blob: 8cf6d437a630e704a86a1c1ad1de3892753af4ec [file] [log] [blame]
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001#
2# For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,
3# see Documentation/kbuild/kconfig-language.txt.
4#
5
6mainmenu "Linux/SuperH Kernel Configuration"
7
8config SUPERH
9 bool
10 default y
11 help
12 The SuperH is a RISC processor targeted for use in embedded systems
13 and consumer electronics; it was also used in the Sega Dreamcast
14 gaming console. The SuperH port has a home page at
15 <http://www.linux-sh.org/>.
16
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070017config RWSEM_GENERIC_SPINLOCK
18 bool
19 default y
20
21config RWSEM_XCHGADD_ALGORITHM
22 bool
23
24config GENERIC_HARDIRQS
25 bool
26 default y
27
28config GENERIC_IRQ_PROBE
29 bool
30 default y
31
32config GENERIC_CALIBRATE_DELAY
33 bool
34 default y
35
viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uka08b6b72005-09-06 01:48:42 +010036config ARCH_MAY_HAVE_PC_FDC
37 bool
38 default y
39
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070040source "init/Kconfig"
41
42menu "System type"
43
44choice
45 prompt "SuperH system type"
46 default SH_UNKNOWN
47
48config SH_SOLUTION_ENGINE
49 bool "SolutionEngine"
50 help
51 Select SolutionEngine if configuring for a Hitachi SH7709
52 or SH7750 evaluation board.
53
54config SH_7751_SOLUTION_ENGINE
55 bool "SolutionEngine7751"
56 help
57 Select 7751 SolutionEngine if configuring for a Hitachi SH7751
58 evaluation board.
59
60config SH_7300_SOLUTION_ENGINE
61 bool "SolutionEngine7300"
62 help
63 Select 7300 SolutionEngine if configuring for a Hitachi SH7300(SH-Mobile V)
64 evaluation board.
65
66config SH_73180_SOLUTION_ENGINE
67 bool "SolutionEngine73180"
68 help
69 Select 73180 SolutionEngine if configuring for a Hitachi SH73180(SH-Mobile 3)
70 evaluation board.
71
72config SH_7751_SYSTEMH
73 bool "SystemH7751R"
74 help
75 Select SystemH if you are configuring for a Renesas SystemH
76 7751R evaluation board.
77
78config SH_STB1_HARP
79 bool "STB1_Harp"
80
81config SH_STB1_OVERDRIVE
82 bool "STB1_Overdrive"
83
84config SH_HP620
85 bool "HP620"
86 help
87 Select HP620 if configuring for a HP jornada HP620.
88 More information (hardware only) at
89 <http://www.hp.com/jornada/>.
90
91config SH_HP680
92 bool "HP680"
93 help
94 Select HP680 if configuring for a HP Jornada HP680.
95 More information (hardware only) at
96 <http://www.hp.com/jornada/products/680/>.
97
98config SH_HP690
99 bool "HP690"
100 help
101 Select HP690 if configuring for a HP Jornada HP690.
102 More information (hardware only)
103 at <http://www.hp.com/jornada/products/680/>.
104
105config SH_CQREEK
106 bool "CqREEK"
107 help
108 Select CqREEK if configuring for a CqREEK SH7708 or SH7750.
109 More information at
110 <http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/hardware.html#SuperH>.
111
112config SH_DMIDA
113 bool "DMIDA"
114 help
115 Select DMIDA if configuring for a DataMyte 4000 Industrial
116 Digital Assistant. More information at <http://www.dmida.com/>.
117
118config SH_EC3104
119 bool "EC3104"
120 help
121 Select EC3104 if configuring for a system with an Eclipse
122 International EC3104 chip, e.g. the Harris AD2000.
123
124config SH_SATURN
125 bool "Saturn"
126 help
127 Select Saturn if configuring for a SEGA Saturn.
128
129config SH_DREAMCAST
130 bool "Dreamcast"
131 help
132 Select Dreamcast if configuring for a SEGA Dreamcast.
133 More information at
134 <http://www.m17n.org/linux-sh/dreamcast/>. There is a
135 Dreamcast project is at <http://linuxdc.sourceforge.net/>.
136
137config SH_CAT68701
138 bool "CAT68701"
139
140config SH_BIGSUR
141 bool "BigSur"
142
143config SH_SH2000
144 bool "SH2000"
145 help
146 SH-2000 is a single-board computer based around SH7709A chip
147 intended for embedded applications.
148 It has an Ethernet interface (CS8900A), direct connected
149 Compact Flash socket, three serial ports and PC-104 bus.
150 More information at <http://sh2000.sh-linux.org>.
151
152config SH_ADX
153 bool "ADX"
154
155config SH_MPC1211
156 bool "MPC1211"
157
158config SH_SH03
159 bool "SH03"
160 help
161 CTP/PCI-SH03 is a CPU module computer that produced
162 by Interface Corporation.
163 It is compact and excellent in durability.
164 It will play an active part in your factory or laboratory
165 as a FA computer.
166 More information at <http://www.interface.co.jp>
167
168config SH_SECUREEDGE5410
169 bool "SecureEdge5410"
170 help
171 Select SecureEdge5410 if configuring for a SnapGear SH board.
172 This includes both the OEM SecureEdge products as well as the
173 SME product line.
174
175config SH_HS7751RVOIP
176 bool "HS7751RVOIP"
177 help
178 Select HS7751RVOIP if configuring for a Renesas Technology
179 Sales VoIP board.
180
181config SH_RTS7751R2D
182 bool "RTS7751R2D"
183 help
184 Select RTS7751R2D if configuring for a Renesas Technology
185 Sales SH-Graphics board.
186
187config SH_EDOSK7705
188 bool "EDOSK7705"
189
190config SH_SH4202_MICRODEV
191 bool "SH4-202 MicroDev"
192 help
193 Select SH4-202 MicroDev if configuring for a SuperH MicroDev board
194 with an SH4-202 CPU.
195
196config SH_UNKNOWN
197 bool "BareCPU"
198 help
199 "Bare CPU" aka "unknown" means an SH-based system which is not one
200 of the specific ones mentioned above, which means you need to enter
201 all sorts of stuff like CONFIG_MEMORY_START because the config
202 system doesn't already know what it is. You get a machine vector
203 without any platform-specific code in it, so things like the RTC may
204 not work.
205
206 This option is for the early stages of porting to a new machine.
207
208endchoice
209
210choice
211 prompt "Processor family"
212 default CPU_SH4
213 help
214 This option determines the CPU family to compile for. Supported
215 targets are SH-2, SH-3, and SH-4. These options are independent of
216 CPU functionality. As such, SH-DSP users will still want to select
217 their respective processor family in addition to the DSP support
218 option.
219
220config CPU_SH2
221 bool "SH-2"
222 select SH_WRITETHROUGH
223
224config CPU_SH3
225 bool "SH-3"
226
227config CPU_SH4
228 bool "SH-4"
229
230endchoice
231
232choice
233 prompt "Processor subtype"
234
235config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7604
236 bool "SH7604"
237 depends on CPU_SH2
238 help
239 Select SH7604 if you have SH7604
240
241config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7300
242 bool "SH7300"
243 depends on CPU_SH3
244
245config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7705
246 bool "SH7705"
247 depends on CPU_SH3
248
249config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7707
250 bool "SH7707"
251 depends on CPU_SH3
252 help
253 Select SH7707 if you have a 60 Mhz SH-3 HD6417707 CPU.
254
255config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7708
256 bool "SH7708"
257 depends on CPU_SH3
258 help
259 Select SH7708 if you have a 60 Mhz SH-3 HD6417708S or
260 if you have a 100 Mhz SH-3 HD6417708R CPU.
261
262config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7709
263 bool "SH7709"
264 depends on CPU_SH3
265 help
266 Select SH7709 if you have a 80 Mhz SH-3 HD6417709 CPU.
267
268config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7750
269 bool "SH7750"
270 depends on CPU_SH4
271 help
272 Select SH7750 if you have a 200 Mhz SH-4 HD6417750 CPU.
273
274config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7751
275 bool "SH7751/SH7751R"
276 depends on CPU_SH4
277 help
278 Select SH7751 if you have a 166 Mhz SH-4 HD6417751 CPU,
279 or if you have a HD6417751R CPU.
280
281config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7760
282 bool "SH7760"
283 depends on CPU_SH4
284
285config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH73180
286 bool "SH73180"
287 depends on CPU_SH4
288
289config CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40STB1
290 bool "ST40STB1 / ST40RA"
291 depends on CPU_SH4
292 help
293 Select ST40STB1 if you have a ST40RA CPU.
294 This was previously called the ST40STB1, hence the option name.
295
296config CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40GX1
297 bool "ST40GX1"
298 depends on CPU_SH4
299 help
300 Select ST40GX1 if you have a ST40GX1 CPU.
301
302config CPU_SUBTYPE_SH4_202
303 bool "SH4-202"
304 depends on CPU_SH4
305
306endchoice
307
308config SH7705_CACHE_32KB
309 bool "Enable 32KB cache size for SH7705"
310 depends on CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7705
311 default y
312
313config MMU
314 bool "Support for memory management hardware"
315 depends on !CPU_SH2
316 default y
317 help
318 Early SH processors (such as the SH7604) lack an MMU. In order to
319 boot on these systems, this option must not be set.
320
321 On other systems (such as the SH-3 and 4) where an MMU exists,
322 turning this off will boot the kernel on these machines with the
323 MMU implicitly switched off.
324
325choice
326 prompt "HugeTLB page size"
327 depends on HUGETLB_PAGE && CPU_SH4 && MMU
328 default HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_64K
329
330config HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_64K
331 bool "64K"
332
333config HUGETLB_PAGE_SIZE_1MB
334 bool "1MB"
335
336endchoice
337
338config CMDLINE_BOOL
339 bool "Default bootloader kernel arguments"
340
341config CMDLINE
342 string "Initial kernel command string"
343 depends on CMDLINE_BOOL
344 default "console=ttySC1,115200"
345
346# Platform-specific memory start and size definitions
347config MEMORY_START
348 hex "Physical memory start address" if !MEMORY_SET || MEMORY_OVERRIDE
349 default "0x08000000" if !MEMORY_SET || MEMORY_OVERRIDE || !MEMORY_OVERRIDE && SH_ADX || SH_MPC1211 || SH_SH03 || SH_SECUREEDGE5410 || SH_SH4202_MICRODEV
350 default "0x0c000000" if !MEMORY_OVERRIDE && (SH_DREAMCAST || SH_HP600 || SH_BIGSUR || SH_SH2000 || SH_73180_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_7300_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_7751_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_HS7751RVOIP || SH_RTS7751R2D || SH_EDOSK7705)
351 ---help---
352 Computers built with Hitachi SuperH processors always
353 map the ROM starting at address zero. But the processor
354 does not specify the range that RAM takes.
355
356 The physical memory (RAM) start address will be automatically
357 set to 08000000, unless you selected one of the following
358 processor types: SolutionEngine, Overdrive, HP620, HP680, HP690,
359 in which case the start address will be set to 0c000000.
360
361 Tweak this only when porting to a new machine which is not already
362 known by the config system. Changing it from the known correct
363 value on any of the known systems will only lead to disaster.
364
365config MEMORY_SIZE
366 hex "Physical memory size" if !MEMORY_SET || MEMORY_OVERRIDE
367 default "0x00400000" if !MEMORY_SET || MEMORY_OVERRIDE || !MEMORY_OVERRIDE && SH_ADX || !MEMORY_OVERRIDE && (SH_HP600 || SH_BIGSUR || SH_SH2000)
368 default "0x01000000" if !MEMORY_OVERRIDE && SH_DREAMCAST || SH_SECUREEDGE5410 || SH_EDOSK7705
369 default "0x02000000" if !MEMORY_OVERRIDE && (SH_73180_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_SOLUTION_ENGINE)
370 default "0x04000000" if !MEMORY_OVERRIDE && (SH_7300_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_7751_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_HS7751RVOIP || SH_RTS7751R2D || SH_SH4202_MICRODEV)
371 default "0x08000000" if SH_MPC1211 || SH_SH03
372 help
373 This sets the default memory size assumed by your SH kernel. It can
374 be overridden as normal by the 'mem=' argument on the kernel command
375 line. If unsure, consult your board specifications or just leave it
376 as 0x00400000 which was the default value before this became
377 configurable.
378
379config MEMORY_SET
380 bool
381 depends on !MEMORY_OVERRIDE && (SH_MPC1211 || SH_SH03 || SH_ADX || SH_DREAMCAST || SH_HP600 || SH_BIGSUR || SH_SH2000 || SH_7751_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_SECUREEDGE5410 || SH_HS7751RVOIP || SH_RTS7751R2D || SH_SH4202_MICRODEV || SH_EDOSK7705)
382 default y
383 help
384 This is an option about which you will never be asked a question.
385 Therefore, I conclude that you do not exist - go away.
386
387 There is a grue here.
388
389# If none of the above have set memory start/size, ask the user.
390config MEMORY_OVERRIDE
391 bool "Override default load address and memory size"
392
393# XXX: break these out into the board-specific configs below
394config CF_ENABLER
395 bool "Compact Flash Enabler support"
396 depends on SH_ADX || SH_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_UNKNOWN || SH_CAT68701 || SH_SH03
397 ---help---
398 Compact Flash is a small, removable mass storage device introduced
399 in 1994 originally as a PCMCIA device. If you say `Y' here, you
400 compile in support for Compact Flash devices directly connected to
401 a SuperH processor. A Compact Flash FAQ is available at
402 <http://www.compactflash.org/faqs/faq.htm>.
403
404 If your board has "Directly Connected" CompactFlash at area 5 or 6,
405 you may want to enable this option. Then, you can use CF as
406 primary IDE drive (only tested for SanDisk).
407
408 If in doubt, select 'N'.
409
410choice
411 prompt "Compact Flash Connection Area"
412 depends on CF_ENABLER
413 default CF_AREA6
414
415config CF_AREA5
416 bool "Area5"
417 help
418 If your board has "Directly Connected" CompactFlash, You should
419 select the area where your CF is connected to.
420
421 - "Area5" if CompactFlash is connected to Area 5 (0x14000000)
422 - "Area6" if it is connected to Area 6 (0x18000000)
423
424 "Area6" will work for most boards. For ADX, select "Area5".
425
426config CF_AREA6
427 bool "Area6"
428
429endchoice
430
431config CF_BASE_ADDR
432 hex
433 depends on CF_ENABLER
434 default "0xb8000000" if CF_AREA6
435 default "0xb4000000" if CF_AREA5
436
437# The SH7750 RTC module is disabled in the Dreamcast
438config SH_RTC
439 bool
440 depends on !SH_DREAMCAST && !SH_SATURN && !SH_7300_SOLUTION_ENGINE && !SH_73180_SOLUTION_ENGINE
441 default y
442 help
443 Selecting this option will allow the Linux kernel to emulate
444 PC's RTC.
445
446 If unsure, say N.
447
448config SH_FPU
449 bool "FPU support"
450 depends on !CPU_SH3
451 default y
452 help
453 Selecting this option will enable support for SH processors that
454 have FPU units (ie, SH77xx).
455
456 This option must be set in order to enable the FPU.
457
458config SH_DSP
459 bool "DSP support"
460 depends on !CPU_SH4
461 default y
462 help
463 Selecting this option will enable support for SH processors that
464 have DSP units (ie, SH2-DSP and SH3-DSP). It is safe to say Y here
465 by default, as the existance of the DSP will be probed at runtime.
466
467 This option must be set in order to enable the DSP.
468
469config SH_ADC
470 bool "ADC support"
471 depends on CPU_SH3
472 default y
473 help
474 Selecting this option will allow the Linux kernel to use SH3 on-chip
475 ADC module.
476
477 If unsure, say N.
478
479config SH_HP600
480 bool
481 depends on SH_HP620 || SH_HP680 || SH_HP690
482 default y
483
484config CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40
485 bool
486 depends on CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40STB1 || CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40GX1
487 default y
488
Dave Hansen3f22ab22005-06-23 00:07:43 -0700489source "mm/Kconfig"
490
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700491config ZERO_PAGE_OFFSET
492 hex "Zero page offset"
493 default "0x00001000" if !(SH_MPC1211 || SH_SH03)
494 default "0x00004000" if SH_MPC1211 || SH_SH03
495 help
496 This sets the default offset of zero page.
497
498# XXX: needs to lose subtype for system type
499config ST40_LMI_MEMORY
500 bool "Memory on LMI"
501 depends on CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40STB1
502
503config MEMORY_START
504 hex
505 depends on CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40STB1 && ST40_LMI_MEMORY
506 default "0x08000000"
507
508config MEMORY_SIZE
509 hex
510 depends on CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40STB1 && ST40_LMI_MEMORY
511 default "0x00400000"
512
513config MEMORY_SET
514 bool
515 depends on CPU_SUBTYPE_ST40STB1 && ST40_LMI_MEMORY
516 default y
517
518config BOOT_LINK_OFFSET
519 hex "Link address offset for booting"
520 default "0x00800000"
521 help
522 This option allows you to set the link address offset of the zImage.
523 This can be useful if you are on a board which has a small amount of
524 memory.
525
526config CPU_LITTLE_ENDIAN
527 bool "Little Endian"
528 help
529 Some SuperH machines can be configured for either little or big
530 endian byte order. These modes require different kernels. Say Y if
531 your machine is little endian, N if it's a big endian machine.
532
533config PREEMPT
534 bool "Preemptible Kernel (EXPERIMENTAL)"
535 depends on EXPERIMENTAL
536
537config UBC_WAKEUP
538 bool "Wakeup UBC on startup"
539 help
540 Selecting this option will wakeup the User Break Controller (UBC) on
541 startup. Although the UBC is left in an awake state when the processor
542 comes up, some boot loaders misbehave by putting the UBC to sleep in a
543 power saving state, which causes issues with things like ptrace().
544
545 If unsure, say N.
546
547config SH_WRITETHROUGH
548 bool "Use write-through caching"
549 default y if CPU_SH2
550 help
551 Selecting this option will configure the caches in write-through
552 mode, as opposed to the default write-back configuration.
553
554 Since there's sill some aliasing issues on SH-4, this option will
555 unfortunately still require the majority of flushing functions to
556 be implemented to deal with aliasing.
557
558 If unsure, say N.
559
560config SH_OCRAM
561 bool "Operand Cache RAM (OCRAM) support"
562 help
563 Selecting this option will automatically tear down the number of
564 sets in the dcache by half, which in turn exposes a memory range.
565
566 The addresses for the OC RAM base will vary according to the
567 processor version. Consult vendor documentation for specifics.
568
569 If unsure, say N.
570
571config SH_STORE_QUEUES
572 bool "Support for Store Queues"
573 depends on CPU_SH4
574 help
575 Selecting this option will enable an in-kernel API for manipulating
576 the store queues integrated in the SH-4 processors.
577
578config SMP
579 bool "Symmetric multi-processing support"
580 ---help---
581 This enables support for systems with more than one CPU. If you have
582 a system with only one CPU, like most personal computers, say N. If
583 you have a system with more than one CPU, say Y.
584
585 If you say N here, the kernel will run on single and multiprocessor
586 machines, but will use only one CPU of a multiprocessor machine. If
587 you say Y here, the kernel will run on many, but not all,
588 singleprocessor machines. On a singleprocessor machine, the kernel
589 will run faster if you say N here.
590
591 People using multiprocessor machines who say Y here should also say
592 Y to "Enhanced Real Time Clock Support", below.
593
594 See also the <file:Documentation/smp.txt>,
595 <file:Documentation/nmi_watchdog.txt> and the SMP-HOWTO available
596 at <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.
597
598 If you don't know what to do here, say N.
599
600config NR_CPUS
601 int "Maximum number of CPUs (2-32)"
602 range 2 32
603 depends on SMP
604 default "2"
605 help
606 This allows you to specify the maximum number of CPUs which this
607 kernel will support. The maximum supported value is 32 and the
608 minimum value which makes sense is 2.
609
610 This is purely to save memory - each supported CPU adds
611 approximately eight kilobytes to the kernel image.
612
613config HS7751RVOIP_CODEC
614 bool "Support VoIP Codec section"
615 depends on SH_HS7751RVOIP
616 help
617 Selecting this option will support CODEC section.
618
619config RTS7751R2D_REV11
620 bool "RTS7751R2D Rev. 1.1 board support"
621 depends on SH_RTS7751R2D
622 help
623 Selecting this option will support version rev. 1.1.
624
625config SH_PCLK_CALC
626 bool
627 default n if CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7300 || CPU_SUBTYPE_SH73180
628 default y
629 help
630 This option will cause the PCLK value to be probed at run-time. It
631 will display a notification if the probed value has greater than a
632 1% variance of the hardcoded CONFIG_SH_PCLK_FREQ.
633
634config SH_PCLK_FREQ
635 int "Peripheral clock frequency (in Hz)"
636 default "50000000" if CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7750
637 default "60000000" if CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7751
638 default "33333333" if CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7300
639 default "27000000" if CPU_SUBTYPE_SH73180
640 default "66000000" if CPU_SUBTYPE_SH4_202
641 default "1193182"
642 help
643 This option is used to specify the peripheral clock frequency. This
644 option must be set for each processor in order for the kernel to
645 function reliably. If no sane default exists, we use a default from
646 the legacy i8254. Any discrepancies will be reported on boot time
647 with an auto-probed frequency which should be considered the proper
648 value for your hardware.
649
650menu "CPU Frequency scaling"
651
652source "drivers/cpufreq/Kconfig"
653
654config SH_CPU_FREQ
655 tristate "SuperH CPU Frequency driver"
656 depends on CPU_FREQ
657 select CPU_FREQ_TABLE
658 help
659 This adds the cpufreq driver for SuperH. At present, only
660 the SH-4 is supported.
661
662 For details, take a look at <file:Documentation/cpu-freq>.
663
664 If unsure, say N.
665
666endmenu
667
668source "arch/sh/drivers/dma/Kconfig"
669
670source "arch/sh/cchips/Kconfig"
671
672config HEARTBEAT
673 bool "Heartbeat LED"
674 depends on SH_MPC1211 || SH_SH03 || SH_CAT68701 || SH_STB1_HARP || SH_STB1_OVERDRIVE || SH_BIGSUR || SH_7751_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_7300_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_73180_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_SOLUTION_ENGINE || SH_RTS7751R2D || SH_SH4202_MICRODEV
675 help
676 Use the power-on LED on your machine as a load meter. The exact
677 behavior is platform-dependent, but normally the flash frequency is
678 a hyperbolic function of the 5-minute load average.
679
680config RTC_9701JE
681 tristate "EPSON RTC-9701JE support"
682 depends on SH_RTS7751R2D
683 help
684 Selecting this option will support EPSON RTC-9701JE.
685
686endmenu
687
Al Viro5cae8412005-05-04 05:39:22 +0100688config ISA_DMA_API
689 bool
690 depends on MPC1211
691 default y
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700692
693menu "Bus options (PCI, PCMCIA, EISA, MCA, ISA)"
694
695# Even on SuperH devices which don't have an ISA bus,
696# this variable helps the PCMCIA modules handle
697# IRQ requesting properly -- Greg Banks.
698#
699# Though we're generally not interested in it when
700# we're not using PCMCIA, so we make it dependent on
701# PCMCIA outright. -- PFM.
702config ISA
703 bool
704 default y if PCMCIA || SMC91X
705 help
706 Find out whether you have ISA slots on your motherboard. ISA is the
707 name of a bus system, i.e. the way the CPU talks to the other stuff
708 inside your box. Other bus systems are PCI, EISA, MicroChannel
709 (MCA) or VESA. ISA is an older system, now being displaced by PCI;
710 newer boards don't support it. If you have ISA, say Y, otherwise N.
711
712config EISA
713 bool
714 ---help---
715 The Extended Industry Standard Architecture (EISA) bus was
716 developed as an open alternative to the IBM MicroChannel bus.
717
718 The EISA bus provided some of the features of the IBM MicroChannel
719 bus while maintaining backward compatibility with cards made for
720 the older ISA bus. The EISA bus saw limited use between 1988 and
721 1995 when it was made obsolete by the PCI bus.
722
723 Say Y here if you are building a kernel for an EISA-based machine.
724
725 Otherwise, say N.
726
727config MCA
728 bool
729 help
730 MicroChannel Architecture is found in some IBM PS/2 machines and
731 laptops. It is a bus system similar to PCI or ISA. See
732 <file:Documentation/mca.txt> (and especially the web page given
733 there) before attempting to build an MCA bus kernel.
734
735config SBUS
736 bool
737
738config MAPLE
739 tristate "Maple Bus support"
740 depends on SH_DREAMCAST
741 default y
742
743source "arch/sh/drivers/pci/Kconfig"
744
745source "drivers/pci/Kconfig"
746
747source "drivers/pcmcia/Kconfig"
748
749source "drivers/pci/hotplug/Kconfig"
750
751endmenu
752
753menu "Executable file formats"
754
755source "fs/Kconfig.binfmt"
756
757endmenu
758
Sam Ravnborgd5950b42005-07-11 21:03:49 -0700759source "net/Kconfig"
760
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700761source "drivers/Kconfig"
762
763source "fs/Kconfig"
764
765source "arch/sh/oprofile/Kconfig"
766
767source "arch/sh/Kconfig.debug"
768
769source "security/Kconfig"
770
771source "crypto/Kconfig"
772
773source "lib/Kconfig"