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| author | Ron Yorston <rmy@pobox.com> | 2016-11-29 11:26:45 +0000 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Ron Yorston <rmy@pobox.com> | 2016-11-29 11:26:45 +0000 |
| commit | bb8d79eadbba1942dbdb9f9cee5c47833afe269f (patch) | |
| tree | b8c517e9ca895d60d7227aef7177b6291df5e2cd /networking/Config.src | |
| parent | 9fa1e4990e655a85025c9d270a1606983e375e47 (diff) | |
| parent | 7d877fc9312a742b06125927bb1d34bd35398c6c (diff) | |
| download | busybox-w32-bb8d79eadbba1942dbdb9f9cee5c47833afe269f.tar.gz busybox-w32-bb8d79eadbba1942dbdb9f9cee5c47833afe269f.tar.bz2 busybox-w32-bb8d79eadbba1942dbdb9f9cee5c47833afe269f.zip | |
Merge branch 'busybox' into merge
Diffstat (limited to 'networking/Config.src')
| -rw-r--r-- | networking/Config.src | 915 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 914 deletions
diff --git a/networking/Config.src b/networking/Config.src index eb0536a7c..527bdd15d 100644 --- a/networking/Config.src +++ b/networking/Config.src | |||
| @@ -5,8 +5,6 @@ | |||
| 5 | 5 | ||
| 6 | menu "Networking Utilities" | 6 | menu "Networking Utilities" |
| 7 | 7 | ||
| 8 | INSERT | ||
| 9 | |||
| 10 | config FEATURE_IPV6 | 8 | config FEATURE_IPV6 |
| 11 | bool "Enable IPv6 support" | 9 | bool "Enable IPv6 support" |
| 12 | default y | 10 | default y |
| @@ -48,891 +46,7 @@ config VERBOSE_RESOLUTION_ERRORS | |||
| 48 | "can't resolve 'hostname.com'" and want to know more. | 46 | "can't resolve 'hostname.com'" and want to know more. |
| 49 | This may increase size of your executable a bit. | 47 | This may increase size of your executable a bit. |
| 50 | 48 | ||
| 51 | config ARP | 49 | INSERT |
| 52 | bool "arp" | ||
| 53 | default y | ||
| 54 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 55 | help | ||
| 56 | Manipulate the system ARP cache. | ||
| 57 | |||
| 58 | config ARPING | ||
| 59 | bool "arping" | ||
| 60 | default y | ||
| 61 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 62 | help | ||
| 63 | Ping hosts by ARP packets. | ||
| 64 | |||
| 65 | config BRCTL | ||
| 66 | bool "brctl" | ||
| 67 | default y | ||
| 68 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 69 | help | ||
| 70 | Manage ethernet bridges. | ||
| 71 | Supports addbr/delbr and addif/delif. | ||
| 72 | |||
| 73 | config FEATURE_BRCTL_FANCY | ||
| 74 | bool "Fancy options" | ||
| 75 | default y | ||
| 76 | depends on BRCTL | ||
| 77 | help | ||
| 78 | Add support for extended option like: | ||
| 79 | setageing, setfd, sethello, setmaxage, | ||
| 80 | setpathcost, setportprio, setbridgeprio, | ||
| 81 | stp | ||
| 82 | This adds about 600 bytes. | ||
| 83 | |||
| 84 | config FEATURE_BRCTL_SHOW | ||
| 85 | bool "Support show" | ||
| 86 | default y | ||
| 87 | depends on BRCTL && FEATURE_BRCTL_FANCY | ||
| 88 | help | ||
| 89 | Add support for option which prints the current config: | ||
| 90 | show | ||
| 91 | |||
| 92 | config DNSD | ||
| 93 | bool "dnsd" | ||
| 94 | default y | ||
| 95 | help | ||
| 96 | Small and static DNS server daemon. | ||
| 97 | |||
| 98 | config ETHER_WAKE | ||
| 99 | bool "ether-wake" | ||
| 100 | default y | ||
| 101 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 102 | help | ||
| 103 | Send a magic packet to wake up sleeping machines. | ||
| 104 | |||
| 105 | config FAKEIDENTD | ||
| 106 | bool "fakeidentd" | ||
| 107 | default y | ||
| 108 | select FEATURE_SYSLOG | ||
| 109 | help | ||
| 110 | fakeidentd listens on the ident port and returns a predefined | ||
| 111 | fake value on any query. | ||
| 112 | |||
| 113 | config FTPD | ||
| 114 | bool "ftpd" | ||
| 115 | default y | ||
| 116 | help | ||
| 117 | simple FTP daemon. You have to run it via inetd. | ||
| 118 | |||
| 119 | config FEATURE_FTP_WRITE | ||
| 120 | bool "Enable upload commands" | ||
| 121 | default y | ||
| 122 | depends on FTPD | ||
| 123 | help | ||
| 124 | Enable all kinds of FTP upload commands (-w option) | ||
| 125 | |||
| 126 | config FEATURE_FTPD_ACCEPT_BROKEN_LIST | ||
| 127 | bool "Enable workaround for RFC-violating clients" | ||
| 128 | default y | ||
| 129 | depends on FTPD | ||
| 130 | help | ||
| 131 | Some ftp clients (among them KDE's Konqueror) issue illegal | ||
| 132 | "LIST -l" requests. This option works around such problems. | ||
| 133 | It might prevent you from listing files starting with "-" and | ||
| 134 | it increases the code size by ~40 bytes. | ||
| 135 | Most other ftp servers seem to behave similar to this. | ||
| 136 | |||
| 137 | config FEATURE_FTP_AUTHENTICATION | ||
| 138 | bool "Enable authentication" | ||
| 139 | default y | ||
| 140 | depends on FTPD | ||
| 141 | help | ||
| 142 | Enable basic system login as seen in telnet etc. | ||
| 143 | |||
| 144 | config FTPGET | ||
| 145 | bool "ftpget" | ||
| 146 | default y | ||
| 147 | help | ||
| 148 | Retrieve a remote file via FTP. | ||
| 149 | |||
| 150 | config FTPPUT | ||
| 151 | bool "ftpput" | ||
| 152 | default y | ||
| 153 | help | ||
| 154 | Store a remote file via FTP. | ||
| 155 | |||
| 156 | config FEATURE_FTPGETPUT_LONG_OPTIONS | ||
| 157 | bool "Enable long options in ftpget/ftpput" | ||
| 158 | default y | ||
| 159 | depends on LONG_OPTS && (FTPGET || FTPPUT) | ||
| 160 | help | ||
| 161 | Support long options for the ftpget/ftpput applet. | ||
| 162 | |||
| 163 | config HOSTNAME | ||
| 164 | bool "hostname" | ||
| 165 | default y | ||
| 166 | help | ||
| 167 | Show or set the system's host name. | ||
| 168 | |||
| 169 | config HTTPD | ||
| 170 | bool "httpd" | ||
| 171 | default y | ||
| 172 | help | ||
| 173 | Serve web pages via an HTTP server. | ||
| 174 | |||
| 175 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_RANGES | ||
| 176 | bool "Support 'Ranges:' header" | ||
| 177 | default y | ||
| 178 | depends on HTTPD | ||
| 179 | help | ||
| 180 | Makes httpd emit "Accept-Ranges: bytes" header and understand | ||
| 181 | "Range: bytes=NNN-[MMM]" header. Allows for resuming interrupted | ||
| 182 | downloads, seeking in multimedia players etc. | ||
| 183 | |||
| 184 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_SETUID | ||
| 185 | bool "Enable -u <user> option" | ||
| 186 | default y | ||
| 187 | depends on HTTPD | ||
| 188 | help | ||
| 189 | This option allows the server to run as a specific user | ||
| 190 | rather than defaulting to the user that starts the server. | ||
| 191 | Use of this option requires special privileges to change to a | ||
| 192 | different user. | ||
| 193 | |||
| 194 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_BASIC_AUTH | ||
| 195 | bool "Enable Basic http Authentication" | ||
| 196 | default y | ||
| 197 | depends on HTTPD | ||
| 198 | help | ||
| 199 | Utilizes password settings from /etc/httpd.conf for basic | ||
| 200 | authentication on a per url basis. | ||
| 201 | Example for httpd.conf file: | ||
| 202 | /adm:toor:PaSsWd | ||
| 203 | |||
| 204 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_AUTH_MD5 | ||
| 205 | bool "Support MD5 crypted passwords for http Authentication" | ||
| 206 | default y | ||
| 207 | depends on FEATURE_HTTPD_BASIC_AUTH | ||
| 208 | help | ||
| 209 | Enables encrypted passwords, and wildcard user/passwords | ||
| 210 | in httpd.conf file. | ||
| 211 | User '*' means 'any system user name is ok', | ||
| 212 | password of '*' means 'use system password for this user' | ||
| 213 | Examples: | ||
| 214 | /adm:toor:$1$P/eKnWXS$aI1aPGxT.dJD5SzqAKWrF0 | ||
| 215 | /adm:root:* | ||
| 216 | /wiki:*:* | ||
| 217 | |||
| 218 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_CGI | ||
| 219 | bool "Support Common Gateway Interface (CGI)" | ||
| 220 | default y | ||
| 221 | depends on HTTPD | ||
| 222 | help | ||
| 223 | This option allows scripts and executables to be invoked | ||
| 224 | when specific URLs are requested. | ||
| 225 | |||
| 226 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_CONFIG_WITH_SCRIPT_INTERPR | ||
| 227 | bool "Support for running scripts through an interpreter" | ||
| 228 | default y | ||
| 229 | depends on FEATURE_HTTPD_CGI | ||
| 230 | help | ||
| 231 | This option enables support for running scripts through an | ||
| 232 | interpreter. Turn this on if you want PHP scripts to work | ||
| 233 | properly. You need to supply an additional line in your | ||
| 234 | httpd.conf file: | ||
| 235 | *.php:/path/to/your/php | ||
| 236 | |||
| 237 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_SET_REMOTE_PORT_TO_ENV | ||
| 238 | bool "Set REMOTE_PORT environment variable for CGI" | ||
| 239 | default y | ||
| 240 | depends on FEATURE_HTTPD_CGI | ||
| 241 | help | ||
| 242 | Use of this option can assist scripts in generating | ||
| 243 | references that contain a unique port number. | ||
| 244 | |||
| 245 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_ENCODE_URL_STR | ||
| 246 | bool "Enable -e option (useful for CGIs written as shell scripts)" | ||
| 247 | default y | ||
| 248 | depends on HTTPD | ||
| 249 | help | ||
| 250 | This option allows html encoding of arbitrary strings for display | ||
| 251 | by the browser. Output goes to stdout. | ||
| 252 | For example, httpd -e "<Hello World>" produces | ||
| 253 | "<Hello World>". | ||
| 254 | |||
| 255 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_ERROR_PAGES | ||
| 256 | bool "Support for custom error pages" | ||
| 257 | default y | ||
| 258 | depends on HTTPD | ||
| 259 | help | ||
| 260 | This option allows you to define custom error pages in | ||
| 261 | the configuration file instead of the default HTTP status | ||
| 262 | error pages. For instance, if you add the line: | ||
| 263 | E404:/path/e404.html | ||
| 264 | in the config file, the server will respond the specified | ||
| 265 | '/path/e404.html' file instead of the terse '404 NOT FOUND' | ||
| 266 | message. | ||
| 267 | |||
| 268 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_PROXY | ||
| 269 | bool "Support for reverse proxy" | ||
| 270 | default y | ||
| 271 | depends on HTTPD | ||
| 272 | help | ||
| 273 | This option allows you to define URLs that will be forwarded | ||
| 274 | to another HTTP server. To setup add the following line to the | ||
| 275 | configuration file | ||
| 276 | P:/url/:http://hostname[:port]/new/path/ | ||
| 277 | Then a request to /url/myfile will be forwarded to | ||
| 278 | http://hostname[:port]/new/path/myfile. | ||
| 279 | |||
| 280 | config FEATURE_HTTPD_GZIP | ||
| 281 | bool "Support for GZIP content encoding" | ||
| 282 | default y | ||
| 283 | depends on HTTPD | ||
| 284 | help | ||
| 285 | Makes httpd send files using GZIP content encoding if the | ||
| 286 | client supports it and a pre-compressed <file>.gz exists. | ||
| 287 | |||
| 288 | config IFCONFIG | ||
| 289 | bool "ifconfig" | ||
| 290 | default y | ||
| 291 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 292 | help | ||
| 293 | Ifconfig is used to configure the kernel-resident network interfaces. | ||
| 294 | |||
| 295 | config FEATURE_IFCONFIG_STATUS | ||
| 296 | bool "Enable status reporting output (+7k)" | ||
| 297 | default y | ||
| 298 | depends on IFCONFIG | ||
| 299 | help | ||
| 300 | If ifconfig is called with no arguments it will display the status | ||
| 301 | of the currently active interfaces. | ||
| 302 | |||
| 303 | config FEATURE_IFCONFIG_SLIP | ||
| 304 | bool "Enable slip-specific options \"keepalive\" and \"outfill\"" | ||
| 305 | default y | ||
| 306 | depends on IFCONFIG | ||
| 307 | help | ||
| 308 | Allow "keepalive" and "outfill" support for SLIP. If you're not | ||
| 309 | planning on using serial lines, leave this unchecked. | ||
| 310 | |||
| 311 | config FEATURE_IFCONFIG_MEMSTART_IOADDR_IRQ | ||
| 312 | bool "Enable options \"mem_start\", \"io_addr\", and \"irq\"" | ||
| 313 | default y | ||
| 314 | depends on IFCONFIG | ||
| 315 | help | ||
| 316 | Allow the start address for shared memory, start address for I/O, | ||
| 317 | and/or the interrupt line used by the specified device. | ||
| 318 | |||
| 319 | config FEATURE_IFCONFIG_HW | ||
| 320 | bool "Enable option \"hw\" (ether only)" | ||
| 321 | default y | ||
| 322 | depends on IFCONFIG | ||
| 323 | help | ||
| 324 | Set the hardware address of this interface, if the device driver | ||
| 325 | supports this operation. Currently, we only support the 'ether' | ||
| 326 | class. | ||
| 327 | |||
| 328 | config FEATURE_IFCONFIG_BROADCAST_PLUS | ||
| 329 | bool "Set the broadcast automatically" | ||
| 330 | default y | ||
| 331 | depends on IFCONFIG | ||
| 332 | help | ||
| 333 | Setting this will make ifconfig attempt to find the broadcast | ||
| 334 | automatically if the value '+' is used. | ||
| 335 | |||
| 336 | config IFENSLAVE | ||
| 337 | bool "ifenslave" | ||
| 338 | default y | ||
| 339 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 340 | help | ||
| 341 | Userspace application to bind several interfaces | ||
| 342 | to a logical interface (use with kernel bonding driver). | ||
| 343 | |||
| 344 | config IFPLUGD | ||
| 345 | bool "ifplugd" | ||
| 346 | default y | ||
| 347 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 348 | help | ||
| 349 | Network interface plug detection daemon. | ||
| 350 | |||
| 351 | config IFUPDOWN | ||
| 352 | bool "ifupdown" | ||
| 353 | default y | ||
| 354 | help | ||
| 355 | Activate or deactivate the specified interfaces. This applet makes | ||
| 356 | use of either "ifconfig" and "route" or the "ip" command to actually | ||
| 357 | configure network interfaces. Therefore, you will probably also want | ||
| 358 | to enable either IFCONFIG and ROUTE, or enable | ||
| 359 | FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IP and the various IP options. Of | ||
| 360 | course you could use non-busybox versions of these programs, so | ||
| 361 | against my better judgement (since this will surely result in plenty | ||
| 362 | of support questions on the mailing list), I do not force you to | ||
| 363 | enable these additional options. It is up to you to supply either | ||
| 364 | "ifconfig", "route" and "run-parts" or the "ip" command, either | ||
| 365 | via busybox or via standalone utilities. | ||
| 366 | |||
| 367 | config IFUPDOWN_IFSTATE_PATH | ||
| 368 | string "Absolute path to ifstate file" | ||
| 369 | default "/var/run/ifstate" | ||
| 370 | depends on IFUPDOWN | ||
| 371 | help | ||
| 372 | ifupdown keeps state information in a file called ifstate. | ||
| 373 | Typically it is located in /var/run/ifstate, however | ||
| 374 | some distributions tend to put it in other places | ||
| 375 | (debian, for example, uses /etc/network/run/ifstate). | ||
| 376 | This config option defines location of ifstate. | ||
| 377 | |||
| 378 | config FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IP | ||
| 379 | bool "Use ip applet" | ||
| 380 | default y | ||
| 381 | depends on IFUPDOWN | ||
| 382 | help | ||
| 383 | Use the iproute "ip" command to implement "ifup" and "ifdown", rather | ||
| 384 | than the default of using the older 'ifconfig' and 'route' utilities. | ||
| 385 | |||
| 386 | config FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IP_BUILTIN | ||
| 387 | bool "Use busybox ip applet" | ||
| 388 | default y | ||
| 389 | depends on FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IP | ||
| 390 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 391 | select IP | ||
| 392 | select FEATURE_IP_ADDRESS | ||
| 393 | select FEATURE_IP_LINK | ||
| 394 | select FEATURE_IP_ROUTE | ||
| 395 | help | ||
| 396 | Use the busybox iproute "ip" applet to implement "ifupdown". | ||
| 397 | |||
| 398 | If left disabled, you must install the full-blown iproute2 | ||
| 399 | utility or the "ifup" and "ifdown" applets will not work. | ||
| 400 | |||
| 401 | config FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IFCONFIG_BUILTIN | ||
| 402 | bool "Use busybox ifconfig and route applets" | ||
| 403 | default n | ||
| 404 | depends on IFUPDOWN && !FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IP | ||
| 405 | select IFCONFIG | ||
| 406 | select ROUTE | ||
| 407 | help | ||
| 408 | Use the busybox iproute "ifconfig" and "route" applets to | ||
| 409 | implement the "ifup" and "ifdown" utilities. | ||
| 410 | |||
| 411 | If left disabled, you must install the full-blown ifconfig | ||
| 412 | and route utilities, or the "ifup" and "ifdown" applets will not | ||
| 413 | work. | ||
| 414 | |||
| 415 | config FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IPV4 | ||
| 416 | bool "Support for IPv4" | ||
| 417 | default y | ||
| 418 | depends on IFUPDOWN | ||
| 419 | help | ||
| 420 | If you want ifup/ifdown to talk IPv4, leave this on. | ||
| 421 | |||
| 422 | config FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IPV6 | ||
| 423 | bool "Support for IPv6" | ||
| 424 | default y | ||
| 425 | depends on IFUPDOWN && FEATURE_IPV6 | ||
| 426 | help | ||
| 427 | If you need support for IPv6, turn this option on. | ||
| 428 | |||
| 429 | ### UNUSED | ||
| 430 | ###config FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_IPX | ||
| 431 | ### bool "Support for IPX" | ||
| 432 | ### default y | ||
| 433 | ### depends on IFUPDOWN | ||
| 434 | ### help | ||
| 435 | ### If this option is selected you can use busybox to work with IPX | ||
| 436 | ### networks. | ||
| 437 | |||
| 438 | config FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_MAPPING | ||
| 439 | bool "Enable mapping support" | ||
| 440 | default y | ||
| 441 | depends on IFUPDOWN | ||
| 442 | help | ||
| 443 | This enables support for the "mapping" stanza, unless you have | ||
| 444 | a weird network setup you don't need it. | ||
| 445 | |||
| 446 | config FEATURE_IFUPDOWN_EXTERNAL_DHCP | ||
| 447 | bool "Support for external dhcp clients" | ||
| 448 | default n | ||
| 449 | depends on IFUPDOWN | ||
| 450 | help | ||
| 451 | This enables support for the external dhcp clients. Clients are | ||
| 452 | tried in the following order: dhcpcd, dhclient, pump and udhcpc. | ||
| 453 | Otherwise, if udhcpc applet is enabled, it is used. | ||
| 454 | Otherwise, ifup/ifdown will have no support for DHCP. | ||
| 455 | |||
| 456 | config INETD | ||
| 457 | bool "inetd" | ||
| 458 | default y | ||
| 459 | select FEATURE_SYSLOG | ||
| 460 | help | ||
| 461 | Internet superserver daemon | ||
| 462 | |||
| 463 | config FEATURE_INETD_SUPPORT_BUILTIN_ECHO | ||
| 464 | bool "Support echo service" | ||
| 465 | default y | ||
| 466 | depends on INETD | ||
| 467 | help | ||
| 468 | Echo received data internal inetd service | ||
| 469 | |||
| 470 | config FEATURE_INETD_SUPPORT_BUILTIN_DISCARD | ||
| 471 | bool "Support discard service" | ||
| 472 | default y | ||
| 473 | depends on INETD | ||
| 474 | help | ||
| 475 | Internet /dev/null internal inetd service | ||
| 476 | |||
| 477 | config FEATURE_INETD_SUPPORT_BUILTIN_TIME | ||
| 478 | bool "Support time service" | ||
| 479 | default y | ||
| 480 | depends on INETD | ||
| 481 | help | ||
| 482 | Return 32 bit time since 1900 internal inetd service | ||
| 483 | |||
| 484 | config FEATURE_INETD_SUPPORT_BUILTIN_DAYTIME | ||
| 485 | bool "Support daytime service" | ||
| 486 | default y | ||
| 487 | depends on INETD | ||
| 488 | help | ||
| 489 | Return human-readable time internal inetd service | ||
| 490 | |||
| 491 | config FEATURE_INETD_SUPPORT_BUILTIN_CHARGEN | ||
| 492 | bool "Support chargen service" | ||
| 493 | default y | ||
| 494 | depends on INETD | ||
| 495 | help | ||
| 496 | Familiar character generator internal inetd service | ||
| 497 | |||
| 498 | config FEATURE_INETD_RPC | ||
| 499 | bool "Support RPC services" | ||
| 500 | default n # very rarely used, and needs Sun RPC support in libc | ||
| 501 | depends on INETD | ||
| 502 | select FEATURE_HAVE_RPC | ||
| 503 | help | ||
| 504 | Support Sun-RPC based services | ||
| 505 | |||
| 506 | config IP | ||
| 507 | bool "ip" | ||
| 508 | default y | ||
| 509 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 510 | help | ||
| 511 | The "ip" applet is a TCP/IP interface configuration and routing | ||
| 512 | utility. You generally don't need "ip" to use busybox with | ||
| 513 | TCP/IP. | ||
| 514 | |||
| 515 | config FEATURE_IP_ADDRESS | ||
| 516 | bool "ip address" | ||
| 517 | default y | ||
| 518 | depends on IP | ||
| 519 | help | ||
| 520 | Address manipulation support for the "ip" applet. | ||
| 521 | |||
| 522 | config FEATURE_IP_LINK | ||
| 523 | bool "ip link" | ||
| 524 | default y | ||
| 525 | depends on IP | ||
| 526 | help | ||
| 527 | Configure network devices with "ip". | ||
| 528 | |||
| 529 | config FEATURE_IP_ROUTE | ||
| 530 | bool "ip route" | ||
| 531 | default y | ||
| 532 | depends on IP | ||
| 533 | help | ||
| 534 | Add support for routing table management to "ip". | ||
| 535 | |||
| 536 | config FEATURE_IP_ROUTE_DIR | ||
| 537 | string "ip route configuration directory" | ||
| 538 | default "/etc/iproute2" | ||
| 539 | depends on FEATURE_IP_ROUTE | ||
| 540 | help | ||
| 541 | Location of the "ip" applet routing configuration. | ||
| 542 | |||
| 543 | config FEATURE_IP_TUNNEL | ||
| 544 | bool "ip tunnel" | ||
| 545 | default y | ||
| 546 | depends on IP | ||
| 547 | help | ||
| 548 | Add support for tunneling commands to "ip". | ||
| 549 | |||
| 550 | config FEATURE_IP_RULE | ||
| 551 | bool "ip rule" | ||
| 552 | default y | ||
| 553 | depends on IP | ||
| 554 | help | ||
| 555 | Add support for rule commands to "ip". | ||
| 556 | |||
| 557 | config FEATURE_IP_NEIGH | ||
| 558 | bool "ip neighbor" | ||
| 559 | default y | ||
| 560 | depends on IP | ||
| 561 | help | ||
| 562 | Add support for neighbor commands to "ip". | ||
| 563 | |||
| 564 | config FEATURE_IP_SHORT_FORMS | ||
| 565 | bool "Support short forms of ip commands" | ||
| 566 | default y | ||
| 567 | depends on IP | ||
| 568 | help | ||
| 569 | Also support short-form of ip <OBJECT> commands: | ||
| 570 | ip addr -> ipaddr | ||
| 571 | ip link -> iplink | ||
| 572 | ip route -> iproute | ||
| 573 | ip tunnel -> iptunnel | ||
| 574 | ip rule -> iprule | ||
| 575 | ip neigh -> ipneigh | ||
| 576 | |||
| 577 | Say N unless you desparately need the short form of the ip | ||
| 578 | object commands. | ||
| 579 | |||
| 580 | config FEATURE_IP_RARE_PROTOCOLS | ||
| 581 | bool "Support displaying rarely used link types" | ||
| 582 | default n | ||
| 583 | depends on IP | ||
| 584 | help | ||
| 585 | If you are not going to use links of type "frad", "econet", | ||
| 586 | "bif" etc, you probably don't need to enable this. | ||
| 587 | Ethernet, wireless, infrared, ppp/slip, ip tunnelling | ||
| 588 | link types are supported without this option selected. | ||
| 589 | |||
| 590 | config IPADDR | ||
| 591 | bool | ||
| 592 | default y | ||
| 593 | depends on FEATURE_IP_SHORT_FORMS && FEATURE_IP_ADDRESS | ||
| 594 | |||
| 595 | config IPLINK | ||
| 596 | bool | ||
| 597 | default y | ||
| 598 | depends on FEATURE_IP_SHORT_FORMS && FEATURE_IP_LINK | ||
| 599 | |||
| 600 | config IPROUTE | ||
| 601 | bool | ||
| 602 | default y | ||
| 603 | depends on FEATURE_IP_SHORT_FORMS && FEATURE_IP_ROUTE | ||
| 604 | |||
| 605 | config IPTUNNEL | ||
| 606 | bool | ||
| 607 | default y | ||
| 608 | depends on FEATURE_IP_SHORT_FORMS && FEATURE_IP_TUNNEL | ||
| 609 | |||
| 610 | config IPRULE | ||
| 611 | bool | ||
| 612 | default y | ||
| 613 | depends on FEATURE_IP_SHORT_FORMS && FEATURE_IP_RULE | ||
| 614 | |||
| 615 | config IPNEIGH | ||
| 616 | bool | ||
| 617 | default y | ||
| 618 | depends on FEATURE_IP_SHORT_FORMS && FEATURE_IP_NEIGH | ||
| 619 | |||
| 620 | config IPCALC | ||
| 621 | bool "ipcalc" | ||
| 622 | default y | ||
| 623 | help | ||
| 624 | ipcalc takes an IP address and netmask and calculates the | ||
| 625 | resulting broadcast, network, and host range. | ||
| 626 | |||
| 627 | config FEATURE_IPCALC_FANCY | ||
| 628 | bool "Fancy IPCALC, more options, adds 1 kbyte" | ||
| 629 | default y | ||
| 630 | depends on IPCALC | ||
| 631 | help | ||
| 632 | Adds the options hostname, prefix and silent to the output of | ||
| 633 | "ipcalc". | ||
| 634 | |||
| 635 | config FEATURE_IPCALC_LONG_OPTIONS | ||
| 636 | bool "Enable long options" | ||
| 637 | default y | ||
| 638 | depends on IPCALC && LONG_OPTS | ||
| 639 | help | ||
| 640 | Support long options for the ipcalc applet. | ||
| 641 | |||
| 642 | config NETSTAT | ||
| 643 | bool "netstat" | ||
| 644 | default y | ||
| 645 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 646 | help | ||
| 647 | netstat prints information about the Linux networking subsystem. | ||
| 648 | |||
| 649 | config FEATURE_NETSTAT_WIDE | ||
| 650 | bool "Enable wide netstat output" | ||
| 651 | default y | ||
| 652 | depends on NETSTAT | ||
| 653 | help | ||
| 654 | Add support for wide columns. Useful when displaying IPv6 addresses | ||
| 655 | (-W option). | ||
| 656 | |||
| 657 | config FEATURE_NETSTAT_PRG | ||
| 658 | bool "Enable PID/Program name output" | ||
| 659 | default y | ||
| 660 | depends on NETSTAT | ||
| 661 | help | ||
| 662 | Add support for -p flag to print out PID and program name. | ||
| 663 | +700 bytes of code. | ||
| 664 | |||
| 665 | config NSLOOKUP | ||
| 666 | bool "nslookup" | ||
| 667 | default y | ||
| 668 | help | ||
| 669 | nslookup is a tool to query Internet name servers. | ||
| 670 | |||
| 671 | config NTPD | ||
| 672 | bool "ntpd" | ||
| 673 | default y | ||
| 674 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 675 | help | ||
| 676 | The NTP client/server daemon. | ||
| 677 | |||
| 678 | config FEATURE_NTPD_SERVER | ||
| 679 | bool "Make ntpd usable as a NTP server" | ||
| 680 | default y | ||
| 681 | depends on NTPD | ||
| 682 | help | ||
| 683 | Make ntpd usable as a NTP server. If you disable this option | ||
| 684 | ntpd will be usable only as a NTP client. | ||
| 685 | |||
| 686 | config FEATURE_NTPD_CONF | ||
| 687 | bool "Make ntpd understand /etc/ntp.conf" | ||
| 688 | default y | ||
| 689 | depends on NTPD | ||
| 690 | help | ||
| 691 | Make ntpd look in /etc/ntp.conf for peers. Only "server address" | ||
| 692 | is supported. | ||
| 693 | |||
| 694 | config PSCAN | ||
| 695 | bool "pscan" | ||
| 696 | default y | ||
| 697 | help | ||
| 698 | Simple network port scanner. | ||
| 699 | |||
| 700 | config ROUTE | ||
| 701 | bool "route" | ||
| 702 | default y | ||
| 703 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 704 | help | ||
| 705 | Route displays or manipulates the kernel's IP routing tables. | ||
| 706 | |||
| 707 | config SLATTACH | ||
| 708 | bool "slattach" | ||
| 709 | default y | ||
| 710 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 711 | help | ||
| 712 | slattach is a small utility to attach network interfaces to serial | ||
| 713 | lines. | ||
| 714 | |||
| 715 | #config TC | ||
| 716 | # bool "tc" | ||
| 717 | # default y | ||
| 718 | # help | ||
| 719 | # show / manipulate traffic control settings | ||
| 720 | # | ||
| 721 | #config FEATURE_TC_INGRESS | ||
| 722 | # def_bool n | ||
| 723 | # depends on TC | ||
| 724 | |||
| 725 | config TCPSVD | ||
| 726 | bool "tcpsvd" | ||
| 727 | default y | ||
| 728 | help | ||
| 729 | tcpsvd listens on a TCP port and runs a program for each new | ||
| 730 | connection. | ||
| 731 | |||
| 732 | config TELNET | ||
| 733 | bool "telnet" | ||
| 734 | default y | ||
| 735 | help | ||
| 736 | Telnet is an interface to the TELNET protocol, but is also commonly | ||
| 737 | used to test other simple protocols. | ||
| 738 | |||
| 739 | config FEATURE_TELNET_TTYPE | ||
| 740 | bool "Pass TERM type to remote host" | ||
| 741 | default y | ||
| 742 | depends on TELNET | ||
| 743 | help | ||
| 744 | Setting this option will forward the TERM environment variable to the | ||
| 745 | remote host you are connecting to. This is useful to make sure that | ||
| 746 | things like ANSI colors and other control sequences behave. | ||
| 747 | |||
| 748 | config FEATURE_TELNET_AUTOLOGIN | ||
| 749 | bool "Pass USER type to remote host" | ||
| 750 | default y | ||
| 751 | depends on TELNET | ||
| 752 | help | ||
| 753 | Setting this option will forward the USER environment variable to the | ||
| 754 | remote host you are connecting to. This is useful when you need to | ||
| 755 | log into a machine without telling the username (autologin). This | ||
| 756 | option enables `-a' and `-l USER' arguments. | ||
| 757 | |||
| 758 | config TELNETD | ||
| 759 | bool "telnetd" | ||
| 760 | default y | ||
| 761 | select FEATURE_SYSLOG | ||
| 762 | help | ||
| 763 | A daemon for the TELNET protocol, allowing you to log onto the host | ||
| 764 | running the daemon. Please keep in mind that the TELNET protocol | ||
| 765 | sends passwords in plain text. If you can't afford the space for an | ||
| 766 | SSH daemon and you trust your network, you may say 'y' here. As a | ||
| 767 | more secure alternative, you should seriously consider installing the | ||
| 768 | very small Dropbear SSH daemon instead: | ||
| 769 | http://matt.ucc.asn.au/dropbear/dropbear.html | ||
| 770 | |||
| 771 | Note that for busybox telnetd to work you need several things: | ||
| 772 | First of all, your kernel needs: | ||
| 773 | CONFIG_UNIX98_PTYS=y | ||
| 774 | |||
| 775 | Next, you need a /dev/pts directory on your root filesystem: | ||
| 776 | |||
| 777 | $ ls -ld /dev/pts | ||
| 778 | drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Sep 23 13:21 /dev/pts/ | ||
| 779 | |||
| 780 | Next you need the pseudo terminal master multiplexer /dev/ptmx: | ||
| 781 | |||
| 782 | $ ls -la /dev/ptmx | ||
| 783 | crw-rw-rw- 1 root tty 5, 2 Sep 23 13:55 /dev/ptmx | ||
| 784 | |||
| 785 | Any /dev/ttyp[0-9]* files you may have can be removed. | ||
| 786 | Next, you need to mount the devpts filesystem on /dev/pts using: | ||
| 787 | |||
| 788 | mount -t devpts devpts /dev/pts | ||
| 789 | |||
| 790 | You need to be sure that busybox has LOGIN and | ||
| 791 | FEATURE_SUID enabled. And finally, you should make | ||
| 792 | certain that Busybox has been installed setuid root: | ||
| 793 | |||
| 794 | chown root.root /bin/busybox | ||
| 795 | chmod 4755 /bin/busybox | ||
| 796 | |||
| 797 | with all that done, telnetd _should_ work.... | ||
| 798 | |||
| 799 | |||
| 800 | config FEATURE_TELNETD_STANDALONE | ||
| 801 | bool "Support standalone telnetd (not inetd only)" | ||
| 802 | default y | ||
| 803 | depends on TELNETD | ||
| 804 | help | ||
| 805 | Selecting this will make telnetd able to run standalone. | ||
| 806 | |||
| 807 | config FEATURE_TELNETD_INETD_WAIT | ||
| 808 | bool "Support -w SEC option (inetd wait mode)" | ||
| 809 | default y | ||
| 810 | depends on FEATURE_TELNETD_STANDALONE | ||
| 811 | help | ||
| 812 | This option allows you to run telnetd in "inet wait" mode. | ||
| 813 | Example inetd.conf line (note "wait", not usual "nowait"): | ||
| 814 | |||
| 815 | telnet stream tcp wait root /bin/telnetd telnetd -w10 | ||
| 816 | |||
| 817 | In this example, inetd passes _listening_ socket_ as fd 0 | ||
| 818 | to telnetd when connection appears. | ||
| 819 | telnetd will wait for connections until all existing | ||
| 820 | connections are closed, and no new connections | ||
| 821 | appear during 10 seconds. Then it exits, and inetd continues | ||
| 822 | to listen for new connections. | ||
| 823 | |||
| 824 | This option is rarely used. "tcp nowait" is much more usual | ||
| 825 | way of running tcp services, including telnetd. | ||
| 826 | You most probably want to say N here. | ||
| 827 | |||
| 828 | config TFTP | ||
| 829 | bool "tftp" | ||
| 830 | default y | ||
| 831 | help | ||
| 832 | This enables the Trivial File Transfer Protocol client program. TFTP | ||
| 833 | is usually used for simple, small transfers such as a root image | ||
| 834 | for a network-enabled bootloader. | ||
| 835 | |||
| 836 | config TFTPD | ||
| 837 | bool "tftpd" | ||
| 838 | default y | ||
| 839 | help | ||
| 840 | This enables the Trivial File Transfer Protocol server program. | ||
| 841 | It expects that stdin is a datagram socket and a packet | ||
| 842 | is already pending on it. It will exit after one transfer. | ||
| 843 | In other words: it should be run from inetd in nowait mode, | ||
| 844 | or from udpsvd. Example: "udpsvd -E 0 69 tftpd DIR" | ||
| 845 | |||
| 846 | comment "Common options for tftp/tftpd" | ||
| 847 | depends on TFTP || TFTPD | ||
| 848 | |||
| 849 | config FEATURE_TFTP_GET | ||
| 850 | bool "Enable 'tftp get' and/or tftpd upload code" | ||
| 851 | default y | ||
| 852 | depends on TFTP || TFTPD | ||
| 853 | help | ||
| 854 | Add support for the GET command within the TFTP client. This allows | ||
| 855 | a client to retrieve a file from a TFTP server. | ||
| 856 | Also enable upload support in tftpd, if tftpd is selected. | ||
| 857 | |||
| 858 | Note: this option does _not_ make tftpd capable of download | ||
| 859 | (the usual operation people need from it)! | ||
| 860 | |||
| 861 | config FEATURE_TFTP_PUT | ||
| 862 | bool "Enable 'tftp put' and/or tftpd download code" | ||
| 863 | default y | ||
| 864 | depends on TFTP || TFTPD | ||
| 865 | help | ||
| 866 | Add support for the PUT command within the TFTP client. This allows | ||
| 867 | a client to transfer a file to a TFTP server. | ||
| 868 | Also enable download support in tftpd, if tftpd is selected. | ||
| 869 | |||
| 870 | config FEATURE_TFTP_BLOCKSIZE | ||
| 871 | bool "Enable 'blksize' and 'tsize' protocol options" | ||
| 872 | default y | ||
| 873 | depends on TFTP || TFTPD | ||
| 874 | help | ||
| 875 | Allow tftp to specify block size, and tftpd to understand | ||
| 876 | "blksize" and "tsize" options. | ||
| 877 | |||
| 878 | config FEATURE_TFTP_PROGRESS_BAR | ||
| 879 | bool "Enable tftp progress meter" | ||
| 880 | default y | ||
| 881 | depends on TFTP && FEATURE_TFTP_BLOCKSIZE | ||
| 882 | help | ||
| 883 | Show progress bar. | ||
| 884 | |||
| 885 | config TFTP_DEBUG | ||
| 886 | bool "Enable debug" | ||
| 887 | default n | ||
| 888 | depends on TFTP || TFTPD | ||
| 889 | help | ||
| 890 | Make tftp[d] print debugging messages on stderr. | ||
| 891 | This is useful if you are diagnosing a bug in tftp[d]. | ||
| 892 | |||
| 893 | config TRACEROUTE | ||
| 894 | bool "traceroute" | ||
| 895 | default y | ||
| 896 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 897 | help | ||
| 898 | Utility to trace the route of IP packets. | ||
| 899 | |||
| 900 | config TRACEROUTE6 | ||
| 901 | bool "traceroute6" | ||
| 902 | default y | ||
| 903 | depends on FEATURE_IPV6 && TRACEROUTE | ||
| 904 | help | ||
| 905 | Utility to trace the route of IPv6 packets. | ||
| 906 | |||
| 907 | config FEATURE_TRACEROUTE_VERBOSE | ||
| 908 | bool "Enable verbose output" | ||
| 909 | default y | ||
| 910 | depends on TRACEROUTE | ||
| 911 | help | ||
| 912 | Add some verbosity to traceroute. This includes among other things | ||
| 913 | hostnames and ICMP response types. | ||
| 914 | |||
| 915 | config FEATURE_TRACEROUTE_USE_ICMP | ||
| 916 | bool "Enable -I option (use ICMP instead of UDP)" | ||
| 917 | default y | ||
| 918 | depends on TRACEROUTE | ||
| 919 | help | ||
| 920 | Add option -I to use ICMP ECHO instead of UDP datagrams. | ||
| 921 | |||
| 922 | config TUNCTL | ||
| 923 | bool "tunctl" | ||
| 924 | default y | ||
| 925 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 926 | help | ||
| 927 | tunctl creates or deletes tun devices. | ||
| 928 | |||
| 929 | config FEATURE_TUNCTL_UG | ||
| 930 | bool "Support owner:group assignment" | ||
| 931 | default y | ||
| 932 | depends on TUNCTL | ||
| 933 | help | ||
| 934 | Allow to specify owner and group of newly created interface. | ||
| 935 | 340 bytes of pure bloat. Say no here. | ||
| 936 | 50 | ||
| 937 | source networking/udhcp/Config.in | 51 | source networking/udhcp/Config.in |
| 938 | 52 | ||
| @@ -945,31 +59,4 @@ config IFUPDOWN_UDHCPC_CMD_OPTIONS | |||
| 945 | Intended to alter options not available in /etc/network/interfaces. | 59 | Intended to alter options not available in /etc/network/interfaces. |
| 946 | (IE: --syslog --background etc...) | 60 | (IE: --syslog --background etc...) |
| 947 | 61 | ||
| 948 | config UDPSVD | ||
| 949 | bool "udpsvd" | ||
| 950 | default y | ||
| 951 | help | ||
| 952 | udpsvd listens on an UDP port and runs a program for each new | ||
| 953 | connection. | ||
| 954 | |||
| 955 | config VCONFIG | ||
| 956 | bool "vconfig" | ||
| 957 | default y | ||
| 958 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 959 | help | ||
| 960 | Creates, removes, and configures VLAN interfaces | ||
| 961 | |||
| 962 | config ZCIP | ||
| 963 | bool "zcip" | ||
| 964 | default y | ||
| 965 | select PLATFORM_LINUX | ||
| 966 | select FEATURE_SYSLOG | ||
| 967 | help | ||
| 968 | ZCIP provides ZeroConf IPv4 address selection, according to RFC 3927. | ||
| 969 | It's a daemon that allocates and defends a dynamically assigned | ||
| 970 | address on the 169.254/16 network, requiring no system administrator. | ||
| 971 | |||
| 972 | See http://www.zeroconf.org for further details, and "zcip.script" | ||
| 973 | in the busybox examples. | ||
| 974 | |||
| 975 | endmenu | 62 | endmenu |
