Kconfig 37 KB

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  1. #
  2. # IDE ATA ATAPI Block device driver configuration
  3. #
  4. # Select HAVE_IDE if IDE is supported
  5. config HAVE_IDE
  6. def_bool n
  7. menuconfig IDE
  8. tristate "ATA/ATAPI/MFM/RLL support"
  9. depends on HAVE_IDE
  10. depends on BLOCK
  11. ---help---
  12. If you say Y here, your kernel will be able to manage low cost mass
  13. storage units such as ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI units. The most common
  14. cases are IDE hard drives and ATAPI CD-ROM drives.
  15. If your system is pure SCSI and doesn't use these interfaces, you
  16. can say N here.
  17. Integrated Disk Electronics (IDE aka ATA-1) is a connecting standard
  18. for mass storage units such as hard disks. It was designed by
  19. Western Digital and Compaq Computer in 1984. It was then named
  20. ST506. Quite a number of disks use the IDE interface.
  21. AT Attachment (ATA) is the superset of the IDE specifications.
  22. ST506 was also called ATA-1.
  23. Fast-IDE is ATA-2 (also named Fast ATA), Enhanced IDE (EIDE) is
  24. ATA-3. It provides support for larger disks (up to 8.4GB by means of
  25. the LBA standard), more disks (4 instead of 2) and for other mass
  26. storage units such as tapes and cdrom. UDMA/33 (aka UltraDMA/33) is
  27. ATA-4 and provides faster (and more CPU friendly) transfer modes
  28. than previous PIO (Programmed processor Input/Output) from previous
  29. ATA/IDE standards by means of fast DMA controllers.
  30. ATA Packet Interface (ATAPI) is a protocol used by EIDE tape and
  31. CD-ROM drives, similar in many respects to the SCSI protocol.
  32. SMART IDE (Self Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) was
  33. designed in order to prevent data corruption and disk crash by
  34. detecting pre hardware failure conditions (heat, access time, and
  35. the like...). Disks built since June 1995 may follow this standard.
  36. The kernel itself doesn't manage this; however there are quite a
  37. number of user programs such as smart that can query the status of
  38. SMART parameters from disk drives.
  39. To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
  40. module will be called ide.
  41. For further information, please read <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt>.
  42. If unsure, say Y.
  43. if IDE
  44. config IDE_MAX_HWIFS
  45. int "Max IDE interfaces"
  46. depends on ALPHA || SUPERH || IA64 || EMBEDDED
  47. range 1 10
  48. default 4
  49. help
  50. This is the maximum number of IDE hardware interfaces that will
  51. be supported by the driver. Make sure it is at least as high as
  52. the number of IDE interfaces in your system.
  53. config BLK_DEV_IDE
  54. tristate "Enhanced IDE/MFM/RLL disk/cdrom/tape/floppy support"
  55. ---help---
  56. If you say Y here, you will use the full-featured IDE driver to
  57. control up to ten ATA/IDE interfaces, each being able to serve a
  58. "master" and a "slave" device, for a total of up to twenty ATA/IDE
  59. disk/cdrom/tape/floppy drives.
  60. Useful information about large (>540 MB) IDE disks, multiple
  61. interfaces, what to do if ATA/IDE devices are not automatically
  62. detected, sound card ATA/IDE ports, module support, and other
  63. topics, is contained in <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt>. For detailed
  64. information about hard drives, consult the Disk-HOWTO and the
  65. Multi-Disk-HOWTO, available from
  66. <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.
  67. To fine-tune ATA/IDE drive/interface parameters for improved
  68. performance, look for the hdparm package at
  69. <ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/system/hardware/>.
  70. To compile this driver as a module, choose M here and read
  71. <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt>. The module will be called ide-mod.
  72. Do not compile this driver as a module if your root file system (the
  73. one containing the directory /) is located on an IDE device.
  74. If you have one or more IDE drives, say Y or M here. If your system
  75. has no IDE drives, or if memory requirements are really tight, you
  76. could say N here, and select the "Old hard disk driver" below
  77. instead to save about 13 KB of memory in the kernel.
  78. if BLK_DEV_IDE
  79. comment "Please see Documentation/ide/ide.txt for help/info on IDE drives"
  80. config IDE_TIMINGS
  81. bool
  82. config IDE_ATAPI
  83. bool
  84. config BLK_DEV_IDE_SATA
  85. bool "Support for SATA (deprecated; conflicts with libata SATA driver)"
  86. default n
  87. ---help---
  88. There are two drivers for Serial ATA controllers.
  89. The main driver, "libata", uses the SCSI subsystem
  90. and supports most modern SATA controllers. In order to use it
  91. you may take a look at "Serial ATA (prod) and Parallel ATA
  92. (experimental) drivers".
  93. The IDE driver (which you are currently configuring) supports
  94. a few first-generation SATA controllers.
  95. In order to eliminate conflicts between the two subsystems,
  96. this config option enables the IDE driver's SATA support.
  97. Normally this is disabled, as it is preferred that libata
  98. supports SATA controllers, and this (IDE) driver supports
  99. PATA controllers.
  100. If unsure, say N.
  101. config BLK_DEV_IDEDISK
  102. tristate "Include IDE/ATA-2 DISK support"
  103. ---help---
  104. This will include enhanced support for MFM/RLL/IDE hard disks. If
  105. you have a MFM/RLL/IDE disk, and there is no special reason to use
  106. the old hard disk driver instead, say Y. If you have an SCSI-only
  107. system, you can say N here.
  108. To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
  109. module will be called ide-disk.
  110. Do not compile this driver as a module if your root file system
  111. (the one containing the directory /) is located on the IDE disk.
  112. If unsure, say Y.
  113. config IDEDISK_MULTI_MODE
  114. bool "Use multiple sector mode for Programmed Input/Output by default"
  115. help
  116. This setting is irrelevant for most IDE disks, with direct memory
  117. access, to which multiple sector mode does not apply. Multiple sector
  118. mode is a feature of most modern IDE hard drives, permitting the
  119. transfer of multiple sectors per Programmed Input/Output interrupt,
  120. rather than the usual one sector per interrupt. When this feature is
  121. enabled, it can reduce operating system overhead for disk Programmed
  122. Input/Output. On some systems, it also can increase the data
  123. throughput of Programmed Input/Output. Some drives, however, seemed
  124. to run slower with multiple sector mode enabled. Some drives claimed
  125. to support multiple sector mode, but lost data at some settings.
  126. Under rare circumstances, such failures could result in massive
  127. filesystem corruption.
  128. If you get the following error, try to say Y here:
  129. hda: set_multmode: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error }
  130. hda: set_multmode: error=0x04 { DriveStatusError }
  131. If in doubt, say N.
  132. config BLK_DEV_IDECS
  133. tristate "PCMCIA IDE support"
  134. depends on PCMCIA
  135. help
  136. Support for Compact Flash cards, outboard IDE disks, tape drives,
  137. and CD-ROM drives connected through a PCMCIA card.
  138. config BLK_DEV_DELKIN
  139. tristate "Cardbus IDE support (Delkin/ASKA/Workbit)"
  140. depends on CARDBUS && PCI
  141. help
  142. Support for Delkin, ASKA, and Workbit Cardbus CompactFlash
  143. Adapters. This may also work for similar SD and XD adapters.
  144. config BLK_DEV_IDECD
  145. tristate "Include IDE/ATAPI CDROM support"
  146. ---help---
  147. If you have a CD-ROM drive using the ATAPI protocol, say Y. ATAPI is
  148. a newer protocol used by IDE CD-ROM and TAPE drives, similar to the
  149. SCSI protocol. Most new CD-ROM drives use ATAPI, including the
  150. NEC-260, Mitsumi FX400, Sony 55E, and just about all non-SCSI
  151. double(2X) or better speed drives.
  152. If you say Y here, the CD-ROM drive will be identified at boot time
  153. along with other IDE devices, as "hdb" or "hdc", or something
  154. similar (check the boot messages with dmesg). If this is your only
  155. CD-ROM drive, you can say N to all other CD-ROM options, but be sure
  156. to say Y or M to "ISO 9660 CD-ROM file system support".
  157. To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
  158. module will be called ide-cd.
  159. config BLK_DEV_IDECD_VERBOSE_ERRORS
  160. bool "Verbose error logging for IDE/ATAPI CDROM driver" if EMBEDDED
  161. depends on BLK_DEV_IDECD
  162. default y
  163. help
  164. Turn this on to have the driver print out the meanings of the
  165. ATAPI error codes. This will use up additional 8kB of kernel-space
  166. memory, though.
  167. config BLK_DEV_IDETAPE
  168. tristate "Include IDE/ATAPI TAPE support"
  169. select IDE_ATAPI
  170. help
  171. If you have an IDE tape drive using the ATAPI protocol, say Y.
  172. ATAPI is a newer protocol used by IDE tape and CD-ROM drives,
  173. similar to the SCSI protocol. If you have an SCSI tape drive
  174. however, you can say N here.
  175. You should also say Y if you have an OnStream DI-30 tape drive; this
  176. will not work with the SCSI protocol, until there is support for the
  177. SC-30 and SC-50 versions.
  178. If you say Y here, the tape drive will be identified at boot time
  179. along with other IDE devices, as "hdb" or "hdc", or something
  180. similar, and will be mapped to a character device such as "ht0"
  181. (check the boot messages with dmesg). Be sure to consult the
  182. <file:drivers/ide/ide-tape.c> and <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt>
  183. files for usage information.
  184. To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
  185. module will be called ide-tape.
  186. config BLK_DEV_IDEFLOPPY
  187. tristate "Include IDE/ATAPI FLOPPY support"
  188. select IDE_ATAPI
  189. ---help---
  190. If you have an IDE floppy drive which uses the ATAPI protocol,
  191. answer Y. ATAPI is a newer protocol used by IDE CD-ROM/tape/floppy
  192. drives, similar to the SCSI protocol.
  193. The LS-120 and the IDE/ATAPI Iomega ZIP drive are also supported by
  194. this driver. For information about jumper settings and the question
  195. of when a ZIP drive uses a partition table, see
  196. <http://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/zip/zip-1.html>.
  197. (ATAPI PD-CD/CDR drives are not supported by this driver; support
  198. for PD-CD/CDR drives is available if you answer Y to
  199. "SCSI emulation support", below).
  200. If you say Y here, the FLOPPY drive will be identified along with
  201. other IDE devices, as "hdb" or "hdc", or something similar (check
  202. the boot messages with dmesg).
  203. To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
  204. module will be called ide-floppy.
  205. config BLK_DEV_IDESCSI
  206. tristate "SCSI emulation support"
  207. depends on SCSI
  208. select IDE_ATAPI
  209. ---help---
  210. WARNING: ide-scsi is no longer needed for cd writing applications!
  211. The 2.6 kernel supports direct writing to ide-cd, which eliminates
  212. the need for ide-scsi + the entire scsi stack just for writing a
  213. cd. The new method is more efficient in every way.
  214. This will provide SCSI host adapter emulation for IDE ATAPI devices,
  215. and will allow you to use a SCSI device driver instead of a native
  216. ATAPI driver.
  217. This is useful if you have an ATAPI device for which no native
  218. driver has been written (for example, an ATAPI PD-CD drive);
  219. you can then use this emulation together with an appropriate SCSI
  220. device driver. In order to do this, say Y here and to "SCSI support"
  221. and "SCSI generic support", below. You must then provide the kernel
  222. command line "hdx=ide-scsi" (try "man bootparam" or see the
  223. documentation of your boot loader (lilo or loadlin) about how to
  224. pass options to the kernel at boot time) for devices if you want the
  225. native EIDE sub-drivers to skip over the native support, so that
  226. this SCSI emulation can be used instead.
  227. Note that this option does NOT allow you to attach SCSI devices to a
  228. box that doesn't have a SCSI host adapter installed.
  229. If both this SCSI emulation and native ATAPI support are compiled
  230. into the kernel, the native support will be used.
  231. config BLK_DEV_IDEACPI
  232. bool "IDE ACPI support"
  233. depends on ACPI
  234. ---help---
  235. Implement ACPI support for generic IDE devices. On modern
  236. machines ACPI support is required to properly handle ACPI S3 states.
  237. config IDE_TASK_IOCTL
  238. bool "IDE Taskfile Access"
  239. help
  240. This is a direct raw access to the media. It is a complex but
  241. elegant solution to test and validate the domain of the hardware and
  242. perform below the driver data recovery if needed. This is the most
  243. basic form of media-forensics.
  244. If you are unsure, say N here.
  245. config IDE_PROC_FS
  246. bool "legacy /proc/ide/ support"
  247. depends on IDE && PROC_FS
  248. default y
  249. help
  250. This option enables support for the various files in
  251. /proc/ide. In Linux 2.6 this has been superseded by
  252. files in sysfs but many legacy applications rely on this.
  253. If unsure say Y.
  254. comment "IDE chipset support/bugfixes"
  255. config IDE_GENERIC
  256. tristate "generic/default IDE chipset support"
  257. depends on ALPHA || X86 || IA64 || M32R || MIPS || PPC32
  258. help
  259. If unsure, say N.
  260. config BLK_DEV_PLATFORM
  261. tristate "Platform driver for IDE interfaces"
  262. help
  263. This is the platform IDE driver, used mostly for Memory Mapped
  264. IDE devices, like Compact Flashes running in True IDE mode.
  265. If unsure, say N.
  266. config BLK_DEV_CMD640
  267. tristate "CMD640 chipset bugfix/support"
  268. depends on X86
  269. ---help---
  270. The CMD-Technologies CMD640 IDE chip is used on many common 486 and
  271. Pentium motherboards, usually in combination with a "Neptune" or
  272. "SiS" chipset. Unfortunately, it has a number of rather nasty
  273. design flaws that can cause severe data corruption under many common
  274. conditions. Say Y here to include code which tries to automatically
  275. detect and correct the problems under Linux. This option also
  276. enables access to the secondary IDE ports in some CMD640 based
  277. systems.
  278. This driver will work automatically in PCI based systems (most new
  279. systems have PCI slots). But if your system uses VESA local bus
  280. (VLB) instead of PCI, you must also supply a kernel boot parameter
  281. to enable the CMD640 bugfix/support: "cmd640.probe_vlb". (Try "man
  282. bootparam" or see the documentation of your boot loader about how to
  283. pass options to the kernel.)
  284. The CMD640 chip is also used on add-in cards by Acculogic, and on
  285. the "CSA-6400E PCI to IDE controller" that some people have. For
  286. details, read <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt>.
  287. config BLK_DEV_CMD640_ENHANCED
  288. bool "CMD640 enhanced support"
  289. depends on BLK_DEV_CMD640
  290. help
  291. This option includes support for setting/autotuning PIO modes and
  292. prefetch on CMD640 IDE interfaces. For details, read
  293. <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt>. If you have a CMD640 IDE interface
  294. and your BIOS does not already do this for you, then say Y here.
  295. Otherwise say N.
  296. config BLK_DEV_IDEPNP
  297. tristate "PNP EIDE support"
  298. depends on PNP
  299. help
  300. If you have a PnP (Plug and Play) compatible EIDE card and
  301. would like the kernel to automatically detect and activate
  302. it, say Y here.
  303. config BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_SFF
  304. bool
  305. if PCI
  306. comment "PCI IDE chipsets support"
  307. config BLK_DEV_IDEPCI
  308. bool
  309. config IDEPCI_PCIBUS_ORDER
  310. bool "Probe IDE PCI devices in the PCI bus order (DEPRECATED)"
  311. depends on BLK_DEV_IDE=y && BLK_DEV_IDEPCI
  312. default y
  313. help
  314. Probe IDE PCI devices in the order in which they appear on the
  315. PCI bus (i.e. 00:1f.1 PCI device before 02:01.0 PCI device)
  316. instead of the order in which IDE PCI host drivers are loaded.
  317. Please note that this method of assuring stable naming of
  318. IDE devices is unreliable and use other means for achieving
  319. it (i.e. udev).
  320. If in doubt, say N.
  321. # TODO: split it on per host driver config options (or module parameters)
  322. config BLK_DEV_OFFBOARD
  323. bool "Boot off-board chipsets first support (DEPRECATED)"
  324. depends on BLK_DEV_IDEPCI && (BLK_DEV_AEC62XX || BLK_DEV_GENERIC || BLK_DEV_HPT34X || BLK_DEV_HPT366 || BLK_DEV_PDC202XX_NEW || BLK_DEV_PDC202XX_OLD || BLK_DEV_TC86C001)
  325. help
  326. Normally, IDE controllers built into the motherboard (on-board
  327. controllers) are assigned to ide0 and ide1 while those on add-in PCI
  328. cards (off-board controllers) are relegated to ide2 and ide3.
  329. Answering Y here will allow you to reverse the situation, with
  330. off-board controllers on ide0/1 and on-board controllers on ide2/3.
  331. This can improve the usability of some boot managers such as lilo
  332. when booting from a drive on an off-board controller.
  333. Note that, if you do this, the order of the hd* devices will be
  334. rearranged which may require modification of fstab and other files.
  335. Please also note that this method of assuring stable naming of
  336. IDE devices is unreliable and use other means for achieving it
  337. (i.e. udev).
  338. If in doubt, say N.
  339. config BLK_DEV_GENERIC
  340. tristate "Generic PCI IDE Chipset Support"
  341. select BLK_DEV_IDEPCI
  342. help
  343. This option provides generic support for various PCI IDE Chipsets
  344. which otherwise might not be supported.
  345. config BLK_DEV_OPTI621
  346. tristate "OPTi 82C621 chipset enhanced support (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  347. depends on EXPERIMENTAL
  348. select BLK_DEV_IDEPCI
  349. help
  350. This is a driver for the OPTi 82C621 EIDE controller.
  351. Please read the comments at the top of <file:drivers/ide/pci/opti621.c>.
  352. config BLK_DEV_RZ1000
  353. tristate "RZ1000 chipset bugfix/support"
  354. depends on X86
  355. select BLK_DEV_IDEPCI
  356. help
  357. The PC-Technologies RZ1000 IDE chip is used on many common 486 and
  358. Pentium motherboards, usually along with the "Neptune" chipset.
  359. Unfortunately, it has a rather nasty design flaw that can cause
  360. severe data corruption under many conditions. Say Y here to include
  361. code which automatically detects and corrects the problem under
  362. Linux. This may slow disk throughput by a few percent, but at least
  363. things will operate 100% reliably.
  364. config BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  365. bool
  366. select BLK_DEV_IDEPCI
  367. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_SFF
  368. config BLK_DEV_AEC62XX
  369. tristate "AEC62XX chipset support"
  370. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  371. help
  372. This driver adds explicit support for Acard AEC62xx (Artop ATP8xx)
  373. IDE controllers. This allows the kernel to change PIO, DMA and UDMA
  374. speeds and to configure the chip to optimum performance.
  375. config BLK_DEV_ALI15X3
  376. tristate "ALI M15x3 chipset support"
  377. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  378. help
  379. This driver ensures (U)DMA support for ALI 1533, 1543 and 1543C
  380. onboard chipsets. It also tests for Simplex mode and enables
  381. normal dual channel support.
  382. Please read the comments at the top of
  383. <file:drivers/ide/pci/alim15x3.c>.
  384. If unsure, say N.
  385. config BLK_DEV_AMD74XX
  386. tristate "AMD and nVidia IDE support"
  387. depends on !ARM
  388. select IDE_TIMINGS
  389. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  390. help
  391. This driver adds explicit support for AMD-7xx and AMD-8111 chips
  392. and also for the nVidia nForce chip. This allows the kernel to
  393. change PIO, DMA and UDMA speeds and to configure the chip to
  394. optimum performance.
  395. config BLK_DEV_ATIIXP
  396. tristate "ATI IXP chipset IDE support"
  397. depends on X86
  398. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  399. help
  400. This driver adds explicit support for ATI IXP chipset.
  401. This allows the kernel to change PIO, DMA and UDMA speeds
  402. and to configure the chip to optimum performance.
  403. Say Y here if you have an ATI IXP chipset IDE controller.
  404. config BLK_DEV_CMD64X
  405. tristate "CMD64{3|6|8|9} chipset support"
  406. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  407. help
  408. Say Y here if you have an IDE controller which uses any of these
  409. chipsets: CMD643, CMD646, or CMD648.
  410. config BLK_DEV_TRIFLEX
  411. tristate "Compaq Triflex IDE support"
  412. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  413. help
  414. Say Y here if you have a Compaq Triflex IDE controller, such
  415. as those commonly found on Compaq Pentium-Pro systems
  416. config BLK_DEV_CY82C693
  417. tristate "CY82C693 chipset support"
  418. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  419. help
  420. This driver adds detection and support for the CY82C693 chipset
  421. used on Digital's PC-Alpha 164SX boards.
  422. config BLK_DEV_CS5520
  423. tristate "Cyrix CS5510/20 MediaGX chipset support (VERY EXPERIMENTAL)"
  424. depends on EXPERIMENTAL
  425. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  426. help
  427. Include support for PIO tuning and virtual DMA on the Cyrix MediaGX
  428. 5510/5520 chipset. This will automatically be detected and
  429. configured if found.
  430. It is safe to say Y to this question.
  431. config BLK_DEV_CS5530
  432. tristate "Cyrix/National Semiconductor CS5530 MediaGX chipset support"
  433. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  434. help
  435. Include support for UDMA on the Cyrix MediaGX 5530 chipset. This
  436. will automatically be detected and configured if found.
  437. It is safe to say Y to this question.
  438. config BLK_DEV_CS5535
  439. tristate "AMD CS5535 chipset support"
  440. depends on X86 && !X86_64
  441. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  442. help
  443. Include support for UDMA on the NSC/AMD CS5535 companion chipset.
  444. This will automatically be detected and configured if found.
  445. It is safe to say Y to this question.
  446. config BLK_DEV_HPT34X
  447. tristate "HPT34X chipset support"
  448. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  449. help
  450. This driver adds up to 4 more EIDE devices sharing a single
  451. interrupt. The HPT343 chipset in its current form is a non-bootable
  452. controller; the HPT345/HPT363 chipset is a bootable (needs BIOS FIX)
  453. PCI UDMA controllers. This driver requires dynamic tuning of the
  454. chipset during the ide-probe at boot time. It is reported to support
  455. DVD II drives, by the manufacturer.
  456. config HPT34X_AUTODMA
  457. bool "HPT34X AUTODMA support (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  458. depends on BLK_DEV_HPT34X && EXPERIMENTAL
  459. help
  460. This is a dangerous thing to attempt currently! Please read the
  461. comments at the top of <file:drivers/ide/pci/hpt34x.c>. If you say Y
  462. here, then say Y to "Use DMA by default when available" as well.
  463. If unsure, say N.
  464. config BLK_DEV_HPT366
  465. tristate "HPT36X/37X chipset support"
  466. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  467. help
  468. HPT366 is an Ultra DMA chipset for ATA-66.
  469. HPT368 is an Ultra DMA chipset for ATA-66 RAID Based.
  470. HPT370 is an Ultra DMA chipset for ATA-100.
  471. HPT372 is an Ultra DMA chipset for ATA-100.
  472. HPT374 is an Ultra DMA chipset for ATA-100.
  473. This driver adds up to 4 more EIDE devices sharing a single
  474. interrupt.
  475. The HPT366 chipset in its current form is bootable. One solution
  476. for this problem are special LILO commands for redirecting the
  477. reference to device 0x80. The other solution is to say Y to "Boot
  478. off-board chipsets first support" (CONFIG_BLK_DEV_OFFBOARD) unless
  479. your mother board has the chipset natively mounted. Regardless one
  480. should use the fore mentioned option and call at LILO.
  481. This driver requires dynamic tuning of the chipset during the
  482. ide-probe at boot. It is reported to support DVD II drives, by the
  483. manufacturer.
  484. config BLK_DEV_JMICRON
  485. tristate "JMicron JMB36x support"
  486. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  487. help
  488. Basic support for the JMicron ATA controllers. For full support
  489. use the libata drivers.
  490. config BLK_DEV_SC1200
  491. tristate "National SCx200 chipset support"
  492. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  493. help
  494. This driver adds support for the on-board IDE controller on the
  495. National SCx200 series of embedded x86 "Geode" systems.
  496. config BLK_DEV_PIIX
  497. tristate "Intel PIIX/ICH chipsets support"
  498. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  499. help
  500. This driver adds explicit support for Intel PIIX and ICH chips.
  501. This allows the kernel to change PIO, DMA and UDMA speeds and to
  502. configure the chip to optimum performance.
  503. config BLK_DEV_IT8213
  504. tristate "IT8213 IDE support"
  505. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  506. help
  507. This driver adds support for the ITE 8213 IDE controller.
  508. config BLK_DEV_IT821X
  509. tristate "IT821X IDE support"
  510. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  511. help
  512. This driver adds support for the ITE 8211 IDE controller and the
  513. IT 8212 IDE RAID controller in both RAID and pass-through mode.
  514. config BLK_DEV_NS87415
  515. tristate "NS87415 chipset support"
  516. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  517. help
  518. This driver adds detection and support for the NS87415 chip
  519. (used mainly on SPARC64 and PA-RISC machines).
  520. Please read the comments at the top of <file:drivers/ide/pci/ns87415.c>.
  521. config BLK_DEV_PDC202XX_OLD
  522. tristate "PROMISE PDC202{46|62|65|67} support"
  523. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  524. help
  525. Promise Ultra33 or PDC20246
  526. Promise Ultra66 or PDC20262
  527. Promise Ultra100 or PDC20265/PDC20267/PDC20268
  528. This driver adds up to 4 more EIDE devices sharing a single
  529. interrupt. This add-on card is a bootable PCI UDMA controller. Since
  530. multiple cards can be installed and there are BIOS ROM problems that
  531. happen if the BIOS revisions of all installed cards (three-max) do
  532. not match, the driver attempts to do dynamic tuning of the chipset
  533. at boot-time for max-speed. Ultra33 BIOS 1.25 or newer is required
  534. for more than one card.
  535. Please read the comments at the top of
  536. <file:drivers/ide/pci/pdc202xx_old.c>.
  537. If unsure, say N.
  538. config BLK_DEV_PDC202XX_NEW
  539. tristate "PROMISE PDC202{68|69|70|71|75|76|77} support"
  540. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  541. config BLK_DEV_SVWKS
  542. tristate "ServerWorks OSB4/CSB5/CSB6 chipsets support"
  543. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  544. help
  545. This driver adds PIO/(U)DMA support for the ServerWorks OSB4/CSB5
  546. chipsets.
  547. config BLK_DEV_SGIIOC4
  548. tristate "Silicon Graphics IOC4 chipset ATA/ATAPI support"
  549. depends on (IA64_SGI_SN2 || IA64_GENERIC) && SGI_IOC4
  550. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  551. help
  552. This driver adds PIO & MultiMode DMA-2 support for the SGI IOC4
  553. chipset, which has one channel and can support two devices.
  554. Please say Y here if you have an Altix System from SGI.
  555. config BLK_DEV_SIIMAGE
  556. tristate "Silicon Image chipset support"
  557. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  558. help
  559. This driver adds PIO/(U)DMA support for the SI CMD680 and SII
  560. 3112 (Serial ATA) chips.
  561. config BLK_DEV_SIS5513
  562. tristate "SiS5513 chipset support"
  563. depends on X86
  564. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  565. help
  566. This driver ensures (U)DMA support for SIS5513 chipset family based
  567. mainboards.
  568. The following chipsets are supported:
  569. ATA16: SiS5511, SiS5513
  570. ATA33: SiS5591, SiS5597, SiS5598, SiS5600
  571. ATA66: SiS530, SiS540, SiS620, SiS630, SiS640
  572. ATA100: SiS635, SiS645, SiS650, SiS730, SiS735, SiS740,
  573. SiS745, SiS750
  574. Please read the comments at the top of <file:drivers/ide/pci/sis5513.c>.
  575. config BLK_DEV_SL82C105
  576. tristate "Winbond SL82c105 support"
  577. depends on (PPC || ARM)
  578. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  579. help
  580. If you have a Winbond SL82c105 IDE controller, say Y here to enable
  581. special configuration for this chip. This is common on various CHRP
  582. motherboards, but could be used elsewhere. If in doubt, say Y.
  583. config BLK_DEV_SLC90E66
  584. tristate "SLC90E66 chipset support"
  585. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  586. help
  587. This driver ensures (U)DMA support for Victory66 SouthBridges for
  588. SMsC with Intel NorthBridges. This is an Ultra66 based chipset.
  589. The nice thing about it is that you can mix Ultra/DMA/PIO devices
  590. and it will handle timing cycles. Since this is an improved
  591. look-a-like to the PIIX4 it should be a nice addition.
  592. Please read the comments at the top of
  593. <file:drivers/ide/pci/slc90e66.c>.
  594. config BLK_DEV_TRM290
  595. tristate "Tekram TRM290 chipset support"
  596. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  597. help
  598. This driver adds support for bus master DMA transfers
  599. using the Tekram TRM290 PCI IDE chip. Volunteers are
  600. needed for further tweaking and development.
  601. Please read the comments at the top of <file:drivers/ide/pci/trm290.c>.
  602. config BLK_DEV_VIA82CXXX
  603. tristate "VIA82CXXX chipset support"
  604. select IDE_TIMINGS
  605. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  606. help
  607. This driver adds explicit support for VIA BusMastering IDE chips.
  608. This allows the kernel to change PIO, DMA and UDMA speeds and to
  609. configure the chip to optimum performance.
  610. config BLK_DEV_TC86C001
  611. tristate "Toshiba TC86C001 support"
  612. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  613. help
  614. This driver adds support for Toshiba TC86C001 GOKU-S chip.
  615. config BLK_DEV_CELLEB
  616. tristate "Toshiba's Cell Reference Set IDE support"
  617. depends on PPC_CELLEB
  618. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  619. help
  620. This driver provides support for the on-board IDE controller on
  621. Toshiba Cell Reference Board.
  622. If unsure, say Y.
  623. endif
  624. config BLK_DEV_IDE_PMAC
  625. tristate "PowerMac on-board IDE support"
  626. depends on PPC_PMAC && IDE=y && BLK_DEV_IDE=y
  627. select IDE_TIMINGS
  628. help
  629. This driver provides support for the on-board IDE controller on
  630. most of the recent Apple Power Macintoshes and PowerBooks.
  631. If unsure, say Y.
  632. config BLK_DEV_IDE_PMAC_ATA100FIRST
  633. bool "Probe on-board ATA/100 (Kauai) first"
  634. depends on BLK_DEV_IDE_PMAC
  635. help
  636. This option will cause the ATA/100 controller found in UniNorth2
  637. based machines (Windtunnel PowerMac, Aluminium PowerBooks, ...)
  638. to be probed before the ATA/66 and ATA/33 controllers. Without
  639. these, those machine used to have the hard disk on hdc and the
  640. CD-ROM on hda. This option changes this to more natural hda for
  641. hard disk and hdc for CD-ROM.
  642. config BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PMAC
  643. bool "PowerMac IDE DMA support"
  644. depends on BLK_DEV_IDE_PMAC
  645. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PCI
  646. help
  647. This option allows the driver for the on-board IDE controller on
  648. Power Macintoshes and PowerBooks to use DMA (direct memory access)
  649. to transfer data to and from memory. Saying Y is safe and improves
  650. performance.
  651. config BLK_DEV_IDE_SWARM
  652. tristate "IDE for Sibyte evaluation boards"
  653. depends on SIBYTE_SB1xxx_SOC
  654. config BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX
  655. bool "IDE for AMD Alchemy Au1200"
  656. depends on SOC_AU1200
  657. choice
  658. prompt "IDE Mode for AMD Alchemy Au1200"
  659. default CONFIG_BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX_PIO_DBDMA
  660. depends on SOC_AU1200 && BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX
  661. config BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX_PIO_DBDMA
  662. bool "PIO+DbDMA IDE for AMD Alchemy Au1200"
  663. config BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX_MDMA2_DBDMA
  664. bool "MDMA2+DbDMA IDE for AMD Alchemy Au1200"
  665. depends on SOC_AU1200 && BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX
  666. endchoice
  667. config BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX_SEQTS_PER_RQ
  668. int "Maximum transfer size (KB) per request (up to 128)"
  669. default "128"
  670. depends on BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX
  671. config IDE_ARM
  672. tristate "ARM IDE support"
  673. depends on ARM && (ARCH_CLPS7500 || ARCH_RPC || ARCH_SHARK)
  674. default y
  675. config BLK_DEV_IDE_ICSIDE
  676. tristate "ICS IDE interface support"
  677. depends on ARM && ARCH_ACORN
  678. help
  679. On Acorn systems, say Y here if you wish to use the ICS IDE
  680. interface card. This is not required for ICS partition support.
  681. If you are unsure, say N to this.
  682. config BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_ICS
  683. bool "ICS DMA support"
  684. depends on BLK_DEV_IDE_ICSIDE
  685. help
  686. Say Y here if you want to add DMA (Direct Memory Access) support to
  687. the ICS IDE driver.
  688. config BLK_DEV_IDE_RAPIDE
  689. tristate "RapIDE interface support"
  690. depends on ARM && ARCH_ACORN
  691. help
  692. Say Y here if you want to support the Yellowstone RapIDE controller
  693. manufactured for use with Acorn computers.
  694. config IDE_H8300
  695. tristate "H8300 IDE support"
  696. depends on H8300
  697. default y
  698. help
  699. Enables the H8300 IDE driver.
  700. config BLK_DEV_GAYLE
  701. tristate "Amiga Gayle IDE interface support"
  702. depends on AMIGA
  703. help
  704. This is the IDE driver for the Amiga Gayle IDE interface. It supports
  705. both the `A1200 style' and `A4000 style' of the Gayle IDE interface,
  706. This includes on-board IDE interfaces on some Amiga models (A600,
  707. A1200, A4000, and A4000T), and IDE interfaces on the Zorro expansion
  708. bus (M-Tech E-Matrix 530 expansion card).
  709. Say Y if you have an Amiga with a Gayle IDE interface and want to use
  710. IDE devices (hard disks, CD-ROM drives, etc.) that are connected to
  711. it.
  712. Note that you also have to enable Zorro bus support if you want to
  713. use Gayle IDE interfaces on the Zorro expansion bus.
  714. config BLK_DEV_IDEDOUBLER
  715. bool "Amiga IDE Doubler support (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  716. depends on BLK_DEV_GAYLE && EXPERIMENTAL
  717. ---help---
  718. This feature provides support for the so-called `IDE doublers' (made
  719. by various manufacturers, e.g. Eyetech) that can be connected to
  720. the on-board IDE interface of some Amiga models. Using such an IDE
  721. doubler, you can connect up to four instead of two IDE devices to
  722. the Amiga's on-board IDE interface.
  723. Note that the normal Amiga Gayle IDE driver may not work correctly
  724. if you have an IDE doubler and don't enable this feature!
  725. Say Y if you have an IDE doubler. The feature is enabled at kernel
  726. runtime using the "gayle.doubler" kernel boot parameter.
  727. config BLK_DEV_BUDDHA
  728. tristate "Buddha/Catweasel/X-Surf IDE interface support (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  729. depends on ZORRO && EXPERIMENTAL
  730. help
  731. This is the IDE driver for the IDE interfaces on the Buddha, Catweasel
  732. and X-Surf expansion boards. It supports up to two interfaces on the
  733. Buddha, three on the Catweasel and two on the X-Surf.
  734. Say Y if you have a Buddha or Catweasel expansion board and want to
  735. use IDE devices (hard disks, CD-ROM drives, etc.) that are connected
  736. to one of its IDE interfaces.
  737. config BLK_DEV_FALCON_IDE
  738. tristate "Falcon IDE interface support"
  739. depends on ATARI
  740. help
  741. This is the IDE driver for the on-board IDE interface on the Atari
  742. Falcon. Say Y if you have a Falcon and want to use IDE devices (hard
  743. disks, CD-ROM drives, etc.) that are connected to the on-board IDE
  744. interface.
  745. config BLK_DEV_MAC_IDE
  746. tristate "Macintosh Quadra/Powerbook IDE interface support"
  747. depends on MAC
  748. help
  749. This is the IDE driver for the on-board IDE interface on some m68k
  750. Macintosh models. It supports both the `Quadra style' (used in
  751. Quadra/ Centris 630 and Performa 588 models) and `Powerbook style'
  752. (used in the Powerbook 150 and 190 models) IDE interface.
  753. Say Y if you have such an Macintosh model and want to use IDE
  754. devices (hard disks, CD-ROM drives, etc.) that are connected to the
  755. on-board IDE interface.
  756. config BLK_DEV_Q40IDE
  757. tristate "Q40/Q60 IDE interface support"
  758. depends on Q40
  759. help
  760. Enable the on-board IDE controller in the Q40/Q60. This should
  761. normally be on; disable it only if you are running a custom hard
  762. drive subsystem through an expansion card.
  763. config BLK_DEV_PALMCHIP_BK3710
  764. tristate "Palmchip bk3710 IDE controller support"
  765. depends on ARCH_DAVINCI
  766. select IDE_TIMINGS
  767. select BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_SFF
  768. help
  769. Say Y here if you want to support the onchip IDE controller on the
  770. TI DaVinci SoC
  771. config BLK_DEV_MPC8xx_IDE
  772. tristate "MPC8xx IDE support"
  773. depends on 8xx && (LWMON || IVMS8 || IVML24 || TQM8xxL) && IDE=y && BLK_DEV_IDE=y && !PPC_MERGE
  774. help
  775. This option provides support for IDE on Motorola MPC8xx Systems.
  776. Please see 'Type of MPC8xx IDE interface' for details.
  777. If unsure, say N.
  778. choice
  779. prompt "Type of MPC8xx IDE interface"
  780. depends on BLK_DEV_MPC8xx_IDE
  781. default IDE_8xx_PCCARD
  782. config IDE_8xx_PCCARD
  783. bool "8xx_PCCARD"
  784. ---help---
  785. Select how the IDE devices are connected to the MPC8xx system:
  786. 8xx_PCCARD uses the 8xx internal PCMCIA interface in combination
  787. with a PC Card (e.g. ARGOSY portable Hard Disk Adapter),
  788. ATA PC Card HDDs or ATA PC Flash Cards (example: TQM8xxL
  789. systems)
  790. 8xx_DIRECT is used for directly connected IDE devices using the 8xx
  791. internal PCMCIA interface (example: IVMS8 systems)
  792. EXT_DIRECT is used for IDE devices directly connected to the 8xx
  793. bus using some glue logic, but _not_ the 8xx internal
  794. PCMCIA interface (example: IDIF860 systems)
  795. config IDE_8xx_DIRECT
  796. bool "8xx_DIRECT"
  797. config IDE_EXT_DIRECT
  798. bool "EXT_DIRECT"
  799. endchoice
  800. # no isa -> no vlb
  801. if ISA && (ALPHA || X86 || MIPS)
  802. comment "Other IDE chipsets support"
  803. comment "Note: most of these also require special kernel boot parameters"
  804. config BLK_DEV_4DRIVES
  805. tristate "Generic 4 drives/port support"
  806. help
  807. Certain older chipsets, including the Tekram 690CD, use a single set
  808. of I/O ports at 0x1f0 to control up to four drives, instead of the
  809. customary two drives per port. Support for this can be enabled at
  810. runtime using the "ide-4drives.probe" kernel boot parameter if you
  811. say Y here.
  812. config BLK_DEV_ALI14XX
  813. tristate "ALI M14xx support"
  814. select IDE_TIMINGS
  815. help
  816. This driver is enabled at runtime using the "ali14xx.probe" kernel
  817. boot parameter. It enables support for the secondary IDE interface
  818. of the ALI M1439/1443/1445/1487/1489 chipsets, and permits faster
  819. I/O speeds to be set as well.
  820. See the files <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt> and
  821. <file:drivers/ide/legacy/ali14xx.c> for more info.
  822. config BLK_DEV_DTC2278
  823. tristate "DTC-2278 support"
  824. help
  825. This driver is enabled at runtime using the "dtc2278.probe" kernel
  826. boot parameter. It enables support for the secondary IDE interface
  827. of the DTC-2278 card, and permits faster I/O speeds to be set as
  828. well. See the <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt> and
  829. <file:drivers/ide/legacy/dtc2278.c> files for more info.
  830. config BLK_DEV_HT6560B
  831. tristate "Holtek HT6560B support"
  832. help
  833. This driver is enabled at runtime using the "ht6560b.probe" kernel
  834. boot parameter. It enables support for the secondary IDE interface
  835. of the Holtek card, and permits faster I/O speeds to be set as well.
  836. See the <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt> and
  837. <file:drivers/ide/legacy/ht6560b.c> files for more info.
  838. config BLK_DEV_QD65XX
  839. tristate "QDI QD65xx support"
  840. help
  841. This driver is enabled at runtime using the "qd65xx.probe" kernel
  842. boot parameter. It permits faster I/O speeds to be set. See the
  843. <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt> and <file:drivers/ide/legacy/qd65xx.c>
  844. for more info.
  845. config BLK_DEV_UMC8672
  846. tristate "UMC-8672 support"
  847. help
  848. This driver is enabled at runtime using the "umc8672.probe" kernel
  849. boot parameter. It enables support for the secondary IDE interface
  850. of the UMC-8672, and permits faster I/O speeds to be set as well.
  851. See the files <file:Documentation/ide/ide.txt> and
  852. <file:drivers/ide/legacy/umc8672.c> for more info.
  853. endif
  854. config BLK_DEV_IDEDMA
  855. def_bool BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_SFF || BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_PMAC || \
  856. BLK_DEV_IDEDMA_ICS || BLK_DEV_IDE_AU1XXX_MDMA2_DBDMA
  857. endif
  858. config BLK_DEV_HD_ONLY
  859. bool "Old hard disk (MFM/RLL/IDE) driver"
  860. depends on !ARM || ARCH_RPC || ARCH_SHARK || BROKEN
  861. help
  862. There are two drivers for MFM/RLL/IDE hard disks. Most people use
  863. the newer enhanced driver, but this old one is still around for two
  864. reasons. Some older systems have strange timing problems and seem to
  865. work only with the old driver (which itself does not work with some
  866. newer systems). The other reason is that the old driver is smaller,
  867. since it lacks the enhanced functionality of the new one. This makes
  868. it a good choice for systems with very tight memory restrictions, or
  869. for systems with only older MFM/RLL/ESDI drives. Choosing the old
  870. driver can save 13 KB or so of kernel memory.
  871. If you want to use this driver together with the new one you have
  872. to use "hda=noprobe hdb=noprobe" kernel parameters to prevent the new
  873. driver from probing the primary interface.
  874. If you are unsure, then just choose the Enhanced IDE/MFM/RLL driver
  875. instead of this one. For more detailed information, read the
  876. Disk-HOWTO, available from
  877. <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.
  878. config BLK_DEV_HD
  879. def_bool BLK_DEV_HD_ONLY
  880. endif # IDE