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Diffstat (limited to 'package/utils/busybox/config/init/Config.in')
-rw-r--r-- | package/utils/busybox/config/init/Config.in | 185 |
1 files changed, 185 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/package/utils/busybox/config/init/Config.in b/package/utils/busybox/config/init/Config.in new file mode 100644 index 0000000..07d94a2 --- /dev/null +++ b/package/utils/busybox/config/init/Config.in @@ -0,0 +1,185 @@ +# DO NOT EDIT. This file is generated from Config.src +# +# For a description of the syntax of this configuration file, +# see scripts/kbuild/config-language.txt. +# + +menu "Init Utilities" + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_BOOTCHARTD + bool "bootchartd" + default n + help + bootchartd is commonly used to profile the boot process + for the purpose of speeding it up. In this case, it is started + by the kernel as the init process. This is configured by adding + the init=/sbin/bootchartd option to the kernel command line. + + It can also be used to monitor the resource usage of a specific + application or the running system in general. In this case, + bootchartd is started interactively by running bootchartd start + and stopped using bootchartd stop. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_BOOTCHARTD_BLOATED_HEADER + bool "Compatible, bloated header" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_BOOTCHARTD + help + Create extended header file compatible with "big" bootchartd. + "Big" bootchartd is a shell script and it dumps some + "convenient" info int the header, such as: + title = Boot chart for `hostname` (`date`) + system.uname = `uname -srvm` + system.release = `cat /etc/DISTRO-release` + system.cpu = `grep '^model name' /proc/cpuinfo | head -1` ($cpucount) + system.kernel.options = `cat /proc/cmdline` + This data is not mandatory for bootchart graph generation, + and is considered bloat. Nevertheless, this option + makes bootchartd applet to dump a subset of it. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_BOOTCHARTD_CONFIG_FILE + bool "Support bootchartd.conf" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_BOOTCHARTD + help + Enable reading and parsing of $PWD/bootchartd.conf + and /etc/bootchartd.conf files. +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_HALT + bool "poweroff, halt, and reboot" + default y + help + Stop all processes and either halt, reboot, or power off the system. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_CALL_TELINIT + bool "Call telinit on shutdown and reboot" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_HALT && !BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + help + Call an external program (normally telinit) to facilitate + a switch to a proper runlevel. + + This option is only available if you selected halt and friends, + but did not select init. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_TELINIT_PATH + string "Path to telinit executable" + default "/sbin/telinit" + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_CALL_TELINIT + help + When busybox halt and friends have to call external telinit + to facilitate proper shutdown, this path is to be used when + locating telinit executable. +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + bool "init" + default y + select BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_SYSLOG + depends on BROKEN + help + init is the first program run when the system boots. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_USE_INITTAB + bool "Support reading an inittab file" + default y + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + help + Allow init to read an inittab file when the system boot. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_KILL_REMOVED + bool "Support killing processes that have been removed from inittab" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_USE_INITTAB + help + When respawn entries are removed from inittab and a SIGHUP is + sent to init, this option will make init kill the processes + that have been removed. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_KILL_DELAY + int "How long to wait between TERM and KILL (0 - send TERM only)" if FEATURE_KILL_REMOVED + range 0 1024 + default 0 + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_KILL_REMOVED + help + With nonzero setting, init sends TERM, forks, child waits N + seconds, sends KILL and exits. Setting it too high is unwise + (child will hang around for too long and could actually kill + the wrong process!) + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_INIT_SCTTY + bool "Run commands with leading dash with controlling tty" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + help + If this option is enabled, init will try to give a controlling + tty to any command which has leading hyphen (often it's "-/bin/sh"). + More precisely, init will do "ioctl(STDIN_FILENO, TIOCSCTTY, 0)". + If device attached to STDIN_FILENO can be a ctty but is not yet + a ctty for other session, it will become this process' ctty. + This is not the traditional init behavour, but is often what you want + in an embedded system where the console is only accessed during + development or for maintenance. + NB: using cttyhack applet may work better. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_INIT_SYSLOG + bool "Enable init to write to syslog" + default y + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_EXTRA_QUIET + bool "Be _extra_ quiet on boot" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + help + Prevent init from logging some messages to the console during boot. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_INIT_COREDUMPS + bool "Support dumping core for child processes (debugging only)" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + help + If this option is enabled and the file /.init_enable_core + exists, then init will call setrlimit() to allow unlimited + core file sizes. If this option is disabled, processes + will not generate any core files. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_INITRD + bool "Support running init from within an initrd (not initramfs)" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + help + Legacy support for running init under the old-style initrd. Allows + the name linuxrc to act as init, and it doesn't assume init is PID 1. + + This does not apply to initramfs, which runs /init as PID 1 and + requires no special support. + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT_TERMINAL_TYPE + string "Initial terminal type" + default "linux" + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_INIT + help + This is the initial value set by init for the TERM environment + variable. This variable is used by programs which make use of + extended terminal capabilities. + + Note that on Linux, init attempts to detect serial terminal and + sets TERM to "vt102" if one is found. +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MESG + bool "mesg" + default n + help + Mesg controls access to your terminal by others. It is typically + used to allow or disallow other users to write to your terminal + +config BUSYBOX_CONFIG_FEATURE_MESG_ENABLE_ONLY_GROUP + bool "Enable writing to tty only by group, not by everybody" + default n + depends on BUSYBOX_CONFIG_MESG + help + Usually, ttys are owned by group "tty", and "write" tool is + setgid to this group. This way, "mesg y" only needs to enable + "write by owning group" bit in tty mode. + + If you set this option to N, "mesg y" will enable writing + by anybody at all. This is not recommended. + +endmenu |