Kconfig 18 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375376377378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398399400401402403404405406407408409410411412413414415416417418419420421422423424425426427428429430431432433434435436437438439440441442443444445446447448449450451452453454455456457458459460461462463464465466467468469470471472473474475476477478479480481482483484485486487488489490491492493494495496497498499500501502503504505506507508509510511512513514515516517518519520521522523524525526527528529530531532533534535536537538539540541542543544545546547548549550551552553554555556557558559
  1. config MTD_NAND_ECC
  2. tristate
  3. config MTD_NAND_ECC_SMC
  4. bool "NAND ECC Smart Media byte order"
  5. depends on MTD_NAND_ECC
  6. default n
  7. help
  8. Software ECC according to the Smart Media Specification.
  9. The original Linux implementation had byte 0 and 1 swapped.
  10. menuconfig MTD_NAND
  11. tristate "NAND Device Support"
  12. depends on MTD
  13. select MTD_NAND_IDS
  14. select MTD_NAND_ECC
  15. help
  16. This enables support for accessing all type of NAND flash
  17. devices. For further information see
  18. <http://www.linux-mtd.infradead.org/doc/nand.html>.
  19. if MTD_NAND
  20. config MTD_NAND_BCH
  21. tristate
  22. select BCH
  23. depends on MTD_NAND_ECC_BCH
  24. default MTD_NAND
  25. config MTD_NAND_ECC_BCH
  26. bool "Support software BCH ECC"
  27. default n
  28. help
  29. This enables support for software BCH error correction. Binary BCH
  30. codes are more powerful and cpu intensive than traditional Hamming
  31. ECC codes. They are used with NAND devices requiring more than 1 bit
  32. of error correction.
  33. config MTD_SM_COMMON
  34. tristate
  35. default n
  36. config MTD_NAND_DENALI
  37. tristate "Support Denali NAND controller"
  38. help
  39. Enable support for the Denali NAND controller. This should be
  40. combined with either the PCI or platform drivers to provide device
  41. registration.
  42. config MTD_NAND_DENALI_PCI
  43. tristate "Support Denali NAND controller on Intel Moorestown"
  44. depends on PCI && MTD_NAND_DENALI
  45. help
  46. Enable the driver for NAND flash on Intel Moorestown, using the
  47. Denali NAND controller core.
  48. config MTD_NAND_DENALI_DT
  49. tristate "Support Denali NAND controller as a DT device"
  50. depends on HAVE_CLK && MTD_NAND_DENALI
  51. help
  52. Enable the driver for NAND flash on platforms using a Denali NAND
  53. controller as a DT device.
  54. config MTD_NAND_DENALI_SCRATCH_REG_ADDR
  55. hex "Denali NAND size scratch register address"
  56. default "0xFF108018"
  57. depends on MTD_NAND_DENALI_PCI
  58. help
  59. Some platforms place the NAND chip size in a scratch register
  60. because (some versions of) the driver aren't able to automatically
  61. determine the size of certain chips. Set the address of the
  62. scratch register here to enable this feature. On Intel Moorestown
  63. boards, the scratch register is at 0xFF108018.
  64. config MTD_NAND_H1900
  65. tristate "iPAQ H1900 flash"
  66. depends on ARCH_PXA && BROKEN
  67. help
  68. This enables the driver for the iPAQ h1900 flash.
  69. config MTD_NAND_GPIO
  70. tristate "GPIO NAND Flash driver"
  71. depends on GENERIC_GPIO && ARM
  72. help
  73. This enables a GPIO based NAND flash driver.
  74. config MTD_NAND_AMS_DELTA
  75. tristate "NAND Flash device on Amstrad E3"
  76. depends on MACH_AMS_DELTA
  77. default y
  78. help
  79. Support for NAND flash on Amstrad E3 (Delta).
  80. config MTD_NAND_OMAP2
  81. tristate "NAND Flash device on OMAP2, OMAP3 and OMAP4"
  82. depends on ARCH_OMAP2PLUS
  83. help
  84. Support for NAND flash on Texas Instruments OMAP2, OMAP3 and OMAP4
  85. platforms.
  86. config MTD_NAND_OMAP_BCH
  87. depends on MTD_NAND && MTD_NAND_OMAP2 && ARCH_OMAP3
  88. bool "Enable support for hardware BCH error correction"
  89. default n
  90. select BCH
  91. select BCH_CONST_PARAMS
  92. help
  93. Support for hardware BCH error correction.
  94. choice
  95. prompt "BCH error correction capability"
  96. depends on MTD_NAND_OMAP_BCH
  97. config MTD_NAND_OMAP_BCH8
  98. bool "8 bits / 512 bytes (recommended)"
  99. help
  100. Support correcting up to 8 bitflips per 512-byte block.
  101. This will use 13 bytes of spare area per 512 bytes of page data.
  102. This is the recommended mode, as 4-bit mode does not work
  103. on some OMAP3 revisions, due to a hardware bug.
  104. config MTD_NAND_OMAP_BCH4
  105. bool "4 bits / 512 bytes"
  106. help
  107. Support correcting up to 4 bitflips per 512-byte block.
  108. This will use 7 bytes of spare area per 512 bytes of page data.
  109. Note that this mode does not work on some OMAP3 revisions, due to a
  110. hardware bug. Please check your OMAP datasheet before selecting this
  111. mode.
  112. endchoice
  113. if MTD_NAND_OMAP_BCH
  114. config BCH_CONST_M
  115. default 13
  116. config BCH_CONST_T
  117. default 4 if MTD_NAND_OMAP_BCH4
  118. default 8 if MTD_NAND_OMAP_BCH8
  119. endif
  120. config MTD_NAND_IDS
  121. tristate
  122. config MTD_NAND_RICOH
  123. tristate "Ricoh xD card reader"
  124. default n
  125. depends on PCI
  126. select MTD_SM_COMMON
  127. help
  128. Enable support for Ricoh R5C852 xD card reader
  129. You also need to enable ether
  130. NAND SSFDC (SmartMedia) read only translation layer' or new
  131. expermental, readwrite
  132. 'SmartMedia/xD new translation layer'
  133. config MTD_NAND_AU1550
  134. tristate "Au1550/1200 NAND support"
  135. depends on MIPS_ALCHEMY
  136. help
  137. This enables the driver for the NAND flash controller on the
  138. AMD/Alchemy 1550 SOC.
  139. config MTD_NAND_BF5XX
  140. tristate "Blackfin on-chip NAND Flash Controller driver"
  141. depends on BF54x || BF52x
  142. help
  143. This enables the Blackfin on-chip NAND flash controller
  144. No board specific support is done by this driver, each board
  145. must advertise a platform_device for the driver to attach.
  146. This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
  147. will be called bf5xx-nand.
  148. config MTD_NAND_BF5XX_HWECC
  149. bool "BF5XX NAND Hardware ECC"
  150. default y
  151. depends on MTD_NAND_BF5XX
  152. help
  153. Enable the use of the BF5XX's internal ECC generator when
  154. using NAND.
  155. config MTD_NAND_BF5XX_BOOTROM_ECC
  156. bool "Use Blackfin BootROM ECC Layout"
  157. default n
  158. depends on MTD_NAND_BF5XX_HWECC
  159. help
  160. If you wish to modify NAND pages and allow the Blackfin on-chip
  161. BootROM to boot from them, say Y here. This is only necessary
  162. if you are booting U-Boot out of NAND and you wish to update
  163. U-Boot from Linux' userspace. Otherwise, you should say N here.
  164. If unsure, say N.
  165. config MTD_NAND_PPCHAMELEONEVB
  166. tristate "NAND Flash device on PPChameleonEVB board"
  167. depends on PPCHAMELEONEVB && BROKEN
  168. help
  169. This enables the NAND flash driver on the PPChameleon EVB Board.
  170. config MTD_NAND_S3C2410
  171. tristate "NAND Flash support for Samsung S3C SoCs"
  172. depends on ARCH_S3C24XX || ARCH_S3C64XX
  173. help
  174. This enables the NAND flash controller on the S3C24xx and S3C64xx
  175. SoCs
  176. No board specific support is done by this driver, each board
  177. must advertise a platform_device for the driver to attach.
  178. config MTD_NAND_S3C2410_DEBUG
  179. bool "Samsung S3C NAND driver debug"
  180. depends on MTD_NAND_S3C2410
  181. help
  182. Enable debugging of the S3C NAND driver
  183. config MTD_NAND_S3C2410_HWECC
  184. bool "Samsung S3C NAND Hardware ECC"
  185. depends on MTD_NAND_S3C2410
  186. help
  187. Enable the use of the controller's internal ECC generator when
  188. using NAND. Early versions of the chips have had problems with
  189. incorrect ECC generation, and if using these, the default of
  190. software ECC is preferable.
  191. config MTD_NAND_NDFC
  192. tristate "NDFC NanD Flash Controller"
  193. depends on 4xx
  194. select MTD_NAND_ECC_SMC
  195. help
  196. NDFC Nand Flash Controllers are integrated in IBM/AMCC's 4xx SoCs
  197. config MTD_NAND_S3C2410_CLKSTOP
  198. bool "Samsung S3C NAND IDLE clock stop"
  199. depends on MTD_NAND_S3C2410
  200. default n
  201. help
  202. Stop the clock to the NAND controller when there is no chip
  203. selected to save power. This will mean there is a small delay
  204. when the is NAND chip selected or released, but will save
  205. approximately 5mA of power when there is nothing happening.
  206. config MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP
  207. tristate "DiskOnChip 2000, Millennium and Millennium Plus (NAND reimplementation)"
  208. depends on HAS_IOMEM
  209. select REED_SOLOMON
  210. select REED_SOLOMON_DEC16
  211. help
  212. This is a reimplementation of M-Systems DiskOnChip 2000,
  213. Millennium and Millennium Plus as a standard NAND device driver,
  214. as opposed to the earlier self-contained MTD device drivers.
  215. This should enable, among other things, proper JFFS2 operation on
  216. these devices.
  217. config MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_PROBE_ADVANCED
  218. bool "Advanced detection options for DiskOnChip"
  219. depends on MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP
  220. help
  221. This option allows you to specify nonstandard address at which to
  222. probe for a DiskOnChip, or to change the detection options. You
  223. are unlikely to need any of this unless you are using LinuxBIOS.
  224. Say 'N'.
  225. config MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_PROBE_ADDRESS
  226. hex "Physical address of DiskOnChip" if MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_PROBE_ADVANCED
  227. depends on MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP
  228. default "0"
  229. ---help---
  230. By default, the probe for DiskOnChip devices will look for a
  231. DiskOnChip at every multiple of 0x2000 between 0xC8000 and 0xEE000.
  232. This option allows you to specify a single address at which to probe
  233. for the device, which is useful if you have other devices in that
  234. range which get upset when they are probed.
  235. (Note that on PowerPC, the normal probe will only check at
  236. 0xE4000000.)
  237. Normally, you should leave this set to zero, to allow the probe at
  238. the normal addresses.
  239. config MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_PROBE_HIGH
  240. bool "Probe high addresses"
  241. depends on MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_PROBE_ADVANCED
  242. help
  243. By default, the probe for DiskOnChip devices will look for a
  244. DiskOnChip at every multiple of 0x2000 between 0xC8000 and 0xEE000.
  245. This option changes to make it probe between 0xFFFC8000 and
  246. 0xFFFEE000. Unless you are using LinuxBIOS, this is unlikely to be
  247. useful to you. Say 'N'.
  248. config MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP_BBTWRITE
  249. bool "Allow BBT writes on DiskOnChip Millennium and 2000TSOP"
  250. depends on MTD_NAND_DISKONCHIP
  251. help
  252. On DiskOnChip devices shipped with the INFTL filesystem (Millennium
  253. and 2000 TSOP/Alon), Linux reserves some space at the end of the
  254. device for the Bad Block Table (BBT). If you have existing INFTL
  255. data on your device (created by non-Linux tools such as M-Systems'
  256. DOS drivers), your data might overlap the area Linux wants to use for
  257. the BBT. If this is a concern for you, leave this option disabled and
  258. Linux will not write BBT data into this area.
  259. The downside of leaving this option disabled is that if bad blocks
  260. are detected by Linux, they will not be recorded in the BBT, which
  261. could cause future problems.
  262. Once you enable this option, new filesystems (INFTL or others, created
  263. in Linux or other operating systems) will not use the reserved area.
  264. The only reason not to enable this option is to prevent damage to
  265. preexisting filesystems.
  266. Even if you leave this disabled, you can enable BBT writes at module
  267. load time (assuming you build diskonchip as a module) with the module
  268. parameter "inftl_bbt_write=1".
  269. config MTD_NAND_DOCG4
  270. tristate "Support for DiskOnChip G4"
  271. depends on HAS_IOMEM
  272. select BCH
  273. select BITREVERSE
  274. help
  275. Support for diskonchip G4 nand flash, found in various smartphones and
  276. PDAs, among them the Palm Treo680, HTC Prophet and Wizard, Toshiba
  277. Portege G900, Asus P526, and O2 XDA Zinc.
  278. With this driver you will be able to use UBI and create a ubifs on the
  279. device, so you may wish to consider enabling UBI and UBIFS as well.
  280. These devices ship with the Mys/Sandisk SAFTL formatting, for which
  281. there is currently no mtd parser, so you may want to use command line
  282. partitioning to segregate write-protected blocks. On the Treo680, the
  283. first five erase blocks (256KiB each) are write-protected, followed
  284. by the block containing the saftl partition table. This is probably
  285. typical.
  286. config MTD_NAND_SHARPSL
  287. tristate "Support for NAND Flash on Sharp SL Series (C7xx + others)"
  288. depends on ARCH_PXA
  289. config MTD_NAND_CAFE
  290. tristate "NAND support for OLPC CAFÉ chip"
  291. depends on PCI
  292. select REED_SOLOMON
  293. select REED_SOLOMON_DEC16
  294. help
  295. Use NAND flash attached to the CAFÉ chip designed for the OLPC
  296. laptop.
  297. config MTD_NAND_CS553X
  298. tristate "NAND support for CS5535/CS5536 (AMD Geode companion chip)"
  299. depends on X86_32
  300. help
  301. The CS553x companion chips for the AMD Geode processor
  302. include NAND flash controllers with built-in hardware ECC
  303. capabilities; enabling this option will allow you to use
  304. these. The driver will check the MSRs to verify that the
  305. controller is enabled for NAND, and currently requires that
  306. the controller be in MMIO mode.
  307. If you say "m", the module will be called cs553x_nand.
  308. config MTD_NAND_ATMEL
  309. tristate "Support for NAND Flash / SmartMedia on AT91 and AVR32"
  310. depends on ARCH_AT91 || AVR32
  311. help
  312. Enables support for NAND Flash / Smart Media Card interface
  313. on Atmel AT91 and AVR32 processors.
  314. config MTD_NAND_PXA3xx
  315. tristate "Support for NAND flash devices on PXA3xx"
  316. depends on PXA3xx || ARCH_MMP
  317. help
  318. This enables the driver for the NAND flash device found on
  319. PXA3xx processors
  320. config MTD_NAND_SLC_LPC32XX
  321. tristate "NXP LPC32xx SLC Controller"
  322. depends on ARCH_LPC32XX
  323. help
  324. Enables support for NXP's LPC32XX SLC (i.e. for Single Level Cell
  325. chips) NAND controller. This is the default for the PHYTEC 3250
  326. reference board which contains a NAND256R3A2CZA6 chip.
  327. Please check the actual NAND chip connected and its support
  328. by the SLC NAND controller.
  329. config MTD_NAND_MLC_LPC32XX
  330. tristate "NXP LPC32xx MLC Controller"
  331. depends on ARCH_LPC32XX
  332. help
  333. Uses the LPC32XX MLC (i.e. for Multi Level Cell chips) NAND
  334. controller. This is the default for the WORK92105 controller
  335. board.
  336. Please check the actual NAND chip connected and its support
  337. by the MLC NAND controller.
  338. config MTD_NAND_CM_X270
  339. tristate "Support for NAND Flash on CM-X270 modules"
  340. depends on MACH_ARMCORE
  341. config MTD_NAND_PASEMI
  342. tristate "NAND support for PA Semi PWRficient"
  343. depends on PPC_PASEMI
  344. help
  345. Enables support for NAND Flash interface on PA Semi PWRficient
  346. based boards
  347. config MTD_NAND_TMIO
  348. tristate "NAND Flash device on Toshiba Mobile IO Controller"
  349. depends on MFD_TMIO
  350. help
  351. Support for NAND flash connected to a Toshiba Mobile IO
  352. Controller in some PDAs, including the Sharp SL6000x.
  353. config MTD_NAND_NANDSIM
  354. tristate "Support for NAND Flash Simulator"
  355. help
  356. The simulator may simulate various NAND flash chips for the
  357. MTD nand layer.
  358. config MTD_NAND_GPMI_NAND
  359. tristate "GPMI NAND Flash Controller driver"
  360. depends on MTD_NAND && MXS_DMA
  361. help
  362. Enables NAND Flash support for IMX23, IMX28 or IMX6.
  363. The GPMI controller is very powerful, with the help of BCH
  364. module, it can do the hardware ECC. The GPMI supports several
  365. NAND flashs at the same time. The GPMI may conflicts with other
  366. block, such as SD card. So pay attention to it when you enable
  367. the GPMI.
  368. config MTD_NAND_BCM47XXNFLASH
  369. tristate "Support for NAND flash on BCM4706 BCMA bus"
  370. depends on BCMA_NFLASH
  371. help
  372. BCMA bus can have various flash memories attached, they are
  373. registered by bcma as platform devices. This enables driver for
  374. NAND flash memories. For now only BCM4706 is supported.
  375. config MTD_NAND_PLATFORM
  376. tristate "Support for generic platform NAND driver"
  377. depends on HAS_IOMEM
  378. help
  379. This implements a generic NAND driver for on-SOC platform
  380. devices. You will need to provide platform-specific functions
  381. via platform_data.
  382. config MTD_ALAUDA
  383. tristate "MTD driver for Olympus MAUSB-10 and Fujifilm DPC-R1"
  384. depends on USB
  385. help
  386. These two (and possibly other) Alauda-based cardreaders for
  387. SmartMedia and xD allow raw flash access.
  388. config MTD_NAND_ORION
  389. tristate "NAND Flash support for Marvell Orion SoC"
  390. depends on PLAT_ORION
  391. help
  392. This enables the NAND flash controller on Orion machines.
  393. No board specific support is done by this driver, each board
  394. must advertise a platform_device for the driver to attach.
  395. config MTD_NAND_FSL_ELBC
  396. tristate "NAND support for Freescale eLBC controllers"
  397. depends on PPC_OF
  398. select FSL_LBC
  399. help
  400. Various Freescale chips, including the 8313, include a NAND Flash
  401. Controller Module with built-in hardware ECC capabilities.
  402. Enabling this option will enable you to use this to control
  403. external NAND devices.
  404. config MTD_NAND_FSL_IFC
  405. tristate "NAND support for Freescale IFC controller"
  406. depends on MTD_NAND && FSL_SOC
  407. select FSL_IFC
  408. help
  409. Various Freescale chips e.g P1010, include a NAND Flash machine
  410. with built-in hardware ECC capabilities.
  411. Enabling this option will enable you to use this to control
  412. external NAND devices.
  413. config MTD_NAND_FSL_UPM
  414. tristate "Support for NAND on Freescale UPM"
  415. depends on PPC_83xx || PPC_85xx
  416. select FSL_LBC
  417. help
  418. Enables support for NAND Flash chips wired onto Freescale PowerPC
  419. processor localbus with User-Programmable Machine support.
  420. config MTD_NAND_MPC5121_NFC
  421. tristate "MPC5121 built-in NAND Flash Controller support"
  422. depends on PPC_MPC512x
  423. help
  424. This enables the driver for the NAND flash controller on the
  425. MPC5121 SoC.
  426. config MTD_NAND_MXC
  427. tristate "MXC NAND support"
  428. depends on ARCH_MXC
  429. help
  430. This enables the driver for the NAND flash controller on the
  431. MXC processors.
  432. config MTD_NAND_SH_FLCTL
  433. tristate "Support for NAND on Renesas SuperH FLCTL"
  434. depends on SUPERH || ARCH_SHMOBILE
  435. help
  436. Several Renesas SuperH CPU has FLCTL. This option enables support
  437. for NAND Flash using FLCTL.
  438. config MTD_NAND_DAVINCI
  439. tristate "Support NAND on DaVinci SoC"
  440. depends on ARCH_DAVINCI
  441. help
  442. Enable the driver for NAND flash chips on Texas Instruments
  443. DaVinci processors.
  444. config MTD_NAND_TXX9NDFMC
  445. tristate "NAND Flash support for TXx9 SoC"
  446. depends on SOC_TX4938 || SOC_TX4939
  447. help
  448. This enables the NAND flash controller on the TXx9 SoCs.
  449. config MTD_NAND_SOCRATES
  450. tristate "Support for NAND on Socrates board"
  451. depends on SOCRATES
  452. help
  453. Enables support for NAND Flash chips wired onto Socrates board.
  454. config MTD_NAND_NUC900
  455. tristate "Support for NAND on Nuvoton NUC9xx/w90p910 evaluation boards."
  456. depends on ARCH_W90X900
  457. help
  458. This enables the driver for the NAND Flash on evaluation board based
  459. on w90p910 / NUC9xx.
  460. config MTD_NAND_JZ4740
  461. tristate "Support for JZ4740 SoC NAND controller"
  462. depends on MACH_JZ4740
  463. help
  464. Enables support for NAND Flash on JZ4740 SoC based boards.
  465. config MTD_NAND_FSMC
  466. tristate "Support for NAND on ST Micros FSMC"
  467. depends on PLAT_SPEAR || ARCH_NOMADIK || ARCH_U8500 || MACH_U300
  468. help
  469. Enables support for NAND Flash chips on the ST Microelectronics
  470. Flexible Static Memory Controller (FSMC)
  471. config MTD_NAND_XWAY
  472. tristate "Support for NAND on Lantiq XWAY SoC"
  473. depends on LANTIQ && SOC_TYPE_XWAY
  474. select MTD_NAND_PLATFORM
  475. help
  476. Enables support for NAND Flash chips on Lantiq XWAY SoCs. NAND is attached
  477. to the External Bus Unit (EBU).
  478. endif # MTD_NAND