Kconfig 9.0 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344
  1. menu "Platform support"
  2. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/Kconfig"
  3. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/pseries/Kconfig"
  4. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/chrp/Kconfig"
  5. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/512x/Kconfig"
  6. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/52xx/Kconfig"
  7. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/powermac/Kconfig"
  8. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/maple/Kconfig"
  9. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/pasemi/Kconfig"
  10. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/ps3/Kconfig"
  11. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/cell/Kconfig"
  12. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/8xx/Kconfig"
  13. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/82xx/Kconfig"
  14. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/83xx/Kconfig"
  15. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/85xx/Kconfig"
  16. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/86xx/Kconfig"
  17. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/embedded6xx/Kconfig"
  18. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/44x/Kconfig"
  19. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig"
  20. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/amigaone/Kconfig"
  21. source "arch/powerpc/platforms/wsp/Kconfig"
  22. config KVM_GUEST
  23. bool "KVM Guest support"
  24. default n
  25. select EPAPR_PARAVIRT
  26. ---help---
  27. This option enables various optimizations for running under the KVM
  28. hypervisor. Overhead for the kernel when not running inside KVM should
  29. be minimal.
  30. In case of doubt, say Y
  31. config EPAPR_PARAVIRT
  32. bool "ePAPR para-virtualization support"
  33. default n
  34. help
  35. Enables ePAPR para-virtualization support for guests.
  36. In case of doubt, say Y
  37. config PPC_NATIVE
  38. bool
  39. depends on 6xx || PPC64
  40. help
  41. Support for running natively on the hardware, i.e. without
  42. a hypervisor. This option is not user-selectable but should
  43. be selected by all platforms that need it.
  44. config PPC_OF_BOOT_TRAMPOLINE
  45. bool "Support booting from Open Firmware or yaboot"
  46. depends on 6xx || PPC64
  47. default y
  48. help
  49. Support from booting from Open Firmware or yaboot using an
  50. Open Firmware client interface. This enables the kernel to
  51. communicate with open firmware to retrieve system information
  52. such as the device tree.
  53. In case of doubt, say Y
  54. config UDBG_RTAS_CONSOLE
  55. bool "RTAS based debug console"
  56. depends on PPC_RTAS
  57. default n
  58. config PPC_SMP_MUXED_IPI
  59. bool
  60. help
  61. Select this opton if your platform supports SMP and your
  62. interrupt controller provides less than 4 interrupts to each
  63. cpu. This will enable the generic code to multiplex the 4
  64. messages on to one ipi.
  65. config PPC_UDBG_BEAT
  66. bool "BEAT based debug console"
  67. depends on PPC_CELLEB
  68. default n
  69. config IPIC
  70. bool
  71. default n
  72. config MPIC
  73. bool
  74. default n
  75. config PPC_EPAPR_HV_PIC
  76. bool
  77. default n
  78. select EPAPR_PARAVIRT
  79. config MPIC_WEIRD
  80. bool
  81. default n
  82. config MPIC_MSGR
  83. bool "MPIC message register support"
  84. depends on MPIC
  85. default n
  86. help
  87. Enables support for the MPIC message registers. These
  88. registers are used for inter-processor communication.
  89. config PPC_I8259
  90. bool
  91. default n
  92. config U3_DART
  93. bool
  94. depends on PPC64
  95. default n
  96. config PPC_RTAS
  97. bool
  98. default n
  99. config RTAS_ERROR_LOGGING
  100. bool
  101. depends on PPC_RTAS
  102. default n
  103. config PPC_RTAS_DAEMON
  104. bool
  105. depends on PPC_RTAS
  106. default n
  107. config RTAS_PROC
  108. bool "Proc interface to RTAS"
  109. depends on PPC_RTAS && PROC_FS
  110. default y
  111. config RTAS_FLASH
  112. tristate "Firmware flash interface"
  113. depends on PPC64 && RTAS_PROC
  114. config MMIO_NVRAM
  115. bool
  116. default n
  117. config MPIC_U3_HT_IRQS
  118. bool
  119. default n
  120. config MPIC_BROKEN_REGREAD
  121. bool
  122. depends on MPIC
  123. help
  124. This option enables a MPIC driver workaround for some chips
  125. that have a bug that causes some interrupt source information
  126. to not read back properly. It is safe to use on other chips as
  127. well, but enabling it uses about 8KB of memory to keep copies
  128. of the register contents in software.
  129. config IBMVIO
  130. depends on PPC_PSERIES
  131. bool
  132. default y
  133. config IBMEBUS
  134. depends on PPC_PSERIES
  135. bool "Support for GX bus based adapters"
  136. help
  137. Bus device driver for GX bus based adapters.
  138. config PPC_MPC106
  139. bool
  140. default n
  141. config PPC_970_NAP
  142. bool
  143. default n
  144. config PPC_P7_NAP
  145. bool
  146. default n
  147. config PPC_INDIRECT_IO
  148. bool
  149. select GENERIC_IOMAP
  150. config PPC_INDIRECT_PIO
  151. bool
  152. select PPC_INDIRECT_IO
  153. config PPC_INDIRECT_MMIO
  154. bool
  155. select PPC_INDIRECT_IO
  156. config PPC_IO_WORKAROUNDS
  157. bool
  158. source "drivers/cpufreq/Kconfig"
  159. menu "CPUIdle driver"
  160. source "drivers/cpuidle/Kconfig"
  161. endmenu
  162. config PPC601_SYNC_FIX
  163. bool "Workarounds for PPC601 bugs"
  164. depends on 6xx && PPC_PMAC
  165. help
  166. Some versions of the PPC601 (the first PowerPC chip) have bugs which
  167. mean that extra synchronization instructions are required near
  168. certain instructions, typically those that make major changes to the
  169. CPU state. These extra instructions reduce performance slightly.
  170. If you say N here, these extra instructions will not be included,
  171. resulting in a kernel which will run faster but may not run at all
  172. on some systems with the PPC601 chip.
  173. If in doubt, say Y here.
  174. config TAU
  175. bool "On-chip CPU temperature sensor support"
  176. depends on 6xx
  177. help
  178. G3 and G4 processors have an on-chip temperature sensor called the
  179. 'Thermal Assist Unit (TAU)', which, in theory, can measure the on-die
  180. temperature within 2-4 degrees Celsius. This option shows the current
  181. on-die temperature in /proc/cpuinfo if the cpu supports it.
  182. Unfortunately, on some chip revisions, this sensor is very inaccurate
  183. and in many cases, does not work at all, so don't assume the cpu
  184. temp is actually what /proc/cpuinfo says it is.
  185. config TAU_INT
  186. bool "Interrupt driven TAU driver (DANGEROUS)"
  187. depends on TAU
  188. ---help---
  189. The TAU supports an interrupt driven mode which causes an interrupt
  190. whenever the temperature goes out of range. This is the fastest way
  191. to get notified the temp has exceeded a range. With this option off,
  192. a timer is used to re-check the temperature periodically.
  193. However, on some cpus it appears that the TAU interrupt hardware
  194. is buggy and can cause a situation which would lead unexplained hard
  195. lockups.
  196. Unless you are extending the TAU driver, or enjoy kernel/hardware
  197. debugging, leave this option off.
  198. config TAU_AVERAGE
  199. bool "Average high and low temp"
  200. depends on TAU
  201. ---help---
  202. The TAU hardware can compare the temperature to an upper and lower
  203. bound. The default behavior is to show both the upper and lower
  204. bound in /proc/cpuinfo. If the range is large, the temperature is
  205. either changing a lot, or the TAU hardware is broken (likely on some
  206. G4's). If the range is small (around 4 degrees), the temperature is
  207. relatively stable. If you say Y here, a single temperature value,
  208. halfway between the upper and lower bounds, will be reported in
  209. /proc/cpuinfo.
  210. If in doubt, say N here.
  211. config QUICC_ENGINE
  212. bool "Freescale QUICC Engine (QE) Support"
  213. depends on FSL_SOC && PPC32
  214. select PPC_LIB_RHEAP
  215. select CRC32
  216. help
  217. The QUICC Engine (QE) is a new generation of communications
  218. coprocessors on Freescale embedded CPUs (akin to CPM in older chips).
  219. Selecting this option means that you wish to build a kernel
  220. for a machine with a QE coprocessor.
  221. config QE_GPIO
  222. bool "QE GPIO support"
  223. depends on QUICC_ENGINE
  224. select ARCH_REQUIRE_GPIOLIB
  225. help
  226. Say Y here if you're going to use hardware that connects to the
  227. QE GPIOs.
  228. config CPM2
  229. bool "Enable support for the CPM2 (Communications Processor Module)"
  230. depends on (FSL_SOC_BOOKE && PPC32) || 8260
  231. select CPM
  232. select PPC_LIB_RHEAP
  233. select PPC_PCI_CHOICE
  234. select ARCH_REQUIRE_GPIOLIB
  235. help
  236. The CPM2 (Communications Processor Module) is a coprocessor on
  237. embedded CPUs made by Freescale. Selecting this option means that
  238. you wish to build a kernel for a machine with a CPM2 coprocessor
  239. on it (826x, 827x, 8560).
  240. config AXON_RAM
  241. tristate "Axon DDR2 memory device driver"
  242. depends on PPC_IBM_CELL_BLADE && BLOCK
  243. default m
  244. help
  245. It registers one block device per Axon's DDR2 memory bank found
  246. on a system. Block devices are called axonram?, their major and
  247. minor numbers are available in /proc/devices, /proc/partitions or
  248. in /sys/block/axonram?/dev.
  249. config FSL_ULI1575
  250. bool
  251. default n
  252. select GENERIC_ISA_DMA
  253. help
  254. Supports for the ULI1575 PCIe south bridge that exists on some
  255. Freescale reference boards. The boards all use the ULI in pretty
  256. much the same way.
  257. config CPM
  258. bool
  259. config OF_RTC
  260. bool
  261. help
  262. Uses information from the OF or flattened device tree to instantiate
  263. platform devices for direct mapped RTC chips like the DS1742 or DS1743.
  264. config SIMPLE_GPIO
  265. bool "Support for simple, memory-mapped GPIO controllers"
  266. depends on PPC
  267. select ARCH_REQUIRE_GPIOLIB
  268. help
  269. Say Y here to support simple, memory-mapped GPIO controllers.
  270. These are usually BCSRs used to control board's switches, LEDs,
  271. chip-selects, Ethernet/USB PHY's power and various other small
  272. on-board peripherals.
  273. config MCU_MPC8349EMITX
  274. bool "MPC8349E-mITX MCU driver"
  275. depends on I2C=y && PPC_83xx
  276. select ARCH_REQUIRE_GPIOLIB
  277. help
  278. Say Y here to enable soft power-off functionality on the Freescale
  279. boards with the MPC8349E-mITX-compatible MCU chips. This driver will
  280. also register MCU GPIOs with the generic GPIO API, so you'll able
  281. to use MCU pins as GPIOs.
  282. config XILINX_PCI
  283. bool "Xilinx PCI host bridge support"
  284. depends on PCI && XILINX_VIRTEX
  285. endmenu