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Rob Landley 027e1dc8cd Point to the same binary cross compilers as the FAQ. 2 năm trước cách đây
.github f616302126 Apparently macOS-12.4 isn't an option. 3 năm trước cách đây
kconfig b9d040bc98 Missed two. 3 năm trước cách đây
lib 5330de20b3 Helps to check in the dirtree changes. (Oops.) 2 năm trước cách đây
scripts c5e7495fe4 Ensure make wrapper sees success return code in verbose mode (V=1) 2 năm trước cách đây
tests 9ba775e805 Add tar -s --sort 2 năm trước cách đây
toys c2d8e184f8 nohup: use the same mode constant for open() and xcreate(). 2 năm trước cách đây
www 687490a30d There's always something. 2 năm trước cách đây
.gitignore d5a17e1a21 Ignore .singlemake. 9 năm trước cách đây
Config.in a6e0c86f77 All PEDANTIC_ARGS does is set a macro that's never used. 3 năm trước cách đây
LICENSE b31192fd73 The title line is confusing github's license detector thingy. 6 năm trước cách đây
Makefile 77381506e9 Don't force "make tests" or scripts/tests.sh to rebuild every time. 2 năm trước cách đây
README 027e1dc8cd Point to the same binary cross compilers as the FAQ. 2 năm trước cách đây
configure f492273712 Move -Wno-string-plus-int to portability.sh and have it only apply to clang. 3 năm trước cách đây
main.c 0ec3ae72ad Fix help -ah to show nbd-client and nbd-server instead of "see hidden_alias". 2 năm trước cách đây
toys.h c62d8a9f74 Release 0.8.9 2 năm trước cách đây

README

Toybox: all-in-one Linux command line.

--- Getting started

You can download static binaries for various targets from:

http://landley.net/toybox/bin

The special name "." indicates the current directory (just like ".." means
the parent directory), and you can run a program that isn't in the $PATH by
specifying a path to it, so this should work:

wget http://landley.net/toybox/bin/toybox-x86_64
chmod +x toybox-x86_64
./toybox-x86_64 echo hello world

--- Building toybox

Type "make help" for build instructions.

Toybox uses the "make menuconfig; make; make install" idiom same as
the Linux kernel. Usually you want something like:

make defconfig
make
make install

Or maybe:

LDFLAGS="--static" CROSS_COMPILE=armv5l- make defconfig toybox
PREFIX=/path/to/root/filesystem/bin make install_flat

The file "configure" defines default values for many environment variables
that control the toybox build; if you export any of these variables into your
environment, your value is used instead of the default in that file.

The CROSS_COMPILE argument above is optional, the default builds a version of
toybox to run on the current machine. Cross compiling requires an appropriately
prefixed cross compiler toolchain, several example toolchains (built using
the file "scripts/mcm-buildall.sh" in the toybox source) are available at:

https://landley.net/toybox/downloads/binaries/toolchains/latest

For the "CROSS_COMPILE=armv5l-" example above, download
armv5l-linux-musleabihf-cross.tar.xz, extract it, and add its "bin"
subdirectory to your $PATH. (And yes, the trailing - is significant,
because the prefix includes a dash.)

For more about cross compiling, see:

https://landley.net/toybox/faq.html#cross
http://landley.net/writing/docs/cross-compiling.html
http://landley.net/aboriginal/architectures.html

For a more thorough description of the toybox build process, see:

http://landley.net/toybox/code.html#building

--- Using toybox

The toybox build produces a multicall binary, a "swiss-army-knife" program
that acts differently depending on the name it was called by (cp, mv, cat...).
Installing toybox adds symlinks for each command name to the $PATH.

The special "toybox" command treats its first argument as the command to run.
With no arguments, it lists available commands. This allows you to use toybox
without installing it, and is the only command that can have an arbitrary
suffix (hence "toybox-armv5l").

The "help" command provides information about each command (ala "help cat"),
and "help toybox" provides general information about toybox.

--- Configuring toybox

It works like the Linux kernel: allnoconfig, defconfig, and menuconfig edit
a ".config" file that selects which features to include in the resulting
binary. You can save and re-use your .config file, but may want to
run "make oldconfig" to re-run the dependency resolver when migrating to
new versions.

The maximum sane configuration is "make defconfig": allyesconfig isn't
recommended as a starting point for toybox because it enables unfinished
commands, debug code, and optional dependencies your build environment may
not provide.

--- Creating a Toybox-based Linux system

Toybox has a built-in simple system builder (scripts/mkroot.sh) with a
Makefile target:

make root
sudo chroot root/host/fs /init

Type "exit" to get back out. If you install appropriate cross compilers and
point it at Linux source code, it can build simple three-package systems
that boot to a shell prompt under qemu:

make root CROSS_COMPILE=sh4-linux-musl- LINUX=~/linux
cd root/sh4
./qemu-sh4.sh

By calling scripts/mkroot.sh directly you can add additional packages
to the build, see scripts/root/dropbear as an example.

The FAQ explains this in a lot more detail:

https://landley.net/toybox/faq.html#system
https://landley.net/toybox/faq.html#mkroot

--- Presentations

1) "Why Toybox?" talk at the Embedded Linux Conference in 2013

outline: http://landley.net/talks/celf-2013.txt
video: http://youtu.be/SGmtP5Lg_t0

The https://landley.net/toybox/about.html page has nav links breaking that
talk down into sections.

2) "Why Public Domain?" The rise and fall of copyleft, Ohio LinuxFest 2013

outline: http://landley.net/talks/ohio-2013.txt
audio: https://archive.org/download/OhioLinuxfest2013/24-Rob_Landley-The_Rise_and_Fall_of_Copyleft.mp3

3) Why did I do Aboriginal Linux (which led me here)

260 slide presentation:
https://speakerdeck.com/landley/developing-for-non-x86-targets-using-qemu

How and why to make android self-hosting:
http://landley.net/aboriginal/about.html#selfhost

More backstory than strictly necessary:
https://landley.net/aboriginal/history.html

4) What's new with toybox (ELC 2015 status update):

video: http://elinux.org/ELC_2015_Presentations
outline: http://landley.net/talks/celf-2015.txt

5) Toybox vs BusyBox (2019 ELC talk):

outline: http://landley.net/talks/elc-2019.txt
video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkJkyMuBm3g

--- Contributing

The three important URLs for communicating with the toybox project are:

web page: http://landley.net/toybox

mailing list: http://lists.landley.net/listinfo.cgi/toybox-landley.net

git repo: http://github.com/landley/toybox

The maintainer prefers patches be sent to the mailing list. If you use git,
the easy thing to do is:

git format-patch -1 $HASH

Then send a file attachment. The list holds messages from non-subscribers
for moderation, but I usually get to them in a day or two.

I download github pull requests as patches and apply them with "git am"
(which avoids gratuitous merge commits). Sometimes I even remember to close
the pull request.

If I haven't responded to your patch after one week, feel free to remind
me of it.

Android's policy for toybox patches is that non-build patches should go
upstream first (into vanilla toybox, with discussion on the toybox mailing
list) and then be pulled into android's toybox repo from there. (They
generally resync on fridays). The exception is patches to their build scripts
(Android.mk and the checked-in generated/* files) which go directly to AOSP.

(As for the other meaning of "contributing", https://patreon.com/landley is
always welcome but I warn you up front I'm terrible about updating it.)