freebsd-src/release/root_crunch.conf
Jordan K. Hubbard 8cb85ad4c4 The cpio floppy is dead. All hail the root floppy.
Basically, this is just a simple name change.  People were historically
confused by the "cpio floppy", having no clear idea as to what it was
(even if they knew what "cpio" stood for) given that the name gives
one absolutely no indication as to what it's FOR.  It's about as content
free as calling it a "data floppy".  Root floppy isn't much better, but
it's got some historical weight (Linux divides their set into boot and
root floppies) and is reasonably descriptive for a floppy that comprises
the beginnings of a stand-alone root filesystem.
1995-05-25 18:43:41 +00:00

38 lines
1.1 KiB
Plaintext

# $Id: cpio_crunch.conf,v 1.7 1995/05/25 01:51:45 jkh Exp $
# first, we list the source dirs that our programs reside in. These are
# searched in order listed to find the dir containing each program.
srcdirs /usr/src/gnu/usr.bin
srcdirs /usr/src/bin /usr/src/sbin /usr/src/sbin/i386 /usr/src/usr.bin
srcdirs /usr/src/usr.sbin
# second, we list all the programs we want to include in our crunched binary.
# The order doesn't matter. Any program that needs hard links to it gets an
# `ln' directive.
# /bin stuff
progs cat chmod cksum cp date dd df echo ed expr grep hostname kill ln
progs mkdir mt mv pwd rcp rm rmdir sleep slattach stty sync test ft
ln test [
# /sbin stuff
progs badsect basename chown clri disklabel dmesg dump dmesg fdisk ft
progs getopt init mknod mount mount_cd9660 mount_msdos mount_nfs
progs ping reboot restore swapon umount
ln dump rdump
ln restore rrestore
ln reboot halt
# /usr/bin stuff
progs tar ncftp ppp rsh sed telnet rlogin
#progs tip
#ln tip cu
# finally, we specify the libraries to link in with our binary
libs -lcrypt -ltelnet -lutil -ll -ledit
libs -lgnuregex -lreadline -lcurses -ltermcap -lkvm