of the existing +entries as a template. (Note: this is in alphabetical order. Applets +are found via binary search, and if you add an applet out of order it +won't work.)</li> + +<li>Add your applet's runtime help text to "include/usage.h". You need +at least appname_trivial_usage (the minimal help text, always included +in the busybox binary when this applet is enabled) and appname_full_usage +(extra help text included in the busybox binary with +CONFIG_FEATURE_VERBOSE_USAGE is enabled), or it won't compile. +The other two help entry types (appname_example_usage and +appname_notes_usage) are optional. They don't take up space in the binary, +but instead show up in the generated documentation (BusyBox.html, +BusyBox.txt, and the man page BusyBox.1).</li> + +<li>Run menuconfig, switch your applet on, compile, test, and fix the +bugs. Be sure to try both "allyesconfig" and "allnoconfig" (and +"allbareconfig" if relevant).</li> + +</ul> + +<h2><a name="standards" />What standards does busybox adhere to?</a></h2> + +<p>The standard we're paying attention to is the "Shell and Utilities" +portion of the <a href=http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/>Open +Group Base Standards</a> (also known as the Single Unix Specification version +3 or SUSv3). Note that paying attention isn't necessarily the same thing as +following it.</p> + +<p>SUSv3 doesn't even mention things like init, mount, tar, or losetup, nor +commonly used options like echo's '-e' and '-n', or sed's '-i'. Busybox is +driven by what real users actually need, not the fact the standard believes +we should implement ed or sccs. For size reasons, we're unlikely to include +much internationalization support beyond UTF-8, and on top of all that, our +configuration menu lets developers chop out features to produce smaller but +very non-standard utilities.</p> + +<p>Also, Busybox is aimed primarily at Linux. Unix standards are interesting +because Linux tries to adhere to them, but portability to dozens of platforms +is only interesting in terms of offering a restricted feature set that works +everywhere, not growing dozens of platform-specific extensions. Busybox +should be portable to all hardware platforms Linux supports, and any other +similar operating systems that are easy to do and won't require much +maintenance.</p> + +<p>In practice, standards compliance tends to be a clean-up step once an +applet is otherwise finished. When polishing and testing a busybox applet, +we ensure we have at least the option of full standards compliance, or else +document where we (intentionally) fall short.</p> + +<br> +<br> +<br> + +<!--#include file="footer.html" --> |