How to get regular stuff working: Difference between revisions

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To minimize footprint, Alpine Linux uses [[BusyBox]] and it is set up as an endpoint for numerous symlinks that substitute various utilities. The utilities in [[BusyBox]] generally have fewer options and hence missing some functionality. This page explains how to get the regular utilities working as found in other Linux distributions. Installing the relevant packages, replaces [[BusyBox]] symlinks.   
To minimize footprint, Alpine Linux comes with [[BusyBox]] by default. [[BusyBox]] is set up as an endpoint for numerous symlinks that substitute various utilities. The utilities in [[BusyBox]] generally have fewer options and hence missing some functionality. This page explains how to get the regular utilities working as found in other Linux distributions. Installing the relevant packages, replaces [[BusyBox]] symlinks.   


== Core utilities ==
== Core utilities ==

Revision as of 10:50, 25 October 2024

To minimize footprint, Alpine Linux comes with BusyBox by default. BusyBox is set up as an endpoint for numerous symlinks that substitute various utilities. The utilities in BusyBox generally have fewer options and hence missing some functionality. This page explains how to get the regular utilities working as found in other Linux distributions. Installing the relevant packages, replaces BusyBox symlinks.

Core utilities

Most of the basic file, shell and text manipulation utilities commonly grouped under Core Utilities are provided by BusyBox. To replace it with original coreutils package:

# apk add coreutils

Util-linux

A set of approximately 100 basic Linux system utilities not included in GNU Core Utilities, such as mount, cfdisk, more, lsblk and kill are maintained under Util-linux. To have the complete util-linux package:

# apk add util-linux

Search utilities

Standard search tools grep and find can be installed by installing the packages grep and findutils as follows:

# apk add grep findutils

Bash shell

The default shell used by Alpine Linux is the busybox variant of the ash shell. To install bash:

# apk add bash bash-completion

Hardware Management

Install pciutils and usbutils for configuring PCI and USB hardware respectively. You can always remove these packages once the hardware is configured.

# apk add pciutils usbutils

The packages hwdata-pci and hwdata-usb are dependencies for the above utilities and they are installed automatically.

Disk Management

Managing (removable) disks is much easier with udisks.

# apk add udisks2

To see the mounted disks:

# udisksctl status

Network Management

For network, you may want to install iproute2.

# apk add iproute2

Development environment

Compiling in Alpine may be more challenging because it uses musl-libc instead of glibc. Alpine offers the regular compiler stuff such as gcc.

# apk add gcc

The alpine-sdk meta package is provided to build packages for Alpine. It includes abuild, build-base, and git.

# apk add alpine-sdk

To install CMake:

# apk add cmake extra-cmake-modules

ccache and a lot other tools are also available in Alpine.

Functional differences between musl and glibc