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  1. Busybox TODO
  2. Stuff that needs to be done. This is organized by who plans to get around to
  3. doing it eventually, but that doesn't mean they "own" the item. If you want to
  4. do one of these bounce an email off the person it's listed under to see if they
  5. have any suggestions how they plan to go about it, and to minimize conflicts
  6. between your work and theirs. But otherwise, all of these are fair game.
  7. Rob Landley <rob@landley.net>:
  8. Add BB_NOMMU to platform.h and migrate __uClinux__ tests to that.
  9. #if defined __UCLIBC__ && !defined __ARCH_USE_MMU__
  10. Add a libbb/platform.c
  11. Implement fdprintf() for platforms that haven't got one.
  12. Implement bb_realpath() that can handle NULL on non-glibc.
  13. Cleanup bb_asprintf()
  14. Migrate calloc() and bb_calloc() occurrences to bb_xzalloc().
  15. Remove obsolete _() wrapper crud for internationalization we don't do.
  16. Figure out where we need utf8 support, and add it.
  17. sh
  18. The command shell situation is a big mess. We have three or four different
  19. shells that don't really share any code, and the "standalone shell" doesn't
  20. work all that well (especially not in a chroot environment), due to apps not
  21. being reentrant. I'm writing a new shell (bbsh) to unify the various
  22. shells and configurably add the minimal set of bash features people
  23. actually use. The hardest part is it has to configure down as small as
  24. lash while providing lash's features. The rest is easy in comparison.
  25. bzip2
  26. Compression-side support.
  27. init
  28. General cleanup (should use ENABLE_FEATURE_INIT_SYSLOG and ENABLE_FEATURE_INIT_DEBUG).
  29. depmod
  30. busybox lacks a way to update module deps when running from firmware without the
  31. use of the depmod.pl (perl is to bloated for most embedded setups) and or orig
  32. modutils. The orig depmod is rather pointless to have to add to a firmware image
  33. in when we already have a insmod/rmmod and friends.
  34. Unify base64 handling.
  35. [done]
  36. Do a SUSv3 audit
  37. Look at the full Single Unix Specification version 3 (available online at
  38. "http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/nfindex.html") and
  39. figure out which of our apps are compliant, and what we're missing that
  40. we might actually care about.
  41. Even better would be some kind of automated compliance test harness that
  42. exercises each command line option and the various corner cases.
  43. Internationalization
  44. How much internationalization should we do?
  45. The low hanging fruit is UTF-8 character set support. We should do this.
  46. (Vodz pointed out the shell's cmdedit as needing work here. What else?)
  47. We also have lots of hardwired english text messages. Consolidating this
  48. into some kind of message table not only makes translation easier, but
  49. also allows us to consolidate redundant (or close) strings.
  50. We probably don't want to be bloated with locale support. (Not unless we
  51. can cleanly export it from our underlying C library without having to
  52. concern ourselves with it directly. Perhaps a few specific things like a
  53. config option for "date" are low hanging fruit here?)
  54. What level should things happen at? How much do we care about
  55. internationalizing the text console when X11 and xterms are so much better
  56. at it? (There's some infrastructure here we don't implement: The
  57. "unicode_start" and "unicode_stop" shell scripts need "vt-is-UTF8" and a
  58. --unicode option to loadkeys. That implies a real loadkeys/dumpkeys
  59. implementation to replace loadkmap/dumpkmap. Plus messing with console font
  60. loading. Is it worth it, or do we just say "use X"?)
  61. Individual compilation of applets.
  62. It would be nice if busybox had the option to compile to individual applets,
  63. for people who want an alternate implementation less bloated than the gnu
  64. utils (or simply with less political baggage), but without it being one big
  65. executable.
  66. Turning libbb into a real dll is another possibility, especially if libbb
  67. could export some of the other library interfaces we've already more or less
  68. got the code for (like zlib).
  69. buildroot - Make a "dogfood" option
  70. Busybox 1.1 will be capable of replacing most gnu packages for real world
  71. use, such as developing software or in a live CD. It needs wider testing.
  72. Busybox should now be able to replace bzip2, coreutils, e2fsprogs, file,
  73. findutils, gawk, grep, inetutils, less, modutils, net-tools, patch, procps,
  74. sed, shadow, sysklogd, sysvinit, tar, util-linux, and vim. The resulting
  75. system should be self-hosting (I.E. able to rebuild itself from source
  76. code). This means it would need (at least) binutils, gcc, and make, or
  77. equivalents.
  78. It would be a good "eating our own dogfood" test if buildroot had the option
  79. of using a "make allyesconfig" busybox instead of the all of the above
  80. packages. Anything that's wrong with the resulting system, we can fix. (It
  81. would be nice to be able to upgrade busybox to be able to replace bash and
  82. diffutils as well, but we're not there yet.)
  83. One example of an existing system that does this already is Firmware Linux:
  84. http://www.landley.net/code/firmware
  85. initramfs
  86. Busybox should have a sample initramfs build script. This depends on
  87. bbsh, mdev, and switch_root.
  88. mkdep
  89. Write a mkdep that doesn't segfault if there's a directory it doesn't
  90. have permission to read, isn't based on manually editing the output of
  91. lexx and yacc, doesn't make such a mess under include/config, etc.
  92. Group globals into unions of structures.
  93. Go through and turn all the global and static variables into structures,
  94. and have all those structures be in a big union shared between processes,
  95. so busybox uses less bss. (This is a big win on nommu machines.) See
  96. sed.c and mdev.c for examples.
  97. Go through bugs.busybox.net and close out all of that somehow.
  98. This one's open to everybody, but I'll wind up doing it...
  99. Bernhard Fischer <busybox@busybox.net> suggests to look at these:
  100. New debug options:
  101. -Wlarger-than-127
  102. Cleanup any big users
  103. -Wunused-parameter
  104. Facilitate applet PROTOTYPES to provide means for having applets that
  105. do a) not take any arguments b) need only one of argc or argv c) need
  106. both argc and argv. All of these three options should go for the most
  107. feature complete denominator.
  108. Collate BUFSIZ IOBUF_SIZE MY_BUF_SIZE PIPE_PROGRESS_SIZE BUFSIZE PIPESIZE
  109. make bb_common_bufsiz1 configurable, size wise.
  110. make pipesize configurable, size wise.
  111. Use bb_common_bufsiz1 throughout applets!
  112. As yet unclaimed:
  113. ----
  114. find
  115. doesn't understand (), lots of susv3 stuff.
  116. ----
  117. diff
  118. Make sure we handle empty files properly:
  119. From the patch man page:
  120. you can remove a file by sending out a context diff that compares
  121. the file to be deleted with an empty file dated the Epoch. The
  122. file will be removed unless patch is conforming to POSIX and the
  123. -E or --remove-empty-files option is not given.
  124. ---
  125. patch
  126. Should have simple fuzz factor support to apply patches at an offset which
  127. shouldn't take up too much space.
  128. And while we're at it, a new patch filename quoting format is apparently
  129. coming soon: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=git&m=112927316408690&w=2
  130. ---
  131. ps / top
  132. Add support for both RSS and VSIZE rather than just one or the other.
  133. Or make it a build option.
  134. ---
  135. man
  136. It would be nice to have a man command. Not one that handles troff or
  137. anything, just one that can handle preformatted ascii man pages, possibly
  138. compressed. This could probably be a script in the extras directory that
  139. calls cat/zcat/bzcat | less
  140. (How doclifter might work into this is anybody's guess.)
  141. ---
  142. ar
  143. Write support?
  144. ---
  145. stty / catv
  146. stty's visible() function and catv's guts are identical. Merge them into
  147. an appropriate libbb function.
  148. ---
  149. struct suffix_mult
  150. Several duplicate users of: grep -r "1024\*1024" * -B2 -A1
  151. Merge to a single size_suffixes[] in libbb.
  152. Users: head tail od_bloaty hexdump and (partially as it wouldn't hurt) svlogd
  153. ---
  154. tail
  155. ./busybox tail -f foo.c~ TODO
  156. should not print fmt=header_fmt for subsequent date >> TODO; i.e. only
  157. fmt+ if another (not the current) file did change
  158. Architectural issues:
  159. bb_close() with fsync()
  160. We should have a bb_close() in place of normal close, with a CONFIG_ option
  161. to not just check the return value of close() for an error, but fsync().
  162. Close can't reliably report anything useful because if write() accepted the
  163. data then it either went out to the network or it's in cache or a pipe
  164. buffer. Either way, there's no guarantee it'll make it to its final
  165. destination before close() gets called, so there's no guarantee that any
  166. error will be reported.
  167. You need to call fsync() if you care about errors that occur after write(),
  168. but that can have a big performance impact. So make it a config option.
  169. ---
  170. Unify archivers
  171. Lots of archivers have the same general infrastructure. The directory
  172. traversal code should be factored out, and the guts of each archiver could
  173. be some setup code and a series of callbacks for "add this file",
  174. "add this directory", "add this symlink" and so on.
  175. This could clean up tar and zip, and make it cheaper to add cpio and ar
  176. write support, and possibly even cheaply add things like mkisofs or
  177. mksquashfs someday, if they become relevant.
  178. ---
  179. Text buffer support.
  180. Several existing applets (sort, vi, less...) read
  181. a whole file into memory and act on it. There might be an opportunity
  182. for shared code in there that could be moved into libbb...
  183. ---
  184. Memory Allocation
  185. We have a CONFIG_BUFFER mechanism that lets us select whether to do memory
  186. allocation on the stack or the heap. Unfortunately, we're not using it much.
  187. We need to audit our memory allocations and turn a lot of malloc/free calls
  188. into RESERVE_CONFIG_BUFFER/RELEASE_CONFIG_BUFFER.
  189. For a start, see e.g. make EXTRA_CFLAGS=-Wlarger-than-64
  190. And while we're at it, many of the CONFIG_FEATURE_CLEAN_UP #ifdefs will be
  191. optimized out by the compiler in the stack allocation case (since there's no
  192. free for an alloca()), and this means that various cleanup loops that just
  193. call free might also be optimized out by the compiler if written right, so
  194. we can yank those #ifdefs too, and generally clean up the code.
  195. ---
  196. Switch CONFIG_SYMBOLS to ENABLE_SYMBOLS
  197. In busybox 1.0 and earlier, configuration was done by CONFIG_SYMBOLS
  198. that were either defined or undefined to indicate whether the symbol was
  199. selected in the .config file. They were used with #ifdefs, ala:
  200. #ifdef CONFIG_SYMBOL
  201. if (other_test) {
  202. do_code();
  203. }
  204. #endif
  205. In 1.1, we have new ENABLE_SYMBOLS which are always defined (as 0 or 1),
  206. meaning you can still use them for preprocessor tests by replacing
  207. "#ifdef CONFIG_SYMBOL" with "#if ENABLE_SYMBOL". But more importantly, we
  208. can use them as a true or false test in normal C code:
  209. if (ENABLE_SYMBOL && other_test) {
  210. do_code();
  211. }
  212. (Optimizing away if() statements that resolve to a constant value
  213. is known as "dead code elimination", an optimization so old and simple that
  214. Turbo Pascal for DOS did it twenty years ago. Even modern mini-compilers
  215. like the Tiny C Compiler (tcc) and the Small Device C Compiler (SDCC)
  216. perform dead code elimination.)
  217. Right now, busybox.h is #including both "config.h" (defining the
  218. CONFIG_SYMBOLS) and "bb_config.h" (defining the ENABLE_SYMBOLS). At some
  219. point in the future, it would be nice to wean ourselves off of the
  220. CONFIG versions. (Among other things, some defective build environments
  221. leak the Linux kernel's CONFIG_SYMBOLS into the system's standard #include
  222. files. We've experienced collisions before.)
  223. ---
  224. FEATURE_CLEAN_UP
  225. This is more an unresolved issue than a to-do item. More thought is needed.
  226. Normally we rely on exit() to free memory, close files, and unmap segments
  227. for us. This makes most calls to free(), close(), and unmap() optional in
  228. busybox applets that don't intend to run for very long, and optional stuff
  229. can be omitted to save size.
  230. The idea was raised that we could simulate fork/exit with setjmp/longjmp
  231. for _really_ brainless embedded systems, or speed up the standalone shell
  232. by not forking. Doing so would require a reliable FEATURE_CLEAN_UP.
  233. Unfortunately, this isn't as easy as it sounds.
  234. The problem is, lots of things exit(), sometimes unexpectedly (xmalloc())
  235. and sometimes reliably (bb_perror_msg_and_die() or show_usage()). This
  236. jumps out of the normal flow control and bypasses any cleanup code we
  237. put at the end of our applets.
  238. It's possible to add hooks to libbb functions like xmalloc() and xopen()
  239. to add their entries to a linked list, which could be traversed and
  240. freed/closed automatically. (This would need to be able to free just the
  241. entries after a checkpoint to be usable for a forkless standalone shell.
  242. You don't want to free the shell's own resources.)
  243. Right now, FEATURE_CLEAN_UP is more or less a debugging aid, to make things
  244. like valgrind happy. It's also documentation of _what_ we're trusting
  245. exit() to clean up for us. But new infrastructure to auto-free stuff would
  246. render the existing FEATURE_CLEAN_UP code redundant.
  247. For right now, exit() handles it just fine.
  248. Minor stuff:
  249. watchdog.c could autodetect the timer duration via:
  250. if(!ioctl (fd, WDIOC_GETTIMEOUT, &tmo)) timer_duration = 1 + (tmo / 2);
  251. Unfortunately, that needs linux/watchdog.h and that contains unfiltered
  252. kernel types on some distros, which breaks the build.
  253. ---
  254. use bb_error_msg where appropriate: See
  255. egrep "(printf.*\([[:space:]]*(stderr|2)|[^_]write.*\([[:space:]]*(stderr|2))"
  256. ---
  257. use bb_perror_msg where appropriate: See
  258. egrep "[^_]perror"
  259. ---
  260. Remove superfluous fmt occurances: e.g.
  261. fprintf(stderr, "%s: %s not found\n", "unalias", *argptr);
  262. -> fprintf(stderr, "unalias: %s not found\n", *argptr);
  263. ---
  264. possible code duplication ingroup() and is_a_group_member()
  265. ---
  266. Move __get_hz() to a better place and (re)use it in route.c, ash.c, msh.c
  267. ---
  268. Code cleanup:
  269. Replace deprecated functions.
  270. bzero() -> memset()
  271. ---
  272. sigblock(), siggetmask(), sigsetmask(), sigmask() -> sigprocmask et al
  273. ---
  274. vdprintf() -> similar sized functionality
  275. ---