1# 2# Character device configuration 3# 4 5menu "Character devices" 6 7source "drivers/tty/Kconfig" 8 9config DEVKMEM 10 bool "/dev/kmem virtual device support" 11 default y 12 help 13 Say Y here if you want to support the /dev/kmem device. The 14 /dev/kmem device is rarely used, but can be used for certain 15 kind of kernel debugging operations. 16 When in doubt, say "N". 17 18config STALDRV 19 bool "Stallion multiport serial support" 20 depends on SERIAL_NONSTANDARD 21 help 22 Stallion cards give you many serial ports. You would need something 23 like this to connect more than two modems to your Linux box, for 24 instance in order to become a dial-in server. If you say Y here, 25 you will be asked for your specific card model in the next 26 questions. Make sure to read <file:Documentation/serial/stallion.txt> 27 in this case. If you have never heard about all this, it's safe to 28 say N. 29 30config SGI_SNSC 31 bool "SGI Altix system controller communication support" 32 depends on (IA64_SGI_SN2 || IA64_GENERIC) 33 help 34 If you have an SGI Altix and you want to enable system 35 controller communication from user space (you want this!), 36 say Y. Otherwise, say N. 37 38config SGI_TIOCX 39 bool "SGI TIO CX driver support" 40 depends on (IA64_SGI_SN2 || IA64_GENERIC) 41 help 42 If you have an SGI Altix and you have fpga devices attached 43 to your TIO, say Y here, otherwise say N. 44 45config SGI_MBCS 46 tristate "SGI FPGA Core Services driver support" 47 depends on SGI_TIOCX 48 help 49 If you have an SGI Altix with an attached SABrick 50 say Y or M here, otherwise say N. 51 52source "drivers/tty/serial/Kconfig" 53 54config TTY_PRINTK 55 bool "TTY driver to output user messages via printk" 56 depends on EXPERT 57 default n 58 ---help--- 59 If you say Y here, the support for writing user messages (i.e. 60 console messages) via printk is available. 61 62 The feature is useful to inline user messages with kernel 63 messages. 64 In order to use this feature, you should output user messages 65 to /dev/ttyprintk or redirect console to this TTY. 66 67 If unsure, say N. 68 69config BFIN_OTP 70 tristate "Blackfin On-Chip OTP Memory Support" 71 depends on BLACKFIN && (BF51x || BF52x || BF54x) 72 default y 73 help 74 If you say Y here, you will get support for a character device 75 interface into the One Time Programmable memory pages that are 76 stored on the Blackfin processor. This will not get you access 77 to the secure memory pages however. You will need to write your 78 own secure code and reader for that. 79 80 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module 81 will be called bfin-otp. 82 83 If unsure, it is safe to say Y. 84 85config BFIN_OTP_WRITE_ENABLE 86 bool "Enable writing support of OTP pages" 87 depends on BFIN_OTP 88 default n 89 help 90 If you say Y here, you will enable support for writing of the 91 OTP pages. This is dangerous by nature as you can only program 92 the pages once, so only enable this option when you actually 93 need it so as to not inadvertently clobber data. 94 95 If unsure, say N. 96 97config PRINTER 98 tristate "Parallel printer support" 99 depends on PARPORT 100 ---help--- 101 If you intend to attach a printer to the parallel port of your Linux 102 box (as opposed to using a serial printer; if the connector at the 103 printer has 9 or 25 holes ["female"], then it's serial), say Y. 104 Also read the Printing-HOWTO, available from 105 <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>. 106 107 It is possible to share one parallel port among several devices 108 (e.g. printer and ZIP drive) and it is safe to compile the 109 corresponding drivers into the kernel. 110 111 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here and read 112 <file:Documentation/parport.txt>. The module will be called lp. 113 114 If you have several parallel ports, you can specify which ports to 115 use with the "lp" kernel command line option. (Try "man bootparam" 116 or see the documentation of your boot loader (lilo or loadlin) about 117 how to pass options to the kernel at boot time.) The syntax of the 118 "lp" command line option can be found in <file:drivers/char/lp.c>. 119 120 If you have more than 8 printers, you need to increase the LP_NO 121 macro in lp.c and the PARPORT_MAX macro in parport.h. 122 123config LP_CONSOLE 124 bool "Support for console on line printer" 125 depends on PRINTER 126 ---help--- 127 If you want kernel messages to be printed out as they occur, you 128 can have a console on the printer. This option adds support for 129 doing that; to actually get it to happen you need to pass the 130 option "console=lp0" to the kernel at boot time. 131 132 If the printer is out of paper (or off, or unplugged, or too 133 busy..) the kernel will stall until the printer is ready again. 134 By defining CONSOLE_LP_STRICT to 0 (at your own risk) you 135 can make the kernel continue when this happens, 136 but it'll lose the kernel messages. 137 138 If unsure, say N. 139 140config PPDEV 141 tristate "Support for user-space parallel port device drivers" 142 depends on PARPORT 143 ---help--- 144 Saying Y to this adds support for /dev/parport device nodes. This 145 is needed for programs that want portable access to the parallel 146 port, for instance deviceid (which displays Plug-and-Play device 147 IDs). 148 149 This is the parallel port equivalent of SCSI generic support (sg). 150 It is safe to say N to this -- it is not needed for normal printing 151 or parallel port CD-ROM/disk support. 152 153 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 154 module will be called ppdev. 155 156 If unsure, say N. 157 158source "drivers/tty/hvc/Kconfig" 159 160config VIRTIO_CONSOLE 161 tristate "Virtio console" 162 depends on VIRTIO 163 select HVC_DRIVER 164 help 165 Virtio console for use with lguest and other hypervisors. 166 167 Also serves as a general-purpose serial device for data 168 transfer between the guest and host. Character devices at 169 /dev/vportNpn will be created when corresponding ports are 170 found, where N is the device number and n is the port number 171 within that device. If specified by the host, a sysfs 172 attribute called 'name' will be populated with a name for 173 the port which can be used by udev scripts to create a 174 symlink to the device. 175 176config IBM_BSR 177 tristate "IBM POWER Barrier Synchronization Register support" 178 depends on PPC_PSERIES 179 help 180 This devices exposes a hardware mechanism for fast synchronization 181 of threads across a large system which avoids bouncing a cacheline 182 between several cores on a system 183 184source "drivers/char/ipmi/Kconfig" 185 186config DS1620 187 tristate "NetWinder thermometer support" 188 depends on ARCH_NETWINDER 189 help 190 Say Y here to include support for the thermal management hardware 191 found in the NetWinder. This driver allows the user to control the 192 temperature set points and to read the current temperature. 193 194 It is also possible to say M here to build it as a module (ds1620) 195 It is recommended to be used on a NetWinder, but it is not a 196 necessity. 197 198config NWBUTTON 199 tristate "NetWinder Button" 200 depends on ARCH_NETWINDER 201 ---help--- 202 If you say Y here and create a character device node /dev/nwbutton 203 with major and minor numbers 10 and 158 ("man mknod"), then every 204 time the orange button is pressed a number of times, the number of 205 times the button was pressed will be written to that device. 206 207 This is most useful for applications, as yet unwritten, which 208 perform actions based on how many times the button is pressed in a 209 row. 210 211 Do not hold the button down for too long, as the driver does not 212 alter the behaviour of the hardware reset circuitry attached to the 213 button; it will still execute a hard reset if the button is held 214 down for longer than approximately five seconds. 215 216 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 217 module will be called nwbutton. 218 219 Most people will answer Y to this question and "Reboot Using Button" 220 below to be able to initiate a system shutdown from the button. 221 222config NWBUTTON_REBOOT 223 bool "Reboot Using Button" 224 depends on NWBUTTON 225 help 226 If you say Y here, then you will be able to initiate a system 227 shutdown and reboot by pressing the orange button a number of times. 228 The number of presses to initiate the shutdown is two by default, 229 but this can be altered by modifying the value of NUM_PRESSES_REBOOT 230 in nwbutton.h and recompiling the driver or, if you compile the 231 driver as a module, you can specify the number of presses at load 232 time with "insmod button reboot_count=<something>". 233 234config NWFLASH 235 tristate "NetWinder flash support" 236 depends on ARCH_NETWINDER 237 ---help--- 238 If you say Y here and create a character device /dev/flash with 239 major 10 and minor 160 you can manipulate the flash ROM containing 240 the NetWinder firmware. Be careful as accidentally overwriting the 241 flash contents can render your computer unbootable. On no account 242 allow random users access to this device. :-) 243 244 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 245 module will be called nwflash. 246 247 If you're not sure, say N. 248 249source "drivers/char/hw_random/Kconfig" 250 251config NVRAM 252 tristate "/dev/nvram support" 253 depends on ATARI || X86 || (ARM && RTC_DRV_CMOS) || GENERIC_NVRAM 254 ---help--- 255 If you say Y here and create a character special file /dev/nvram 256 with major number 10 and minor number 144 using mknod ("man mknod"), 257 you get read and write access to the extra bytes of non-volatile 258 memory in the real time clock (RTC), which is contained in every PC 259 and most Ataris. The actual number of bytes varies, depending on the 260 nvram in the system, but is usually 114 (128-14 for the RTC). 261 262 This memory is conventionally called "CMOS RAM" on PCs and "NVRAM" 263 on Ataris. /dev/nvram may be used to view settings there, or to 264 change them (with some utility). It could also be used to frequently 265 save a few bits of very important data that may not be lost over 266 power-off and for which writing to disk is too insecure. Note 267 however that most NVRAM space in a PC belongs to the BIOS and you 268 should NEVER idly tamper with it. See Ralf Brown's interrupt list 269 for a guide to the use of CMOS bytes by your BIOS. 270 271 On Atari machines, /dev/nvram is always configured and does not need 272 to be selected. 273 274 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 275 module will be called nvram. 276 277# 278# These legacy RTC drivers just cause too many conflicts with the generic 279# RTC framework ... let's not even try to coexist any more. 280# 281if RTC_LIB=n 282 283config RTC 284 tristate "Enhanced Real Time Clock Support (legacy PC RTC driver)" 285 depends on !PPC && !PARISC && !IA64 && !M68K && !SPARC && !FRV \ 286 && !ARM && !SUPERH && !S390 && !AVR32 && !BLACKFIN && !UML 287 ---help--- 288 If you say Y here and create a character special file /dev/rtc with 289 major number 10 and minor number 135 using mknod ("man mknod"), you 290 will get access to the real time clock (or hardware clock) built 291 into your computer. 292 293 Every PC has such a clock built in. It can be used to generate 294 signals from as low as 1Hz up to 8192Hz, and can also be used 295 as a 24 hour alarm. It reports status information via the file 296 /proc/driver/rtc and its behaviour is set by various ioctls on 297 /dev/rtc. 298 299 If you run Linux on a multiprocessor machine and said Y to 300 "Symmetric Multi Processing" above, you should say Y here to read 301 and set the RTC in an SMP compatible fashion. 302 303 If you think you have a use for such a device (such as periodic data 304 sampling), then say Y here, and read <file:Documentation/rtc.txt> 305 for details. 306 307 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 308 module will be called rtc. 309 310config JS_RTC 311 tristate "Enhanced Real Time Clock Support" 312 depends on SPARC32 && PCI 313 ---help--- 314 If you say Y here and create a character special file /dev/rtc with 315 major number 10 and minor number 135 using mknod ("man mknod"), you 316 will get access to the real time clock (or hardware clock) built 317 into your computer. 318 319 Every PC has such a clock built in. It can be used to generate 320 signals from as low as 1Hz up to 8192Hz, and can also be used 321 as a 24 hour alarm. It reports status information via the file 322 /proc/driver/rtc and its behaviour is set by various ioctls on 323 /dev/rtc. 324 325 If you think you have a use for such a device (such as periodic data 326 sampling), then say Y here, and read <file:Documentation/rtc.txt> 327 for details. 328 329 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 330 module will be called js-rtc. 331 332config GEN_RTC 333 tristate "Generic /dev/rtc emulation" 334 depends on RTC!=y && !IA64 && !ARM && !M32R && !MIPS && !SPARC && !FRV && !S390 && !SUPERH && !AVR32 && !BLACKFIN && !UML 335 ---help--- 336 If you say Y here and create a character special file /dev/rtc with 337 major number 10 and minor number 135 using mknod ("man mknod"), you 338 will get access to the real time clock (or hardware clock) built 339 into your computer. 340 341 It reports status information via the file /proc/driver/rtc and its 342 behaviour is set by various ioctls on /dev/rtc. If you enable the 343 "extended RTC operation" below it will also provide an emulation 344 for RTC_UIE which is required by some programs and may improve 345 precision in some cases. 346 347 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 348 module will be called genrtc. 349 350config GEN_RTC_X 351 bool "Extended RTC operation" 352 depends on GEN_RTC 353 help 354 Provides an emulation for RTC_UIE which is required by some programs 355 and may improve precision of the generic RTC support in some cases. 356 357config EFI_RTC 358 bool "EFI Real Time Clock Services" 359 depends on IA64 360 361config DS1302 362 tristate "DS1302 RTC support" 363 depends on M32R && (PLAT_M32700UT || PLAT_OPSPUT) 364 help 365 If you say Y here and create a character special file /dev/rtc with 366 major number 121 and minor number 0 using mknod ("man mknod"), you 367 will get access to the real time clock (or hardware clock) built 368 into your computer. 369 370endif # RTC_LIB 371 372config DTLK 373 tristate "Double Talk PC internal speech card support" 374 depends on ISA 375 help 376 This driver is for the DoubleTalk PC, a speech synthesizer 377 manufactured by RC Systems (<http://www.rcsys.com/>). It is also 378 called the `internal DoubleTalk'. 379 380 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 381 module will be called dtlk. 382 383config XILINX_HWICAP 384 tristate "Xilinx HWICAP Support" 385 depends on XILINX_VIRTEX || MICROBLAZE 386 help 387 This option enables support for Xilinx Internal Configuration 388 Access Port (ICAP) driver. The ICAP is used on Xilinx Virtex 389 FPGA platforms to partially reconfigure the FPGA at runtime. 390 391 If unsure, say N. 392 393config R3964 394 tristate "Siemens R3964 line discipline" 395 ---help--- 396 This driver allows synchronous communication with devices using the 397 Siemens R3964 packet protocol. Unless you are dealing with special 398 hardware like PLCs, you are unlikely to need this. 399 400 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 401 module will be called n_r3964. 402 403 If unsure, say N. 404 405config APPLICOM 406 tristate "Applicom intelligent fieldbus card support" 407 depends on PCI 408 ---help--- 409 This driver provides the kernel-side support for the intelligent 410 fieldbus cards made by Applicom International. More information 411 about these cards can be found on the WWW at the address 412 <http://www.applicom-int.com/>, or by email from David Woodhouse 413 <dwmw2@infradead.org>. 414 415 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 416 module will be called applicom. 417 418 If unsure, say N. 419 420config SONYPI 421 tristate "Sony Vaio Programmable I/O Control Device support (EXPERIMENTAL)" 422 depends on EXPERIMENTAL && X86 && PCI && INPUT && !64BIT 423 ---help--- 424 This driver enables access to the Sony Programmable I/O Control 425 Device which can be found in many (all ?) Sony Vaio laptops. 426 427 If you have one of those laptops, read 428 <file:Documentation/laptops/sonypi.txt>, and say Y or M here. 429 430 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 431 module will be called sonypi. 432 433config GPIO_TB0219 434 tristate "TANBAC TB0219 GPIO support" 435 depends on TANBAC_TB022X 436 select GPIO_VR41XX 437 438source "drivers/char/pcmcia/Kconfig" 439 440config MWAVE 441 tristate "ACP Modem (Mwave) support" 442 depends on X86 443 select SERIAL_8250 444 ---help--- 445 The ACP modem (Mwave) for Linux is a WinModem. It is composed of a 446 kernel driver and a user level application. Together these components 447 support direct attachment to public switched telephone networks (PSTNs) 448 and support selected world wide countries. 449 450 This version of the ACP Modem driver supports the IBM Thinkpad 600E, 451 600, and 770 that include on board ACP modem hardware. 452 453 The modem also supports the standard communications port interface 454 (ttySx) and is compatible with the Hayes AT Command Set. 455 456 The user level application needed to use this driver can be found at 457 the IBM Linux Technology Center (LTC) web site: 458 <http://www.ibm.com/linux/ltc/>. 459 460 If you own one of the above IBM Thinkpads which has the Mwave chipset 461 in it, say Y. 462 463 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the 464 module will be called mwave. 465 466config SCx200_GPIO 467 tristate "NatSemi SCx200 GPIO Support" 468 depends on SCx200 469 select NSC_GPIO 470 help 471 Give userspace access to the GPIO pins on the National 472 Semiconductor SCx200 processors. 473 474 If compiled as a module, it will be called scx200_gpio. 475 476config PC8736x_GPIO 477 tristate "NatSemi PC8736x GPIO Support" 478 depends on X86_32 && !UML 479 default SCx200_GPIO # mostly N 480 select NSC_GPIO # needed for support routines 481 help 482 Give userspace access to the GPIO pins on the National 483 Semiconductor PC-8736x (x=[03456]) SuperIO chip. The chip 484 has multiple functional units, inc several managed by 485 hwmon/pc87360 driver. Tested with PC-87366 486 487 If compiled as a module, it will be called pc8736x_gpio. 488 489config NSC_GPIO 490 tristate "NatSemi Base GPIO Support" 491 depends on X86_32 492 # selected by SCx200_GPIO and PC8736x_GPIO 493 # what about 2 selectors differing: m != y 494 help 495 Common support used (and needed) by scx200_gpio and 496 pc8736x_gpio drivers. If those drivers are built as 497 modules, this one will be too, named nsc_gpio 498 499config RAW_DRIVER 500 tristate "RAW driver (/dev/raw/rawN)" 501 depends on BLOCK 502 help 503 The raw driver permits block devices to be bound to /dev/raw/rawN. 504 Once bound, I/O against /dev/raw/rawN uses efficient zero-copy I/O. 505 See the raw(8) manpage for more details. 506 507 Applications should preferably open the device (eg /dev/hda1) 508 with the O_DIRECT flag. 509 510config MAX_RAW_DEVS 511 int "Maximum number of RAW devices to support (1-65536)" 512 depends on RAW_DRIVER 513 default "256" 514 help 515 The maximum number of RAW devices that are supported. 516 Default is 256. Increase this number in case you need lots of 517 raw devices. 518 519config HPET 520 bool "HPET - High Precision Event Timer" if (X86 || IA64) 521 default n 522 depends on ACPI 523 help 524 If you say Y here, you will have a miscdevice named "/dev/hpet/". Each 525 open selects one of the timers supported by the HPET. The timers are 526 non-periodic and/or periodic. 527 528config HPET_MMAP 529 bool "Allow mmap of HPET" 530 default y 531 depends on HPET 532 help 533 If you say Y here, user applications will be able to mmap 534 the HPET registers. 535 536 In some hardware implementations, the page containing HPET 537 registers may also contain other things that shouldn't be 538 exposed to the user. If this applies to your hardware, 539 say N here. 540 541config HANGCHECK_TIMER 542 tristate "Hangcheck timer" 543 depends on X86 || IA64 || PPC64 || S390 544 help 545 The hangcheck-timer module detects when the system has gone 546 out to lunch past a certain margin. It can reboot the system 547 or merely print a warning. 548 549config MMTIMER 550 tristate "MMTIMER Memory mapped RTC for SGI Altix" 551 depends on IA64_GENERIC || IA64_SGI_SN2 552 default y 553 help 554 The mmtimer device allows direct userspace access to the 555 Altix system timer. 556 557config UV_MMTIMER 558 tristate "UV_MMTIMER Memory mapped RTC for SGI UV" 559 depends on X86_UV 560 default m 561 help 562 The uv_mmtimer device allows direct userspace access to the 563 UV system timer. 564 565source "drivers/char/tpm/Kconfig" 566 567config TELCLOCK 568 tristate "Telecom clock driver for ATCA SBC" 569 depends on EXPERIMENTAL && X86 570 default n 571 help 572 The telecom clock device is specific to the MPCBL0010 and MPCBL0050 573 ATCA computers and allows direct userspace access to the 574 configuration of the telecom clock configuration settings. This 575 device is used for hardware synchronization across the ATCA backplane 576 fabric. Upon loading, the driver exports a sysfs directory, 577 /sys/devices/platform/telco_clock, with a number of files for 578 controlling the behavior of this hardware. 579 580config DEVPORT 581 bool 582 depends on !M68K 583 depends on ISA || PCI 584 default y 585 586source "drivers/s390/char/Kconfig" 587 588config RAMOOPS 589 tristate "Log panic/oops to a RAM buffer" 590 depends on HAS_IOMEM 591 default n 592 help 593 This enables panic and oops messages to be logged to a circular 594 buffer in RAM where it can be read back at some later point. 595 596config MSM_SMD_PKT 597 bool "Enable device interface for some SMD packet ports" 598 default n 599 depends on MSM_SMD 600 help 601 Enables userspace clients to read and write to some packet SMD 602 ports via device interface for MSM chipset. 603 604config TILE_SROM 605 bool "Character-device access via hypervisor to the Tilera SPI ROM" 606 depends on TILE 607 default y 608 ---help--- 609 This device provides character-level read-write access 610 to the SROM, typically via the "0", "1", and "2" devices 611 in /dev/srom/. The Tilera hypervisor makes the flash 612 device appear much like a simple EEPROM, and knows 613 how to partition a single ROM for multiple purposes. 614 615endmenu 616 617