Config.in 22 KB

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  1. menu "System configuration"
  2. # Note on package/skeleton: usually, it is not safe to 'select' a
  3. # provider of a virtual package. But below we have an exception: each
  4. # init system may select one of the virtual skeleton-init-* packages.
  5. # As only one init system may be enabled, only one skeleton-init-* may
  6. # be selected. So this is a safe situation.
  7. choice
  8. prompt "Root FS skeleton"
  9. config BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  10. bool "default target skeleton"
  11. help
  12. Use default target skeleton for selected init system.
  13. config BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_CUSTOM
  14. bool "custom target skeleton"
  15. select BR2_PACKAGE_SKELETON_CUSTOM
  16. help
  17. Use custom target skeleton.
  18. # skeleton from br2-external trees, if any
  19. source "$BR2_BASE_DIR/.br2-external.in.skeleton"
  20. endchoice
  21. if BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_CUSTOM
  22. config BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_CUSTOM_PATH
  23. string "custom target skeleton path"
  24. help
  25. Path to custom target skeleton.
  26. endif
  27. if BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  28. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_HOSTNAME
  29. string "System hostname"
  30. default "buildroot"
  31. help
  32. Select system hostname to be stored in /etc/hostname.
  33. Leave empty to not create /etc/hostname, or to keep the
  34. one from a custom skeleton.
  35. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_ISSUE
  36. string "System banner"
  37. default "Welcome to Buildroot"
  38. help
  39. Select system banner (/etc/issue) to be displayed at login.
  40. Leave empty to not create /etc/issue, or to keep the
  41. one from a custom skeleton.
  42. endif
  43. choice
  44. bool "Passwords encoding"
  45. default BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_PASSWD_SHA256
  46. help
  47. Choose the password encoding scheme to use when Buildroot
  48. needs to encode a password (eg. the root password, below).
  49. Note: this is used at build-time, and *not* at runtime.
  50. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_PASSWD_SHA256
  51. bool "sha-256"
  52. help
  53. Use SHA256 to encode passwords which is stronger than MD5.
  54. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_PASSWD_SHA512
  55. bool "sha-512"
  56. help
  57. Use SHA512 to encode passwords which is stronger than SHA256
  58. endchoice # Passwd encoding
  59. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_PASSWD_METHOD
  60. string
  61. default "sha-256" if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_PASSWD_SHA256
  62. default "sha-512" if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_PASSWD_SHA512
  63. # See comment at the top of the file, about selecting individual
  64. # skeletons, which are providers of the virtual skeleton package.
  65. choice
  66. prompt "Init system"
  67. default BR2_INIT_BUSYBOX
  68. config BR2_INIT_BUSYBOX
  69. bool "BusyBox"
  70. select BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX
  71. select BR2_PACKAGE_INITSCRIPTS
  72. select BR2_PACKAGE_SKELETON_INIT_SYSV if BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  73. config BR2_INIT_SYSV
  74. bool "systemV"
  75. depends on BR2_USE_MMU # sysvinit
  76. select BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX_SHOW_OTHERS # sysvinit
  77. select BR2_PACKAGE_INITSCRIPTS
  78. select BR2_PACKAGE_SYSVINIT
  79. select BR2_PACKAGE_SKELETON_INIT_SYSV if BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  80. config BR2_INIT_OPENRC
  81. bool "OpenRC"
  82. depends on BR2_USE_MMU
  83. depends on !BR2_STATIC_LIBS
  84. depends on !BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_UCLIBC # openrc
  85. select BR2_PACKAGE_OPENRC
  86. select BR2_PACKAGE_SKELETON_INIT_OPENRC if BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  87. comment "openrc needs a glibc or musl toolchain w/ dynamic library"
  88. depends on BR2_USE_MMU
  89. depends on BR2_STATIC_LIBS && BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_UCLIBC
  90. # In Buildroot, we decided not to support a split-usr when systemd is
  91. # used as an init system. This is a design decision, not a systemd
  92. # issue. Thus the select is with BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD (below) rather than
  93. # with BR2_PACKAGE_SYSTEMD.
  94. config BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD
  95. bool "systemd"
  96. depends on BR2_PACKAGE_SYSTEMD_ARCH_SUPPORTS
  97. depends on BR2_USE_MMU
  98. depends on !BR2_STATIC_LIBS
  99. depends on BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_GLIBC
  100. depends on BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HAS_SSP
  101. depends on BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HAS_THREADS
  102. depends on BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HEADERS_AT_LEAST_4_14
  103. depends on BR2_TOOLCHAIN_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
  104. depends on BR2_HOST_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
  105. select BR2_ROOTFS_MERGED_USR
  106. select BR2_PACKAGE_SYSTEMD
  107. select BR2_PACKAGE_SKELETON_INIT_SYSTEMD if BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  108. comment "systemd needs a glibc toolchain w/ SSP, headers >= 4.14, host and target gcc >= 5"
  109. depends on BR2_PACKAGE_SYSTEMD_ARCH_SUPPORTS
  110. depends on BR2_USE_MMU
  111. depends on !BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_GLIBC || \
  112. !BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HAS_SSP || \
  113. !BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HEADERS_AT_LEAST_4_14 || \
  114. !BR2_TOOLCHAIN_GCC_AT_LEAST_5 || \
  115. !BR2_HOST_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
  116. comment "systemd highly recommends Linux >= 4.15"
  117. depends on BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD
  118. depends on !BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HEADERS_AT_LEAST_4_15
  119. config BR2_INIT_NONE
  120. bool "None"
  121. select BR2_PACKAGE_SKELETON_INIT_NONE if BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  122. help
  123. Buildroot will not install any init system. You will
  124. have to provide your own, either with a new package
  125. or with a rootfs-overlay.
  126. # Init systems from br2-external trees, if any
  127. source "$BR2_BASE_DIR/.br2-external.in.init"
  128. endchoice
  129. if BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD
  130. choice
  131. bool "/var management"
  132. default BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD_VAR_FACTORY # legacy
  133. depends on !BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_REMOUNT_ROOTFS_RW
  134. help
  135. Select how Buildroot provides a read-write /var when the
  136. rootfs is not remounted read-write.
  137. Note: Buildroot uses a tmpfs, either as a mount point or as
  138. the upper of an overlayfs, so as to at least make the system
  139. bootable out of the box; mounting a filesystem from actual
  140. storage is left to the integration, as it is too specific and
  141. may need preparatory work like partitionning a device and/or
  142. formatting a filesystem first, which falls out of the scope
  143. of Buildroot.
  144. config BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD_VAR_FACTORY
  145. bool "build a factory to populate a tmpfs"
  146. help
  147. Build a factory of the content of /var as installed by
  148. packages, mount a tmpfs on /var at runtime, so that
  149. systemd-tmpfiles can populate it from the factory.
  150. This may help on a read-only rootfs.
  151. It probably does not play very well with triggering a call
  152. to systemd-tmpfiles at build time (below).
  153. To use persistent storage, provide a systemd dropin for the
  154. var.mount unit, that overrides the What and Type, and possibly
  155. the Options and After, fields.
  156. config BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD_VAR_OVERLAYFS
  157. bool "mount an overlayfs backed by a tmpfs"
  158. select BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD_POPULATE_TMPFILES
  159. help
  160. Mount an overlayfs on /var, with the upper as a tmpfs.
  161. To use a persistent storage, provide either a mount unit or a
  162. fstab line to mount it on /run/buildroot/mounts/var, e.g.
  163. /dev/sdc1 /run/buildroot/mounts/var ext4 defaults
  164. config BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD_VAR_NONE
  165. bool "do nothing"
  166. help
  167. Choose this if you have custom dispositions (like one or more
  168. of a post-build script, a fakeroot script, systemd units, an
  169. initramfs, or something else) that prepare /var to be writable
  170. on a read-only rootfs.
  171. endchoice
  172. config BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD_POPULATE_TMPFILES
  173. bool "trigger systemd-tmpfiles during build"
  174. default y # legacy
  175. help
  176. Act on the systemd-tmpfiles.d database at build time, when
  177. assembling the root filesystems.
  178. This may help on a read-only filesystem.
  179. It probably does not play very well with the /var factory
  180. (above).
  181. config BR2_PACKAGE_SYSTEMD_DEFAULT_TARGET
  182. string "The default unit systemd starts at bootup"
  183. default "multi-user.target"
  184. help
  185. Specify the name of the unit configuration file to be started
  186. at bootup by systemd. Should end in ".target".
  187. ex: multi-user.target
  188. https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.special.html#default.target
  189. endif # BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD
  190. choice
  191. prompt "/dev management" if !BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD
  192. default BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_CREATION_DYNAMIC_DEVTMPFS
  193. config BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_CREATION_STATIC
  194. bool "Static using device table"
  195. config BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_CREATION_DYNAMIC_DEVTMPFS
  196. bool "Dynamic using devtmpfs only"
  197. config BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_CREATION_DYNAMIC_MDEV
  198. bool "Dynamic using devtmpfs + mdev"
  199. select BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX
  200. config BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_CREATION_DYNAMIC_EUDEV
  201. bool "Dynamic using devtmpfs + eudev"
  202. depends on BR2_USE_WCHAR # eudev
  203. depends on !BR2_STATIC_LIBS
  204. depends on BR2_USE_MMU # eudev
  205. select BR2_PACKAGE_EUDEV
  206. comment "eudev needs a toolchain w/ wchar, dynamic library"
  207. depends on BR2_USE_MMU
  208. depends on !BR2_USE_WCHAR || BR2_STATIC_LIBS
  209. endchoice
  210. comment "/dev management using udev (from systemd)"
  211. depends on BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD
  212. config BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_TABLE
  213. string "Path to the permission tables"
  214. default "system/device_table.txt"
  215. help
  216. Specify a space-separated list of permission table locations,
  217. that will be passed to the makedevs utility to assign
  218. correct owners and permissions on various files in the
  219. target filesystem.
  220. See package/makedevs/README for details on the usage and
  221. syntax of these files.
  222. config BR2_ROOTFS_STATIC_DEVICE_TABLE
  223. string "Path to the device tables"
  224. default "system/device_table_dev.txt"
  225. depends on BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_CREATION_STATIC
  226. help
  227. Specify a space-separated list of device table locations,
  228. that will be passed to the makedevs utility to create all
  229. the special device files under /dev.
  230. See package/makedevs/README for details on the usage and
  231. syntax of these files.
  232. config BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_TABLE_SUPPORTS_EXTENDED_ATTRIBUTES
  233. bool "support extended attributes in device tables"
  234. help
  235. Support extended attributes handling in device tables
  236. config BR2_ROOTFS_MERGED_USR
  237. bool "Use symlinks to /usr for /bin, /sbin and /lib"
  238. help
  239. If you say 'n' here, then /bin, /sbin and /lib and their
  240. counterparts in /usr will be separate directories. This
  241. is the historical UNIX way. In this case, /usr can be a
  242. filesystem on a partition separate from / .
  243. If you say 'y' here, then /bin, /sbin and /lib will be
  244. symlinks to their counterparts in /usr. In this case, /usr can
  245. not be a separate filesystem.
  246. if BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  247. config BR2_TARGET_ENABLE_ROOT_LOGIN
  248. bool "Enable root login with password"
  249. default y
  250. select BR2_PACKAGE_HOST_MKPASSWD if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_ROOT_PASSWD != ""
  251. help
  252. Allow root to log in with a password.
  253. If not enabled, root will not be able to log in with a
  254. password. However, if you have an ssh server and you add an
  255. ssh key, you can still allow root to log in. Alternatively,
  256. you can use sudo to become root.
  257. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_ROOT_PASSWD
  258. string "Root password"
  259. default ""
  260. depends on BR2_TARGET_ENABLE_ROOT_LOGIN
  261. help
  262. Set the initial root password.
  263. If set to empty (the default), then no root password will be
  264. set, and root will need no password to log in.
  265. If the password starts with any of $1$, $5$ or $6$, it is
  266. considered to be already crypt-encoded with respectively md5,
  267. sha256 or sha512. Any other value is taken to be a clear-text
  268. value, and is crypt-encoded as per the "Passwords encoding"
  269. scheme, above.
  270. Note: "$" signs in the hashed password must be doubled. For
  271. example, if the hashed password is
  272. "$1$longsalt$v35DIIeMo4yUfI23yditq0", then you must enter it
  273. as "$$1$$longsalt$$v35DIIeMo4yUfI23yditq0" (this is necessary
  274. otherwise make would attempt to interpret the $ as a variable
  275. expansion).
  276. WARNING! WARNING!
  277. The password appears as-is in the .config file, and may appear
  278. in the build log! Avoid using a valuable password if either
  279. the .config file or the build log may be distributed, or at
  280. the very least use a strong cryptographic hash for your
  281. password!
  282. choice
  283. bool "/bin/sh"
  284. default BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_DASH if !BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX
  285. help
  286. Select which shell will provide /bin/sh.
  287. # busybox has shells that work on noMMU
  288. config BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_BUSYBOX
  289. bool "busybox' default shell"
  290. depends on BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX
  291. config BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_BASH
  292. bool "bash"
  293. depends on BR2_USE_MMU # bash
  294. depends on BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX_SHOW_OTHERS
  295. select BR2_PACKAGE_BASH
  296. config BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_DASH
  297. bool "dash"
  298. depends on BR2_USE_MMU # dash
  299. depends on BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX_SHOW_OTHERS
  300. select BR2_PACKAGE_DASH
  301. config BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_MKSH
  302. bool "mksh"
  303. depends on BR2_USE_MMU # mksh
  304. depends on BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX_SHOW_OTHERS
  305. select BR2_PACKAGE_MKSH
  306. config BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_ZSH
  307. bool "zsh"
  308. depends on BR2_USE_MMU # zsh
  309. depends on BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX_SHOW_OTHERS
  310. select BR2_PACKAGE_ZSH
  311. comment "bash, dash, mksh, zsh need BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX_SHOW_OTHERS"
  312. depends on !BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX_SHOW_OTHERS && BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX
  313. config BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_NONE
  314. bool "none"
  315. endchoice # /bin/sh
  316. config BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH
  317. string
  318. default "bash" if BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_BASH
  319. default "dash" if BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_DASH
  320. default "mksh" if BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_MKSH
  321. default "zsh" if BR2_SYSTEM_BIN_SH_ZSH
  322. menuconfig BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY
  323. bool "Run a getty (login prompt) after boot"
  324. default y if !BR2_PACKAGE_PETITBOOT
  325. if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY
  326. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_PORT
  327. string "TTY port"
  328. default "console"
  329. help
  330. Specify a port to run a getty on.
  331. choice
  332. prompt "Baudrate"
  333. default BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_KEEP
  334. help
  335. Select a baudrate to use.
  336. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_KEEP
  337. bool "keep kernel default"
  338. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_9600
  339. bool "9600"
  340. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_19200
  341. bool "19200"
  342. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_38400
  343. bool "38400"
  344. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_57600
  345. bool "57600"
  346. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_115200
  347. bool "115200"
  348. endchoice
  349. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE
  350. string
  351. default "0" if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_KEEP
  352. default "9600" if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_9600
  353. default "19200" if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_19200
  354. default "38400" if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_38400
  355. default "57600" if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_57600
  356. default "115200" if BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_BAUDRATE_115200
  357. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_TERM
  358. string "TERM environment variable"
  359. default "vt100"
  360. # currently observed by all but systemd
  361. depends on !BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD
  362. help
  363. Specify a TERM type.
  364. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_GETTY_OPTIONS
  365. string "other options to pass to getty"
  366. default ""
  367. # currently observed by all but systemd
  368. depends on !BR2_INIT_SYSTEMD
  369. help
  370. Any other flags you want to pass to getty,
  371. Refer to getty --help for details.
  372. endif
  373. config BR2_TARGET_GENERIC_REMOUNT_ROOTFS_RW
  374. bool "remount root filesystem read-write during boot"
  375. default y
  376. help
  377. The root filesystem is typically mounted read-only at boot.
  378. By default, buildroot remounts it in read-write mode early
  379. during the boot process.
  380. Say no here if you would rather like your root filesystem to
  381. remain read-only.
  382. If unsure, say Y.
  383. config BR2_SYSTEM_DHCP
  384. string "Network interface to configure through DHCP"
  385. default ""
  386. depends on BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX || BR2_PACKAGE_IFUPDOWN || \
  387. BR2_PACKAGE_SYSTEMD_NETWORKD || BR2_PACKAGE_NETIFRC
  388. help
  389. Enter here the name of the network interface (E.G. eth0) to
  390. automatically configure through DHCP at bootup.
  391. If left empty, no automatic DHCP requests will take place.
  392. For more complicated network setups use an overlay to
  393. overwrite /etc/network/interfaces or add a networkd
  394. configuration file.
  395. comment "automatic network configuration via DHCP needs ifupdown or busybox or networkd or netifrc"
  396. depends on !(BR2_PACKAGE_BUSYBOX || BR2_PACKAGE_IFUPDOWN || \
  397. BR2_PACKAGE_SYSTEMD_NETWORKD || BR2_PACKAGE_NETIFRC)
  398. endif # BR2_ROOTFS_SKELETON_DEFAULT
  399. config BR2_SYSTEM_DEFAULT_PATH
  400. string "Set the system's default PATH"
  401. default "/usr/bin:/usr/sbin" if BR2_ROOTFS_MERGED_USR
  402. default "/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin" if !BR2_ROOTFS_MERGED_USR
  403. help
  404. Sets the system's default PATH. It is being used in
  405. /etc/profile in the skeleton-init-common package and by some
  406. daemons.
  407. The default should work in most cases.
  408. config BR2_ENABLE_LOCALE_PURGE
  409. bool "Purge unwanted locales"
  410. default y
  411. help
  412. Explicitly specify what locales to install on target. If N
  413. then all locales supported by packages are installed.
  414. config BR2_ENABLE_LOCALE_WHITELIST
  415. string "Locales to keep"
  416. default "C en_US"
  417. depends on BR2_ENABLE_LOCALE_PURGE
  418. help
  419. Whitespace separated list of locales to allow on target.
  420. Locales not listed here will be removed from the target.
  421. See 'locale -a' on your host for a list of locales available
  422. on your build host, or have a look in /usr/share/locale in
  423. the target file system for available locales.
  424. Notice that listing a locale here doesn't guarantee that it
  425. will be available on the target - That purely depends on the
  426. support for that locale in the selected packages.
  427. config BR2_GENERATE_LOCALE
  428. string "Generate locale data"
  429. default ""
  430. depends on \
  431. (BR2_TOOLCHAIN_BUILDROOT_UCLIBC && BR2_ENABLE_LOCALE) || \
  432. BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_GLIBC
  433. help
  434. Generate support for a list of locales. Locales can be
  435. specified with or without encoding, when no encoding is
  436. specified, UTF-8 is assumed. Examples of locales: en_US,
  437. fr_FR.UTF-8.
  438. config BR2_SYSTEM_ENABLE_NLS
  439. bool "Enable Native Language Support (NLS)"
  440. depends on BR2_USE_WCHAR
  441. # - glibc has built-in NLS support, but anyway doesn't
  442. # support static linking
  443. # - musl and uclibc support static linking, but they don't
  444. # have built-in NLS support, which is provided by the
  445. # libintl library from gettext. The fact that it is a
  446. # separate library causes too many problems for static
  447. # linking.
  448. depends on !BR2_STATIC_LIBS
  449. select BR2_PACKAGE_GETTEXT if !BR2_TOOLCHAIN_HAS_FULL_GETTEXT
  450. help
  451. This option will enable Native Language Support, which will
  452. allow software packages to support translations.
  453. comment "NLS support needs a toolchain w/ wchar, dynamic library"
  454. depends on !BR2_USE_WCHAR || BR2_STATIC_LIBS
  455. config BR2_TARGET_TZ_INFO
  456. bool "Install timezone info"
  457. select BR2_PACKAGE_TZDATA if BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_GLIBC
  458. select BR2_PACKAGE_TZDATA if BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_MUSL
  459. select BR2_PACKAGE_TZ if BR2_TOOLCHAIN_USES_UCLIBC
  460. help
  461. Say 'y' here to install timezone info.
  462. if BR2_TARGET_TZ_INFO
  463. config BR2_TARGET_TZ_ZONELIST
  464. string "timezone list"
  465. default "default"
  466. help
  467. Space-separated list of time zones to compile.
  468. The value "default" includes all commonly used time zones.
  469. Note that this set consumes around 5.5M for glibc and 2.1M for
  470. uClibc.
  471. The full list is the list of files in the time zone database
  472. source, not including the build and .tab files.
  473. config BR2_TARGET_LOCALTIME
  474. string "default local time"
  475. default "Etc/UTC"
  476. help
  477. The time zone to install as the default local time, expressed
  478. as a tzdata location, such as:
  479. Etc/UTC (the default)
  480. GMT
  481. Europe/Paris
  482. America/New_York
  483. Pacific/Wallis
  484. ...
  485. Set to empty to not install a default time zone.
  486. endif # BR2_TARGET_TZ_INFO
  487. config BR2_ROOTFS_USERS_TABLES
  488. string "Path to the users tables"
  489. help
  490. Specify a space-separated list of users table locations,
  491. that will be passed to the mkusers utility to create
  492. users on the system, with home directory, password, etc.
  493. See manual for details on the usage and syntax of these files.
  494. config BR2_ROOTFS_OVERLAY
  495. string "Root filesystem overlay directories"
  496. default ""
  497. help
  498. Specify a list of directories that are copied over the target
  499. root filesystem after the build has finished and before it is
  500. packed into the selected filesystem images.
  501. They are copied as-is into the rootfs, excluding files ending
  502. with ~ and .git, .svn and .hg directories.
  503. config BR2_ROOTFS_PRE_BUILD_SCRIPT
  504. string "Custom scripts to run before commencing the build"
  505. default ""
  506. help
  507. Specify a space-separated list of scripts to be run before the
  508. build commences.
  509. This gives users the opportunity to do board-specific
  510. preparations before starting the build.
  511. config BR2_ROOTFS_POST_BUILD_SCRIPT
  512. string "Custom scripts to run before creating filesystem images"
  513. default ""
  514. help
  515. Specify a space-separated list of scripts to be run after the
  516. build has finished and before Buildroot starts packing the
  517. files into selected filesystem images.
  518. This gives users the opportunity to do board-specific
  519. cleanups, add-ons and the like, so the generated files can be
  520. used directly without further processing.
  521. These scripts are called with the target directory name as
  522. first argument. Make sure the exit code of those scripts are
  523. 0, otherwise make will stop after calling them.
  524. config BR2_ROOTFS_POST_FAKEROOT_SCRIPT
  525. string "Custom scripts to run inside the fakeroot environment"
  526. default ""
  527. help
  528. Specify a space-separated list of scripts to be run at the end
  529. of the fakeroot script right before the image(s) are actually
  530. generated.
  531. This gives users the opportunity to do customisations of the
  532. content of the rootfs, which would otherwise require root
  533. rights.
  534. These scripts are called with the target directory name as
  535. first argument. The build will fail on the first scripts that
  536. exits with a non-zero exit code.
  537. Note that Buildroot already provides mechanisms to customise
  538. the content of the rootfs:
  539. - BR2_ROOTFS_STATIC_DEVICE_TABLE
  540. to create arbitrary entries statically in /dev
  541. - BR2_ROOTFS_DEVICE_TABLE
  542. to set arbitrary permissions as well as extended
  543. attributes (such as capabilities) on files and
  544. directories,
  545. - BR2_ROOTFS_USERS_TABLES:
  546. to create arbitrary users and their home directories
  547. It is highly recommended to use those mechanisms if possible,
  548. rather than using custom fakeroot scripts.
  549. config BR2_ROOTFS_POST_IMAGE_SCRIPT
  550. string "Custom scripts to run after creating filesystem images"
  551. default ""
  552. help
  553. Specify a space-separated list of scripts to be run after
  554. the build has finished and after Buildroot has packed the
  555. files into selected filesystem images.
  556. This can for example be used to call a tool building a
  557. firmware image from different images generated by Buildroot,
  558. or automatically extract the tarball root filesystem image
  559. into some location exported by NFS, or any other custom
  560. action.
  561. These scripts are called with the images directory name as
  562. first argument. The script is executed from the main Buildroot
  563. source directory as the current directory.
  564. config BR2_ROOTFS_POST_SCRIPT_ARGS
  565. string "Extra arguments passed to custom scripts"
  566. depends on BR2_ROOTFS_PRE_BUILD_SCRIPT != "" \
  567. || BR2_ROOTFS_POST_BUILD_SCRIPT != "" \
  568. || BR2_ROOTFS_POST_FAKEROOT_SCRIPT != "" \
  569. || BR2_ROOTFS_POST_IMAGE_SCRIPT != ""
  570. help
  571. Pass these additional arguments to each pre-build, post-build,
  572. post-fakeroot and post-image scripts.
  573. Note that all the post-build and post-image scripts will be
  574. passed the same set of arguments, you can not pass different
  575. arguments to each script.
  576. Note also, as stated in their respective help text, that the
  577. first argument to each post-build or post-image script is the
  578. target directory / images directory. The arguments in this
  579. option will be passed *after* those.
  580. endmenu