Kconfig 9.0 KB

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  1. menu "Processor selection"
  2. #
  3. # Processor families
  4. #
  5. config CPU_SH2
  6. select SH_WRITETHROUGH if !CPU_SH2A
  7. bool
  8. config CPU_SH2A
  9. bool
  10. select CPU_SH2
  11. config CPU_SH3
  12. bool
  13. select CPU_HAS_INTEVT
  14. select CPU_HAS_SR_RB
  15. config CPU_SH4
  16. bool
  17. select CPU_HAS_INTEVT
  18. select CPU_HAS_SR_RB
  19. select CPU_HAS_PTEA if (!CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40 && !CPU_SH4A) || CPU_SHX2
  20. config CPU_SH4A
  21. bool
  22. select CPU_SH4
  23. config CPU_SH4AL_DSP
  24. bool
  25. select CPU_SH4A
  26. config CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40
  27. bool
  28. select CPU_SH4
  29. select CPU_HAS_INTC2_IRQ
  30. config CPU_SHX2
  31. bool
  32. #
  33. # Processor subtypes
  34. #
  35. comment "SH-2 Processor Support"
  36. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7604
  37. bool "Support SH7604 processor"
  38. select CPU_SH2
  39. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7619
  40. bool "Support SH7619 processor"
  41. select CPU_SH2
  42. comment "SH-2A Processor Support"
  43. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7206
  44. bool "Support SH7206 processor"
  45. select CPU_SH2A
  46. comment "SH-3 Processor Support"
  47. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7300
  48. bool "Support SH7300 processor"
  49. select CPU_SH3
  50. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7705
  51. bool "Support SH7705 processor"
  52. select CPU_SH3
  53. select CPU_HAS_PINT_IRQ
  54. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7706
  55. bool "Support SH7706 processor"
  56. select CPU_SH3
  57. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  58. help
  59. Select SH7706 if you have a 133 Mhz SH-3 HD6417706 CPU.
  60. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7707
  61. bool "Support SH7707 processor"
  62. select CPU_SH3
  63. select CPU_HAS_PINT_IRQ
  64. help
  65. Select SH7707 if you have a 60 Mhz SH-3 HD6417707 CPU.
  66. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7708
  67. bool "Support SH7708 processor"
  68. select CPU_SH3
  69. help
  70. Select SH7708 if you have a 60 Mhz SH-3 HD6417708S or
  71. if you have a 100 Mhz SH-3 HD6417708R CPU.
  72. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7709
  73. bool "Support SH7709 processor"
  74. select CPU_SH3
  75. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  76. select CPU_HAS_PINT_IRQ
  77. help
  78. Select SH7709 if you have a 80 Mhz SH-3 HD6417709 CPU.
  79. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7710
  80. bool "Support SH7710 processor"
  81. select CPU_SH3
  82. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  83. help
  84. Select SH7710 if you have a SH3-DSP SH7710 CPU.
  85. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7712
  86. bool "Support SH7712 processor"
  87. select CPU_SH3
  88. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  89. help
  90. Select SH7712 if you have a SH3-DSP SH7712 CPU.
  91. comment "SH-4 Processor Support"
  92. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7750
  93. bool "Support SH7750 processor"
  94. select CPU_SH4
  95. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  96. help
  97. Select SH7750 if you have a 200 Mhz SH-4 HD6417750 CPU.
  98. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7091
  99. bool "Support SH7091 processor"
  100. select CPU_SH4
  101. select CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7750
  102. help
  103. Select SH7091 if you have an SH-4 based Sega device (such as
  104. the Dreamcast, Naomi, and Naomi 2).
  105. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7750R
  106. bool "Support SH7750R processor"
  107. select CPU_SH4
  108. select CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7750
  109. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  110. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7750S
  111. bool "Support SH7750S processor"
  112. select CPU_SH4
  113. select CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7750
  114. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  115. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7751
  116. bool "Support SH7751 processor"
  117. select CPU_SH4
  118. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  119. help
  120. Select SH7751 if you have a 166 Mhz SH-4 HD6417751 CPU,
  121. or if you have a HD6417751R CPU.
  122. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7751R
  123. bool "Support SH7751R processor"
  124. select CPU_SH4
  125. select CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7751
  126. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  127. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7760
  128. bool "Support SH7760 processor"
  129. select CPU_SH4
  130. select CPU_HAS_INTC2_IRQ
  131. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  132. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH4_202
  133. bool "Support SH4-202 processor"
  134. select CPU_SH4
  135. comment "ST40 Processor Support"
  136. config CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40STB1
  137. bool "Support ST40STB1/ST40RA processors"
  138. select CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40
  139. help
  140. Select ST40STB1 if you have a ST40RA CPU.
  141. This was previously called the ST40STB1, hence the option name.
  142. config CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40GX1
  143. bool "Support ST40GX1 processor"
  144. select CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40
  145. help
  146. Select ST40GX1 if you have a ST40GX1 CPU.
  147. comment "SH-4A Processor Support"
  148. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7770
  149. bool "Support SH7770 processor"
  150. select CPU_SH4A
  151. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7780
  152. bool "Support SH7780 processor"
  153. select CPU_SH4A
  154. select CPU_HAS_INTC2_IRQ
  155. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7785
  156. bool "Support SH7785 processor"
  157. select CPU_SH4A
  158. select CPU_SHX2
  159. select CPU_HAS_INTC2_IRQ
  160. comment "SH4AL-DSP Processor Support"
  161. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH73180
  162. bool "Support SH73180 processor"
  163. select CPU_SH4AL_DSP
  164. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7343
  165. bool "Support SH7343 processor"
  166. select CPU_SH4AL_DSP
  167. config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7722
  168. bool "Support SH7722 processor"
  169. select CPU_SH4AL_DSP
  170. select CPU_SHX2
  171. select CPU_HAS_IPR_IRQ
  172. endmenu
  173. menu "Memory management options"
  174. config MMU
  175. bool "Support for memory management hardware"
  176. depends on !CPU_SH2
  177. default y
  178. help
  179. Some SH processors (such as SH-2/SH-2A) lack an MMU. In order to
  180. boot on these systems, this option must not be set.
  181. On other systems (such as the SH-3 and 4) where an MMU exists,
  182. turning this off will boot the kernel on these machines with the
  183. MMU implicitly switched off.
  184. config PAGE_OFFSET
  185. hex
  186. default "0x80000000" if MMU
  187. default "0x00000000"
  188. config MEMORY_START
  189. hex "Physical memory start address"
  190. default "0x08000000"
  191. ---help---
  192. Computers built with Hitachi SuperH processors always
  193. map the ROM starting at address zero. But the processor
  194. does not specify the range that RAM takes.
  195. The physical memory (RAM) start address will be automatically
  196. set to 08000000. Other platforms, such as the Solution Engine
  197. boards typically map RAM at 0C000000.
  198. Tweak this only when porting to a new machine which does not
  199. already have a defconfig. Changing it from the known correct
  200. value on any of the known systems will only lead to disaster.
  201. config MEMORY_SIZE
  202. hex "Physical memory size"
  203. default "0x00400000"
  204. help
  205. This sets the default memory size assumed by your SH kernel. It can
  206. be overridden as normal by the 'mem=' argument on the kernel command
  207. line. If unsure, consult your board specifications or just leave it
  208. as 0x00400000 which was the default value before this became
  209. configurable.
  210. config 32BIT
  211. bool "Support 32-bit physical addressing through PMB"
  212. depends on CPU_SH4A && MMU && (!X2TLB || BROKEN)
  213. default y
  214. help
  215. If you say Y here, physical addressing will be extended to
  216. 32-bits through the SH-4A PMB. If this is not set, legacy
  217. 29-bit physical addressing will be used.
  218. config X2TLB
  219. bool "Enable extended TLB mode"
  220. depends on CPU_SHX2 && MMU && EXPERIMENTAL
  221. help
  222. Selecting this option will enable the extended mode of the SH-X2
  223. TLB. For legacy SH-X behaviour and interoperability, say N. For
  224. all of the fun new features and a willingless to submit bug reports,
  225. say Y.
  226. config VSYSCALL
  227. bool "Support vsyscall page"
  228. depends on MMU
  229. default y
  230. help
  231. This will enable support for the kernel mapping a vDSO page
  232. in process space, and subsequently handing down the entry point
  233. to the libc through the ELF auxiliary vector.
  234. From the kernel side this is used for the signal trampoline.
  235. For systems with an MMU that can afford to give up a page,
  236. (the default value) say Y.
  237. choice
  238. prompt "Kernel page size"
  239. default PAGE_SIZE_4KB
  240. config PAGE_SIZE_4KB
  241. bool "4kB"
  242. help
  243. This is the default page size used by all SuperH CPUs.
  244. config PAGE_SIZE_8KB
  245. bool "8kB"
  246. depends on EXPERIMENTAL && X2TLB
  247. help
  248. This enables 8kB pages as supported by SH-X2 and later MMUs.
  249. config PAGE_SIZE_64KB
  250. bool "64kB"
  251. depends on EXPERIMENTAL && CPU_SH4
  252. help
  253. This enables support for 64kB pages, possible on all SH-4
  254. CPUs and later. Highly experimental, not recommended.
  255. endchoice
  256. choice
  257. prompt "HugeTLB page size"
  258. depends on HUGETLB_PAGE && CPU_SH4 && MMU
  259. default HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_64K
  260. config HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_64K
  261. bool "64kB"
  262. config HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_256K
  263. bool "256kB"
  264. depends on X2TLB
  265. config HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_1MB
  266. bool "1MB"
  267. config HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_4MB
  268. bool "4MB"
  269. depends on X2TLB
  270. config HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_64MB
  271. bool "64MB"
  272. depends on X2TLB
  273. endchoice
  274. source "mm/Kconfig"
  275. endmenu
  276. menu "Cache configuration"
  277. config SH7705_CACHE_32KB
  278. bool "Enable 32KB cache size for SH7705"
  279. depends on CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7705
  280. default y
  281. config SH_DIRECT_MAPPED
  282. bool "Use direct-mapped caching"
  283. default n
  284. help
  285. Selecting this option will configure the caches to be direct-mapped,
  286. even if the cache supports a 2 or 4-way mode. This is useful primarily
  287. for debugging on platforms with 2 and 4-way caches (SH7750R/SH7751R,
  288. SH4-202, SH4-501, etc.)
  289. Turn this option off for platforms that do not have a direct-mapped
  290. cache, and you have no need to run the caches in such a configuration.
  291. config SH_WRITETHROUGH
  292. bool "Use write-through caching"
  293. help
  294. Selecting this option will configure the caches in write-through
  295. mode, as opposed to the default write-back configuration.
  296. Since there's sill some aliasing issues on SH-4, this option will
  297. unfortunately still require the majority of flushing functions to
  298. be implemented to deal with aliasing.
  299. If unsure, say N.
  300. config SH_OCRAM
  301. bool "Operand Cache RAM (OCRAM) support"
  302. help
  303. Selecting this option will automatically tear down the number of
  304. sets in the dcache by half, which in turn exposes a memory range.
  305. The addresses for the OC RAM base will vary according to the
  306. processor version. Consult vendor documentation for specifics.
  307. If unsure, say N.
  308. endmenu