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BUSYBOX(1)			    busybox			    BUSYBOX(1)

NAME
       BusyBox - The Swiss Army Knife of Embedded Linux

SYNTAX
	busybox <applet> [arguments...]	 # or

	<applet> [arguments...]		   # if symlinked

DESCRIPTION
       BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX utilities into a
       single small executable. It provides minimalist replacements for most
       of the utilities you usually find in GNU coreutils, util-linux, etc.
       The utilities in BusyBox generally have fewer options than their full-
       featured GNU cousins; however, the options that are included provide
       the expected functionality and behave very much like their GNU
       counterparts.

       BusyBox has been written with size-optimization and limited resources
       in mind.	 It is also extremely modular so you can easily include or
       exclude commands (or features) at compile time. This makes it easy to
       customize your embedded systems. To create a working system, just add
       /dev, /etc, and a Linux kernel.	BusyBox provides a fairly complete
       POSIX environment for any small or embedded system.

       BusyBox is extremely configurable.  This allows you to include only the
       components you need, thereby reducing binary size. Run 'make config' or
       'make menuconfig' to select the functionality that you wish to enable.
       Then run 'make' to compile BusyBox using your configuration.

       After the compile has finished, you should use 'make install' to
       install BusyBox. This will install the 'bin/busybox' binary, in the
       target directory specified by CONFIG_PREFIX. CONFIG_PREFIX can be set
       when configuring BusyBox, or you can specify an alternative location at
       install time (i.e., with a command line like 'make
       CONFIG_PREFIX=/tmp/foo install'). If you enabled any applet
       installation scheme (either as symlinks or hardlinks), these will also
       be installed in the location pointed to by CONFIG_PREFIX.

USAGE
       BusyBox is a multi-call binary.	A multi-call binary is an executable
       program that performs the same job as more than one utility program.
       That means there is just a single BusyBox binary, but that single
       binary acts like a large number of utilities.  This allows BusyBox to
       be smaller since all the built-in utility programs (we call them
       applets) can share code for many common operations.

       You can also invoke BusyBox by issuing a command as an argument on the
       command line.  For example, entering

	       /bin/busybox ls

       will also cause BusyBox to behave as 'ls'.

       Of course, adding '/bin/busybox' into every command would be painful.
       So most people will invoke BusyBox using links to the BusyBox binary.

       For example, entering

	       ln -s /bin/busybox ls
	       ./ls

       will cause BusyBox to behave as 'ls' (if the 'ls' command has been
       compiled into BusyBox).	Generally speaking, you should never need to
       make all these links yourself, as the BusyBox build system will do this
       for you when you run the 'make install' command.

       If you invoke BusyBox with no arguments, it will provide you with a
       list of the applets that have been compiled into your BusyBox binary.

COMMON OPTIONS
       Most BusyBox applets support the --help argument to provide a terse
       runtime description of their behavior.  If the
       CONFIG_FEATURE_VERBOSE_USAGE option has been enabled, more detailed
       usage information will also be available.

COMMANDS
       Currently available applets include:

	       [, [[, addgroup, adduser, adjtimex, ar, arp, arping, ash, awk,
	       basename, bbconfig, bbsh, blkid, brctl, bunzip2, busybox, bzcat,
	       bzip2, cal, cat, catv, chat, chattr, chcon, chgrp, chmod, chown,
	       chpasswd, chpst, chroot, chrt, chvt, cksum, clear, cmp, comm, cp,
	       cpio, crond, crontab, cryptpw, cttyhack, cut, date, dc, dd,
	       deallocvt, delgroup, deluser, depmod, devfsd, devmem, df,
	       dhcprelay, diff, dirname, dmesg, dnsd, dos2unix, dpkg, dpkg_deb,
	       du, dumpkmap, dumpleases, e2fsck, echo, ed, egrep, eject, env,
	       envdir, envuidgid, ether_wake, expand, expr, fakeidentd, false,
	       fbset, fbsplash, fdflush, fdformat, fdisk, fgrep, find, findfs,
	       fold, free, freeramdisk, fsck, fsck_minix, ftpget, ftpput, fuser,
	       getenforce, getopt, getsebool, getty, grep, gunzip, gzip, halt,
	       hd, hdparm, head, hexdump, hostid, hostname, httpd, hush,
	       hwclock, id, ifconfig, ifdown, ifenslave, ifup, inetd, init,
	       inotifyd, insmod, install, ip, ipaddr, ipcalc, ipcrm, ipcs,
	       iplink, iproute, iprule, iptunnel, kbd_mode, kill, killall,
	       killall5, klogd, lash, last, length, less, linux32, linux64,
	       linuxrc, ln, load_policy, loadfont, loadkmap, logger, login,
	       logname, logread, losetup, lpd, lpq, lpr, ls, lsattr, lsmod,
	       lzmacat, makedevs, makemime, man, matchpathcon, md5sum, mdev,
	       mesg, microcom, mkdir, mke2fs, mkfifo, mkfs_minix, mknod, mkswap,
	       mktemp, modprobe, more, mount, mountpoint, msh, mt, mv, nameif,
	       nc, netstat, nice, nmeter, nohup, nslookup, od, openvt, parse,
	       passwd, patch, pgrep, pidof, ping, ping6, pipe_progress,
	       pivot_root, pkill, popmaildir, poweroff, printenv, printf, ps,
	       pscan, pwd, raidautorun, rdate, rdev, readahead, readlink,
	       readprofile, realpath, reboot, reformime, renice, reset, resize,
	       restorecon, rm, rmdir, rmmod, route, rpm, rpm2cpio, rtcwake,
	       run_parts, runcon, runlevel, runsv, runsvdir, rx, script, sed,
	       selinuxenabled, sendmail, seq, sestatus, setarch, setconsole,
	       setenforce, setfiles, setfont, setkeycodes, setlogcons,
	       setsebool, setsid, setuidgid, sh, sha1sum, showkey, slattach,
	       sleep, softlimit, sort, split, start_stop_daemon, stat,
	       static_sh, strings, stty, su, sulogin, sum, sv, svlogd, swapoff,
	       swapon, switch_root, sync, sysctl, syslogd, tac, tail, tar,
	       taskset, tc, tcpsvd, tee, telnet, telnetd, test, tftp, tftpd,
	       time, top, touch, tr, traceroute, true, tty, ttysize, tune2fs,
	       udhcpc, udhcpd, udpsvd, umount, uname, uncompress, unexpand,
	       uniq, unix2dos, unlzma, unzip, uptime, usleep, uudecode,
	       uuencode, vconfig, vi, vlock, watch, watchdog, wc, wget, which,
	       who, whoami, xargs, yes, zcat, zcip

COMMAND DESCRIPTIONS
       addgroup
	   addgroup   [-g GID] [user_name] group_name

	   Add a group or add an user to a group

	   Options:

		   -g GID  Group id

       adduser
	   adduser    [OPTIONS] user_name

	   Add an user

	   Options:

		   -h DIR	   Home directory
		   -g GECOS	   GECOS field
		   -s SHELL	   Login shell
		   -G GROUP	   Add user to existing group
		   -S		   Create a system user
		   -D		   Do not assign a password
		   -H		   Do not create home directory

       adjtimex
	   adjtimex   [-q] [-o offset] [-f frequency] [-p timeconstant] [-t
	   tick]

	   Read and optionally set system timebase parameters. See
	   adjtimex(2).

	   Options:

		   -q		   Quiet
		   -o offset	   Time offset, microseconds
		   -f frequency	   Frequency adjust, integer kernel units (65536 is 1ppm)
				   (positive values make clock run faster)
		   -t tick	   Microseconds per tick, usually 10000
		   -p timeconstant

       ar  ar	      [-o] [-v] [-p] [-t] [-x] ARCHIVE FILES

	   Extract or list FILES from an ar archive

	   Options:

		   -o	   Preserve original dates
		   -p	   Extract to stdout
		   -t	   List
		   -x	   Extract
		   -v	   Verbose

       arp arp [-vn]	 [-H type] [-i if] -a [hostname] [-v]	     [-i if]
	   -d hostname [pub] [-v] [-H type] [-i if] -s hostname hw_addr [temp]
	   [-v] [-H type] [-i if] -s hostname hw_addr [netmask nm] pub
	   [-v] [-H type] [-i if] -Ds hostname ifa [netmask nm] pub

	   Manipulate ARP cache

	   Options:

		   -a		   Display (all) hosts
		   -s		   Set new ARP entry
		   -d		   Delete a specified entry
		   -v		   Verbose
		   -n		   Don't resolve names
		   -i IF	   Network interface
		   -D		   Read <hwaddr> from given device
		   -A, -p AF	   Protocol family
		   -H HWTYPE	   Hardware address type

       arping
	   arping     [-fqbDUA] [-c count] [-w timeout] [-I dev] [-s sender]
	   target

	   Send ARP requests/replies

	   Options:

		   -f		   Quit on first ARP reply
		   -q		   Quiet
		   -b		   Keep broadcasting, don't go unicast
		   -D		   Duplicated address detection mode
		   -U		   Unsolicited ARP mode, update your neighbors
		   -A		   ARP answer mode, update your neighbors
		   -c N		   Stop after sending N ARP requests
		   -w timeout	   Time to wait for ARP reply, in seconds
		   -I dev	   Interface to use (default eth0)
		   -s sender	   Sender IP address
		   target	   Target IP address

       ash ash	      #define ash_full_usage

       awk awk	      [OPTION]... [program-text] [FILE...]

	   Options:

		   -v var=val	   Set variable
		   -F sep	   Use sep as field separator
		   -f file	   Read program from file

       basename
	   basename   FILE [SUFFIX]

	   Strip directory path and suffixes from FILE.	 If specified, also
	   remove any trailing SUFFIX.

	   Example:

		   $ basename /usr/local/bin/foo
		   foo
		   $ basename /usr/local/bin/
		   bin
		   $ basename /foo/bar.txt .txt
		   bar

       bbconfig
	   bbconfig

	   Print the config file which built busybox

       bbsh
	   bbsh	      [FILE]...	 or: bbsh -c command [args]...

	   The bbsh shell (command interpreter)

       blkid
	   blkid

	   Print UUIDs of all filesystems.

       brctl
	   brctl      COMMAND [BRIDGE [INTERFACE]]

	   Manage ethernet bridges.

	   Commands:

		   show			   Show a list of bridges
		   addbr BRIDGE		   Create BRIDGE
		   delbr BRIDGE		   Delete BRIDGE
		   addif BRIDGE IFACE	   Add IFACE to BRIDGE
		   delif BRIDGE IFACE	   Delete IFACE from BRIDGE
		   setageing BRIDGE TIME	   Set ageing time
		   setfd BRIDGE TIME		   Set bridge forward delay
		   sethello BRIDGE TIME		   Set hello time
		   setmaxage BRIDGE TIME	   Set max message age
		   setpathcost BRIDGE COST	   Set path cost
		   setportprio BRIDGE PRIO	   Set port priority
		   setbridgeprio BRIDGE PRIO	   Set bridge priority
		   stp BRIDGE [1|0]		   STP on/off

       bunzip2
	   bunzip2    [OPTION]... [FILE]

	   Uncompress FILE (or standard input if FILE is '-' or omitted)

	   Options:

		   -c	   Write to standard output
		   -f	   Force

       busybox
	   busybox

	   Hello world!

       bzcat
	   bzcat      FILE

	   Uncompress to stdout

       bzip2
	   bzip2      [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Compress FILE(s) with bzip2 algorithm.  When FILE is '-' or
	   unspecified, reads standard input. Implies -c.

	   Options:

		   -c	   Write to standard output
		   -d	   Decompress
		   -f	   Force
		   -1..-9  Compression level

       cal cal	      [-jy] [[month] year]

	   Display a calendar

	   Options:

		   -j	   Use julian dates
		   -y	   Display the entire year

       cat cat	      [-u] [FILE]...

	   Concatenate FILE(s) and print them to stdout

	   Options:

		   -u	   Use unbuffered i/o (ignored)

	   Example:

		   $ cat /proc/uptime
		   110716.72 17.67

       catv
	   catv	      [-etv] [FILE]...

	   Display nonprinting characters as ^x or M-x

	   Options:

		   -e	   End each line with $
		   -t	   Show tabs as ^I
		   -v	   Don't use ^x or M-x escapes

       chat
	   chat	      EXPECT [SEND [EXPECT [SEND...]]]

	   Useful for interacting with a modem connected to stdin/stdout.  A
	   script consists of one or more "expect-send" pairs of strings, each
	   pair is a pair of arguments. Example: chat '' ATZ OK ATD123456
	   CONNECT '' ogin: pppuser word: ppppass '~'

       chattr
	   chattr     [-R] [-+=AacDdijsStTu] [-v version] files...

	   Change file attributes on an ext2 fs

	   Modifiers:

		   -	   Remove attributes
		   +	   Add attributes
		   =	   Set attributes
	   Attributes:

		   A	   Don't track atime
		   a	   Append mode only
		   c	   Enable compress
		   D	   Write dir contents synchronously
		   d	   Do not backup with dump
		   i	   Cannot be modified (immutable)
		   j	   Write all data to journal first
		   s	   Zero disk storage when deleted
		   S	   Write file contents synchronously
		   t	   Disable tail-merging of partial blocks with other files
		   u	   Allow file to be undeleted
	   Options:

		   -R	   Recursively list subdirectories
		   -v	   Set the file's version/generation number

       chcon
	   chcon      [OPTIONS] CONTEXT FILE...	      chcon [OPTIONS] [-u
	   USER] [-r ROLE] [-l RANGE] [-t TYPE] FILE...	      chcon [OPTIONS]
	   --reference=RFILE FILE...

	   Change the security context of each FILE to CONTEXT

		   -v,--verbose		   Verbose
		   -c,--changes		   Report changes made
		   -h,--no-dereference	   Affect symlinks instead of their targets
		   -f,--silent,--quiet	   Suppress most error messages
		   --reference=RFILE	   Use RFILE's group instead of using a CONTEXT value
		   -u,--user=USER	   Set user/role/type/range in the target
		   -r,--role=ROLE	   security context
		   -t,--type=TYPE
		   -l,--range=RANGE
		   -R,--recursive	   Recurse subdirectories

       chgrp
	   chgrp      [-RhLHPcvf]... GROUP FILE...

	   Change the group membership of each FILE to GROUP

	   Options:

		   -R	   Recurse directories
		   -h	   Affect symlinks instead of symlink targets
		   -L	   Traverse all symlinks to directories
		   -H	   Traverse symlinks on command line only
		   -P	   Do not traverse symlinks (default)
		   -c	   List changed files
		   -v	   Verbose
		   -f	   Hide errors

	   Example:

		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -r--r--r--	 1 andersen andersen	    0 Apr 12 18:25 /tmp/foo
		   $ chgrp root /tmp/foo
		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -r--r--r--	 1 andersen root	    0 Apr 12 18:25 /tmp/foo

       chmod
	   chmod      [-Rcvf] MODE[,MODE]... FILE...

	   Each MODE is one or more of the letters ugoa, one of the symbols
	   +-= and one or more of the letters rwxst

	   Options:

		   -R	   Recurse directories
		   -c	   List changed files
		   -v	   List all files
		   -f	   Hide errors

	   Example:

		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -rw-rw-r--	 1 root	    root	    0 Apr 12 18:25 /tmp/foo
		   $ chmod u+x /tmp/foo
		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -rwxrw-r--	 1 root	    root	    0 Apr 12 18:25 /tmp/foo*
		   $ chmod 444 /tmp/foo
		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -r--r--r--	 1 root	    root	    0 Apr 12 18:25 /tmp/foo

       chown
	   chown      [-RhLHPcvf]... OWNER[<.|:>[GROUP]] FILE...

	   Change the owner and/or group of each FILE to OWNER and/or GROUP

	   Options:

		   -R	   Recurse directories
		   -h	   Affect symlinks instead of symlink targets
		   -L	   Traverse all symlinks to directories
		   -H	   Traverse symlinks on command line only
		   -P	   Do not traverse symlinks (default)
		   -c	   List changed files
		   -v	   List all files
		   -f	   Hide errors

	   Example:

		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -r--r--r--	 1 andersen andersen	    0 Apr 12 18:25 /tmp/foo
		   $ chown root /tmp/foo
		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -r--r--r--	 1 root	    andersen	    0 Apr 12 18:25 /tmp/foo
		   $ chown root.root /tmp/foo
		   ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -r--r--r--	 1 root	    root	    0 Apr 12 18:25 /tmp/foo

       chpasswd
	   chpasswd   [--md5|--encrypted]

	   Read user:password information from stdin and update /etc/passwd
	   accordingly.

	   Options:

		   -e,--encrypted  Supplied passwords are in encrypted form
		   -m,--md5	   Use MD5 encryption instead of DES

       chpst
	   chpst      [-vP012] [-u USER[:GRP]] [-U USER[:GRP]] [-e DIR]
		[-/ DIR] [-n NICE] [-m BYTES] [-d BYTES] [-o N]	     [-p N]
	   [-f BYTES] [-c BYTES] PROG ARGS

	   Change the process state and run PROG

	   Options:

		   -u USER[:GRP]   Set uid and gid
		   -U USER[:GRP]   Set $UID and $GID in environment
		   -e DIR	   Set environment variables as specified by files
				   in DIR: file=1st_line_of_file
		   -/ DIR	   Chroot to DIR
		   -n NICE	   Add NICE to nice value
		   -m BYTES	   Same as -d BYTES -s BYTES -l BYTES
		   -d BYTES	   Limit data segment
		   -o N		   Limit number of open files per process
		   -p N		   Limit number of processes per uid
		   -f BYTES	   Limit output file sizes
		   -c BYTES	   Limit core file size
		   -v		   Verbose
		   -P		   Create new process group
		   -0		   Close standard input
		   -1		   Close standard output
		   -2		   Close standard error

       chroot
	   chroot     NEWROOT [COMMAND...]

	   Run COMMAND with root directory set to NEWROOT

	   Example:

		   $ ls -l /bin/ls
		   lrwxrwxrwx	 1 root	    root	  12 Apr 13 00:46 /bin/ls -> /BusyBox
		   # mount /dev/hdc1 /mnt -t minix
		   # chroot /mnt
		   # ls -l /bin/ls
		   -rwxr-xr-x	 1 root	    root	40816 Feb  5 07:45 /bin/ls*

       chrt
	   chrt	      [OPTION]... [prio] [pid | command [arg]...]

	   Manipulate real-time attributes of a process

	   Options:

		   -p	   Operate on pid
		   -r	   Set scheduling policy to SCHED_RR
		   -f	   Set scheduling policy to SCHED_FIFO
		   -o	   Set scheduling policy to SCHED_OTHER
		   -m	   Show min and max priorities

	   Example:

		   $ chrt -r 4 sleep 900; x=$!
		   $ chrt -f -p 3 $x
		   You need CAP_SYS_NICE privileges to set scheduling attributes of a process

       chvt
	   chvt	      N

	   Change the foreground virtual terminal to /dev/ttyN

       cksum
	   cksum      FILES...

	   Calculate the CRC32 checksums of FILES

       clear
	   clear

	   Clear screen

       cmp cmp	      [-l] [-s] FILE1 [FILE2 [SKIP1 [SKIP2]]]

	   Compares FILE1 vs stdin if FILE2 is not specified

	   Options:

		   -l	   Write the byte numbers (decimal) and values (octal)
			   for all differing bytes
		   -s	   Quiet

       comm
	   comm	      [-123] FILE1 FILE2

	   Compare FILE1 to FILE2, or to stdin if - is specified

	   Options:

		   -1	   Suppress lines unique to FILE1
		   -2	   Suppress lines unique to FILE2
		   -3	   Suppress lines common to both files

       cp  cp	      [OPTION]... SOURCE DEST

	   Copy SOURCE to DEST, or multiple SOURCE(s) to DIRECTORY

	   Options:

		   -a	   Same as -dpR
		   -c	   Preserve security context
		   -d,-P   Preserve links
		   -H,-L   Dereference all symlinks (default)
		   -p	   Preserve file attributes if possible
		   -f	   Force overwrite
		   -i	   Prompt before overwrite
		   -R,-r   Recurse directories
		   -l,-s   Create (sym)links

       cpio
	   cpio	      -[dimotuv][F cpiofile][H newc]

	   Extract or list files from a cpio archive, or create a cpio archive
	   Main operation mode:

		   d	   Make leading directories
		   i	   Extract
		   m	   Preserve mtime
		   o	   Create
		   H newc  Define format
		   t	   List
		   v	   Verbose
		   u	   Unconditional overwrite
		   F	   Input from file

       crond
	   crond      -fbS -l N -d N -L LOGFILE -c DIR

		   -f	   Foreground
		   -b	   Background (default)
		   -S	   Log to syslog (default)
		   -l	   Set log level. 0 is the most verbose, default 8
		   -d	   Set log level, log to stderr
		   -L	   Log to file
		   -c	   Working dir

       crontab
	   crontab    [-c DIR] [-u USER] [-ler]|[FILE]

		   -c	   Crontab directory
		   -u	   User
		   -l	   List crontab
		   -e	   Edit crontab
		   -r	   Delete crontab
		   FILE	   Replace crontab by FILE ('-': stdin)

       cryptpw
	   cryptpw    [-a des|md5] [string]

	   Output crypted string.  If string isn't supplied on cmdline, read
	   it from stdin.

	   Options:

		   -a	   Algorithm to use (default: md5)

       cttyhack
	   cttyhack   #define cttyhack_full_usage

       cut cut	      [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Print selected fields from each input FILE to standard output

	   Options:

		   -b LIST Output only bytes from LIST
		   -c LIST Output only characters from LIST
		   -d CHAR Use CHAR instead of tab as the field delimiter
		   -s	   Output only the lines containing delimiter
		   -f N	   Print only these fields
		   -n	   Ignored

	   Example:

		   $ echo "Hello world" | cut -f 1 -d ' '
		   Hello
		   $ echo "Hello world" | cut -f 2 -d ' '
		   world

       date
	   date	      [OPTION]... [+FMT] [TIME]

	   Display time (using +FMT), or set time

	   Options:

		   -u		   Work in UTC (don't convert to local time)
		   -R		   Output RFC-822 compliant date string
		   -I[SPEC]	   Output ISO-8601 compliant date string
				   SPEC='date' (default) for date only,
				   'hours', 'minutes', or 'seconds' for date and
				   time to the indicated precision
		   -d TIME	   Display TIME, not 'now'
		   -r FILE	   Display last modification time of FILE
		   [-s] TIME	   Set time to TIME
		   -D FMT	   Use FMT for str->date conversion

	   Recognized formats for TIME:

		   hh:mm[:ss]
		   [YYYY.]MM.DD-hh:mm[:ss]
		   YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm[:ss]
		   MMDDhhmm[[YY]YY][.ss]

	   Example:

		   $ date
		   Wed Apr 12 18:52:41 MDT 2000

       dc  dc	      expression...

	   Tiny RPN calculator. Operations: +, add, -, sub, *, mul, /, div, %,
	   mod, **, exp, and, or, not, eor, p - print top of the stack
	   (without altering the stack), f - print entire stack, o - pop the
	   value and set output radix (value must be 10 or 16).	 Examples: 'dc
	   2 2 add' -> 4, 'dc 8 8 * 2 2 + /' -> 16.

	   Example:

		   $ dc 2 2 + p
		   4
		   $ dc 8 8 \* 2 2 + / p
		   16
		   $ dc 0 1 and p
		   0
		   $ dc 0 1 or p
		   1
		   $ echo 72 9 div 8 mul p | dc
		   64

       dd  dd	      [if=FILE] [of=FILE] [ibs=N] [obs=N] [bs=N] [count=N]
	   [skip=N]	 [seek=N] [conv=notrunc|noerror|sync|fsync]

	   Copy a file with converting and formatting

	   Options:

		   if=FILE	   Read from FILE instead of stdin
		   of=FILE	   Write to FILE instead of stdout
		   bs=N		   Read and write N bytes at a time
		   ibs=N	   Read N bytes at a time
		   obs=N	   Write N bytes at a time
		   count=N	   Copy only N input blocks
		   skip=N	   Skip N input blocks
		   seek=N	   Skip N output blocks
		   conv=notrunc	   Don't truncate output file
		   conv=noerror	   Continue after read errors
		   conv=sync	   Pad blocks with zeros
		   conv=fsync	   Physically write data out before finishing

	   Numbers may be suffixed by c (x1), w (x2), b (x512), kD (x1000), k
	   (x1024), MD (x1000000), M (x1048576), GD (x1000000000) or G
	   (x1073741824)

	   Example:

		   $ dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/ram1 bs=1M count=4
		   4+0 records in
		   4+0 records out

       deallocvt
	   deallocvt  [N]

	   Deallocate unused virtual terminal /dev/ttyN

       delgroup
	   delgroup   [USER] GROUP

	   Delete group GROUP from the system or user USER from group GROUP

       deluser
	   deluser    USER

	   Delete USER from the system

       depmod
	   depmod     #define depmod_full_usage

       devfsd
	   devfsd     mntpnt [-v][-fg][-np]

	   Manage devfs permissions and old device name symlinks

	   Options:

		   mntpnt  The mount point where devfs is mounted
		   -v	   Print the protocol version numbers for devfsd
			   and the kernel-side protocol version and exit
		   -fg	   Run in foreground
		   -np	   Exit after parsing the configuration file
			   and processing synthetic REGISTER events,
			   do not poll for events

       devmem
	   devmem     ADDRESS [WIDTH [VALUE]]

	   Read/write from physical address

		   ADDRESS Address to act upon
		   WIDTH   Width (8/16/...)
		   VALUE   Data to be written

       df  df	      [-Pkmhai] [-B SIZE] [FILESYSTEM...]

	   Print filesystem usage statistics

	   Options:

		   -P	   POSIX output format
		   -k	   1024-byte blocks (default)
		   -m	   1M-byte blocks
		   -h	   Human readable (e.g. 1K 243M 2G)
		   -a	   Show all filesystems
		   -i	   Inodes
		   -B SIZE Blocksize

	   Example:

		   $ df
		   Filesystem		1K-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on
		   /dev/sda3		  8690864   8553540    137324  98% /
		   /dev/sda1		    64216     36364	27852  57% /boot
		   $ df /dev/sda3
		   Filesystem		1K-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on
		   /dev/sda3		  8690864   8553540    137324  98% /
		   $ POSIXLY_CORRECT=sure df /dev/sda3
		   Filesystem	      512B-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on
		   /dev/sda3		 17381728  17107080    274648  98% /
		   $ POSIXLY_CORRECT=yep df -P /dev/sda3
		   Filesystem	       512-blocks      Used Available Capacity Mounted on
		   /dev/sda3		 17381728  17107080    274648	   98% /

       dhcprelay
	   dhcprelay  [client1,client2,...] [server_device]

	   Relay dhcp requests from client devices to server device.  Pass
	   clients as CSV

       diff
	   diff	      [-abdiNqrTstw] [-L LABEL] [-S FILE] [-U LINES] FILE1
	   FILE2

	   Compare files line by line and output the differences between them.
	   This implementation supports unified diffs only.

	   Options:

		   -a	   Treat all files as text
		   -b	   Ignore changes in the amount of whitespace
		   -d	   Try hard to find a smaller set of changes
		   -i	   Ignore case differences
		   -L	   Use LABEL instead of the filename in the unified header
		   -N	   Treat absent files as empty
		   -q	   Output only whether files differ
		   -r	   Recursively compare subdirectories
		   -S	   Start with FILE when comparing directories
		   -T	   Make tabs line up by prefixing a tab when necessary
		   -s	   Report when two files are the same
		   -t	   Expand tabs to spaces in output
		   -U	   Output LINES lines of context
		   -w	   Ignore all whitespace

       dirname
	   dirname    FILENAME

	   Strip non-directory suffix from FILENAME

	   Example:

		   $ dirname /tmp/foo
		   /tmp
		   $ dirname /tmp/foo/
		   /tmp

       dmesg
	   dmesg      [-c] [-n LEVEL] [-s SIZE]

	   Print or control the kernel ring buffer

	   Options:

		   -c		   Clear ring buffer after printing
		   -n LEVEL	   Set console logging level
		   -s SIZE	   Buffer size

       dnsd
	   dnsd	      [-c config] [-t seconds] [-p port] [-i iface-ip] [-d]

	   Small static DNS server daemon

	   Options:

		   -c	   Config filename
		   -t	   TTL in seconds
		   -p	   Listening port
		   -i	   Listening ip (default all)
		   -d	   Daemonize

       dos2unix
	   dos2unix   [option] [FILE]

	   Convert FILE from dos to unix format.  When no file is given, use
	   stdin/stdout.

	   Options:

		   -u	   dos2unix
		   -d	   unix2dos

       dpkg
	   dpkg	      [-ilCPru] [-F option] package_name

	   Install, remove and manage Debian packages

	   Options:

		   -i		   Install the package
		   -l		   List of installed packages
		   -C		   Configure an unpackaged package
		   -F depends	   Ignore dependency problems
		   -P		   Purge all files of a package
		   -r		   Remove all but the configuration files for a package
		   -u		   Unpack a package, but don't configure it

       dpkg-deb
	   dpkg-deb   [-cefxX] FILE [argument]

	   Perform actions on Debian packages (.debs)

	   Options:

		   -c	   List contents of filesystem tree
		   -e	   Extract control files to [argument] directory
		   -f	   Display control field name starting with [argument]
		   -x	   Extract packages filesystem tree to directory
		   -X	   Verbose extract

	   Example:

		   $ dpkg-deb -X ./busybox_0.48-1_i386.deb /tmp

       du  du	      [-aHLdclsxhmk] [FILE]...

	   Summarize disk space used for each FILE and/or directory.  Disk
	   space is printed in units of 1024 bytes.

	   Options:

		   -a	   Show file sizes too
		   -H	   Follow symlinks on command line
		   -L	   Follow all symlinks
		   -d N	   Limit output to directories (and files with -a) of depth < N
		   -c	   Show grand total
		   -l	   Count sizes many times if hard linked
		   -s	   Display only a total for each argument
		   -x	   Skip directories on different filesystems
		   -h	   Sizes in human readable format (e.g., 1K 243M 2G )
		   -m	   Sizes in megabytes
		   -k	   Sizes in kilobytes (default)

	   Example:

		   $ du
		   16	   ./CVS
		   12	   ./kernel-patches/CVS
		   80	   ./kernel-patches
		   12	   ./tests/CVS
		   36	   ./tests
		   12	   ./scripts/CVS
		   16	   ./scripts
		   12	   ./docs/CVS
		   104	   ./docs
		   2417	   .

       dumpkmap
	   dumpkmap   > keymap

	   Print a binary keyboard translation table to standard output

	   Example:

		   $ dumpkmap > keymap

       dumpleases
	   dumpleases [-r|-a] [-f LEASEFILE]

	   Display DHCP leases granted by udhcpd

	   Options:

		   -f,--file=FILE  Leases file to load
		   -r,--remaining  Interpret lease times as time remaining
		   -a,--absolute   Interpret lease times as expire time

       e2fsck
	   e2fsck     [-panyrcdfvstDFSV] [-b superblock] [-B blocksize] [-I
	   inode_buffer_blocks] [-P process_inode_size] [-l|-L
	   bad_blocks_file] [-C fd] [-j external_journal] [-E
	   extended-options] device

	   Check ext2/ext3 file system

	   Options:

		   -p		   Automatic repair (no questions)
		   -n		   Make no changes to the filesystem
		   -y		   Assume 'yes' to all questions
		   -c		   Check for bad blocks and add them to the badblock list
		   -f		   Force checking even if filesystem is marked clean
		   -v		   Verbose
		   -b superblock   Use alternative superblock
		   -B blocksize	   Force blocksize when looking for superblock
		   -j journal	   Set location of the external journal
		   -l file	   Add to badblocks list
		   -L file	   Set badblocks list

       echo
	   echo	      [-neE] [ARG...]

	   Print the specified ARGs to stdout

	   Options:

		   -n	   Suppress trailing newline
		   -e	   Interpret backslash-escaped characters (i.e., \t=tab)
		   -E	   Disable interpretation of backslash-escaped characters

	   Example:

		   $ echo "Erik is cool"
		   Erik is cool
		   $ echo -e "Erik\nis\ncool"
		   Erik
		   is
		   cool
		   $ echo "Erik\nis\ncool"
		   Erik\nis\ncool

       ed  ed	      #define ed_full_usage

       egrep
	   egrep      #define egrep_full_usage

       eject
	   eject      [-t] [-T] [DEVICE]

	   Eject specified DEVICE (or default /dev/cdrom)

	   Options:

		   -s	   SCSI device
		   -t	   Close tray
		   -T	   Open/close tray (toggle)

       env env	      [-iu] [-] [name=value]... [command]

	   Print the current environment or run a program after setting up the
	   specified environment

	   Options:

		   -, -i   Start with an empty environment
		   -u	   Remove variable from the environment

       envdir
	   envdir     dir prog args

	   Set various environment variables as specified by files in the
	   directory dir and run PROG

       envuidgid
	   envuidgid  account prog args

	   Set $UID to account's uid and $GID to account's gid and run PROG

       ether-wake
	   ether-wake [-b] [-i iface] [-p aa:bb:cc:dd[:ee:ff]] MAC

	   Send a magic packet to wake up sleeping machines.  MAC must be a
	   station address (00:11:22:33:44:55) or a hostname with a known
	   'ethers' entry.

	   Options:

		   -b		   Send wake-up packet to the broadcast address
		   -i iface	   Interface to use (default eth0)
		   -p pass	   Append four or six byte password PW to the packet

       expand
	   expand     [-i] [-t NUM] [FILE|-]

	   Convert tabs to spaces, writing to standard output.

	   Options:

		   -i,--initial	   Do not convert tabs after non blanks
		   -t,--tabs=N	   Tabstops every N chars

       expr
	   expr	      EXPRESSION

	   Print the value of EXPRESSION to standard output.

	   EXPRESSION may be:

		   ARG1 | ARG2	   ARG1 if it is neither null nor 0, otherwise ARG2
		   ARG1 & ARG2	   ARG1 if neither argument is null or 0, otherwise 0
		   ARG1 < ARG2	   1 if ARG1 is less than ARG2, else 0. Similarly:
		   ARG1 <= ARG2
		   ARG1 = ARG2
		   ARG1 != ARG2
		   ARG1 >= ARG2
		   ARG1 > ARG2
		   ARG1 + ARG2	   Sum of ARG1 and ARG2. Similarly:
		   ARG1 - ARG2
		   ARG1 * ARG2
		   ARG1 / ARG2
		   ARG1 % ARG2
		   STRING : REGEXP	   Anchored pattern match of REGEXP in STRING
		   match STRING REGEXP	   Same as STRING : REGEXP
		   substr STRING POS LENGTH Substring of STRING, POS counted from 1
		   index STRING CHARS	   Index in STRING where any CHARS is found, or 0
		   length STRING	   Length of STRING
		   quote TOKEN		   Interpret TOKEN as a string, even if
					   it is a keyword like 'match' or an
					   operator like '/'
		   (EXPRESSION)		   Value of EXPRESSION

	   Beware that many operators need to be escaped or quoted for shells.
	   Comparisons are arithmetic if both ARGs are numbers, else
	   lexicographical. Pattern matches return the string matched between
	   \( and \) or null; if \( and \) are not used, they return the
	   number of characters matched or 0.

       fakeidentd
	   fakeidentd [-fiw] [-b ADDR] [STRING]

	   Provide fake ident (auth) service

	   Options:

		   -f	   Run in foreground
		   -i	   Inetd mode
		   -w	   Inetd 'wait' mode
		   -b ADDR Bind to specified address
		   STRING  Ident answer string (default is 'nobody')

       false
	   false

	   Return an exit code of FALSE (1)

	   Example:

		   $ false
		   $ echo $?
		   1

       fbset
	   fbset      [options] [mode]

	   Show and modify frame buffer settings

	   Example:

		   $ fbset
		   mode "1024x768-76"
			   # D: 78.653 MHz, H: 59.949 kHz, V: 75.694 Hz
			   geometry 1024 768 1024 768 16
			   timings 12714 128 32 16 4 128 4
			   accel false
			   rgba 5/11,6/5,5/0,0/0
		   endmode

       fbsplash
	   fbsplash   -s IMGFILE [-c] [-d DEV] [-i INIFILE] [-f CMD]

	   Options:

		   -s	   Image
		   -c	   Hide cursor
		   -d	   Framebuffer device (default /dev/fb0)
		   -i	   Config file (var=value):
				   BAR_LEFT,BAR_TOP,BAR_WIDTH,BAR_HEIGHT
				   BAR_R,BAR_G,BAR_B
		   -f	   Control pipe (else exit after drawing image)
				   commands: 'NN' (% for progress bar) or 'exit'

       fdflush
	   fdflush    DEVICE

	   Force floppy disk drive to detect disk change

       fdformat
	   fdformat   [-n] DEVICE

	   Format floppy disk

	   Options:

		   -n	   Don't verify after format

       fdisk
	   fdisk      [-uls] [-C CYLINDERS] [-H HEADS] [-S SECTORS] [-b SSZ]
	   DISK

	   Change partition table

	   Options:

		   -u		   Start and End are in sectors (instead of cylinders)
		   -l		   Show partition table for each DISK, then exit
		   -s		   Show partition sizes in kb for each DISK, then exit
		   -b 2048	   (for certain MO disks) use 2048-byte sectors
		   -C CYLINDERS	   Set number of cylinders/heads/sectors
		   -H HEADS

		   -S SECTORS

       fgrep
	   fgrep      #define fgrep_full_usage

       find
	   find	      [PATH...] [EXPRESSION]

	   Search for files. The default PATH is the current directory,
	   default EXPRESSION is '-print'

	   EXPRESSION may consist of:

		   -follow	   Dereference symlinks
		   -xdev	   Don't descend directories on other filesystems
		   -maxdepth N	   Descend at most N levels. -maxdepth 0 applies
				   tests/actions to command line arguments only
		   -name PATTERN   File name (w/o directory name) matches PATTERN
		   -iname PATTERN  Case insensitive -name
		   -path PATTERN   Path matches PATTERN
		   -regex PATTERN  Path matches regex PATTERN
		   -type X	   File type is X (X is one of: f,d,l,b,c,...)
		   -perm NNN	   Permissions match any of (+NNN), all of (-NNN),
				   or exactly (NNN)
		   -mtime DAYS	   Modified time is greater than (+N), less than (-N),
				   or exactly (N) days
		   -mmin MINS	   Modified time is greater than (+N), less than (-N),
				   or exactly (N) minutes
		   -newer FILE	   Modified time is more recent than FILE's
		   -inum N	   File has inode number N
		   -user NAME	   File is owned by user NAME (numeric user ID allowed)
		   -group NAME	   File belongs to group NAME (numeric group ID allowed)
		   -depth	   Process directory name after traversing it
		   -size N[bck]	   File size is N (c:bytes,k:kbytes,b:512 bytes(def.)).
				   +/-N: file size is bigger/smaller than N
		   -print	   Print (default and assumed)
		   -print0	   Delimit output with null characters rather than
				   newlines	   USE_FEATURE_FIND_CONTEXT (
		   -context	   File has specified security context")
		   -exec CMD ARG ; Execute CMD with all instances of {} replaced by the
				   matching files
		   -prune	   Stop traversing current subtree
		   -delete	   Delete files, turns on -depth option
		   (EXPR)	   Group an expression

	   Example:

		   $ find / -name passwd
		   /etc/passwd

       findfs
	   findfs     LABEL=label or UUID=uuid

	   Find a filesystem device based on a label or UUID.

	   Example:

		   $ findfs LABEL=MyDevice

       fold
	   fold	      [-bs] [-w WIDTH] [FILE]

	   Wrap input lines in each FILE (standard input by default), writing
	   to standard output

	   Options:

		   -b	   Count bytes rather than columns
		   -s	   Break at spaces
		   -w	   Use WIDTH columns instead of 80

       free
	   free

	   Display the amount of free and used system memory

	   Example:

		   $ free
				 total	       used	    free       shared	   buffers
		     Mem:	257628	     248724	    8904	59644	     93124
		    Swap:	128516	       8404	  120112
		   Total:	386144	     257128	  129016

       freeramdisk
	   freeramdisk DEVICE

	   Free all memory used by the specified ramdisk

	   Example:

		   $ freeramdisk /dev/ram2

       fsck
	   fsck	      [-ANPRTV] [-C fd] [-t fstype] [fs-options] [filesys...]

	   Check and repair filesystems

	   Options:

		   -A	   Walk /etc/fstab and check all filesystems
		   -N	   Don't execute, just show what would be done
		   -P	   With -A, check filesystems in parallel
		   -R	   With -A, skip the root filesystem
		   -T	   Don't show title on startup
		   -V	   Verbose
		   -C n	   Write status information to specified filedescriptor
		   -t type List of filesystem types to check

       fsck.minix
	   fsck.minix [-larvsmf] /dev/name

	   Check MINIX filesystem

	   Options:

		   -l	   List all filenames
		   -r	   Perform interactive repairs
		   -a	   Perform automatic repairs
		   -v	   Verbose
		   -s	   Output superblock information
		   -m	   Show "mode not cleared" warnings
		   -f	   Force file system check

       ftpget
	   ftpget     [options] remote-host local-file remote-file

	   Retrieve a remote file via FTP

	   Options:

		   -c,--continue   Continue previous transfer
		   -v,--verbose	   Verbose
		   -u,--username   Username
		   -p,--password   Password
		   -P,--port	   Port number

       ftpput
	   ftpput     [options] remote-host remote-file local-file

	   Store a local file on a remote machine via FTP

	   Options:

		   -v,--verbose	   Verbose
		   -u,--username   Username
		   -p,--password   Password
		   -P,--port	   Port number

       fuser
	   fuser      [options] FILE or PORT/PROTO

	   Find processes which use FILEs or PORTs

	   Options:

		   -m	   Find processes which use same fs as FILEs
		   -4	   Search only IPv4 space
		   -6	   Search only IPv6 space
		   -s	   Silent: just exit with 0 if any processes are found
		   -k	   Kill found processes (otherwise display PIDs)
		   -SIGNAL Signal to send (default: TERM)

       getenforce
	   getenforce #define getenforce_full_usage

       getopt
	   getopt     [OPTIONS]...

	   Parse command options

		   -a,--alternative		   Allow long options starting with single -
		   -l,--longoptions=longopts	   Long options to be recognized
		   -n,--name=progname		   The name under which errors are reported
		   -o,--options=optstring	   Short options to be recognized
		   -q,--quiet			   Disable error reporting by getopt(3)
		   -Q,--quiet-output		   No normal output
		   -s,--shell=shell		   Set shell quoting conventions
		   -T,--test			   Test for getopt(1) version
		   -u,--unquoted		   Don't quote the output

	   Example:

		   $ cat getopt.test
		   #!/bin/sh
		   GETOPT=`getopt -o ab:c:: --long a-long,b-long:,c-long:: \
			  -n 'example.busybox' -- "$@"`
		   if [ $? != 0 ]; then	 exit 1; fi
		   eval set -- "$GETOPT"
		   while true; do
		    case $1 in
		      -a|--a-long) echo "Option a"; shift;;
		      -b|--b-long) echo "Option b, argument '$2'"; shift 2;;
		      -c|--c-long)
			case "$2" in
			  "") echo "Option c, no argument"; shift 2;;
			  *)  echo "Option c, argument '$2'"; shift 2;;
			esac;;
		      --) shift; break;;
		      *) echo "Internal error!"; exit 1;;
		    esac
		   done

       getsebool
	   getsebool  -a or getsebool boolean...

		   -a	   Show all SELinux booleans

       getty
	   getty      [OPTIONS] BAUD_RATE TTY [TERMTYPE]

	   Open a tty, prompt for a login name, then invoke /bin/login

	   Options:

		   -h		   Enable hardware (RTS/CTS) flow control
		   -i		   Do not display /etc/issue before running login
		   -L		   Local line, do not do carrier detect
		   -m		   Get baud rate from modem's CONNECT status message
		   -w		   Wait for a CR or LF before sending /etc/issue
		   -n		   Do not prompt the user for a login name
		   -f issue_file   Display issue_file instead of /etc/issue
		   -l login_app	   Invoke login_app instead of /bin/login
		   -t timeout	   Terminate after timeout if no username is read
		   -I initstring   Init string to send before anything else
		   -H login_host   Log login_host into the utmp file as the hostname

       grep
	   grep	      [-HhrilLnqvsoweFEABC] PATTERN [FILEs...]

	   Search for PATTERN in each FILE or standard input

	   Options:

		   -H	   Prefix output lines with filename where match was found
		   -h	   Suppress the prefixing filename on output
		   -r	   Recurse subdirectories
		   -i	   Ignore case distinctions
		   -l	   List names of files that match
		   -L	   List names of files that do not match
		   -n	   Print line number with output lines
		   -q	   Quiet. Return 0 if PATTERN is found, 1 otherwise
		   -v	   Select non-matching lines
		   -s	   Suppress file open/read error messages
		   -c	   Only print count of matching lines
		   -o	   Show only the part of a line that matches PATTERN
		   -m MAX  Match up to MAX times per file
		   -w	   Match whole words only
		   -F	   PATTERN is a set of newline-separated strings
		   -E	   PATTERN is an extended regular expression
		   -e PTRN Pattern to match
		   -f FILE Read pattern from file
		   -A	   Print NUM lines of trailing context
		   -B	   Print NUM lines of leading context
		   -C	   Print NUM lines of output context

	   Example:

		   $ grep root /etc/passwd
		   root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash
		   $ grep ^[rR]oo. /etc/passwd
		   root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash

       gunzip
	   gunzip     [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Uncompress FILEs (or standard input)

	   Options:

		   -c	   Write to standard output
		   -f	   Force
		   -t	   Test file integrity

	   Example:

		   $ ls -la /tmp/BusyBox*
		   -rw-rw-r--	 1 andersen andersen   557009 Apr 11 10:55 /tmp/BusyBox-0.43.tar.gz
		   $ gunzip /tmp/BusyBox-0.43.tar.gz
		   $ ls -la /tmp/BusyBox*
		   -rw-rw-r--	 1 andersen andersen  1761280 Apr 14 17:47 /tmp/BusyBox-0.43.tar

       gzip
	   gzip	      [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Compress FILEs (or standard input)

	   Options:

		   -c	   Write to standard output
		   -d	   Decompress
		   -f	   Force

	   Example:

		   $ ls -la /tmp/busybox*
		   -rw-rw-r--	 1 andersen andersen  1761280 Apr 14 17:47 /tmp/busybox.tar
		   $ gzip /tmp/busybox.tar
		   $ ls -la /tmp/busybox*
		   -rw-rw-r--	 1 andersen andersen   554058 Apr 14 17:49 /tmp/busybox.tar.gz

       halt
	   halt	      [-d delay] [-n] [-f] [-w]

	   Halt the system

	   Options:

		   -d	   Delay interval for halting
		   -n	   No call to sync()
		   -f	   Force halt (don't go through init)
		   -w	   Only write a wtmp record

       hd  hd	      FILE...

	   hd is an alias for hexdump -C

       hdparm
	   hdparm     [options] [device] ..

	   Options:

		   -a	   Get/set fs readahead
		   -A	   Set drive read-lookahead flag (0/1)
		   -b	   Get/set bus state (0 == off, 1 == on, 2 == tristate)
		   -B	   Set Advanced Power Management setting (1-255)
		   -c	   Get/set IDE 32-bit IO setting
		   -C	   Check IDE power mode status
		   -d	   Get/set using_dma flag
		   -D	   Enable/disable drive defect-mgmt
		   -f	   Flush buffer cache for device on exit
		   -g	   Display drive geometry
		   -h	   Display terse usage information
		   -i	   Display drive identification
		   -I	   Detailed/current information directly from drive
		   -k	   Get/set keep_settings_over_reset flag (0/1)
		   -K	   Set drive keep_features_over_reset flag (0/1)
		   -L	   Set drive doorlock (0/1) (removable harddisks only)
		   -m	   Get/set multiple sector count
		   -n	   Get/set ignore-write-errors flag (0/1)
		   -p	   Set PIO mode on IDE interface chipset (0,1,2,3,4,...)
		   -P	   Set drive prefetch count/*	"
		   -q	   Change next setting quietly" - not supported ib bbox */
		   -Q	   Get/set DMA tagged-queuing depth (if supported)
		   -r	   Get/set readonly flag (DANGEROUS to set)
		   -R	   Register an IDE interface (DANGEROUS)
		   -S	   Set standby (spindown) timeout
		   -t	   Perform device read timings
		   -T	   Perform cache read timings
		   -u	   Get/set unmaskirq flag (0/1)
		   -U	   Un-register an IDE interface (DANGEROUS)
		   -v	   Defaults; same as -mcudkrag for IDE drives
		   -V	   Display program version and exit immediately
		   -w	   Perform device reset (DANGEROUS)
		   -W	   Set drive write-caching flag (0/1) (DANGEROUS)
		   -x	   Tristate device for hotswap (0/1) (DANGEROUS)
		   -X	   Set IDE xfer mode (DANGEROUS)
		   -y	   Put IDE drive in standby mode
		   -Y	   Put IDE drive to sleep
		   -Z	   Disable Seagate auto-powersaving mode
		   -z	   Re-read partition table

       head
	   head	      [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Print first 10 lines of each FILE to standard output.  With more
	   than one FILE, precede each with a header giving the file name.
	   With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.

	   Options:

		   -n NUM  Print first NUM lines instead of first 10
		   -c NUM  Output the first NUM bytes
		   -q	   Never output headers giving file names
		   -v	   Always output headers giving file names

	   Example:

		   $ head -n 2 /etc/passwd
		   root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash
		   daemon:x:1:1:daemon:/usr/sbin:/bin/sh

       hexdump
	   hexdump    [-bcCdefnosvxR] FILE...

	   Display file(s) or standard input in a user specified format

	   Options:

		   -b		   One-byte octal display
		   -c		   One-byte character display
		   -C		   Canonical hex+ASCII, 16 bytes per line
		   -d		   Two-byte decimal display
		   -e FORMAT STRING
		   -f FORMAT FILE
		   -n LENGTH	   Interpret only LENGTH bytes of input
		   -o		   Two-byte octal display
		   -s OFFSET	   Skip OFFSET bytes
		   -v		   Display all input data
		   -x		   Two-byte hexadecimal display
		   -R		   Reverse of 'hexdump -Cv'

       hostid
	   hostid

	   Print out a unique 32-bit identifier for the machine

       hostname
	   hostname   [OPTION] [hostname | -F FILE]

	   Get or set hostname or DNS domain name

	   Options:

		   -s	   Short
		   -i	   Addresses for the hostname
		   -d	   DNS domain name
		   -f	   Fully qualified domain name
		   -F FILE Use the contents of FILE to specify the hostname

	   Example:

		   $ hostname
		   sage

       httpd
	   httpd      [-c conffile] [-p [ip:]port] [-i] [-f] [-v[v]] [-u
	   user[:grp]] [-r realm] [-m pass] [-h home] [-d/-e string]

	   Listen for incoming HTTP requests

	   Options:

		   -c FILE	   Configuration file (default httpd.conf)
		   -p [IP:]PORT	   Bind to ip:port (default *:80)
		   -i		   Inetd mode
		   -f		   Do not daemonize
		   -v[v]	   Verbose
		   -u USER[:GRP]   Set uid/gid after binding to port
		   -r REALM	   Authentication Realm for Basic Authentication
		   -m PASS	   Crypt PASS with md5 algorithm
		   -h HOME	   Home directory (default .)
		   -e STRING	   HTML encode STRING
		   -d STRING	   URL decode STRING

       hush
	   hush	      #define hush_full_usage

       hwclock
	   hwclock	   [-r|--show] [-s|--hctosys] [-w|--systohc]
	   [-l|--localtime] [-u|--utc] [-f FILE]

	   Query and set hardware clock (RTC)

	   Options:

		   -r	   Show hardware clock time
		   -s	   Set system time from hardware clock
		   -w	   Set hardware clock to system time
		   -u	   Hardware clock is in UTC
		   -l	   Hardware clock is in local time
		   -f FILE Use specified device (e.g. /dev/rtc2)

       id  id	      [OPTIONS]... [USER]

	   Print information about USER or the current user

	   Options:

		   -Z	   Print the security context
		   -u	   Print user ID
		   -g	   Print group ID
		   -G	   Print supplementary group IDs
		   -n	   Print name instead of a number
		   -r	   Print real user ID instead of effective ID

	   Example:

		   $ id
		   uid=1000(andersen) gid=1000(andersen)

       ifconfig
	   ifconfig   [-a] interface [address]

	   Configure a network interface

	   Options:

		   [add ADDRESS[/PREFIXLEN]]
		   [del ADDRESS[/PREFIXLEN]]
		   [[-]broadcast [ADDRESS]] [[-]pointopoint [ADDRESS]]
		   [netmask ADDRESS] [dstaddr ADDRESS]
		   [outfill NN] [keepalive NN]
		   [hw ether|infiniband ADDRESS] [metric NN] [mtu NN]
		   [[-]trailers] [[-]arp] [[-]allmulti]
		   [multicast] [[-]promisc] [txqueuelen NN] [[-]dynamic]
		   [mem_start NN] [io_addr NN] [irq NN]
		   [up|down] ...

       ifdown
	   ifdown     [-ainmvf] ifaces...

	   Options:

		   -a	   De/configure all interfaces automatically
		   -i FILE Use FILE for interface definitions
		   -n	   Print out what would happen, but don't do it
			   (note: doesn't disable mappings)
		   -m	   Don't run any mappings
		   -v	   Print out what would happen before doing it
		   -f	   Force de/configuration

       ifenslave
	   ifenslave  [-cdf] master-iface <slave-iface...>

	   Configure network interfaces for parallel routing

	   Options:

		   -c, --change-active	   Change active slave
		   -d, --detach		   Remove slave interface from bonding device
		   -f, --force		   Force, even if interface is not Ethernet/*	"
		   -r, --receive-slave	   Create a receive-only slave" */

	   Example:

		   To create a bond device, simply follow these three steps :
		   - ensure that the required drivers are properly loaded :
		     # modprobe bonding ; modprobe <3c59x|eepro100|pcnet32|tulip|...>
		   - assign an IP address to the bond device :
		     # ifconfig bond0 <addr> netmask <mask> broadcast <bcast>
		   - attach all the interfaces you need to the bond device :
		     # ifenslave bond0 eth0 eth1 eth2
		     If bond0 didn't have a MAC address, it will take eth0's. Then, all
		     interfaces attached AFTER this assignment will get the same MAC addr.

		     To detach a dead interface without setting the bond device down :
		      # ifenslave -d bond0 eth1

		     To set the bond device down and automatically release all the slaves :
		      # ifconfig bond0 down

		     To change active slave :
		      # ifenslave -c bond0 eth0

       ifup
	   ifup	      [-ainmvf] ifaces...

	   Options:

		   -a	   De/configure all interfaces automatically
		   -i FILE Use FILE for interface definitions
		   -n	   Print out what would happen, but don't do it
			   (note: doesn't disable mappings)
		   -m	   Don't run any mappings
		   -v	   Print out what would happen before doing it
		   -f	   Force de/configuration

       inetd
	   inetd      [-fe] [-q N] [-R N] [CONFFILE]

	   Listen for network connections and launch programs

	   Options:

		   -f	   Run in foreground
		   -e	   Log to stderr
		   -q N	   Socket listen queue (default: 128)
		   -R N	   Pause services after N connects/min
			   (default: 0 - disabled)

       init
	   init

	   Init is the parent of all processes

	   This version of init is designed to be run only by the kernel.

	   BusyBox init doesn't support multiple runlevels. The runlevels
	   field of the /etc/inittab file is completely ignored by BusyBox
	   init. If you want runlevels, use sysvinit.

	   BusyBox init works just fine without an inittab. If no inittab is
	   found, it has the following default behavior:

		   ::sysinit:/etc/init.d/rcS
		   ::askfirst:/bin/sh
		   ::ctrlaltdel:/sbin/reboot
		   ::shutdown:/sbin/swapoff -a
		   ::shutdown:/bin/umount -a -r
		   ::restart:/sbin/init

	   if it detects that /dev/console is _not_ a serial console, it will
	   also run:

		   tty2::askfirst:/bin/sh
		   tty3::askfirst:/bin/sh
		   tty4::askfirst:/bin/sh

	   If you choose to use an /etc/inittab file, the inittab entry format
	   is as follows:

		   <id>:<runlevels>:<action>:<process>

		   <id>:

			   WARNING: This field has a non-traditional meaning for BusyBox init!
			   The id field is used by BusyBox init to specify the controlling tty for
			   the specified process to run on. The contents of this field are
			   appended to "/dev/" and used as-is. There is no need for this field to
			   be unique, although if it isn't you may have strange results. If this
			   field is left blank, the controlling tty is set to the console. Also
			   note that if BusyBox detects that a serial console is in use, then only
			   entries whose controlling tty is either the serial console or /dev/null
			   will be run. BusyBox init does nothing with utmp. We don't need no
			   stinkin' utmp.

		   <runlevels>:

			   The runlevels field is completely ignored.

		   <action>:

			   Valid actions include: sysinit, respawn, askfirst, wait,
			   once, restart, ctrlaltdel, and shutdown.

			   The available actions can be classified into two groups: actions
			   that are run only once, and actions that are re-run when the specified
			   process exits.

			   Run only-once actions:

				   'sysinit' is the first item run on boot. init waits until all
				   sysinit actions are completed before continuing. Following the
				   completion of all sysinit actions, all 'wait' actions are run.
				   'wait' actions, like 'sysinit' actions, cause init to wait until
				   the specified task completes. 'once' actions are asynchronous,
				   therefore, init does not wait for them to complete. 'restart' is
				   the action taken to restart the init process. By default this should
				   simply run /sbin/init, but can be a script which runs pivot_root or it
				   can do all sorts of other interesting things. The 'ctrlaltdel' init
				   actions are run when the system detects that someone on the system
				   console has pressed the CTRL-ALT-DEL key combination. Typically one
				   wants to run 'reboot' at this point to cause the system to reboot.
				   Finally the 'shutdown' action specifies the actions to taken when
				   init is told to reboot. Unmounting filesystems and disabling swap
				   is a very good here.

			   Run repeatedly actions:

				   'respawn' actions are run after the 'once' actions. When a process
				   started with a 'respawn' action exits, init automatically restarts
				   it. Unlike sysvinit, BusyBox init does not stop processes from
				   respawning out of control. The 'askfirst' actions acts just like
				   respawn, except that before running the specified process it
				   displays the line "Please press Enter to activate this console."
				   and then waits for the user to press enter before starting the
				   specified process.

			   Unrecognized actions (like initdefault) will cause init to emit an
			   error message, and then go along with its business. All actions are
			   run in the order they appear in /etc/inittab.

		   <process>:

			   Specifies the process to be executed and its command line.

	   Example /etc/inittab file:

		   # This is run first except when booting in single-user mode
		   #
		   ::sysinit:/etc/init.d/rcS

		   # /bin/sh invocations on selected ttys
		   #
		   # Start an "askfirst" shell on the console (whatever that may be)
		   ::askfirst:-/bin/sh
		   # Start an "askfirst" shell on /dev/tty2-4
		   tty2::askfirst:-/bin/sh
		   tty3::askfirst:-/bin/sh
		   tty4::askfirst:-/bin/sh

		   # /sbin/getty invocations for selected ttys
		   #
		   tty4::respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty4
		   tty5::respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty5

		   # Example of how to put a getty on a serial line (for a terminal)
		   #
		   #::respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS0 9600 vt100
		   #::respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS1 9600 vt100
		   #
		   # Example how to put a getty on a modem line
		   #::respawn:/sbin/getty 57600 ttyS2

		   # Stuff to do when restarting the init process
		   ::restart:/sbin/init

		   # Stuff to do before rebooting
		   ::ctrlaltdel:/sbin/reboot
		   ::shutdown:/bin/umount -a -r
		   ::shutdown:/sbin/swapoff -a

       inotifyd
	   inotifyd   /user/space/agent dir/or/file/being/watched[:mask] ...

	   Spawn userspace agent on filesystem changes.	 When a filesystem
	   event matching the mask occurs on specified file/directory an
	   userspace agent is spawned with the parameters: 1. actual event(s)
	   2. file/directory name 3. name of subfile (if any), in case of
	   watching a directory

		   a	   File is accessed
		   c	   File is modified
		   e	   Metadata changed
		   w	   Writtable file is closed
		   0	   Unwrittable file is closed
		   r	   File is opened
		   m	   File is moved from X
		   y	   File is moved to Y
		   n	   Subfile is created
		   d	   Subfile is deleted
		   D	   Self is deleted
		   M	   Self is moved

       insmod
	   insmod     [OPTION]... MODULE [symbol=value]...

	   Load the specified kernel modules into the kernel

	   Options:

		   -f	   Force module to load into the wrong kernel version
		   -k	   Make module autoclean-able
		   -v	   Verbose
		   -q	   Quiet
		   -L	   Lock to prevent simultaneous loads of a module
		   -m	   Output load map to stdout
		   -o NAME Set internal module name to NAME
		   -x	   Do not export externs

       install
	   install    [-cdDsp] [-o USER] [-g GRP] [-m MODE] [source]
	   dest|directory

	   Copy files and set attributes

	   Options:

		   -c	   Just copy (default)
		   -d	   Create directories
		   -D	   Create leading target directories
		   -s	   Strip symbol table
		   -p	   Preserve date
		   -o USER Set ownership
		   -g GRP  Set group ownership
		   -m MODE Set permissions
		   -Z	   Set security context

       ip  ip	      [OPTIONS] {address | route | link | tunnel | rule}
	   {COMMAND}

	   ip [OPTIONS] OBJECT {COMMAND} where OBJECT := {address | route |
	   link | tunnel | rule} OPTIONS := { -f[amily] { inet | inet6 | link
	   } | -o[neline] }

       ipaddr
	   ipaddr     { {add|del} IFADDR dev STRING | {show|flush}
		     [dev STRING] [to PREFIX] }

	   ipaddr {add|delete} IFADDR dev STRING ipaddr {show|flush} [dev
	   STRING] [scope SCOPE-ID]

		   [to PREFIX] [label PATTERN]
		   IFADDR := PREFIX | ADDR peer PREFIX
		   [broadcast ADDR] [anycast ADDR]
		   [label STRING] [scope SCOPE-ID]
		   SCOPE-ID := [host | link | global | NUMBER]

       ipcalc
	   ipcalc     [OPTION]... ADDRESS[[/]NETMASK] [NETMASK]

	   Calculate IP network settings from a IP address

	   Options:

		   -b,--broadcast  Display calculated broadcast address
		   -n,--network	   Display calculated network address
		   -m,--netmask	   Display default netmask for IP
		   -p,--prefix	   Display the prefix for IP/NETMASK
		   -h,--hostname   Display first resolved host name
		   -s,--silent	   Don't ever display error messages		   )

       ipcrm
	   ipcrm      [-MQS key] [-mqs id]

	   Upper-case options MQS remove an object by shmkey value.  Lower-
	   case options remove an object by shmid value.

	   Options:

		   -mM	   Remove memory segment after last detach
		   -qQ	   Remove message queue
		   -sS	   Remove semaphore

       ipcs
	   ipcs	      [[-smq] -i shmid] | [[-asmq] [-tcplu]]

		   -i	   Show specific resource
	   Resource specification:

		   -m	   Shared memory segments
		   -q	   Message queues
		   -s	   Semaphore arrays
		   -a	   All (default)
	   Output format:

		   -t	   Time
		   -c	   Creator
		   -p	   Pid
		   -l	   Limits
		   -u	   Summary

       iplink
	   iplink

	   iplink set DEVICE { up | down | arp | multicast { on | off } |

				   dynamic { on | off } |
				   mtu MTU }
	   iplink show [DEVICE]

       iproute
	   iproute    { list | flush | { add | del | change | append |
		     replace | monitor } ROUTE }

	   iproute { list | flush } SELECTOR iproute get ADDRESS [from ADDRESS
	   iif STRING]

				   [oif STRING]	 [tos TOS]
	   iproute { add | del | change | append | replace | monitor } ROUTE

				   SELECTOR := [root PREFIX] [match PREFIX] [proto RTPROTO]
				   ROUTE := [TYPE] PREFIX [tos TOS] [proto RTPROTO]
					   [metric METRIC]

       iprule
	   iprule     {[list | add | del] RULE}

	   iprule [list | add | del] SELECTOR ACTION

		   SELECTOR := [from PREFIX] [to PREFIX] [tos TOS] [fwmark FWMARK]
				   [dev STRING] [pref NUMBER]
		   ACTION := [table TABLE_ID] [nat ADDRESS]
				   [prohibit | reject | unreachable]
				   [realms [SRCREALM/]DSTREALM]
		   TABLE_ID := [local | main | default | NUMBER]

       iptunnel
	   iptunnel   { add | change | del | show } [NAME]	[mode { ipip |
	   gre | sit }]	     [remote ADDR] [local ADDR] [ttl TTL]

	   iptunnel { add | change | del | show } [NAME]

		   [mode { ipip | gre | sit }] [remote ADDR] [local ADDR]
		   [[i|o]seq] [[i|o]key KEY] [[i|o]csum]
		   [ttl TTL] [tos TOS] [[no]pmtudisc] [dev PHYS_DEV]

       kbd_mode
	   kbd_mode   [-a|k|s|u] [-C TTY]

	   Report or set the keyboard mode

	   Options set mode:

		   -a	   Default (ASCII)
		   -k	   Medium-raw (keyboard)
		   -s	   Raw (scancode)
		   -u	   Unicode (utf-8)
		   -C TTY  Affect TTY instead of /dev/tty

       kill
	   kill	      [-l] [-SIG] PID...

	   Send a signal (default is TERM) to given PIDs

	   Options:

		   -l	   List all signal names and numbers/*	 "
		   -s SIG  Yet another way of specifying SIG" */

	   Example:

		   $ ps | grep apache
		   252 root	root	 S [apache]
		   263 www-data www-data S [apache]
		   264 www-data www-data S [apache]
		   265 www-data www-data S [apache]
		   266 www-data www-data S [apache]
		   267 www-data www-data S [apache]
		   $ kill 252

       killall
	   killall    [-l] [-q] [-SIG] process-name...

	   Send a signal (default is TERM) to given processes

	   Options:

		   -l	   List all signal names and numbers/*	 "
		   -s SIG  Yet another way of specifying SIG" */
		   -q	   Do not complain if no processes were killed

	   Example:

		   $ killall apache

       killall5
	   killall5   [-l] [-SIG]

	   Send a signal (default is TERM) to all processes outside current
	   session

	   Options:

		   -l	   List all signal names and numbers/*	 "
		   -s SIG  Yet another way of specifying SIG" */

       klogd
	   klogd      [-c N] [-n]

	   Kernel logger

	   Options:

		   -c N	   Only messages with level < N are printed to console
		   -n	   Run in foreground

       lash
	   lash	      [FILE]...	 or: sh -c command [args]...

	   lash is deprecated, please use hush

       last
	   last	      [-HW] [-f file]

	   Show listing of the last users that logged into the system

	   Options:/*	"

		   -H	   Show header line" */
		   -W	   Display with no host column truncation
		   -f file Read from file instead of /var/log/wtmp

       length
	   length     STRING

	   Print STRING's length

	   Example:

		   $ length Hello
		   5

       less
	   less	      [-EMNmh~I?] [FILE...]

	   View a file or list of files. The position within files can be
	   changed, and files can be manipulated in various ways.

	   Options:

		   -E	   Quit once the end of a file is reached
		   -M,-m   Display a status line containing the line numbers
			   and percentage through the file
		   -N	   Prefix line numbers to each line
		   -I	   Ignore case in all searches
		   -~	   Suppress ~s displayed past the end of the file

       linux32
	   linux32    #define linux32_full_usage

       linux64
	   linux64    #define linux64_full_usage

       linuxrc
	   linuxrc    #define linuxrc_full_usage

       ln  ln	      [OPTION] TARGET... LINK_NAME|DIRECTORY

	   Create a link named LINK_NAME or DIRECTORY to the specified TARGET.
	   Use '--' to indicate that all following arguments are non-options.

	   Options:

		   -s	   Make symlinks instead of hardlinks
		   -f	   Remove existing destination files
		   -n	   Don't dereference symlinks - treat like normal file
		   -b	   Make a backup of the target (if exists) before link operation
		   -S suf  Use suffix instead of ~ when making backup files

	   Example:

		   $ ln -s BusyBox /tmp/ls
		   $ ls -l /tmp/ls
		   lrwxrwxrwx	 1 root	    root	    7 Apr 12 18:39 ls -> BusyBox*

       load_policy
	   load_policy #define load_policy_full_usage

       loadfont
	   loadfont   < font

	   Load a console font from standard input/*   "

		   -C TTY  Affect TTY instead of /dev/tty" */

	   Example:

		   $ loadfont < /etc/i18n/fontname

       loadkmap
	   loadkmap   < keymap

	   Load a binary keyboard translation table from standard input /*   "

		   -C TTY  Affect TTY instead of /dev/tty" */

	   Example:

		   $ loadkmap < /etc/i18n/lang-keymap

       logger
	   logger     [OPTION]... [MESSAGE]

	   Write MESSAGE to the system log. If MESSAGE is omitted, log stdin.

	   Options:

		   -s	   Log to stderr as well as the system log
		   -t TAG  Log using the specified tag (defaults to user name)
		   -p PRIO Priority (numeric or facility.level pair)

	   Example:

		   $ logger "hello"

       login
	   login      [-p] [-h HOST] [[-f] USER]

	   Begin a new session on the system

	   Options:

		   -f	   Do not authenticate (user already authenticated)
		   -h	   Name of the remote host
		   -p	   Preserve environment

       logname
	   logname

	   Print the name of the current user

	   Example:

		   $ logname
		   root

       logread
	   logread    [OPTION]...

	   Show messages in syslogd's circular buffer

	   Options:

		   -f	   Output data as log grows

       losetup
	   losetup    [-o OFS] LOOPDEV FILE - associate loop devices
		losetup -d LOOPDEV - disassociate      losetup [-f] - show

	   Options:

		   -o OFS  Start OFS bytes into FILE
		   -f	   Show first free loop device

	   No arguments will display all current associations.	One argument
	   (losetup /dev/loop1) will display the current association (if any),
	   or disassociate it (with -d). The display shows the offset and
	   filename of the file the loop device is currently bound to.

	   Two arguments (losetup /dev/loop1 file.img) create a new
	   association, with an optional offset (-o 12345). Encryption is not
	   yet supported.  losetup -f will show the first loop free loop
	   device

       lpd lpd	      SPOOLDIR [HELPER [ARGS...]]

	   SPOOLDIR must contain (symlinks to) device nodes or directories
	   with names matching print queue names. In the first case, jobs are
	   sent directly to the device. Otherwise each job is stored in queue
	   directory and HELPER program is called. Name of file to print is
	   passed in $DATAFILE variable.  Example:

		   tcpsvd -E 0 515 softlimit -m 999999 lpd /var/spool ./print

       lpq lpq	      [-P queue[@host[:port]]] [-U USERNAME] [-d JOBID...]
	   [-fs]

	   Options:

		   -P	   lp service to connect to (else uses $PRINTER)
		   -d	   Delete jobs
		   -f	   Force any waiting job to be printed
		   -s	   Short display

       lpr lpr	      -P queue[@host[:port]] -U USERNAME -J TITLE -Vmh
	   [FILE...]

	   Options:

		   -P	   lp service to connect to (else uses $PRINTER)
		   -m	   Send mail on completion
		   -h	   Print banner page too
		   -V	   Verbose

       ls  ls	      [-1AacCdeFilnpLRrSsTtuvwxXhkK] [filenames...]

	   List directory contents

	   Options:

		   -1	   List in a single column
		   -A	   Don't list . and ..
		   -a	   Don't hide entries starting with .
		   -C	   List by columns
		   -c	   With -l: sort by ctime
		   --color[={always,never,auto}]   Control coloring
		   -d	   List directory entries instead of contents
		   -e	   List full date and time
		   -F	   Append indicator (one of */=@|) to entries
		   -i	   List inode numbers
		   -l	   Long listing format
		   -n	   List numeric UIDs and GIDs instead of names
		   -p	   Append indicator (one of /=@|) to entries
		   -L	   List entries pointed to by symlinks
		   -R	   List subdirectories recursively
		   -r	   Sort in reverse order
		   -S	   Sort by file size
		   -s	   List the size of each file, in blocks
		   -T NUM  Assume tabstop every NUM columns
		   -t	   With -l: sort by modification time
		   -u	   With -l: sort by access time
		   -v	   Sort by version
		   -w NUM  Assume the terminal is NUM columns wide
		   -x	   List by lines
		   -X	   Sort by extension
		   -h	   List sizes in human readable format (1K 243M 2G)
		   -k	   List security context
		   -K	   List security context in long format
		   -Z	   List security context and permission

       lsattr
	   lsattr     [-Radlv] [files...]

	   List file attributes on an ext2 fs

	   Options:

		   -R	   Recursively list subdirectories
		   -a	   Do not hide entries starting with .
		   -d	   List directory entries instead of contents
		   -l	   List long flag names
		   -v	   List the file's version/generation number

       lsmod
	   lsmod

	   List the currently loaded kernel modules

       lzmacat
	   lzmacat    FILE

	   Uncompress to stdout

       makedevs
	   makedevs   [-d device_table] rootdir

	   Create a range of special files as specified in a device table.
	   Device table entries take the form of: <type> <mode> <uid> <gid>
	   <major> <minor> <start> <inc> <count> Where name is the file name,
	   type can be one of:

		   f	   Regular file
		   d	   Directory
		   c	   Character device
		   b	   Block device
		   p	   Fifo (named pipe)
	   uid is the user id for the target file, gid is the group id for the
	   target file. The rest of the entries (major, minor, etc) apply to
	   to device special files. A '-' may be used for blank entries.

	   Example:

		   For example:
		   <name>    <type> <mode><uid><gid><major><minor><start><inc><count>
		   /dev		d   755	   0	0    -	    -	   -	  -    -
		   /dev/console c   666	   0	0    5	    1	   -	  -    -
		   /dev/null	c   666	   0	0    1	    3	   0	  0    -
		   /dev/zero	c   666	   0	0    1	    5	   0	  0    -
		   /dev/hda	b   640	   0	0    3	    0	   0	  0    -
		   /dev/hda	b   640	   0	0    3	    1	   1	  1    15

		   Will Produce:
		   /dev
		   /dev/console
		   /dev/null
		   /dev/zero
		   /dev/hda
		   /dev/hda[0-15]

       makemime
	   makemime   [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Create MIME-encoded message

	   Options:

		   -C	   Charset
		   -e	   Tranfer encoding. Ignored. base64 is assumed

	   Other options are silently ignored.

       man man	      [OPTION]... [MANPAGE]...

	   Format and display manual page

	   Options:

		   -a	   Display all pages
		   -w	   Show page locations

       matchpathcon
	   matchpathcon [-n] [-N] [-f file_contexts_file] [-p prefix] [-V]

		   -n	   Do not display path
		   -N	   Do not use translations
		   -f	   Use alternate file_context file
		   -p	   Use prefix to speed translations
		   -V	   Verify file context on disk matches defaults

       md5sum
	   md5sum     [OPTION] [FILEs...]
	      or: md5sum [OPTION] -c [FILE]

	   Print or check MD5 checksums

	   Options:

		   -c	   Check MD5 sums against given list
		   -s	   Don't output anything, status code shows success
		   -w	   Warn about improperly formatted MD5 checksum lines

	   Example:

		   $ md5sum < busybox
		   6fd11e98b98a58f64ff3398d7b324003
		   $ md5sum busybox
		   6fd11e98b98a58f64ff3398d7b324003  busybox
		   $ md5sum -c -
		   6fd11e98b98a58f64ff3398d7b324003  busybox
		   busybox: OK
		   ^D

       mdev
	   mdev	      [-s]

		   -s	   Scan /sys and populate /dev during system boot

	   Called with no options (via hotplug) it uses environment variables
	   to determine which device to add/remove.

		    The mdev config file contains lines that look like:
	     hd[a-z][0-9]* 0:3 660

	   That's device name (with regex match), uid:gid, and permissions.

	   Optionally, that can be followed (on the same line) by a special
	   character and a command line to run after creating/before deleting
	   the corresponding device(s). The environment variable $MDEV
	   indicates the active device node (which is useful if it's a regex
	   match). For example:

	     hdc root:cdrom 660	 *ln -s $MDEV cdrom

	   The special characters are @ (run after creating), $ (run before
	   deleting), and * (run both after creating and before deleting). The
	   commands run in the /dev directory, and use system() which calls
	   /bin/sh.

	   Config file parsing stops on the first matching line. If no config
	   entry is matched, devices are created with default 0:0 660. (Make
	   the last line match .* to override this.)

       mesg
	   mesg	      [y|n]

	   Control write access to your terminal

		   y	   Allow write access to your terminal
		   n	   Disallow write access to your terminal

       microcom
	   microcom   [-d DELAY] [-t TIMEOUT] [-s SPEED] [-X] TTY

	   Copy bytes for stdin to TTY and from TTY to stdout

	   Options:

		   -d	   Wait up to DELAY ms for TTY output before sending every
			   next byte to it
		   -t	   Exit if both stdin and TTY are silent for TIMEOUT ms
		   -s	   Set serial line to SPEED
		   -X	   Disable special meaning of NUL and Ctrl-X from stdin

       mkdir
	   mkdir      [OPTION] DIRECTORY...

	   Create DIRECTORY

	   Options:

		   -m	   Set permission mode (as in chmod), not rwxrwxrwx - umask
		   -p	   No error if existing, make parent directories as needed
		   -Z	   Set security context

	   Example:

		   $ mkdir /tmp/foo
		   $ mkdir /tmp/foo
		   /tmp/foo: File exists
		   $ mkdir /tmp/foo/bar/baz
		   /tmp/foo/bar/baz: No such file or directory
		   $ mkdir -p /tmp/foo/bar/baz

       mke2fs
	   mke2fs     [-c|-l filename] [-b block-size] [-f fragment-size] [-g
	   blocks-per-group] [-i bytes-per-inode] [-j] [-J journal-options]
	   [-N number-of-inodes] [-n] [-m reserved-blocks-percentage] [-o
	   creator-os] [-O feature[,...]] [-q] [r fs-revision-level] [-E
	   extended-options] [-v] [-F] [-L volume-label] [-M
	   last-mounted-directory] [-S] [-T filesystem-type] device
	   [blocks-count]

		   -b size	   Block size in bytes
		   -c		   Check for bad blocks before creating
		   -E opts	   Set extended options
		   -f size	   Fragment size in bytes
		   -F		   Force (ignore sanity checks)
		   -g num	   Number of blocks in a block group
		   -i ratio	   The bytes/inode ratio
		   -j		   Create a journal (ext3)
		   -J opts	   Set journal options (size/device)
		   -l file	   Read bad blocks list from file
		   -L lbl	   Set the volume label
		   -m percent	   Percent of fs blocks to reserve for admin
		   -M dir	   Set last mounted directory
		   -n		   Do not actually create anything
		   -N num	   Number of inodes to create
		   -o os	   Set the 'creator os' field
		   -O features	   Dir_index/filetype/has_journal/journal_dev/sparse_super
		   -q		   Quiet
		   -r rev	   Set filesystem revision
		   -S		   Write superblock and group descriptors only
		   -T fs-type	   Set usage type (news/largefile/largefile4)
		   -v		   Verbose

       mkfifo
	   mkfifo     [OPTIONS] name

	   Create named pipe (identical to 'mknod name p')

	   Options:

		   -m MODE Mode (default a=rw)
		   -Z	   Set security context

       mkfs.minix
	   mkfs.minix [-c | -l filename] [-nXX] [-iXX] /dev/name [blocks]

	   Make a MINIX filesystem

	   Options:

		   -c		   Check device for bad blocks
		   -n [14|30]	   Maximum length of filenames
		   -i INODES	   Number of inodes for the filesystem
		   -l FILENAME	   Read bad blocks list from FILENAME
		   -v		   Make version 2 filesystem

       mknod
	   mknod      [OPTIONS] NAME TYPE MAJOR MINOR

	   Create a special file (block, character, or pipe)

	   Options:

		   -m	   Create the special file using the specified mode (default a=rw)
	   TYPEs include:

		   b:	   Make a block device
		   c or u: Make a character device
		   p:	   Make a named pipe (MAJOR and MINOR are ignored)
		   -Z	   Set security context

	   Example:

		   $ mknod /dev/fd0 b 2 0
		   $ mknod -m 644 /tmp/pipe p

       mkswap
	   mkswap     DEVICE

	   Prepare block device to be used as swap partition

       mktemp
	   mktemp     [-dt] [-p DIR] [TEMPLATE]

	   Create a temporary file with name based on TEMPLATE and print its
	   name.  TEMPLATE must end with XXXXXX (e.g. [/dir/]nameXXXXXX).

	   Options:

		   -d	   Make a directory instead of a file/*	  "
		   -q	   Fail silently if an error occurs" - we ignore it */
		   -t	   Generate a path rooted in temporary directory
		   -p DIR  Use DIR as a temporary directory (implies -t)

	   For -t or -p, directory is chosen as follows: $TMPDIR if set, else
	   -p DIR, else /tmp

	   Example:

		   $ mktemp /tmp/temp.XXXXXX
		   /tmp/temp.mWiLjM
		   $ ls -la /tmp/temp.mWiLjM
		   -rw-------	 1 andersen andersen	    0 Apr 25 17:10 /tmp/temp.mWiLjM

       modprobe
	   modprobe   [-knqrsv] MODULE [symbol=value...]

	   Options:

		   -k	   Make module autoclean-able
		   -n	   Dry run
		   -q	   Quiet
		   -r	   Remove module (stacks) or do autoclean
		   -s	   Report via syslog instead of stderr
		   -v	   Verbose
		   -b	   Apply blacklist to module names too

	   modprobe can (un)load a stack of modules, passing each module
	   options (when loading). modprobe uses a configuration file to
	   determine what option(s) to pass each module it loads.

	   The configuration file is searched (in order) amongst:

	       /etc/modprobe.conf (2.6 only)
	       /etc/modules.conf
	       /etc/conf.modules (deprecated)

	   They all have the same syntax (see below). If none is present, it
	   is _not_ an error; each loaded module is then expected to load
	   without options. Once a file is found, the others are tested for.

	   /etc/modules.conf entry format:

	     alias <alias_name> <mod_name>
	       Makes it possible to modprobe alias_name, when there is no such module.
	       It makes sense if your mod_name is long, or you want a more representative
	       name for that module (eg. 'scsi' in place of 'aha7xxx').
	       This makes it also possible to use a different set of options (below) for
	       the module and the alias.
	       A module can be aliased more than once.

	     options <mod_name|alias_name> <symbol=value...>
	       When loading module mod_name (or the module aliased by alias_name), pass
	       the "symbol=value" pairs as option to that module.

	   Sample /etc/modules.conf file:

	     options tulip irq=3
	     alias tulip tulip2
	     options tulip2 irq=4 io=0x308

	   Other functionality offered by 'classic' modprobe is not available
	   in this implementation.

	   If module options are present both in the config file, and on the
	   command line, then the options from the command line will be passed
	   to the module _after_ the options from the config file. That way,
	   you can have defaults in the config file, and override them for a
	   specific usage from the command line.

	   Example:

		   (with the above /etc/modules.conf):

		   $ modprobe tulip
		      will load the module 'tulip' with default option 'irq=3'

		   $ modprobe tulip irq=5
		      will load the module 'tulip' with option 'irq=5', thus overriding the default

		   $ modprobe tulip2
		      will load the module 'tulip' with default options 'irq=4 io=0x308',
		      which are the default for alias 'tulip2'

		   $ modprobe tulip2 irq=8
		      will load the module 'tulip' with default options 'irq=4 io=0x308 irq=8',
		      which are the default for alias 'tulip2' overridden by the option 'irq=8'

		      from the command line

		   $ modprobe tulip2 irq=2 io=0x210
		      will load the module 'tulip' with default options 'irq=4 io=0x308 irq=4 io=0x210',
		      which are the default for alias 'tulip2' overridden by the options 'irq=2 io=0x210'

		      from the command line

       more
	   more	      [FILE...]

	   View FILE or standard input one screenful at a time

	   Example:

		   $ dmesg | more

       mount
	   mount      [flags] DEVICE NODE [-o options,more-options]

	   Mount a filesystem. Filesystem autodetection requires /proc be
	   mounted.

	   Options:

		   -a		   Mount all filesystems in fstab
		   -f		   Update /etc/mtab, but don't mount
		   -i		   Don't call /sbin/mount.<filesystem> helper
		   -n		   Don't update /etc/mtab
		   -r		   Read-only mount
		   -t fs-type	   Filesystem type
		   -w		   Read-write mount (default)
	   B<-o> option:

		   loop		   Ignored (loop devices are autodetected)
		   [a]sync	   Writes are asynchronous / synchronous
		   [no]atime	   Disable / enable updates to inode access times
		   [no]diratime	   Disable / enable atime updates to directories
		   [no]relatime	   Disable / enable atime updates relative to modification time
		   [no]dev	   Allow use of special device files / disallow them
		   [no]exec	   Allow use of executable files / disallow them
		   [no]suid	   Allow set-user-id-root programs / disallow them
		   [r]shared	   Convert [recursively] to a shared subtree
		   [r]slave	   Convert [recursively] to a slave subtree
		   [r]private	   Convert [recursively] to a private subtree
		   [un]bindable	   Make mount point [un]able to be bind mounted
		   bind		   Bind a directory to an additional location
		   move		   Relocate an existing mount point
		   remount	   Remount a mounted filesystem, changing its flags
		   ro/rw	   Mount for read-only / read-write

	   There are EVEN MORE flags that are specific to each filesystem
	   You'll have to see the written documentation for those filesystems

	   Returns 0 for success, number of failed mounts for -a, or errno for
	   one mount.

	   Example:

		   $ mount
		   /dev/hda3 on / type minix (rw)
		   proc on /proc type proc (rw)
		   devpts on /dev/pts type devpts (rw)
		   $ mount /dev/fd0 /mnt -t msdos -o ro
		   $ mount /tmp/diskimage /opt -t ext2 -o loop
		   $ mount cd_image.iso mydir

       mountpoint
	   mountpoint [-q] <[-d] DIR | -x DEVICE>

	   mountpoint checks if the directory is a mountpoint

	   Options:

		   -q	   Quiet
		   -d	   Print major/minor device number of the filesystem
		   -x	   Print major/minor device number of the blockdevice

	   Example:

		   $ mountpoint /proc
		   /proc is not a mountpoint
		   $ mountpoint /sys
		   /sys is a mountpoint

       msh msh	      #define msh_full_usage

       mt  mt	      [-f device] opcode value

	   Control magnetic tape drive operation

	   Available Opcodes:

	   bsf bsfm bsr bss datacompression drvbuffer eof eom erase fsf fsfm
	   fsr fss load lock mkpart nop offline ras1 ras2 ras3 reset retension
	   rewind rewoffline seek setblk setdensity setpart tell unload unlock
	   weof wset

       mv  mv	      [OPTION]... SOURCE DEST or: mv [OPTION]... SOURCE...
	   DIRECTORY

	   Rename SOURCE to DEST, or move SOURCE(s) to DIRECTORY

	   Options:

		   -f	   Don't prompt before overwriting
		   -i	   Interactive, prompt before overwrite

	   Example:

		   $ mv /tmp/foo /bin/bar

       nameif
	   nameif     [-s] [-c FILE] [{IFNAME MACADDR}]

	   Rename network interface while it in the down state

	   Options:

		   -c FILE	   Use configuration file (default is /etc/mactab)
		   -s		   Use syslog (LOCAL0 facility)
		   IFNAME MACADDR  new_interface_name interface_mac_address

	   Example:

		   $ nameif -s dmz0 00:A0:C9:8C:F6:3F
		    or
		   $ nameif -c /etc/my_mactab_file

       nc  nc	      [-options] hostname port	- connect nc [-options] -l -p
	   port [hostname] [port]  - listen

	   Options:

		   -e prog [args]  Program to exec after connect (must be last)
		   -l		   Listen mode, for inbound connects
		   -n		   Don't do DNS resolution
		   -s addr	   Local address
		   -p port	   Local port
		   -u		   UDP mode
		   -v		   Verbose (cumulative: -vv)
		   -w secs	   Timeout for connects and final net reads
		   -i sec	   Delay interval for lines sent" /* ", ports scanned" */
		   -o file	   Hex dump of traffic
		   -z		   Zero-I/O mode (scanning)/*	"
		   -r		   Randomize local and remote ports" */

		    To use netcat as a terminal emulator on a serial port:

	   $ stty 115200 -F /dev/ttyS0 $ stty raw -echo -ctlecho && nc -f
	   /dev/ttyS0

	   Example:

		   $ nc foobar.somedomain.com 25
		   220 foobar ESMTP Exim 3.12 #1 Sat, 15 Apr 2000 00:03:02 -0600
		   help
		   214-Commands supported:
		   214-	   HELO EHLO MAIL RCPT DATA AUTH
		   214	   NOOP QUIT RSET HELP
		   quit
		   221 foobar closing connection

       netstat
	   netstat    [-laentuwxrWp]

	   Display networking information

	   Options:

		   -l	   Display listening server sockets
		   -a	   Display all sockets (default: connected)
		   -e	   Display other/more information
		   -n	   Don't resolve names
		   -t	   Tcp sockets
		   -u	   Udp sockets
		   -w	   Raw sockets
		   -x	   Unix sockets
		   -r	   Display routing table
		   -W	   Display with no column truncation
		   -p	   Display PID/Program name for sockets

       nice
	   nice	      [-n ADJUST] [COMMAND [ARG]...]

	   Run a program with modified scheduling priority

	   Options:

		   -n ADJUST	   Adjust the scheduling priority by ADJUST

       nmeter
	   nmeter     format_string

	   Monitor system in real time

	   Format specifiers: %Nc or %[cN]   Monitor CPU. N - bar size,
	   default 10

			   (displays: S:system U:user N:niced D:iowait I:irq i:softirq)
	   %[niface]	   Monitor network interface 'iface'
	   %m		   Monitor allocated memory
	   %[mf]	   Monitor free memory
	   %[mt]	   Monitor total memory
	   %s		   Monitor allocated swap
	   %f		   Monitor number of used file descriptors
	   %Ni		   Monitor total/specific IRQ rate
	   %x		   Monitor context switch rate
	   %p		   Monitor forks
	   %[pn]	   Monitor # of processes
	   %b		   Monitor block io
	   %Nt		   Show time (with N decimal points)
	   %Nd		   Milliseconds between updates (default=1000)
	   %r		   Print <cr> instead of <lf> at EOL

	   Example:

		   nmeter '%250d%t %20c int %i bio %b mem %m forks%p'

       nohup
	   nohup      COMMAND [ARGS]

	   Run a command immune to hangups, with output to a non-tty

	   Example:

		   $ nohup make &

       nslookup
	   nslookup   [HOST] [SERVER]

	   Query the nameserver for the IP address of the given HOST
	   optionally using a specified DNS server

	   Example:

		   $ nslookup localhost
		   Server:     default
		   Address:    default

		   Name:       debian
		   Address:    127.0.0.1

       od  od	      [-aBbcDdeFfHhIiLlOovXx] [-t TYPE] [FILE]

	   Write an unambiguous representation, octal bytes by default, of
	   FILE to standard output. With no FILE or when FILE is -, read
	   standard input.

       openvt
	   openvt     [-c NUM] [-sw] [COMMAND [ARGS]]

	   Start COMMAND on a new virtual terminal

	   Options:

		   -c	   Use specified VT
		   -s	   Switch to the VT/*	"
		   -l	   Run COMMAND as login shell (by prepending '-')" */
		   -w	   Wait for COMMAND to exit

	   Example:

		   openvt 2 /bin/ash

       parse
	   parse      [-n maxtokens] [-m mintokens] [-d delims] [-f flags]
	   file ...

	   [-n maxtokens] [-m mintokens] [-d delims] [-f flags] file ...

       passwd
	   passwd     [OPTION] [name]

	   Change user's password. If no name is specified, changes the
	   password for the current user.

	   Options:

		   -a	   Algorithm to use for password (choices: des, md5)" /* ", sha1)" */
		   -d	   Delete password for the account
		   -l	   Lock (disable) account
		   -u	   Unlock (re-enable) account

       patch
	   patch      [-p NUM] [-i DIFF] [-R]

		   -p NUM  Strip NUM leading components from file names
		   -i DIFF Read DIFF instead of stdin
		   -R	   Reverse patch

	   Example:

		   $ patch -p1 < example.diff
		   $ patch -p0 -i example.diff

       pgrep
	   pgrep      [-flnovx] pattern

	   Display process(es) selected by regex pattern

	   Options:

		   -l	   Show command name too
		   -f	   Match against entire command line
		   -n	   Show the newest process only
		   -o	   Show the oldest process only
		   -v	   Negate the matching
		   -x	   Match whole name (not substring)

       pidof
	   pidof      [NAME...]

	   List PIDs of all processes with names that match NAMEs USAGE_PIDOF

		   -s	   Show only one PID
		   -o PID  Omit given pid
			   Use %PPID to omit pid of pidof's parent

	   Example:

		   $ pidof init
		   1
		   $ pidof /bin/sh
		   20351 5973 5950
		   $ pidof /bin/sh -o %PPID
		   20351 5950

       ping
	   ping	      [OPTION]... host

	   Send ICMP ECHO_REQUEST packets to network hosts

	   Options:

		   -4, -6	   Force IPv4 or IPv6 hostname resolution
		   -c CNT	   Send only CNT pings
		   -s SIZE	   Send SIZE data bytes in packets (default=56)
		   -I iface/IP	   Use interface or IP address as source
		   -W timeout	   Seconds to wait for the first response (default:10)
				   (after all -c CNT packets are sent)
		   -w deadline	   Seconds until ping exits (default:infinite)
				   (can exit earlier with -c CNT)
		   -q		   Quiet, only displays output at start
				   and when finished

	   Example:

		   $ ping localhost
		   PING slag (127.0.0.1): 56 data bytes
		   64 bytes from 127.0.0.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=20.1 ms

		   --- debian ping statistics ---
		   1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received, 0% packet loss
		   round-trip min/avg/max = 20.1/20.1/20.1 ms

       ping6
	   ping6      [OPTION]... host

	   Send ICMP ECHO_REQUEST packets to network hosts

	   Options:

		   -c CNT	   Send only CNT pings
		   -s SIZE	   Send SIZE data bytes in packets (default=56)
		   -I iface/IP	   Use interface or IP address as source
		   -q		   Quiet, only displays output at start
				   and when finished

	   Example:

		   $ ping6 ip6-localhost
		   PING ip6-localhost (::1): 56 data bytes
		   64 bytes from ::1: icmp6_seq=0 ttl=64 time=20.1 ms

		   --- ip6-localhost ping statistics ---
		   1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received, 0% packet loss
		   round-trip min/avg/max = 20.1/20.1/20.1 ms

       pipe_progress
	   pipe_progress #define pipe_progress_full_usage

       pivot_root
	   pivot_root NEW_ROOT PUT_OLD

	   Move the current root file system to PUT_OLD and make NEW_ROOT the
	   new root file system

       pkill
	   pkill      [-l] | [-fnovx] [-signal] pattern

	   Send a signal to process(es) selected by regex pattern

	   Options:

		   -l	   List all signals
		   -f	   Match against entire command line
		   -n	   Signal the newest process only
		   -o	   Signal the oldest process only
		   -v	   Negate the matching
		   -x	   Match whole name (not substring)

       popmaildir
	   popmaildir [OPTIONS] Maildir [connection-helper ...]

	   Fetch content of remote mailbox to local maildir

	   Options:

		   -b		   Binary mode. Ignored
		   -d		   Debug. Ignored
		   -m		   Show used memory. Ignored
		   -V		   Show version. Ignored
		   -c		   Use tcpclient. Ignored
		   -a		   Use APOP protocol. Implied. If server supports APOP -> use it
		   -s		   Skip authorization
		   -T		   Get messages with TOP instead with RETR
		   -k		   Keep retrieved messages on the server
		   -t timeout	   Set network timeout
		   -F "program arg1 arg2 ..."	   Filter by program. May be multiple
		   -M "program arg1 arg2 ..."	   Deliver by program
		   -R size	   Remove old messages on the server >= size (in bytes). Ignored
		   -Z N1-N2	   Remove messages from N1 to N2 (dangerous). Ignored
		   -L size	   Do not retrieve new messages >= size (in bytes). Ignored
		   -H lines	   Type specified number of lines of a message. Ignored

	   Example:

		   $ popmaildir -k ~/Maildir -- nc pop.drvv.ru 110 [<password_file]
		   $ popmaildir ~/Maildir -- openssl s_client -quiet -connect pop.gmail.com:995 [<password_file]

       poweroff
	   poweroff   [-d delay] [-n] [-f]

	   Halt and shut off power

	   Options:

		   -d	   Delay interval for halting
		   -n	   No call to sync()
		   -f	   Force power off (don't go through init)

       printenv
	   printenv   [VARIABLES...]

	   Print all or part of environment.  If no environment VARIABLE
	   specified, print them all.

       printf
	   printf     FORMAT [ARGUMENT...]

	   Format and print ARGUMENT(s) according to FORMAT, where FORMAT
	   controls the output exactly as in C printf

	   Example:

		   $ printf "Val=%d\n" 5
		   Val=5

       ps  ps

	   Report process status

		   USAGE_PS
		   -Z	   Show SE Linux context
		   w	   Wide output

	   Example:

		   $ ps
		     PID  Uid	   Gid State Command
		       1 root	  root	   S init
		       2 root	  root	   S [kflushd]
		       3 root	  root	   S [kupdate]
		       4 root	  root	   S [kpiod]
		       5 root	  root	   S [kswapd]
		     742 andersen andersen S [bash]
		     743 andersen andersen S -bash
		     745 root	  root	   S [getty]
		    2990 andersen andersen R ps

       pscan
	   pscan      [-cb] [-p MIN_PORT] [-P MAX_PORT] [-t TIMEOUT] [-T
	   MIN_RTT] HOST

	   Scan a host, print all open ports

	   Options:

		   -c	   Show closed ports too
		   -b	   Show blocked ports too
		   -p	   Scan from this port (default 1)
		   -P	   Scan up to this port (default 1024)
		   -t	   Timeout (default 5000 ms)
		   -T	   Minimum rtt (default 5 ms, increase for congested hosts)

       pwd pwd

	   Print the full filename of the current working directory

	   Example:

		   $ pwd
		   /root

       raidautorun
	   raidautorun DEVICE

	   Tell the kernel to automatically search and start RAID arrays

	   Example:

		   $ raidautorun /dev/md0

       rdate
	   rdate      [-sp] HOST

	   Get and possibly set the system date and time from a remote HOST

	   Options:

		   -s	   Set the system date and time (default)
		   -p	   Print the date and time

       rdev
	   rdev

	   Print the device node associated with the filesystem mounted at '/'

	   Example:

		   $ rdev
		   /dev/mtdblock9 /

       readahead
	   readahead  [FILE]...

	   Preload FILE(s) in RAM cache so that subsequent reads for
	   thosefiles do not block on disk I/O

       readlink
	   readlink   [-f] FILE

	   Display the value of a symlink

	   Options:

		   -f	   Canonicalize by following all symlinks

       readprofile
	   readprofile [OPTIONS]...

	   Options:

		   -m mapfile	   (Default: /boot/System.map)
		   -p profile	   (Default: /proc/profile)
		   -M mult	   Set the profiling multiplier to mult
		   -i		   Print only info about the sampling step
		   -v		   Verbose
		   -a		   Print all symbols, even if count is 0
		   -b		   Print individual histogram-bin counts
		   -s		   Print individual counters within functions
		   -r		   Reset all the counters (root only)
		   -n		   Disable byte order auto-detection

       realpath
	   realpath   pathname...

	   Return the absolute pathnames of given argument

       reboot
	   reboot     [-d delay] [-n] [-f]

	   Reboot the system

	   Options:

		   -d	   Delay interval for rebooting
		   -n	   No call to sync()
		   -f	   Force reboot (don't go through init)

       reformime
	   reformime  [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Parse MIME-encoded message

	   Options:

		   -x prefix	   Extract content of MIME sections to files
		   -X prog [args]  Filter content of MIME sections through prog.
				   Must be the last option

	   Other options are silently ignored.

       renice
	   renice     {{-n INCREMENT} | PRIORITY} [[-p | -g | -u] ID...]

	   Change priority of running processes

	   Options:

		   -n	   Adjust current nice value (smaller is faster)
		   -p	   Process id(s) (default)
		   -g	   Process group id(s)
		   -u	   Process user name(s) and/or id(s)

       reset
	   reset

	   Reset the screen

       resize
	   resize

	   Resize the screen

       restorecon
	   restorecon [-iFnrRv] [-e excludedir]... [-o filename] [-f filename
	   | pathname]

	   Reset security contexts of files in pathname

		   -i		   Ignore files that do not exist
		   -f file	   File with list of files to process. Use - for stdin
		   -e directory	   Directory to exclude
		   -R,-r	   Recurse directories
		   -n		   Don't change any file labels
		   -o file	   Save list of files with incorrect context
		   -v		   Verbose
		   -vv		   Show changed labels
		   -F		   Force reset of context to match file_context
				   for customizable files, or the user section,
				   if it has changed

       rm  rm	      [OPTION]... FILE...

	   Remove (unlink) the FILE(s). Use '--' to indicate that all
	   following arguments are non-options.

	   Options:

		   -i	   Always prompt before removing
		   -f	   Never prompt
		   -r,-R   Remove directories recursively

	   Example:

		   $ rm -rf /tmp/foo

       rmdir
	   rmdir      [OPTION]... DIRECTORY...

	   Remove the DIRECTORY, if it is empty.

	   Options:

		   -p|--parents	   Include parents
		   -ignore-fail-on-non-empty

	   Example:

		   # rmdir /tmp/foo

       rmmod
	   rmmod      [OPTION]... [MODULE]...

	   Unload the specified kernel modules from the kernel

	   Options:

		   -w	   Wait until the module is no longer used
		   -f	   Force unloading
		   -a	   Remove all unused modules (recursively)

	   Example:

		   $ rmmod tulip

       route
	   route      [{add|del|delete}]

	   Edit kernel routing tables

	   Options:

		   -n	   Don't resolve names
		   -e	   Display other/more information
		   -A inet{6}	   Select address family

       rpm rpm	      -i -q[ildc]p package.rpm

	   Manipulate RPM packages

	   Options:

		   -i	   Install package
		   -q	   Query package
		   -p	   Query uninstalled package
		   -i	   Show information
		   -l	   List contents
		   -d	   List documents
		   -c	   List config files

       rpm2cpio
	   rpm2cpio   package.rpm

	   Output a cpio archive of the rpm file

       rtcwake
	   rtcwake    [-a | -l | -u] [-d DEV] [-m MODE] [-s SECS | -t TIME]

	   Enter a system sleep state until specified wakeup time

		   -a,--auto	    Read clock mode from adjtime
		   -l,--local	    Clock is set to local time
		   -u,--utc	    Clock is set to UTC time
		   -d,--device=DEV  Specify the RTC device
		   -m,--mode=MODE   Set the sleep state (default: standby)
		   -s,--seconds=SEC Set the timeout in SEC seconds from now
		   -t,--time=TIME   Set the timeout to TIME seconds from epoch

       run-parts
	   run-parts  [-t] [-l] [-a ARG] [-u MASK] DIRECTORY

	   Run a bunch of scripts in a directory

	   Options:

		   -t	   Print what would be run, but don't actually run anything
		   -a ARG  Pass ARG as argument for every program
		   -u MASK Set the umask to MASK before running every program
		   -l	   Print names of all matching files even if they are not executable

	   Example:

		   $ run-parts -a start /etc/init.d
		   $ run-parts -a stop=now /etc/init.d

		   Let's assume you have a script foo/dosomething:
		   #!/bin/sh
		   for i in $*; do eval $i; done; unset i
		   case "$1" in
		   start*) echo starting something;;
		   stop*) set -x; shutdown -h $stop;;
		   esac

		   Running this yields:
		   $run-parts -a stop=+4m foo/
		   + shutdown -h +4m

       runcon
	   runcon     [-c] [-u USER] [-r ROLE] [-t TYPE] [-l RANGE] COMMAND
	   [args]      runcon CONTEXT COMMAND [args]

	   Run a program in a different security context

		   CONTEXT	   Complete security context

		   -c,--compute	   Compute process transition context before modifying
		   -t,--type=TYPE  Type (for same role as parent)
		   -u,--user=USER  User identity
		   -r,--role=ROLE  Role
		   -l,--range=RNG  Levelrange

       runlevel
	   runlevel   [utmp]

	   Example:

		   $ runlevel /var/run/utmp
		   N 2

       runsv
	   runsv      dir

	   Start and monitor a service and optionally an appendant log service

       runsvdir
	   runsvdir   [-P] [-s SCRIPT] dir

	   Start a runsv process for each subdirectory. If it exits, restart
	   it.

		   -P		   Put each runsv in a new session
		   -s SCRIPT	   Run SCRIPT <signo> after signal is processed

       rx  rx	      FILE

	   Receive a file using the xmodem protocol

	   Example:

		   $ rx /tmp/foo

       script
	   script     [-afq] [-c COMMAND] [OUTFILE]

	   Options:

		   -a	   Append output
		   -c	   Run COMMAND, not shell
		   -f	   Flush output after each write
		   -q	   Quiet

       sed sed	      [-efinr] pattern [files...]

	   Options:

		   -e script	   Add the script to the commands to be executed
		   -f scriptfile   Add scriptfile contents to the
				   commands to be executed
		   -i		   Edit files in-place
		   -n		   Suppress automatic printing of pattern space
		   -r		   Use extended regular expression syntax

	   If no -e or -f is given, the first non-option argument is taken as
	   the sed script to interpret. All remaining arguments are names of
	   input files; if no input files are specified, then the standard
	   input is read. Source files will not be modified unless -i option
	   is given.

	   Example:

		   $ echo "foo" | sed -e 's/f[a-zA-Z]o/bar/g'
		   bar

       selinuxenabled
	   selinuxenabled #define selinuxenabled_full_usage

       sendmail
	   sendmail   [OPTIONS] [rcpt]...

	   Send an email

	   Options:

		   -w timeout	   Network timeout
		   -H [user:pass@]server[:port] Server
		   -S		   Use openssl connection helper for secure servers
		   -N type	   Request delivery notification. Type is ignored
		   -f sender	   Sender
		   -F fullname	   Sender full name. Overrides $NAME
		   -s subject	   Subject
		   -j charset	   Assume charset for body and subject (" CONFIG_FEATURE_MIME_CHARSET
		   -a file	   File to attach. May be multiple
		   -H "prog args..." Use external connection helper. E.g. openssl for secure servers
		   -S server[:port] Server	   )
		   -c rcpt	   Cc: recipient. May be multiple
		   -e rcpt	   Errors-To: recipient

       seq seq	      [first [increment]] last

	   Print numbers from FIRST to LAST, in steps of INCREMENT.  FIRST,
	   INCREMENT default to 1

	   Arguments:

		   LAST
		   FIRST LAST
		   FIRST INCREMENT LAST

       sestatus
	   sestatus   [-vb]

		   -v	   Verbose
		   -b	   Display current state of booleans

       setarch
	   setarch    personality program [args...]

	   Personality may be:

		   linux32	   Set 32bit uname emulation
		   linux64	   Set 64bit uname emulation

       setconsole
	   setconsole [-r|--reset] [DEVICE]

	   Redirect system console output to DEVICE (default: /dev/tty)

	   Options:

		   -r	   Reset output to /dev/console

       setenforce
	   setenforce [Enforcing | Permissive | 1 | 0]

       setfiles
	   setfiles   [-dnpqsvW] [-e dir]... [-o file] [-r alt_root_path] [-c
	   policyfile] spec_file pathname

	   Reset file contexts under pathname according to spec_file

		   -c file Check the validity of the contexts against the specified binary policy
		   -d	   Show which specification matched each file
		   -l	   Log changes in file labels to syslog
		   -n	   Don't change any file labels
		   -q	   Suppress warnings
		   -r dir  Use an altenate root path
		   -e dir  Exclude directory
		   -F	   Force reset of context to match file_context for customizable files
		   -o file Save list of files with incorrect context
		   -s	   Take a list of files from standard input (instead of command line)
		   -v	   Show changes in file labels, if type or role are changing
		   -vv	   Show changes in file labels, if type, role, or user are changing
		   -W	   Display warnings about entries that had no matching files

       setfont
	   setfont    FONT [-m MAPFILE] [-C TTY]

	   Load a console font

	   Options:

		   -m MAPFILE	   Load console screen map
		   -C TTY	   Affect TTY instead of /dev/tty

	   Example:

		   $ setfont -m koi8-r /etc/i18n/fontname

       setkeycodes
	   setkeycodes SCANCODE KEYCODE...

	   Set entries into the kernel's scancode-to-keycode map, allowing
	   unusual keyboards to generate usable keycodes.

	   SCANCODE may be either xx or e0xx (hexadecimal), and KEYCODE is
	   given in decimal

	   Example:

		   $ setkeycodes e030 127

       setlogcons
	   setlogcons N

	   Redirect the kernel output to console N (0 for current)

       setsebool
	   setsebool  boolean value

	   Change boolean setting

       setsid
	   setsid     PROG [ARG...]

	   Run PROG in a new session. PROG will have no controlling terminal
	   and will not be affected by keyboard signals (Ctrl-C etc).  See
	   setsid(2) for details.

       setuidgid
	   setuidgid  account prog args

	   Set uid and gid to account's uid and gid, removing all
	   supplementary groups and run PROG

       sh  sh	      #define sh_full_usage

       sha1sum
	   sha1sum    [OPTION] [FILEs...]
	      or: sha1sum [OPTION] -c [FILE]

	   Print or check SHA1 checksums.

	   Options:

		   -c	   Check SHA1 sums against given list
		   -s	   Don't output anything, status code shows success
		   -w	   Warn about improperly formatted SHA1 checksum lines

       showkey
	   showkey    [-a | -k | -s]

	   Show keys pressed

	   Options:

		   -a	   Display decimal/octal/hex values of the keys
		   -k	   Display interpreted keycodes (default)
		   -s	   Display raw scan-codes

       slattach
	   slattach   [-cehmLF] [-s speed] [-p protocol] DEVICEs

	   Attach network interface(s) to serial line(s)

	   Options:

		   -p	   Set protocol (slip, cslip, slip6, clisp6 or adaptive)
		   -s	   Set line speed
		   -e	   Exit after initializing device
		   -h	   Exit when the carrier is lost
		   -c	   Execute a command when the line is hung up
		   -m	   Do NOT initialize the line in raw 8 bits mode
		   -L	   Enable 3-wire operation
		   -F	   Disable RTS/CTS flow control

       sleep
	   sleep      [N]...

			    Pause for a time equal to the total of the args given, where each arg can
	   have an optional suffix of (s)econds, (m)inutes, (h)ours, or (d)ays

	   Example:

		   $ sleep 2
		   [2 second delay results]
		   $ sleep 1d 3h 22m 8s
		   [98528 second delay results]

       softlimit
	   softlimit  [-a BYTES] [-m BYTES] [-d BYTES] [-s BYTES] [-l BYTES]
		[-f BYTES] [-c BYTES] [-r BYTES] [-o N] [-p N] [-t N]
		PROG ARGS

	   Set soft resource limits, then run PROG

	   Options:

		   -a BYTES	   Limit total size of all segments
		   -m BYTES	   Same as -d BYTES -s BYTES -l BYTES -a BYTES
		   -d BYTES	   Limit data segment
		   -s BYTES	   Limit stack segment
		   -l BYTES	   Limit locked memory size
		   -o N		   Limit number of open files per process
		   -p N		   Limit number of processes per uid
	   Options controlling file sizes:

		   -f BYTES	   Limit output file sizes
		   -c BYTES	   Limit core file size
	   Efficiency opts:

		   -r BYTES	   Limit resident set size
		   -t N		   Limit CPU time, process receives
				   a SIGXCPU after N seconds

       sort
	   sort	      [-nrugMcszbdfimSTokt] [-o FILE] [-k
	   start[.offset][opts][,end[.offset][opts]] [-t CHAR] [FILE]...

	   Sort lines of text

	   Options:

		   -b	   Ignore leading blanks
		   -c	   Check whether input is sorted
		   -d	   Dictionary order (blank or alphanumeric only)
		   -f	   Ignore case
		   -g	   General numerical sort
		   -i	   Ignore unprintable characters
		   -k	   Sort key
		   -M	   Sort month
		   -n	   Sort numbers
		   -o	   Output to file
		   -k	   Sort by key
		   -t CHAR Key separator
		   -r	   Reverse sort order
		   -s	   Stable (don't sort ties alphabetically)
		   -u	   Suppress duplicate lines
		   -z	   Lines are terminated by NUL, not newline
		   -mST	   Ignored for GNU compatibility

	   Example:

		   $ echo -e "e\nf\nb\nd\nc\na" | sort
		   a
		   b
		   c
		   d
		   e
		   f
		   $ echo -e "c 3\nb 2\nd 2" | $SORT -k 2,2n -k 1,1r
		   d 2
		   b 2
		   c 3

       split
	   split      [OPTION] [INPUT [PREFIX]]

	   Options:

		   -b n[k|m]	   Split by bytes
		   -l n		   Split by lines
		   -a n		   Use n letters as suffix

	   Example:

		   $ split TODO foo
		   $ cat TODO | split -a 2 -l 2 TODO_

       start-stop-daemon
	   start-stop-daemon [OPTIONS] [-S|-K] ... [-- arguments...]

	   Search for matching processes, and then -K: stop all matching
	   processes.  -S: start a process unless a matching process is found.

	   Process matching:

		   -u,--user USERNAME|UID  Match only this user's processes
		   -n,--name NAME	   Match processes with NAME
					   in comm field in /proc/PID/stat
		   -x,--exec EXECUTABLE	   Match processes with this command
					   in /proc/PID/cmdline
		   -p,--pidfile FILE	   Match a process with PID from the file
		   All specified conditions must match
	   B<-S> only:

		   -x,--exec EXECUTABLE	   Program to run
		   -a,--startas NAME	   Zeroth argument
		   -b,--background	   Background
		   -N,--nicelevel N	   Change nice level
		   -c,--chuid USER[:[GRP]] Change to user/group
		   -m,--make-pidfile	   Write PID to the pidfile specified by -p
	   B<-K> only:

		   -s,--signal SIG	   Signal to send
		   -t,--test		   Match only, exit with 0 if a process is found
	   Other:

		   -o,--oknodo		   Exit with status 0 if nothing is done
		   -v,--verbose		   Verbose
		   -q,--quiet		   Quiet
		   -c USER[:[GRP]] Change to user/group
		   -m		   Write PID to the pidfile specified by -p
	   B<-K> only:

		   -s SIG	   Signal to send
		   -t		   Match only, exit with 0 if a process is found
	   Other:

		   -o		   Exit with status 0 if nothing is done
		   -v		   Verbose
		   -q		   Quiet   )

       stat
	   stat	      [OPTION] FILE...

	   Display file (default) or filesystem status

	   Options:

		   -c fmt  Use the specified format
		   -f	   Display filesystem status
		   -L	   Dereference links
		   -t	   Display info in terse form
		   -Z	   Print security context

	   Valid format sequences for files:

	    %a	   Access rights in octal
	    %A	   Access rights in human readable form
	    %b	   Number of blocks allocated (see %B)
	    %B	   The size in bytes of each block reported by %b
	    %d	   Device number in decimal
	    %D	   Device number in hex
	    %f	   Raw mode in hex
	    %F	   File type
	    %g	   Group ID of owner
	    %G	   Group name of owner
	    %h	   Number of hard links
	    %i	   Inode number
	    %n	   File name
	    %N	   Quoted file name with dereference if symlink
	    %o	   I/O block size
	    %s	   Total size, in bytes
	    %t	   Major device type in hex
	    %T	   Minor device type in hex
	    %u	   User ID of owner
	    %U	   User name of owner
	    %x	   Time of last access
	    %X	   Time of last access as seconds since Epoch
	    %y	   Time of last modification
	    %Y	   Time of last modification as seconds since Epoch
	    %z	   Time of last change
	    %Z	   Time of last change as seconds since Epoch

	   Valid format sequences for file systems:

	    %a	   Free blocks available to non-superuser
	    %b	   Total data blocks in file system
	    %c	   Total file nodes in file system
	    %d	   Free file nodes in file system
	    %f	   Free blocks in file system
	    %C	   Security context in SELinux
	    %i	   File System ID in hex
	    %l	   Maximum length of filenames
	    %n	   File name
	    %s	   Block size (for faster transfer)
	    %S	   Fundamental block size (for block counts)
	    %t	   Type in hex
	    %T	   Type in human readable form

       static_sh
	   static_sh  #define static_sh_full_usage

       strings
	   strings    [-afo] [-n length] [file...]

	   Display printable strings in a binary file

	   Options:

		   -a	   Scan whole file (default)
		   -f	   Precede strings with filenames
		   -n N	   At least N characters form a string (default 4)
		   -o	   Precede strings with decimal offsets

       stty
	   stty	      [-a|g] [-F DEVICE] [SETTING]...

	   Without arguments, prints baud rate, line discipline, and
	   deviations from stty sane

	   Options:

		   -F DEVICE	   Open device instead of stdin
		   -a		   Print all current settings in human-readable form
		   -g		   Print in stty-readable form
		   [SETTING]	   See manpage

       su  su	      [OPTION]... [-] [username]

	   Change user id or become root

	   Options:

		   -p, -m  Preserve environment
		   -c	   Command to pass to 'sh -c'
		   -s	   Shell to use instead of default shell

       sulogin
	   sulogin    [OPTION]... [tty-device]

	   Single user login

	   Options:

		   -t	   Timeout

       sum sum	      [rs] [files...]

	   Checksum and count the blocks in a file

	   Options:

		   -r	   Use BSD sum algorithm (1K blocks)
		   -s	   Use System V sum algorithm (512byte blocks)

       sv  sv	      [-v] [-w sec] command service...

	   Control services monitored by runsv supervisor.  Commands (only
	   first character is enough):

	   status: query service status up: if service isn't running, start
	   it. If service stops, restart it once: like 'up', but if service
	   stops, don't restart it down: send TERM and CONT signals. If ./run
	   exits, start ./finish

		   if it exists. After it stops, do not restart service
	   exit: send TERM and CONT signals to service and log service. If they exit,

		   runsv exits too
	   pause, cont, hup, alarm, interrupt, quit, 1, 2, term, kill: send
	   STOP, CONT, HUP, ALRM, INT, QUIT, USR1, USR2, TERM, KILL signal to service

       svlogd
	   svlogd     [-ttv] [-r c] [-R abc] [-l len] [-b buflen] dir...

	   Continuously read log data from standard input, optionally filter
	   log messages, and write the data to one or more automatically
	   rotated logs

       swapoff
	   swapoff    [-a] [DEVICE]

	   Stop swapping on DEVICE

	   Options:

		   -a	   Stop swapping on all swap devices

       swapon
	   swapon     [-a] [-p pri] [DEVICE]

	   Start swapping on DEVICE

	   Options:

		   -a	   Start swapping on all swap devices
		   -p pri  Set swap device priority

       switch_root
	   switch_root [-c /dev/console] NEW_ROOT NEW_INIT [ARGUMENTS_TO_INIT]

	   Use from PID 1 under initramfs to free initramfs, chroot to
	   NEW_ROOT, and exec NEW_INIT

	   Options:

		   -c	   Redirect console to device on new root

       sync
	   sync

	   Write all buffered filesystem blocks to disk

       sysctl
	   sysctl     [OPTIONS]... [VALUE]...

	   Configure kernel parameters at runtime

	   Options:

		   -n	   Disable printing of key names
		   -e	   Don't warn about unknown keys
		   -w	   Change sysctl setting
		   -p FILE Load sysctl settings from FILE (default /etc/sysctl.conf)
		   -a	   Display all values
		   -A	   Display all values in table form

	   Example:

		   sysctl [-n] [-e] variable...
		   sysctl [-n] [-e] -w variable=value...
		   sysctl [-n] [-e] -a
		   sysctl [-n] [-e] -p file	   (default /etc/sysctl.conf)
		   sysctl [-n] [-e] -A

       syslogd
	   syslogd    [OPTION]...

	   System logging utility.  Note that this version of syslogd ignores
	   /etc/syslog.conf.

	   Options:

		   -n		   Run in foreground
		   -O FILE	   Log to given file (default=/var/log/messages)
		   -l n		   Set local log level
		   -S		   Smaller logging output
		   -s SIZE	   Max size (KB) before rotate (default=200KB, 0=off)
		   -b NUM	   Number of rotated logs to keep (default=1, max=99, 0=purge)
		   -R HOST[:PORT]  Log to IP or hostname on PORT (default PORT=514/UDP)
		   -L		   Log locally and via network (default is network only if -R)
		   -D		   Drop duplicates
		   -C[size(KiB)]   Log to shared mem buffer (read it using logread)	   /* NB: -Csize shouldn't have space (because size is optional) */

	   Example:

		   $ syslogd -R masterlog:514
		   $ syslogd -R 192.168.1.1:601

       tac tac	      [FILE]...

	   Concatenate FILE(s) and print them in reverse

       tail
	   tail	      [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Print last 10 lines of each FILE to standard output.	 With more
	   than one FILE, precede each with a header giving the file name.
	   With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.

	   Options:

		   -c N[kbm]	   Output the last N bytes
		   -n N[kbm]	   Print last N lines instead of last 10
		   -f		   Output data as the file grows
		   -q		   Never output headers giving file names
		   -s SEC	   Wait SEC seconds between reads with -f
		   -v		   Always output headers giving file names

	   If the first character of N (bytes or lines) is a '+', output
	   begins with the Nth item from the start of each file, otherwise,
	   print the last N items in the file. N bytes may be suffixed by k
	   (x1024), b (x512), or m (1024^2).

	   Example:

		   $ tail -n 1 /etc/resolv.conf
		   nameserver 10.0.0.1

       tar tar	      -[czjaZxtvO] [-X FILE] [-f TARFILE] [-C DIR]
	   [FILE(s)]...

	   Create, extract, or list files from a tar file

	   Options:

		   c	   Create
		   x	   Extract
		   t	   List
	   Archive format selection:

		   z	   Filter the archive through gzip
		   j	   Filter the archive through bzip2
		   a	   Filter the archive through lzma
		   Z	   Filter the archive through compress
	   File selection:

		   f	   Name of TARFILE or "-" for stdin
		   O	   Extract to stdout
		   exclude File to exclude
		   X	   File with names to exclude
		   C	   Change to directory DIR before operation
		   v	   Verbose

	   Example:

		   $ zcat /tmp/tarball.tar.gz | tar -xf -
		   $ tar -cf /tmp/tarball.tar /usr/local

       taskset
	   taskset    [-p] [mask] [pid | command [arg]...]

	   Set or get CPU affinity

	   Options:

		   -p	   Operate on an existing PID

	   Example:

		   $ taskset 0x7 ./dgemm_test&
		   $ taskset -p 0x1 $!
		   pid 4790's current affinity mask: 7
		   pid 4790's new affinity mask: 1
		   $ taskset 0x7 /bin/sh -c './taskset -p 0x1 $$'
		   pid 6671's current affinity mask: 1
		   pid 6671's new affinity mask: 1
		   $ taskset -p 1
		   pid 1's current affinity mask: 3

       tc  tc		  /*"[OPTIONS] "*/"OBJECT CMD [dev STRING]

	   OBJECT: {qdisc|class|filter} CMD: {add|del|change|replace|show}

	   qdisc [ handle QHANDLE ] [ root | ingress | parent CLASSID ]

		   /* "	   [ estimator INTERVAL TIME_CONSTANT ]
	   " */	   [ [ QDISC_KIND ] [ help | OPTIONS ] ]

		   QDISC_KIND := { [p|b]fifo | tbf | prio | cbq | red | etc. }
	   qdisc show [ dev STRING ] [ingress]
	   class [ classid CLASSID ] [ root | parent CLASSID ]

		   [ [ QDISC_KIND ] [ help | OPTIONS ] ]
	   class show [ dev STRING ] [ root | parent CLASSID ]
	   filter [ pref PRIO ] [ protocol PROTO ]

		   /* "	   [ estimator INTERVAL TIME_CONSTANT ]
	   " */	   [ root | classid CLASSID ] [ handle FILTERID ]

		   [ [ FILTER_TYPE ] [ help | OPTIONS ] ]
	   filter show [ dev STRING ] [ root | parent CLASSID ]

       tcpsvd
	   tcpsvd     [-hEv] [-c n] [-C n:msg] [-b n] [-u user] [-l name] ip
	   port prog...

	   Create TCP socket, bind it to ip:port and listen for incoming
	   connection. Run PROG for each connection.

	   ip	     IP to listen on. '0' = all port	  Port to listen on
	   prog [arg] Program to run -l name	    Local hostname (else looks
	   up local hostname in DNS) -u user[:group]	 Change to user/group
	   after bind -c n	Handle up to n connections simultaneously -b
	   n	  Allow a backlog of approximately n TCP SYNs -C
	   n[:msg]     Allow only up to n connections from the same IP

			   New connections from this IP address are closed
			   immediately. 'msg' is written to the peer before close
	   B<-h>	   Look up peer's hostname
	   B<-E>	   Do not set up environment variables
	   B<-v>	   Verbose

       tee tee	      [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Copy standard input to each FILE, and also to standard output

	   Options:

		   -a	   Append to the given FILEs, do not overwrite
		   -i	   Ignore interrupt signals (SIGINT)

	   Example:

		   $ echo "Hello" | tee /tmp/foo
		   $ cat /tmp/foo
		   Hello

       telnet
	   telnet     HOST [PORT]

	   Connect to telnet server

       telnetd
	   telnetd    [OPTION]

	   Handle incoming telnet connections

	   Options:

		   -l LOGIN	   Exec LOGIN on connect
		   -f issue_file   Display issue_file instead of /etc/issue
		   -K		   Close connection as soon as login exits
				   (normally wait until all programs close slave pty)
		   -p PORT	   Port to listen on
		   -b ADDR	   Address to bind to
		   -F		   Run in foreground
		   -i		   Run as inetd subservice

       test
	   test	      EXPRESSION ]

	   Check file types, compare values etc. Return a 0/1 exit code
	   depending on logical value of EXPRESSION

	   Example:

		   $ test 1 -eq 2
		   $ echo $?
		   1
		   $ test 1 -eq 1
		   $ echo $?
		   0
		   $ [ -d /etc ]
		   $ echo $?
		   0
		   $ [ -d /junk ]
		   $ echo $?
		   1

       tftp
	   tftp	      [OPTION]... HOST [PORT]

	   Transfer a file from/to tftp server

	   Options:

		   -l FILE Local FILE
		   -r FILE Remote FILE
		   -g	   Get file
		   -p	   Put file
		   -b SIZE Transfer blocks of SIZE octets

       tftpd
	   tftpd      [-cr] [-u USER] [DIR]

	   Transfer a file on tftp client's request.

	   tftpd should be used as an inetd service.  tftpd's line for
	   inetd.conf:

		   69 dgram udp nowait root tftpd tftpd /files/to/serve
	   It also can be ran from udpsvd:

		   udpsvd -vE 0.0.0.0 69 tftpd /files/to/serve

	   Options:

		   -r	   Prohibit upload
		   -c	   Allow file creation via upload
		   -u	   Access files as USER

       time
	   time	      [OPTION]... COMMAND [ARGS...]

	   Run the program COMMAND with arguments ARGS. When COMMAND finishes,
	   COMMAND's resource usage information is displayed.

	   Options:

		   -v	   Verbose

       top top	      [-b] [-nCOUNT] [-dSECONDS]

	   Provide a view of process activity in real time.  Read the status
	   of all processes from /proc each SECONDS and show the status for
	   however many processes will fit on the screen.

       touch
	   touch      [-c] FILE [FILE...]

	   Update the last-modified date on the given FILE[s]

	   Options:

		   -c	   Do not create any files

	   Example:

		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   /bin/ls: /tmp/foo: No such file or directory
		   $ touch /tmp/foo
		   $ ls -l /tmp/foo
		   -rw-rw-r--	 1 andersen andersen	    0 Apr 15 01:11 /tmp/foo

       tr  tr	      [-cds] STRING1 [STRING2]

	   Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters from standard input,
	   writing to standard output

	   Options:

		   -c	   Take complement of STRING1
		   -d	   Delete input characters coded STRING1
		   -s	   Squeeze multiple output characters of STRING2 into one character

	   Example:

		   $ echo "gdkkn vnqkc" | tr [a-y] [b-z]
		   hello world

       traceroute
	   traceroute [-FIldnrv] [-f 1st_ttl] [-m max_ttl] [-p port#] [-q
	   nqueries]	  [-s src_addr] [-t tos] [-w wait] [-g gateway] [-i
	   iface]      [-z pausemsecs] HOST [data size]

	   Trace the route to HOST

	   Options:

		   -F	   Set the don't fragment bit
		   -I	   Use ICMP ECHO instead of UDP datagrams
		   -l	   Display the ttl value of the returned packet
		   -d	   Set SO_DEBUG options to socket
		   -n	   Print hop addresses numerically rather than symbolically
		   -r	   Bypass the normal routing tables and send directly to a host
		   -v	   Verbose
		   -m max_ttl	   Max time-to-live (max number of hops)
		   -p port#	   Base UDP port number used in probes
				   (default is 33434)
		   -q nqueries	   Number of probes per 'ttl' (default 3)
		   -s src_addr	   IP address to use as the source address
		   -t tos	   Type-of-service in probe packets (default 0)
		   -w wait	   Time in seconds to wait for a response
				   (default 3 sec)
		   -g		   Loose source route gateway (8 max)

       true
	   true

	   Return an exit code of TRUE (0)

	   Example:

		   $ true
		   $ echo $?
		   0

       tty tty

	   Print file name of standard input's terminal

	   Options:

		   -s	   Print nothing, only return exit status

	   Example:

		   $ tty
		   /dev/tty2

       ttysize
	   ttysize    [w] [h]

	   Print dimension(s) of standard input's terminal, on error return
	   80x25

       tune2fs
	   tune2fs    [-c max-mounts-count] [-e errors-behavior] [-g group]
	   [-i interval[d|m|w]] [-j] [-J journal-options] [-l] [-s
	   sparse-flag] [-m reserved-blocks-percent] [-o
	   [^]mount-options[,...]] [-r reserved-blocks-count] [-u user] [-C
	   mount-count] [-L volume-label] [-M last-mounted-dir] [-O
	   [^]feature[,...]] [-T last-check-time] [-U UUID] device

	   Adjust filesystem options on ext[23] filesystems

       udhcpc
	   udhcpc     [-Cfbnqtvo] [-c CID] [-V VCLS] [-H HOSTNAME] [-i
	   INTERFACE]	   [-p pidfile] [-r IP] [-s script] [-O
	   dhcp-option]... [-P N]

			   -V,--vendorclass=CLASSID	   Vendor class identifier
		   -i,--interface=INTERFACE	   Interface to use (default eth0)
		   -H,-h,--hostname=HOSTNAME	   Client hostname
		   -c,--clientid=CLIENTID  Client identifier
		   -C,--clientid-none	   Suppress default client identifier
		   -p,--pidfile=file	   Create pidfile
		   -r,--request=IP	   IP address to request
		   -s,--script=file	   Run file at DHCP events (default "CONFIG_UDHCPC_DEFAULT_SCRIPT
		   -t,--retries=N	   Send up to N request packets
		   -T,--timeout=N	   Try to get a lease for N seconds (default 3)
		   -A,--tryagain=N	   Wait N seconds (default 20) after failure
		   -O,--request-option=OPT Request DHCP option OPT (cumulative)
		   -o,--no-default-options Do not request any options (unless -O is also given)
		   -f,--foreground Run in foreground
		   -b,--background Background if lease is not immediately obtained
		   -S,--syslog	   Log to syslog too
		   -n,--now	   Exit with failure if lease is not immediately obtained
		   -q,--quit	   Quit after obtaining lease
		   -R,--release	   Release IP on quit
		   -P,--client-port N  Use port N instead of default 68
		   -a,--arping	   Use arping to validate offered address  )
		   -t N		   Send up to N request packets
		   -T N		   Try to get a lease for N seconds (default 3)
		   -A N		   Wait N seconds (default 20) after failure
		   -O OPT	   Request DHCP option OPT (cumulative)
		   -o		   Do not request any options (unless -O is also given)
		   -f		   Run in foreground
		   -b		   Background if lease is not immediately obtained
		   -S		   Log to syslog too
		   -n		   Exit with failure if lease is not immediately obtained
		   -q		   Quit after obtaining lease
		   -R		   Release IP on quit
		   -P N		   Use port N instead of default 68
		   -a		   Use arping to validate offered address  )

       udhcpd
	   udhcpd     [-fS] [-P N] [configfile]

	   DHCP server

		   -f	   Run in foreground
		   -S	   Log to syslog too
		   -P N	   Use port N instead of default 67

       udpsvd
	   udpsvd     [-hEv] [-c n] [-u user] [-l name] ip port prog

	   Create UDP socket, bind it to ip:port and wait for incoming
	   packets. Run PROG for each packet, redirecting all further packets
	   with same peer ip:port to it

	   ip	     IP to listen on. '0' = all port	  Port to listen on
	   prog [arg] Program to run -l name	    Local hostname (else looks
	   up local hostname in DNS) -u user[:group]	 Change to user/group
	   after bind -c n	Handle up to n connections simultaneously
	   -h	     Look up peer's hostname -E	       Do not set up
	   environment variables -v	   Verbose

       umount
	   umount     [flags] FILESYSTEM|DIRECTORY

	   Unmount file systems

	   Options:

		   -a	   Unmount all file systems in /etc/mtab
		   -n	   Don't erase /etc/mtab entries
		   -r	   Try to remount devices as read-only if mount is busy
		   -l	   Lazy umount (detach filesystem)
		   -f	   Force umount (i.e., unreachable NFS server)
		   -i	   Don't call /sbin/mount.<filesystem> helper
		   -d	   Free loop device if it has been used

	   Example:

		   $ umount /dev/hdc1

       uname
	   uname      [-amnrspv]

	   Print system information.

	   Options:

		   -a	   Print all
		   -m	   The machine (hardware) type
		   -n	   Hostname
		   -r	   OS release
		   -s	   OS name (default)
		   -p	   Processor type
		   -v	   OS version

	   Example:

		   $ uname -a
		   Linux debian 2.4.23 #2 Tue Dec 23 17:09:10 MST 2003 i686 GNU/Linux

       uncompress
	   uncompress [-c] [-f] [name...]

	   Uncompress .Z file[s]

	   Options:

		   -c	   Extract to stdout
		   -f	   Overwrite an existing file

       unexpand
	   unexpand   [-f][-a][-t NUM] [FILE|-]

	   Convert spaces to tabs, writing to standard output.

	   Options:

		   -a,--all	   Convert all blanks
		   -f,--first-only Convert only leading blanks
		   -t,--tabs=N	   Tabstops every N chars

       uniq
	   uniq	      [-fscduw]... [INPUT [OUTPUT]]

	   Discard duplicate lines

	   Options:

		   -c	   Prefix lines by the number of occurrences
		   -d	   Only print duplicate lines
		   -u	   Only print unique lines
		   -f N	   Skip first N fields
		   -s N	   Skip first N chars (after any skipped fields)
		   -w N	   Compare N characters in line

	   Example:

		   $ echo -e "a\na\nb\nc\nc\na" | sort | uniq
		   a
		   b
		   c

       unix2dos
	   unix2dos   [option] [FILE]

	   Convert FILE from unix to dos format.  When no file is given, use
	   stdin/stdout.

	   Options:

		   -u	   dos2unix
		   -d	   unix2dos

       unlzma
	   unlzma     [OPTION]... [FILE]

	   Uncompress FILE (or standard input if FILE is '-' or omitted)

	   Options:

		   -c	   Write to standard output
		   -f	   Force

       unzip
	   unzip      [-opts[modifiers]] file[.zip] [list] [-x xlist] [-d
	   exdir]

	   Extract files from ZIP archives

	   Options:

		   -l	   List archive contents (with -q for short form)
		   -n	   Never overwrite existing files (default)
		   -o	   Overwrite files without prompting
		   -p	   Send output to stdout
		   -q	   Quiet
		   -x	   Exclude these files
		   -d	   Extract files into this directory

       uptime
	   uptime

	   Display the time since the last boot

	   Example:

		   $ uptime
		     1:55pm  up	 2:30, load average: 0.09, 0.04, 0.00

       usleep
	   usleep     N

	   Pause for N microseconds

	   Example:

		   $ usleep 1000000
		   [pauses for 1 second]

       uudecode
	   uudecode   [-o outfile] [infile]

	   Uudecode a file Finds outfile name in uuencoded source unless -o is
	   given

	   Example:

		   $ uudecode -o busybox busybox.uu
		   $ ls -l busybox
		   -rwxr-xr-x	1 ams	   ams	      245264 Jun  7 21:35 busybox

       uuencode
	   uuencode   [-m] [infile] stored_filename

	   Uuencode a file to stdout

	   Options:

		   -m	   Use base64 encoding per RFC1521

	   Example:

		   $ uuencode busybox busybox
		   begin 755 busybox
		   <encoded file snipped>
		   $ uudecode busybox busybox > busybox.uu
		   $

       vconfig
	   vconfig    COMMAND [OPTIONS]...

	   Create and remove virtual ethernet devices

	   Options:

		   add		   [interface-name] [vlan_id]
		   rem		   [vlan-name]
		   set_flag	   [interface-name] [flag-num] [0 | 1]
		   set_egress_map  [vlan-name] [skb_priority] [vlan_qos]
		   set_ingress_map [vlan-name] [skb_priority] [vlan_qos]
		   set_name_type   [name-type]

       vi  vi	      [OPTION] [FILE]...

	   Edit FILE

	   Options:

		   -c	   Initial command to run ($EXINIT also available)
		   -R	   Read-only - do not write to the file
		   -H	   Short help regarding available features

       vlock
	   vlock      [OPTIONS]

	   Lock a virtual terminal. A password is required to unlock.

	   Options:

		   -a	   Lock all VTs

       watch
	   watch      [-n seconds] [-t] COMMAND...

	   Execute a program periodically

	   Options:

		   -n	   Loop period in seconds (default 2)
		   -t	   Don't print header

	   Example:

		   $ watch date
		   Mon Dec 17 10:31:40 GMT 2000
		   Mon Dec 17 10:31:42 GMT 2000
		   Mon Dec 17 10:31:44 GMT 2000

       watchdog
	   watchdog   [-t N[ms]] [-T N[ms]] [-F] DEV

	   Periodically write to watchdog device DEV

	   Options:

		   -T N	   Reboot after N seconds if not reset (default 60)
		   -t N	   Reset every N seconds (default 30)
		   -F	   Run in foreground

	   Use 500ms to specify period in milliseconds

       wc  wc	      [OPTION]... [FILE]...

	   Print line, word, and byte counts for each FILE, and a total line
	   if more than one FILE is specified. With no FILE, read standard
	   input.

	   Options:

		   -c	   Print the byte counts
		   -l	   Print the newline counts
		   -L	   Print the length of the longest line
		   -w	   Print the word counts

	   Example:

		   $ wc /etc/passwd
			31	46    1365 /etc/passwd

       wget
	   wget		   [-c|--continue] [-s|--spider] [-q|--quiet]
	   [-O|--output-document file]	    [--header 'header: value']
	   [-Y|--proxy on/off] [-P DIR]	     [-U|--user-agent agent] url

	   Retrieve files via HTTP or FTP

	   Options:

		   -s	   Spider mode - only check file existence
		   -c	   Continue retrieval of aborted transfer
		   -q	   Quiet
		   -P	   Set directory prefix to DIR
		   -O	   Save to filename ('-' for stdout)
		   -U	   Adjust 'User-Agent' field
		   -Y	   Use proxy ('on' or 'off')

       which
	   which      [COMMAND...]

	   Locate a COMMAND

	   Example:

		   $ which login
		   /bin/login

       who who	      [-a]

	   Show who is logged on

	   Options:

		   -a	   show all

       whoami
	   whoami

	   Print the user name associated with the current effective user id

       xargs
	   xargs      [OPTIONS] [COMMAND] [ARGS...]

	   Execute COMMAND on every item given by standard input

	   Options:

		   -p	   Ask user whether to run each command
		   -r	   Do not run command if input is empty
		   -0	   Input is separated by NUL characters
		   -t	   Print the command on stderr before execution
		   -e[STR] STR stops input processing
		   -n N	   Pass no more than N args to COMMAND
		   -s N	   Pass command line of no more than N bytes
		   -x	   Exit if size is exceeded

	   Example:

		   $ ls | xargs gzip
		   $ find . -name '*.c' -print | xargs rm

       yes yes	      [OPTION]... [STRING]...

	   Repeatedly output a line with all specified STRING(s), or 'y'

       zcat
	   zcat	      FILE

	   Uncompress to stdout

       zcip
	   zcip	      [OPTIONS] ifname script

	   Manage a ZeroConf IPv4 link-local address

	   Options:

		   -f		   Run in foreground
		   -q		   Quit after obtaining address
		   -r 169.254.x.x  Request this address first
		   -v		   Verbose

	   With no -q, runs continuously monitoring for ARP conflicts, exits
	   only on I/O errors (link down etc)

LIBC NSS
       GNU Libc (glibc) uses the Name Service Switch (NSS) to configure the
       behavior of the C library for the local environment, and to configure
       how it reads system data, such as passwords and group information.
       This is implemented using an /etc/nsswitch.conf configuration file, and
       using one or more of the /lib/libnss_* libraries.  BusyBox tries to
       avoid using any libc calls that make use of NSS.	 Some applets however,
       such as login and su, will use libc functions that require NSS.

       If you enable CONFIG_USE_BB_PWD_GRP, BusyBox will use internal
       functions to directly access the /etc/passwd, /etc/group, and
       /etc/shadow files without using NSS.  This may allow you to run your
       system without the need for installing any of the NSS configuration
       files and libraries.

       When used with glibc, the BusyBox 'networking' applets will similarly
       require that you install at least some of the glibc NSS stuff (in
       particular, /etc/nsswitch.conf, /lib/libnss_dns*, /lib/libnss_files*,
       and /lib/libresolv*).

       Shameless Plug: As an alternative, one could use a C library such as
       uClibc.	In addition to making your system significantly smaller,
       uClibc does not require the use of any NSS support files or libraries.

MAINTAINER
       Denis Vlasenko <vda.linux@googlemail.com>

AUTHORS
       The following people have contributed code to BusyBox whether they know
       it or not.  If you have written code included in BusyBox, you should
       probably be listed here so you can obtain your bit of eternal glory.
       If you should be listed here, or the description of what you have done
       needs more detail, or is incorect, please send in an update.

       Emanuele Aina <emanuele.aina@tiscali.it>	     run-parts

       Erik Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org>

	   Tons of new stuff, major rewrite of most of the
	   core apps, tons of new apps as noted in header files.
	   Lots of tedious effort writing these boring docs that
	   nobody is going to actually read.

       Laurence Anderson <l.d.anderson@warwick.ac.uk>

	   rpm2cpio, unzip, get_header_cpio, read_gz interface, rpm

       Jeff Angielski <jeff@theptrgroup.com>

	   ftpput, ftpget

       Edward Betts <edward@debian.org>

	   expr, hostid, logname, whoami

       John Beppu <beppu@codepoet.org>

	   du, nslookup, sort

       Brian Candler <B.Candler@pobox.com>

	   tiny-ls(ls)

       Randolph Chung <tausq@debian.org>

	   fbset, ping, hostname

       Dave Cinege <dcinege@psychosis.com>

	   more(v2), makedevs, dutmp, modularization, auto links file,
	   various fixes, Linux Router Project maintenance

       Jordan Crouse <jordan@cosmicpenguin.net>

	       ipcalc

       Magnus Damm <damm@opensource.se>

	   tftp client insmod powerpc support

       Larry Doolittle <ldoolitt@recycle.lbl.gov>

	   pristine source directory compilation, lots of patches and fixes.

       Glenn Engel <glenne@engel.org>

	   httpd

       Gennady Feldman <gfeldman@gena01.com>

	   Sysklogd (single threaded syslogd, IPC Circular buffer support,
	   logread), various fixes.

       Karl M. Hegbloom <karlheg@debian.org>

	   cp_mv.c, the test suite, various fixes to utility.c, &c.

       Daniel Jacobowitz <dan@debian.org>

	   mktemp.c

       Matt Kraai <kraai@alumni.cmu.edu>

	   documentation, bugfixes, test suite

       Stephan Linz <linz@li-pro.net>

	       ipcalc, Red Hat equivalence

       John Lombardo <john@deltanet.com>

	   tr

       Glenn McGrath <bug1@iinet.net.au>

	   Common unarchving code and unarchiving applets, ifupdown, ftpgetput,
	   nameif, sed, patch, fold, install, uudecode.
	   Various bugfixes, review and apply numerous patches.

       Manuel Novoa III <mjn3@codepoet.org>

	   cat, head, mkfifo, mknod, rmdir, sleep, tee, tty, uniq, usleep, wc, yes,
	   mesg, vconfig, make_directory, parse_mode, dirname, mode_string,
	   get_last_path_component, simplify_path, and a number trivial libbb routines

	   also bug fixes, partial rewrites, and size optimizations in
	   ash, basename, cal, cmp, cp, df, du, echo, env, ln, logname, md5sum, mkdir,
	   mv, realpath, rm, sort, tail, touch, uname, watch, arith, human_readable,
	   interface, dutmp, ifconfig, route

       Vladimir Oleynik <dzo@simtreas.ru>

	   cmdedit; xargs(current), httpd(current);
	   ports: ash, crond, fdisk, inetd, stty, traceroute, top;
	   locale, various fixes
	   and irreconcilable critic of everything not perfect.

       Bruce Perens <bruce@pixar.com>

	   Original author of BusyBox in 1995, 1996. Some of his code can
	   still be found hiding here and there...

       Tim Riker <Tim@Rikers.org>

	   bug fixes, member of fan club

       Kent Robotti <robotti@metconnect.com>

	   reset, tons and tons of bug reports and patches.

       Chip Rosenthal <chip@unicom.com>, <crosenth@covad.com>

	   wget - Contributed by permission of Covad Communications

       Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>

	   Lots of bugs fixes and patches.

       Gyepi Sam <gyepi@praxis-sw.com>

	   Remote logging feature for syslogd

       Linus Torvalds <torvalds@transmeta.com>

	   mkswap, fsck.minix, mkfs.minix

       Mark Whitley <markw@codepoet.org>

	   grep, sed, cut, xargs(previous),
	   style-guide, new-applet-HOWTO, bug fixes, etc.

       Charles P. Wright <cpwright@villagenet.com>

	   gzip, mini-netcat(nc)

       Enrique Zanardi <ezanardi@ull.es>

	   tarcat (since removed), loadkmap, various fixes, Debian maintenance

       Tito Ragusa <farmatito@tiscali.it>

	       devfsd and size optimizations in strings, openvt and deallocvt.

version 1			  2010-04-22			    BUSYBOX(1)
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