|  | # drivers/mtd/maps/Kconfig | 
|  | # $Id: Kconfig,v 1.18 2005/11/07 11:14:24 gleixner Exp $ | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "Self-contained MTD device drivers" | 
|  | depends on MTD!=n | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_PMC551 | 
|  | tristate "Ramix PMC551 PCI Mezzanine RAM card support" | 
|  | depends on PCI | 
|  | ---help--- | 
|  | This provides a MTD device driver for the Ramix PMC551 RAM PCI card | 
|  | from Ramix Inc. <http://www.ramix.com/products/memory/pmc551.html>. | 
|  | These devices come in memory configurations from 32M - 1G.  If you | 
|  | have one, you probably want to enable this. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If this driver is compiled as a module you get the ability to select | 
|  | the size of the aperture window pointing into the devices memory. | 
|  | What this means is that if you have a 1G card, normally the kernel | 
|  | will use a 1G memory map as its view of the device.  As a module, | 
|  | you can select a 1M window into the memory and the driver will | 
|  | "slide" the window around the PMC551's memory.  This was | 
|  | particularly useful on the 2.2 kernels on PPC architectures as there | 
|  | was limited kernel space to deal with. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_PMC551_BUGFIX | 
|  | bool "PMC551 256M DRAM Bugfix" | 
|  | depends on MTD_PMC551 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Some of Ramix's PMC551 boards with 256M configurations have invalid | 
|  | column and row mux values.  This option will fix them, but will | 
|  | break other memory configurations.  If unsure say N. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_PMC551_DEBUG | 
|  | bool "PMC551 Debugging" | 
|  | depends on MTD_PMC551 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option makes the PMC551 more verbose during its operation and | 
|  | is only really useful if you are developing on this driver or | 
|  | suspect a possible hardware or driver bug.  If unsure say N. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_MS02NV | 
|  | tristate "DEC MS02-NV NVRAM module support" | 
|  | depends on MACH_DECSTATION | 
|  | help | 
|  | This is an MTD driver for the DEC's MS02-NV (54-20948-01) battery | 
|  | backed-up NVRAM module.  The module was originally meant as an NFS | 
|  | accelerator.  Say Y here if you have a DECstation 5000/2x0 or a | 
|  | DECsystem 5900 equipped with such a module. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you want to compile this driver as a module ( = code which can be | 
|  | inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want), | 
|  | say M here and read <file:Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt>. | 
|  | The module will be called ms02-nv.ko. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DATAFLASH | 
|  | tristate "Support for AT45xxx DataFlash" | 
|  | depends on SPI_MASTER && EXPERIMENTAL | 
|  | help | 
|  | This enables access to AT45xxx DataFlash chips, using SPI. | 
|  | Sometimes DataFlash chips are packaged inside MMC-format | 
|  | cards; at this writing, the MMC stack won't handle those. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_M25P80 | 
|  | tristate "Support most SPI Flash chips (AT26DF, M25P, W25X, ...)" | 
|  | depends on SPI_MASTER && EXPERIMENTAL | 
|  | help | 
|  | This enables access to most modern SPI flash chips, used for | 
|  | program and data storage.   Series supported include Atmel AT26DF, | 
|  | Spansion S25SL, SST 25VF, ST M25P, and Winbond W25X.  Other chips | 
|  | are supported as well.  See the driver source for the current list, | 
|  | or to add other chips. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that the original DataFlash chips (AT45 series, not AT26DF), | 
|  | need an entirely different driver. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Set up your spi devices with the right board-specific platform data, | 
|  | if you want to specify device partitioning or to use a device which | 
|  | doesn't support the JEDEC ID instruction. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_SLRAM | 
|  | tristate "Uncached system RAM" | 
|  | help | 
|  | If your CPU cannot cache all of the physical memory in your machine, | 
|  | you can still use it for storage or swap by using this driver to | 
|  | present it to the system as a Memory Technology Device. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_PHRAM | 
|  | tristate "Physical system RAM" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This is a re-implementation of the slram driver above. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Use this driver to access physical memory that the kernel proper | 
|  | doesn't have access to, memory beyond the mem=xxx limit, nvram, | 
|  | memory on the video card, etc... | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_LART | 
|  | tristate "28F160xx flash driver for LART" | 
|  | depends on SA1100_LART | 
|  | help | 
|  | This enables the flash driver for LART. Please note that you do | 
|  | not need any mapping/chip driver for LART. This one does it all | 
|  | for you, so go disable all of those if you enabled some of them (: | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_MTDRAM | 
|  | tristate "Test driver using RAM" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This enables a test MTD device driver which uses vmalloc() to | 
|  | provide storage.  You probably want to say 'N' unless you're | 
|  | testing stuff. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTDRAM_TOTAL_SIZE | 
|  | int "MTDRAM device size in KiB" | 
|  | depends on MTD_MTDRAM | 
|  | default "4096" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This allows you to configure the total size of the MTD device | 
|  | emulated by the MTDRAM driver.  If the MTDRAM driver is built | 
|  | as a module, it is also possible to specify this as a parameter when | 
|  | loading the module. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTDRAM_ERASE_SIZE | 
|  | int "MTDRAM erase block size in KiB" | 
|  | depends on MTD_MTDRAM | 
|  | default "128" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This allows you to configure the size of the erase blocks in the | 
|  | device emulated by the MTDRAM driver.  If the MTDRAM driver is built | 
|  | as a module, it is also possible to specify this as a parameter when | 
|  | loading the module. | 
|  |  | 
|  | #If not a module (I don't want to test it as a module) | 
|  | config MTDRAM_ABS_POS | 
|  | hex "SRAM Hexadecimal Absolute position or 0" | 
|  | depends on MTD_MTDRAM=y | 
|  | default "0" | 
|  | help | 
|  | If you have system RAM accessible by the CPU but not used by Linux | 
|  | in normal operation, you can give the physical address at which the | 
|  | available RAM starts, and the MTDRAM driver will use it instead of | 
|  | allocating space from Linux's available memory. Otherwise, leave | 
|  | this set to zero. Most people will want to leave this as zero. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_BLOCK2MTD | 
|  | tristate "MTD using block device" | 
|  | depends on BLOCK | 
|  | help | 
|  | This driver allows a block device to appear as an MTD. It would | 
|  | generally be used in the following cases: | 
|  |  | 
|  | Using Compact Flash as an MTD, these usually present themselves to | 
|  | the system as an ATA drive. | 
|  | Testing MTD users (eg JFFS2) on large media and media that might | 
|  | be removed during a write (using the floppy drive). | 
|  |  | 
|  | comment "Disk-On-Chip Device Drivers" | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOC2000 | 
|  | tristate "M-Systems Disk-On-Chip 2000 and Millennium (DEPRECATED)" | 
|  | select MTD_DOCPROBE | 
|  | select MTD_NAND_IDS | 
|  | ---help--- | 
|  | This provides an MTD device driver for the M-Systems DiskOnChip | 
|  | 2000 and Millennium devices.  Originally designed for the DiskOnChip | 
|  | 2000, it also now includes support for the DiskOnChip Millennium. | 
|  | If you have problems with this driver and the DiskOnChip Millennium, | 
|  | you may wish to try the alternative Millennium driver below. To use | 
|  | the alternative driver, you will need to undefine DOC_SINGLE_DRIVER | 
|  | in the <file:drivers/mtd/devices/docprobe.c> source code. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you use this device, you probably also want to enable the NFTL | 
|  | 'NAND Flash Translation Layer' option below, which is used to | 
|  | emulate a block device by using a kind of file system on the flash | 
|  | chips. | 
|  |  | 
|  | NOTE: This driver is deprecated and will probably be removed soon. | 
|  | Please try the new DiskOnChip driver under "NAND Flash Device | 
|  | Drivers". | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOC2001 | 
|  | tristate "M-Systems Disk-On-Chip Millennium-only alternative driver (DEPRECATED)" | 
|  | select MTD_DOCPROBE | 
|  | select MTD_NAND_IDS | 
|  | ---help--- | 
|  | This provides an alternative MTD device driver for the M-Systems | 
|  | DiskOnChip Millennium devices.  Use this if you have problems with | 
|  | the combined DiskOnChip 2000 and Millennium driver above.  To get | 
|  | the DiskOnChip probe code to load and use this driver instead of | 
|  | the other one, you will need to undefine DOC_SINGLE_DRIVER near | 
|  | the beginning of <file:drivers/mtd/devices/docprobe.c>. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you use this device, you probably also want to enable the NFTL | 
|  | 'NAND Flash Translation Layer' option below, which is used to | 
|  | emulate a block device by using a kind of file system on the flash | 
|  | chips. | 
|  |  | 
|  | NOTE: This driver is deprecated and will probably be removed soon. | 
|  | Please try the new DiskOnChip driver under "NAND Flash Device | 
|  | Drivers". | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOC2001PLUS | 
|  | tristate "M-Systems Disk-On-Chip Millennium Plus" | 
|  | select MTD_DOCPROBE | 
|  | select MTD_NAND_IDS | 
|  | ---help--- | 
|  | This provides an MTD device driver for the M-Systems DiskOnChip | 
|  | Millennium Plus devices. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If you use this device, you probably also want to enable the INFTL | 
|  | 'Inverse NAND Flash Translation Layer' option below, which is used | 
|  | to emulate a block device by using a kind of file system on the | 
|  | flash chips. | 
|  |  | 
|  | NOTE: This driver will soon be replaced by the new DiskOnChip driver | 
|  | under "NAND Flash Device Drivers" (currently that driver does not | 
|  | support all Millennium Plus devices). | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOCPROBE | 
|  | tristate | 
|  | select MTD_DOCECC | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOCECC | 
|  | tristate | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOCPROBE_ADVANCED | 
|  | bool "Advanced detection options for DiskOnChip" | 
|  | depends on MTD_DOCPROBE | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option allows you to specify nonstandard address at which to | 
|  | probe for a DiskOnChip, or to change the detection options.  You | 
|  | are unlikely to need any of this unless you are using LinuxBIOS. | 
|  | Say 'N'. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOCPROBE_ADDRESS | 
|  | hex "Physical address of DiskOnChip" if MTD_DOCPROBE_ADVANCED | 
|  | depends on MTD_DOCPROBE | 
|  | default "0x0000" if MTD_DOCPROBE_ADVANCED | 
|  | default "0" if !MTD_DOCPROBE_ADVANCED | 
|  | ---help--- | 
|  | By default, the probe for DiskOnChip devices will look for a | 
|  | DiskOnChip at every multiple of 0x2000 between 0xC8000 and 0xEE000. | 
|  | This option allows you to specify a single address at which to probe | 
|  | for the device, which is useful if you have other devices in that | 
|  | range which get upset when they are probed. | 
|  |  | 
|  | (Note that on PowerPC, the normal probe will only check at | 
|  | 0xE4000000.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | Normally, you should leave this set to zero, to allow the probe at | 
|  | the normal addresses. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOCPROBE_HIGH | 
|  | bool "Probe high addresses" | 
|  | depends on MTD_DOCPROBE_ADVANCED | 
|  | help | 
|  | By default, the probe for DiskOnChip devices will look for a | 
|  | DiskOnChip at every multiple of 0x2000 between 0xC8000 and 0xEE000. | 
|  | This option changes to make it probe between 0xFFFC8000 and | 
|  | 0xFFFEE000.  Unless you are using LinuxBIOS, this is unlikely to be | 
|  | useful to you.  Say 'N'. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MTD_DOCPROBE_55AA | 
|  | bool "Probe for 0x55 0xAA BIOS Extension Signature" | 
|  | depends on MTD_DOCPROBE_ADVANCED | 
|  | help | 
|  | Check for the 0x55 0xAA signature of a DiskOnChip, and do not | 
|  | continue with probing if it is absent.  The signature will always be | 
|  | present for a DiskOnChip 2000 or a normal DiskOnChip Millennium. | 
|  | Only if you have overwritten the first block of a DiskOnChip | 
|  | Millennium will it be absent.  Enable this option if you are using | 
|  | LinuxBIOS or if you need to recover a DiskOnChip Millennium on which | 
|  | you have managed to wipe the first block. | 
|  |  | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  |