Kconfig 22 KB

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  1. #
  2. # USB Gadget support on a system involves
  3. # (a) a peripheral controller, and
  4. # (b) the gadget driver using it.
  5. #
  6. # NOTE: Gadget support ** DOES NOT ** depend on host-side CONFIG_USB !!
  7. #
  8. # - Host systems (like PCs) need CONFIG_USB (with "A" jacks).
  9. # - Peripherals (like PDAs) need CONFIG_USB_GADGET (with "B" jacks).
  10. # - Some systems have both kinds of controllers.
  11. #
  12. # With help from a special transceiver and a "Mini-AB" jack, systems with
  13. # both kinds of controller can also support "USB On-the-Go" (CONFIG_USB_OTG).
  14. #
  15. menuconfig USB_GADGET
  16. tristate "USB Gadget Support"
  17. help
  18. USB is a master/slave protocol, organized with one master
  19. host (such as a PC) controlling up to 127 peripheral devices.
  20. The USB hardware is asymmetric, which makes it easier to set up:
  21. you can't connect a "to-the-host" connector to a peripheral.
  22. Linux can run in the host, or in the peripheral. In both cases
  23. you need a low level bus controller driver, and some software
  24. talking to it. Peripheral controllers are often discrete silicon,
  25. or are integrated with the CPU in a microcontroller. The more
  26. familiar host side controllers have names like "EHCI", "OHCI",
  27. or "UHCI", and are usually integrated into southbridges on PC
  28. motherboards.
  29. Enable this configuration option if you want to run Linux inside
  30. a USB peripheral device. Configure one hardware driver for your
  31. peripheral/device side bus controller, and a "gadget driver" for
  32. your peripheral protocol. (If you use modular gadget drivers,
  33. you may configure more than one.)
  34. If in doubt, say "N" and don't enable these drivers; most people
  35. don't have this kind of hardware (except maybe inside Linux PDAs).
  36. For more information, see <http://www.linux-usb.org/gadget> and
  37. the kernel DocBook documentation for this API.
  38. if USB_GADGET
  39. config USB_GADGET_DEBUG
  40. boolean "Debugging messages (DEVELOPMENT)"
  41. depends on USB_GADGET && DEBUG_KERNEL
  42. help
  43. Many controller and gadget drivers will print some debugging
  44. messages if you use this option to ask for those messages.
  45. Avoid enabling these messages, even if you're actively
  46. debugging such a driver. Many drivers will emit so many
  47. messages that the driver timings are affected, which will
  48. either create new failure modes or remove the one you're
  49. trying to track down. Never enable these messages for a
  50. production build.
  51. config USB_GADGET_DEBUG_FILES
  52. boolean "Debugging information files (DEVELOPMENT)"
  53. depends on USB_GADGET && PROC_FS
  54. help
  55. Some of the drivers in the "gadget" framework can expose
  56. debugging information in files such as /proc/driver/udc
  57. (for a peripheral controller). The information in these
  58. files may help when you're troubleshooting or bringing up a
  59. driver on a new board. Enable these files by choosing "Y"
  60. here. If in doubt, or to conserve kernel memory, say "N".
  61. config USB_GADGET_DEBUG_FS
  62. boolean "Debugging information files in debugfs (DEVELOPMENT)"
  63. depends on USB_GADGET && DEBUG_FS
  64. help
  65. Some of the drivers in the "gadget" framework can expose
  66. debugging information in files under /sys/kernel/debug/.
  67. The information in these files may help when you're
  68. troubleshooting or bringing up a driver on a new board.
  69. Enable these files by choosing "Y" here. If in doubt, or
  70. to conserve kernel memory, say "N".
  71. config USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  72. boolean
  73. #
  74. # USB Peripheral Controller Support
  75. #
  76. # The order here is alphabetical, except that integrated controllers go
  77. # before discrete ones so they will be the initial/default value:
  78. # - integrated/SOC controllers first
  79. # - licensed IP used in both SOC and discrete versions
  80. # - discrete ones (including all PCI-only controllers)
  81. # - debug/dummy gadget+hcd is last.
  82. #
  83. choice
  84. prompt "USB Peripheral Controller"
  85. depends on USB_GADGET
  86. help
  87. A USB device uses a controller to talk to its host.
  88. Systems should have only one such upstream link.
  89. Many controller drivers are platform-specific; these
  90. often need board-specific hooks.
  91. #
  92. # Integrated controllers
  93. #
  94. config USB_GADGET_AT91
  95. boolean "Atmel AT91 USB Device Port"
  96. depends on ARCH_AT91 && !ARCH_AT91SAM9RL && !ARCH_AT91CAP9
  97. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  98. help
  99. Many Atmel AT91 processors (such as the AT91RM2000) have a
  100. full speed USB Device Port with support for five configurable
  101. endpoints (plus endpoint zero).
  102. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  103. dynamically linked module called "at91_udc" and force all
  104. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  105. config USB_AT91
  106. tristate
  107. depends on USB_GADGET_AT91
  108. default USB_GADGET
  109. config USB_GADGET_ATMEL_USBA
  110. boolean "Atmel USBA"
  111. select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED
  112. depends on AVR32 || ARCH_AT91CAP9 || ARCH_AT91SAM9RL
  113. help
  114. USBA is the integrated high-speed USB Device controller on
  115. the AT32AP700x, some AT91SAM9 and AT91CAP9 processors from Atmel.
  116. config USB_ATMEL_USBA
  117. tristate
  118. depends on USB_GADGET_ATMEL_USBA
  119. default USB_GADGET
  120. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  121. config USB_GADGET_FSL_USB2
  122. boolean "Freescale Highspeed USB DR Peripheral Controller"
  123. depends on FSL_SOC
  124. select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED
  125. help
  126. Some of Freescale PowerPC processors have a High Speed
  127. Dual-Role(DR) USB controller, which supports device mode.
  128. The number of programmable endpoints is different through
  129. SOC revisions.
  130. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  131. dynamically linked module called "fsl_usb2_udc" and force
  132. all gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  133. config USB_FSL_USB2
  134. tristate
  135. depends on USB_GADGET_FSL_USB2
  136. default USB_GADGET
  137. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  138. config USB_GADGET_LH7A40X
  139. boolean "LH7A40X"
  140. depends on ARCH_LH7A40X
  141. help
  142. This driver provides USB Device Controller driver for LH7A40x
  143. config USB_LH7A40X
  144. tristate
  145. depends on USB_GADGET_LH7A40X
  146. default USB_GADGET
  147. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  148. config USB_GADGET_OMAP
  149. boolean "OMAP USB Device Controller"
  150. depends on ARCH_OMAP
  151. select ISP1301_OMAP if MACH_OMAP_H2 || MACH_OMAP_H3
  152. help
  153. Many Texas Instruments OMAP processors have flexible full
  154. speed USB device controllers, with support for up to 30
  155. endpoints (plus endpoint zero). This driver supports the
  156. controller in the OMAP 1611, and should work with controllers
  157. in other OMAP processors too, given minor tweaks.
  158. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  159. dynamically linked module called "omap_udc" and force all
  160. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  161. config USB_OMAP
  162. tristate
  163. depends on USB_GADGET_OMAP
  164. default USB_GADGET
  165. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  166. config USB_OTG
  167. boolean "OTG Support"
  168. depends on USB_GADGET_OMAP && ARCH_OMAP_OTG && USB_OHCI_HCD
  169. help
  170. The most notable feature of USB OTG is support for a
  171. "Dual-Role" device, which can act as either a device
  172. or a host. The initial role choice can be changed
  173. later, when two dual-role devices talk to each other.
  174. Select this only if your OMAP board has a Mini-AB connector.
  175. config USB_GADGET_PXA25X
  176. boolean "PXA 25x or IXP 4xx"
  177. depends on (ARCH_PXA && PXA25x) || ARCH_IXP4XX
  178. help
  179. Intel's PXA 25x series XScale ARM-5TE processors include
  180. an integrated full speed USB 1.1 device controller. The
  181. controller in the IXP 4xx series is register-compatible.
  182. It has fifteen fixed-function endpoints, as well as endpoint
  183. zero (for control transfers).
  184. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  185. dynamically linked module called "pxa25x_udc" and force all
  186. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  187. config USB_PXA25X
  188. tristate
  189. depends on USB_GADGET_PXA25X
  190. default USB_GADGET
  191. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  192. # if there's only one gadget driver, using only two bulk endpoints,
  193. # don't waste memory for the other endpoints
  194. config USB_PXA25X_SMALL
  195. depends on USB_GADGET_PXA25X
  196. bool
  197. default n if USB_ETH_RNDIS
  198. default y if USB_ZERO
  199. default y if USB_ETH
  200. default y if USB_G_SERIAL
  201. config USB_GADGET_PXA27X
  202. boolean "PXA 27x"
  203. depends on ARCH_PXA && PXA27x
  204. help
  205. Intel's PXA 27x series XScale ARM v5TE processors include
  206. an integrated full speed USB 1.1 device controller.
  207. It has up to 23 endpoints, as well as endpoint zero (for
  208. control transfers).
  209. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  210. dynamically linked module called "pxa27x_udc" and force all
  211. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  212. config USB_PXA27X
  213. tristate
  214. depends on USB_GADGET_PXA27X
  215. default USB_GADGET
  216. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  217. config USB_GADGET_S3C2410
  218. boolean "S3C2410 USB Device Controller"
  219. depends on ARCH_S3C2410
  220. help
  221. Samsung's S3C2410 is an ARM-4 processor with an integrated
  222. full speed USB 1.1 device controller. It has 4 configurable
  223. endpoints, as well as endpoint zero (for control transfers).
  224. This driver has been tested on the S3C2410, S3C2412, and
  225. S3C2440 processors.
  226. config USB_S3C2410
  227. tristate
  228. depends on USB_GADGET_S3C2410
  229. default USB_GADGET
  230. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  231. config USB_S3C2410_DEBUG
  232. boolean "S3C2410 udc debug messages"
  233. depends on USB_GADGET_S3C2410
  234. #
  235. # Controllers available in both integrated and discrete versions
  236. #
  237. # musb builds in ../musb along with host support
  238. config USB_GADGET_MUSB_HDRC
  239. boolean "Inventra HDRC USB Peripheral (TI, ...)"
  240. depends on USB_MUSB_HDRC && (USB_MUSB_PERIPHERAL || USB_MUSB_OTG)
  241. select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED
  242. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  243. help
  244. This OTG-capable silicon IP is used in dual designs including
  245. the TI DaVinci, OMAP 243x, OMAP 343x, and TUSB 6010.
  246. config USB_GADGET_M66592
  247. boolean "Renesas M66592 USB Peripheral Controller"
  248. select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED
  249. help
  250. M66592 is a discrete USB peripheral controller chip that
  251. supports both full and high speed USB 2.0 data transfers.
  252. It has seven configurable endpoints, and endpoint zero.
  253. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  254. dynamically linked module called "m66592_udc" and force all
  255. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  256. config USB_M66592
  257. tristate
  258. depends on USB_GADGET_M66592
  259. default USB_GADGET
  260. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  261. config SUPERH_BUILT_IN_M66592
  262. boolean "Enable SuperH built-in USB like the M66592"
  263. depends on USB_GADGET_M66592 && CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7722
  264. help
  265. SH7722 has USB like the M66592.
  266. The transfer rate is very slow when use "Ethernet Gadget".
  267. However, this problem is improved if change a value of
  268. NET_IP_ALIGN to 4.
  269. #
  270. # Controllers available only in discrete form (and all PCI controllers)
  271. #
  272. config USB_GADGET_AMD5536UDC
  273. boolean "AMD5536 UDC"
  274. depends on PCI
  275. select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED
  276. help
  277. The AMD5536 UDC is part of the AMD Geode CS5536, an x86 southbridge.
  278. It is a USB Highspeed DMA capable USB device controller. Beside ep0
  279. it provides 4 IN and 4 OUT endpoints (bulk or interrupt type).
  280. The UDC port supports OTG operation, and may be used as a host port
  281. if it's not being used to implement peripheral or OTG roles.
  282. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  283. dynamically linked module called "amd5536udc" and force all
  284. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  285. config USB_AMD5536UDC
  286. tristate
  287. depends on USB_GADGET_AMD5536UDC
  288. default USB_GADGET
  289. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  290. config USB_GADGET_NET2280
  291. boolean "NetChip 228x"
  292. depends on PCI
  293. select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED
  294. help
  295. NetChip 2280 / 2282 is a PCI based USB peripheral controller which
  296. supports both full and high speed USB 2.0 data transfers.
  297. It has six configurable endpoints, as well as endpoint zero
  298. (for control transfers) and several endpoints with dedicated
  299. functions.
  300. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  301. dynamically linked module called "net2280" and force all
  302. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  303. config USB_NET2280
  304. tristate
  305. depends on USB_GADGET_NET2280
  306. default USB_GADGET
  307. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  308. config USB_GADGET_GOKU
  309. boolean "Toshiba TC86C001 'Goku-S'"
  310. depends on PCI
  311. help
  312. The Toshiba TC86C001 is a PCI device which includes controllers
  313. for full speed USB devices, IDE, I2C, SIO, plus a USB host (OHCI).
  314. The device controller has three configurable (bulk or interrupt)
  315. endpoints, plus endpoint zero (for control transfers).
  316. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  317. dynamically linked module called "goku_udc" and to force all
  318. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  319. config USB_GOKU
  320. tristate
  321. depends on USB_GADGET_GOKU
  322. default USB_GADGET
  323. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  324. #
  325. # LAST -- dummy/emulated controller
  326. #
  327. config USB_GADGET_DUMMY_HCD
  328. boolean "Dummy HCD (DEVELOPMENT)"
  329. depends on USB=y || (USB=m && USB_GADGET=m)
  330. select USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED
  331. help
  332. This host controller driver emulates USB, looping all data transfer
  333. requests back to a USB "gadget driver" in the same host. The host
  334. side is the master; the gadget side is the slave. Gadget drivers
  335. can be high, full, or low speed; and they have access to endpoints
  336. like those from NET2280, PXA2xx, or SA1100 hardware.
  337. This may help in some stages of creating a driver to embed in a
  338. Linux device, since it lets you debug several parts of the gadget
  339. driver without its hardware or drivers being involved.
  340. Since such a gadget side driver needs to interoperate with a host
  341. side Linux-USB device driver, this may help to debug both sides
  342. of a USB protocol stack.
  343. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  344. dynamically linked module called "dummy_hcd" and force all
  345. gadget drivers to also be dynamically linked.
  346. config USB_DUMMY_HCD
  347. tristate
  348. depends on USB_GADGET_DUMMY_HCD
  349. default USB_GADGET
  350. select USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  351. # NOTE: Please keep dummy_hcd LAST so that "real hardware" appears
  352. # first and will be selected by default.
  353. endchoice
  354. config USB_GADGET_DUALSPEED
  355. bool
  356. depends on USB_GADGET
  357. default n
  358. help
  359. Means that gadget drivers should include extra descriptors
  360. and code to handle dual-speed controllers.
  361. #
  362. # USB Gadget Drivers
  363. #
  364. choice
  365. tristate "USB Gadget Drivers"
  366. depends on USB_GADGET && USB_GADGET_SELECTED
  367. default USB_ETH
  368. help
  369. A Linux "Gadget Driver" talks to the USB Peripheral Controller
  370. driver through the abstract "gadget" API. Some other operating
  371. systems call these "client" drivers, of which "class drivers"
  372. are a subset (implementing a USB device class specification).
  373. A gadget driver implements one or more USB functions using
  374. the peripheral hardware.
  375. Gadget drivers are hardware-neutral, or "platform independent",
  376. except that they sometimes must understand quirks or limitations
  377. of the particular controllers they work with. For example, when
  378. a controller doesn't support alternate configurations or provide
  379. enough of the right types of endpoints, the gadget driver might
  380. not be able work with that controller, or might need to implement
  381. a less common variant of a device class protocol.
  382. # this first set of drivers all depend on bulk-capable hardware.
  383. config USB_ZERO
  384. tristate "Gadget Zero (DEVELOPMENT)"
  385. help
  386. Gadget Zero is a two-configuration device. It either sinks and
  387. sources bulk data; or it loops back a configurable number of
  388. transfers. It also implements control requests, for "chapter 9"
  389. conformance. The driver needs only two bulk-capable endpoints, so
  390. it can work on top of most device-side usb controllers. It's
  391. useful for testing, and is also a working example showing how
  392. USB "gadget drivers" can be written.
  393. Make this be the first driver you try using on top of any new
  394. USB peripheral controller driver. Then you can use host-side
  395. test software, like the "usbtest" driver, to put your hardware
  396. and its driver through a basic set of functional tests.
  397. Gadget Zero also works with the host-side "usb-skeleton" driver,
  398. and with many kinds of host-side test software. You may need
  399. to tweak product and vendor IDs before host software knows about
  400. this device, and arrange to select an appropriate configuration.
  401. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  402. dynamically linked module called "g_zero".
  403. config USB_ZERO_HNPTEST
  404. boolean "HNP Test Device"
  405. depends on USB_ZERO && USB_OTG
  406. help
  407. You can configure this device to enumerate using the device
  408. identifiers of the USB-OTG test device. That means that when
  409. this gadget connects to another OTG device, with this one using
  410. the "B-Peripheral" role, that device will use HNP to let this
  411. one serve as the USB host instead (in the "B-Host" role).
  412. config USB_ETH
  413. tristate "Ethernet Gadget (with CDC Ethernet support)"
  414. depends on NET
  415. help
  416. This driver implements Ethernet style communication, in either
  417. of two ways:
  418. - The "Communication Device Class" (CDC) Ethernet Control Model.
  419. That protocol is often avoided with pure Ethernet adapters, in
  420. favor of simpler vendor-specific hardware, but is widely
  421. supported by firmware for smart network devices.
  422. - On hardware can't implement that protocol, a simple CDC subset
  423. is used, placing fewer demands on USB.
  424. RNDIS support is a third option, more demanding than that subset.
  425. Within the USB device, this gadget driver exposes a network device
  426. "usbX", where X depends on what other networking devices you have.
  427. Treat it like a two-node Ethernet link: host, and gadget.
  428. The Linux-USB host-side "usbnet" driver interoperates with this
  429. driver, so that deep I/O queues can be supported. On 2.4 kernels,
  430. use "CDCEther" instead, if you're using the CDC option. That CDC
  431. mode should also interoperate with standard CDC Ethernet class
  432. drivers on other host operating systems.
  433. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  434. dynamically linked module called "g_ether".
  435. config USB_ETH_RNDIS
  436. bool "RNDIS support"
  437. depends on USB_ETH
  438. default y
  439. help
  440. Microsoft Windows XP bundles the "Remote NDIS" (RNDIS) protocol,
  441. and Microsoft provides redistributable binary RNDIS drivers for
  442. older versions of Windows.
  443. If you say "y" here, the Ethernet gadget driver will try to provide
  444. a second device configuration, supporting RNDIS to talk to such
  445. Microsoft USB hosts.
  446. To make MS-Windows work with this, use Documentation/usb/linux.inf
  447. as the "driver info file". For versions of MS-Windows older than
  448. XP, you'll need to download drivers from Microsoft's website; a URL
  449. is given in comments found in that info file.
  450. config USB_GADGETFS
  451. tristate "Gadget Filesystem (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  452. depends on EXPERIMENTAL
  453. help
  454. This driver provides a filesystem based API that lets user mode
  455. programs implement a single-configuration USB device, including
  456. endpoint I/O and control requests that don't relate to enumeration.
  457. All endpoints, transfer speeds, and transfer types supported by
  458. the hardware are available, through read() and write() calls.
  459. Currently, this option is still labelled as EXPERIMENTAL because
  460. of existing race conditions in the underlying in-kernel AIO core.
  461. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  462. dynamically linked module called "gadgetfs".
  463. config USB_FILE_STORAGE
  464. tristate "File-backed Storage Gadget"
  465. depends on BLOCK
  466. help
  467. The File-backed Storage Gadget acts as a USB Mass Storage
  468. disk drive. As its storage repository it can use a regular
  469. file or a block device (in much the same way as the "loop"
  470. device driver), specified as a module parameter.
  471. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  472. dynamically linked module called "g_file_storage".
  473. config USB_FILE_STORAGE_TEST
  474. bool "File-backed Storage Gadget testing version"
  475. depends on USB_FILE_STORAGE
  476. default n
  477. help
  478. Say "y" to generate the larger testing version of the
  479. File-backed Storage Gadget, useful for probing the
  480. behavior of USB Mass Storage hosts. Not needed for
  481. normal operation.
  482. config USB_G_SERIAL
  483. tristate "Serial Gadget (with CDC ACM and CDC OBEX support)"
  484. help
  485. The Serial Gadget talks to the Linux-USB generic serial driver.
  486. This driver supports a CDC-ACM module option, which can be used
  487. to interoperate with MS-Windows hosts or with the Linux-USB
  488. "cdc-acm" driver.
  489. This driver also supports a CDC-OBEX option. You will need a
  490. user space OBEX server talking to /dev/ttyGS*, since the kernel
  491. itself doesn't implement the OBEX protocol.
  492. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  493. dynamically linked module called "g_serial".
  494. For more information, see Documentation/usb/gadget_serial.txt
  495. which includes instructions and a "driver info file" needed to
  496. make MS-Windows work with CDC ACM.
  497. config USB_MIDI_GADGET
  498. tristate "MIDI Gadget (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  499. depends on SND && EXPERIMENTAL
  500. select SND_RAWMIDI
  501. help
  502. The MIDI Gadget acts as a USB Audio device, with one MIDI
  503. input and one MIDI output. These MIDI jacks appear as
  504. a sound "card" in the ALSA sound system. Other MIDI
  505. connections can then be made on the gadget system, using
  506. ALSA's aconnect utility etc.
  507. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  508. dynamically linked module called "g_midi".
  509. config USB_G_PRINTER
  510. tristate "Printer Gadget"
  511. help
  512. The Printer Gadget channels data between the USB host and a
  513. userspace program driving the print engine. The user space
  514. program reads and writes the device file /dev/g_printer to
  515. receive or send printer data. It can use ioctl calls to
  516. the device file to get or set printer status.
  517. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  518. dynamically linked module called "g_printer".
  519. For more information, see Documentation/usb/gadget_printer.txt
  520. which includes sample code for accessing the device file.
  521. config USB_CDC_COMPOSITE
  522. tristate "CDC Composite Device (Ethernet and ACM)"
  523. depends on NET
  524. help
  525. This driver provides two functions in one configuration:
  526. a CDC Ethernet (ECM) link, and a CDC ACM (serial port) link.
  527. This driver requires four bulk and two interrupt endpoints,
  528. plus the ability to handle altsettings. Not all peripheral
  529. controllers are that capable.
  530. Say "y" to link the driver statically, or "m" to build a
  531. dynamically linked module.
  532. # put drivers that need isochronous transfer support (for audio
  533. # or video class gadget drivers), or specific hardware, here.
  534. # - none yet
  535. endchoice
  536. endif # USB_GADGET