| config PCI | 
 | 	bool "PCI support" | 
 | 	help | 
 | 	  Find out whether you have a PCI motherboard. PCI is the name of a | 
 | 	  bus system, i.e. the way the CPU talks to the other stuff inside | 
 | 	  your box. If you have PCI, say Y, otherwise N. | 
 |  | 
 | 	  The PCI-HOWTO, available from | 
 | 	  <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>, contains valuable | 
 | 	  information about which PCI hardware does work under Linux and which | 
 | 	  doesn't. | 
 |  | 
 | config SH_PCIDMA_NONCOHERENT | 
 | 	bool "Cache and PCI noncoherent" | 
 | 	depends on PCI | 
 | 	default y | 
 | 	help | 
 | 	  Enable this option if your platform does not have a CPU cache which | 
 | 	  remains coherent with PCI DMA. It is safest to say 'Y', although you | 
 | 	  will see better performance if you can say 'N', because the PCI DMA | 
 | 	  code will not have to flush the CPU's caches. If you have a PCI host | 
 | 	  bridge integrated with your SH CPU, refer carefully to the chip specs | 
 | 	  to see if you can say 'N' here. Otherwise, leave it as 'Y'. | 
 |  | 
 | # This is also board-specific | 
 | config PCI_AUTO | 
 | 	bool | 
 | 	depends on PCI | 
 | 	default y | 
 |  | 
 | config PCI_AUTO_UPDATE_RESOURCES | 
 | 	bool | 
 | 	depends on PCI_AUTO | 
 | 	default y if !SH_DREAMCAST | 
 | 	help | 
 | 	  Selecting this option will cause the PCI auto code to leave your | 
 | 	  BAR values alone. Otherwise they will be updated automatically. If | 
 | 	  for some reason, you have a board that simply refuses to work | 
 | 	  with its resources updated beyond what they are when the device | 
 | 	  is powered up, set this to N. Everyone else will want this as Y. | 
 |  |