xref: /freebsd/sys/conf/NOTES (revision f26c33d249fdfe79cac3926d7891386e8d345bf0)
12365e64fSRodney W. Grimes#
22365e64fSRodney W. Grimes# LINT -- config file for checking all the sources, tries to pull in
32365e64fSRodney W. Grimes#	as much of the source tree as it can.
42365e64fSRodney W. Grimes#
5f26c33d2SNick Hibma#	$Id: LINT,v 1.600 1999/05/20 10:08:37 hm Exp $
62365e64fSRodney W. Grimes#
73aa06999SGarrett Wollman# NB: You probably don't want to try running a kernel built from this
83aa06999SGarrett Wollman# file.  Instead, you should start from GENERIC, and add options from
93aa06999SGarrett Wollman# this file as required.
102365e64fSRodney W. Grimes#
112365e64fSRodney W. Grimes
126a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
136a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# This directive is mandatory; it defines the architecture to be
1456be1833SKATO Takenori# configured for; in this case, the 386 family based IBM-PC and
1556be1833SKATO Takenori# compatibles.
166a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
175895e3c8SPeter Wemmmachine		i386
182365e64fSRodney W. Grimes
196a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
206a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# This is the ``identification'' of the kernel.  Usually this should
216a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# be the same as the name of your kernel.
226a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
236a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanident		LINT
246a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
256a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
266a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# The `maxusers' parameter controls the static sizing of a number of
276a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# internal system tables by a complicated formula defined in param.c.
286a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
296a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanmaxusers	10
306a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
316a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
327bf01a14SPeter Wemm# The `makeoptions' parameter allows variables to be passed to the
337bf01a14SPeter Wemm# generated Makefile in the build area.  DEBUG happens to be magic.
347bf01a14SPeter Wemm# The following is equivalent to 'config -g KERNELNAME' and creates
357bf01a14SPeter Wemm# 'kernel.debug' compiled with -g debugging as well as a normal
367bf01a14SPeter Wemm# 'kernel'.  Use 'make install.debug' to install the debug kernel
377bf01a14SPeter Wemm# but that isn't normally necessary as the debug symbols are not loaded
387bf01a14SPeter Wemm# by the kernel and are not useful there anyway.
397bf01a14SPeter Wemm#
402c8635c6SPeter Wemm# KERNEL can be overridden so that you can change the default name of your
412c8635c6SPeter Wemm# kernel.
422c8635c6SPeter Wemm#
435895e3c8SPeter Wemm#makeoptions	DEBUG=-g		#Build kernel with gdb(1) debug symbols
442c8635c6SPeter Wemm#makeoptions	KERNEL=foo		#Build kernel "foo" and install "/foo"
457bf01a14SPeter Wemm
467bf01a14SPeter Wemm#
47d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson# Certain applications can grow to be larger than the 128M limit
48d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson# that FreeBSD initially imposes.  Below are some options to
49d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson# allow that limit to grow to 256MB, and can be increased further
50d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson# with changing the parameters.  MAXDSIZ is the maximum that the
51d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson# limit can be set to, and the DFLDSIZ is the default value for
52d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson# the limit.  You might want to set the default lower than the
53d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson# max, and explicitly set the maximum with a shell command for processes
54d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson# that regularly exceed the limit like INND.
55d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson#
565895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		MAXDSIZ="(256*1024*1024)"
575895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		DFLDSIZ="(256*1024*1024)"
58d43f0f0aSJohn Dyson
5925cf9d99SJordan K. Hubbard# When this is set, be extra conservative in various parts of the kernel
6025cf9d99SJordan K. Hubbard# and choose functionality over speed (on the widest variety of systems).
6125cf9d99SJordan K. Hubbardoptions		FAILSAFE
6225cf9d99SJordan K. Hubbard
6320f71813SJohn-Mark Gurney# Options for the VM subsystem
6420f71813SJohn-Mark Gurney#options	PQ_NOOPT		# No coloring
6520f71813SJohn-Mark Gurneyoptions		PQ_LARGECACHE		# color for 512k/16k cache
6620f71813SJohn-Mark Gurney#options	PQ_HUGECACHE		# color for 1024k/16k cache
6720f71813SJohn-Mark Gurney
68827d623eSJordan K. Hubbard# This allows you to actually store this configuration file into
69827d623eSJordan K. Hubbard# the kernel binary itself, where it may be later read by saying:
7071c1bf9fSJoseph Koshy#    strings -aout -n 3 /kernel | grep ^___ | sed -e 's/^___//' > MYKERNEL
71827d623eSJordan K. Hubbard#
72827d623eSJordan K. Hubbardoptions         INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE     # Include this file in kernel
73827d623eSJordan K. Hubbard
746a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
756a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#####################################################################
76477a642cSPeter Wemm# SMP OPTIONS:
77477a642cSPeter Wemm#
78477a642cSPeter Wemm# SMP enables building of a Symmetric MultiProcessor Kernel.
79477a642cSPeter Wemm# APIC_IO enables the use of the IO APIC for Symmetric I/O.
80477a642cSPeter Wemm# NCPU sets the number of CPUs, defaults to 2.
81477a642cSPeter Wemm# NBUS sets the number of busses, defaults to 4.
82477a642cSPeter Wemm# NAPIC sets the number of IO APICs on the motherboard, defaults to 1.
83477a642cSPeter Wemm# NINTR sets the total number of INTs provided by the motherboard.
84477a642cSPeter Wemm#
85477a642cSPeter Wemm# Notes:
86477a642cSPeter Wemm#
87477a642cSPeter Wemm#  An SMP kernel will ONLY run on an Intel MP spec. qualified motherboard.
88477a642cSPeter Wemm#
895895e3c8SPeter Wemm#  Be sure to disable 'cpu I386_CPU' && 'cpu I486_CPU' for SMP kernels.
90477a642cSPeter Wemm#
91477a642cSPeter Wemm#  Check the 'Rogue SMP hardware' section to see if additional options
92477a642cSPeter Wemm#   are required by your hardware.
93477a642cSPeter Wemm#
94477a642cSPeter Wemm
95477a642cSPeter Wemm# Mandatory:
96477a642cSPeter Wemmoptions		SMP			# Symmetric MultiProcessor Kernel
97477a642cSPeter Wemmoptions		APIC_IO			# Symmetric (APIC) I/O
98477a642cSPeter Wemm
9906daa051SBruce Evans# Optional, these are the defaults plus 1:
10025717e99SSteve Passeoptions		NCPU=5			# number of CPUs
10106daa051SBruce Evansoptions		NBUS=5			# number of busses
10206daa051SBruce Evansoptions		NAPIC=2			# number of IO APICs
10306daa051SBruce Evansoptions		NINTR=25		# number of INTs
104477a642cSPeter Wemm
105477a642cSPeter Wemm#
106477a642cSPeter Wemm# Rogue SMP hardware:
107477a642cSPeter Wemm#
108477a642cSPeter Wemm
109477a642cSPeter Wemm# Bridged PCI cards:
110477a642cSPeter Wemm#
111477a642cSPeter Wemm# The MP tables of most of the current generation MP motherboards
112477a642cSPeter Wemm#  do NOT properly support bridged PCI cards.  To use one of these
113477a642cSPeter Wemm#  cards you should refer to ???
114477a642cSPeter Wemm
115477a642cSPeter Wemm
116477a642cSPeter Wemm#####################################################################
11756be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU OPTIONS
11856be1833SKATO Takenori
11956be1833SKATO Takenori#
12056be1833SKATO Takenori# You must specify at least one CPU (the one you intend to run on);
12156be1833SKATO Takenori# deleting the specification for CPUs you don't need to use may make
12256be1833SKATO Takenori# parts of the system run faster.  This is especially true removing
12356be1833SKATO Takenori# I386_CPU.
12456be1833SKATO Takenori#
1255895e3c8SPeter Wemmcpu		I386_CPU
1265895e3c8SPeter Wemmcpu		I486_CPU
1275895e3c8SPeter Wemmcpu		I586_CPU		# aka Pentium(tm)
1285895e3c8SPeter Wemmcpu		I686_CPU		# aka Pentium Pro(tm)
12956be1833SKATO Takenori
13056be1833SKATO Takenori#
13156be1833SKATO Takenori# Options for CPU features.
13256be1833SKATO Takenori#
13356be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_FPU_OP_CACHE enables FPU operand cache on IBM
13456be1833SKATO Takenori# BlueLightning CPU.  It works only with Cyrix FPU, and this option
13556be1833SKATO Takenori# should not be used with Intel FPU.
13656be1833SKATO Takenori#
13756be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_3X enables triple-clock mode on IBM Blue Lightning
13856be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU if CPU supports it. The default is double-clock mode on
13956be1833SKATO Takenori# BlueLightning CPU box.
14056be1833SKATO Takenori#
14156be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_BTB_EN enables branch target buffer on Cyrix 5x86 (NOTE 1).
14256be1833SKATO Takenori#
1434962d938SKATO Takenori# CPU_DIRECT_MAPPED_CACHE sets L1 cache of Cyrix 486DLC CPU in direct
1444962d938SKATO Takenori# mapped mode.  Default is 2-way set associative mode.
1454962d938SKATO Takenori#
1466593be60SKATO Takenori# CPU_CYRIX_NO_LOCK enables weak locking for the entire address space
1476593be60SKATO Takenori# of Cyrix 6x86 and 6x86MX CPUs.  If this option is not set and
1486593be60SKATO Takenori# FAILESAFE is defined, NO_LOCK bit of CCR1 is cleared.  (NOTE 3)
1496593be60SKATO Takenori#
15056be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_DISABLE_5X86_LSSER disables load store serialize (i.e. enables
15156be1833SKATO Takenori# reorder).  This option should not be used if you use memory mapped
15256be1833SKATO Takenori# I/O device(s).
15356be1833SKATO Takenori#
15456be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_FASTER_5X86_FPU enables faster FPU exception handler.
15556be1833SKATO Takenori#
15656be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_I486_ON_386 enables CPU cache on i486 based CPU upgrade products
15756be1833SKATO Takenori# for i386 machines.
1584962d938SKATO Takenori#
15956be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_IORT defines I/O clock delay time (NOTE 1).  Default vaules of
16056be1833SKATO Takenori# I/O clock delay time on Cyrix 5x86 and 6x86 are 0 and 7,respectively
16156be1833SKATO Takenori# (no clock delay).
16256be1833SKATO Takenori#
16356be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_LOOP_EN prevents flushing the prefetch buffer if the destination
16456be1833SKATO Takenori# of a jump is already present in the prefetch buffer on Cyrix 5x86(NOTE
16556be1833SKATO Takenori# 1).
16656be1833SKATO Takenori#
16756be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_RSTK_EN enables return stack on Cyrix 5x86 (NOTE 1).
16856be1833SKATO Takenori#
16956be1833SKATO Takenori# CPU_SUSP_HLT enables suspend on HALT.  If this option is set, CPU
17056be1833SKATO Takenori# enters suspend mode following execution of HALT instruction.
17156be1833SKATO Takenori#
1724536af6aSKATO Takenori# CPU_WT_ALLOC enables write allocation on Cyrix 6x86/6x86MX and AMD
1734536af6aSKATO Takenori# K5/K6/K6-2 cpus.
1746593be60SKATO Takenori#
17556be1833SKATO Takenori# CYRIX_CACHE_WORKS enables CPU cache on Cyrix 486 CPUs with cache
17656be1833SKATO Takenori# flush at hold state.
17756be1833SKATO Takenori#
17856be1833SKATO Takenori# CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS enables (1) CPU cache on Cyrix 486 CPUs
17956be1833SKATO Takenori# without cache flush at hold state, and (2) write-back CPU cache on
18056be1833SKATO Takenori# Cyrix 6x86 whose revision < 2.7 (NOTE 2).
18156be1833SKATO Takenori#
182b0050656SJohn-Mark Gurney# NO_F00F_HACK disables the hack that prevents Pentiums (and ONLY
183b0050656SJohn-Mark Gurney# Pentiums) from locking up when a LOCK CMPXCHG8B instruction is
184b0050656SJohn-Mark Gurney# executed.  This should be included for ALL kernels that won't run
185b0050656SJohn-Mark Gurney# on a Pentium.
186b0050656SJohn-Mark Gurney#
187925f3681SMike Smith# NO_MEMORY_HOLE is an optimisation for systems with AMD K6 processors
188925f3681SMike Smith# which indicates that the 15-16MB range is *definitely* not being
189925f3681SMike Smith# occupied by an ISA memory hole.
190925f3681SMike Smith#
19156be1833SKATO Takenori# NOTE 1: The options, CPU_BTB_EN, CPU_LOOP_EN, CPU_IORT,
1924536af6aSKATO Takenori# CPU_LOOP_ENand CPU_RSTK_EN should not be used becasue of CPU bugs.
19356be1833SKATO Takenori# These options may crash your system.
19456be1833SKATO Takenori#
19556be1833SKATO Takenori# NOTE 2: If CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS is not set, CPU cache is enabled
19656be1833SKATO Takenori# in write-through mode when revision < 2.7.  If revision of Cyrix
19756be1833SKATO Takenori# 6x86 >= 2.7, CPU cache is always enabled in write-back mode.
19856be1833SKATO Takenori#
1996593be60SKATO Takenori# NOTE 3: This option may cause failures for software that requires
2006593be60SKATO Takenori# locked cycles in order to operate correctly.
2016593be60SKATO Takenori#
2025895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_FPU_OP_CACHE
2035895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_3X
2045895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_BTB_EN
2055895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_DIRECT_MAPPED_CACHE
2065895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_DISABLE_5X86_LSSER
2075895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_FASTER_5X86_FPU
2085895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_I486_ON_386
2095895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_IORT
2105895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_LOOP_EN
2115895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_RSTK_EN
2125895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_SUSP_HLT
2135895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CPU_WT_ALLOC
2145895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CYRIX_CACHE_WORKS
2155895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS
2165895e3c8SPeter Wemm#options	NO_F00F_HACK
21756be1833SKATO Takenori
21856be1833SKATO Takenori#
21956be1833SKATO Takenori# A math emulator is mandatory if you wish to run on hardware which
22056be1833SKATO Takenori# does not have a floating-point processor.  Pick either the original,
22156be1833SKATO Takenori# bogus (but freely-distributable) math emulator, or a much more
22256be1833SKATO Takenori# fully-featured but GPL-licensed emulator taken from Linux.
22356be1833SKATO Takenori#
22456be1833SKATO Takenorioptions		MATH_EMULATE		#Support for x87 emulation
22556be1833SKATO Takenori# Don't enable both of these in a real config.
22656be1833SKATO Takenorioptions		GPL_MATH_EMULATE	#Support for x87 emulation via
22756be1833SKATO Takenori					#new math emulator
22856be1833SKATO Takenori
22956be1833SKATO Takenori
23056be1833SKATO Takenori#####################################################################
2316a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# COMPATIBILITY OPTIONS
232690f540cSAndrey A. Chernov
2336a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
2346a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Implement system calls compatible with 4.3BSD and older versions of
23556c7a48cSJordan K. Hubbard# FreeBSD.  You probably do NOT want to remove this as much current code
23656c7a48cSJordan K. Hubbard# still relies on the 4.3 emulation.
2376a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
2385895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		COMPAT_43
2396a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
2406a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
2416c5e9bbdSMike Pritchard# Allow user-mode programs to manipulate their local descriptor tables.
2426a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# This option is required for the WINE Windows(tm) emulator, and is
2436a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# not used by anything else (that we know of).
2446a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
2456a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanoptions		USER_LDT		#allow user-level control of i386 ldt
2466a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
2476a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
2486a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# These three options provide support for System V Interface
2496a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Definition-style interprocess communication, in the form of shared
2506a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# memory, semaphores, and message queues, respectively.
2516a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
2526a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanoptions		SYSVSHM
2536a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanoptions		SYSVSEM
2546a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanoptions		SYSVMSG
2556a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
25694801746SPoul-Henning Kamp#
25794801746SPoul-Henning Kamp# This option includes a MD5 routine in the kernel, this is used for
25894801746SPoul-Henning Kamp# various authentication and privacy uses.
25994801746SPoul-Henning Kamp#
2605895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		MD5
26194801746SPoul-Henning Kamp
262adeb9a12SJonathan Lemon#
263adeb9a12SJonathan Lemon# Allow processes to switch to vm86 mode, as well as enabling direct
264adeb9a12SJonathan Lemon# user-mode access to the I/O port space.  This option is necessary for
2656757ed7eSPeter Wemm# the doscmd emulator to run and the VESA modes in syscons to be available.
266adeb9a12SJonathan Lemon#
2675895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		VM86
268adeb9a12SJonathan Lemon
2696a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
2706a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#####################################################################
2716a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# DEBUGGING OPTIONS
2726a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
2736a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
274b5d89ca8SBruce Evans# Enable the kernel debugger.
2756a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
276b5d89ca8SBruce Evansoptions		DDB
277b5d89ca8SBruce Evans
278b5d89ca8SBruce Evans#
2795ccab2afSGary Palmer# Don't drop into DDB for a panic. Intended for unattended operation
2805ccab2afSGary Palmer# where you may want to drop to DDB from the console, but still want
2815ccab2afSGary Palmer# the machine to recover from a panic
2825ccab2afSGary Palmer#
2835ccab2afSGary Palmeroptions		DDB_UNATTENDED
2845ccab2afSGary Palmer
2855ccab2afSGary Palmer#
286562d05dfSPaul Traina# If using GDB remote mode to debug the kernel, there's a non-standard
287562d05dfSPaul Traina# extension to the remote protocol that can be used to use the serial
288562d05dfSPaul Traina# port as both the debugging port and the system console.  It's non-
289562d05dfSPaul Traina# standard and you're on your own if you enable it.  See also the
290562d05dfSPaul Traina# "remotechat" variables in the FreeBSD specific version of gdb.
291562d05dfSPaul Traina#
292562d05dfSPaul Trainaoptions		GDB_REMOTE_CHAT
293562d05dfSPaul Traina
294562d05dfSPaul Traina#
2956a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# KTRACE enables the system-call tracing facility ktrace(2).
2966a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
2972365e64fSRodney W. Grimesoptions		KTRACE			#kernel tracing
29821c64a07SAndrey A. Chernov
2996a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
3005526d2d9SEivind Eklund# The INVARIANTS option is used in a number of source files to enable
3016a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# extra sanity checking of internal structures.  This support is not
3026a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# enabled by default because of the extra time it would take to check
3036a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# for these conditions, which can only occur as a result of
3046a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# programming errors.
3056a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
3065526d2d9SEivind Eklundoptions		INVARIANTS
3075526d2d9SEivind Eklund
3085526d2d9SEivind Eklund#
3095526d2d9SEivind Eklund# The INVARIANT_SUPPORT option makes us compile in support for
3105526d2d9SEivind Eklund# verifying some of the internal structures.  It is a prerequisite for
3115526d2d9SEivind Eklund# 'INVARIANTS', as enabling 'INVARIANTS' will make these functions be
3125526d2d9SEivind Eklund# called.  The intent is that you can set 'INVARIANTS' for single
3135526d2d9SEivind Eklund# source files (by changing the source file or specifying it on the
3145526d2d9SEivind Eklund# command line) if you have 'INVARIANT_SUPPORT' enabled.
3155526d2d9SEivind Eklund#
3165526d2d9SEivind Eklundoptions		INVARIANT_SUPPORT
3175526d2d9SEivind Eklund
3185526d2d9SEivind Eklund#
3195526d2d9SEivind Eklund# The DIAGNOSTIC option is used to enable extra debugging information
3205526d2d9SEivind Eklund# from some parts of the kernel.  As this makes everything more noisy,
3215526d2d9SEivind Eklund# it is disabled by default.
3225526d2d9SEivind Eklund#
3230dc7d907SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		DIAGNOSTIC
324da59a31cSDavid Greenman
3250dd1eea1SJordan K. Hubbard#
326348acd94SGarrett Wollman# PERFMON causes the driver for Pentium/Pentium Pro performance counters
327348acd94SGarrett Wollman# to be compiled.  See perfmon(4) for more information.
328348acd94SGarrett Wollman#
329348acd94SGarrett Wollmanoptions		PERFMON
330348acd94SGarrett Wollman
331346ebe51SEivind Eklund
332346ebe51SEivind Eklund#
333346ebe51SEivind Eklund# This option let some drivers co-exist that can't co-exist in a running
334346ebe51SEivind Eklund# system.  This is used to be able to compile all kernel code in one go for
335346ebe51SEivind Eklund# quality assurance purposes (like this file, which the option takes it name
336346ebe51SEivind Eklund# from.)
337346ebe51SEivind Eklund#
338346ebe51SEivind Eklundoptions COMPILING_LINT
339346ebe51SEivind Eklund
340346ebe51SEivind Eklund
341348acd94SGarrett Wollman# XXX - this doesn't belong here.
3420dd1eea1SJordan K. Hubbard# Allow ordinary users to take the console - this is useful for X.
3430dd1eea1SJordan K. Hubbardoptions		UCONSOLE
3440dd1eea1SJordan K. Hubbard
34596fc6efbSPoul-Henning Kamp# XXX - this doesn't belong here either
34696fc6efbSPoul-Henning Kampoptions		USERCONFIG		#boot -c editor
347ed91f3baSMike Smithoptions		INTRO_USERCONFIG	#imply -c and show intro screen
34896fc6efbSPoul-Henning Kampoptions		VISUAL_USERCONFIG	#visual boot -c editor
349b307e58fSPoul-Henning Kamp
350b307e58fSPoul-Henning Kamp# XXX - neither does this
351b307e58fSPoul-Henning Kampoptions		ROOTDEVNAME=\"da0s2e\"
3526a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
3536a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#####################################################################
3546a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# NETWORKING OPTIONS
35570c0b54cSAndrey A. Chernov
3566a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
3576a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Protocol families:
3586a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#  Only the INET (Internet) family is officially supported in FreeBSD.
35911bfa65aSBruce Evans#  Source code for the NS (Xerox Network Service) is provided for amusement
36011bfa65aSBruce Evans#  value.
3616a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
3626a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanoptions		INET			#Internet communications protocols
363f73bbaf2SDavid Greenman
364cc6a66f2SJulian Elischeroptions		IPX			#IPX/SPX communications protocols
365cc6a66f2SJulian Elischeroptions		IPXIP			#IPX in IP encapsulation (not available)
366cc6a66f2SJulian Elischeroptions		IPTUNNEL		#IP in IPX encapsulation (not available)
367cc6a66f2SJulian Elischer
36834b5fca7SJulian Elischeroptions		NETATALK		#Appletalk communications protocols
36934b5fca7SJulian Elischer
37011bfa65aSBruce Evans# These are currently broken but are shipped due to interest.
37111bfa65aSBruce Evans#options		NS			#Xerox NS protocols
37211bfa65aSBruce Evans
373bba9a7a0SGarrett Wollman# These are currently broken and are no longer shipped due to lack
374bba9a7a0SGarrett Wollman# of interest.
375bba9a7a0SGarrett Wollman#options		CCITT			#X.25 network layer
376f73bbaf2SDavid Greenman#options		ISO
377f73bbaf2SDavid Greenman#options		TPIP			#ISO TP class 4 over IP
378f73bbaf2SDavid Greenman#options		TPCONS			#ISO TP class 0 over X.25
379bba9a7a0SGarrett Wollman#options		LLC			#X.25 link layer for Ethernets
380bba9a7a0SGarrett Wollman#options		HDLC			#X.25 link layer for serial lines
381bba9a7a0SGarrett Wollman#options		EON			#ISO CLNP over IP
382dc915e7cSGarrett Wollman#options		NSIP			#XNS over IP
38363a74862SSteven Wallace
3846a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
3856a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Network interfaces:
38656c7a48cSJordan K. Hubbard#  The `loop' pseudo-device is MANDATORY when networking is enabled.
3876a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#  The `ether' pseudo-device provides generic code to handle
38856c7a48cSJordan K. Hubbard#  Ethernets; it is MANDATORY when a Ethernet device driver is
389722012ccSJulian Elischer#  configured or token-ring is enabled.
390d41f24e7SDavid Greenman#  The 'fddi' pseudo-device provides generic code to support FDDI.
39183401efaSGarrett Wollman#  The `sppp' pseudo-device serves a similar role for certain types
392e7c234a1SPeter Wemm#  of synchronous PPP links (like `cx', `ar').
3936a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#  The `sl' pseudo-device implements the Serial Line IP (SLIP) service.
394829b5d55SPeter Wemm#  The `ppp' pseudo-device implements the Point-to-Point Protocol.
395fb46af4fSDag-Erling Smørgrav#  The `bpfilter' pseudo-device enables the Berkeley Packet Filter.  Be
396d29895dcSGarrett Wollman#  aware of the legal and administrative consequences of enabling this
397d29895dcSGarrett Wollman#  option.  The number of devices determines the maximum number of
398d29895dcSGarrett Wollman#  simultaneous BPF clients programs runnable.
39959d8d13fSGarrett Wollman#  The `disc' pseudo-device implements a minimal network interface,
40059d8d13fSGarrett Wollman#  which throws away all packets sent and never receives any.  It is
40159d8d13fSGarrett Wollman#  included for testing purposes.
4027b598cd2SBrian Somers#  The `tun' pseudo-device implements (user-)ppp and nos-tun
403d1721fe1SMark Newton#  The `streams' pseudo-device implements SysVR4 STREAMS emulation.
4046a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
405829b5d55SPeter Wemm# The PPP_BSDCOMP option enables support for compress(1) style entire
406829b5d55SPeter Wemm# packet compression, the PPP_DEFLATE is for zlib/gzip style compression.
407829b5d55SPeter Wemm# PPP_FILTER enables code for filtering the ppp data stream and selecting
408829b5d55SPeter Wemm# events for resetting the demand dial activity timer - requires bpfilter.
409829b5d55SPeter Wemm# See pppd(8) for more details.
41089327d27SPeter Wemm#
4116a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanpseudo-device	ether			#Generic Ethernet
412722012ccSJulian Elischerpseudo-device	token			#Generic TokenRing
413d41f24e7SDavid Greenmanpseudo-device	fddi			#Generic FDDI
41483401efaSGarrett Wollmanpseudo-device	sppp			#Generic Synchronous PPP
4156a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanpseudo-device	loop			#Network loopback device
416fb46af4fSDag-Erling Smørgravpseudo-device	bpfilter 4		#Berkeley packet filter
417829b5d55SPeter Wemmpseudo-device	disc			#Discard device
4187b598cd2SBrian Somerspseudo-device	tun	1		#Tunnel driver (ppp(8), nos-tun(8))
4196a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanpseudo-device	sl	2		#Serial Line IP
4206a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanpseudo-device	ppp	2		#Point-to-point protocol
421d1721fe1SMark Newtonpseudo-device	streams
42289327d27SPeter Wemmoptions PPP_BSDCOMP			#PPP BSD-compress support
42389327d27SPeter Wemmoptions PPP_DEFLATE			#PPP zlib/deflate/gzip support
42496be526aSPeter Wemmoptions PPP_FILTER			#enable bpf filtering (needs bpfilter)
425d29895dcSGarrett Wollman
4266a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
4276a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Internet family options:
4286a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
4296a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# TCP_COMPAT_42 causes the TCP code to emulate certain bugs present in
4306a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# 4.2BSD.  This option should not be used unless you have a 4.2BSD
4316a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# machine and TCP connections fail.
4326a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
4336a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# MROUTING enables the kernel multicast packet forwarder, which works
4346a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# with mrouted(8).
4356a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
436d29895dcSGarrett Wollman# IPFIREWALL enables support for IP firewall construction, in
437ff6f025aSAlexander Langer# conjunction with the `ipfw' program.  IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE sends
438ff6f025aSAlexander Langer# logged packets to the system logger.  IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT
439ff6f025aSAlexander Langer# limits the number of times a matching entry can be logged.
440ab6e02daSJordan K. Hubbard#
441ab6e02daSJordan K. Hubbard# WARNING:  IPFIREWALL defaults to a policy of "deny ip from any to any"
442ab6e02daSJordan K. Hubbard# and if you do not add other rules during startup to allow access,
443ab6e02daSJordan K. Hubbard# YOU WILL LOCK YOURSELF OUT.  It is suggested that you set firewall=open
444ab6e02daSJordan K. Hubbard# in /etc/rc.conf when first enabling this feature, then refining the
445ab6e02daSJordan K. Hubbard# firewall rules in /etc/rc.firewall after you've tested that the new kernel
446ab6e02daSJordan K. Hubbard# feature works properly.
4478dd4744eSJordan K. Hubbard#
448ffdd472dSPeter Wemm# IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT causes the default rule (at boot) to
449ffdd472dSPeter Wemm# allow everything.  Use with care, if a cracker can crash your
450ffdd472dSPeter Wemm# firewall machine, they can get to your protected machines.  However,
451ffdd472dSPeter Wemm# if you are using it as an as-needed filter for specific problems as
452ffdd472dSPeter Wemm# they arise, then this may be for you.  Changing the default to 'allow'
453ffdd472dSPeter Wemm# means that you won't get stuck if the kernel and /sbin/ipfw binary get
454ffdd472dSPeter Wemm# out of sync.
455d29895dcSGarrett Wollman#
45693e0e116SJulian Elischer# IPDIVERT enables the divert IP sockets, used by ``ipfw divert''
45793e0e116SJulian Elischer#
4581689d8bdSPeter Wemm# IPFILTER enables Darren Reed's ipfilter package.
4591689d8bdSPeter Wemm# IPFILTER_LOG enables ipfilter's logging.
4601689d8bdSPeter Wemm# IPFILTER_LKM enables LKM support for an ipfilter module (untested).
4611689d8bdSPeter Wemm#
4621b968362SDag-Erling Smørgrav# IPSTEALTH enables code to support stealth forwarding (i.e., forwarding
4631b968362SDag-Erling Smørgrav# packets without touching the ttl).  This can be useful to hide firewalls
4641b968362SDag-Erling Smørgrav# from traceroute and similar tools.
4651b968362SDag-Erling Smørgrav#
46665e8111fSBruce Evans# TCPDEBUG is undocumented.
46765e8111fSBruce Evans#
4685895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		TCP_COMPAT_42		#emulate 4.2BSD TCP bugs
469e3178a06SJordan K. Hubbardoptions		MROUTING		# Multicast routing
470d29895dcSGarrett Wollmanoptions         IPFIREWALL              #firewall
471d29895dcSGarrett Wollmanoptions         IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE      #print information about
472d29895dcSGarrett Wollman					# dropped packets
4731857b6feSDag-Erling Smørgravoptions         IPFIREWALL_FORWARD      #enable transparent proxy support
4745895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=100 #limit verbosity
475e43a9900SAlexander Langeroptions		IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT #allow everything by default
47693e0e116SJulian Elischeroptions		IPDIVERT		#divert sockets
4771689d8bdSPeter Wemmoptions		IPFILTER		#kernel ipfilter support
4781689d8bdSPeter Wemmoptions		IPFILTER_LOG		#ipfilter logging
4791689d8bdSPeter Wemm#options	IPFILTER_LKM		#kernel support for ip_fil.o LKM
4801b968362SDag-Erling Smørgravoptions		IPSTEALTH		#support for stealth forwarding
48165e8111fSBruce Evansoptions		TCPDEBUG
4826a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
4833b60b6acSMatthew Dillon# ICMP_BANDLIM enables icmp error response bandwidth limiting.   You
4843b60b6acSMatthew Dillon# typically want this option as it will help protect the machine from
4853b60b6acSMatthew Dillon# D.O.S. packet attacks.
4863b60b6acSMatthew Dillon#
4875895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions         ICMP_BANDLIM
4883b60b6acSMatthew Dillon
48968e9d934SLuigi Rizzo# DUMMYNET enables the "dummynet" bandwidth limiter. You need
49068e9d934SLuigi Rizzo# IPFIREWALL as well. See the dummynet(4) manpage for more info.
49168e9d934SLuigi Rizzo# BRIDGE enables bridging between ethernet cards -- see bridge(4).
49268e9d934SLuigi Rizzo# You can use IPFIREWALL and dummynet together with bridging.
49368ec4eb6SLuigi Rizzooptions	DUMMYNET
49468ec4eb6SLuigi Rizzooptions	BRIDGE
49568e9d934SLuigi Rizzo
4963f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#
4973f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# ATM (HARP version) options
4983f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#
4993f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# ATM_CORE includes the base ATM functionality code.  This must be included
5003f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#	for ATM support.
5013f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#
5023f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# ATM_IP includes support for running IP over ATM.
5033f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#
5043f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# At least one (and usually only one) of the following signalling managers
5053f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# must be included (note that all signalling managers include PVC support):
5063f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# ATM_SIGPVC includes support for the PVC-only signalling manager `sigpvc'.
5073f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# ATM_SPANS includes support for the `spans' signalling manager, which runs
5083f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#	the FORE Systems's proprietary SPANS signalling protocol.
5093f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# ATM_UNI includes support for the `uni30' and `uni31' signalling managers,
5103f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#	which run the ATM Forum UNI 3.x signalling protocols.
5113f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#
5123f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# The `hea' driver provides support for the Efficient Networks, Inc.
5133f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# ENI-155p ATM PCI Adapter.
5143f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#
5153f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# The `hfa' driver provides support for the FORE Systems, Inc.
5163f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp# PCA-200E ATM PCI Adapter.
5173f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp#
5183f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		ATM_CORE		#core ATM protocol family
5193f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		ATM_IP			#IP over ATM support
5203f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		ATM_SIGPVC		#SIGPVC signalling manager
5213f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		ATM_SPANS		#SPANS signalling manager
5223f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		ATM_UNI			#UNI signalling manager
5233f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kampdevice		hea0			#Efficient ENI-155p ATM PCI
5243f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kampdevice		hfa0			#FORE PCA-200E ATM PCI
5253f8c4506SPoul-Henning Kamp
5266a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
5276a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#####################################################################
5286a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# FILESYSTEM OPTIONS
529e3178a06SJordan K. Hubbard
5302365e64fSRodney W. Grimes#
5316a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Only the root, /usr, and /tmp filesystems need be statically
5326a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# compiled; everything else will be automatically loaded at mount
533c5b193bfSPoul-Henning Kamp# time.  (Exception: the UFS family---FFS, and MFS --- cannot
5346a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# currently be demand-loaded.)  Some people still prefer to statically
5356a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# compile other filesystems as well.
5366a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
537a5b88b01SKATO Takenori# NB: The NULL, PORTAL, UMAP and UNION filesystems are known to be
538a5b88b01SKATO Takenori# buggy, and WILL panic your system if you attempt to do anything with
539a5b88b01SKATO Takenori# them.  They are included here as an incentive for some enterprising
540a5b88b01SKATO Takenori# soul to sit down and fix them.
5412365e64fSRodney W. Grimes#
542f1a9c715SDavid Greenman
5436a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# One of these is mandatory:
5446a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanoptions		FFS			#Fast filesystem
54532a023dcSDavid E. O'Brienoptions		MFS			#Memory File System
5466a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanoptions		NFS			#Network File System
5476a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
5486a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# The rest are optional:
5497c115697SPoul-Henning Kamp# options	NFS_NOSERVER		#Disable the NFS-server code.
5505895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CD9660			#ISO 9660 filesystem
551f1a9c715SDavid Greenmanoptions		FDESC			#File descriptor filesystem
552f1a9c715SDavid Greenmanoptions		KERNFS			#Kernel filesystem
5533f9a6982SDoug Rabsonoptions		MSDOSFS			#MS DOS File System
5543ee9bf69SEivind Eklundoptions		NTFS			#NT File System
555f1a9c715SDavid Greenmanoptions		NULLFS			#NULL filesystem
556f1a9c715SDavid Greenmanoptions		PORTAL			#Portal filesystem
557f1a9c715SDavid Greenmanoptions		PROCFS			#Process filesystem
558f1a9c715SDavid Greenmanoptions		UMAPFS			#UID map filesystem
559f1a9c715SDavid Greenmanoptions		UNION			#Union filesystem
560a788bdc4SDavid E. O'Brien# The xFS_ROOT options REQUIRE the associated ``options xFS''
5615895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CD9660_ROOT		#CD-ROM usable as root device
5627b778b5eSEivind Eklundoptions		FFS_ROOT		#FFS usable as root device
56332a023dcSDavid E. O'Brienoptions		MFS_ROOT		#MFS usable as root device
5647b778b5eSEivind Eklundoptions		NFS_ROOT		#NFS usable as root device
565c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki# This code is still experimental (e.g. doesn't handle disk slices well).
566c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki# Also, 'options MFS' is currently incompatible with DEVFS.
56746746c3bSJulian Elischeroptions		DEVFS			#devices filesystem
568f1a9c715SDavid Greenman
569f8f8d7afSEivind Eklund# Soft updates is technique for improving file system speed and
570f8f8d7afSEivind Eklund# making abrupt shutdown less risky.  It is not enabled by default due
571f8f8d7afSEivind Eklund# to copyright restraints on the code that implement it.
572f8f8d7afSEivind Eklund#
573a29a2986SRobert Nordier# Read ../../ufs/ffs/README.softupdates to learn what you need to
574f8f8d7afSEivind Eklund# do to enable this.  ../../../contrib/sys/softupdates/README gives
575f8f8d7afSEivind Eklund# more details on how they actually work.
576f8f8d7afSEivind Eklund#
577b1897c19SJulian Elischer#options		SOFTUPDATES
578b1897c19SJulian Elischer
579d52d7365SPoul-Henning Kamp# Make space in the kernel for a MFS root filesystem.  Define to the number
580d52d7365SPoul-Henning Kamp# of kilobytes to reserve for the filesystem.
5811315dabdSBruce Evansoptions		MFS_ROOT_SIZE=10
582a9c94e9bSJohn-Mark Gurney# Allows MFS filesystems to be exported via nfs
583a9c94e9bSJohn-Mark Gurneyoptions		EXPORTMFS
584d52d7365SPoul-Henning Kamp
585a401ebbeSDavid Greenman# Allow this many swap-devices.
586b1529bdaSPeter Wemmoptions		NSWAPDEV=20
587a401ebbeSDavid Greenman
588495967e4SEivind Eklund# Disk quotas are supported when this option is enabled.
5892365e64fSRodney W. Grimesoptions		QUOTA			#enable disk quotas
5906a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
59123d048eeSGary Palmer# Add more checking code to various filesystems
59223d048eeSGary Palmer#options		NULLFS_DIAGNOSTIC
59323d048eeSGary Palmer#options		KERNFS_DIAGNOSTIC
59423d048eeSGary Palmer#options		UMAPFS_DIAGNOSTIC
59523d048eeSGary Palmer#options		UNION_DIAGNOSTIC
59623d048eeSGary Palmer
5975a9714deSJoerg Wunsch# In particular multi-session CD-Rs might require a huge amount of
5985a9714deSJoerg Wunsch# time in order to "settle".  If we are about mounting them as the
5995a9714deSJoerg Wunsch# root f/s, we gotta wait a little.
6005a9714deSJoerg Wunsch#
6015a9714deSJoerg Wunsch# The number is supposed to be in seconds.
6025895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CD9660_ROOTDELAY=20
6035a9714deSJoerg Wunsch
604276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# If you are running a machine just as a fileserver for PC and MAC
605276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# users, using SAMBA or Netatalk, you may consider setting this option
606276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# and keeping all those users' directories on a filesystem that is
607276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# mounted with the suiddir option. This gives new files the same
608276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# ownership as the directory (similiar to group). It's a security hole
6096110161fSDag-Erling Smørgrav# if you let these users run programs, so confine it to file-servers
610276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# (but it'll save you lots of headaches in those cases). Root owned
611276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# directories are exempt and X bits are cleared. The suid bit must be
612276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# set on the directory as well; see chmod(1) PC owners can't see/set
613276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# ownerships so they keep getting their toes trodden on. This saves
614276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# you all the support calls as the filesystem it's used on will act as
615276756a4SDag-Erling Smørgrav# they expect: "It's my dir so it must be my file".
616cb800e34SJulian Elischer#
617cb800e34SJulian Elischeroptions		SUIDDIR
618cb800e34SJulian Elischer
619cb800e34SJulian Elischer
62023d048eeSGary Palmer# Add some error checking code to the null_bypass routine
621c85cfdb2SDavid E. O'Brien# in the NULL filesystem
62223d048eeSGary Palmer#options		SAFETY
62323d048eeSGary Palmer
624df394affSJohn-Mark Gurney
625df394affSJohn-Mark Gurney# NFS options:
6265895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NFS_MINATTRTIMO=3	# VREG attrib cache timeout in sec
6275895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NFS_MAXATTRTIMO=60
6285895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NFS_MINDIRATTRTIMO=30	# VDIR attrib cache timeout in sec
6295895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NFS_MAXDIRATTRTIMO=60
6305895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NFS_GATHERDELAY=10	# Default write gather delay (msec)
6315895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NFS_UIDHASHSIZ=29	# Tune the size of nfssvc_sock with this
6325895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NFS_WDELAYHASHSIZ=16	# and with this
6335895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NFS_MUIDHASHSIZ=63	# Tune the size of nfsmount with this
634df394affSJohn-Mark Gurneyoptions		NFS_DEBUG		# Enable NFS Debugging
635df394affSJohn-Mark Gurney
6369afcea2fSRobert V. Baron# Coda stuff:
6379afcea2fSRobert V. Baronoptions		CODA			#CODA filesystem.
6389afcea2fSRobert V. Baronpseudo-device	vcoda	4		#coda minicache <-> venus comm.
639a1d55890SJordan K. Hubbard
640053a2b61SEivind Eklund#
641053a2b61SEivind Eklund# Add support for the EXT2FS filesystem of Linux fame.  Be a bit
642053a2b61SEivind Eklund# careful with this - the ext2fs code has a tendency to lag behind
643053a2b61SEivind Eklund# changes and not be exercised very much, so mounting read/write could
644053a2b61SEivind Eklund# be dangerous (and even mounting read only could result in panics.)
645053a2b61SEivind Eklund#
6465895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		EXT2FS
647053a2b61SEivind Eklund
648053a2b61SEivind Eklund
6496a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
6506a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#####################################################################
651abc97a06SBruce Evans# POSIX P1003.1B
652abc97a06SBruce Evans
653abc97a06SBruce Evans# Real time extensions added int the 1993 Posix
654abc97a06SBruce Evans# P1003_1B: Infrastructure
655abc97a06SBruce Evans# _KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING: Build in _POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING
656abc97a06SBruce Evans# _KPOSIX_VERSION:             Version kernel is built for
657abc97a06SBruce Evans
6585895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		P1003_1B
6595895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		_KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING
6605895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		_KPOSIX_VERSION=199309L
661abc97a06SBruce Evans
662abc97a06SBruce Evans
663abc97a06SBruce Evans#####################################################################
664de6a307eSPeter Dufault# SCSI DEVICES
665de6a307eSPeter Dufault
6666a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# SCSI DEVICE CONFIGURATION
6676a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
6686a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# The SCSI subsystem consists of the `base' SCSI code, a number of
669ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# high-level SCSI device `type' drivers, and the low-level host-adapter
6706a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# device drivers.  The host adapters are listed in the ISA and PCI
6716a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# device configuration sections below.
6726a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
673265368d4SRodney W. Grimes# Beginning with FreeBSD 2.0.5 you can wire down your SCSI devices so
674ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# that a given bus, target, and LUN always come on line as the same
675ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# device unit.  In earlier versions the unit numbers were assigned
676ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# in the order that the devices were probed on the SCSI bus.  This
677ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# means that if you removed a disk drive, you may have had to rewrite
678ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# your /etc/fstab file, and also that you had to be careful when adding
679ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# a new disk as it may have been probed earlier and moved your device
680ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# configuration around.
681ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault
682ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# This old behavior is maintained as the default behavior.  The unit
683ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# assignment begins with the first non-wired down unit for a device
684700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# type.  For example, if you wire a disk as "da3" then the first
685700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# non-wired disk will be assigned da4.
686ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault
687ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# The syntax for wiring down devices is:
688ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault
6894fbaf9a7SJustin T. Gibbs# controller	scbus0 at ahc0		# Single bus device
6904fbaf9a7SJustin T. Gibbs# controller	scbus1 at ahc1 bus 0	# Single bus device
6914fbaf9a7SJustin T. Gibbs# controller	scbus3 at ahc2 bus 0	# Twin bus device
6924fbaf9a7SJustin T. Gibbs# controller	scbus2 at ahc2 bus 1	# Twin bus device
693700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# disk 		da0 at scbus0 target 0 unit 0
694700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# disk		da1 at scbus3 target 1
695700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# disk		da2 at scbus2 target 3
6964fbaf9a7SJustin T. Gibbs# tape		st1 at scbus1 target 6
697ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# device	cd0 at scbus?
698ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault
699ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# "units" (SCSI logical unit number) that are not specified are
700ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# treated as if specified as LUN 0.
701ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault
702ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# All SCSI devices allocate as many units as are required.
703ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault
704265368d4SRodney W. Grimes# The "unknown" device (uk? in pre-2.0.5) is now part of the base SCSI
705ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault# configuration and doesn't have to be explicitly configured.
706ebc1a0e2SPeter Dufault
7076a8d6623SGarrett Wollmancontroller	scbus0	#base SCSI code
7086a8d6623SGarrett Wollmandevice		ch0	#SCSI media changers
709700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbsdevice		da0	#SCSI direct access devices (aka disks)
710700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbsdevice		sa0	#SCSI tapes
7116a8d6623SGarrett Wollmandevice		cd0	#SCSI CD-ROMs
712700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs#device		od0	#SCSI optical disk
713700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbsdevice		pass0	#CAM passthrough driver
7146a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
715700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# The previous devices (ch, da, st, cd) are recognized by config.
716265368d4SRodney W. Grimes# config doesn't (and shouldn't) know about these newer ones,
717265368d4SRodney W. Grimes# so we have to specify that they are on a SCSI bus with the "at scbus?"
718265368d4SRodney W. Grimes# clause.
719265368d4SRodney W. Grimes
7208909a72bSPeter Dufaultdevice pt0 at scbus?	# SCSI processor type
7218909a72bSPeter Dufaultdevice sctarg0 at scbus? # SCSI target
7228909a72bSPeter Dufault
723700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# CAM OPTIONS:
724700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# debugging options:
725700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# -- NOTE --  If you specify one of the bus/target/lun options, you must
726700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs#             specify them all!
727700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# CAMDEBUG: When defined enables debugging macros
728700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# CAM_DEBUG_BUS:  Debug the given bus.  Use -1 to debug all busses.
729700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# CAM_DEBUG_TARGET:  Debug the given target.  Use -1 to debug all targets.
730700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# CAM_DEBUG_LUN:  Debug the given lun.  Use -1 to debug all luns.
731d05caa00SKenneth D. Merry# CAM_DEBUG_FLAGS:  OR together CAM_DEBUG_INFO, CAM_DEBUG_TRACE,
732d05caa00SKenneth D. Merry#                   CAM_DEBUG_SUBTRACE, and CAM_DEBUG_CDB
733700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs#
734700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# CAM_MAX_HIGHPOWER: Maximum number of concurrent high power (start unit) cmds
735700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS: When defined disables sense descriptions
736700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# SCSI_NO_OP_STRINGS: When defined disables opcode descriptions
7371a7c583cSGarrett Wollman# SCSI_REPORT_GEOMETRY: Always report disk geometry at boot up instead
738265368d4SRodney W. Grimes#                       of only when booting verbosely.
73956234437SKenneth D. Merry# SCSI_DELAY: The number of MILLISECONDS to freeze the SIM (scsi adapter)
74056234437SKenneth D. Merry#             queue after a bus reset, and the number of milliseconds to
74156234437SKenneth D. Merry#             freeze the device queue after a bus device reset.
742700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbsoptions		CAMDEBUG
7435895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CAM_DEBUG_BUS=-1
7445895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CAM_DEBUG_TARGET=-1
7455895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CAM_DEBUG_LUN=-1
7465895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CAM_DEBUG_FLAGS="CAM_DEBUG_INFO|CAM_DEBUG_TRACE|CAM_DEBUG_CDB"
7475895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CAM_MAX_HIGHPOWER=4
748700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbsoptions		SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS
749700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbsoptions		SCSI_NO_OP_STRINGS
7501a7c583cSGarrett Wollmanoptions		SCSI_REPORT_GEOMETRY
75156234437SKenneth D. Merryoptions		SCSI_DELAY=8000	# Be pessimistic about Joe SCSI device
7521a7c583cSGarrett Wollman
753700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# Options for the CAM CDROM driver:
754700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# CHANGER_MIN_BUSY_SECONDS: Guaranteed minimum time quantum for a changer LUN
755700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# CHANGER_MAX_BUSY_SECONDS: Maximum time quantum per changer LUN, only
756700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs#                           enforced if there is I/O waiting for another LUN
757700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# The compiled in defaults for these variables are 2 and 10 seconds,
758700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# respectively.
75993063432SJoerg Wunsch#
760700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# These can also be changed on the fly with the following sysctl variables:
761700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# kern.cam.cd.changer.min_busy_seconds
762700daf5eSJustin T. Gibbs# kern.cam.cd.changer.max_busy_seconds
76393063432SJoerg Wunsch#
7645895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CHANGER_MIN_BUSY_SECONDS=2
7655895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CHANGER_MAX_BUSY_SECONDS=10
76693063432SJoerg Wunsch
7679dfb4471SKenneth D. Merry# Options for the CAM sequential access driver:
7689dfb4471SKenneth D. Merry# SA_SPACE_TIMEOUT: Timeout for space operations, in minutes
7699dfb4471SKenneth D. Merry# SA_REWIND_TIMEOUT: Timeout for rewind operations, in minutes
7709dfb4471SKenneth D. Merry# SA_ERASE_TIMEOUT: Timeout for erase operations, in minutes
7715895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		SA_SPACE_TIMEOUT="(60)"
7725895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		SA_REWIND_TIMEOUT="(2*60)"
7735895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		SA_ERASE_TIMEOUT="(4*60)"
7749dfb4471SKenneth D. Merry
7756a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
7766a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#####################################################################
7776a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# MISCELLANEOUS DEVICES AND OPTIONS
7786a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
7791160da92SJoerg Wunsch# The `pty' device usually turns out to be ``effectively mandatory'',
7801160da92SJoerg Wunsch# as it is required for `telnetd', `rlogind', `screen', `emacs', and
7811160da92SJoerg Wunsch# `xterm', among others.
7821160da92SJoerg Wunsch
7832aba17b3SGary Palmerpseudo-device	pty	16	#Pseudo ttys - can go as high as 256
7846a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanpseudo-device	speaker		#Play IBM BASIC-style noises out your speaker
7856a8d6623SGarrett Wollmanpseudo-device	gzip		#Exec gzipped a.out's
786784cf072SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device	vn		#Vnode driver (turns a file into a device)
7874cba4555SUgen J.S. Antsilevichpseudo-device	snp	3	#Snoop device - to look at pty/vty/etc..
78803b225a3SSatoshi Asamipseudo-device	ccd	4	#Concatenated disk driver
789be174c7eSGreg Lehey
790be174c7eSGreg Lehey# Configuring Vinum into the kernel is not necessary, since the kld
791be174c7eSGreg Lehey# module gets started automatically when vinum(8) starts.  This
792be174c7eSGreg Lehey# device is also untested.  Use at your own risk.
7934cc4752cSGreg Lehey#
7944cc4752cSGreg Lehey# The option VINUMDEBUG must match the value set in CFLAGS
795c867b0e5SPoul-Henning Kamp# in /usr/src/sbin/vinum/Makefile.  Failure to do so will result in
7964cc4752cSGreg Lehey# the following message from vinum(8):
7974cc4752cSGreg Lehey#
7984cc4752cSGreg Lehey# Can't get vinum config: Invalid argument
7994cc4752cSGreg Lehey#
8004cc4752cSGreg Lehey# see vinum(4) for more reasons not to use these options.
8013ea799d5SPeter Wemmpseudo-device	vinum		#Vinum concat/mirror/raid driver
8023ea799d5SPeter Wemmoptions 	VINUMDEBUG	#enable Vinum debugging hooks
8039ba0e7c3SBruce Evans
80465e8111fSBruce Evans# These are only for watching for bitrot in old tty code.
80565e8111fSBruce Evans# broken
80665e8111fSBruce Evans#pseudo-device	tb
80765e8111fSBruce Evans
80858067a99SPoul-Henning Kamp# Size of the kernel message buffer.  Should be N * pagesize.
8095895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		MSGBUF_SIZE=40960
81058067a99SPoul-Henning Kamp
8116a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
8126a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#####################################################################
8136a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# HARDWARE DEVICE CONFIGURATION
8146a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
8156a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# ISA and EISA devices:
816c37ddbb8SJoerg Wunsch# EISA support is available for some device, so they can be auto-probed.
8176a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Micro Channel is not supported at all.
8186a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
8196a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
82016e164e3SBruce Evans# Mandatory ISA devices: isa, npx
8216a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
822f71c851cSPeter Wemmcontroller	isa0
8232365e64fSRodney W. Grimes
8246a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
8256a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Options for `isa':
8266a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
827d72ee36fSBruce Evans# AUTO_EOI_1 enables the `automatic EOI' feature for the master 8259A
828d72ee36fSBruce Evans# interrupt controller.  This saves about 0.7-1.25 usec for each interrupt.
829d72ee36fSBruce Evans# This option breaks suspend/resume on some portables.
830d72ee36fSBruce Evans#
8319ba0e7c3SBruce Evans# AUTO_EOI_2 enables the `automatic EOI' feature for the slave 8259A
832d72ee36fSBruce Evans# interrupt controller.  This saves about 0.7-1.25 usec for each interrupt.
8339ba0e7c3SBruce Evans# Automatic EOI is documented not to work for for the slave with the
8349ba0e7c3SBruce Evans# original i8259A, but it works for some clones and some integrated
8359ba0e7c3SBruce Evans# versions.
8369ba0e7c3SBruce Evans#
837b2796687SNate Williams# MAXMEM specifies the amount of RAM on the machine; if this is not
8389bc192deSDavid E. O'Brien# specified, FreeBSD will first read the amount of memory from the CMOS
8399bc192deSDavid E. O'Brien# RAM, so the amount of memory will initially be limited to 64MB or 16MB
8409bc192deSDavid E. O'Brien# depending on the BIOS.  If the BIOS reports 64MB, a memory probe will
8419bc192deSDavid E. O'Brien# then attempt to detect the installed amount of RAM.  If this probe
8429bc192deSDavid E. O'Brien# fails to detect >64MB RAM you will have to use the MAXMEM option.
8439bc192deSDavid E. O'Brien# The amount is in kilobytes, so for a machine with 128MB of RAM, it would
8449bc192deSDavid E. O'Brien# be 131072 (128 * 1024).
845b2796687SNate Williams#
8463339606dSAndreas Schulz# TUNE_1542 enables the automatic ISA bus speed selection for the
8473339606dSAndreas Schulz# Adaptec 1542 boards. Does not work for all boards, use it with caution.
8483339606dSAndreas Schulz#
8495eb46edfSDavid Greenman# BROKEN_KEYBOARD_RESET disables the use of the keyboard controller to
8505eb46edfSDavid Greenman# reset the CPU for reboot.  This is needed on some systems with broken
8515eb46edfSDavid Greenman# keyboard controllers.
8523eafdedeSBruce Evans#
85377959e8eSMarc G. Fournier# PAS_JOYSTICK_ENABLE enables the gameport on the ProAudio Spectrum
85477959e8eSMarc G. Fournier
8555895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		AUTO_EOI_1
8565895e3c8SPeter Wemm#options	AUTO_EOI_2
8575895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		MAXMEM="(128*1024)"
8585895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions 	TUNE_1542
859b1529bdaSPeter Wemm#options	BROKEN_KEYBOARD_RESET
86077959e8eSMarc G. Fournier#options	PAS_JOYSTICK_ENABLE
8613af6b652SDavid Greenman
862595f6341SPoul-Henning Kamp# Enable support for the kernel PLL to use an external PPS signal,
863595f6341SPoul-Henning Kamp# under supervision of [x]ntpd(8)
864a2210fe1SPoul-Henning Kamp# More info in ntpd documentation: http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~ntp
865595f6341SPoul-Henning Kamp
866595f6341SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		PPS_SYNC
867595f6341SPoul-Henning Kamp
868c2906d55SPoul-Henning Kamp# If you see the "calcru: negative time of %ld usec for pid %d (%s)\n"
869c2906d55SPoul-Henning Kamp# message you probably have some broken sw/hw which disables interrupts
870c2906d55SPoul-Henning Kamp# for too long.  You can make the system more resistant to this by
871c2906d55SPoul-Henning Kamp# choosing a high value for NTIMECOUNTER.  The default is 5, there
872c2906d55SPoul-Henning Kamp# is no upper limit but more than a couple of hundred are not productive.
873a2210fe1SPoul-Henning Kamp# A better strategy may be to sysctl -w kern.timecounter.method=1
874c2906d55SPoul-Henning Kamp
8755895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NTIMECOUNTER=20
876c2906d55SPoul-Henning Kamp
87753a7a570SJohn-Mark Gurney# Enable PnP support in the kernel.  This allows you to automaticly
87853a7a570SJohn-Mark Gurney# attach to PnP cards for drivers that support it and allows you to
87953a7a570SJohn-Mark Gurney# configure cards from USERCONFIG.  See pnp(4) for more info.
88053a7a570SJohn-Mark Gurneycontroller	pnp0
88153a7a570SJohn-Mark Gurney
88223f7bd17SBrian Somers# The keyboard controller; it controls the keyboard and the PS/2 mouse.
8836182fdbdSPeter Wemmcontroller	atkbdc0	at isa? port IO_KBD
8842ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA
8852ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA# The AT keyboard
886ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		atkbd0	at atkbdc? irq 1
8872ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA
8880a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTA# Options for atkbd:
8890a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP	# specify the built-in keymap
8900a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTAmakeoptions	ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP="jp.106"
8910a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTA
8920a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTA# These options are valid for other keyboard drivers as well.
8930a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		KBD_DISABLE_KEYMAP_LOAD	# refuse to load a keymap
8940a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		KBD_INSTALL_CDEV	# install a CDEV entry in /dev
8950a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTA
896e1b5fc4cSKazutaka YOKOTA# `flags' for atkbd:
897e1b5fc4cSKazutaka YOKOTA#       0x01    Force detection of keyboard, else we always assume a keyboard
898e1b5fc4cSKazutaka YOKOTA#       0x02    Don't reset keyboard, useful for some newer ThinkPads
899e1b5fc4cSKazutaka YOKOTA#       0x04    Old-style (XT) keyboard support, useful for older ThinkPads
900e1b5fc4cSKazutaka YOKOTA
9012ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA# PS/2 mouse
902ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		psm0	at atkbdc? irq 12
9032ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA
9042ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA# Options for psm:
9052ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		PSM_HOOKAPM		#hook the APM resume event, useful
9062ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA					#for some laptops
9072ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		PSM_RESETAFTERSUSPEND	#reset the device at the resume event
9082ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA
9092ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA# The video card driver.
9102ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTAdevice		vga0	at isa? port ? conflicts
9112ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA
912c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA# Options for vga:
913c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA# Try the following option if the mouse pointer is not drawn correctly
914c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA# or font does not seem to be loaded properly.  May cause flicker on
915c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA# some systems.
916c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		VGA_ALT_SEQACCESS
917c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA
918c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA# If you can dispense with some vga driver features, you may want to
919c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA# use the following options to save some memory.
920c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		VGA_NO_FONT_LOADING	# don't save/load font
921c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		VGA_NO_MODE_CHANGE	# don't change video modes
922c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA
923c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA# Older video cards may require this option for proper operation.
924c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		VGA_SLOW_IOACCESS	# do byte-wide i/o's to TS and GDC regs
925c619f2acSKazutaka YOKOTA
9260a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTA# To include support for VESA video modes
9270a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		VESA			# needs VM86 defined too!!
9280a0319c2SKazutaka YOKOTA
9292ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA# Splash screen at start up!  Screen savers require this too.
9302ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTApseudo-device	splash
9312ad872c5SKazutaka YOKOTA
932c19da41eSPeter Wemm# The pcvt console driver (vt220 compatible).
933ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		vt0	at isa?
934c19da41eSPeter Wemmoptions		XSERVER			# support for running an X server.
935c19da41eSPeter Wemmoptions		FAT_CURSOR		# start with block cursor
936c19da41eSPeter Wemm# This PCVT option is for keyboards such as those used on IBM ThinkPad laptops
937c19da41eSPeter Wemmoptions		PCVT_SCANSET=2 		# IBM keyboards are non-std
938a467384bSJoerg Wunsch# Other PCVT options are documented in pcvt(4).
9395895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		PCVT_24LINESDEF
940a467384bSJoerg Wunschoptions		PCVT_CTRL_ALT_DEL
941a467384bSJoerg Wunschoptions		PCVT_EMU_MOUSE
942a467384bSJoerg Wunschoptions		PCVT_FREEBSD=211
943a467384bSJoerg Wunschoptions		PCVT_META_ESC
944a467384bSJoerg Wunschoptions		PCVT_NSCREENS=9
945a467384bSJoerg Wunschoptions		PCVT_PRETTYSCRNS
946a467384bSJoerg Wunschoptions		PCVT_SCREENSAVER
947a467384bSJoerg Wunschoptions		PCVT_USEKBDSEC
9485895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		PCVT_VT220KEYB
949c19da41eSPeter Wemm
950ee16b430SBruce Evans# The syscons console driver (sco color console compatible).
951ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		sc0	at isa?
952683cbdf4SBruce Evansoptions		MAXCONS=16		# number of virtual consoles
9535895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		STD8X16FONT		# Compile font in
9545895e3c8SPeter Wemmmakeoptions	STD8X16FONT=cp850
955297976f7SKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		SC_HISTORY_SIZE=200	# number of history buffer lines
956c4118fc0SKazutaka YOKOTAoptions		SC_DISABLE_REBOOT	# disable reboot key sequence
95785e36760SJordan K. Hubbard
9586620cf78SNate Williams#
9596620cf78SNate Williams# `flags' for sc0:
9606620cf78SNate Williams#       0x01    Use a 'visual' bell
9616620cf78SNate Williams#       0x02    Use a 'blink' cursor
9625d3b1465SKazutaka YOKOTA#       0x04    Use a 'underline' cursor
9635d3b1465SKazutaka YOKOTA#       0x06    Use a 'blinking underline' (destructive) cursor
964c0fad1a4SKazutaka YOKOTA#	0x40	Make the bell quiet if it is rung in the backgroud vty.
9652ac8be82SAndreas Schulz
9666a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
96725292acbSBruce Evans# The Numeric Processing eXtension driver.  This should be configured if
96825292acbSBruce Evans# your machine has a math co-processor, unless the coprocessor is very
96925292acbSBruce Evans# buggy. If it is not configured then you *must* configure math emulation
97025292acbSBruce Evans# (see above).  If both npx0 and emulation are configured, then only npx0
97125292acbSBruce Evans# is used (provided it works).
9726182fdbdSPeter Wemmdevice		npx0	at nexus? port IO_NPX iosiz 0x0 flags 0x0 irq 13
9731fe04850SBruce Evans
97498e9e66cSNate Williams#
9751fe04850SBruce Evans# `flags' for npx0:
9761fe04850SBruce Evans#	0x01	don't use the npx registers to optimize bcopy
9771fe04850SBruce Evans#	0x02	don't use the npx registers to optimize bzero
9781fe04850SBruce Evans#	0x04	don't use the npx registers to optimize copyin or copyout.
9791fe04850SBruce Evans# The npx registers are normally used to optimize copying and zeroing when
9801fe04850SBruce Evans# all of the following conditions are satisfied:
9815895e3c8SPeter Wemm#	I586_CPU is an option
9821fe04850SBruce Evans#	the cpu is an i586 (perhaps not a Pentium)
9831fe04850SBruce Evans#	the probe for npx0 succeeds
9841fe04850SBruce Evans#	INT 16 exception handling works.
9851fe04850SBruce Evans# Then copying and zeroing using the npx registers is normally 30-100% faster.
9861fe04850SBruce Evans# The flags can be used to control cases where it doesn't work or is slower.
9871fe04850SBruce Evans# Setting them at boot time using userconfig works right (the optimizations
9881fe04850SBruce Evans# are not used until later in the bootstrap when npx0 is attached).
9891fe04850SBruce Evans#
9901fe04850SBruce Evans
9911fe04850SBruce Evans#
9921fe04850SBruce Evans# `iosiz' for npx0:
9931fe04850SBruce Evans# This can be used instead of the MAXMEM option to set the memory size.  If
9941fe04850SBruce Evans# it is nonzero, then it overrides both the MAXMEM option and the memory
9951fe04850SBruce Evans# size reported by the BIOS.  Setting it at boot time using userconfig takes
9961fe04850SBruce Evans# effect on the next reboot after the change has been recorded in the kernel
9971fe04850SBruce Evans# binary (the size is used early in the boot before userconfig has a chance
9981fe04850SBruce Evans# to change it).
9991fe04850SBruce Evans#
10006a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
10016a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
10026a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Optional ISA and EISA devices:
10036a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
10046a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
10056a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
10064a64714fSKenneth D. Merry# SCSI host adapters: `aha', `bt'
10076a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
1008859244a6SJustin T. Gibbs# adv: All Narrow SCSI bus AdvanSys controllers.
1009859244a6SJustin T. Gibbs# adw: Second Generation AdvanSys controllers including the ADV940UW.
10106a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# aha: Adaptec 154x
10119829c3edSJordan K. Hubbard# ahc: Adaptec 274x/284x/294x
10126a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# bt: Most Buslogic controllers
10136a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
10146a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Note that the order is important in order for Buslogic cards to be
10156a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# probed correctly.
10166a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
10176a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
10185895e3c8SPeter Wemmcontroller	bt0	at isa? port IO_BT0 irq ?
1019ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmcontroller	adv0	at isa? port ? irq ?
1020859244a6SJustin T. Gibbscontroller	adw0
1021ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmcontroller      aha0    at isa? port ? irq ?
10226a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
10238b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt#
10248b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt# ATA and ATAPI devices
10258b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt# This is work in progress, use at your own risk.
1026c867b0e5SPoul-Henning Kamp# It currently reuses the majors of wd.c and friends.
10278b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt# It cannot co-exist with the old system in one kernel.
10288b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt# You only need one "controller ata0" for it to find all
10298b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt# PCI devices on modern machines.
10308b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt#controller	ata0
10318b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt#device		atadisk0	# ATA disk drives
10328b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt#device		atapicd0	# ATAPI CDROM drives
103361f625f0SSøren Schmidt#device		atapifd0	# ATAPI floppy drives
10348b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt#device		atapist0	# ATAPI tape drives
10358b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt#
10368b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt# If you need ISA only devices, this is the lines to add:
10375895e3c8SPeter Wemm#controller	ata1	at isa? port IO_WD1 irq 14
10385895e3c8SPeter Wemm#controller	ata2	at isa? port IO_WD2 irq 15
10398b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt#
10408b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt# All the controller lines can coexist, the driver will
10418b89ef0aSSøren Schmidt# find out which ones are there.
10423c43212aSSøren Schmidt
10436a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
10446a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# ST-506, ESDI, and IDE hard disks: `wdc' and `wd'
10456a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
1046e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# The flags fields are used to enable the multi-sector I/O and
1047e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# the 32BIT I/O modes.  The flags may be used in either the controller
1048e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# definition or in the individual disk definitions.  The controller
1049e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# definition is supported for the boot configuration stuff.
1050e3dd3158SJohn Dyson#
1051e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# Each drive has a 16 bit flags value defined:
1052e3dd3158SJohn Dyson#	The low 8 bits are the maximum value for the multi-sector I/O,
1053e3dd3158SJohn Dyson#	where 0xff defaults to the maximum that the drive can handle.
1054e3dd3158SJohn Dyson#	The high bit of the 16 bit flags (0x8000) allows probing for
10551f7727a9SSøren Schmidt#	32 bit transfers.  Bit 14 (0x4000) enables a hack to wake
10561f7727a9SSøren Schmidt#	up powered-down laptop drives.  Bit 13 (0x2000) allows
10571f7727a9SSøren Schmidt#	probing for PCI IDE DMA controllers, such as Intel's PIIX
1058f559a836SSøren Schmidt#	south bridges. Bit 12 (0x1000) sets LBA mode instead of the
1059f559a836SSøren Schmidt#	default CHS mode for accessing the drive. See the wd.4 man page.
1060e3dd3158SJohn Dyson#
1061e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# The flags field for the drives can be specified in the controller
1062e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# specification with the low 16 bits for drive 0, and the high 16 bits
1063e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# for drive 1.
1064e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# e.g.:
10655895e3c8SPeter Wemm#controller	wdc0	at isa? port IO_WD1 irq 14 flags 0x00ff8004
1066e3dd3158SJohn Dyson#
1067e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# specifies that drive 0 will be allowed to probe for 32 bit transfers and
1068e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# a maximum multi-sector transfer of 4 sectors, and drive 1 will not be
1069e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# allowed to probe for 32 bit transfers, but will allow multi-sector
1070e3dd3158SJohn Dyson# transfers up to the maximum that the drive supports.
1071e3dd3158SJohn Dyson#
1072e871e61fSJohn Dyson# If you are using a PCI controller that is not running in compatibility
1073e871e61fSJohn Dyson# mode (for example, it is a 2nd IDE PCI interface), then use config line(s)
1074e871e61fSJohn Dyson# such as:
1075e3dd3158SJohn Dyson#
10765895e3c8SPeter Wemm#controller	wdc2	at isa? port 0 irq ? flags 0xa0ffa0ff
1077e871e61fSJohn Dyson#disk		wd4	at wdc2 drive 0
1078e871e61fSJohn Dyson#disk		wd5	at wdc2 drive 1
1079e871e61fSJohn Dyson#
10805895e3c8SPeter Wemm#controller	wdc3	at isa? port 0 irq ? flags 0xa0ffa0ff
1081e871e61fSJohn Dyson#disk		wd6	at wdc3 drive 0
1082e871e61fSJohn Dyson#disk		wd7	at wdc3 drive 1
1083e871e61fSJohn Dyson#
1084e871e61fSJohn Dyson# Note that the above config would be useful for a Promise card, when used
1085e871e61fSJohn Dyson# on a MB that already has a PIIX controller.  Note the bogus irq and port
1086e871e61fSJohn Dyson# entries.  These are automatically filled in by the IDE/PCI support.
1087e871e61fSJohn Dyson#
1088e871e61fSJohn Dyson
10895895e3c8SPeter Wemmcontroller	wdc0	at isa? port IO_WD1 irq 14
10902620c42eSNate Williamsdisk		wd0	at wdc0 drive 0
10912620c42eSNate Williamsdisk		wd1	at wdc0 drive 1
10925895e3c8SPeter Wemmcontroller	wdc1	at isa? port IO_WD2 irq 15
10932620c42eSNate Williamsdisk		wd2	at wdc1 drive 0
10942620c42eSNate Williamsdisk		wd3	at wdc1 drive 1
10952365e64fSRodney W. Grimes
10966a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
1097340fe9aeSEivind Eklund# This option allow you to override the default probe time for IDE
1098340fe9aeSEivind Eklund# devices, to get a faster probe.  Setting this below 10000 violate
1099340fe9aeSEivind Eklund# the IDE specs, but may still work for you (it will work for most
1100340fe9aeSEivind Eklund# people).
1101340fe9aeSEivind Eklund#
1102340fe9aeSEivind Eklundoptions		IDE_DELAY=8000	# Be optimistic about Joe IDE device
1103340fe9aeSEivind Eklund
1104eeded4d8SSøren Schmidt# IDE CD-ROM & CD-R/RW  driver - requires wdc controller and ATAPI option
1105d99434fbSSøren Schmidtdevice          wcd0
1106eeded4d8SSøren Schmidt
1107aaf86206SPaul Traina# IDE floppy driver - requires wdc controller and ATAPI option
1108aaf86206SPaul Trainadevice          wfd0
1109aaf86206SPaul Traina
1110ea0be999SBruce Evans# IDE tape driver - requires wdc controller and ATAPI option
1111ea0be999SBruce Evansdevice          wst0
1112ea0be999SBruce Evans
1113aaf86206SPaul Traina
11146788ce49SJordan K. Hubbard#
11156a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Standard floppy disk controllers and floppy tapes: `fdc', `fd', and `ft'
11166a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
11175895e3c8SPeter Wemmcontroller	fdc0	at isa? port IO_FD1 irq 6 drq 2
111885827d9cSJoerg Wunsch#
1119d2fb4892SJoerg Wunsch# FDC_DEBUG enables floppy debugging.  Since the debug output is huge, you
1120d2fb4892SJoerg Wunsch# gotta turn it actually on by setting the variable fd_debug with DDB,
1121d2fb4892SJoerg Wunsch# however.
1122d2fb4892SJoerg Wunschoptions		FDC_DEBUG
112369acd21dSWarner Losh# FDC_YE enables support for the floppies used on the Libretto.  This is a
112469acd21dSWarner Losh# pcmcia floppy.  You will also need to add
112569acd21dSWarner Losh#card "Y-E DATA" "External FDD"
112669acd21dSWarner Losh#        config 0x4 "fdc0" 10
112769acd21dSWarner Losh# to your pccard.conf file.
1128d95939afSPeter Wemmoptions		FDC_YE		#XXX newbus broken
1129d2fb4892SJoerg Wunsch#
113085827d9cSJoerg Wunsch# Activate this line instead of the fdc0 line above if you happen to
113185827d9cSJoerg Wunsch# have an Insight floppy tape.  Probing them proved to be dangerous
113285827d9cSJoerg Wunsch# for people with floppy disks only, so it's "hidden" behind a flag:
11335895e3c8SPeter Wemm#controller fdc0 at isa? port IO_FD1 flags 1 irq 6 drq 2
113485827d9cSJoerg Wunsch
11356a8d6623SGarrett Wollmandisk		fd0	at fdc0 drive 0
11366a8d6623SGarrett Wollmandisk		fd1	at fdc0 drive 1
113785827d9cSJoerg Wunsch
11386a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
1139807ef708SDag-Erling Smørgrav# Other standard PC hardware: `mse', `sio', etc.
11406a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
11416a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# mse: Logitech and ATI InPort bus mouse ports
11426a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# sio: serial ports (see sio(4))
11436a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
1144ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		mse0	at isa? port 0x23c irq 5
1145975c53c7SDoug Rabson
11465895e3c8SPeter Wemmdevice		sio0	at isa? port IO_COM1 flags 0x10 irq 4
11479546766aSBruce Evans
11489546766aSBruce Evans#
11499546766aSBruce Evans# `flags' for serial drivers that support consoles (only for sio now):
11509546766aSBruce Evans#	0x10	enable console support for this unit.  The other console flags
11519546766aSBruce Evans#		are ignored unless this is set.  Enabling console support does
11529546766aSBruce Evans#		not make the unit the preferred console - boot with -h or set
11539546766aSBruce Evans#		the 0x20 flag for that.  Currently, at most one unit can have
11549546766aSBruce Evans#		console support; the first one (in config file order) with
11559546766aSBruce Evans#		this flag set is preferred.  Setting this flag for sio0 gives
11569546766aSBruce Evans#		the old behaviour.
11579546766aSBruce Evans#	0x20	force this unit to be the console (unless there is another
11589546766aSBruce Evans#		higher priority console).  This replaces the COMCONSOLE option.
11599546766aSBruce Evans#	0x40	reserve this unit for low level console operations.  Do not
116004fb8e53SAlexander Langer#		access the device in any normal way.
11619546766aSBruce Evans#
11626a796ce0SJohn-Mark Gurney# PnP `flags' (set via userconfig using pnp x flags y)
11636a796ce0SJohn-Mark Gurney#	0x1	disable probing of this device.  Used to prevent your modem
11646a796ce0SJohn-Mark Gurney#		from being attached as a PnP modem.
11656a796ce0SJohn-Mark Gurney#
11669546766aSBruce Evans
11679546766aSBruce Evans# Options for serial drivers that support consoles (only for sio now):
11689546766aSBruce Evansoptions		BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER	#a BREAK on a comconsole goes to
11699546766aSBruce Evans					#DDB, if available.
11705ea6cb03SPaul Trainaoptions		CONSPEED=9600		#default speed for serial console (default 9600)
11716a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
11726a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# Options for sio:
1173768fd661SBruce Evansoptions		COM_ESP			#code for Hayes ESP
11749ba0e7c3SBruce Evansoptions		COM_MULTIPORT		#code for some cards with shared IRQs
11755895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		EXTRA_SIO=2		#number of extra sio ports to allocate
11766a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
117796b89afcSBruce Evans# Other flags for sio that aren't documented in the man page.
117896b89afcSBruce Evans#	0x20000	enable hardware RTS/CTS and larger FIFOs.  Only works for
117996b89afcSBruce Evans#		ST16650A-compatible UARTs.
118096b89afcSBruce Evans
11816a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
118283401efaSGarrett Wollman# Network interfaces: `cx', `ed', `el', `ep', `ie', `is', `le', `lnc'
11836a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
11846c5e9bbdSMike Pritchard# ar: Arnet SYNC/570i hdlc sync 2/4 port V.35/X.21 serial driver (requires sppp)
1185b16d163dSMike Smith# cs: IBM Etherjet and other Crystal Semi CS89x0-based adapters
118683401efaSGarrett Wollman# cx: Cronyx/Sigma multiport sync/async (with Cisco or PPP framing)
11876a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# ed: Western Digital and SMC 80xx; Novell NE1000 and NE2000; 3Com 3C503
11886a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# el: 3Com 3C501 (slow!)
11896a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# ep: 3Com 3C509 (buggy)
1190903a1a16SDag-Erling Smørgrav# ex: Intel EtherExpress Pro/10 and other i82595-based adapters
11911a7c583cSGarrett Wollman# fe: Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet
11920f1d6a82SSteve Price# ie: AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507; unknown NI5210; Intel EtherExpress
11936a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# le: Digital Equipment EtherWorks 2 and EtherWorks 3 (DEPCA, DE100,
11946a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#     DE101, DE200, DE201, DE202, DE203, DE204, DE205, DE422)
11959a093170SDavid E. O'Brien# lnc: Lance/PCnet cards (Isolan, Novell NE2100, NE32-VL, AMD Am7990 & Am79C960)
119630cfb5b6SJoerg Wunsch# rdp: RealTek RTL 8002-based pocket ethernet adapters
1197d805b866SJohn Hay# sr: RISCom/N2 hdlc sync 1/2 port V.35/X.21 serial driver (requires sppp)
119898d46ad0SMike Smith# wl: Lucent Wavelan (ISA card only).
119931a08ab0SBill Paul# wi: Lucent WaveLAN/IEEE 802.11 PCMCIA adapters. Note: this supports both
12005f0d0590SPeter Wemm#     the PCMCIA and ISA cards: the ISA card is really a PCMCIA to ISA
12015f0d0590SPeter Wemm#     bridge with a PCMCIA adapter plugged into it.
1202282462f9SDavid E. O'Brien# xe: Xircom/Intel EtherExpress Pro100/16 PC Card ethernet controller.
1203648c711bSPoul-Henning Kamp# ze: IBM/National Semiconductor PCMCIA ethernet controller.
1204648c711bSPoul-Henning Kamp# zp: 3Com PCMCIA Etherlink III (It does not require shared memory for
1205648c711bSPoul-Henning Kamp#     send/receive operation, but it needs 'iomem' to read/write the
1206648c711bSPoul-Henning Kamp#     attribute memory)
1207722012ccSJulian Elischer# oltr: Olicom ISA token-ring adapters OC-3115, OC-3117, OC-3118 and OC-3133
1208722012ccSJulian Elischer#       (no options needed)
12096a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
1210ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice ar0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 10 iomem 0xd0000
1211ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice cs0 at isa? port 0x300 irq ?
1212ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice cx0 at isa? port 0x240 irq 15 drq 7
1213ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice ed0 at isa? port 0x280 irq 5 iomem 0xd8000
1214ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice el0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 9
1215ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice ep0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 10
1216ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice ex0 at isa? port? irq?
1217ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice fe0 at isa? port 0x300 irq ?
1218ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice ie0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 5 iomem 0xd0000
1219ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice ie1 at isa? port 0x360 irq 7 iomem 0xd0000
1220ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice le0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 5 iomem 0xd0000
1221ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice lnc0 at isa? port 0x280 irq 10 drq 0
1222ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice rdp0 at isa? port 0x378 irq 7 flags 2
1223ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice sr0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 5 iomem 0xd0000
122431a08ab0SBill Pauldevice wi0 at isa? port? irq?
12253476cdb9SMike Smithoptions		WLCACHE		# enables the signal-strength cache
12263476cdb9SMike Smithoptions		WLDEBUG		# enables verbose debugging output
1227ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice wl0 at isa? port 0x300 irq ?
1228282462f9SDavid E. O'Briendevice xe0 at isa? port? irq ?
1229346ebe51SEivind Eklund# We can (bogusly) include both the dedicated PCCARD drivers and the generic
1230346ebe51SEivind Eklund# support when COMPILING_LINT.
1231ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice ze0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 5 iomem 0xd8000
1232ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice zp0 at isa? port 0x300 irq 10 iomem 0xd8000
1233648c711bSPoul-Henning Kamp
1234722012ccSJulian Elischerdevice oltr0 at isa?
1235722012ccSJulian Elischer
123668713f97SKenjiro Cho#
123768713f97SKenjiro Cho# ATM related options
123868713f97SKenjiro Cho#
123968713f97SKenjiro Cho# The `en' device provides support for Efficient Networks (ENI)
124068713f97SKenjiro Cho# ENI-155 PCI midway cards, and the Adaptec 155Mbps PCI ATM cards (ANA-59x0).
124168713f97SKenjiro Cho#
12423cbceb82SKenjiro Cho# atm pseudo-device provides generic atm functions and is required for
124368713f97SKenjiro Cho# atm devices.
12443cbceb82SKenjiro Cho# NATM enables the netnatm protocol family that can be used to
124568713f97SKenjiro Cho# bypass TCP/IP.
124668713f97SKenjiro Cho#
124768713f97SKenjiro Cho# the current driver supports only PVC operations (no atm-arp, no multicast).
124868713f97SKenjiro Cho# for more details, please read the original documents at
124968713f97SKenjiro Cho# http://www.ccrc.wustl.edu/pub/chuck/bsdatm/wucs.html
125068713f97SKenjiro Cho#
125168713f97SKenjiro Chopseudo-device	atm
125268713f97SKenjiro Chodevice en0
125368713f97SKenjiro Chodevice en1
12543cbceb82SKenjiro Chooptions		NATM			#native ATM
1255f4567b9cSJulian Elischer
1256c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1257c19da41eSPeter Wemm# Audio drivers: `snd', `sb', `pas', `gus', `pca'
1258c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1259c19da41eSPeter Wemm# snd: Voxware sound support code
1260c19da41eSPeter Wemm# sb: SoundBlaster PCM - SoundBlaster, SB Pro, SB16, ProAudioSpectrum
1261c19da41eSPeter Wemm# sbxvi: SoundBlaster 16
1262c19da41eSPeter Wemm# sbmidi: SoundBlaster 16 MIDI interface
1263c19da41eSPeter Wemm# pas: ProAudioSpectrum PCM and MIDI
1264c19da41eSPeter Wemm# gus: Gravis Ultrasound - Ultrasound, Ultrasound 16, Ultrasound MAX
1265c19da41eSPeter Wemm# gusxvi: Gravis Ultrasound 16-bit PCM	(do not use)
1266c19da41eSPeter Wemm# mss: Microsoft Sound System
1267c19da41eSPeter Wemm# css: Crystal Sound System (CSS 423x PnP)
1268c19da41eSPeter Wemm# sscape: Ensoniq Soundscape MIDI interface
1269c19da41eSPeter Wemm# sscape_mss: Ensoniq Soundscape PCM (requires sscape)
1270c19da41eSPeter Wemm# opl: Yamaha OPL-2 and OPL-3 FM - SB, SB Pro, SB 16, ProAudioSpectrum
1271c19da41eSPeter Wemm# uart: stand-alone 6850 UART for MIDI
1272c19da41eSPeter Wemm# mpu: Roland MPU-401 stand-alone card
1273c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1274c64aec80SNik Clayton# Note: It has been reprted that ISA DMA with the SoundBlaster will
1275c64aec80SNik Clayton# lock up the machine (PR docs/5358).  If this happens to you,
1276c64aec80SNik Clayton# turning off USWC write posting in your machine's BIOS may fix
1277c64aec80SNik Clayton# the problem.
1278c64aec80SNik Clayton#
1279c19da41eSPeter Wemm# Beware!  The addresses specified below are also hard-coded in
1280c19da41eSPeter Wemm# i386/isa/sound/sound_config.h.  If you change the values here, you
1281c19da41eSPeter Wemm# must also change the values in the include file.
1282c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1283c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney# pcm: PCM audio through various sound cards.
1284c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney#
128568ec4eb6SLuigi Rizzo# This has support for a large number of new audio cards, based on
128668ec4eb6SLuigi Rizzo# CS423x, OPTi931, Yamaha OPL-SAx, and also for SB16, GusPnP.
128768ec4eb6SLuigi Rizzo# For more information about this driver and supported cards,
128868ec4eb6SLuigi Rizzo# see the pcm.4 man page and /sys/i386/isa/snd/CARDS.
1289c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney#
1290c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney# The flags of the device tells the device a bit more info about the
1291c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney# device that normally is obtained through the PnP interface.
1292c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney#	bit  2..0   secondary DMA channel;
1293c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney#	bit  4      set if the board uses two dma channels;
1294c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney#	bit 15..8   board type, overrides autodetection; leave it
1295c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney#		    zero if don't know what to put in (and you don't,
1296c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney#		    since this is unsupported at the moment...).
1297c7406082SJohn-Mark Gurney#
1298c19da41eSPeter Wemm# This driver will use the new PnP code if it's available.
1299c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
13006a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# pca: PCM audio through your PC speaker
13018b8cd792SJordan K. Hubbard#
1302c19da41eSPeter Wemm# If you have a GUS-MAX card and want to use the CS4231 codec on the
1303c19da41eSPeter Wemm# card the drqs for the gus max must be 8 bit (1, 2, or 3).
1304c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1305c19da41eSPeter Wemm# If you would like to use the full duplex option on the gus, then define
1306c19da41eSPeter Wemm# flags to be the ``read dma channel''.
1307c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1308c19da41eSPeter Wemm# options BROKEN_BUS_CLOCK	#PAS-16 isn't working and OPTI chipset
1309c19da41eSPeter Wemm# options SYMPHONY_PAS		#PAS-16 isn't working and SYMPHONY chipset
1310c19da41eSPeter Wemm# options EXCLUDE_SBPRO		#PAS-16
1311c19da41eSPeter Wemm# options SBC_IRQ=5		#PAS-16. Must match irq on sb0 line.
1312c19da41eSPeter Wemm# PAS16: The order of the pas0/sb0/opl0 is important since the
1313c19da41eSPeter Wemm#	sb emulation is enabled in the pas-16 attach.
1314c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1315c19da41eSPeter Wemm# To overide the GUS defaults use:
1316c19da41eSPeter Wemm# options GUS_DMA2
1317c19da41eSPeter Wemm# options GUS_DMA
1318c19da41eSPeter Wemm# options GUS_IRQ
1319c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1320c19da41eSPeter Wemm# The i386/isa/sound/sound.doc has more information.
1321c19da41eSPeter Wemm
1322c19da41eSPeter Wemm# Controls all "VOXWARE" driver sound devices.  See Luigi's driver
1323c19da41eSPeter Wemm# below for an alternate which may work better for some cards.
1324c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1325c19da41eSPeter Wemmcontroller	snd0
1326c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice pas0     at isa? port 0x388 irq 10 drq 6
1327c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice sb0      at isa? port 0x220 irq 5 drq 1
1328c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice sbxvi0   at isa? drq 5
1329c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice sbmidi0  at isa? port 0x330
1330c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice awe0     at isa? port 0x620
1331c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice gus0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 12 drq 1
1332c19da41eSPeter Wemm#device gus0 at isa? port 0x220 irq 12 drq 1 flags 0x3
1333c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice mss0 at isa? port 0x530 irq 10 drq 1
1334c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice css0	at isa? port 0x534 irq 5 drq 1 flags 0x08
1335c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice sscape0  at isa? port 0x330 irq 9 drq 0
1336c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice trix0    at isa? port 0x330 irq 6 drq 0
1337c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice sscape_mss0  at isa? port 0x534 irq 5 drq 1
1338c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice opl0     at isa? port 0x388
1339c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice mpu0     at isa? port 0x330 irq 6 drq 0
1340c19da41eSPeter Wemmdevice uart0 at isa? port 0x330 irq 5
1341c19da41eSPeter Wemm
1342c19da41eSPeter Wemm# Luigi's snd code (use INSTEAD of snd0 and all VOXWARE drivers!).
1343c19da41eSPeter Wemm# You may also wish to enable the pnp controller with this, for pnp
1344c19da41eSPeter Wemm# sound cards.
1345c19da41eSPeter Wemm#
1346ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device pcm0 at isa? port ? irq 10 drq 1 flags 0x0
1347c19da41eSPeter Wemm
13481a7c583cSGarrett Wollman# Not controlled by `snd'
13495895e3c8SPeter Wemmdevice pca0 at isa? port IO_TIMER1
13509ad380abSGarrett Wollman
13516a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
1352567e21c2SBruce Evans# Miscellaneous hardware:
13536a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
13546a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# mcd: Mitsumi CD-ROM
13552d859864SAndreas Schulz# scd: Sony CD-ROM
135605e1d9d4SJordan K. Hubbard# matcd: Matsushita/Panasonic CD-ROM
13576a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# wt: Wangtek and Archive QIC-02/QIC-36 tape drives
13586a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# ctx: Cortex-I frame grabber
13596a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# apm: Laptop Advanced Power Management (experimental)
13606c5e9bbdSMike Pritchard# spigot: The Creative Labs Video Spigot video-acquisition board
13611d86961eSJordan K. Hubbard# meteor: Matrox Meteor video capture board
13626773d00eSSøren Schmidt# bktr: Brooktree bt848/848a/849/878/879 family video capture and TV Tuner board
136365e8111fSBruce Evans# cy: Cyclades serial driver
1364a50cd483SJordan K. Hubbard# dgb: Digiboard PC/Xi and PC/Xe series driver (ALPHA QUALITY!)
1365c35bda94SBrian Somers# dgm: Digiboard PC/Xem driver
13661a7c583cSGarrett Wollman# gp:  National Instruments AT-GPIB and AT-GPIB/TNT board
1367a800f455SJulian Elischer# asc: GI1904-based hand scanners, e.g. the Trust Amiscan Grey
13681a7c583cSGarrett Wollman# gsc: Genius GS-4500 hand scanner.
13691a7c583cSGarrett Wollman# joy: joystick
1370657e73c4SPeter Dufault# labpc: National Instrument's Lab-PC and Lab-PC+
1371d0930614SAndrey A. Chernov# rc: RISCom/8 multiport card
13723b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard# rp: Comtrol Rocketport(ISA) - single card
1373567e21c2SBruce Evans# tw: TW-523 power line interface for use with X-10 home control products
13740d04cf6aSPeter Wemm# si: Specialix SI/XIO 4-32 port terminal multiplexor
1375c9da1b81SPeter Wemm# stl: Stallion EasyIO and EasyConnection 8/32 (cd1400 based)
1376c9da1b81SPeter Wemm# stli: Stallion EasyConnection 8/64, ONboard, Brumby (intelligent)
1377657e73c4SPeter Dufault
1378e597b497SNate Williams# Notes on APM
13793d4d8fe9SPoul-Henning Kamp#  The flags takes the following meaning for apm0:
13803d4d8fe9SPoul-Henning Kamp#    0x0020  Statclock is broken.
13813d4d8fe9SPoul-Henning Kamp#    0x0011  Limit APM protocol to 1.1 or 1.0
13823d4d8fe9SPoul-Henning Kamp#    0x0010  Limit APM protocol to 1.0
138338ebe562SAdam David#  If apm is omitted, some systems require sysctl -w kern.timcounter.method=1
138438ebe562SAdam David#  for correct timekeeping.
138538ebe562SAdam David
13862cd01159SJordan K. Hubbard# Notes on the spigot:
13872cd01159SJordan K. Hubbard#  The video spigot is at 0xad6.  This port address can not be changed.
13882cd01159SJordan K. Hubbard#  The irq values may only be 10, 11, or 15
13892cd01159SJordan K. Hubbard#  I/O memory is an 8kb region.  Possible values are:
13902cd01159SJordan K. Hubbard#    0a0000, 0a2000, ..., 0fffff, f00000, f02000, ..., ffffff
1391d01b6680SJordan K. Hubbard#    The start address must be on an even boundary.
1392d01b6680SJordan K. Hubbard#  Add the following option if you want to allow non-root users to be able
1393d01b6680SJordan K. Hubbard#  to access the spigot.  This option is not secure because it allows users
1394d01b6680SJordan K. Hubbard#  direct access to the I/O page.
1395d01b6680SJordan K. Hubbard#  	options SPIGOT_UNSECURE
13968819d6ecSPoul-Henning Kamp
13973b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard# Notes on the Comtrol Rocketport driver:
13983b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#
13993b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard# The exact values used for rp0 depend on how many boards you have
14003b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard# in the system.  The manufacturer's sample configs are listed as:
14013b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#
14023b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#   Comtrol Rocketport ISA single card
1403ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#               device  rp0     at isa? port 0x280
14043b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#
14053b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#   If instead you have two ISA cards, one installed at 0x100 and the
14063b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#   second installed at 0x180, then you should add the following to
14073b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#   your kernel configuration file:
14083b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#
1409ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#               device  rp0     at isa? port 0x100
1410ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#               device  rp1     at isa? port 0x180
14113b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#
14123b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#   For 4 ISA cards, it might be something like this:
14133b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#
1414ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#               device  rp0     at isa? port 0x180
1415ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#               device  rp1     at isa? port 0x100
1416ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#               device  rp2     at isa? port 0x340
1417ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#               device  rp3     at isa? port 0x240
14183b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#
14193b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#   And for PCI cards, you only need say:
14203b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#
14213b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#               device rp0
14223b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#               device rp1
14233b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#               ...
14243b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#   Note: Make sure that any Rocketport PCI devices are specified BEFORE the
14253b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard#   ISA Rocketport devices.
14263b577e1fSJordan K. Hubbard
1427a50cd483SJordan K. Hubbard# Notes on the Digiboard driver:
1428a50cd483SJordan K. Hubbard#
1429a50cd483SJordan K. Hubbard# The following flag values have special meanings:
1430c35bda94SBrian Somers#	0x01 - alternate layout of pins (dgb & dgm)
1431c35bda94SBrian Somers#	0x02 - use the windowed PC/Xe in 64K mode (dgb only)
14320d04cf6aSPeter Wemm
14330d04cf6aSPeter Wemm# Notes on the Specialix SI/XIO driver:
1434c4823710SPeter Wemm#  **This is NOT a Specialix supported Driver!**
1435c4823710SPeter Wemm#  The host card is memory, not IO mapped.
1436c4823710SPeter Wemm#  The Rev 1 host cards use a 64K chunk, on a 32K boundary.
1437c4823710SPeter Wemm#  The Rev 2 host cards use a 32K chunk, on a 32K boundary.
1438c4823710SPeter Wemm#  The cards can use an IRQ of 11, 12 or 15.
1439c4823710SPeter Wemm
1440c9da1b81SPeter Wemm# Notes on the Stallion stl and stli drivers:
1441c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#  See src/i386/isa/README.stl for complete instructions.
1442c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#  This is version 0.0.5alpha, unsupported by Stallion.
1443c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#  The stl driver has a secondary IO port hard coded at 0x280.  You need
1444c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#     to change src/i386/isa/stallion.c if you reconfigure this on the boards.
1445c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#  The "flags" and "iosiz" settings on the stli driver depend on the board:
1446c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#	EasyConnection 8/64 ISA:     flags 23         iosiz 0x1000
1447c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#	EasyConnection 8/64 EISA:    flags 24         iosiz 0x10000
1448c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#	EasyConnection 8/64 MCA:     flags 25         iosiz 0x1000
1449c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#	ONboard ISA:                 flags 4          iosiz 0x10000
1450c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#	ONboard EISA:                flags 7          iosiz 0x10000
1451c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#	ONboard MCA:                 flags 3          iosiz 0x10000
1452c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#	Brumby:                      flags 2          iosiz 0x4000
1453c9da1b81SPeter Wemm#	Stallion:                    flags 1          iosiz 0x10000
1454c9da1b81SPeter Wemm
1455ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		mcd0	at isa? port 0x300 irq 10
145605e1d9d4SJordan K. Hubbard# for the Sony CDU31/33A CDROM
1457ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		scd0	at isa? port 0x230
14586c5e9bbdSMike Pritchard# for the SoundBlaster 16 multicd - up to 4 devices
1459ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmcontroller      matcd0  at isa? port 0x230
1460ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		wt0	at isa? port 0x300 irq 5 drq 1
14616a8d6623SGarrett Wollmandevice		ctx0	at isa? port 0x230 iomem 0xd0000
146278e33712SBruce Evansdevice		spigot0 at isa? port 0xad6 irq 15 iomem 0xee000
14636182fdbdSPeter Wemmdevice		apm0	at nexus?
1464ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		gp0	at isa? port 0x2c0
14655895e3c8SPeter Wemmdevice		gsc0	at isa? port IO_GSC1 drq 3
14664a04f6f6SBruce Evansdevice		joy0	at isa? port IO_GAME
1467ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		cy0	at isa? irq 10 iomem 0xd4000 iosiz 0x2000
1468b8cf6ea7SBruce Evansoptions		CY_PCI_FASTINTR		# Use with cy_pci unless irq is shared
1469ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		dgb0	at isa? port 0x220 iomem 0xfc000 iosiz ?
14705895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NDGBPORTS=16		# Defaults to 16*NDGB
1471ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		dgm0	at isa? port 0x104 iomem 0xd0000 iosiz ?
1472ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		labpc0	at isa? port 0x260 irq 5
1473ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice          rc0     at isa? port 0x220 irq 12
1474ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice          rp0     at isa? port 0x280
1475567e21c2SBruce Evans# the port and irq for tw0 are fictitious
1476ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice          tw0     at isa? port 0x380 irq 11
1477ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		si0	at isa? iomem 0xd0000 irq 12
14785895e3c8SPeter Wemmdevice		asc0	at isa? port IO_ASC1 drq 3 irq 10
1479ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		stl0	at isa? port 0x2a0 irq 10
1480ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		stli0	at isa? port 0x2a0 iomem 0xcc000 flags 23 iosiz 0x1000
14815db3b831SPoul-Henning Kamp# You are unlikely to have the hardware for loran0 <phk@FreeBSD.org>
1482ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		loran0	at isa? port ? irq 5
14835db3b831SPoul-Henning Kamp# HOT1 Xilinx 6200 card (www.vcc.com)
14845db3b831SPoul-Henning Kampdevice		xrpu0
1485a800f455SJulian Elischer
1486eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs#
1487eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs# EISA devices:
1488eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs#
1489eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs# The EISA bus device is eisa0.  It provides auto-detection and
1490eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs# configuration support for all devices on the EISA bus.
1491eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs#
1492e56e7036SJustin T. Gibbs# The `ahb' device provides support for the Adaptec 174X adapter.
1493e56e7036SJustin T. Gibbs#
1494eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs# The `ahc' device provides support for the Adaptec 274X and 284X
1495eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs# adapters.  The 284X, although a VLB card responds to EISA probes.
1496eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs#
1497c37ddbb8SJoerg Wunsch# fea: DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter
1498c37ddbb8SJoerg Wunsch#
1499eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbscontroller	eisa0
1500e56e7036SJustin T. Gibbscontroller	ahb0
1501eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbscontroller	ahc0
1502c37ddbb8SJoerg Wunschdevice		fea0
15036a8d6623SGarrett Wollman
15046fb5e0faSJustin T. Gibbs# The aic7xxx driver will attempt to use memory mapped I/O for all PCI
150511b5ea72SJustin T. Gibbs# controllers that have it configured only if this option is set. Unfortunately,
150611b5ea72SJustin T. Gibbs# this doesn't work on some motherboards, which prevents it from being the
150711b5ea72SJustin T. Gibbs# default.
150811b5ea72SJustin T. Gibbsoptions AHC_ALLOW_MEMIO
15096e702c99SPaul Traina
15101b0d3143SJoerg Wunsch# By default, only 10 EISA slots are probed, since the slot numbers
15111b0d3143SJoerg Wunsch# above clash with the configuration address space of the PCI subsystem,
15121b0d3143SJoerg Wunsch# and the EISA probe is not very smart about this.  This is sufficient
15131b0d3143SJoerg Wunsch# for most machines, but in particular the HP NetServer LC series comes
15141b0d3143SJoerg Wunsch# with an onboard AIC7770 dual-channel SCSI controller on EISA slot #11,
15151b0d3143SJoerg Wunsch# thus you need to bump this figure to 12 for them.
15165895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions	EISA_SLOTS=12
15171b0d3143SJoerg Wunsch
15186a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
151916e164e3SBruce Evans# PCI devices & PCI options:
15206a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
15216a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# The main PCI bus device is `pci'.  It provides auto-detection and
15226a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# configuration support for all devices on the PCI bus, using either
15236a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# configuration mode defined in the PCI specification.
15246a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
1525eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs# The `ahc' device provides support for the Adaptec 29/3940(U)(W)
1526eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs# and motherboard based AIC7870/AIC7880 adapters.
1527eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbs#
15286a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# The `ncr' device provides support for the NCR 53C810 and 53C825
15296a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# self-contained SCSI host adapters.
15306a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
15318bafc245SMatt Jacob# The `isp' device provides support for the Qlogic ISP 1020, 1040
15328bafc245SMatt Jacob# nd 1040B PCI SCSI host adapters, as well as the Qlogic ISP 2100
15338bafc245SMatt Jacob# FC/AL Host Adapter.
15348bafc245SMatt Jacob#
153531188d61SBill Paul# The `ax' device provides support for PCI fast ethernet adapters
153631188d61SBill Paul# based on the ASIX Electronics AX88140A chip, including the Alfa
153731188d61SBill Paul# Inc. GFC2204.
153831188d61SBill Paul#
15396a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# The `de' device provides support for the Digital Equipment DC21040
15406a8d6623SGarrett Wollman# self-contained Ethernet adapter.
15416a8d6623SGarrett Wollman#
154256086e0dSSatoshi Asami# The `fxp' device provides support for the Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B
154356086e0dSSatoshi Asami# PCI Fast Ethernet adapters.
154456086e0dSSatoshi Asami#
1545726ff6a1SBill Paul# The `mx' device provides support for various fast ethernet adapters
1546726ff6a1SBill Paul# based on the Macronix 98713, 987615 ans 98725 series chips.
1547726ff6a1SBill Paul#
1548726ff6a1SBill Paul# The `pn' device provides support for various fast ethernet adapters
1549726ff6a1SBill Paul# based on the Lite-On 82c168 and 82c169 PNIC chips, including the
1550726ff6a1SBill Paul# LinkSys LNE100TX, the NetGear FA310TX rev. D1 and the Matrox
1551726ff6a1SBill Paul# FastNIC 10/100.
1552726ff6a1SBill Paul#
1553589e38a6SBill Paul# The 'rl' device provides support for PCI fast ethernet adapters based
1554589e38a6SBill Paul# on the RealTek 8129/8139 chipset. Note that the RealTek driver defaults
1555589e38a6SBill Paul# to useing programmed I/O to do register accesses because memory mapped
1556726ff6a1SBill Paul# mode seems to cause severe lockups on SMP hardware. This driver also
1557726ff6a1SBill Paul# supports the Accton EN1207D `Cheetah' adapter, which uses a chip called
1558726ff6a1SBill Paul# the MPX 5030/5038, which is either a RealTek in disguise or a RealTek
1559726ff6a1SBill Paul# workalike.
1560589e38a6SBill Paul#
1561d02c2331SBill Paul# The 'ti' device provides support for PCI gigabit ethernet NICs based
1562d02c2331SBill Paul# on the Alteon Networks Tigon 1 and Tigon 2 chipsets. This includes the
1563d02c2331SBill Paul# Alteon AceNIC, the 3Com 3c985, the Netgear GA620 and various others.
1564d02c2331SBill Paul# Note that you will probably want to bump up NBMCLUSTERS a lot to use
1565d02c2331SBill Paul# this driver.
1566d02c2331SBill Paul#
1567e21faf3eSBill Paul# The 'tl' device provides support for the Texas Instruments TNETE100
1568e21faf3eSBill Paul# series 'ThunderLAN' cards and integrated ethernet controllers. This
1569e21faf3eSBill Paul# includes several Compaq Netelligent 10/100 cards and the built-in
1570e21faf3eSBill Paul# ethernet controllers in several Compaq Prosignia, Proliant and
1571e30938ceSBill Paul# Deskpro systems. It also supports several Olicom 10Mbps and 10/100
1572e30938ceSBill Paul# boards.
1573e21faf3eSBill Paul#
1574ec4f65d2SJordan K. Hubbard# The `tx' device provides support for the SMC 9432TX cards.
1575ec4f65d2SJordan K. Hubbard#
1576726ff6a1SBill Paul# The `vr' device provides support for various fast ethernet adapters
1577726ff6a1SBill Paul# based on the VIA Technologies VT3043 `Rhine I' and VT86C100A `Rhine II'
1578726ff6a1SBill Paul# chips, including the D-Link DFE530TX.
1579726ff6a1SBill Paul#
15805ccfdea2SAndreas Schulz# The `vx' device provides support for the 3Com 3C590 and 3C595
1581f4567b9cSJulian Elischer# early support
1582f4567b9cSJulian Elischer#
1583726ff6a1SBill Paul# The `wb' device provides support for various fast ethernet adapters
1584726ff6a1SBill Paul# based on the Winbond W89C840F chip. Note: this is not the same as
1585726ff6a1SBill Paul# the Winbond W89C940F, which is an NE2000 clone.
1586726ff6a1SBill Paul#
1587726ff6a1SBill Paul# The `xl' device provides support for the 3Com 3c900, 3c905 and
1588e30938ceSBill Paul# 3c905B (Fast) Etherlink XL cards and integrated controllers. This
1589e30938ceSBill Paul# includes the integrated 3c905B-TX chips in certain Dell Optiplex and
1590e30938ceSBill Paul# Dell Precision desktop machines and the integrated 3c905-TX chips
1591e30938ceSBill Paul# in Dell Latitude laptop docking stations.
1592e30938ceSBill Paul#
1593d41f24e7SDavid Greenman# The `fpa' device provides support for the Digital DEFPA PCI FDDI
1594d41f24e7SDavid Greenman# adapter. pseudo-device fddi is also needed.
1595d41f24e7SDavid Greenman#
1596bba9a7a0SGarrett Wollman# The `meteor' device is a PCI video capture board. It can also have the
15971d86961eSJordan K. Hubbard# following options:
1598b1529bdaSPeter Wemm#   options METEOR_ALLOC_PAGES=xxx	preallocate kernel pages for data entry
15991d86961eSJordan K. Hubbard#	figure (ROWS*COLUMN*BYTES_PER_PIXEL*FRAME+PAGE_SIZE-1)/PAGE_SIZE
16001d86961eSJordan K. Hubbard#   options METEOR_DEALLOC_PAGES	remove all allocated pages on close(2)
1601b1529bdaSPeter Wemm#   options METEOR_DEALLOC_ABOVE=xxx	remove all allocated pages above the
16021d86961eSJordan K. Hubbard#	specified amount. If this value is below the allocated amount no action
16031d86961eSJordan K. Hubbard#	taken
16044f5f3f07SBrian Somers#   options METEOR_SYSTEM_DEFAULT={METEOR_PAL|METEOR_NTSC|METEOR_SECAM}, used
1605734d08a2SJordan K. Hubbard#	for initialization of fps routine when a signal is not present.
16061d86961eSJordan K. Hubbard#
1607a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# The 'bktr' device is a PCI video capture device using the Brooktree
1608a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# bt848/bt848a/bt849/bt878/bt879 chipset. When used with a TV Tuner it forms a
1609a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# TV card, eg Miro PC/TV,Hauppauge WinCast/TV WinTV, VideoLogic Captivator,
1610a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# Intel Smart Video III, AverMedia, IMS Turbo.
1611a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# The following options can be used to override the auto detection
1612a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt#   options OVERRIDE_CARD=xxx
1613a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt#   options OVERRIDE_TUNER=xxx
1614a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt#   options OVERRIDE_MSP=1
1615a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt#   options OVERRIDE_DBX=1
16169ff07e32SAmancio Hasty# The current values are found in /usr/src/sys/pci/brooktree848.c
16179ff07e32SAmancio Hasty#
16184f5f3f07SBrian Somers#   options BROOKTREE_SYSTEM_DEFAULT=BROOKTREE_PAL
1619a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# This is required for Dual Crystal (28&35Mhz) boards where PAL is used
1620a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# to prevent hangs during initialisation.  eg VideoLogic Captivator PCI.
1621a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt#
1622a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# PAL or SECAM users who have a 28Mhz crystal (and no 35Mhz crystal)
1623a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# must enable PLL mode with this option. eg some new Hauppauge cards.
16244f5f3f07SBrian Somers#   options BKTR_USE_PLL
1625a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt#
1626a9c5b8d0SSøren Schmidt# Using sysctl(8) run-time overrides on a per-card basis can be made
16275719a93cSJohn-Mark Gurney#
16285895e3c8SPeter Wemm# The oltr driver supports the following Olicom PCI token-ring adapters
1629722012ccSJulian Elischer# OC-3136, OC-3137, OC-3139, OC-3140, OC-3141, OC-3540, OC-3250
1630722012ccSJulian Elischer#
1631f71c851cSPeter Wemmcontroller	pci0
1632eeb706c0SJustin T. Gibbscontroller	ahc1
163311bfa65aSBruce Evanscontroller	ncr0
16348bafc245SMatt Jacobcontroller	isp0
1635017b0edcSMatt Jacob#
1636017b0edcSMatt Jacob# Options for ISP
1637017b0edcSMatt Jacob#
1638017b0edcSMatt Jacob#	SCSI_ISP_NO_FWLOAD_MASK	- mask of isp unit numbers (obviously
1639017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  a max of 32) that you wish to disable
1640017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  to disable the loading of firmware on.
1641017b0edcSMatt Jacob#	SCSI_ISP_NO_NVRAM_MASK	- mask of isp unit numbers (obviously
1642017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  a max of 32) that you wish to disable
1643017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  them picking up information from NVRAM
1644017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  (for broken cards you can't fix the NVRAM
1645017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  on- very rare, or for systems you can't
1646017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  change NVRAM on (e.g. alpha) and you don't
1647017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  like what's in there)
1648017b0edcSMatt Jacob#	SCSI_ISP_PREFER_MEM_MAP	- control preference for using memory mappings
1649017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  instead of I/O space mappings. It defaults
1650017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  to 1 for i386, 0 for alpha. Set to 1 to
1651017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  unconditionally prefer mapping memory,
1652017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  else it will use I/O space mappings. Of
1653017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  course, this can fail if the PCI implement-
1654017b0edcSMatt Jacob#				  ation doesn't support what you want.
16551afb37efSMatt Jacob#
16561afb37efSMatt Jacob#	SCSI_ISP_FABRIC		  enable loading of Fabric f/w flavor (2100).
16571afb37efSMatt Jacob#	SCSI_ISP_SCCLUN		  enable loading of expanded lun f/w (2100).
16581afb37efSMatt Jacob#
16591afb37efSMatt Jacob#	ISP_DISABLE_1020_SUPPORT	Disable support for 1020/1040 cards
16601afb37efSMatt Jacob#	ISP_DISABLE_1080_SUPPORT	Disable support for 1080/1240 cards
16611afb37efSMatt Jacob#	ISP_DISABLE_2100_SUPPORT	Disable support for 2100 cards
16621afb37efSMatt Jacob#	(these really just to save code space)
16631afb37efSMatt Jacob#	(use of all three will cause the driver to not compile)
16645895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions	SCSI_ISP_NO_FWLOAD_MASK=0x12	# disable FW load for isp1 and isp4
16655895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions SCSI_ISP_NO_NVRAM_MASK=0x1	# disable NVRAM for isp0
16665895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions SCSI_ISP_PREFER_MEM_MAP=0	# prefer I/O mapping
16675895e3c8SPeter Wemm#options	ISP_DISABLE_1020_SUPPORT
16685895e3c8SPeter Wemm#options	ISP_DISABLE_1080_SUPPORT
16695895e3c8SPeter Wemm#options	ISP_DISABLE_2100_SUPPORT
1670017b0edcSMatt Jacob
167131188d61SBill Pauldevice		ax0
16726a8d6623SGarrett Wollmandevice		de0
167317acc2b2SDavid Greenmandevice		fxp0
1674726ff6a1SBill Pauldevice		mx0
1675726ff6a1SBill Pauldevice		pn0
1676589e38a6SBill Pauldevice		rl0
1677d02c2331SBill Pauldevice		ti0
1678e21faf3eSBill Pauldevice		tl0
1679ec4f65d2SJordan K. Hubbarddevice		tx0
1680726ff6a1SBill Pauldevice		vr0
16815ccfdea2SAndreas Schulzdevice		vx0
1682726ff6a1SBill Pauldevice		wb0
168316e164e3SBruce Evansdevice		xl0
1684d41f24e7SDavid Greenmandevice		fpa0
16851d86961eSJordan K. Hubbarddevice		meteor0
1686db7cb131SPeter Wemm#The oltr driver in the ISA section will also find PCI cards.
1687db7cb131SPeter Wemm#device		oltr0
168828ebb692SNicolas Souchu
16890f3563b6SRoger Hardiman
169028ebb692SNicolas Souchu# Brooktree driver has been ported to the new I2C framework. Thus,
16910f3563b6SRoger Hardiman# you'll need to have the following 3 lines in the kernel config.
16920f3563b6SRoger Hardiman#     controller smbus0
16930f3563b6SRoger Hardiman#     controller iicbus0
16940f3563b6SRoger Hardiman#     controller iicbb0
16950f3563b6SRoger Hardiman# The iic and smb devices are only needed if you want to control other
16960f3563b6SRoger Hardiman# I2C slaves connected to the external connector of some cards.
169728ebb692SNicolas Souchu#
16985719a93cSJohn-Mark Gurneydevice		bktr0
1699446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch
1700dc9deb29SPoul-Henning Kamp#
170116e164e3SBruce Evans# PCI options
1702e261d589SJohn-Mark Gurney#
1703e261d589SJohn-Mark Gurney#options	PCI_QUIET	#quiets PCI code on chipset settings
1704e261d589SJohn-Mark Gurney
1705e261d589SJohn-Mark Gurney#
1706dc9deb29SPoul-Henning Kamp# PCCARD/PCMCIA
1707dc9deb29SPoul-Henning Kamp#
1708e7e437dbSNate Williams# card: slot controller
170913cbd355SNate Williams# pcic: slots
1710e7e437dbSNate Williamscontroller	card0
171194316d1dSWolfgang Helbigdevice		pcic0 at card?
171294316d1dSWolfgang Helbigdevice		pcic1 at card?
1713dc9deb29SPoul-Henning Kamp
17148aa25588SBrian Somers# You may need to reset all pccards after resuming
17158aa25588SBrian Somersoptions		PCIC_RESUME_RESET	# reset after resume
17168aa25588SBrian Somers
1717446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch#
1718446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch# Laptop/Notebook options:
1719446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch#
1720446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch# See also:
17216c5e9bbdSMike Pritchard#  apm under `Miscellaneous hardware'
1722446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch# above.
1723446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch
1724446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch# For older notebooks that signal a powerfail condition (external
1725446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch# power supply dropped, or battery state low) by issuing an NMI:
1726446cee6eSJoerg Wunsch
1727446cee6eSJoerg Wunschoptions		POWERFAIL_NMI	# make it beep instead of panicing
172865e8111fSBruce Evans
1729ab4c624bSMike Smith#
17308afa373cSNicolas Souchu# SMB bus
17318afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17328afa373cSNicolas Souchu# System Management Bus support provided by the 'smbus' device.
17338afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17348afa373cSNicolas Souchu# Supported devices:
17358afa373cSNicolas Souchu# smb	standard io
17368afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17378afa373cSNicolas Souchu# Supported interfaces:
173828ebb692SNicolas Souchu# iicsmb I2C to SMB bridge with any iicbus interface
173928ebb692SNicolas Souchu# bktr	brooktree848 I2C hardware interface
174004fb1490SNicolas Souchu# intpm	Intel PIIX4 Power Management Unit
1741c5ea635cSNicolas Souchu# alpm	Acer Aladdin-IV/V/Pro2 Power Management Unit
17428afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17438afa373cSNicolas Souchucontroller smbus0
174404fb1490SNicolas Souchucontroller intpm0
1745c5ea635cSNicolas Souchucontroller alpm0
17468afa373cSNicolas Souchu
17478afa373cSNicolas Souchudevice smb0	at smbus?
17488afa373cSNicolas Souchu
17498afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17508afa373cSNicolas Souchu# I2C Bus
17518afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17528afa373cSNicolas Souchu# Philips i2c bus support is provided by the `iicbus' device.
17538afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17548afa373cSNicolas Souchu# Supported devices:
17558afa373cSNicolas Souchu# ic	i2c network interface
17568afa373cSNicolas Souchu# iic	i2c standard io
1757f7d09fbaSNicolas Souchu# iicsmb i2c to smb bridge. Allow i2c i/o with smb commands.
17588afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17598afa373cSNicolas Souchu# Supported interfaces:
17608afa373cSNicolas Souchu# pcf	Philips PCF8584 ISA-bus controller
176128ebb692SNicolas Souchu# bktr	brooktree848 I2C software interface
176228ebb692SNicolas Souchu#
176328ebb692SNicolas Souchu# Other:
176428ebb692SNicolas Souchu# iicbb	generic I2C bit-banging code (needed by lpbb, bktr)
17658afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
17668afa373cSNicolas Souchucontroller iicbus0
176728ebb692SNicolas Souchucontroller iicbb0
17688afa373cSNicolas Souchu
17698afa373cSNicolas Souchudevice ic0	at iicbus?
17708afa373cSNicolas Souchudevice iic0	at iicbus?
17718afa373cSNicolas Souchudevice iicsmb0	at iicbus?
17728afa373cSNicolas Souchu
1773ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmcontroller pcf0	at isa? port 0x320 irq 5
17748afa373cSNicolas Souchu
177519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ISDN4BSD section
177680037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis#
177780037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis# see /usr/share/examples/isdn/ROADMAP for an introduction to isdn4bsd.
177880037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis#
177919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# i4b passive ISDN cards support (isic - I4b Siemens Isdn Chipset driver)
178019c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# note that the ``options'' and ``device'' lines must BOTH be defined !
17818afa373cSNicolas Souchu#
178219c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Non-PnP Cards:
178319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# --------------
178419c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
178519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Teles S0/8 or Niccy 1008
17865895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions TEL_S0_8
1787ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? iomem 0xd0000 irq 5 flags 1
178819c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
178919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Teles S0/16 or Creatix ISDN-S0 or Niccy 1016
17905895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions TEL_S0_16
1791ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port 0xd80 iomem 0xd0000 irq 5 flags 2
179219c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
179319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Teles S0/16.3
17945895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions TEL_S0_16_3
1795ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port 0xd80 irq 5 flags 3
179619c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
179719c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# AVM A1 or AVM Fritz!Card
17985895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions AVM_A1
1799ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port 0x340 irq 5 flags 4
180019c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
180119c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# USRobotics Sportster ISDN TA intern
18025895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions USR_STI
1803ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device isic0 at isa? port 0x268 irq 5 flags 7
180419c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
180519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ITK ix1 Micro
18065895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions ITKIX1
1807ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device isic0 at isa? port 0x398 irq 10 flags 18
180819c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
180980037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis# ELSA PCC-16
181080037d6eSHellmuth Michaelisoptions "ELSA_PCC16"
181180037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis#device isic0 at isa? port 0x360 irq 10 flags 19
181280037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis#
181319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# PnP-Cards:
181419c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ----------
181519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
181619c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Teles S0/16.3 PnP
18175895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions TEL_S0_16_3_P
1818ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port ? irq ?
181919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
182019c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Creatix ISDN-S0 P&P
18215895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions CRTX_S0_P
1822ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port ? irq ?
182319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
182419c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Dr. Neuhaus Niccy Go@
18255895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions DRN_NGO
1826ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port ? irq ?
182719c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
182819c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Sedlbauer Win Speed
18295895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions SEDLBAUER
1830ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port ? irq ?
183119c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
183219c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Dynalink IS64PH
18335895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions DYNALINK
1834ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port ? irq ?
183519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
183619c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ELSA QuickStep 1000pro ISA
18375895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions ELSA_QS1ISA
1838ea7b76b1SPeter Wemm#device	isic0 at isa? port ? irq ?
183919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
184019c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# PCI-Cards:
184119c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ----------
184219c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
184319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ELSA QuickStep 1000pro PCI
18445895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions ELSA_QS1PCI
184519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#device  isic0
184619c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
184780037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis# AVM Fritz!Card PCI
184880037d6eSHellmuth Michaelisoptions "AVM_A1_PCI"
184980037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis#device  isic0
185080037d6eSHellmuth Michaelis#
185119c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# PCMCIA-Cards:
185219c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# -------------
185319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
185419c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# AVM PCMCIA Fritz!Card
18555895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions AVM_A1_PCMCIA
1856ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice	isic0 at isa? port 0x340 irq 5 flags 10
185719c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
185819c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Active Cards:
185919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# -------------
186019c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
186119c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Stollmann Tina-dd control device
1862ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice tina0 at isa? port 0x260 irq 10
186319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
186419c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ISDN Protocol Stack
186519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# -------------------
186619c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
186719c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Q.921 / layer 2 - i4b passive cards D channel handling
186819c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device	"i4bq921"
186919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
187019c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# Q.931 / layer 3 - i4b passive cards D channel handling
187119c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device	"i4bq931"
187219c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
187319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# layer 4 - i4b common passive and active card handling
187419c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device	"i4b"
187519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
187619c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ISDN devices
187719c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# ------------
187819c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
187919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# userland driver to do ISDN tracing (for passive cards only)
188019c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device   "i4btrc"	4
188119c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
188219c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# userland driver to control the whole thing
188319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device   "i4bctl"
188419c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
188519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# userland driver for access to raw B channel
188619c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device   "i4brbch"       4
188719c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
188819c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# userland driver for telephony
188919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device   "i4btel"        2
189019c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
189119c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# network driver for IP over raw HDLC ISDN
189219c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device   "i4bipr"	4
189319c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# enable VJ header compression detection for ipr i/f
189419c74962SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		IPR_VJ
189519c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp#
189619c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp# network driver for sync PPP over ISDN
189719c74962SPoul-Henning Kamppseudo-device	"i4bisppp"	4
189819c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp
189919c74962SPoul-Henning Kamp
1900ab4c624bSMike Smith# Parallel-Port Bus
1901ab4c624bSMike Smith#
1902ab4c624bSMike Smith# Parallel port bus support is provided by the `ppbus' device.
1903ab4c624bSMike Smith# Multiple devices may be attached to the parallel port, devices
1904ab4c624bSMike Smith# are automatically probed and attached when found.
1905ab4c624bSMike Smith#
1906ab4c624bSMike Smith# Supported devices:
1907ab4c624bSMike Smith# vpo	Iomega Zip Drive
1908f7d09fbaSNicolas Souchu#	Requires SCSI disk support ('scbus' and 'da'), best
1909f88c1346SMike Smith#	performance is achieved with ports in EPP 1.9 mode.
1910fdf94d1aSNicolas Souchu# lpt	Parallel Printer
191146f3ff79SMike Smith# plip	Parallel network interface
1912fdf94d1aSNicolas Souchu# ppi	General-purpose I/O ("Geek Port") + IEEE1284 I/O
1913f7d09fbaSNicolas Souchu# pps	Pulse per second Timing Interface
191428ebb692SNicolas Souchu# lpbb	Philips official parallel port I2C bit-banging interface
1915ab4c624bSMike Smith#
1916ab4c624bSMike Smith# Supported interfaces:
1917ab4c624bSMike Smith# ppc	ISA-bus parallel port interfaces.
1918ab4c624bSMike Smith#
1919ef8f7626SNicolas Souchu
19205895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		DEBUG_1284	# IEEE1284 signaling protocol debug
19215895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		PERIPH_1284	# Makes your computer act as a IEEE1284
1922ef8f7626SNicolas Souchu				# compliant peripheral
19235895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		DONTPROBE_1284	# Avoid boot detection of PnP parallel devices
19245895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		VP0_DEBUG	# ZIP/ZIP+ debug
19255895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		LPT_DEBUG	# Printer driver debug
19265895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		PPC_DEBUG	# Parallel chipset level debug
19275895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		PLIP_DEBUG	# Parallel network IP interface debug
1928ef8f7626SNicolas Souchu
1929ab4c624bSMike Smithcontroller	ppbus0
193058bcaed0SNicolas Souchucontroller	vpo0	at ppbus?
1931fdf94d1aSNicolas Souchudevice		lpt0	at ppbus?
193246f3ff79SMike Smithdevice		plip0	at ppbus?
1933ab4c624bSMike Smithdevice		ppi0	at ppbus?
1934507e2e44SPoul-Henning Kampdevice		pps0	at ppbus?
193528ebb692SNicolas Souchudevice		lpbb0	at ppbus?
1936ab4c624bSMike Smith
1937ea7b76b1SPeter Wemmdevice		ppc0	at isa? port? irq 7
1938ab4c624bSMike Smith
1939432aad0eSTor Egge# Kernel BOOTP support
1940432aad0eSTor Egge
1941432aad0eSTor Eggeoptions		BOOTP		# Use BOOTP to obtain IP address/hostname
1942432aad0eSTor Eggeoptions		BOOTP_NFSROOT	# NFS mount root filesystem using BOOTP info
19435895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		BOOTP_NFSV3	# Use NFS v3 to NFS mount root
1944432aad0eSTor Eggeoptions		BOOTP_COMPAT	# Workaround for broken bootp daemons.
19455895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		BOOTP_WIRED_TO=fxp0 # Use interface fxp0 for BOOTP
1946432aad0eSTor Egge
1947d94f38acSEivind Eklund#
1948d94f38acSEivind Eklund# Add tie-ins for a hardware watchdog.  This only enable the hooks;
1949d94f38acSEivind Eklund# the user must still supply the actual driver.
1950d94f38acSEivind Eklund#
1951d94f38acSEivind Eklundoptions		HW_WDOG
1952d94f38acSEivind Eklund
1953005092bbSEivind Eklund#
1954005092bbSEivind Eklund# Set the number of PV entries per process.  Increasing this can
1955005092bbSEivind Eklund# stop panics related to heavy use of shared memory. However, that can
1956005092bbSEivind Eklund# (combined with large amounts of physical memory) cause panics at
1957005092bbSEivind Eklund# boot time due the kernel running out of VM space.
1958005092bbSEivind Eklund#
1959005092bbSEivind Eklund# If you're tweaking this, you might also want to increase the sysctls
1960005092bbSEivind Eklund# "vm.v_free_min", "vm.v_free_reserved", and "vm.v_free_target".
1961005092bbSEivind Eklund#
196204fa1e6cSEivind Eklund# The value below is the one more than the default.
1963005092bbSEivind Eklund#
19645895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions         PMAP_SHPGPERPROC=201
1965005092bbSEivind Eklund
1966c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki#
1967c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki# Disable swapping. This option removes all code which actually performs
1968c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki# swapping, so it's not possible to turn it back on at run-time.
1969c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki#
1970c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki# This is sometimes usable for systems which don't have any swap space
1971c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki# (see also sysctls "vm.defer_swapspace_pageouts" and
1972c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki# "vm.disable_swapspace_pageouts")
1973c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki#
1974c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki#options	NO_SWAPPING
1975c796cfa1SAndrzej Bialecki
19769dab0776SDavid Greenman# Set the number of sf_bufs to allocate. sf_bufs are virtual buffers
19779dab0776SDavid Greenman# for sendfile(2) that are used to map file VM pages, and normally
19789dab0776SDavid Greenman# default to a quantity that is roughly 16*MAXUSERS+512. You would
19799dab0776SDavid Greenman# typically want about 4 of these for each simultaneous file send.
19809dab0776SDavid Greenman#
19815895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		NSFBUFS=1024
19829dab0776SDavid Greenman
198315a1057cSEivind Eklund#
1984053a2b61SEivind Eklund# Enable extra debugging code for locks.  This stores the filename and
1985053a2b61SEivind Eklund# line of whatever aquired the lock in the lock itself, and change a
1986053a2b61SEivind Eklund# number of function calls to pass around the relevant data.  This is
1987053a2b61SEivind Eklund# not at all useful unless you are debugging lock code.  Also note
1988053a2b61SEivind Eklund# that it is likely to break e.g. fstat(1) unless you recompile your
1989053a2b61SEivind Eklund# userland with -DDEBUG_LOCKS as well.
199015a1057cSEivind Eklund#
199115a1057cSEivind Eklundoptions		DEBUG_LOCKS
199215a1057cSEivind Eklund
199365e8111fSBruce Evans# More undocumented options for linting.
199494c94804SBruce Evans
1995d656e316SBruce Evansoptions		CLK_CALIBRATION_LOOP
19965895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		CLK_USE_I8254_CALIBRATION
1997d46e059fSPoul-Henning Kampoptions		CLK_USE_TSC_CALIBRATION
19985895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		TIMER_FREQ="((14318182+6)/12)"
19999546766aSBruce Evansoptions		CLUSTERDEBUG
2000f3e002a8SPoul-Henning Kampoptions		COMPAT_LINUX
200196b89afcSBruce Evansoptions		CPU_UPGRADE_HW_CACHE
200211bfa65aSBruce Evansoptions		DEBUG
200315a1057cSEivind Eklundoptions		DEBUG_VFS_LOCKS
2004c6de6a69SEivind Eklund#options	DISABLE_PSE
20055895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		I586_PMC_GUPROF=0x70000
20065895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		IBCS2
2007751bf650SJun-ichiro itojun Haginooptions		KEY
2008751bf650SJun-ichiro itojun Haginooptions		KEY_DEBUG
200925292acbSBruce Evansoptions		LOCKF_DEBUG
2010c6de6a69SEivind Eklundoptions		LOUTB
20114bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		KBD_MAXRETRY=4
20124bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		KBD_MAXWAIT=6
20134bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		KBD_RESETDELAY=201
20144bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		KBDIO_DEBUG=2
20154bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		MSGMNB=2049
20164bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		MSGMNI=41
20174bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		MSGSEG=2049
201856a956e5SBruce Evansoptions		MSGSSZ=16
20194bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		MSGTQL=41
20204bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		NBUF=512
2021c6de6a69SEivind Eklundoptions		NETATALKDEBUG
20224bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		NMBCLUSTERS=1024
20239546766aSBruce Evansoptions		NPX_DEBUG
2024c6de6a69SEivind Eklundoptions		PANIC_REBOOT_WAIT_TIME=16
20254bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		PSM_DEBUG=1
2026078d4ac9SBruce Evansoptions		SCSI_NCR_DEBUG
2027078d4ac9SBruce Evansoptions		SCSI_NCR_DFLT_TAGS=4
2028078d4ac9SBruce Evansoptions		SCSI_NCR_MAX_SYNC=10000
2029078d4ac9SBruce Evansoptions		SCSI_NCR_MAX_WIDE=1
2030078d4ac9SBruce Evansoptions		SCSI_NCR_MYADDR=7
20314bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SEMMAP=31
20324bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SEMMNI=11
20334bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SEMMNS=61
20344bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SEMMNU=31
20354bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SEMMSL=61
20364bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SEMOPM=101
20374bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SEMUME=11
2038b1529bdaSPeter Wemmoptions		SHOW_BUSYBUFS	# List buffers that prevent root unmount
20394bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SHMALL=1025
20405895e3c8SPeter Wemmoptions		SHMMAX="(SHMMAXPGS*PAGE_SIZE+1)"
20414bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SHMMAXPGS=1025
20424bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SHMMIN=2
20434bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SHMMNI=33
20444bc24b97SBruce Evansoptions		SHMSEG=9
2045d656e316SBruce Evansoptions		SI_DEBUG
204625292acbSBruce Evansoptions		SIMPLELOCK_DEBUG
2047cefdbb04SBruce Evansoptions		SPX_HACK
20485526d2d9SEivind Eklundoptions		VFS_BIO_DEBUG
204904fb1490SNicolas Souchuoptions		ENABLE_ALART
205016094866SJulian Elischer
2051f909c15bSEivind Eklund# The 'dpt' driver provides support for DPT controllers (http://www.dpt.com/).
2052f909c15bSEivind Eklund# These have hardware RAID-{0,1,5} support, and do multi-initiator I/O.
2053b755b885SEivind Eklund# The DPT controllers are commonly re-licensed under other brand-names -
2054b755b885SEivind Eklund# some controllers by Olivetti, Dec, HP, AT&T, SNI, AST, Alphatronic, NEC and
2055b755b885SEivind Eklund# Compaq are actually DPT controllers.
2056b755b885SEivind Eklund#
205716094866SJulian Elischer# See sys/dev/dpt for debugging and other subtle options.
205816094866SJulian Elischer#   DPT_VERIFY_HINTR        Performs some strict hardware interrupts testing.
205916094866SJulian Elischer#                           Only use if you suspect PCI bus corruption problems
206016094866SJulian Elischer#   DPT_RESTRICTED_FREELIST Normally, the freelisat used by the DPT for queue
206116094866SJulian Elischer#                           will grow to accomodate increased use.  This growth
206216094866SJulian Elischer#                           will NOT shrink.  To restrict the number of queue
206316094866SJulian Elischer#                           slots to exactly what the DPT can hold at one time,
206416094866SJulian Elischer#                           enable this option.
206516094866SJulian Elischer#   DPT_MEASURE_PERFORMANCE Enables a set of (semi)invasive metrics. Various
2066b755b885SEivind Eklund#                           instruments are enabled.  The tools in
2067b755b885SEivind Eklund#                           /usr/sbin/dpt_* assume these to be enabled.
2068b755b885SEivind Eklund#   DPT_FREELIST_IS_STACK   For optimal L{1,2} CPU cache utilization, enable
206916094866SJulian Elischer#                           this option.  Otherwise, the transaction queue is
207016094866SJulian Elischer#                           a LIFO.  I cannot measure the performance gain.
207116094866SJulian Elischer#   DPT_HANDLE_TIMEOUTS     Normally device timeouts are handled by the DPT.
207216094866SJulian Elischer#                           If you ant the driver to handle timeouts, enable
207316094866SJulian Elischer#                           this option.  If your system is very busy, this
207416094866SJulian Elischer#                           option will create more trouble than solve.
207516094866SJulian Elischer#   DPT_TIMEOUT_FACTOR      Used to compute the excessive amount of time to
207616094866SJulian Elischer#                           wait when timing out with the above option.
207716094866SJulian Elischer#  DPT_DEBUG_xxxx           These are controllable from sys/dev/dpt/dpt.h
207816094866SJulian Elischer#  DPT_LOST_IRQ             When enabled, will try, once per second, to catch
207916094866SJulian Elischer#                           any interrupt that got lost.  Seems to help in some
208016094866SJulian Elischer#                           DPT-firmware/Motherboard combinations.  Minimal
208116094866SJulian Elischer#                           cost, great benefit.
2082b755b885SEivind Eklund#  DPT_RESET_HBA            Make "reset" actually reset the controller
2083b755b885SEivind Eklund#                           instead of fudging it.  Only enable this if you
2084b755b885SEivind Eklund#			    are 100% certain you need it.
2085b755b885SEivind Eklund#  DPT_SHUTDOWN_SLEEP       Reset controller if a request take more than
2086b755b885SEivind Eklund#                           this number of seconds.  Do NOT enable this
2087b755b885SEivind Eklund#			    unless you are really, really, really certain
2088b755b885SEivind Eklund#			    you need it.  You are advised to call Simon (the
2089b755b885SEivind Eklund#			    driver author) before setting it, and NEVER,
2090b755b885SEivind Eklund#			    EVER set it to less than 300s (5 minutes).
209116094866SJulian Elischer
209216094866SJulian Elischercontroller      dpt0
209316094866SJulian Elischer
209416094866SJulian Elischer# DPT options
209516094866SJulian Elischeroptions DPT_VERIFY_HINTR
209616094866SJulian Elischeroptions DPT_RESTRICTED_FREELIST
20977c0daaa8SEivind Eklund#!CAM# options DPT_MEASURE_PERFORMANCE
209816094866SJulian Elischeroptions DPT_FREELIST_IS_STACK
20997c0daaa8SEivind Eklund#!CAM# options DPT_HANDLE_TIMEOUTS
210016094866SJulian Elischeroptions DPT_TIMEOUT_FACTOR=4
210116094866SJulian Elischeroptions	DPT_INTR_DELAY=200      # Some motherboards need that
210216094866SJulian Elischeroptions DPT_LOST_IRQ
2103b755b885SEivind Eklundoptions DPT_RESET_HBA
2104b755b885SEivind Eklund
2105b755b885SEivind Eklund# Don't EVER set this without having talked to Simon Shapiro on the phone
2106b755b885SEivind Eklund# first.
2107b755b885SEivind Eklundoptions DPT_SHUTDOWN_SLEEP=500
21081d33cf3dSNick Hibma
21091d33cf3dSNick Hibma# USB support
21101d33cf3dSNick Hibma# UHCI controller
21118f2a96f2SNick Hibmacontroller	uhci0
21121d33cf3dSNick Hibma# OHCI controller
21131d33cf3dSNick Hibmacontroller	ohci0
21141d33cf3dSNick Hibma# General USB code (mandatory for USB)
21151d33cf3dSNick Hibmacontroller	usb0
21161d33cf3dSNick Hibma#
2117f26c33d2SNick Hibma# Generic USB device driver
2118f26c33d2SNick Hibmadevice		ugen0
2119f26c33d2SNick Hibma# Human Interface Device (anything with buttons and dials)
2120f26c33d2SNick Hibmadevice		uhid0
21211d33cf3dSNick Hibma# USB keyboard
21221d33cf3dSNick Hibmadevice		ukbd0
21231d33cf3dSNick Hibma# USB printer
21241d33cf3dSNick Hibmadevice		ulpt0
2125f26c33d2SNick Hibma# USB Iomega Zip 100 Drive
2126f26c33d2SNick Hibmacontroller	umass0
2127f26c33d2SNick Hibma# USB mouse
2128f26c33d2SNick Hibmadevice		ums0
2129f26c33d2SNick Hibma#
2130f26c33d2SNick Hibma
2131f26c33d2SNick Hibma# debugging options for the USB subsystem
21321d33cf3dSNick Hibma#
21337dc1a5bdSNick Hibmaoptions		UHCI_DEBUG
21347dc1a5bdSNick Hibmaoptions		OHCI_DEBUG
21351d33cf3dSNick Hibmaoptions		USB_DEBUG
2136f26c33d2SNick Hibma
21377dc1a5bdSNick Hibmaoptions		UGEN_DEBUG
2138f26c33d2SNick Hibmaoptions		UHID_DEBUG
2139f26c33d2SNick Hibmaoptions		UHUB_DEBUG
2140f26c33d2SNick Hibmaoptions		UKBD_DEBUG
21417dc1a5bdSNick Hibmaoptions		ULPT_DEBUG
2142f26c33d2SNick Hibmaoptions		UMASS_DEBUG
2143f26c33d2SNick Hibmaoptions		UMS_DEBUG
2144f26c33d2SNick Hibma
2145785d2100SJohn Birrell#
2146785d2100SJohn Birrell# Embedded system options:
2147785d2100SJohn Birrell#
2148785d2100SJohn Birrell# An embedded system might want to run something other than init.
21498a13a924SJohn Birrelloptions		INIT_PATH="/sbin/init:/stand/sysinstall"
2150785d2100SJohn Birrell
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