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- NOEXEC and NOFORK applets.
- Unix shells traditionally execute some commands internally in the attempt
- to dramatically speed up execution. It will be slow as hell if for every
- "echo blah" shell will fork and exec /bin/echo. To this end, shells
- have to _reimplement_ these commands internally.
- Busybox is unique in this regard because it already is a collection
- of reimplemented Unix commands, and we can do the same trick
- for speeding up busybox shells, and more. NOEXEC and NOFORK applets
- are exactly those applets which are eligible for these tricks.
- Applet will be subject to NOFORK/NOEXEC tricks if it is marked as such
- in applets.h. FEATURE_PREFER_APPLETS is a config option which
- globally enables usage of NOFORK/NOEXEC tricks.
- If it is enabled, FEATURE_SH_STANDALONE can be enabled too,
- and then shells will use NOFORK/NOEXEC tricks for ordinary commands.
- NB: shell builtins use these tricks regardless of FEATURE_SH_STANDALONE
- or FEATURE_PREFER_APPLETS.
- In C, if you want to call a program and wait for it, use
- spawn_and_wait(argv), BB_EXECVP(prog,argv) or BB_EXECLP(prog,argv0,...).
- They check whether program name is an applet name and optionally
- do NOFORK/NOEXEC thing depending on configuration.
- NOEXEC
- NOEXEC applet should work correctly if another applet forks and then
- executes exit(<applet>_main(argc,argv)) in the child. The rules
- roughly are:
- * do not expect shared global variables/buffers to be in their
- "initialized" state. Examples: xfunc_error_retval can be != 1,
- bb_common_bufsiz1 can be scribbled over, ...
- * do not expect that stdio wasn't used before. Calling set[v]buf()
- can be disastrous.
- * ...
- NOEXEC applets save only one half of fork+exec overhead.
- NOEXEC trick is disabled for NOMMU build.
- NOFORK
- NOFORK applet should work correctly if another applet simply runs
- <applet>_main(argc,argv) and then continues with its business (xargs,
- find, shells can do it). This poses much more serious limitations
- on what applet can/cannot do:
- * all NOEXEC limitations apply.
- * do not ever exit() or exec().
- - xfuncs are okay. They are using special trick to return
- to the caller applet instead of dying when they detect "x" condition.
- - you may "exit" to caller applet by calling xfunc_die(). Return value
- is taken from xfunc_error_retval.
- - fflush_stdout_and_exit(n) is ok to use.
- * do not use shared global data, or save/restore shared global data
- prior to returning. (e.g. bb_common_bufsiz1 is off-limits).
- - getopt32() is ok to use. You do not need to save/restore option_mask32,
- it is already done by core code.
- * if you allocate memory, you can use xmalloc() only on the very first
- allocation. All other allocations should use malloc[_or_warn]().
- After first allocation, you cannot use any xfuncs.
- Otherwise, failing xfunc will return to caller applet
- without freeing malloced data!
- * All allocated data, opened files, signal handlers, termios settings,
- O_NONBLOCK flags etc should be freed/closed/restored prior to return.
- * ...
- NOFORK applets give the most of speed advantage, but are trickiest
- to implement. In order to minimize amount of bugs and maintenance,
- prime candidates for NOFORK-ification are those applets which
- are small and easy to audit, and those which are more likely to be
- frequently executed from shell/find/xargs, particularly in shell
- script loops. Applets which mess with signal handlers, termios etc
- are probably not worth the effort.
- Any NOFORK applet is also a NOEXEC applet.
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