blob: a11f27c4266a6758387b9bd9643cd8819ee22c2c [file] [log] [blame]
Sam Ravnborgdaa93fa2007-11-12 20:54:30 +01001# Select 32 or 64 bit
2config 64BIT
Sam Ravnborg68409992007-11-17 15:37:31 +01003 bool "64-bit kernel" if ARCH = "x86"
David Woodhouseffee0de2012-12-20 21:51:55 +00004 default ARCH != "i386"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01005 ---help---
Sam Ravnborgdaa93fa2007-11-12 20:54:30 +01006 Say yes to build a 64-bit kernel - formerly known as x86_64
7 Say no to build a 32-bit kernel - formerly known as i386
8
9config X86_32
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +010010 def_bool y
11 depends on !64BIT
Russell King82491452011-05-08 18:55:19 +010012 select CLKSRC_I8253
Catalin Marinasaf1839e2012-10-08 16:28:08 -070013 select HAVE_UID16
Sam Ravnborgdaa93fa2007-11-12 20:54:30 +010014
15config X86_64
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +010016 def_bool y
17 depends on 64BIT
Alessandro Rubini4692d772012-04-04 19:39:58 +020018 select X86_DEV_DMA_OPS
Linus Torvaldsbc08b442013-09-02 12:12:15 -070019 select ARCH_USE_CMPXCHG_LOCKREF
Sam Ravnborg1032c0b2007-11-06 21:35:08 +010020
21### Arch settings
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +010022config X86
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +010023 def_bool y
Hanjun Guo46ba51e2014-07-18 18:02:54 +080024 select ARCH_MIGHT_HAVE_ACPI_PDC if ACPI
Stephen Boyd446f24d2013-04-30 15:28:42 -070025 select ARCH_HAS_DEBUG_STRICT_USER_COPY_CHECKS
Mark Salter77fbbc82013-10-07 22:18:07 -040026 select ARCH_MIGHT_HAVE_PC_PARPORT
Mark Salter5e2c18c2014-01-01 11:34:16 -080027 select ARCH_MIGHT_HAVE_PC_SERIO
David Woodhousee17c6d52008-06-17 12:19:34 +010028 select HAVE_AOUT if X86_32
Ingo Molnara5574cf2008-05-05 23:19:50 +020029 select HAVE_UNSTABLE_SCHED_CLOCK
Mel Gorman4468dd72014-06-04 16:06:29 -070030 select ARCH_SUPPORTS_NUMA_BALANCING if X86_64
Peter Zijlstrabe5e6102013-11-18 18:27:06 +010031 select ARCH_SUPPORTS_INT128 if X86_64
Peter Zijlstracbee9f82012-10-25 14:16:43 +020032 select ARCH_WANTS_PROT_NUMA_PROT_NONE
Sam Ravnborgec7748b2008-02-09 10:46:40 +010033 select HAVE_IDE
Mathieu Desnoyers42d4b832008-02-02 15:10:34 -050034 select HAVE_OPROFILE
Ralf Baechle8761f1a2011-06-01 19:05:09 +010035 select HAVE_PCSPKR_PLATFORM
Peter Zijlstracc2067a2010-11-16 21:49:01 +010036 select HAVE_PERF_EVENTS
Rik van Riel28b2ee22008-07-23 21:27:05 -070037 select HAVE_IOREMAP_PROT
Mathieu Desnoyers3f550092008-02-02 15:10:35 -050038 select HAVE_KPROBES
Yinghai Lu72d7c3b2010-08-25 13:39:17 -070039 select HAVE_MEMBLOCK
Tejun Heo0608f702011-07-14 11:44:23 +020040 select HAVE_MEMBLOCK_NODE_MAP
Tejun Heoc378ddd2011-07-14 11:46:03 +020041 select ARCH_DISCARD_MEMBLOCK
Ingo Molnar1f972762008-07-26 13:52:50 +020042 select ARCH_WANT_OPTIONAL_GPIOLIB
Ingo Molnarda4276b2009-01-07 11:05:10 +010043 select ARCH_WANT_FRAME_POINTERS
FUJITA Tomonori7c095e42009-06-17 16:28:12 -070044 select HAVE_DMA_ATTRS
Akinobu Mita9c5a3622014-06-04 16:06:50 -070045 select HAVE_DMA_CONTIGUOUS
Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli9edddaa2008-03-04 14:28:37 -080046 select HAVE_KRETPROBES
Mark Salter5b7c73e2014-04-07 15:39:49 -070047 select GENERIC_EARLY_IOREMAP
Masami Hiramatsuc0f7ac32010-02-25 08:34:46 -050048 select HAVE_OPTPROBES
Masami Hiramatsue7dbfe32012-09-28 17:15:20 +090049 select HAVE_KPROBES_ON_FTRACE
Steven Rostedte4b2b882008-08-14 15:45:11 -040050 select HAVE_FTRACE_MCOUNT_RECORD
Steven Rostedtd57c5d52011-02-09 13:32:18 -050051 select HAVE_FENTRY if X86_64
Steven Rostedtcf4db252010-10-14 23:32:44 -040052 select HAVE_C_RECORDMCOUNT
Steven Rostedt677aa9f2008-05-17 00:01:36 -040053 select HAVE_DYNAMIC_FTRACE
Masami Hiramatsu06aeaae2012-09-28 17:15:17 +090054 select HAVE_DYNAMIC_FTRACE_WITH_REGS
Steven Rostedt606576c2008-10-06 19:06:12 -040055 select HAVE_FUNCTION_TRACER
Frederic Weisbecker48d68b22008-12-02 00:20:39 +010056 select HAVE_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER
Steven Rostedt71e308a2009-06-18 12:45:08 -040057 select HAVE_FUNCTION_GRAPH_FP_TEST
Josh Stone66700002009-08-24 14:43:11 -070058 select HAVE_SYSCALL_TRACEPOINTS
Catalin Marinas7ac57a82012-10-08 16:28:16 -070059 select SYSCTL_EXCEPTION_TRACE
Ingo Molnare0ec9482009-01-27 17:01:14 +010060 select HAVE_KVM
Ingo Molnar49793b02009-01-27 17:02:29 +010061 select HAVE_ARCH_KGDB
Roland McGrath99bbc4b2008-04-20 14:35:12 -070062 select HAVE_ARCH_TRACEHOOK
Dmitry Baryshkov323ec002008-06-29 14:19:31 +040063 select HAVE_GENERIC_DMA_COHERENT if X86_32
Johannes Berg58340a02008-07-25 01:45:33 -070064 select HAVE_EFFICIENT_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
Török Edwin8d264872008-11-23 12:39:08 +020065 select USER_STACKTRACE_SUPPORT
Heiko Carstensf850c30c2010-02-10 17:25:17 +010066 select HAVE_REGS_AND_STACK_ACCESS_API
Joerg Roedel2118d0c2009-01-09 15:13:15 +010067 select HAVE_DMA_API_DEBUG
H. Peter Anvin2e9f3bd2009-01-04 15:41:25 -080068 select HAVE_KERNEL_GZIP
69 select HAVE_KERNEL_BZIP2
70 select HAVE_KERNEL_LZMA
Lasse Collin30314802011-01-12 17:01:24 -080071 select HAVE_KERNEL_XZ
Albin Tonnerre13510992010-01-08 14:42:45 -080072 select HAVE_KERNEL_LZO
Kyungsik Leef9b493a2013-07-08 16:01:48 -070073 select HAVE_KERNEL_LZ4
K.Prasad0067f122009-06-01 23:43:57 +053074 select HAVE_HW_BREAKPOINT
Frederic Weisbecker01027522010-04-11 18:55:56 +020075 select HAVE_MIXED_BREAKPOINTS_REGS
Frederic Weisbecker99e8c5a2009-12-17 01:33:54 +010076 select PERF_EVENTS
Frederic Weisbeckerc01d4322010-05-15 22:57:48 +020077 select HAVE_PERF_EVENTS_NMI
Jiri Olsac5e63192012-08-07 15:20:36 +020078 select HAVE_PERF_REGS
Jiri Olsac5ebced2012-08-07 15:20:40 +020079 select HAVE_PERF_USER_STACK_DUMP
Catalin Marinasb69ec422012-10-08 16:28:11 -070080 select HAVE_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK
Frederic Weisbecker99e8c5a2009-12-17 01:33:54 +010081 select ANON_INODES
H. Peter Anvineb068e72012-11-28 11:50:23 -080082 select HAVE_ALIGNED_STRUCT_PAGE if SLUB
83 select HAVE_CMPXCHG_LOCAL
Heiko Carstens25654092012-01-12 17:17:33 -080084 select HAVE_CMPXCHG_DOUBLE
Pekka Enberg0a4af3b2009-02-26 21:38:56 +020085 select HAVE_ARCH_KMEMCHECK
Avi Kivity7c68af62009-09-19 09:40:22 +030086 select HAVE_USER_RETURN_NOTIFIER
David Daneye39f5602012-01-10 15:10:21 -080087 select ARCH_BINFMT_ELF_RANDOMIZE_PIE
Steven Rostedt46eb3b62010-09-22 23:10:23 -040088 select HAVE_ARCH_JUMP_LABEL
Catalin Marinas74634492012-07-30 14:41:09 -070089 select ARCH_HAS_ATOMIC64_DEC_IF_POSITIVE
Yinghai Lu141d55e2011-10-12 11:53:17 -070090 select SPARSE_IRQ
Jan Beulichc49aa5b2011-03-08 09:24:26 +000091 select GENERIC_FIND_FIRST_BIT
Thomas Gleixner3bb98082010-09-27 12:46:02 +000092 select GENERIC_IRQ_PROBE
93 select GENERIC_PENDING_IRQ if SMP
Thomas Gleixner517e4982010-12-16 17:59:57 +010094 select GENERIC_IRQ_SHOW
Martin Schwidefskyd1748302011-08-23 15:29:42 +020095 select GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS_MIN_ADJUST
Thomas Gleixnerc01858082011-02-07 02:24:08 +010096 select IRQ_FORCED_THREADING
Sam Ravnborge47b65b2012-05-21 20:45:37 +020097 select HAVE_BPF_JIT if X86_64
Gerald Schaefer15626062012-10-08 16:30:04 -070098 select HAVE_ARCH_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE
Laura Abbott308c09f2014-08-08 14:23:25 -070099 select ARCH_HAS_SG_CHAIN
Thomas Gleixner0a779c52011-06-09 13:08:26 +0000100 select CLKEVT_I8253
Huang Yingdf013ff2011-07-13 13:14:22 +0800101 select ARCH_HAVE_NMI_SAFE_CMPXCHG
Michael S. Tsirkin4673ca82011-11-24 14:54:28 +0200102 select GENERIC_IOMAP
Linus Torvaldse419b4c2012-05-03 10:16:43 -0700103 select DCACHE_WORD_ACCESS
Thomas Gleixner7eb43a62012-04-20 13:05:48 +0000104 select GENERIC_SMP_IDLE_THREAD
Will Deaconc1d7e012012-07-30 14:42:46 -0700105 select ARCH_WANT_IPC_PARSE_VERSION if X86_32
Will Drewryc6cfbeb2012-04-12 16:48:03 -0500106 select HAVE_ARCH_SECCOMP_FILTER
David Daney8b5ad472012-04-24 11:23:15 -0700107 select BUILDTIME_EXTABLE_SORT
Thomas Gleixnerbdebaf82012-05-18 16:45:44 +0000108 select GENERIC_CMOS_UPDATE
Cyrill Gorcunov2bf01f92014-06-04 16:08:16 -0700109 select HAVE_ARCH_SOFT_DIRTY if X86_64
Thomas Gleixnerbdebaf82012-05-18 16:45:44 +0000110 select CLOCKSOURCE_WATCHDOG
111 select GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS
Stefani Seiboldd2312e32014-03-17 23:22:01 +0100112 select ARCH_CLOCKSOURCE_DATA
Thomas Gleixner09ec5442014-07-16 21:05:12 +0000113 select CLOCKSOURCE_VALIDATE_LAST_CYCLE
Thomas Gleixnerbdebaf82012-05-18 16:45:44 +0000114 select GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS_BROADCAST if X86_64 || (X86_32 && X86_LOCAL_APIC)
Stefani Seiboldd2312e32014-03-17 23:22:01 +0100115 select GENERIC_TIME_VSYSCALL
Linus Torvalds4ae73f22012-05-26 10:14:39 -0700116 select GENERIC_STRNCPY_FROM_USER
Linus Torvalds5723aa92012-05-26 11:09:53 -0700117 select GENERIC_STRNLEN_USER
Frederic Weisbecker91d1aa432012-11-27 19:33:25 +0100118 select HAVE_CONTEXT_TRACKING if X86_64
Frederic Weisbeckerfdf9c352012-09-09 14:56:31 +0200119 select HAVE_IRQ_TIME_ACCOUNTING
Stephen Rothwell4febd952013-03-07 15:48:16 +1100120 select VIRT_TO_BUS
David Howells786d35d2012-09-28 14:31:03 +0930121 select MODULES_USE_ELF_REL if X86_32
122 select MODULES_USE_ELF_RELA if X86_64
Al Viro1d4b4b22012-10-22 22:34:11 -0400123 select CLONE_BACKWARDS if X86_32
David Woodhouse83a57a42012-12-20 01:16:20 +0000124 select ARCH_USE_BUILTIN_BSWAP
Waiman Longbd01ec12014-02-03 13:18:57 +0100125 select ARCH_USE_QUEUE_RWLOCK
Al Viro15ce1f72012-12-25 16:09:20 -0500126 select OLD_SIGSUSPEND3 if X86_32 || IA32_EMULATION
Al Viro5b3eb3a2012-12-25 19:14:55 -0500127 select OLD_SIGACTION if X86_32
128 select COMPAT_OLD_SIGACTION if IA32_EMULATION
Prarit Bhargava3195ef52013-02-14 12:02:54 -0500129 select RTC_LIB
Dave Hansend1a1dc02013-07-01 13:04:42 -0700130 select HAVE_DEBUG_STACKOVERFLOW
Frederic Weisbeckera2cd11f2013-09-24 17:18:36 +0200131 select HAVE_IRQ_EXIT_ON_IRQ_STACK if X86_64
Kees Cook19952a92013-12-19 11:35:58 -0800132 select HAVE_CC_STACKPROTECTOR
Ard Biesheuvel2b9c1f02014-02-08 13:34:10 +0100133 select GENERIC_CPU_AUTOPROBE
AKASHI Takahiro7a017722014-02-25 18:16:24 +0900134 select HAVE_ARCH_AUDITSYSCALL
Peter Zijlstra4badad32014-06-06 19:53:16 +0200135 select ARCH_SUPPORTS_ATOMIC_RMW
Tomasz Nowicki44a69f62014-07-22 11:20:12 +0200136 select HAVE_ACPI_APEI if ACPI
137 select HAVE_ACPI_APEI_NMI if ACPI
Graeme Gregory8a1664b2014-07-18 18:02:52 +0800138 select ACPI_LEGACY_TABLES_LOOKUP if ACPI
Josh Triplett9def39be2013-10-30 08:09:45 -0700139 select X86_FEATURE_NAMES if PROC_FS
Balbir Singh7d8330a2008-02-10 12:46:28 +0530140
Ingo Molnarba7e4d12009-06-06 13:58:12 +0200141config INSTRUCTION_DECODER
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +0100142 def_bool y
143 depends on KPROBES || PERF_EVENTS || UPROBES
Ingo Molnarba7e4d12009-06-06 13:58:12 +0200144
Linus Torvalds51b26ad2009-04-26 10:12:47 -0700145config OUTPUT_FORMAT
146 string
147 default "elf32-i386" if X86_32
148 default "elf64-x86-64" if X86_64
149
Sam Ravnborg73531902008-05-25 23:03:18 +0200150config ARCH_DEFCONFIG
Sam Ravnborgb9b39bf2008-04-29 12:48:15 +0200151 string
Sam Ravnborg73531902008-05-25 23:03:18 +0200152 default "arch/x86/configs/i386_defconfig" if X86_32
153 default "arch/x86/configs/x86_64_defconfig" if X86_64
Sam Ravnborgb9b39bf2008-04-29 12:48:15 +0200154
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100155config LOCKDEP_SUPPORT
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100156 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100157
158config STACKTRACE_SUPPORT
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100159 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100160
Heiko Carstensaa7d9352008-02-01 17:45:14 +0100161config HAVE_LATENCYTOP_SUPPORT
162 def_bool y
163
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100164config MMU
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100165 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100166
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100167config SBUS
168 bool
169
FUJITA Tomonori3bc4e452010-03-10 15:23:22 -0800170config NEED_DMA_MAP_STATE
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +0100171 def_bool y
172 depends on X86_64 || INTEL_IOMMU || DMA_API_DEBUG
FUJITA Tomonori3bc4e452010-03-10 15:23:22 -0800173
FUJITA Tomonori18e98302010-05-26 14:44:32 -0700174config NEED_SG_DMA_LENGTH
Andrew Morton4a14d842010-05-26 14:44:33 -0700175 def_bool y
FUJITA Tomonori18e98302010-05-26 14:44:32 -0700176
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100177config GENERIC_ISA_DMA
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +0100178 def_bool y
179 depends on ISA_DMA_API
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100180
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100181config GENERIC_BUG
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100182 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100183 depends on BUG
Jan Beulichb93a5312008-12-16 11:40:27 +0000184 select GENERIC_BUG_RELATIVE_POINTERS if X86_64
185
186config GENERIC_BUG_RELATIVE_POINTERS
187 bool
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100188
189config GENERIC_HWEIGHT
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100190 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100191
192config ARCH_MAY_HAVE_PC_FDC
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +0100193 def_bool y
194 depends on ISA_DMA_API
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100195
Sam Ravnborg1032c0b2007-11-06 21:35:08 +0100196config RWSEM_XCHGADD_ALGORITHM
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +0100197 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg1032c0b2007-11-06 21:35:08 +0100198
Sam Ravnborg1032c0b2007-11-06 21:35:08 +0100199config GENERIC_CALIBRATE_DELAY
200 def_bool y
201
venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com9a0b8412008-01-31 17:35:06 -0800202config ARCH_HAS_CPU_RELAX
203 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100204
Pekka Enberg1b27d052008-04-28 02:12:22 -0700205config ARCH_HAS_CACHE_LINE_SIZE
206 def_bool y
207
Mike Travisdd5af902008-01-30 13:33:32 +0100208config HAVE_SETUP_PER_CPU_AREA
Brian Gerst89c9c4c2009-01-27 12:56:48 +0900209 def_bool y
travis@sgi.comb32ef632008-01-30 13:32:51 +0100210
Tejun Heo08fc4582009-08-14 15:00:49 +0900211config NEED_PER_CPU_EMBED_FIRST_CHUNK
212 def_bool y
213
214config NEED_PER_CPU_PAGE_FIRST_CHUNK
Tejun Heo11124412009-02-20 16:29:09 +0900215 def_bool y
216
Johannes Berg801e4062007-12-08 02:12:39 +0100217config ARCH_HIBERNATION_POSSIBLE
218 def_bool y
Johannes Berg801e4062007-12-08 02:12:39 +0100219
Johannes Bergf4cb5702007-12-08 02:14:00 +0100220config ARCH_SUSPEND_POSSIBLE
221 def_bool y
Johannes Bergf4cb5702007-12-08 02:14:00 +0100222
Steve Cappercfe28c52013-04-29 14:29:48 +0100223config ARCH_WANT_HUGE_PMD_SHARE
224 def_bool y
225
Steve Capper53313b22013-04-30 08:03:42 +0100226config ARCH_WANT_GENERAL_HUGETLB
227 def_bool y
228
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100229config ZONE_DMA32
230 bool
231 default X86_64
232
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100233config AUDIT_ARCH
234 bool
235 default X86_64
236
Ingo Molnar765c68b2008-04-09 11:03:37 +0200237config ARCH_SUPPORTS_OPTIMIZED_INLINING
238 def_bool y
239
Akinobu Mita6a11f752009-03-31 15:23:17 -0700240config ARCH_SUPPORTS_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC
241 def_bool y
242
Shane Wang69575d32009-09-01 18:25:07 -0700243config HAVE_INTEL_TXT
244 def_bool y
Kees Cook6ea30382012-10-02 11:16:47 -0700245 depends on INTEL_IOMMU && ACPI
Shane Wang69575d32009-09-01 18:25:07 -0700246
Sam Ravnborg6b0c3d42008-01-30 13:32:27 +0100247config X86_32_SMP
248 def_bool y
249 depends on X86_32 && SMP
250
251config X86_64_SMP
252 def_bool y
253 depends on X86_64 && SMP
254
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100255config X86_HT
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +0100256 def_bool y
Adrian Bunkee0011a2007-12-04 17:19:07 +0100257 depends on SMP
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100258
Tejun Heoccbeed32009-02-09 22:17:40 +0900259config X86_32_LAZY_GS
260 def_bool y
Tejun Heo60a53172009-02-09 22:17:40 +0900261 depends on X86_32 && !CC_STACKPROTECTOR
Tejun Heoccbeed32009-02-09 22:17:40 +0900262
Borislav Petkovd61931d2010-03-05 17:34:46 +0100263config ARCH_HWEIGHT_CFLAGS
264 string
265 default "-fcall-saved-ecx -fcall-saved-edx" if X86_32
266 default "-fcall-saved-rdi -fcall-saved-rsi -fcall-saved-rdx -fcall-saved-rcx -fcall-saved-r8 -fcall-saved-r9 -fcall-saved-r10 -fcall-saved-r11" if X86_64
267
Srikar Dronamraju2b144492012-02-09 14:56:42 +0530268config ARCH_SUPPORTS_UPROBES
269 def_bool y
270
Rob Herringd20642f2014-04-18 17:19:54 -0500271config FIX_EARLYCON_MEM
272 def_bool y
273
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100274source "init/Kconfig"
Matt Helsleydc52ddc2008-10-18 20:27:21 -0700275source "kernel/Kconfig.freezer"
Sam Ravnborg8d5fffb2007-11-06 23:30:30 +0100276
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100277menu "Processor type and features"
278
Randy Dunlap5ee71532012-01-16 11:57:18 -0800279config ZONE_DMA
280 bool "DMA memory allocation support" if EXPERT
281 default y
282 help
283 DMA memory allocation support allows devices with less than 32-bit
284 addressing to allocate within the first 16MB of address space.
285 Disable if no such devices will be used.
286
287 If unsure, say Y.
288
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100289config SMP
290 bool "Symmetric multi-processing support"
291 ---help---
292 This enables support for systems with more than one CPU. If you have
Robert Graffham4a474152014-01-23 15:55:29 -0800293 a system with only one CPU, say N. If you have a system with more
294 than one CPU, say Y.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100295
Robert Graffham4a474152014-01-23 15:55:29 -0800296 If you say N here, the kernel will run on uni- and multiprocessor
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100297 machines, but will use only one CPU of a multiprocessor machine. If
298 you say Y here, the kernel will run on many, but not all,
Robert Graffham4a474152014-01-23 15:55:29 -0800299 uniprocessor machines. On a uniprocessor machine, the kernel
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100300 will run faster if you say N here.
301
302 Note that if you say Y here and choose architecture "586" or
303 "Pentium" under "Processor family", the kernel will not work on 486
304 architectures. Similarly, multiprocessor kernels for the "PPro"
305 architecture may not work on all Pentium based boards.
306
307 People using multiprocessor machines who say Y here should also say
308 Y to "Enhanced Real Time Clock Support", below. The "Advanced Power
309 Management" code will be disabled if you say Y here.
310
Paul Bolle395cf962011-08-15 02:02:26 +0200311 See also <file:Documentation/x86/i386/IO-APIC.txt>,
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100312 <file:Documentation/nmi_watchdog.txt> and the SMP-HOWTO available at
313 <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.
314
315 If you don't know what to do here, say N.
316
Josh Triplett9def39be2013-10-30 08:09:45 -0700317config X86_FEATURE_NAMES
318 bool "Processor feature human-readable names" if EMBEDDED
319 default y
320 ---help---
321 This option compiles in a table of x86 feature bits and corresponding
322 names. This is required to support /proc/cpuinfo and a few kernel
323 messages. You can disable this to save space, at the expense of
324 making those few kernel messages show numeric feature bits instead.
325
326 If in doubt, say Y.
327
Yinghai Lu06cd9a72009-02-16 17:29:58 -0800328config X86_X2APIC
329 bool "Support x2apic"
Suresh Siddhad3f13812011-08-23 17:05:25 -0700330 depends on X86_LOCAL_APIC && X86_64 && IRQ_REMAP
Yinghai Lu06cd9a72009-02-16 17:29:58 -0800331 ---help---
332 This enables x2apic support on CPUs that have this feature.
333
334 This allows 32-bit apic IDs (so it can support very large systems),
335 and accesses the local apic via MSRs not via mmio.
336
Yinghai Lu06cd9a72009-02-16 17:29:58 -0800337 If you don't know what to do here, say N.
338
Yinghai Lu6695c852008-06-19 12:13:09 -0700339config X86_MPPARSE
Bin Gao6e87f9b72012-10-25 09:35:44 -0700340 bool "Enable MPS table" if ACPI || SFI
Jan Beulich7a527682008-10-30 10:38:24 +0000341 default y
Ingo Molnar5ab74722008-07-10 14:42:03 +0200342 depends on X86_LOCAL_APIC
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100343 ---help---
Yinghai Lu6695c852008-06-19 12:13:09 -0700344 For old smp systems that do not have proper acpi support. Newer systems
345 (esp with 64bit cpus) with acpi support, MADT and DSDT will override it
Yinghai Lu6695c852008-06-19 12:13:09 -0700346
Yinghai Lu26f7ef12009-01-29 14:19:22 -0800347config X86_BIGSMP
348 bool "Support for big SMP systems with more than 8 CPUs"
349 depends on X86_32 && SMP
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100350 ---help---
Yinghai Lu26f7ef12009-01-29 14:19:22 -0800351 This option is needed for the systems that have more than 8 CPUs
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100352
Jun Nakajimaddd70cf2013-01-21 17:23:09 +0000353config GOLDFISH
354 def_bool y
355 depends on X86_GOLDFISH
356
Ravikiran G Thirumalai84250912009-02-20 16:59:11 -0800357if X86_32
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800358config X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
359 bool "Support for extended (non-PC) x86 platforms"
360 default y
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100361 ---help---
Ingo Molnar06ac8342009-01-27 18:11:43 +0100362 If you disable this option then the kernel will only support
363 standard PC platforms. (which covers the vast majority of
364 systems out there.)
365
Ravikiran G Thirumalai84250912009-02-20 16:59:11 -0800366 If you enable this option then you'll be able to select support
367 for the following (non-PC) 32 bit x86 platforms:
Ben Hutchingscb7b8022013-06-24 01:05:25 +0100368 Goldfish (Android emulator)
Ravikiran G Thirumalai84250912009-02-20 16:59:11 -0800369 AMD Elan
Ravikiran G Thirumalai84250912009-02-20 16:59:11 -0800370 RDC R-321x SoC
371 SGI 320/540 (Visual Workstation)
Alessandro Rubini83125a32012-04-04 19:40:21 +0200372 STA2X11-based (e.g. Northville)
Thomas Gleixner3f4110a2009-08-29 14:54:20 +0200373 Moorestown MID devices
Ingo Molnar06ac8342009-01-27 18:11:43 +0100374
375 If you have one of these systems, or if you want to build a
376 generic distribution kernel, say Y here - otherwise say N.
Ravikiran G Thirumalai84250912009-02-20 16:59:11 -0800377endif
Ingo Molnar06ac8342009-01-27 18:11:43 +0100378
Ravikiran G Thirumalai84250912009-02-20 16:59:11 -0800379if X86_64
380config X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
381 bool "Support for extended (non-PC) x86 platforms"
382 default y
383 ---help---
384 If you disable this option then the kernel will only support
385 standard PC platforms. (which covers the vast majority of
386 systems out there.)
387
388 If you enable this option then you'll be able to select support
389 for the following (non-PC) 64 bit x86 platforms:
Steffen Persvold44b111b2011-12-06 00:07:26 +0800390 Numascale NumaChip
Ravikiran G Thirumalai84250912009-02-20 16:59:11 -0800391 ScaleMP vSMP
392 SGI Ultraviolet
393
394 If you have one of these systems, or if you want to build a
395 generic distribution kernel, say Y here - otherwise say N.
396endif
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800397# This is an alphabetically sorted list of 64 bit extended platforms
398# Please maintain the alphabetic order if and when there are additions
Steffen Persvold44b111b2011-12-06 00:07:26 +0800399config X86_NUMACHIP
400 bool "Numascale NumaChip"
401 depends on X86_64
402 depends on X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
403 depends on NUMA
404 depends on SMP
405 depends on X86_X2APIC
Daniel J Bluemanf9726bf2012-12-07 14:24:32 -0700406 depends on PCI_MMCONFIG
Steffen Persvold44b111b2011-12-06 00:07:26 +0800407 ---help---
408 Adds support for Numascale NumaChip large-SMP systems. Needed to
409 enable more than ~168 cores.
410 If you don't have one of these, you should say N here.
Nick Piggin03b48632009-01-20 04:36:04 +0100411
Ingo Molnar6a485652009-01-27 18:29:13 +0100412config X86_VSMP
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800413 bool "ScaleMP vSMP"
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100414 select HYPERVISOR_GUEST
Ingo Molnar6a485652009-01-27 18:29:13 +0100415 select PARAVIRT
416 depends on X86_64 && PCI
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800417 depends on X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
Shai Fultheimead91d42012-04-16 10:39:35 +0300418 depends on SMP
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100419 ---help---
Ingo Molnar6a485652009-01-27 18:29:13 +0100420 Support for ScaleMP vSMP systems. Say 'Y' here if this kernel is
421 supposed to run on these EM64T-based machines. Only choose this option
422 if you have one of these machines.
423
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800424config X86_UV
425 bool "SGI Ultraviolet"
426 depends on X86_64
427 depends on X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
Jack Steiner54c28d22009-04-03 15:39:42 -0500428 depends on NUMA
Suresh Siddha9d6c26e2009-04-20 13:02:31 -0700429 depends on X86_X2APIC
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800430 ---help---
431 This option is needed in order to support SGI Ultraviolet systems.
432 If you don't have one of these, you should say N here.
433
434# Following is an alphabetically sorted list of 32 bit extended platforms
435# Please maintain the alphabetic order if and when there are additions
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100436
Jun Nakajimaddd70cf2013-01-21 17:23:09 +0000437config X86_GOLDFISH
438 bool "Goldfish (Virtual Platform)"
Ben Hutchingscb7b8022013-06-24 01:05:25 +0100439 depends on X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
Jun Nakajimaddd70cf2013-01-21 17:23:09 +0000440 ---help---
441 Enable support for the Goldfish virtual platform used primarily
442 for Android development. Unless you are building for the Android
443 Goldfish emulator say N here.
444
Thomas Gleixnerc751e172010-11-09 12:08:04 -0800445config X86_INTEL_CE
446 bool "CE4100 TV platform"
447 depends on PCI
448 depends on PCI_GODIRECT
Jiang Liu6084a6e2014-06-09 16:19:46 +0800449 depends on X86_IO_APIC
Thomas Gleixnerc751e172010-11-09 12:08:04 -0800450 depends on X86_32
451 depends on X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
Dirk Brandewie37bc9f52010-11-09 12:08:08 -0800452 select X86_REBOOTFIXUPS
Sebastian Andrzej Siewiorda6b7372011-02-22 21:07:37 +0100453 select OF
454 select OF_EARLY_FLATTREE
Grant Likelyb4e51852011-12-16 15:50:17 -0700455 select IRQ_DOMAIN
Thomas Gleixnerc751e172010-11-09 12:08:04 -0800456 ---help---
457 Select for the Intel CE media processor (CE4100) SOC.
458 This option compiles in support for the CE4100 SOC for settop
459 boxes and media devices.
460
David Cohen4cb9b002013-12-16 17:37:26 -0800461config X86_INTEL_MID
Alan Cox43605ef2011-07-12 17:49:29 +0100462 bool "Intel MID platform support"
463 depends on X86_32
464 depends on X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
David Cohenedc6bc72014-01-21 10:41:39 -0800465 depends on X86_PLATFORM_DEVICES
Alan Cox1ea7c672011-11-10 13:29:14 +0000466 depends on PCI
467 depends on PCI_GOANY
468 depends on X86_IO_APIC
Alan Cox7c9c3a12011-12-29 14:43:16 +0000469 select SFI
David Cohen4cb9b002013-12-16 17:37:26 -0800470 select I2C
Alan Cox7c9c3a12011-12-29 14:43:16 +0000471 select DW_APB_TIMER
Alan Cox1ea7c672011-11-10 13:29:14 +0000472 select APB_TIMER
Alan Cox1ea7c672011-11-10 13:29:14 +0000473 select INTEL_SCU_IPC
Mika Westerberg15a713d2012-01-26 17:35:05 +0000474 select MFD_INTEL_MSIC
Alan Cox1ea7c672011-11-10 13:29:14 +0000475 ---help---
David Cohen4cb9b002013-12-16 17:37:26 -0800476 Select to build a kernel capable of supporting Intel MID (Mobile
477 Internet Device) platform systems which do not have the PCI legacy
478 interfaces. If you are building for a PC class system say N here.
Alan Cox1ea7c672011-11-10 13:29:14 +0000479
David Cohen4cb9b002013-12-16 17:37:26 -0800480 Intel MID platforms are based on an Intel processor and chipset which
481 consume less power than most of the x86 derivatives.
Alan Cox43605ef2011-07-12 17:49:29 +0100482
Mika Westerberg3d48aab2013-01-18 13:45:59 +0000483config X86_INTEL_LPSS
484 bool "Intel Low Power Subsystem Support"
485 depends on ACPI
486 select COMMON_CLK
Mathias Nyman0f531432013-09-13 17:02:29 +0300487 select PINCTRL
Mika Westerberg3d48aab2013-01-18 13:45:59 +0000488 ---help---
489 Select to build support for Intel Low Power Subsystem such as
490 found on Intel Lynxpoint PCH. Selecting this option enables
Mathias Nyman0f531432013-09-13 17:02:29 +0300491 things like clock tree (common clock framework) and pincontrol
492 which are needed by the LPSS peripheral drivers.
Mika Westerberg3d48aab2013-01-18 13:45:59 +0000493
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800494config X86_RDC321X
495 bool "RDC R-321x SoC"
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100496 depends on X86_32
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800497 depends on X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
498 select M486
499 select X86_REBOOTFIXUPS
500 ---help---
501 This option is needed for RDC R-321x system-on-chip, also known
502 as R-8610-(G).
503 If you don't have one of these chips, you should say N here.
504
Ingo Molnare0c7ae32009-01-27 18:43:09 +0100505config X86_32_NON_STANDARD
Ingo Molnar9c398012009-01-27 18:24:57 +0100506 bool "Support non-standard 32-bit SMP architectures"
507 depends on X86_32 && SMP
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800508 depends on X86_EXTENDED_PLATFORM
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100509 ---help---
H. Peter Anvinb5660ba2014-02-25 12:14:06 -0800510 This option compiles in the bigsmp and STA2X11 default
511 subarchitectures. It is intended for a generic binary
512 kernel. If you select them all, kernel will probe it one by
513 one and will fallback to default.
Yinghai Lud49c4282008-06-08 18:31:54 -0700514
Ravikiran G Thirumalaic5c606d2009-02-09 18:18:14 -0800515# Alphabetically sorted list of Non standard 32 bit platforms
Yinghai Lud49c4282008-06-08 18:31:54 -0700516
Linus Torvaldsd949f362009-09-26 09:35:07 -0700517config X86_SUPPORTS_MEMORY_FAILURE
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +0100518 def_bool y
Linus Torvaldsd949f362009-09-26 09:35:07 -0700519 # MCE code calls memory_failure():
520 depends on X86_MCE
521 # On 32-bit this adds too big of NODES_SHIFT and we run out of page flags:
Linus Torvaldsd949f362009-09-26 09:35:07 -0700522 # On 32-bit SPARSEMEM adds too big of SECTIONS_WIDTH:
523 depends on X86_64 || !SPARSEMEM
524 select ARCH_SUPPORTS_MEMORY_FAILURE
Linus Torvaldsd949f362009-09-26 09:35:07 -0700525
Alessandro Rubini83125a32012-04-04 19:40:21 +0200526config STA2X11
527 bool "STA2X11 Companion Chip Support"
528 depends on X86_32_NON_STANDARD && PCI
529 select X86_DEV_DMA_OPS
530 select X86_DMA_REMAP
531 select SWIOTLB
532 select MFD_STA2X11
533 select ARCH_REQUIRE_GPIOLIB
534 default n
535 ---help---
536 This adds support for boards based on the STA2X11 IO-Hub,
537 a.k.a. "ConneXt". The chip is used in place of the standard
538 PC chipset, so all "standard" peripherals are missing. If this
539 option is selected the kernel will still be able to boot on
540 standard PC machines.
541
Shérab82148d12010-09-25 06:06:57 +0200542config X86_32_IRIS
543 tristate "Eurobraille/Iris poweroff module"
544 depends on X86_32
545 ---help---
546 The Iris machines from EuroBraille do not have APM or ACPI support
547 to shut themselves down properly. A special I/O sequence is
548 needed to do so, which is what this module does at
549 kernel shutdown.
550
551 This is only for Iris machines from EuroBraille.
552
553 If unused, say N.
554
Ingo Molnarae1e9132008-11-11 09:05:16 +0100555config SCHED_OMIT_FRAME_POINTER
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100556 def_bool y
557 prompt "Single-depth WCHAN output"
Ken Chena87d0912008-11-06 11:10:49 -0800558 depends on X86
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100559 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100560 Calculate simpler /proc/<PID>/wchan values. If this option
561 is disabled then wchan values will recurse back to the
562 caller function. This provides more accurate wchan values,
563 at the expense of slightly more scheduling overhead.
564
565 If in doubt, say "Y".
566
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100567menuconfig HYPERVISOR_GUEST
568 bool "Linux guest support"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100569 ---help---
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100570 Say Y here to enable options for running Linux under various hyper-
571 visors. This option enables basic hypervisor detection and platform
572 setup.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100573
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100574 If you say N, all options in this submenu will be skipped and
575 disabled, and Linux guest support won't be built in.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100576
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100577if HYPERVISOR_GUEST
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100578
Eduardo Pereira Habkoste61bd942008-01-30 13:33:32 +0100579config PARAVIRT
580 bool "Enable paravirtualization code"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100581 ---help---
Eduardo Pereira Habkoste61bd942008-01-30 13:33:32 +0100582 This changes the kernel so it can modify itself when it is run
583 under a hypervisor, potentially improving performance significantly
584 over full virtualization. However, when run without a hypervisor
585 the kernel is theoretically slower and slightly larger.
586
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100587config PARAVIRT_DEBUG
588 bool "paravirt-ops debugging"
589 depends on PARAVIRT && DEBUG_KERNEL
590 ---help---
591 Enable to debug paravirt_ops internals. Specifically, BUG if
592 a paravirt_op is missing when it is called.
593
Jeremy Fitzhardingeb4ecc122009-05-13 17:16:55 -0700594config PARAVIRT_SPINLOCKS
595 bool "Paravirtualization layer for spinlocks"
Kees Cook6ea30382012-10-02 11:16:47 -0700596 depends on PARAVIRT && SMP
Raghavendra K T8db73262013-08-09 19:51:50 +0530597 select UNINLINE_SPIN_UNLOCK
Jeremy Fitzhardingeb4ecc122009-05-13 17:16:55 -0700598 ---help---
599 Paravirtualized spinlocks allow a pvops backend to replace the
600 spinlock implementation with something virtualization-friendly
601 (for example, block the virtual CPU rather than spinning).
602
Raghavendra K T4c4e4f62013-10-21 21:35:08 +0530603 It has a minimal impact on native kernels and gives a nice performance
604 benefit on paravirtualized KVM / Xen kernels.
Jeremy Fitzhardingeb4ecc122009-05-13 17:16:55 -0700605
Raghavendra K T4c4e4f62013-10-21 21:35:08 +0530606 If you are unsure how to answer this question, answer Y.
Jeremy Fitzhardingeb4ecc122009-05-13 17:16:55 -0700607
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100608source "arch/x86/xen/Kconfig"
609
610config KVM_GUEST
611 bool "KVM Guest support (including kvmclock)"
612 depends on PARAVIRT
613 select PARAVIRT_CLOCK
614 default y
615 ---help---
616 This option enables various optimizations for running under the KVM
617 hypervisor. It includes a paravirtualized clock, so that instead
618 of relying on a PIT (or probably other) emulation by the
619 underlying device model, the host provides the guest with
620 timing infrastructure such as time of day, and system time
621
Srivatsa Vaddagiri1e20eb82013-08-09 19:52:01 +0530622config KVM_DEBUG_FS
623 bool "Enable debug information for KVM Guests in debugfs"
624 depends on KVM_GUEST && DEBUG_FS
625 default n
626 ---help---
627 This option enables collection of various statistics for KVM guest.
628 Statistics are displayed in debugfs filesystem. Enabling this option
629 may incur significant overhead.
630
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100631source "arch/x86/lguest/Kconfig"
632
633config PARAVIRT_TIME_ACCOUNTING
634 bool "Paravirtual steal time accounting"
635 depends on PARAVIRT
636 default n
637 ---help---
638 Select this option to enable fine granularity task steal time
639 accounting. Time spent executing other tasks in parallel with
640 the current vCPU is discounted from the vCPU power. To account for
641 that, there can be a small performance impact.
642
643 If in doubt, say N here.
644
Gerd Hoffmann7af192c2008-06-03 16:17:29 +0200645config PARAVIRT_CLOCK
646 bool
Gerd Hoffmann7af192c2008-06-03 16:17:29 +0200647
Borislav Petkov6276a072013-03-04 21:20:21 +0100648endif #HYPERVISOR_GUEST
Jeremy Fitzhardinge97349132008-06-25 00:19:14 -0400649
Yinghai Lu08677212010-02-10 01:20:20 -0800650config NO_BOOTMEM
Yinghai Lu774ea0b2010-08-25 13:39:18 -0700651 def_bool y
Yinghai Lu08677212010-02-10 01:20:20 -0800652
Yinghai Lu03273182008-04-18 17:49:15 -0700653config MEMTEST
654 bool "Memtest"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100655 ---help---
Yinghai Luc64df702008-03-21 18:56:19 -0700656 This option adds a kernel parameter 'memtest', which allows memtest
Yinghai Lu03273182008-04-18 17:49:15 -0700657 to be set.
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100658 memtest=0, mean disabled; -- default
659 memtest=1, mean do 1 test pattern;
660 ...
661 memtest=4, mean do 4 test patterns.
Thomas Gleixneraba37282008-07-15 14:48:48 +0200662 If you are unsure how to answer this question, answer N.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100663
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100664source "arch/x86/Kconfig.cpu"
665
666config HPET_TIMER
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100667 def_bool X86_64
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100668 prompt "HPET Timer Support" if X86_32
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100669 ---help---
670 Use the IA-PC HPET (High Precision Event Timer) to manage
671 time in preference to the PIT and RTC, if a HPET is
672 present.
673 HPET is the next generation timer replacing legacy 8254s.
674 The HPET provides a stable time base on SMP
675 systems, unlike the TSC, but it is more expensive to access,
676 as it is off-chip. You can find the HPET spec at
677 <http://www.intel.com/hardwaredesign/hpetspec_1.pdf>.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100678
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100679 You can safely choose Y here. However, HPET will only be
680 activated if the platform and the BIOS support this feature.
681 Otherwise the 8254 will be used for timing services.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100682
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100683 Choose N to continue using the legacy 8254 timer.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100684
685config HPET_EMULATE_RTC
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100686 def_bool y
Bernhard Walle9d8af782008-02-06 01:38:52 -0800687 depends on HPET_TIMER && (RTC=y || RTC=m || RTC_DRV_CMOS=m || RTC_DRV_CMOS=y)
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100688
Jacob Panbb24c472009-09-02 07:37:17 -0700689config APB_TIMER
Alan Cox933b9462011-12-17 17:43:40 +0000690 def_bool y if X86_INTEL_MID
691 prompt "Intel MID APB Timer Support" if X86_INTEL_MID
Jamie Iles06c3df42011-06-06 12:43:07 +0100692 select DW_APB_TIMER
Alan Coxa0c38322011-12-17 21:57:25 +0000693 depends on X86_INTEL_MID && SFI
Jacob Panbb24c472009-09-02 07:37:17 -0700694 help
695 APB timer is the replacement for 8254, HPET on X86 MID platforms.
696 The APBT provides a stable time base on SMP
697 systems, unlike the TSC, but it is more expensive to access,
698 as it is off-chip. APB timers are always running regardless of CPU
699 C states, they are used as per CPU clockevent device when possible.
700
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -0800701# Mark as expert because too many people got it wrong.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100702# The code disables itself when not needed.
Thomas Petazzoni7ae93922008-04-28 02:14:14 -0700703config DMI
704 default y
Ard Biesheuvelcf074402014-01-23 15:54:39 -0800705 select DMI_SCAN_MACHINE_NON_EFI_FALLBACK
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -0800706 bool "Enable DMI scanning" if EXPERT
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100707 ---help---
Thomas Petazzoni7ae93922008-04-28 02:14:14 -0700708 Enabled scanning of DMI to identify machine quirks. Say Y
709 here unless you have verified that your setup is not
710 affected by entries in the DMI blacklist. Required by PNP
711 BIOS code.
712
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100713config GART_IOMMU
Andi Kleen38901f12013-10-04 14:37:56 -0700714 bool "Old AMD GART IOMMU support"
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100715 select SWIOTLB
Andreas Herrmann23ac4ae2010-09-17 18:03:43 +0200716 depends on X86_64 && PCI && AMD_NB
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100717 ---help---
Ingo Molnarced3c422013-10-06 11:45:20 +0200718 Provides a driver for older AMD Athlon64/Opteron/Turion/Sempron
719 GART based hardware IOMMUs.
720
721 The GART supports full DMA access for devices with 32-bit access
722 limitations, on systems with more than 3 GB. This is usually needed
723 for USB, sound, many IDE/SATA chipsets and some other devices.
724
725 Newer systems typically have a modern AMD IOMMU, supported via
726 the CONFIG_AMD_IOMMU=y config option.
727
728 In normal configurations this driver is only active when needed:
729 there's more than 3 GB of memory and the system contains a
730 32-bit limited device.
731
732 If unsure, say Y.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100733
734config CALGARY_IOMMU
735 bool "IBM Calgary IOMMU support"
736 select SWIOTLB
Kees Cook6ea30382012-10-02 11:16:47 -0700737 depends on X86_64 && PCI
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100738 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100739 Support for hardware IOMMUs in IBM's xSeries x366 and x460
740 systems. Needed to run systems with more than 3GB of memory
741 properly with 32-bit PCI devices that do not support DAC
742 (Double Address Cycle). Calgary also supports bus level
743 isolation, where all DMAs pass through the IOMMU. This
744 prevents them from going anywhere except their intended
745 destination. This catches hard-to-find kernel bugs and
746 mis-behaving drivers and devices that do not use the DMA-API
747 properly to set up their DMA buffers. The IOMMU can be
748 turned off at boot time with the iommu=off parameter.
749 Normally the kernel will make the right choice by itself.
750 If unsure, say Y.
751
752config CALGARY_IOMMU_ENABLED_BY_DEFAULT
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100753 def_bool y
754 prompt "Should Calgary be enabled by default?"
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100755 depends on CALGARY_IOMMU
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100756 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100757 Should Calgary be enabled by default? if you choose 'y', Calgary
758 will be used (if it exists). If you choose 'n', Calgary will not be
759 used even if it exists. If you choose 'n' and would like to use
760 Calgary anyway, pass 'iommu=calgary' on the kernel command line.
761 If unsure, say Y.
762
763# need this always selected by IOMMU for the VIA workaround
764config SWIOTLB
Joerg Roedela1afd012008-11-18 12:44:21 +0100765 def_bool y if X86_64
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100766 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100767 Support for software bounce buffers used on x86-64 systems
Joe Millenbach4454d322012-09-02 17:38:20 -0700768 which don't have a hardware IOMMU. Using this PCI devices
769 which can only access 32-bits of memory can be used on systems
770 with more than 3 GB of memory.
771 If unsure, say Y.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100772
FUJITA Tomonoria8522502008-04-29 00:59:36 -0700773config IOMMU_HELPER
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +0100774 def_bool y
775 depends on CALGARY_IOMMU || GART_IOMMU || SWIOTLB || AMD_IOMMU
Linus Torvaldsd25e26b2008-08-25 14:15:38 -0700776
Mike Travis1184dc22008-05-12 21:21:12 +0200777config MAXSMP
Samuel Thibaultddb0c5a2010-08-21 21:32:41 +0200778 bool "Enable Maximum number of SMP Processors and NUMA Nodes"
Kees Cook6ea30382012-10-02 11:16:47 -0700779 depends on X86_64 && SMP && DEBUG_KERNEL
Mike Travis36f51012008-12-16 17:33:51 -0800780 select CPUMASK_OFFSTACK
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100781 ---help---
Samuel Thibaultddb0c5a2010-08-21 21:32:41 +0200782 Enable maximum number of CPUS and NUMA Nodes for this architecture.
Mike Travis1184dc22008-05-12 21:21:12 +0200783 If unsure, say N.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100784
785config NR_CPUS
Mike Travis36f51012008-12-16 17:33:51 -0800786 int "Maximum number of CPUs" if SMP && !MAXSMP
Michael K. Johnson2a3313f2009-04-21 21:44:48 -0400787 range 2 8 if SMP && X86_32 && !X86_BIGSMP
Josh Boyerbb61ccc2013-11-05 09:37:29 -0500788 range 2 512 if SMP && !MAXSMP && !CPUMASK_OFFSTACK
Josh Boyerb53b5ed2013-11-05 09:38:16 -0500789 range 2 8192 if SMP && !MAXSMP && CPUMASK_OFFSTACK && X86_64
Mike Travis78637a972008-12-16 17:34:00 -0800790 default "1" if !SMP
Josh Boyerb53b5ed2013-11-05 09:38:16 -0500791 default "8192" if MAXSMP
H. Peter Anvinb5660ba2014-02-25 12:14:06 -0800792 default "32" if SMP && X86_BIGSMP
Mike Travis78637a972008-12-16 17:34:00 -0800793 default "8" if SMP
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100794 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100795 This allows you to specify the maximum number of CPUs which this
Josh Boyerbb61ccc2013-11-05 09:37:29 -0500796 kernel will support. If CPUMASK_OFFSTACK is enabled, the maximum
797 supported value is 4096, otherwise the maximum value is 512. The
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100798 minimum value which makes sense is 2.
799
800 This is purely to save memory - each supported CPU adds
801 approximately eight kilobytes to the kernel image.
802
803config SCHED_SMT
804 bool "SMT (Hyperthreading) scheduler support"
Hiroshi Shimamotob089c122008-02-27 13:16:30 -0800805 depends on X86_HT
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100806 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100807 SMT scheduler support improves the CPU scheduler's decision making
808 when dealing with Intel Pentium 4 chips with HyperThreading at a
809 cost of slightly increased overhead in some places. If unsure say
810 N here.
811
812config SCHED_MC
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100813 def_bool y
814 prompt "Multi-core scheduler support"
Hiroshi Shimamotob089c122008-02-27 13:16:30 -0800815 depends on X86_HT
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100816 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100817 Multi-core scheduler support improves the CPU scheduler's decision
818 making when dealing with multi-core CPU chips at a cost of slightly
819 increased overhead in some places. If unsure say N here.
820
821source "kernel/Kconfig.preempt"
822
823config X86_UP_APIC
824 bool "Local APIC support on uniprocessors"
Thomas Petazzoni0dbc6072013-10-03 11:59:14 +0200825 depends on X86_32 && !SMP && !X86_32_NON_STANDARD && !PCI_MSI
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100826 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100827 A local APIC (Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller) is an
828 integrated interrupt controller in the CPU. If you have a single-CPU
829 system which has a processor with a local APIC, you can say Y here to
830 enable and use it. If you say Y here even though your machine doesn't
831 have a local APIC, then the kernel will still run with no slowdown at
832 all. The local APIC supports CPU-generated self-interrupts (timer,
833 performance counters), and the NMI watchdog which detects hard
834 lockups.
835
836config X86_UP_IOAPIC
837 bool "IO-APIC support on uniprocessors"
838 depends on X86_UP_APIC
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100839 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100840 An IO-APIC (I/O Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller) is an
841 SMP-capable replacement for PC-style interrupt controllers. Most
842 SMP systems and many recent uniprocessor systems have one.
843
844 If you have a single-CPU system with an IO-APIC, you can say Y here
845 to use it. If you say Y here even though your machine doesn't have
846 an IO-APIC, then the kernel will still run with no slowdown at all.
847
848config X86_LOCAL_APIC
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100849 def_bool y
Thomas Petazzoni0dbc6072013-10-03 11:59:14 +0200850 depends on X86_64 || SMP || X86_32_NON_STANDARD || X86_UP_APIC || PCI_MSI
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100851
852config X86_IO_APIC
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100853 def_bool y
Thomas Petazzoni0dbc6072013-10-03 11:59:14 +0200854 depends on X86_64 || SMP || X86_32_NON_STANDARD || X86_UP_IOAPIC || PCI_MSI
Thomas Gleixnerb1ee5442014-05-07 15:44:06 +0000855 select GENERIC_IRQ_LEGACY_ALLOC_HWIRQ
Jiang Liud7f3d472014-06-09 16:19:52 +0800856 select IRQ_DOMAIN
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100857
Stefan Assmann41b9eb22008-07-15 13:48:55 +0200858config X86_REROUTE_FOR_BROKEN_BOOT_IRQS
859 bool "Reroute for broken boot IRQs"
Stefan Assmann41b9eb22008-07-15 13:48:55 +0200860 depends on X86_IO_APIC
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100861 ---help---
Stefan Assmann41b9eb22008-07-15 13:48:55 +0200862 This option enables a workaround that fixes a source of
863 spurious interrupts. This is recommended when threaded
864 interrupt handling is used on systems where the generation of
865 superfluous "boot interrupts" cannot be disabled.
866
867 Some chipsets generate a legacy INTx "boot IRQ" when the IRQ
868 entry in the chipset's IO-APIC is masked (as, e.g. the RT
869 kernel does during interrupt handling). On chipsets where this
870 boot IRQ generation cannot be disabled, this workaround keeps
871 the original IRQ line masked so that only the equivalent "boot
872 IRQ" is delivered to the CPUs. The workaround also tells the
873 kernel to set up the IRQ handler on the boot IRQ line. In this
874 way only one interrupt is delivered to the kernel. Otherwise
875 the spurious second interrupt may cause the kernel to bring
876 down (vital) interrupt lines.
877
878 Only affects "broken" chipsets. Interrupt sharing may be
879 increased on these systems.
880
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100881config X86_MCE
Andi Kleenbab9bc62009-07-09 00:31:38 +0200882 bool "Machine Check / overheating reporting"
Borislav Petkove57dbaf2011-09-13 15:23:21 +0200883 default y
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100884 ---help---
Andi Kleenbab9bc62009-07-09 00:31:38 +0200885 Machine Check support allows the processor to notify the
886 kernel if it detects a problem (e.g. overheating, data corruption).
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100887 The action the kernel takes depends on the severity of the problem,
Andi Kleenbab9bc62009-07-09 00:31:38 +0200888 ranging from warning messages to halting the machine.
Andi Kleen4efc0672009-04-28 19:07:31 +0200889
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100890config X86_MCE_INTEL
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100891 def_bool y
892 prompt "Intel MCE features"
Andi Kleenc1ebf832009-07-09 00:31:41 +0200893 depends on X86_MCE && X86_LOCAL_APIC
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100894 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100895 Additional support for intel specific MCE features such as
896 the thermal monitor.
897
898config X86_MCE_AMD
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +0100899 def_bool y
900 prompt "AMD MCE features"
Andi Kleenc1ebf832009-07-09 00:31:41 +0200901 depends on X86_MCE && X86_LOCAL_APIC
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100902 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100903 Additional support for AMD specific MCE features such as
904 the DRAM Error Threshold.
905
Andi Kleen4efc0672009-04-28 19:07:31 +0200906config X86_ANCIENT_MCE
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +0100907 bool "Support for old Pentium 5 / WinChip machine checks"
Andi Kleenc31d9632009-07-09 00:31:37 +0200908 depends on X86_32 && X86_MCE
Hidetoshi Setocd13adcc2009-05-27 16:57:31 +0900909 ---help---
910 Include support for machine check handling on old Pentium 5 or WinChip
Masanari Iida5065a702013-11-30 21:38:43 +0900911 systems. These typically need to be enabled explicitly on the command
Hidetoshi Setocd13adcc2009-05-27 16:57:31 +0900912 line.
Andi Kleen4efc0672009-04-28 19:07:31 +0200913
Andi Kleenb2762682009-02-12 13:49:31 +0100914config X86_MCE_THRESHOLD
915 depends on X86_MCE_AMD || X86_MCE_INTEL
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +0100916 def_bool y
Andi Kleenb2762682009-02-12 13:49:31 +0100917
Andi Kleenea149b32009-04-29 19:31:00 +0200918config X86_MCE_INJECT
Andi Kleenc1ebf832009-07-09 00:31:41 +0200919 depends on X86_MCE
Andi Kleenea149b32009-04-29 19:31:00 +0200920 tristate "Machine check injector support"
921 ---help---
922 Provide support for injecting machine checks for testing purposes.
923 If you don't know what a machine check is and you don't do kernel
924 QA it is safe to say n.
925
Andi Kleen4efc0672009-04-28 19:07:31 +0200926config X86_THERMAL_VECTOR
927 def_bool y
Andi Kleen5bb38ad2009-07-09 00:31:39 +0200928 depends on X86_MCE_INTEL
Andi Kleen4efc0672009-04-28 19:07:31 +0200929
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100930config VM86
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -0800931 bool "Enable VM86 support" if EXPERT
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100932 default y
933 depends on X86_32
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +0100934 ---help---
H. Peter Anvin34273f42014-05-04 10:36:22 -0700935 This option is required by programs like DOSEMU to run
936 16-bit real mode legacy code on x86 processors. It also may
937 be needed by software like XFree86 to initialize some video
938 cards via BIOS. Disabling this option saves about 6K.
939
940config X86_16BIT
941 bool "Enable support for 16-bit segments" if EXPERT
942 default y
943 ---help---
944 This option is required by programs like Wine to run 16-bit
945 protected mode legacy code on x86 processors. Disabling
946 this option saves about 300 bytes on i386, or around 6K text
947 plus 16K runtime memory on x86-64,
948
949config X86_ESPFIX32
950 def_bool y
951 depends on X86_16BIT && X86_32
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100952
H. Peter Anvin197725d2014-05-04 10:00:49 -0700953config X86_ESPFIX64
954 def_bool y
H. Peter Anvin34273f42014-05-04 10:36:22 -0700955 depends on X86_16BIT && X86_64
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100956
957config TOSHIBA
958 tristate "Toshiba Laptop support"
959 depends on X86_32
960 ---help---
961 This adds a driver to safely access the System Management Mode of
962 the CPU on Toshiba portables with a genuine Toshiba BIOS. It does
963 not work on models with a Phoenix BIOS. The System Management Mode
964 is used to set the BIOS and power saving options on Toshiba portables.
965
966 For information on utilities to make use of this driver see the
967 Toshiba Linux utilities web site at:
968 <http://www.buzzard.org.uk/toshiba/>.
969
970 Say Y if you intend to run this kernel on a Toshiba portable.
971 Say N otherwise.
972
973config I8K
974 tristate "Dell laptop support"
Jean Delvare949a9d72011-05-25 20:43:33 +0200975 select HWMON
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100976 ---help---
977 This adds a driver to safely access the System Management Mode
978 of the CPU on the Dell Inspiron 8000. The System Management Mode
979 is used to read cpu temperature and cooling fan status and to
980 control the fans on the I8K portables.
981
982 This driver has been tested only on the Inspiron 8000 but it may
983 also work with other Dell laptops. You can force loading on other
984 models by passing the parameter `force=1' to the module. Use at
985 your own risk.
986
987 For information on utilities to make use of this driver see the
988 I8K Linux utilities web site at:
989 <http://people.debian.org/~dz/i8k/>
990
991 Say Y if you intend to run this kernel on a Dell Inspiron 8000.
992 Say N otherwise.
993
994config X86_REBOOTFIXUPS
Jan Beulich9ba16082008-10-15 22:01:38 -0700995 bool "Enable X86 board specific fixups for reboot"
996 depends on X86_32
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +0100997 ---help---
998 This enables chipset and/or board specific fixups to be done
999 in order to get reboot to work correctly. This is only needed on
1000 some combinations of hardware and BIOS. The symptom, for which
1001 this config is intended, is when reboot ends with a stalled/hung
1002 system.
1003
1004 Currently, the only fixup is for the Geode machines using
Florian Fainelli5e3a77e2008-01-30 13:33:36 +01001005 CS5530A and CS5536 chipsets and the RDC R-321x SoC.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001006
1007 Say Y if you want to enable the fixup. Currently, it's safe to
1008 enable this option even if you don't need it.
1009 Say N otherwise.
1010
1011config MICROCODE
Borislav Petkove43f6e62012-08-01 19:17:01 +02001012 tristate "CPU microcode loading support"
Borislav Petkov80030e32013-10-13 18:36:29 +02001013 depends on CPU_SUP_AMD || CPU_SUP_INTEL
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001014 select FW_LOADER
1015 ---help---
Borislav Petkove43f6e62012-08-01 19:17:01 +02001016
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001017 If you say Y here, you will be able to update the microcode on
Peter Oruba80cc9f12008-07-28 18:44:22 +02001018 certain Intel and AMD processors. The Intel support is for the
Borislav Petkove43f6e62012-08-01 19:17:01 +02001019 IA32 family, e.g. Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4,
1020 Xeon etc. The AMD support is for families 0x10 and later. You will
1021 obviously need the actual microcode binary data itself which is not
1022 shipped with the Linux kernel.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001023
Peter Oruba8d86f392008-07-28 18:44:21 +02001024 This option selects the general module only, you need to select
1025 at least one vendor specific module as well.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001026
Borislav Petkove43f6e62012-08-01 19:17:01 +02001027 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
1028 will be called microcode.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001029
Peter Oruba8d86f392008-07-28 18:44:21 +02001030config MICROCODE_INTEL
Borislav Petkove43f6e62012-08-01 19:17:01 +02001031 bool "Intel microcode loading support"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001032 depends on MICROCODE
1033 default MICROCODE
1034 select FW_LOADER
1035 ---help---
1036 This options enables microcode patch loading support for Intel
1037 processors.
Peter Oruba8d86f392008-07-28 18:44:21 +02001038
Alanb8989db2014-01-20 18:01:56 +00001039 For the current Intel microcode data package go to
1040 <https://downloadcenter.intel.com> and search for
1041 'Linux Processor Microcode Data File'.
Peter Oruba8d86f392008-07-28 18:44:21 +02001042
Peter Oruba80cc9f12008-07-28 18:44:22 +02001043config MICROCODE_AMD
Borislav Petkove43f6e62012-08-01 19:17:01 +02001044 bool "AMD microcode loading support"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001045 depends on MICROCODE
1046 select FW_LOADER
1047 ---help---
1048 If you select this option, microcode patch loading support for AMD
1049 processors will be enabled.
Peter Oruba80cc9f12008-07-28 18:44:22 +02001050
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001051config MICROCODE_OLD_INTERFACE
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01001052 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001053 depends on MICROCODE
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001054
Fenghua Yuda76f642012-12-20 23:44:32 -08001055config MICROCODE_INTEL_EARLY
Jacob Shin757885e2013-05-30 14:09:19 -05001056 def_bool n
1057
1058config MICROCODE_AMD_EARLY
1059 def_bool n
1060
1061config MICROCODE_EARLY
Fenghua Yuda76f642012-12-20 23:44:32 -08001062 bool "Early load microcode"
Jacob Shin6b3389a2013-05-31 01:53:24 -05001063 depends on MICROCODE=y && BLK_DEV_INITRD
Jacob Shin757885e2013-05-30 14:09:19 -05001064 select MICROCODE_INTEL_EARLY if MICROCODE_INTEL
1065 select MICROCODE_AMD_EARLY if MICROCODE_AMD
Fenghua Yuda76f642012-12-20 23:44:32 -08001066 default y
1067 help
1068 This option provides functionality to read additional microcode data
1069 at the beginning of initrd image. The data tells kernel to load
1070 microcode to CPU's as early as possible. No functional change if no
1071 microcode data is glued to the initrd, therefore it's safe to say Y.
1072
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001073config X86_MSR
1074 tristate "/dev/cpu/*/msr - Model-specific register support"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001075 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001076 This device gives privileged processes access to the x86
1077 Model-Specific Registers (MSRs). It is a character device with
1078 major 202 and minors 0 to 31 for /dev/cpu/0/msr to /dev/cpu/31/msr.
1079 MSR accesses are directed to a specific CPU on multi-processor
1080 systems.
1081
1082config X86_CPUID
1083 tristate "/dev/cpu/*/cpuid - CPU information support"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001084 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001085 This device gives processes access to the x86 CPUID instruction to
1086 be executed on a specific processor. It is a character device
1087 with major 203 and minors 0 to 31 for /dev/cpu/0/cpuid to
1088 /dev/cpu/31/cpuid.
1089
1090choice
1091 prompt "High Memory Support"
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +01001092 default HIGHMEM4G
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001093 depends on X86_32
1094
1095config NOHIGHMEM
1096 bool "off"
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001097 ---help---
1098 Linux can use up to 64 Gigabytes of physical memory on x86 systems.
1099 However, the address space of 32-bit x86 processors is only 4
1100 Gigabytes large. That means that, if you have a large amount of
1101 physical memory, not all of it can be "permanently mapped" by the
1102 kernel. The physical memory that's not permanently mapped is called
1103 "high memory".
1104
1105 If you are compiling a kernel which will never run on a machine with
1106 more than 1 Gigabyte total physical RAM, answer "off" here (default
1107 choice and suitable for most users). This will result in a "3GB/1GB"
1108 split: 3GB are mapped so that each process sees a 3GB virtual memory
1109 space and the remaining part of the 4GB virtual memory space is used
1110 by the kernel to permanently map as much physical memory as
1111 possible.
1112
1113 If the machine has between 1 and 4 Gigabytes physical RAM, then
1114 answer "4GB" here.
1115
1116 If more than 4 Gigabytes is used then answer "64GB" here. This
1117 selection turns Intel PAE (Physical Address Extension) mode on.
1118 PAE implements 3-level paging on IA32 processors. PAE is fully
1119 supported by Linux, PAE mode is implemented on all recent Intel
1120 processors (Pentium Pro and better). NOTE: If you say "64GB" here,
1121 then the kernel will not boot on CPUs that don't support PAE!
1122
1123 The actual amount of total physical memory will either be
1124 auto detected or can be forced by using a kernel command line option
1125 such as "mem=256M". (Try "man bootparam" or see the documentation of
1126 your boot loader (lilo or loadlin) about how to pass options to the
1127 kernel at boot time.)
1128
1129 If unsure, say "off".
1130
1131config HIGHMEM4G
1132 bool "4GB"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001133 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001134 Select this if you have a 32-bit processor and between 1 and 4
1135 gigabytes of physical RAM.
1136
1137config HIGHMEM64G
1138 bool "64GB"
H. Peter Anvineb068e72012-11-28 11:50:23 -08001139 depends on !M486
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001140 select X86_PAE
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001141 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001142 Select this if you have a 32-bit processor and more than 4
1143 gigabytes of physical RAM.
1144
1145endchoice
1146
1147choice
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -08001148 prompt "Memory split" if EXPERT
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001149 default VMSPLIT_3G
1150 depends on X86_32
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001151 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001152 Select the desired split between kernel and user memory.
1153
1154 If the address range available to the kernel is less than the
1155 physical memory installed, the remaining memory will be available
1156 as "high memory". Accessing high memory is a little more costly
1157 than low memory, as it needs to be mapped into the kernel first.
1158 Note that increasing the kernel address space limits the range
1159 available to user programs, making the address space there
1160 tighter. Selecting anything other than the default 3G/1G split
1161 will also likely make your kernel incompatible with binary-only
1162 kernel modules.
1163
1164 If you are not absolutely sure what you are doing, leave this
1165 option alone!
1166
1167 config VMSPLIT_3G
1168 bool "3G/1G user/kernel split"
1169 config VMSPLIT_3G_OPT
1170 depends on !X86_PAE
1171 bool "3G/1G user/kernel split (for full 1G low memory)"
1172 config VMSPLIT_2G
1173 bool "2G/2G user/kernel split"
1174 config VMSPLIT_2G_OPT
1175 depends on !X86_PAE
1176 bool "2G/2G user/kernel split (for full 2G low memory)"
1177 config VMSPLIT_1G
1178 bool "1G/3G user/kernel split"
1179endchoice
1180
1181config PAGE_OFFSET
1182 hex
1183 default 0xB0000000 if VMSPLIT_3G_OPT
1184 default 0x80000000 if VMSPLIT_2G
1185 default 0x78000000 if VMSPLIT_2G_OPT
1186 default 0x40000000 if VMSPLIT_1G
1187 default 0xC0000000
1188 depends on X86_32
1189
1190config HIGHMEM
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01001191 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001192 depends on X86_32 && (HIGHMEM64G || HIGHMEM4G)
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001193
1194config X86_PAE
Jan Beulich9ba16082008-10-15 22:01:38 -07001195 bool "PAE (Physical Address Extension) Support"
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001196 depends on X86_32 && !HIGHMEM4G
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001197 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001198 PAE is required for NX support, and furthermore enables
1199 larger swapspace support for non-overcommit purposes. It
1200 has the cost of more pagetable lookup overhead, and also
1201 consumes more pagetable space per process.
1202
Jeremy Fitzhardinge600715d2008-09-11 01:31:45 -07001203config ARCH_PHYS_ADDR_T_64BIT
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +01001204 def_bool y
1205 depends on X86_64 || X86_PAE
Jeremy Fitzhardinge600715d2008-09-11 01:31:45 -07001206
FUJITA Tomonori66f2b062010-10-20 15:55:35 -07001207config ARCH_DMA_ADDR_T_64BIT
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +01001208 def_bool y
1209 depends on X86_64 || HIGHMEM64G
FUJITA Tomonori66f2b062010-10-20 15:55:35 -07001210
Nick Piggin9e899812008-10-22 12:33:16 +02001211config DIRECT_GBPAGES
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -08001212 bool "Enable 1GB pages for kernel pagetables" if EXPERT
Nick Piggin9e899812008-10-22 12:33:16 +02001213 default y
1214 depends on X86_64
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001215 ---help---
Nick Piggin9e899812008-10-22 12:33:16 +02001216 Allow the kernel linear mapping to use 1GB pages on CPUs that
1217 support it. This can improve the kernel's performance a tiny bit by
1218 reducing TLB pressure. If in doubt, say "Y".
1219
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001220# Common NUMA Features
1221config NUMA
KOSAKI Motohirofd51b2d2008-11-05 02:27:19 +09001222 bool "Numa Memory Allocation and Scheduler Support"
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001223 depends on SMP
H. Peter Anvinb5660ba2014-02-25 12:14:06 -08001224 depends on X86_64 || (X86_32 && HIGHMEM64G && X86_BIGSMP)
1225 default y if X86_BIGSMP
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001226 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001227 Enable NUMA (Non Uniform Memory Access) support.
KOSAKI Motohirofd51b2d2008-11-05 02:27:19 +09001228
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001229 The kernel will try to allocate memory used by a CPU on the
1230 local memory controller of the CPU and add some more
1231 NUMA awareness to the kernel.
1232
Ingo Molnarc280ea52008-11-08 13:29:45 +01001233 For 64-bit this is recommended if the system is Intel Core i7
KOSAKI Motohirofd51b2d2008-11-05 02:27:19 +09001234 (or later), AMD Opteron, or EM64T NUMA.
1235
H. Peter Anvinb5660ba2014-02-25 12:14:06 -08001236 For 32-bit this is only needed if you boot a 32-bit
David Rientjes7cf6c942014-02-11 18:11:13 -08001237 kernel on a 64-bit NUMA platform.
KOSAKI Motohirofd51b2d2008-11-05 02:27:19 +09001238
1239 Otherwise, you should say N.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001240
Hans Rosenfeldeec1d4f2010-10-29 17:14:30 +02001241config AMD_NUMA
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01001242 def_bool y
1243 prompt "Old style AMD Opteron NUMA detection"
Tejun Heo5da0ef92011-07-11 10:34:32 +02001244 depends on X86_64 && NUMA && PCI
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001245 ---help---
Hans Rosenfeldeec1d4f2010-10-29 17:14:30 +02001246 Enable AMD NUMA node topology detection. You should say Y here if
1247 you have a multi processor AMD system. This uses an old method to
1248 read the NUMA configuration directly from the builtin Northbridge
1249 of Opteron. It is recommended to use X86_64_ACPI_NUMA instead,
1250 which also takes priority if both are compiled in.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001251
1252config X86_64_ACPI_NUMA
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01001253 def_bool y
1254 prompt "ACPI NUMA detection"
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001255 depends on X86_64 && NUMA && ACPI && PCI
1256 select ACPI_NUMA
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001257 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001258 Enable ACPI SRAT based node topology detection.
1259
Suresh Siddha6ec6e0d2008-03-25 10:14:35 -07001260# Some NUMA nodes have memory ranges that span
1261# other nodes. Even though a pfn is valid and
1262# between a node's start and end pfns, it may not
1263# reside on that node. See memmap_init_zone()
1264# for details.
1265config NODES_SPAN_OTHER_NODES
1266 def_bool y
1267 depends on X86_64_ACPI_NUMA
1268
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001269config NUMA_EMU
1270 bool "NUMA emulation"
Tejun Heo1b7e03e2011-05-02 17:24:48 +02001271 depends on NUMA
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001272 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001273 Enable NUMA emulation. A flat machine will be split
1274 into virtual nodes when booted with "numa=fake=N", where N is the
1275 number of nodes. This is only useful for debugging.
1276
1277config NODES_SHIFT
Linus Torvaldsd25e26b2008-08-25 14:15:38 -07001278 int "Maximum NUMA Nodes (as a power of 2)" if !MAXSMP
David Rientjes51591e32010-03-25 15:39:27 -07001279 range 1 10
1280 default "10" if MAXSMP
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001281 default "6" if X86_64
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001282 default "3"
1283 depends on NEED_MULTIPLE_NODES
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001284 ---help---
Mike Travis1184dc22008-05-12 21:21:12 +02001285 Specify the maximum number of NUMA Nodes available on the target
Matt LaPlante692105b2009-01-26 11:12:25 +01001286 system. Increases memory reserved to accommodate various tables.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001287
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001288config ARCH_HAVE_MEMORY_PRESENT
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01001289 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001290 depends on X86_32 && DISCONTIGMEM
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001291
1292config NEED_NODE_MEMMAP_SIZE
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01001293 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001294 depends on X86_32 && (DISCONTIGMEM || SPARSEMEM)
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001295
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001296config ARCH_FLATMEM_ENABLE
1297 def_bool y
Tejun Heo3b166512011-04-01 11:15:12 +02001298 depends on X86_32 && !NUMA
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001299
1300config ARCH_DISCONTIGMEM_ENABLE
1301 def_bool y
Christoph Lameterb2632952008-01-30 13:30:47 +01001302 depends on NUMA && X86_32
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001303
1304config ARCH_DISCONTIGMEM_DEFAULT
1305 def_bool y
Christoph Lameterb2632952008-01-30 13:30:47 +01001306 depends on NUMA && X86_32
1307
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001308config ARCH_SPARSEMEM_ENABLE
1309 def_bool y
Kees Cook6ea30382012-10-02 11:16:47 -07001310 depends on X86_64 || NUMA || X86_32 || X86_32_NON_STANDARD
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001311 select SPARSEMEM_STATIC if X86_32
1312 select SPARSEMEM_VMEMMAP_ENABLE if X86_64
1313
Tejun Heo3b166512011-04-01 11:15:12 +02001314config ARCH_SPARSEMEM_DEFAULT
1315 def_bool y
1316 depends on X86_64
1317
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001318config ARCH_SELECT_MEMORY_MODEL
1319 def_bool y
Christoph Lameterb2632952008-01-30 13:30:47 +01001320 depends on ARCH_SPARSEMEM_ENABLE
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001321
1322config ARCH_MEMORY_PROBE
Toshi Kania0842b72013-07-19 11:47:48 -06001323 bool "Enable sysfs memory/probe interface"
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +01001324 depends on X86_64 && MEMORY_HOTPLUG
Toshi Kania0842b72013-07-19 11:47:48 -06001325 help
1326 This option enables a sysfs memory/probe interface for testing.
1327 See Documentation/memory-hotplug.txt for more information.
1328 If you are unsure how to answer this question, answer N.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001329
Tejun Heo3b166512011-04-01 11:15:12 +02001330config ARCH_PROC_KCORE_TEXT
1331 def_bool y
1332 depends on X86_64 && PROC_KCORE
1333
Avi Kivitya29815a2010-01-10 16:28:09 +02001334config ILLEGAL_POINTER_VALUE
1335 hex
1336 default 0 if X86_32
1337 default 0xdead000000000000 if X86_64
1338
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001339source "mm/Kconfig"
1340
1341config HIGHPTE
1342 bool "Allocate 3rd-level pagetables from highmem"
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +01001343 depends on HIGHMEM
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001344 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001345 The VM uses one page table entry for each page of physical memory.
1346 For systems with a lot of RAM, this can be wasteful of precious
1347 low memory. Setting this option will put user-space page table
1348 entries in high memory.
1349
Jeremy Fitzhardinge9f077872008-09-07 01:51:34 -07001350config X86_CHECK_BIOS_CORRUPTION
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001351 bool "Check for low memory corruption"
1352 ---help---
1353 Periodically check for memory corruption in low memory, which
1354 is suspected to be caused by BIOS. Even when enabled in the
1355 configuration, it is disabled at runtime. Enable it by
1356 setting "memory_corruption_check=1" on the kernel command
1357 line. By default it scans the low 64k of memory every 60
1358 seconds; see the memory_corruption_check_size and
1359 memory_corruption_check_period parameters in
1360 Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt to adjust this.
Jeremy Fitzhardinge9f077872008-09-07 01:51:34 -07001361
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001362 When enabled with the default parameters, this option has
1363 almost no overhead, as it reserves a relatively small amount
1364 of memory and scans it infrequently. It both detects corruption
1365 and prevents it from affecting the running system.
Jeremy Fitzhardinge9f077872008-09-07 01:51:34 -07001366
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001367 It is, however, intended as a diagnostic tool; if repeatable
1368 BIOS-originated corruption always affects the same memory,
1369 you can use memmap= to prevent the kernel from using that
1370 memory.
Jeremy Fitzhardinge9f077872008-09-07 01:51:34 -07001371
Jeremy Fitzhardingec885df52008-09-07 02:37:32 -07001372config X86_BOOTPARAM_MEMORY_CORRUPTION_CHECK
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001373 bool "Set the default setting of memory_corruption_check"
Jeremy Fitzhardingec885df52008-09-07 02:37:32 -07001374 depends on X86_CHECK_BIOS_CORRUPTION
1375 default y
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001376 ---help---
1377 Set whether the default state of memory_corruption_check is
1378 on or off.
Jeremy Fitzhardingec885df52008-09-07 02:37:32 -07001379
H. Peter Anvin9ea77bd2010-08-25 16:38:20 -07001380config X86_RESERVE_LOW
H. Peter Anvind0cd7422010-08-24 17:32:04 -07001381 int "Amount of low memory, in kilobytes, to reserve for the BIOS"
1382 default 64
1383 range 4 640
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001384 ---help---
H. Peter Anvind0cd7422010-08-24 17:32:04 -07001385 Specify the amount of low memory to reserve for the BIOS.
Ingo Molnarfc381512008-09-16 10:07:34 +02001386
H. Peter Anvind0cd7422010-08-24 17:32:04 -07001387 The first page contains BIOS data structures that the kernel
1388 must not use, so that page must always be reserved.
Ingo Molnarfc381512008-09-16 10:07:34 +02001389
H. Peter Anvind0cd7422010-08-24 17:32:04 -07001390 By default we reserve the first 64K of physical RAM, as a
1391 number of BIOSes are known to corrupt that memory range
1392 during events such as suspend/resume or monitor cable
1393 insertion, so it must not be used by the kernel.
Ingo Molnarfc381512008-09-16 10:07:34 +02001394
H. Peter Anvind0cd7422010-08-24 17:32:04 -07001395 You can set this to 4 if you are absolutely sure that you
1396 trust the BIOS to get all its memory reservations and usages
1397 right. If you know your BIOS have problems beyond the
1398 default 64K area, you can set this to 640 to avoid using the
1399 entire low memory range.
1400
1401 If you have doubts about the BIOS (e.g. suspend/resume does
1402 not work or there's kernel crashes after certain hardware
1403 hotplug events) then you might want to enable
1404 X86_CHECK_BIOS_CORRUPTION=y to allow the kernel to check
1405 typical corruption patterns.
1406
1407 Leave this to the default value of 64 if you are unsure.
Ingo Molnarfc381512008-09-16 10:07:34 +02001408
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001409config MATH_EMULATION
1410 bool
1411 prompt "Math emulation" if X86_32
1412 ---help---
1413 Linux can emulate a math coprocessor (used for floating point
1414 operations) if you don't have one. 486DX and Pentium processors have
1415 a math coprocessor built in, 486SX and 386 do not, unless you added
1416 a 487DX or 387, respectively. (The messages during boot time can
1417 give you some hints here ["man dmesg"].) Everyone needs either a
1418 coprocessor or this emulation.
1419
1420 If you don't have a math coprocessor, you need to say Y here; if you
1421 say Y here even though you have a coprocessor, the coprocessor will
1422 be used nevertheless. (This behavior can be changed with the kernel
1423 command line option "no387", which comes handy if your coprocessor
1424 is broken. Try "man bootparam" or see the documentation of your boot
1425 loader (lilo or loadlin) about how to pass options to the kernel at
1426 boot time.) This means that it is a good idea to say Y here if you
1427 intend to use this kernel on different machines.
1428
1429 More information about the internals of the Linux math coprocessor
1430 emulation can be found in <file:arch/x86/math-emu/README>.
1431
1432 If you are not sure, say Y; apart from resulting in a 66 KB bigger
1433 kernel, it won't hurt.
1434
1435config MTRR
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +01001436 def_bool y
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -08001437 prompt "MTRR (Memory Type Range Register) support" if EXPERT
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001438 ---help---
1439 On Intel P6 family processors (Pentium Pro, Pentium II and later)
1440 the Memory Type Range Registers (MTRRs) may be used to control
1441 processor access to memory ranges. This is most useful if you have
1442 a video (VGA) card on a PCI or AGP bus. Enabling write-combining
1443 allows bus write transfers to be combined into a larger transfer
1444 before bursting over the PCI/AGP bus. This can increase performance
1445 of image write operations 2.5 times or more. Saying Y here creates a
1446 /proc/mtrr file which may be used to manipulate your processor's
1447 MTRRs. Typically the X server should use this.
1448
1449 This code has a reasonably generic interface so that similar
1450 control registers on other processors can be easily supported
1451 as well:
1452
1453 The Cyrix 6x86, 6x86MX and M II processors have Address Range
1454 Registers (ARRs) which provide a similar functionality to MTRRs. For
1455 these, the ARRs are used to emulate the MTRRs.
1456 The AMD K6-2 (stepping 8 and above) and K6-3 processors have two
1457 MTRRs. The Centaur C6 (WinChip) has 8 MCRs, allowing
1458 write-combining. All of these processors are supported by this code
1459 and it makes sense to say Y here if you have one of them.
1460
1461 Saying Y here also fixes a problem with buggy SMP BIOSes which only
1462 set the MTRRs for the boot CPU and not for the secondary CPUs. This
1463 can lead to all sorts of problems, so it's good to say Y here.
1464
1465 You can safely say Y even if your machine doesn't have MTRRs, you'll
1466 just add about 9 KB to your kernel.
1467
Randy Dunlap7225e752008-07-26 17:54:22 -07001468 See <file:Documentation/x86/mtrr.txt> for more information.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001469
Yinghai Lu95ffa242008-04-29 03:52:33 -07001470config MTRR_SANITIZER
Yinghai Lu2ffb3502008-09-30 16:29:40 -07001471 def_bool y
Yinghai Lu95ffa242008-04-29 03:52:33 -07001472 prompt "MTRR cleanup support"
1473 depends on MTRR
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001474 ---help---
Thomas Gleixneraba37282008-07-15 14:48:48 +02001475 Convert MTRR layout from continuous to discrete, so X drivers can
1476 add writeback entries.
Yinghai Lu95ffa242008-04-29 03:52:33 -07001477
Thomas Gleixneraba37282008-07-15 14:48:48 +02001478 Can be disabled with disable_mtrr_cleanup on the kernel command line.
Matt LaPlante692105b2009-01-26 11:12:25 +01001479 The largest mtrr entry size for a continuous block can be set with
Thomas Gleixneraba37282008-07-15 14:48:48 +02001480 mtrr_chunk_size.
Yinghai Lu95ffa242008-04-29 03:52:33 -07001481
Yinghai Lu2ffb3502008-09-30 16:29:40 -07001482 If unsure, say Y.
Yinghai Lu95ffa242008-04-29 03:52:33 -07001483
1484config MTRR_SANITIZER_ENABLE_DEFAULT
Yinghai Luf5098d62008-04-29 20:25:58 -07001485 int "MTRR cleanup enable value (0-1)"
1486 range 0 1
1487 default "0"
Yinghai Lu95ffa242008-04-29 03:52:33 -07001488 depends on MTRR_SANITIZER
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001489 ---help---
Yinghai Luf5098d62008-04-29 20:25:58 -07001490 Enable mtrr cleanup default value
Yinghai Lu95ffa242008-04-29 03:52:33 -07001491
Yinghai Lu12031a62008-05-02 02:40:22 -07001492config MTRR_SANITIZER_SPARE_REG_NR_DEFAULT
1493 int "MTRR cleanup spare reg num (0-7)"
1494 range 0 7
1495 default "1"
1496 depends on MTRR_SANITIZER
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001497 ---help---
Yinghai Lu12031a62008-05-02 02:40:22 -07001498 mtrr cleanup spare entries default, it can be changed via
Thomas Gleixneraba37282008-07-15 14:48:48 +02001499 mtrr_spare_reg_nr=N on the kernel command line.
Yinghai Lu12031a62008-05-02 02:40:22 -07001500
venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com2e5d9c82008-03-18 17:00:14 -07001501config X86_PAT
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +01001502 def_bool y
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -08001503 prompt "x86 PAT support" if EXPERT
Ingo Molnar2a8a2712008-04-26 10:26:52 +02001504 depends on MTRR
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001505 ---help---
venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com2e5d9c82008-03-18 17:00:14 -07001506 Use PAT attributes to setup page level cache control.
Venki Pallipadi042b78e2008-03-24 14:22:35 -07001507
venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com2e5d9c82008-03-18 17:00:14 -07001508 PATs are the modern equivalents of MTRRs and are much more
1509 flexible than MTRRs.
1510
1511 Say N here if you see bootup problems (boot crash, boot hang,
Venki Pallipadi042b78e2008-03-24 14:22:35 -07001512 spontaneous reboots) or a non-working video driver.
venkatesh.pallipadi@intel.com2e5d9c82008-03-18 17:00:14 -07001513
1514 If unsure, say Y.
1515
Venkatesh Pallipadi46cf98c2009-07-10 09:57:37 -07001516config ARCH_USES_PG_UNCACHED
1517 def_bool y
1518 depends on X86_PAT
1519
H. Peter Anvin628c6242011-07-31 13:59:29 -07001520config ARCH_RANDOM
1521 def_bool y
1522 prompt "x86 architectural random number generator" if EXPERT
1523 ---help---
1524 Enable the x86 architectural RDRAND instruction
1525 (Intel Bull Mountain technology) to generate random numbers.
1526 If supported, this is a high bandwidth, cryptographically
1527 secure hardware random number generator.
1528
H. Peter Anvin51ae4a22012-09-21 12:43:10 -07001529config X86_SMAP
1530 def_bool y
1531 prompt "Supervisor Mode Access Prevention" if EXPERT
1532 ---help---
1533 Supervisor Mode Access Prevention (SMAP) is a security
1534 feature in newer Intel processors. There is a small
1535 performance cost if this enabled and turned on; there is
1536 also a small increase in the kernel size if this is enabled.
1537
1538 If unsure, say Y.
1539
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001540config EFI
Jan Beulich9ba16082008-10-15 22:01:38 -07001541 bool "EFI runtime service support"
Huang, Ying5b836832008-01-30 13:31:19 +01001542 depends on ACPI
Sergey Vlasovf6ce5002013-04-16 18:31:08 +04001543 select UCS2_STRING
Ard Biesheuvel022ee6c2014-06-26 12:09:05 +02001544 select EFI_RUNTIME_WRAPPERS
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001545 ---help---
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001546 This enables the kernel to use EFI runtime services that are
1547 available (such as the EFI variable services).
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001548
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001549 This option is only useful on systems that have EFI firmware.
1550 In addition, you should use the latest ELILO loader available
1551 at <http://elilo.sourceforge.net> in order to take advantage
1552 of EFI runtime services. However, even with this option, the
1553 resultant kernel should continue to boot on existing non-EFI
1554 platforms.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001555
Matt Fleming291f3632011-12-12 21:27:52 +00001556config EFI_STUB
1557 bool "EFI stub support"
Matt Flemingb16d8c22014-08-05 00:12:19 +01001558 depends on EFI && !X86_USE_3DNOW
Matt Fleming7b2a5832014-07-11 08:45:25 +01001559 select RELOCATABLE
Matt Fleming291f3632011-12-12 21:27:52 +00001560 ---help---
1561 This kernel feature allows a bzImage to be loaded directly
1562 by EFI firmware without the use of a bootloader.
1563
Roy Franz4172fe22013-09-22 15:45:25 -07001564 See Documentation/efi-stub.txt for more information.
Matt Fleming0c759662012-03-16 12:03:13 +00001565
Matt Fleming7d453ee2014-01-10 18:52:06 +00001566config EFI_MIXED
1567 bool "EFI mixed-mode support"
1568 depends on EFI_STUB && X86_64
1569 ---help---
1570 Enabling this feature allows a 64-bit kernel to be booted
1571 on a 32-bit firmware, provided that your CPU supports 64-bit
1572 mode.
1573
1574 Note that it is not possible to boot a mixed-mode enabled
1575 kernel via the EFI boot stub - a bootloader that supports
1576 the EFI handover protocol must be used.
1577
1578 If unsure, say N.
1579
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001580config SECCOMP
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01001581 def_bool y
1582 prompt "Enable seccomp to safely compute untrusted bytecode"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001583 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001584 This kernel feature is useful for number crunching applications
1585 that may need to compute untrusted bytecode during their
1586 execution. By using pipes or other transports made available to
1587 the process as file descriptors supporting the read/write
1588 syscalls, it's possible to isolate those applications in
1589 their own address space using seccomp. Once seccomp is
Alexey Dobriyan9c0bbee2008-09-09 11:01:31 +04001590 enabled via prctl(PR_SET_SECCOMP), it cannot be disabled
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001591 and the task is only allowed to execute a few safe syscalls
1592 defined by each seccomp mode.
1593
1594 If unsure, say Y. Only embedded should say N here.
1595
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001596source kernel/Kconfig.hz
1597
1598config KEXEC
1599 bool "kexec system call"
Vivek Goyalde5b56b2014-08-08 14:25:41 -07001600 select BUILD_BIN2C
Vivek Goyal12db5562014-08-08 14:26:04 -07001601 select CRYPTO
1602 select CRYPTO_SHA256
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001603 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001604 kexec is a system call that implements the ability to shutdown your
1605 current kernel, and to start another kernel. It is like a reboot
1606 but it is independent of the system firmware. And like a reboot
1607 you can start any kernel with it, not just Linux.
1608
1609 The name comes from the similarity to the exec system call.
1610
1611 It is an ongoing process to be certain the hardware in a machine
1612 is properly shutdown, so do not be surprised if this code does not
Geert Uytterhoevenbf220692013-08-20 21:38:03 +02001613 initially work for you. As of this writing the exact hardware
1614 interface is strongly in flux, so no good recommendation can be
1615 made.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001616
Vivek Goyal8e7d8382014-08-08 14:26:13 -07001617config KEXEC_VERIFY_SIG
1618 bool "Verify kernel signature during kexec_file_load() syscall"
1619 depends on KEXEC
1620 ---help---
1621 This option makes kernel signature verification mandatory for
1622 kexec_file_load() syscall. If kernel is signature can not be
1623 verified, kexec_file_load() will fail.
1624
1625 This option enforces signature verification at generic level.
1626 One needs to enable signature verification for type of kernel
1627 image being loaded to make sure it works. For example, enable
1628 bzImage signature verification option to be able to load and
1629 verify signatures of bzImage. Otherwise kernel loading will fail.
1630
1631config KEXEC_BZIMAGE_VERIFY_SIG
1632 bool "Enable bzImage signature verification support"
1633 depends on KEXEC_VERIFY_SIG
1634 depends on SIGNED_PE_FILE_VERIFICATION
1635 select SYSTEM_TRUSTED_KEYRING
1636 ---help---
1637 Enable bzImage signature verification support.
1638
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001639config CRASH_DUMP
Pavel Machek04b69442008-08-14 17:16:50 +02001640 bool "kernel crash dumps"
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001641 depends on X86_64 || (X86_32 && HIGHMEM)
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001642 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001643 Generate crash dump after being started by kexec.
1644 This should be normally only set in special crash dump kernels
1645 which are loaded in the main kernel with kexec-tools into
1646 a specially reserved region and then later executed after
1647 a crash by kdump/kexec. The crash dump kernel must be compiled
1648 to a memory address not used by the main kernel or BIOS using
1649 PHYSICAL_START, or it must be built as a relocatable image
1650 (CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=y).
1651 For more details see Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt
1652
Huang Ying3ab83522008-07-25 19:45:07 -07001653config KEXEC_JUMP
Kees Cook6ea30382012-10-02 11:16:47 -07001654 bool "kexec jump"
Huang Yingfee7b0d2009-03-10 10:57:16 +08001655 depends on KEXEC && HIBERNATION
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001656 ---help---
Huang Ying89081d12008-07-25 19:45:10 -07001657 Jump between original kernel and kexeced kernel and invoke
1658 code in physical address mode via KEXEC
Huang Ying3ab83522008-07-25 19:45:07 -07001659
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001660config PHYSICAL_START
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -08001661 hex "Physical address where the kernel is loaded" if (EXPERT || CRASH_DUMP)
H. Peter Anvinceefccc2009-05-11 16:12:16 -07001662 default "0x1000000"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001663 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001664 This gives the physical address where the kernel is loaded.
1665
1666 If kernel is a not relocatable (CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=n) then
1667 bzImage will decompress itself to above physical address and
1668 run from there. Otherwise, bzImage will run from the address where
1669 it has been loaded by the boot loader and will ignore above physical
1670 address.
1671
1672 In normal kdump cases one does not have to set/change this option
1673 as now bzImage can be compiled as a completely relocatable image
1674 (CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=y) and be used to load and run from a different
1675 address. This option is mainly useful for the folks who don't want
1676 to use a bzImage for capturing the crash dump and want to use a
1677 vmlinux instead. vmlinux is not relocatable hence a kernel needs
1678 to be specifically compiled to run from a specific memory area
1679 (normally a reserved region) and this option comes handy.
1680
H. Peter Anvinceefccc2009-05-11 16:12:16 -07001681 So if you are using bzImage for capturing the crash dump,
1682 leave the value here unchanged to 0x1000000 and set
1683 CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=y. Otherwise if you plan to use vmlinux
1684 for capturing the crash dump change this value to start of
1685 the reserved region. In other words, it can be set based on
1686 the "X" value as specified in the "crashkernel=YM@XM"
1687 command line boot parameter passed to the panic-ed
1688 kernel. Please take a look at Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt
1689 for more details about crash dumps.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001690
1691 Usage of bzImage for capturing the crash dump is recommended as
1692 one does not have to build two kernels. Same kernel can be used
1693 as production kernel and capture kernel. Above option should have
1694 gone away after relocatable bzImage support is introduced. But it
1695 is present because there are users out there who continue to use
1696 vmlinux for dump capture. This option should go away down the
1697 line.
1698
1699 Don't change this unless you know what you are doing.
1700
1701config RELOCATABLE
H. Peter Anvin26717802009-05-07 14:19:34 -07001702 bool "Build a relocatable kernel"
1703 default y
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001704 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001705 This builds a kernel image that retains relocation information
1706 so it can be loaded someplace besides the default 1MB.
1707 The relocations tend to make the kernel binary about 10% larger,
1708 but are discarded at runtime.
1709
1710 One use is for the kexec on panic case where the recovery kernel
1711 must live at a different physical address than the primary
1712 kernel.
1713
1714 Note: If CONFIG_RELOCATABLE=y, then the kernel runs from the address
1715 it has been loaded at and the compile time physical address
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001716 (CONFIG_PHYSICAL_START) is used as the minimum location.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001717
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001718config RANDOMIZE_BASE
1719 bool "Randomize the address of the kernel image"
1720 depends on RELOCATABLE
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001721 default n
1722 ---help---
1723 Randomizes the physical and virtual address at which the
1724 kernel image is decompressed, as a security feature that
1725 deters exploit attempts relying on knowledge of the location
1726 of kernel internals.
1727
Kees Cooka653f352013-11-11 14:28:39 -08001728 Entropy is generated using the RDRAND instruction if it is
1729 supported. If RDTSC is supported, it is used as well. If
1730 neither RDRAND nor RDTSC are supported, then randomness is
1731 read from the i8254 timer.
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001732
1733 The kernel will be offset by up to RANDOMIZE_BASE_MAX_OFFSET,
Kees Cooka653f352013-11-11 14:28:39 -08001734 and aligned according to PHYSICAL_ALIGN. Since the kernel is
1735 built using 2GiB addressing, and PHYSICAL_ALGIN must be at a
1736 minimum of 2MiB, only 10 bits of entropy is theoretically
1737 possible. At best, due to page table layouts, 64-bit can use
1738 9 bits of entropy and 32-bit uses 8 bits.
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001739
Kees Cookda2b6fb2013-12-10 12:27:45 -08001740 If unsure, say N.
1741
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001742config RANDOMIZE_BASE_MAX_OFFSET
Kees Cookda2b6fb2013-12-10 12:27:45 -08001743 hex "Maximum kASLR offset allowed" if EXPERT
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001744 depends on RANDOMIZE_BASE
Kees Cook6145cfe2013-10-10 17:18:18 -07001745 range 0x0 0x20000000 if X86_32
1746 default "0x20000000" if X86_32
1747 range 0x0 0x40000000 if X86_64
1748 default "0x40000000" if X86_64
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001749 ---help---
Kees Cookda2b6fb2013-12-10 12:27:45 -08001750 The lesser of RANDOMIZE_BASE_MAX_OFFSET and available physical
1751 memory is used to determine the maximal offset in bytes that will
1752 be applied to the kernel when kernel Address Space Layout
1753 Randomization (kASLR) is active. This must be a multiple of
1754 PHYSICAL_ALIGN.
Kees Cook6145cfe2013-10-10 17:18:18 -07001755
Kees Cookda2b6fb2013-12-10 12:27:45 -08001756 On 32-bit this is limited to 512MiB by page table layouts. The
1757 default is 512MiB.
Kees Cook6145cfe2013-10-10 17:18:18 -07001758
Kees Cookda2b6fb2013-12-10 12:27:45 -08001759 On 64-bit this is limited by how the kernel fixmap page table is
1760 positioned, so this cannot be larger than 1GiB currently. Without
1761 RANDOMIZE_BASE, there is a 512MiB to 1.5GiB split between kernel
1762 and modules. When RANDOMIZE_BASE_MAX_OFFSET is above 512MiB, the
1763 modules area will shrink to compensate, up to the current maximum
1764 1GiB to 1GiB split. The default is 1GiB.
1765
1766 If unsure, leave at the default value.
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001767
1768# Relocation on x86 needs some additional build support
H. Peter Anvin845adf72009-05-05 21:20:51 -07001769config X86_NEED_RELOCS
1770 def_bool y
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001771 depends on RANDOMIZE_BASE || (X86_32 && RELOCATABLE)
H. Peter Anvin845adf72009-05-05 21:20:51 -07001772
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001773config PHYSICAL_ALIGN
Kees Cooka0215062013-07-08 09:15:17 -07001774 hex "Alignment value to which kernel should be aligned"
Kees Cook8ab38202013-10-10 17:18:14 -07001775 default "0x200000"
Kees Cooka0215062013-07-08 09:15:17 -07001776 range 0x2000 0x1000000 if X86_32
1777 range 0x200000 0x1000000 if X86_64
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001778 ---help---
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001779 This value puts the alignment restrictions on physical address
1780 where kernel is loaded and run from. Kernel is compiled for an
1781 address which meets above alignment restriction.
1782
1783 If bootloader loads the kernel at a non-aligned address and
1784 CONFIG_RELOCATABLE is set, kernel will move itself to nearest
1785 address aligned to above value and run from there.
1786
1787 If bootloader loads the kernel at a non-aligned address and
1788 CONFIG_RELOCATABLE is not set, kernel will ignore the run time
1789 load address and decompress itself to the address it has been
1790 compiled for and run from there. The address for which kernel is
1791 compiled already meets above alignment restrictions. Hence the
1792 end result is that kernel runs from a physical address meeting
1793 above alignment restrictions.
1794
Kees Cooka0215062013-07-08 09:15:17 -07001795 On 32-bit this value must be a multiple of 0x2000. On 64-bit
1796 this value must be a multiple of 0x200000.
1797
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001798 Don't change this unless you know what you are doing.
1799
1800config HOTPLUG_CPU
Dimitri Sivanich7c13e6a2008-08-11 10:46:46 -05001801 bool "Support for hot-pluggable CPUs"
Stephen Rothwell40b31362013-05-21 13:49:35 +10001802 depends on SMP
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001803 ---help---
Dimitri Sivanich7c13e6a2008-08-11 10:46:46 -05001804 Say Y here to allow turning CPUs off and on. CPUs can be
1805 controlled through /sys/devices/system/cpu.
1806 ( Note: power management support will enable this option
1807 automatically on SMP systems. )
1808 Say N if you want to disable CPU hotplug.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001809
Fenghua Yu80aa1df2012-11-13 11:32:39 -08001810config BOOTPARAM_HOTPLUG_CPU0
1811 bool "Set default setting of cpu0_hotpluggable"
1812 default n
Kees Cook2c922cd2013-01-22 13:01:19 -08001813 depends on HOTPLUG_CPU
Fenghua Yu80aa1df2012-11-13 11:32:39 -08001814 ---help---
1815 Set whether default state of cpu0_hotpluggable is on or off.
1816
1817 Say Y here to enable CPU0 hotplug by default. If this switch
1818 is turned on, there is no need to give cpu0_hotplug kernel
1819 parameter and the CPU0 hotplug feature is enabled by default.
1820
1821 Please note: there are two known CPU0 dependencies if you want
1822 to enable the CPU0 hotplug feature either by this switch or by
1823 cpu0_hotplug kernel parameter.
1824
1825 First, resume from hibernate or suspend always starts from CPU0.
1826 So hibernate and suspend are prevented if CPU0 is offline.
1827
1828 Second dependency is PIC interrupts always go to CPU0. CPU0 can not
1829 offline if any interrupt can not migrate out of CPU0. There may
1830 be other CPU0 dependencies.
1831
1832 Please make sure the dependencies are under your control before
1833 you enable this feature.
1834
1835 Say N if you don't want to enable CPU0 hotplug feature by default.
1836 You still can enable the CPU0 hotplug feature at boot by kernel
1837 parameter cpu0_hotplug.
1838
Fenghua Yua71c8bc2012-11-13 11:32:51 -08001839config DEBUG_HOTPLUG_CPU0
1840 def_bool n
1841 prompt "Debug CPU0 hotplug"
Kees Cook2c922cd2013-01-22 13:01:19 -08001842 depends on HOTPLUG_CPU
Fenghua Yua71c8bc2012-11-13 11:32:51 -08001843 ---help---
1844 Enabling this option offlines CPU0 (if CPU0 can be offlined) as
1845 soon as possible and boots up userspace with CPU0 offlined. User
1846 can online CPU0 back after boot time.
1847
1848 To debug CPU0 hotplug, you need to enable CPU0 offline/online
1849 feature by either turning on CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_HOTPLUG_CPU0 during
1850 compilation or giving cpu0_hotplug kernel parameter at boot.
1851
1852 If unsure, say N.
1853
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001854config COMPAT_VDSO
Andy Lutomirskib0b49f22014-03-13 16:01:26 -07001855 def_bool n
1856 prompt "Disable the 32-bit vDSO (needed for glibc 2.3.3)"
Roland McGrathaf65d642008-01-30 13:30:43 +01001857 depends on X86_32 || IA32_EMULATION
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001858 ---help---
Andy Lutomirskib0b49f22014-03-13 16:01:26 -07001859 Certain buggy versions of glibc will crash if they are
1860 presented with a 32-bit vDSO that is not mapped at the address
1861 indicated in its segment table.
Randy Dunlape84446d2009-11-10 15:46:52 -08001862
Andy Lutomirskib0b49f22014-03-13 16:01:26 -07001863 The bug was introduced by f866314b89d56845f55e6f365e18b31ec978ec3a
1864 and fixed by 3b3ddb4f7db98ec9e912ccdf54d35df4aa30e04a and
1865 49ad572a70b8aeb91e57483a11dd1b77e31c4468. Glibc 2.3.3 is
1866 the only released version with the bug, but OpenSUSE 9
1867 contains a buggy "glibc 2.3.2".
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001868
Andy Lutomirskib0b49f22014-03-13 16:01:26 -07001869 The symptom of the bug is that everything crashes on startup, saying:
1870 dl_main: Assertion `(void *) ph->p_vaddr == _rtld_local._dl_sysinfo_dso' failed!
1871
1872 Saying Y here changes the default value of the vdso32 boot
1873 option from 1 to 0, which turns off the 32-bit vDSO entirely.
1874 This works around the glibc bug but hurts performance.
1875
1876 If unsure, say N: if you are compiling your own kernel, you
1877 are unlikely to be using a buggy version of glibc.
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001878
Tim Bird516cbf32008-08-12 12:52:36 -07001879config CMDLINE_BOOL
1880 bool "Built-in kernel command line"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001881 ---help---
Tim Bird516cbf32008-08-12 12:52:36 -07001882 Allow for specifying boot arguments to the kernel at
1883 build time. On some systems (e.g. embedded ones), it is
1884 necessary or convenient to provide some or all of the
1885 kernel boot arguments with the kernel itself (that is,
1886 to not rely on the boot loader to provide them.)
1887
1888 To compile command line arguments into the kernel,
1889 set this option to 'Y', then fill in the
1890 the boot arguments in CONFIG_CMDLINE.
1891
1892 Systems with fully functional boot loaders (i.e. non-embedded)
1893 should leave this option set to 'N'.
1894
1895config CMDLINE
1896 string "Built-in kernel command string"
1897 depends on CMDLINE_BOOL
1898 default ""
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001899 ---help---
Tim Bird516cbf32008-08-12 12:52:36 -07001900 Enter arguments here that should be compiled into the kernel
1901 image and used at boot time. If the boot loader provides a
1902 command line at boot time, it is appended to this string to
1903 form the full kernel command line, when the system boots.
1904
1905 However, you can use the CONFIG_CMDLINE_OVERRIDE option to
1906 change this behavior.
1907
1908 In most cases, the command line (whether built-in or provided
1909 by the boot loader) should specify the device for the root
1910 file system.
1911
1912config CMDLINE_OVERRIDE
1913 bool "Built-in command line overrides boot loader arguments"
Tim Bird516cbf32008-08-12 12:52:36 -07001914 depends on CMDLINE_BOOL
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01001915 ---help---
Tim Bird516cbf32008-08-12 12:52:36 -07001916 Set this option to 'Y' to have the kernel ignore the boot loader
1917 command line, and use ONLY the built-in command line.
1918
1919 This is used to work around broken boot loaders. This should
1920 be set to 'N' under normal conditions.
1921
Sam Ravnborg506f1d02007-11-09 21:56:54 +01001922endmenu
1923
1924config ARCH_ENABLE_MEMORY_HOTPLUG
1925 def_bool y
1926 depends on X86_64 || (X86_32 && HIGHMEM)
1927
Gary Hade35551052008-10-31 10:52:03 -07001928config ARCH_ENABLE_MEMORY_HOTREMOVE
1929 def_bool y
1930 depends on MEMORY_HOTPLUG
1931
Lee Schermerhorne534c7c2010-05-26 14:44:58 -07001932config USE_PERCPU_NUMA_NODE_ID
Tejun Heo645a7912011-01-23 14:37:40 +01001933 def_bool y
Lee Schermerhorne534c7c2010-05-26 14:44:58 -07001934 depends on NUMA
1935
Kirill A. Shutemov94918462013-11-14 14:31:10 -08001936config ARCH_ENABLE_SPLIT_PMD_PTLOCK
1937 def_bool y
1938 depends on X86_64 || X86_PAE
1939
Naoya Horiguchic177c812014-06-04 16:05:35 -07001940config ARCH_ENABLE_HUGEPAGE_MIGRATION
1941 def_bool y
1942 depends on X86_64 && HUGETLB_PAGE && MIGRATION
1943
Bjorn Helgaasda85f862008-11-05 13:37:27 -06001944menu "Power management and ACPI options"
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01001945
1946config ARCH_HIBERNATION_HEADER
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01001947 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01001948 depends on X86_64 && HIBERNATION
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01001949
1950source "kernel/power/Kconfig"
1951
1952source "drivers/acpi/Kconfig"
1953
Feng Tangefafc8b2009-08-14 15:23:29 -04001954source "drivers/sfi/Kconfig"
1955
Andi Kleena6b68072008-01-30 13:32:49 +01001956config X86_APM_BOOT
Jan Beulich6fc108a2010-04-21 15:23:44 +01001957 def_bool y
Paul Bolle282e5aa2011-11-17 11:41:31 +01001958 depends on APM
Andi Kleena6b68072008-01-30 13:32:49 +01001959
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01001960menuconfig APM
1961 tristate "APM (Advanced Power Management) BIOS support"
Ingo Molnarefefa6f2008-07-10 16:09:50 +02001962 depends on X86_32 && PM_SLEEP
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01001963 ---help---
1964 APM is a BIOS specification for saving power using several different
1965 techniques. This is mostly useful for battery powered laptops with
1966 APM compliant BIOSes. If you say Y here, the system time will be
1967 reset after a RESUME operation, the /proc/apm device will provide
1968 battery status information, and user-space programs will receive
1969 notification of APM "events" (e.g. battery status change).
1970
1971 If you select "Y" here, you can disable actual use of the APM
1972 BIOS by passing the "apm=off" option to the kernel at boot time.
1973
1974 Note that the APM support is almost completely disabled for
1975 machines with more than one CPU.
1976
1977 In order to use APM, you will need supporting software. For location
Michael Witten2dc98fd2011-07-08 21:11:16 +00001978 and more information, read <file:Documentation/power/apm-acpi.txt>
1979 and the Battery Powered Linux mini-HOWTO, available from
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01001980 <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.
1981
1982 This driver does not spin down disk drives (see the hdparm(8)
1983 manpage ("man 8 hdparm") for that), and it doesn't turn off
1984 VESA-compliant "green" monitors.
1985
1986 This driver does not support the TI 4000M TravelMate and the ACER
1987 486/DX4/75 because they don't have compliant BIOSes. Many "green"
1988 desktop machines also don't have compliant BIOSes, and this driver
1989 may cause those machines to panic during the boot phase.
1990
1991 Generally, if you don't have a battery in your machine, there isn't
1992 much point in using this driver and you should say N. If you get
1993 random kernel OOPSes or reboots that don't seem to be related to
1994 anything, try disabling/enabling this option (or disabling/enabling
1995 APM in your BIOS).
1996
1997 Some other things you should try when experiencing seemingly random,
1998 "weird" problems:
1999
2000 1) make sure that you have enough swap space and that it is
2001 enabled.
2002 2) pass the "no-hlt" option to the kernel
2003 3) switch on floating point emulation in the kernel and pass
2004 the "no387" option to the kernel
2005 4) pass the "floppy=nodma" option to the kernel
2006 5) pass the "mem=4M" option to the kernel (thereby disabling
2007 all but the first 4 MB of RAM)
2008 6) make sure that the CPU is not over clocked.
2009 7) read the sig11 FAQ at <http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/>
2010 8) disable the cache from your BIOS settings
2011 9) install a fan for the video card or exchange video RAM
2012 10) install a better fan for the CPU
2013 11) exchange RAM chips
2014 12) exchange the motherboard.
2015
2016 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
2017 module will be called apm.
2018
2019if APM
2020
2021config APM_IGNORE_USER_SUSPEND
2022 bool "Ignore USER SUSPEND"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002023 ---help---
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002024 This option will ignore USER SUSPEND requests. On machines with a
2025 compliant APM BIOS, you want to say N. However, on the NEC Versa M
2026 series notebooks, it is necessary to say Y because of a BIOS bug.
2027
2028config APM_DO_ENABLE
2029 bool "Enable PM at boot time"
2030 ---help---
2031 Enable APM features at boot time. From page 36 of the APM BIOS
2032 specification: "When disabled, the APM BIOS does not automatically
2033 power manage devices, enter the Standby State, enter the Suspend
2034 State, or take power saving steps in response to CPU Idle calls."
2035 This driver will make CPU Idle calls when Linux is idle (unless this
2036 feature is turned off -- see "Do CPU IDLE calls", below). This
2037 should always save battery power, but more complicated APM features
2038 will be dependent on your BIOS implementation. You may need to turn
2039 this option off if your computer hangs at boot time when using APM
2040 support, or if it beeps continuously instead of suspending. Turn
2041 this off if you have a NEC UltraLite Versa 33/C or a Toshiba
2042 T400CDT. This is off by default since most machines do fine without
2043 this feature.
2044
2045config APM_CPU_IDLE
Len Browndd8af072013-02-09 21:10:04 -05002046 depends on CPU_IDLE
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002047 bool "Make CPU Idle calls when idle"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002048 ---help---
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002049 Enable calls to APM CPU Idle/CPU Busy inside the kernel's idle loop.
2050 On some machines, this can activate improved power savings, such as
2051 a slowed CPU clock rate, when the machine is idle. These idle calls
2052 are made after the idle loop has run for some length of time (e.g.,
2053 333 mS). On some machines, this will cause a hang at boot time or
2054 whenever the CPU becomes idle. (On machines with more than one CPU,
2055 this option does nothing.)
2056
2057config APM_DISPLAY_BLANK
2058 bool "Enable console blanking using APM"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002059 ---help---
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002060 Enable console blanking using the APM. Some laptops can use this to
2061 turn off the LCD backlight when the screen blanker of the Linux
2062 virtual console blanks the screen. Note that this is only used by
2063 the virtual console screen blanker, and won't turn off the backlight
2064 when using the X Window system. This also doesn't have anything to
2065 do with your VESA-compliant power-saving monitor. Further, this
2066 option doesn't work for all laptops -- it might not turn off your
2067 backlight at all, or it might print a lot of errors to the console,
2068 especially if you are using gpm.
2069
2070config APM_ALLOW_INTS
2071 bool "Allow interrupts during APM BIOS calls"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002072 ---help---
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002073 Normally we disable external interrupts while we are making calls to
2074 the APM BIOS as a measure to lessen the effects of a badly behaving
2075 BIOS implementation. The BIOS should reenable interrupts if it
2076 needs to. Unfortunately, some BIOSes do not -- especially those in
2077 many of the newer IBM Thinkpads. If you experience hangs when you
2078 suspend, try setting this to Y. Otherwise, say N.
2079
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002080endif # APM
2081
Dave Jonesbb0a56e2011-05-19 18:51:07 -04002082source "drivers/cpufreq/Kconfig"
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002083
2084source "drivers/cpuidle/Kconfig"
2085
Andy Henroid27471fd2008-10-09 11:45:22 -07002086source "drivers/idle/Kconfig"
2087
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002088endmenu
2089
2090
2091menu "Bus options (PCI etc.)"
2092
2093config PCI
Ingo Molnar1ac97012008-05-19 14:10:14 +02002094 bool "PCI support"
Adrian Bunk1c858082008-01-30 13:32:32 +01002095 default y
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002096 ---help---
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002097 Find out whether you have a PCI motherboard. PCI is the name of a
2098 bus system, i.e. the way the CPU talks to the other stuff inside
2099 your box. Other bus systems are ISA, EISA, MicroChannel (MCA) or
2100 VESA. If you have PCI, say Y, otherwise N.
2101
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002102choice
2103 prompt "PCI access mode"
Ingo Molnarefefa6f2008-07-10 16:09:50 +02002104 depends on X86_32 && PCI
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002105 default PCI_GOANY
2106 ---help---
2107 On PCI systems, the BIOS can be used to detect the PCI devices and
2108 determine their configuration. However, some old PCI motherboards
2109 have BIOS bugs and may crash if this is done. Also, some embedded
2110 PCI-based systems don't have any BIOS at all. Linux can also try to
2111 detect the PCI hardware directly without using the BIOS.
2112
2113 With this option, you can specify how Linux should detect the
2114 PCI devices. If you choose "BIOS", the BIOS will be used,
2115 if you choose "Direct", the BIOS won't be used, and if you
2116 choose "MMConfig", then PCI Express MMCONFIG will be used.
2117 If you choose "Any", the kernel will try MMCONFIG, then the
2118 direct access method and falls back to the BIOS if that doesn't
2119 work. If unsure, go with the default, which is "Any".
2120
2121config PCI_GOBIOS
2122 bool "BIOS"
2123
2124config PCI_GOMMCONFIG
2125 bool "MMConfig"
2126
2127config PCI_GODIRECT
2128 bool "Direct"
2129
Andres Salomon3ef0e1f2008-04-29 00:59:53 -07002130config PCI_GOOLPC
Daniel Drake76fb6572010-09-23 17:28:04 +01002131 bool "OLPC XO-1"
Andres Salomon3ef0e1f2008-04-29 00:59:53 -07002132 depends on OLPC
2133
Andres Salomon2bdd1b02008-06-05 14:14:41 -07002134config PCI_GOANY
2135 bool "Any"
2136
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002137endchoice
2138
2139config PCI_BIOS
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01002140 def_bool y
Ingo Molnarefefa6f2008-07-10 16:09:50 +02002141 depends on X86_32 && PCI && (PCI_GOBIOS || PCI_GOANY)
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002142
2143# x86-64 doesn't support PCI BIOS access from long mode so always go direct.
2144config PCI_DIRECT
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01002145 def_bool y
Shaohua Li0aba4962011-05-27 14:59:39 +08002146 depends on PCI && (X86_64 || (PCI_GODIRECT || PCI_GOANY || PCI_GOOLPC || PCI_GOMMCONFIG))
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002147
2148config PCI_MMCONFIG
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01002149 def_bool y
Feng Tang5f0db7a2009-08-14 15:37:50 -04002150 depends on X86_32 && PCI && (ACPI || SFI) && (PCI_GOMMCONFIG || PCI_GOANY)
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002151
Andres Salomon3ef0e1f2008-04-29 00:59:53 -07002152config PCI_OLPC
Andres Salomon2bdd1b02008-06-05 14:14:41 -07002153 def_bool y
2154 depends on PCI && OLPC && (PCI_GOOLPC || PCI_GOANY)
Andres Salomon3ef0e1f2008-04-29 00:59:53 -07002155
Alex Nixonb5401a92010-03-18 16:31:34 -04002156config PCI_XEN
2157 def_bool y
2158 depends on PCI && XEN
2159 select SWIOTLB_XEN
2160
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002161config PCI_DOMAINS
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01002162 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002163 depends on PCI
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002164
2165config PCI_MMCONFIG
2166 bool "Support mmconfig PCI config space access"
2167 depends on X86_64 && PCI && ACPI
2168
Ira W. Snyder3f6ea842010-04-01 11:43:30 -07002169config PCI_CNB20LE_QUIRK
David Rientjes6a108a12011-01-20 14:44:16 -08002170 bool "Read CNB20LE Host Bridge Windows" if EXPERT
Kees Cook6ea30382012-10-02 11:16:47 -07002171 depends on PCI
Ira W. Snyder3f6ea842010-04-01 11:43:30 -07002172 help
2173 Read the PCI windows out of the CNB20LE host bridge. This allows
2174 PCI hotplug to work on systems with the CNB20LE chipset which do
2175 not have ACPI.
2176
Bjorn Helgaas64a5fed2011-01-06 10:12:30 -07002177 There's no public spec for this chipset, and this functionality
2178 is known to be incomplete.
2179
2180 You should say N unless you know you need this.
2181
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002182source "drivers/pci/pcie/Kconfig"
2183
2184source "drivers/pci/Kconfig"
2185
David Rientjes1c00f012011-03-22 16:34:59 -07002186# x86_64 have no ISA slots, but can have ISA-style DMA.
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002187config ISA_DMA_API
David Rientjes1c00f012011-03-22 16:34:59 -07002188 bool "ISA-style DMA support" if (X86_64 && EXPERT)
2189 default y
2190 help
2191 Enables ISA-style DMA support for devices requiring such controllers.
2192 If unsure, say Y.
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002193
2194if X86_32
2195
2196config ISA
2197 bool "ISA support"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002198 ---help---
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002199 Find out whether you have ISA slots on your motherboard. ISA is the
2200 name of a bus system, i.e. the way the CPU talks to the other stuff
2201 inside your box. Other bus systems are PCI, EISA, MicroChannel
2202 (MCA) or VESA. ISA is an older system, now being displaced by PCI;
2203 newer boards don't support it. If you have ISA, say Y, otherwise N.
2204
2205config EISA
2206 bool "EISA support"
2207 depends on ISA
2208 ---help---
2209 The Extended Industry Standard Architecture (EISA) bus was
2210 developed as an open alternative to the IBM MicroChannel bus.
2211
2212 The EISA bus provided some of the features of the IBM MicroChannel
2213 bus while maintaining backward compatibility with cards made for
2214 the older ISA bus. The EISA bus saw limited use between 1988 and
2215 1995 when it was made obsolete by the PCI bus.
2216
2217 Say Y here if you are building a kernel for an EISA-based machine.
2218
2219 Otherwise, say N.
2220
2221source "drivers/eisa/Kconfig"
2222
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002223config SCx200
2224 tristate "NatSemi SCx200 support"
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002225 ---help---
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002226 This provides basic support for National Semiconductor's
2227 (now AMD's) Geode processors. The driver probes for the
2228 PCI-IDs of several on-chip devices, so its a good dependency
2229 for other scx200_* drivers.
2230
2231 If compiled as a module, the driver is named scx200.
2232
2233config SCx200HR_TIMER
2234 tristate "NatSemi SCx200 27MHz High-Resolution Timer Support"
John Stultz592913e2010-07-13 17:56:20 -07002235 depends on SCx200
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002236 default y
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002237 ---help---
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002238 This driver provides a clocksource built upon the on-chip
2239 27MHz high-resolution timer. Its also a workaround for
2240 NSC Geode SC-1100's buggy TSC, which loses time when the
2241 processor goes idle (as is done by the scheduler). The
2242 other workaround is idle=poll boot option.
2243
Andres Salomon3ef0e1f2008-04-29 00:59:53 -07002244config OLPC
2245 bool "One Laptop Per Child support"
Thomas Gleixner54008972011-02-23 09:50:15 +01002246 depends on !X86_PAE
Andres Salomon3c554942009-12-14 18:00:36 -08002247 select GPIOLIB
Thomas Gleixnerdc3119e72011-02-23 10:08:31 +01002248 select OF
Daniel Drake45bb1672011-03-13 15:10:17 +00002249 select OF_PROMTREE
Grant Likelyb4e51852011-12-16 15:50:17 -07002250 select IRQ_DOMAIN
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002251 ---help---
Andres Salomon3ef0e1f2008-04-29 00:59:53 -07002252 Add support for detecting the unique features of the OLPC
2253 XO hardware.
2254
Daniel Drakea3128582011-06-25 17:34:10 +01002255config OLPC_XO1_PM
2256 bool "OLPC XO-1 Power Management"
Daniel Drake97c4cb72011-06-25 17:34:11 +01002257 depends on OLPC && MFD_CS5535 && PM_SLEEP
Daniel Drakea3128582011-06-25 17:34:10 +01002258 select MFD_CORE
Daniel Drakebf1ebf02010-10-10 10:40:32 +01002259 ---help---
Daniel Drake97c4cb72011-06-25 17:34:11 +01002260 Add support for poweroff and suspend of the OLPC XO-1 laptop.
Daniel Drakebf1ebf02010-10-10 10:40:32 +01002261
Daniel Drakecfee9592011-06-25 17:34:17 +01002262config OLPC_XO1_RTC
2263 bool "OLPC XO-1 Real Time Clock"
2264 depends on OLPC_XO1_PM && RTC_DRV_CMOS
2265 ---help---
2266 Add support for the XO-1 real time clock, which can be used as a
2267 programmable wakeup source.
2268
Daniel Drake7feda8e2011-06-25 17:34:12 +01002269config OLPC_XO1_SCI
2270 bool "OLPC XO-1 SCI extras"
Daniel Draked8d01a62011-07-24 18:33:21 +01002271 depends on OLPC && OLPC_XO1_PM
Randy Dunlaped8e47f2012-12-18 12:22:17 -08002272 depends on INPUT=y
Daniel Draked8d01a62011-07-24 18:33:21 +01002273 select POWER_SUPPLY
Daniel Drake7feda8e2011-06-25 17:34:12 +01002274 select GPIO_CS5535
2275 select MFD_CORE
2276 ---help---
2277 Add support for SCI-based features of the OLPC XO-1 laptop:
Daniel Drake7bc74b32011-06-25 17:34:14 +01002278 - EC-driven system wakeups
Daniel Drake7feda8e2011-06-25 17:34:12 +01002279 - Power button
Daniel Drake7bc74b32011-06-25 17:34:14 +01002280 - Ebook switch
Daniel Drake2cf2bae2011-06-25 17:34:15 +01002281 - Lid switch
Daniel Drakee1040ac2011-06-25 17:34:16 +01002282 - AC adapter status updates
2283 - Battery status updates
Daniel Drake7feda8e2011-06-25 17:34:12 +01002284
Daniel Drakea0f30f52011-06-25 17:34:18 +01002285config OLPC_XO15_SCI
2286 bool "OLPC XO-1.5 SCI extras"
Daniel Draked8d01a62011-07-24 18:33:21 +01002287 depends on OLPC && ACPI
2288 select POWER_SUPPLY
Daniel Drakea0f30f52011-06-25 17:34:18 +01002289 ---help---
2290 Add support for SCI-based features of the OLPC XO-1.5 laptop:
2291 - EC-driven system wakeups
2292 - AC adapter status updates
2293 - Battery status updates
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002294
Ed Wildgoosed4f3e352011-09-20 14:00:12 -07002295config ALIX
2296 bool "PCEngines ALIX System Support (LED setup)"
2297 select GPIOLIB
2298 ---help---
2299 This option enables system support for the PCEngines ALIX.
2300 At present this just sets up LEDs for GPIO control on
2301 ALIX2/3/6 boards. However, other system specific setup should
2302 get added here.
2303
2304 Note: You must still enable the drivers for GPIO and LED support
2305 (GPIO_CS5535 & LEDS_GPIO) to actually use the LEDs
2306
2307 Note: You have to set alix.force=1 for boards with Award BIOS.
2308
Philip Prindevilleda4e3302012-03-05 15:05:15 -08002309config NET5501
2310 bool "Soekris Engineering net5501 System Support (LEDS, GPIO, etc)"
2311 select GPIOLIB
2312 ---help---
2313 This option enables system support for the Soekris Engineering net5501.
2314
Philip A. Prindeville31970592012-01-14 01:45:39 -07002315config GEOS
2316 bool "Traverse Technologies GEOS System Support (LEDS, GPIO, etc)"
2317 select GPIOLIB
2318 depends on DMI
2319 ---help---
2320 This option enables system support for the Traverse Technologies GEOS.
2321
Vivien Didelot7d029122013-01-04 16:18:14 -05002322config TS5500
2323 bool "Technologic Systems TS-5500 platform support"
2324 depends on MELAN
2325 select CHECK_SIGNATURE
2326 select NEW_LEDS
2327 select LEDS_CLASS
2328 ---help---
2329 This option enables system support for the Technologic Systems TS-5500.
2330
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002331endif # X86_32
2332
Andreas Herrmann23ac4ae2010-09-17 18:03:43 +02002333config AMD_NB
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002334 def_bool y
Borislav Petkov0e152cd2010-03-12 15:43:03 +01002335 depends on CPU_SUP_AMD && PCI
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002336
2337source "drivers/pcmcia/Kconfig"
2338
2339source "drivers/pci/hotplug/Kconfig"
2340
Alexandre Bounine388b78a2011-03-23 16:43:03 -07002341config RAPIDIO
Alexandre Bouninefdf90ab2013-07-03 15:08:56 -07002342 tristate "RapidIO support"
Alexandre Bounine388b78a2011-03-23 16:43:03 -07002343 depends on PCI
2344 default n
2345 help
Alexandre Bouninefdf90ab2013-07-03 15:08:56 -07002346 If enabled this option will include drivers and the core
Alexandre Bounine388b78a2011-03-23 16:43:03 -07002347 infrastructure code to support RapidIO interconnect devices.
2348
2349source "drivers/rapidio/Kconfig"
2350
David Herrmanne3263ab2013-08-02 14:05:22 +02002351config X86_SYSFB
2352 bool "Mark VGA/VBE/EFI FB as generic system framebuffer"
2353 help
2354 Firmwares often provide initial graphics framebuffers so the BIOS,
2355 bootloader or kernel can show basic video-output during boot for
2356 user-guidance and debugging. Historically, x86 used the VESA BIOS
2357 Extensions and EFI-framebuffers for this, which are mostly limited
2358 to x86.
2359 This option, if enabled, marks VGA/VBE/EFI framebuffers as generic
2360 framebuffers so the new generic system-framebuffer drivers can be
2361 used on x86. If the framebuffer is not compatible with the generic
2362 modes, it is adverticed as fallback platform framebuffer so legacy
2363 drivers like efifb, vesafb and uvesafb can pick it up.
2364 If this option is not selected, all system framebuffers are always
2365 marked as fallback platform framebuffers as usual.
2366
2367 Note: Legacy fbdev drivers, including vesafb, efifb, uvesafb, will
2368 not be able to pick up generic system framebuffers if this option
2369 is selected. You are highly encouraged to enable simplefb as
2370 replacement if you select this option. simplefb can correctly deal
2371 with generic system framebuffers. But you should still keep vesafb
2372 and others enabled as fallback if a system framebuffer is
2373 incompatible with simplefb.
2374
2375 If unsure, say Y.
2376
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002377endmenu
2378
2379
2380menu "Executable file formats / Emulations"
2381
2382source "fs/Kconfig.binfmt"
2383
2384config IA32_EMULATION
2385 bool "IA32 Emulation"
2386 depends on X86_64
Randy Dunlapd1603992013-06-18 12:33:40 -07002387 select BINFMT_ELF
Roland McGratha97f52e2008-01-30 13:31:55 +01002388 select COMPAT_BINFMT_ELF
Catalin Marinasaf1839e2012-10-08 16:28:08 -07002389 select HAVE_UID16
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002390 ---help---
H. J. Lu5fd92e62012-02-19 10:40:03 -08002391 Include code to run legacy 32-bit programs under a
2392 64-bit kernel. You should likely turn this on, unless you're
2393 100% sure that you don't have any 32-bit programs left.
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002394
2395config IA32_AOUT
Ingo Molnar8f9ca472009-02-05 16:21:53 +01002396 tristate "IA32 a.out support"
2397 depends on IA32_EMULATION
2398 ---help---
2399 Support old a.out binaries in the 32bit emulation.
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002400
H. Peter Anvin0bf62762012-02-27 14:09:10 -08002401config X86_X32
Kees Cook6ea30382012-10-02 11:16:47 -07002402 bool "x32 ABI for 64-bit mode"
2403 depends on X86_64 && IA32_EMULATION
H. J. Lu5fd92e62012-02-19 10:40:03 -08002404 ---help---
2405 Include code to run binaries for the x32 native 32-bit ABI
2406 for 64-bit processors. An x32 process gets access to the
2407 full 64-bit register file and wide data path while leaving
2408 pointers at 32 bits for smaller memory footprint.
2409
2410 You will need a recent binutils (2.22 or later) with
2411 elf32_x86_64 support enabled to compile a kernel with this
2412 option set.
2413
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002414config COMPAT
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01002415 def_bool y
H. Peter Anvin0bf62762012-02-27 14:09:10 -08002416 depends on IA32_EMULATION || X86_X32
Chris Metcalf48b25c42012-03-15 13:13:38 -04002417 select ARCH_WANT_OLD_COMPAT_IPC
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002418
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +01002419if COMPAT
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002420config COMPAT_FOR_U64_ALIGNMENT
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +01002421 def_bool y
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002422
2423config SYSVIPC_COMPAT
Harvey Harrison3c2362e2008-01-30 13:31:03 +01002424 def_bool y
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +01002425 depends on SYSVIPC
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002426
David Howellsee009e4a02011-03-07 15:06:20 +00002427config KEYS_COMPAT
Jan Beulich3120e252012-09-10 12:41:45 +01002428 def_bool y
2429 depends on KEYS
2430endif
David Howellsee009e4a02011-03-07 15:06:20 +00002431
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002432endmenu
2433
2434
Keith Packarde5beae12008-11-03 18:21:45 +01002435config HAVE_ATOMIC_IOMAP
2436 def_bool y
2437 depends on X86_32
2438
Alessandro Rubini4692d772012-04-04 19:39:58 +02002439config X86_DEV_DMA_OPS
2440 bool
Alessandro Rubini83125a32012-04-04 19:40:21 +02002441 depends on X86_64 || STA2X11
Alessandro Rubini4692d772012-04-04 19:39:58 +02002442
Alessandro Rubinif7219a52012-04-04 19:40:10 +02002443config X86_DMA_REMAP
2444 bool
Alessandro Rubini83125a32012-04-04 19:40:21 +02002445 depends on STA2X11
Alessandro Rubinif7219a52012-04-04 19:40:10 +02002446
David E. Box461844152014-01-08 13:27:51 -08002447config IOSF_MBI
David E. Box6b8f0c82014-05-09 13:44:05 -07002448 tristate
2449 default m
David E. Box461844152014-01-08 13:27:51 -08002450 depends on PCI
David E. Box461844152014-01-08 13:27:51 -08002451
Li, Aubrey93e5ead2014-06-30 14:08:42 +08002452config PMC_ATOM
2453 def_bool y
2454 depends on PCI
2455
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002456source "net/Kconfig"
2457
2458source "drivers/Kconfig"
2459
2460source "drivers/firmware/Kconfig"
2461
2462source "fs/Kconfig"
2463
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002464source "arch/x86/Kconfig.debug"
2465
2466source "security/Kconfig"
2467
2468source "crypto/Kconfig"
2469
Avi Kivityedf88412007-12-16 11:02:48 +02002470source "arch/x86/kvm/Kconfig"
2471
Sam Ravnborge279b6c2007-11-06 20:41:05 +01002472source "lib/Kconfig"