let ipkg fail when a package file to be installed is not found
[openwrt/staging/wigyori.git] / openwrt / package / busybox / config / util-linux / Config.in
1 #
2 # For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,
3 # see scripts/kbuild/config-language.txt.
4 #
5
6 menu "Linux System Utilities"
7
8 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_DMESG
9 bool "dmesg"
10 default y
11 help
12 dmesg is used to examine or control the kernel ring buffer. When the
13 Linux kernel prints messages to the system log, they are stored in
14 the kernel ring buffer. You can use dmesg to print the kernel's ring
15 buffer, clear the kernel ring buffer, change the size of the kernel
16 ring buffer, and change the priority level at which kernel messages
17 are also logged to the system console. Enable this option if you
18 wish to enable the 'dmesg' utility.
19
20 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FBSET
21 bool "fbset"
22 default n
23 help
24 fbset is used to show or change the settings of a Linux frame buffer
25 device. The frame buffer device provides a simple and unique
26 interface to access a graphics display. Enable this option
27 if you wish to enable the 'fbset' utility.
28
29 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FBSET_FANCY
30 bool " Turn on extra fbset options"
31 default n
32 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FBSET
33 help
34 This option enables extended fbset options, allowing one to set the
35 framebuffer size, color depth, etc. interface to access a graphics
36 display. Enable this option if you wish to enable extended fbset
37 options.
38
39 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FBSET_READMODE
40 bool " Turn on fbset readmode support"
41 default n
42 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FBSET
43 help
44 This option allows fbset to read the video mode database stored by
45 default n /etc/fb.modes, which can be used to set frame buffer
46 device to pre-defined video modes.
47
48 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDFLUSH
49 bool "fdflush"
50 default n
51 help
52 fdflush is only needed when changing media on slightly-broken
53 removable media drives. It is used to make Linux believe that a
54 hardware disk-change switch has been actuated, which causes Linux to
55 forget anything it has cached from the previous media. If you have
56 such a slightly-broken drive, you will need to run fdflush every time
57 you change a disk. Most people have working hardware and can safely
58 leave this disabled.
59
60 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDFORMAT
61 bool "fdformat"
62 default n
63 help
64 fdformat is used to low-level format a floppy disk.
65
66 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDISK
67 bool "fdisk"
68 default n
69 help
70 The fdisk utility is used to divide hard disks into one or more
71 logical disks, which are generally called partitions. This utility
72 can be used to list and edit the set of partitions or BSD style
73 'disk slices' that are defined on a hard drive.
74
75 config BUSYBOX_FDISK_SUPPORT_LARGE_DISKS
76 bool
77 default y
78 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDISK
79 help
80 Enable this option to support large disks > 4GB.
81
82 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
83 bool " Write support"
84 default n
85 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDISK
86 help
87 Enabling this option allows you to create or change a partition table
88 and write those changes out to disk. If you leave this option
89 disabled, you will only be able to view the partition table.
90
91 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_AIX_LABEL
92 bool " Support AIX disklabels"
93 default n
94 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDISK && BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
95 help
96 Enabling this option allows you to create or change AIX disklabels.
97 Most people can safely leave this option disabled.
98
99 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_SGI_LABEL
100 bool " Support SGI disklabels"
101 default n
102 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDISK && BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
103 help
104 Enabling this option allows you to create or change SGI disklabels.
105 Most people can safely leave this option disabled.
106
107 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_SUN_LABEL
108 bool " Support SUN disklabels"
109 default n
110 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDISK && BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
111 help
112 Enabling this option allows you to create or change SUN disklabels.
113 Most people can safely leave this option disabled.
114
115 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_OSF_LABEL
116 bool " Support BSD disklabels"
117 default n
118 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDISK && BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
119 help
120 Enabling this option allows you to create or change BSD disklabels
121 and define and edit BSD disk slices.
122
123 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FDISK_ADVANCED
124 bool " Support expert mode"
125 default n
126 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FDISK && BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
127 help
128 Enabling this option allows you to do terribly unsafe things like
129 define arbitrary drive geometry, move the beginning of data in a
130 partition, and similarly evil things. Unless you have a very good
131 reason you would be wise to leave this disabled.
132
133 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FREERAMDISK
134 bool "freeramdisk"
135 default n
136 help
137 Linux allows you to create ramdisks. This utility allows you to
138 delete them and completely free all memory that was used for the
139 ramdisk. For example, if you boot Linux into a ramdisk and later
140 pivot_root, you may want to free the memory that is allocated to the
141 ramdisk. If you have no use for freeing memory from a ramdisk, leave
142 this disabled.
143
144 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FSCK_MINIX
145 bool "fsck_minix"
146 default n
147 help
148 The minix filesystem is a nice, small, compact, read-write filesystem
149 with little overhead. It is not a journaling filesystem however and
150 can experience corruption if it is not properly unmounted or if the
151 power goes off in the middle of a write. This utility allows you to
152 check for and attempt to repair any corruption that occurs to a minix
153 filesystem.
154
155 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MKFS_MINIX
156 bool "mkfs_minix"
157 default n
158 help
159 The minix filesystem is a nice, small, compact, read-write filesystem
160 with little overhead. If you wish to be able to create minix filesystems
161 this utility will do the job for you.
162
163 comment "Minix filesystem support"
164 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FSCK_MINIX || BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MKFS_MINIX
165
166 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_MINIX2
167 bool " Support Minix fs v2 (fsck_minix/mkfs_minix)"
168 default n
169 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FSCK_MINIX || BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MKFS_MINIX
170 help
171 If you wish to be able to create version 2 minix filesystems, enable this.
172 If you enabled 'mkfs_minix' then you almost certainly want to be using the
173 version 2 filesystem support.
174
175 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_GETOPT
176 bool "getopt"
177 default n
178 help
179 The getopt utility is used to break up (parse) options in command
180 lines to make it easy to write complex shell scripts that also check
181 for legal (and illegal) options. If you want to write horribly
182 complex shell scripts, or use some horribly complex shell script
183 written by others, this utility may be for you. Most people will
184 wisely leave this disabled.
185
186 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_HEXDUMP
187 bool "hexdump"
188 default y
189 help
190 The hexdump utility is used to display binary data in a readable
191 way that is comparable to the output from most hex editors.
192
193 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_HWCLOCK
194 bool "hwclock"
195 default n
196 help
197 The hwclock utility is used to read and set the hardware clock
198 on a system. This is primarily used to set the current time on
199 shutdown in the hardware clock, so the hardware will keep the
200 correct time when Linux is _not_ running.
201
202 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_HWCLOCK_LONGOPTIONS
203 bool " Support long options (--hctosys,...)"
204 default n
205 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_HWCLOCK
206 help
207 By default, the hwclock utility only uses short options. If you
208 are overly fond of its long options, such as --hctosys, --utc, etc)
209 then enable this option.
210
211 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_HWCLOCK_ADJTIME_FHS
212 bool " Use FHS /var/lib/hwclock/adjtime"
213 default n
214 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_HWCLOCK
215 help
216 Starting with FHS 2.3, the adjtime state file is supposed to exist
217 at /var/lib/hwclock/adjtime instead of /etc/adjtime. If you wish
218 to use the FHS behavior, answer Y here, otherwise answer N for the
219 classic /etc/adjtime path.
220
221 http://www.pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html#VARLIBHWCLOCKSTATEDIRECTORYFORHWCLO
222
223 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_IPCRM
224 bool "ipcrm"
225 default n
226 select BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_SUID
227 help
228 The ipcrm utility allows the removal of System V interprocess
229 communication (IPC) objects and the associated data structures
230 from the system.
231
232 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_IPCS
233 bool "ipcs"
234 default n
235 select BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_SUID
236 help
237 The ipcs utility is used to provide information on the currently
238 allocated System V interprocess (IPC) objects in the system.
239
240 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_LOSETUP
241 bool "losetup"
242 default n
243 help
244 losetup is used to associate or detach a loop device with a regular
245 file or block device, and to query the status of a loop device. This
246 version does not currently support enabling data encryption.
247
248 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MDEV
249 bool "mdev"
250 default n
251 help
252 mdev is a mini-udev implementation: call it with -s to populate
253 /dev from /sys, then "echo /sbin/mdev > /proc/sys/kernel/hotplug" to
254 have it handle hotplug events afterwards. Device names are taken
255 from sysfs.
256
257 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_MDEV_CONF
258 bool " Support /etc/mdev.conf"
259 default n
260 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MDEV
261 help
262 The mdev config file contains lines that look like:
263
264 hd[a-z][0-9]* 0:3 660
265
266 That's device name (with regex match), uid:gid, and permissions.
267
268 Optionally, that can be followed (on the same line) by an asterisk
269 and a command line to run after creating the corresponding device(s),
270 ala:
271
272 hdc root:cdrom 660 *ln -s hdc cdrom
273
274 Config file parsing stops on the first matching line. If no config
275 entry is matched, devices are created with default 0:0 660. (Make
276 the last line match .* to override this.)
277
278 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MKSWAP
279 bool "mkswap"
280 default n
281 help
282 The mkswap utility is used to configure a file or disk partition as
283 Linux swap space. This allows Linux to use the entire file or
284 partition as if it were additional RAM, which can greatly increase
285 the capability of low-memory machines. This additional memory is
286 much slower than real RAM, but can be very helpful at preventing your
287 applications being killed by the Linux out of memory (OOM) killer.
288 Once you have created swap space using 'mkswap' you need to enable
289 the swap space using the 'swapon' utility.
290
291 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MORE
292 bool "more"
293 default y
294 help
295 more is a simple utility which allows you to read text one screen
296 sized page at a time. If you want to read text that is larger than
297 the screen, and you are using anything faster than a 300 baud modem,
298 you will probably find this utility very helpful. If you don't have
299 any need to reading text files, you can leave this disabled.
300
301 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_USE_TERMIOS
302 bool " Use termios to manipulate the screen"
303 default y
304 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MORE
305 help
306 This option allows utilities such as 'more' and 'top' to determine
307 the size of the screen. If you leave this disabled, your utilities
308 that display things on the screen will be especially primitive and
309 will be unable to determine the current screen size, and will be
310 unable to move the cursor.
311
312 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MOUNT
313 bool "mount"
314 default y
315 help
316 All files and filesystems in Unix are arranged into one big directory
317 tree. The 'mount' utility is used to graft a filesystem onto a
318 particular part of the tree. A filesystem can either live on a block
319 device, or it can be accessible over the network, as is the case with
320 NFS filesystems. Most people using BusyBox will also want to enable
321 the 'mount' utility.
322
323 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_MOUNT_NFS
324 bool " Support mounting NFS file systems"
325 default y
326 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MOUNT
327 help
328 Enable mounting of NFS file systems.
329
330 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_PIVOT_ROOT
331 bool "pivot_root"
332 default y
333 help
334 The pivot_root utility swaps the mount points for the root filesystem
335 with some other mounted filesystem. This allows you to do all sorts
336 of wild and crazy things with your Linux system and is far more
337 powerful than 'chroot'.
338
339 Note: This is for initrd in linux 2.4. Under initramfs (introduced
340 in linux 2.6) use switch_root instead.
341
342 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_RDATE
343 bool "rdate"
344 default y
345 help
346 The rdate utility allows you to synchronize the date and time of your
347 system clock with the date and time of a remote networked system using
348 the RFC868 protocol, which is built into the inetd daemon on most
349 systems.
350
351 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_READPROFILE
352 bool "readprofile"
353 default n
354 help
355 This allows you to parse /proc/profile for basic profiling.
356
357 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_SETARCH
358 bool "setarch"
359 default n
360 help
361 The linux32 utility is used to create a 32bit environment for the
362 specified program (usually a shell). It only makes sense to have
363 this util on a system that supports both 64bit and 32bit userland
364 (like amd64/x86, ppc64/ppc, sparc64/sparc, etc...).
365
366 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_SWAPONOFF
367 bool "swaponoff"
368 default n
369 help
370 This option enables both the 'swapon' and the 'swapoff' utilities.
371 Once you have created some swap space using 'mkswap', you also need
372 to enable your swap space with the 'swapon' utility. The 'swapoff'
373 utility is used, typically at system shutdown, to disable any swap
374 space. If you are not using any swap space, you can leave this
375 option disabled.
376
377 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_SWITCH_ROOT
378 bool "switch_root"
379 default y
380 help
381 The switch_root utility is used from initramfs to select a new
382 root device. Under initramfs, you have to use this instead of
383 pivot_root. (Stop reading here if you don't care why.)
384
385 Booting with initramfs extracts a gzipped cpio archive into rootfs
386 (which is a variant of ramfs/tmpfs). Because rootfs can't be moved
387 or unmounted*, pivot_root will not work from initramfs. Instead,
388 switch_root deletes everything out of rootfs (including itself),
389 does a mount --move that overmounts rootfs with the new root, and
390 then execs the specified init program.
391
392 * Because the Linux kernel uses rootfs internally as the starting
393 and ending point for searching through the kernel's doubly linked
394 list of active mount points. That's why.
395
396 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_UMOUNT
397 bool "umount"
398 default y
399 help
400 When you want to remove a mounted filesystem from its current mount point,
401 for example when you are shutting down the system, the 'umount' utility is
402 the tool to use. If you enabled the 'mount' utility, you almost certainly
403 also want to enable 'umount'.
404
405 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_UMOUNT_ALL
406 bool " umount -a option"
407 default y
408 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_UMOUNT
409 help
410 Support -a option to unmount all currently mounted filesystems.
411
412 comment "Common options for mount/umount"
413 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MOUNT || BUSYBOX_CONFIG_UMOUNT
414
415 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_MOUNT_LOOP
416 bool " Support loopback mounts"
417 default y
418 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MOUNT || BUSYBOX_CONFIG_UMOUNT
419 help
420 Enabling this feature allows automatic mounting of files (containing
421 filesystem images) via the linux kernel's loopback devices. The mount
422 command will detect you are trying to mount a file instead of a block
423 device, and transparently associate the file with a loopback device.
424 The umount command will also free that loopback device.
425
426 You can still use the 'losetup' utility (to manually associate files
427 with loop devices) if you need to do something advanced, such as
428 specify an offset or cryptographic options to the loopback device.
429 (If you don't want umount to free the loop device, use "umount -D".)
430
431 config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_MTAB_SUPPORT
432 bool " Support for the old /etc/mtab file"
433 default n
434 depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MOUNT || BUSYBOX_CONFIG_UMOUNT
435 help
436 Historically, Unix systems kept track of the currently mounted
437 partitions in the file "/etc/mtab". These days, the kernel exports
438 the list of currently mounted partitions in "/proc/mounts", rendering
439 the old mtab file obsolete. (In modern systems, /etc/mtab should be
440 a symlink to /proc/mounts.)
441
442 The only reason to have mount maintain an /etc/mtab file itself is if
443 your stripped-down embedded system does not have a /proc directory.
444 If you must use this, keep in mind it's inherently brittle (for
445 example a mount under chroot won't update it), can't handle modern
446 features like separate per-process filesystem namespaces, requires
447 that your /etc directory be writeable, tends to get easily confused
448 by --bind or --move mounts, and so on. (In brief: avoid.)
449
450 endmenu
451