1# $FreeBSD$ 2# 3# NOTES -- Lines that can be cut/pasted into kernel and hints configs. 4# 5# Lines that begin with 'device', 'options', 'machine', 'ident', 'maxusers', 6# 'makeoptions', 'hints', etc. go into the kernel configuration that you 7# run config(8) with. 8# 9# Lines that begin with 'hint.' are NOT for config(8), they go into your 10# hints file. See /boot/device.hints and/or the 'hints' config(8) directive. 11# 12# Please use ``make LINT'' to create an old-style LINT file if you want to 13# do kernel test-builds. 14# 15# This file contains machine independent kernel configuration notes. For 16# machine dependent notes, look in /sys/<arch>/conf/NOTES. 17# 18 19# 20# NOTES conventions and style guide: 21# 22# Large block comments should begin and end with a line containing only a 23# comment character. 24# 25# To describe a particular object, a block comment (if it exists) should 26# come first. Next should come device, options, and hints lines in that 27# order. All device and option lines must be described by a comment that 28# doesn't just expand the device or option name. Use only a concise 29# comment on the same line if possible. Very detailed descriptions of 30# devices and subsystems belong in man pages. 31# 32# A space followed by a tab separates 'options' from an option name. Two 33# spaces followed by a tab separate 'device' from a device name. Comments 34# after an option or device should use one space after the comment character. 35# To comment out a negative option that disables code and thus should not be 36# enabled for LINT builds, precede 'options' with "#!". 37# 38 39# 40# This is the ``identification'' of the kernel. Usually this should 41# be the same as the name of your kernel. 42# 43ident LINT 44 45# 46# The `maxusers' parameter controls the static sizing of a number of 47# internal system tables by a formula defined in subr_param.c. 48# Omitting this parameter or setting it to 0 will cause the system to 49# auto-size based on physical memory. 50# 51maxusers 10 52 53# 54# The `makeoptions' parameter allows variables to be passed to the 55# generated Makefile in the build area. 56# 57# CONF_CFLAGS gives some extra compiler flags that are added to ${CFLAGS} 58# after most other flags. Here we use it to inhibit use of non-optimal 59# gcc built-in functions (e.g., memcmp). 60# 61# DEBUG happens to be magic. 62# The following is equivalent to 'config -g KERNELNAME' and creates 63# 'kernel.debug' compiled with -g debugging as well as a normal 64# 'kernel'. Use 'make install.debug' to install the debug kernel 65# but that isn't normally necessary as the debug symbols are not loaded 66# by the kernel and are not useful there anyway. 67# 68# KERNEL can be overridden so that you can change the default name of your 69# kernel. 70# 71# MODULES_OVERRIDE can be used to limit modules built to a specific list. 72# 73makeoptions CONF_CFLAGS=-fno-builtin #Don't allow use of memcmp, etc. 74#makeoptions DEBUG=-g #Build kernel with gdb(1) debug symbols 75#makeoptions KERNEL=foo #Build kernel "foo" and install "/foo" 76# Only build ext2fs module plus those parts of the sound system I need. 77#makeoptions MODULES_OVERRIDE="ext2fs sound/sound sound/driver/maestro3" 78makeoptions DESTDIR=/tmp 79 80# 81# FreeBSD processes are subject to certain limits to their consumption 82# of system resources. See getrlimit(2) for more details. Each 83# resource limit has two values, a "soft" limit and a "hard" limit. 84# The soft limits can be modified during normal system operation, but 85# the hard limits are set at boot time. Their default values are 86# in sys/<arch>/include/vmparam.h. There are two ways to change them: 87# 88# 1. Set the values at kernel build time. The options below are one 89# way to allow that limit to grow to 1GB. They can be increased 90# further by changing the parameters: 91# 92# 2. In /boot/loader.conf, set the tunables kern.maxswzone, 93# kern.maxbcache, kern.maxtsiz, kern.dfldsiz, kern.maxdsiz, 94# kern.dflssiz, kern.maxssiz and kern.sgrowsiz. 95# 96# The options in /boot/loader.conf override anything in the kernel 97# configuration file. See the function init_param1 in 98# sys/kern/subr_param.c for more details. 99# 100 101options MAXDSIZ=(1024UL*1024*1024) 102options MAXSSIZ=(128UL*1024*1024) 103options DFLDSIZ=(1024UL*1024*1024) 104 105# 106# BLKDEV_IOSIZE sets the default block size used in user block 107# device I/O. Note that this value will be overridden by the label 108# when specifying a block device from a label with a non-0 109# partition blocksize. The default is PAGE_SIZE. 110# 111options BLKDEV_IOSIZE=8192 112 113# 114# MAXPHYS and DFLTPHYS 115# 116# These are the max and default 'raw' I/O block device access sizes. 117# Reads and writes will be split into DFLTPHYS chunks. Some applications 118# have better performance with larger raw I/O access sizes. Typically 119# MAXPHYS should be twice the size of DFLTPHYS. Note that certain VM 120# parameters are derived from these values and making them too large 121# can make an an unbootable kernel. 122# 123# The defaults are 64K and 128K respectively. 124options DFLTPHYS=(64*1024) 125options MAXPHYS=(128*1024) 126 127 128# This allows you to actually store this configuration file into 129# the kernel binary itself. See config(8) for more details. 130# 131options INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE # Include this file in kernel 132 133options GEOM_AES # Don't use, use GEOM_BDE 134options GEOM_BDE # Disk encryption. 135options GEOM_BSD # BSD disklabels 136options GEOM_CACHE # Disk cache. 137options GEOM_CONCAT # Disk concatenation. 138options GEOM_ELI # Disk encryption. 139options GEOM_FOX # Redundant path mitigation 140options GEOM_GATE # Userland services. 141options GEOM_JOURNAL # Journaling. 142options GEOM_LABEL # Providers labelization. 143options GEOM_LINUX_LVM # Linux LVM2 volumes 144options GEOM_MBR # DOS/MBR partitioning 145options GEOM_MIRROR # Disk mirroring. 146options GEOM_MULTIPATH # Disk multipath 147options GEOM_NOP # Test class. 148options GEOM_PART_APM # Apple partitioning 149options GEOM_PART_BSD # BSD disklabel 150options GEOM_PART_GPT # GPT partitioning 151options GEOM_PART_MBR # MBR partitioning 152options GEOM_PART_PC98 # PC-9800 disk partitioning 153options GEOM_PART_VTOC8 # SMI VTOC8 disk label 154options GEOM_PC98 # NEC PC9800 partitioning 155options GEOM_RAID3 # RAID3 functionality. 156options GEOM_SHSEC # Shared secret. 157options GEOM_STRIPE # Disk striping. 158options GEOM_SUNLABEL # Sun/Solaris partitioning 159options GEOM_UZIP # Read-only compressed disks 160options GEOM_VIRSTOR # Virtual storage. 161options GEOM_VOL # Volume names from UFS superblock 162options GEOM_ZERO # Performance testing helper. 163 164# 165# The root device and filesystem type can be compiled in; 166# this provides a fallback option if the root device cannot 167# be correctly guessed by the bootstrap code, or an override if 168# the RB_DFLTROOT flag (-r) is specified when booting the kernel. 169# 170options ROOTDEVNAME=\"ufs:da0s2e\" 171 172 173##################################################################### 174# Scheduler options: 175# 176# Specifying one of SCHED_4BSD or SCHED_ULE is mandatory. These options 177# select which scheduler is compiled in. 178# 179# SCHED_4BSD is the historical, proven, BSD scheduler. It has a global run 180# queue and no CPU affinity which makes it suboptimal for SMP. It has very 181# good interactivity and priority selection. 182# 183# SCHED_ULE provides significant performance advantages over 4BSD on many 184# workloads on SMP machines. It supports cpu-affinity, per-cpu runqueues 185# and scheduler locks. It also has a stronger notion of interactivity 186# which leads to better responsiveness even on uniprocessor machines. This 187# will eventually become the default scheduler. 188# 189# SCHED_STATS is a debugging option which keeps some stats in the sysctl 190# tree at 'kern.sched.stats' and is useful for debugging scheduling decisions. 191# 192options SCHED_4BSD 193options SCHED_STATS 194#options SCHED_ULE 195 196##################################################################### 197# SMP OPTIONS: 198# 199# SMP enables building of a Symmetric MultiProcessor Kernel. 200 201# Mandatory: 202options SMP # Symmetric MultiProcessor Kernel 203 204# ADAPTIVE_MUTEXES changes the behavior of blocking mutexes to spin 205# if the thread that currently owns the mutex is executing on another 206# CPU. This behaviour is enabled by default, so this option can be used 207# to disable it. 208options NO_ADAPTIVE_MUTEXES 209 210# ADAPTIVE_RWLOCKS changes the behavior of reader/writer locks to spin 211# if the thread that currently owns the rwlock is executing on another 212# CPU. This behaviour is enabled by default, so this option can be used 213# to disable it. 214options NO_ADAPTIVE_RWLOCKS 215 216# ADAPTIVE_SX changes the behavior of sx locks to spin if the thread 217# that currently owns the lock is executing on another CPU. Note that 218# in addition to enabling this option, individual sx locks must be 219# initialized with the SX_ADAPTIVESPIN flag. 220options ADAPTIVE_SX 221 222# MUTEX_NOINLINE forces mutex operations to call functions to perform each 223# operation rather than inlining the simple cases. This can be used to 224# shrink the size of the kernel text segment. Note that this behavior is 225# already implied by the INVARIANT_SUPPORT, INVARIANTS, KTR, LOCK_PROFILING, 226# and WITNESS options. 227options MUTEX_NOINLINE 228 229# RWLOCK_NOINLINE forces rwlock operations to call functions to perform each 230# operation rather than inlining the simple cases. This can be used to 231# shrink the size of the kernel text segment. Note that this behavior is 232# already implied by the INVARIANT_SUPPORT, INVARIANTS, KTR, LOCK_PROFILING, 233# and WITNESS options. 234options RWLOCK_NOINLINE 235 236# SX_NOINLINE forces sx lock operations to call functions to perform each 237# operation rather than inlining the simple cases. This can be used to 238# shrink the size of the kernel text segment. Note that this behavior is 239# already implied by the INVARIANT_SUPPORT, INVARIANTS, KTR, LOCK_PROFILING, 240# and WITNESS options. 241options SX_NOINLINE 242 243# SMP Debugging Options: 244# 245# PREEMPTION allows the threads that are in the kernel to be preempted by 246# higher priority [interrupt] threads. It helps with interactivity 247# and allows interrupt threads to run sooner rather than waiting. 248# WARNING! Only tested on amd64 and i386. 249# FULL_PREEMPTION instructs the kernel to preempt non-realtime kernel 250# threads. Its sole use is to expose race conditions and other 251# bugs during development. Enabling this option will reduce 252# performance and increase the frequency of kernel panics by 253# design. If you aren't sure that you need it then you don't. 254# Relies on the PREEMPTION option. DON'T TURN THIS ON. 255# MUTEX_DEBUG enables various extra assertions in the mutex code. 256# SLEEPQUEUE_PROFILING enables rudimentary profiling of the hash table 257# used to hold active sleep queues as well as sleep wait message 258# frequency. 259# TURNSTILE_PROFILING enables rudimentary profiling of the hash table 260# used to hold active lock queues. 261# WITNESS enables the witness code which detects deadlocks and cycles 262# during locking operations. 263# WITNESS_KDB causes the witness code to drop into the kernel debugger if 264# a lock hierarchy violation occurs or if locks are held when going to 265# sleep. 266# WITNESS_SKIPSPIN disables the witness checks on spin mutexes. 267options PREEMPTION 268options FULL_PREEMPTION 269options MUTEX_DEBUG 270options WITNESS 271options WITNESS_KDB 272options WITNESS_SKIPSPIN 273 274# LOCK_PROFILING - Profiling locks. See LOCK_PROFILING(9) for details. 275options LOCK_PROFILING 276# Set the number of buffers and the hash size. The hash size MUST be larger 277# than the number of buffers. Hash size should be prime. 278options MPROF_BUFFERS="1536" 279options MPROF_HASH_SIZE="1543" 280 281# Profiling for internal hash tables. 282options SLEEPQUEUE_PROFILING 283options TURNSTILE_PROFILING 284 285 286##################################################################### 287# COMPATIBILITY OPTIONS 288 289# 290# Implement system calls compatible with 4.3BSD and older versions of 291# FreeBSD. You probably do NOT want to remove this as much current code 292# still relies on the 4.3 emulation. Note that some architectures that 293# are supported by FreeBSD do not include support for certain important 294# aspects of this compatibility option, namely those related to the 295# signal delivery mechanism. 296# 297options COMPAT_43 298 299# Old tty interface. 300options COMPAT_43TTY 301 302# Enable FreeBSD4 compatibility syscalls 303options COMPAT_FREEBSD4 304 305# Enable FreeBSD5 compatibility syscalls 306options COMPAT_FREEBSD5 307 308# Enable FreeBSD6 compatibility syscalls 309options COMPAT_FREEBSD6 310 311# Enable FreeBSD7 compatibility syscalls 312options COMPAT_FREEBSD7 313 314# 315# These three options provide support for System V Interface 316# Definition-style interprocess communication, in the form of shared 317# memory, semaphores, and message queues, respectively. 318# 319options SYSVSHM 320options SYSVSEM 321options SYSVMSG 322 323 324##################################################################### 325# DEBUGGING OPTIONS 326 327# 328# Compile with kernel debugger related code. 329# 330options KDB 331 332# 333# Print a stack trace of the current thread on the console for a panic. 334# 335options KDB_TRACE 336 337# 338# Don't enter the debugger for a panic. Intended for unattended operation 339# where you may want to enter the debugger from the console, but still want 340# the machine to recover from a panic. 341# 342options KDB_UNATTENDED 343 344# 345# Enable the ddb debugger backend. 346# 347options DDB 348 349# 350# Print the numerical value of symbols in addition to the symbolic 351# representation. 352# 353options DDB_NUMSYM 354 355# 356# Enable the remote gdb debugger backend. 357# 358options GDB 359 360# 361# Enable the kernel DTrace hooks which are required to load the DTrace 362# kernel modules. 363# 364options KDTRACE_HOOKS 365 366# 367# SYSCTL_DEBUG enables a 'sysctl' debug tree that can be used to dump the 368# contents of the registered sysctl nodes on the console. It is disabled by 369# default because it generates excessively verbose console output that can 370# interfere with serial console operation. 371# 372options SYSCTL_DEBUG 373 374# 375# DEBUG_MEMGUARD builds and enables memguard(9), a replacement allocator 376# for the kernel used to detect modify-after-free scenarios. See the 377# memguard(9) man page for more information on usage. 378# 379options DEBUG_MEMGUARD 380 381# 382# DEBUG_REDZONE enables buffer underflows and buffer overflows detection for 383# malloc(9). 384# 385options DEBUG_REDZONE 386 387# 388# KTRACE enables the system-call tracing facility ktrace(2). To be more 389# SMP-friendly, KTRACE uses a worker thread to process most trace events 390# asynchronously to the thread generating the event. This requires a 391# pre-allocated store of objects representing trace events. The 392# KTRACE_REQUEST_POOL option specifies the initial size of this store. 393# The size of the pool can be adjusted both at boottime and runtime via 394# the kern.ktrace_request_pool tunable and sysctl. 395# 396options KTRACE #kernel tracing 397options KTRACE_REQUEST_POOL=101 398 399# 400# KTR is a kernel tracing mechanism imported from BSD/OS. Currently 401# it has no userland interface aside from a few sysctl's. It is 402# enabled with the KTR option. KTR_ENTRIES defines the number of 403# entries in the circular trace buffer; it must be a power of two. 404# KTR_COMPILE defines the mask of events to compile into the kernel as 405# defined by the KTR_* constants in <sys/ktr.h>. KTR_MASK defines the 406# initial value of the ktr_mask variable which determines at runtime 407# what events to trace. KTR_CPUMASK determines which CPU's log 408# events, with bit X corresponding to CPU X. KTR_VERBOSE enables 409# dumping of KTR events to the console by default. This functionality 410# can be toggled via the debug.ktr_verbose sysctl and defaults to off 411# if KTR_VERBOSE is not defined. 412# 413options KTR 414options KTR_ENTRIES=1024 415options KTR_COMPILE=(KTR_INTR|KTR_PROC) 416options KTR_MASK=KTR_INTR 417options KTR_CPUMASK=0x3 418options KTR_VERBOSE 419 420# 421# ALQ(9) is a facility for the asynchronous queuing of records from the kernel 422# to a vnode, and is employed by services such as KTR(4) to produce trace 423# files based on a kernel event stream. Records are written asynchronously 424# in a worker thread. 425# 426options ALQ 427options KTR_ALQ 428 429# 430# The INVARIANTS option is used in a number of source files to enable 431# extra sanity checking of internal structures. This support is not 432# enabled by default because of the extra time it would take to check 433# for these conditions, which can only occur as a result of 434# programming errors. 435# 436options INVARIANTS 437 438# 439# The INVARIANT_SUPPORT option makes us compile in support for 440# verifying some of the internal structures. It is a prerequisite for 441# 'INVARIANTS', as enabling 'INVARIANTS' will make these functions be 442# called. The intent is that you can set 'INVARIANTS' for single 443# source files (by changing the source file or specifying it on the 444# command line) if you have 'INVARIANT_SUPPORT' enabled. Also, if you 445# wish to build a kernel module with 'INVARIANTS', then adding 446# 'INVARIANT_SUPPORT' to your kernel will provide all the necessary 447# infrastructure without the added overhead. 448# 449options INVARIANT_SUPPORT 450 451# 452# The DIAGNOSTIC option is used to enable extra debugging information 453# from some parts of the kernel. As this makes everything more noisy, 454# it is disabled by default. 455# 456options DIAGNOSTIC 457 458# 459# REGRESSION causes optional kernel interfaces necessary only for regression 460# testing to be enabled. These interfaces may constitute security risks 461# when enabled, as they permit processes to easily modify aspects of the 462# run-time environment to reproduce unlikely or unusual (possibly normally 463# impossible) scenarios. 464# 465options REGRESSION 466 467# 468# RESTARTABLE_PANICS allows one to continue from a panic as if it were 469# a call to the debugger to continue from a panic as instead. It is only 470# useful if a kernel debugger is present. To restart from a panic, reset 471# the panicstr variable to NULL and continue execution. This option is 472# for development use only and should NOT be used in production systems 473# to "workaround" a panic. 474# 475#options RESTARTABLE_PANICS 476 477# 478# This option let some drivers co-exist that can't co-exist in a running 479# system. This is used to be able to compile all kernel code in one go for 480# quality assurance purposes (like this file, which the option takes it name 481# from.) 482# 483options COMPILING_LINT 484 485# 486# STACK enables the stack(9) facility, allowing the capture of kernel stack 487# for the purpose of procinfo(1), etc. stack(9) will also be compiled in 488# automatically if DDB(4) is compiled into the kernel. 489# 490options STACK 491 492 493##################################################################### 494# PERFORMANCE MONITORING OPTIONS 495 496# 497# The hwpmc driver that allows the use of in-CPU performance monitoring 498# counters for performance monitoring. The base kernel needs to configured 499# with the 'options' line, while the hwpmc device can be either compiled 500# in or loaded as a loadable kernel module. 501# 502# Additional configuration options may be required on specific architectures, 503# please see hwpmc(4). 504 505device hwpmc # Driver (also a loadable module) 506options HWPMC_HOOKS # Other necessary kernel hooks 507 508 509##################################################################### 510# NETWORKING OPTIONS 511 512# 513# Protocol families 514# 515options INET #Internet communications protocols 516options INET6 #IPv6 communications protocols 517 518options ROUTETABLES=2 # max 16. 1 is back compatible. 519 520# In order to enable IPSEC you MUST also add device crypto to 521# your kernel configuration 522options IPSEC #IP security (requires device crypto) 523#options IPSEC_DEBUG #debug for IP security 524# 525# Set IPSEC_FILTERTUNNEL to force packets coming through a tunnel 526# to be processed by any configured packet filtering twice. 527# The default is that packets coming out of a tunnel are _not_ processed; 528# they are assumed trusted. 529# 530# IPSEC history is preserved for such packets, and can be filtered 531# using ipfw(8)'s 'ipsec' keyword, when this option is enabled. 532# 533#options IPSEC_FILTERTUNNEL #filter ipsec packets from a tunnel 534 535options IPX #IPX/SPX communications protocols 536 537options NCP #NetWare Core protocol 538 539options NETATALK #Appletalk communications protocols 540options NETATALKDEBUG #Appletalk debugging 541 542# 543# SMB/CIFS requester 544# NETSMB enables support for SMB protocol, it requires LIBMCHAIN and LIBICONV 545# options. 546options NETSMB #SMB/CIFS requester 547 548# mchain library. It can be either loaded as KLD or compiled into kernel 549options LIBMCHAIN 550 551# libalias library, performing NAT 552options LIBALIAS 553 554# 555# SCTP is a NEW transport protocol defined by 556# RFC2960 updated by RFC3309 and RFC3758.. and 557# soon to have a new base RFC and many many more 558# extensions. This release supports all the extensions 559# including many drafts (most about to become RFC's). 560# It is the premeier SCTP implementation in the NET 561# and is quite well tested. 562# 563# Note YOU MUST have both INET and INET6 defined. 564# you don't have to enable V6, but SCTP is 565# dual stacked and so far we have not teased apart 566# the V6 and V4.. since an association can span 567# both a V6 and V4 address at the SAME time :-) 568# 569options SCTP 570# There are bunches of options: 571# this one turns on all sorts of 572# nastly printing that you can 573# do. Its all controled by a 574# bit mask (settable by socket opt and 575# by sysctl). Including will not cause 576# logging until you set the bits.. but it 577# can be quite verbose.. so without this 578# option we don't do any of the tests for 579# bits and prints.. which makes the code run 580# faster.. if you are not debugging don't use. 581options SCTP_DEBUG 582# 583# This option turns off the CRC32c checksum. Basically 584# You will not be able to talk to anyone else that 585# has not done this. Its more for expermentation to 586# see how much CPU the CRC32c really takes. Most new 587# cards for TCP support checksum offload.. so this 588# option gives you a "view" into what SCTP would be 589# like with such an offload (which only exists in 590# high in iSCSI boards so far). With the new 591# splitting 8's algorithm its not as bad as it used 592# to be.. but it does speed things up try only 593# for in a captured lab environment :-) 594options SCTP_WITH_NO_CSUM 595# 596 597# 598# All that options after that turn on specific types of 599# logging. You can monitor CWND growth, flight size 600# and all sorts of things. Go look at the code and 601# see. I have used this to produce interesting 602# charts and graphs as well :-> 603# 604# I have not yet commited the tools to get and print 605# the logs, I will do that eventually .. before then 606# if you want them send me an email rrs@freebsd.org 607# You basically must have KTR enabled for these 608# and you then set the sysctl to turn on/off various 609# logging bits. Use ktrdump to pull the log and run 610# it through a dispaly program.. and graphs and other 611# things too. 612# 613options SCTP_LOCK_LOGGING 614options SCTP_MBUF_LOGGING 615options SCTP_MBCNT_LOGGING 616options SCTP_PACKET_LOGGING 617options SCTP_LTRACE_CHUNKS 618options SCTP_LTRACE_ERRORS 619 620 621# altq(9). Enable the base part of the hooks with the ALTQ option. 622# Individual disciplines must be built into the base system and can not be 623# loaded as modules at this point. ALTQ requires a stable TSC so if yours is 624# broken or changes with CPU throttling then you must also have the ALTQ_NOPCC 625# option. 626options ALTQ 627options ALTQ_CBQ # Class Based Queueing 628options ALTQ_RED # Random Early Detection 629options ALTQ_RIO # RED In/Out 630options ALTQ_HFSC # Hierarchical Packet Scheduler 631options ALTQ_CDNR # Traffic conditioner 632options ALTQ_PRIQ # Priority Queueing 633options ALTQ_NOPCC # Required if the TSC is unusable 634options ALTQ_DEBUG 635 636# IP optional behaviour. 637# IP_NONLOCALBIND disables the check that bind() usually makes that the 638# address is one that is assigned to an interface on this machine. 639# It allows transparent proxies to pretend to be other machines. 640# How the packet GET to that machine is a problem solved elsewhere, 641# smart routers, ipfw fwd, etc. 642options IP_NONLOCALBIND # Allow impersonation for proxies. 643 644# netgraph(4). Enable the base netgraph code with the NETGRAPH option. 645# Individual node types can be enabled with the corresponding option 646# listed below; however, this is not strictly necessary as netgraph 647# will automatically load the corresponding KLD module if the node type 648# is not already compiled into the kernel. Each type below has a 649# corresponding man page, e.g., ng_async(8). 650options NETGRAPH # netgraph(4) system 651options NETGRAPH_DEBUG # enable extra debugging, this 652 # affects netgraph(4) and nodes 653# Node types 654options NETGRAPH_ASYNC 655options NETGRAPH_ATMLLC 656options NETGRAPH_ATM_ATMPIF 657options NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH # ng_bluetooth(4) 658options NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_BT3C # ng_bt3c(4) 659options NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_HCI # ng_hci(4) 660options NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_L2CAP # ng_l2cap(4) 661options NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_SOCKET # ng_btsocket(4) 662options NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_UBT # ng_ubt(4) 663options NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_UBTBCMFW # ubtbcmfw(4) 664options NETGRAPH_BPF 665options NETGRAPH_BRIDGE 666options NETGRAPH_CAR 667options NETGRAPH_CISCO 668options NETGRAPH_DEFLATE 669options NETGRAPH_DEVICE 670options NETGRAPH_ECHO 671options NETGRAPH_EIFACE 672options NETGRAPH_ETHER 673options NETGRAPH_FEC 674options NETGRAPH_FRAME_RELAY 675options NETGRAPH_GIF 676options NETGRAPH_GIF_DEMUX 677options NETGRAPH_HOLE 678options NETGRAPH_IFACE 679options NETGRAPH_IP_INPUT 680options NETGRAPH_IPFW 681options NETGRAPH_KSOCKET 682options NETGRAPH_L2TP 683options NETGRAPH_LMI 684# MPPC compression requires proprietary files (not included) 685#options NETGRAPH_MPPC_COMPRESSION 686options NETGRAPH_MPPC_ENCRYPTION 687options NETGRAPH_NETFLOW 688options NETGRAPH_NAT 689options NETGRAPH_ONE2MANY 690options NETGRAPH_PPP 691options NETGRAPH_PPPOE 692options NETGRAPH_PPTPGRE 693options NETGRAPH_PRED1 694options NETGRAPH_RFC1490 695options NETGRAPH_SOCKET 696options NETGRAPH_SPLIT 697options NETGRAPH_SPPP 698options NETGRAPH_TAG 699options NETGRAPH_TCPMSS 700options NETGRAPH_TEE 701options NETGRAPH_UI 702options NETGRAPH_VJC 703 704# NgATM - Netgraph ATM 705options NGATM_ATM 706options NGATM_ATMBASE 707options NGATM_SSCOP 708options NGATM_SSCFU 709options NGATM_UNI 710options NGATM_CCATM 711 712device mn # Munich32x/Falc54 Nx64kbit/sec cards. 713 714# 715# Network interfaces: 716# The `loop' device is MANDATORY when networking is enabled. 717# The `ether' device provides generic code to handle 718# Ethernets; it is MANDATORY when an Ethernet device driver is 719# configured or token-ring is enabled. 720# The `vlan' device implements the VLAN tagging of Ethernet frames 721# according to IEEE 802.1Q. It requires `device miibus'. 722# The `wlan' device provides generic code to support 802.11 723# drivers, including host AP mode; it is MANDATORY for the wi, 724# and ath drivers and will eventually be required by all 802.11 drivers. 725# The `wlan_wep', `wlan_tkip', and `wlan_ccmp' devices provide 726# support for WEP, TKIP, and AES-CCMP crypto protocols optionally 727# used with 802.11 devices that depend on the `wlan' module. 728# The `wlan_xauth' device provides support for external (i.e. user-mode) 729# authenticators for use with 802.11 drivers that use the `wlan' 730# module and support 802.1x and/or WPA security protocols. 731# The `wlan_acl' device provides a MAC-based access control mechanism 732# for use with 802.11 drivers operating in ap mode and using the 733# `wlan' module. 734# The `fddi' device provides generic code to support FDDI. 735# The `arcnet' device provides generic code to support Arcnet. 736# The `sppp' device serves a similar role for certain types 737# of synchronous PPP links (like `cx', `ar'). 738# The `sl' device implements the Serial Line IP (SLIP) service. 739# The `ppp' device implements the Point-to-Point Protocol. 740# The `bpf' device enables the Berkeley Packet Filter. Be 741# aware of the legal and administrative consequences of enabling this 742# option. The number of devices determines the maximum number of 743# simultaneous BPF clients programs runnable. DHCP requires bpf. 744# The `disc' device implements a minimal network interface, 745# which throws away all packets sent and never receives any. It is 746# included for testing and benchmarking purposes. 747# The `edsc' device implements a minimal Ethernet interface, 748# which discards all packets sent and receives none. 749# The `tap' device is a pty-like virtual Ethernet interface 750# The `tun' device implements (user-)ppp and nos-tun 751# The `gif' device implements IPv6 over IP4 tunneling, 752# IPv4 over IPv6 tunneling, IPv4 over IPv4 tunneling and 753# IPv6 over IPv6 tunneling. 754# The `gre' device implements two types of IP4 over IP4 tunneling: 755# GRE and MOBILE, as specified in the RFC1701 and RFC2004. 756# The XBONEHACK option allows the same pair of addresses to be configured on 757# multiple gif interfaces. 758# The `faith' device captures packets sent to it and diverts them 759# to the IPv4/IPv6 translation daemon. 760# The `stf' device implements 6to4 encapsulation. 761# The `ef' device provides support for multiple ethernet frame types 762# specified via ETHER_* options. See ef(4) for details. 763# 764# The pf packet filter consists of three devices: 765# The `pf' device provides /dev/pf and the firewall code itself. 766# The `pflog' device provides the pflog0 interface which logs packets. 767# The `pfsync' device provides the pfsync0 interface used for 768# synchronization of firewall state tables (over the net). 769# 770# The PPP_BSDCOMP option enables support for compress(1) style entire 771# packet compression, the PPP_DEFLATE is for zlib/gzip style compression. 772# PPP_FILTER enables code for filtering the ppp data stream and selecting 773# events for resetting the demand dial activity timer - requires bpf. 774# See pppd(8) for more details. 775# 776device ether #Generic Ethernet 777device vlan #VLAN support (needs miibus) 778device wlan #802.11 support 779options IEEE80211_DEBUG #enable debugging msgs 780options IEEE80211_AMPDU_AGE #age frames in AMPDU reorder q's 781device wlan_wep #802.11 WEP support 782device wlan_ccmp #802.11 CCMP support 783device wlan_tkip #802.11 TKIP support 784device wlan_xauth #802.11 external authenticator support 785device wlan_acl #802.11 MAC ACL support 786device wlan_amrr #AMRR transmit rate control algorithm 787device token #Generic TokenRing 788device fddi #Generic FDDI 789device arcnet #Generic Arcnet 790device sppp #Generic Synchronous PPP 791device loop #Network loopback device 792device bpf #Berkeley packet filter 793device disc #Discard device based on loopback 794device edsc #Ethernet discard device 795device tap #Virtual Ethernet driver 796device tun #Tunnel driver (ppp(8), nos-tun(8)) 797device gre #IP over IP tunneling 798device if_bridge #Bridge interface 799device pf #PF OpenBSD packet-filter firewall 800device pflog #logging support interface for PF 801device pfsync #synchronization interface for PF 802device carp #Common Address Redundancy Protocol 803device enc #IPsec interface 804device lagg #Link aggregation interface 805 806device ef # Multiple ethernet frames support 807options ETHER_II # enable Ethernet_II frame 808options ETHER_8023 # enable Ethernet_802.3 (Novell) frame 809options ETHER_8022 # enable Ethernet_802.2 frame 810options ETHER_SNAP # enable Ethernet_802.2/SNAP frame 811 812# for IPv6 813device gif #IPv6 and IPv4 tunneling 814options XBONEHACK 815device faith #for IPv6 and IPv4 translation 816device stf #6to4 IPv6 over IPv4 encapsulation 817 818# 819# Internet family options: 820# 821# MROUTING enables the kernel multicast packet forwarder, which works 822# with mrouted and XORP. 823# 824# IPFIREWALL enables support for IP firewall construction, in 825# conjunction with the `ipfw' program. IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE sends 826# logged packets to the system logger. IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT 827# limits the number of times a matching entry can be logged. 828# 829# WARNING: IPFIREWALL defaults to a policy of "deny ip from any to any" 830# and if you do not add other rules during startup to allow access, 831# YOU WILL LOCK YOURSELF OUT. It is suggested that you set firewall_type=open 832# in /etc/rc.conf when first enabling this feature, then refining the 833# firewall rules in /etc/rc.firewall after you've tested that the new kernel 834# feature works properly. 835# 836# IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT causes the default rule (at boot) to 837# allow everything. Use with care, if a cracker can crash your 838# firewall machine, they can get to your protected machines. However, 839# if you are using it as an as-needed filter for specific problems as 840# they arise, then this may be for you. Changing the default to 'allow' 841# means that you won't get stuck if the kernel and /sbin/ipfw binary get 842# out of sync. 843# 844# IPDIVERT enables the divert IP sockets, used by ``ipfw divert''. It 845# depends on IPFIREWALL if compiled into the kernel. 846# 847# IPFIREWALL_FORWARD enables changing of the packet destination either 848# to do some sort of policy routing or transparent proxying. Used by 849# ``ipfw forward''. All redirections apply to locally generated 850# packets too. Because of this great care is required when 851# crafting the ruleset. 852# 853# IPFIREWALL_NAT adds support for in kernel nat in ipfw, and it requires 854# LIBALIAS. 855# 856# IPSTEALTH enables code to support stealth forwarding (i.e., forwarding 857# packets without touching the TTL). This can be useful to hide firewalls 858# from traceroute and similar tools. 859# 860# TCPDEBUG enables code which keeps traces of the TCP state machine 861# for sockets with the SO_DEBUG option set, which can then be examined 862# using the trpt(8) utility. 863# 864options MROUTING # Multicast routing 865options IPFIREWALL #firewall 866options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE #enable logging to syslogd(8) 867options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=100 #limit verbosity 868options IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT #allow everything by default 869options IPFIREWALL_FORWARD #packet destination changes 870options IPFIREWALL_NAT #ipfw kernel nat support 871options IPDIVERT #divert sockets 872options IPFILTER #ipfilter support 873options IPFILTER_LOG #ipfilter logging 874options IPFILTER_LOOKUP #ipfilter pools 875options IPFILTER_DEFAULT_BLOCK #block all packets by default 876options IPSTEALTH #support for stealth forwarding 877options TCPDEBUG 878 879# The MBUF_STRESS_TEST option enables options which create 880# various random failures / extreme cases related to mbuf 881# functions. See mbuf(9) for a list of available test cases. 882# MBUF_PROFILING enables code to profile the mbuf chains 883# exiting the system (via participating interfaces) and 884# return a logarithmic histogram of monitored parameters 885# (e.g. packet size, wasted space, number of mbufs in chain). 886options MBUF_STRESS_TEST 887options MBUF_PROFILING 888 889# Statically Link in accept filters 890options ACCEPT_FILTER_DATA 891options ACCEPT_FILTER_DNS 892options ACCEPT_FILTER_HTTP 893 894# TCP_SIGNATURE adds support for RFC 2385 (TCP-MD5) digests. These are 895# carried in TCP option 19. This option is commonly used to protect 896# TCP sessions (e.g. BGP) where IPSEC is not available nor desirable. 897# This is enabled on a per-socket basis using the TCP_MD5SIG socket option. 898# This requires the use of 'device crypto', 'options IPSEC' 899# or 'device cryptodev'. 900options TCP_SIGNATURE #include support for RFC 2385 901 902# DUMMYNET enables the "dummynet" bandwidth limiter. You need IPFIREWALL 903# as well. See dummynet(4) and ipfw(8) for more info. When you run 904# DUMMYNET it is advisable to also have at least "options HZ=1000" to achieve 905# a smooth scheduling of the traffic. 906options DUMMYNET 907 908# Zero copy sockets support. This enables "zero copy" for sending and 909# receiving data via a socket. The send side works for any type of NIC, 910# the receive side only works for NICs that support MTUs greater than the 911# page size of your architecture and that support header splitting. See 912# zero_copy(9) for more details. 913options ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS 914 915 916##################################################################### 917# FILESYSTEM OPTIONS 918 919# 920# Only the root, /usr, and /tmp filesystems need be statically 921# compiled; everything else will be automatically loaded at mount 922# time. (Exception: the UFS family--- FFS --- cannot 923# currently be demand-loaded.) Some people still prefer to statically 924# compile other filesystems as well. 925# 926# NB: The PORTAL filesystem is known to be buggy, and WILL panic your 927# system if you attempt to do anything with it. It is included here 928# as an incentive for some enterprising soul to sit down and fix it. 929# The UNION filesystem was known to be buggy in the past. It is now 930# being actively maintained, although there are still some issues being 931# resolved. 932# 933 934# One of these is mandatory: 935options FFS #Fast filesystem 936options NFSCLIENT #Network File System client 937 938# The rest are optional: 939options CD9660 #ISO 9660 filesystem 940options FDESCFS #File descriptor filesystem 941options HPFS #OS/2 File system 942options MSDOSFS #MS DOS File System (FAT, FAT32) 943options NFSSERVER #Network File System server 944options NFSLOCKD #Network Lock Manager 945 946# NT File System. Read-mostly, see mount_ntfs(8) for details. 947# For a full read-write NTFS support consider sysutils/fusefs-ntfs 948# port/package. 949options NTFS 950 951options NULLFS #NULL filesystem 952# Broken (depends on NCP): 953#options NWFS #NetWare filesystem 954options PORTALFS #Portal filesystem 955options PROCFS #Process filesystem (requires PSEUDOFS) 956options PSEUDOFS #Pseudo-filesystem framework 957options PSEUDOFS_TRACE #Debugging support for PSEUDOFS 958options SMBFS #SMB/CIFS filesystem 959options UDF #Universal Disk Format 960options UNIONFS #Union filesystem 961# The xFS_ROOT options REQUIRE the associated ``options xFS'' 962options NFS_ROOT #NFS usable as root device 963 964# Soft updates is a technique for improving filesystem speed and 965# making abrupt shutdown less risky. 966# 967options SOFTUPDATES 968 969# Extended attributes allow additional data to be associated with files, 970# and is used for ACLs, Capabilities, and MAC labels. 971# See src/sys/ufs/ufs/README.extattr for more information. 972options UFS_EXTATTR 973options UFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART 974 975# Access Control List support for UFS filesystems. The current ACL 976# implementation requires extended attribute support, UFS_EXTATTR, 977# for the underlying filesystem. 978# See src/sys/ufs/ufs/README.acls for more information. 979options UFS_ACL 980 981# Directory hashing improves the speed of operations on very large 982# directories at the expense of some memory. 983options UFS_DIRHASH 984 985# Gjournal-based UFS journaling support. 986options UFS_GJOURNAL 987 988# Make space in the kernel for a root filesystem on a md device. 989# Define to the number of kilobytes to reserve for the filesystem. 990options MD_ROOT_SIZE=10 991 992# Make the md device a potential root device, either with preloaded 993# images of type mfs_root or md_root. 994options MD_ROOT 995 996# Disk quotas are supported when this option is enabled. 997options QUOTA #enable disk quotas 998 999# If you are running a machine just as a fileserver for PC and MAC 1000# users, using SAMBA or Netatalk, you may consider setting this option 1001# and keeping all those users' directories on a filesystem that is 1002# mounted with the suiddir option. This gives new files the same 1003# ownership as the directory (similar to group). It's a security hole 1004# if you let these users run programs, so confine it to file-servers 1005# (but it'll save you lots of headaches in those cases). Root owned 1006# directories are exempt and X bits are cleared. The suid bit must be 1007# set on the directory as well; see chmod(1) PC owners can't see/set 1008# ownerships so they keep getting their toes trodden on. This saves 1009# you all the support calls as the filesystem it's used on will act as 1010# they expect: "It's my dir so it must be my file". 1011# 1012options SUIDDIR 1013 1014# NFS options: 1015options NFS_MINATTRTIMO=3 # VREG attrib cache timeout in sec 1016options NFS_MAXATTRTIMO=60 1017options NFS_MINDIRATTRTIMO=30 # VDIR attrib cache timeout in sec 1018options NFS_MAXDIRATTRTIMO=60 1019options NFS_GATHERDELAY=10 # Default write gather delay (msec) 1020options NFS_WDELAYHASHSIZ=16 # and with this 1021options NFS_DEBUG # Enable NFS Debugging 1022 1023# Coda stuff: 1024options CODA #CODA filesystem. 1025device vcoda #coda minicache <-> venus comm. 1026# Use the old Coda 5.x venus<->kernel interface instead of the new 1027# realms-aware 6.x protocol. 1028#options CODA_COMPAT_5 1029 1030# 1031# Add support for the EXT2FS filesystem of Linux fame. Be a bit 1032# careful with this - the ext2fs code has a tendency to lag behind 1033# changes and not be exercised very much, so mounting read/write could 1034# be dangerous (and even mounting read only could result in panics.) 1035# 1036options EXT2FS 1037 1038# 1039# Add support for the ReiserFS filesystem (used in Linux). Currently, 1040# this is limited to read-only access. 1041# 1042options REISERFS 1043 1044# 1045# Add support for the SGI XFS filesystem. Currently, 1046# this is limited to read-only access. 1047# 1048options XFS 1049 1050# Use real implementations of the aio_* system calls. There are numerous 1051# stability and security issues in the current aio code that make it 1052# unsuitable for inclusion on machines with untrusted local users. 1053options VFS_AIO 1054 1055# Cryptographically secure random number generator; /dev/random 1056device random 1057 1058# The system memory devices; /dev/mem, /dev/kmem 1059device mem 1060 1061# Optional character code conversion support with LIBICONV. 1062# Each option requires their base file system and LIBICONV. 1063options CD9660_ICONV 1064options MSDOSFS_ICONV 1065options NTFS_ICONV 1066options UDF_ICONV 1067 1068 1069##################################################################### 1070# POSIX P1003.1B 1071 1072# Real time extensions added in the 1993 POSIX 1073# _KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING: Build in _POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING 1074 1075options _KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING 1076# p1003_1b_semaphores are very experimental, 1077# user should be ready to assist in debugging if problems arise. 1078options P1003_1B_SEMAPHORES 1079 1080# POSIX message queue 1081options P1003_1B_MQUEUE 1082 1083##################################################################### 1084# SECURITY POLICY PARAMETERS 1085 1086# Support for BSM audit 1087options AUDIT 1088 1089# Support for Mandatory Access Control (MAC): 1090options MAC 1091options MAC_BIBA 1092options MAC_BSDEXTENDED 1093options MAC_IFOFF 1094options MAC_LOMAC 1095options MAC_MLS 1096options MAC_NONE 1097options MAC_PARTITION 1098options MAC_PORTACL 1099options MAC_SEEOTHERUIDS 1100options MAC_STUB 1101options MAC_TEST 1102 1103 1104##################################################################### 1105# CLOCK OPTIONS 1106 1107# The granularity of operation is controlled by the kernel option HZ whose 1108# default value (1000 on most architectures) means a granularity of 1ms 1109# (1s/HZ). Historically, the default was 100, but finer granularity is 1110# required for DUMMYNET and other systems on modern hardware. There are 1111# reasonable arguments that HZ should, in fact, be 100 still; consider, 1112# that reducing the granularity too much might cause excessive overhead in 1113# clock interrupt processing, potentially causing ticks to be missed and thus 1114# actually reducing the accuracy of operation. 1115 1116options HZ=100 1117 1118# Enable support for the kernel PLL to use an external PPS signal, 1119# under supervision of [x]ntpd(8) 1120# More info in ntpd documentation: http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~ntp 1121 1122options PPS_SYNC 1123 1124 1125##################################################################### 1126# SCSI DEVICES 1127 1128# SCSI DEVICE CONFIGURATION 1129 1130# The SCSI subsystem consists of the `base' SCSI code, a number of 1131# high-level SCSI device `type' drivers, and the low-level host-adapter 1132# device drivers. The host adapters are listed in the ISA and PCI 1133# device configuration sections below. 1134# 1135# It is possible to wire down your SCSI devices so that a given bus, 1136# target, and LUN always come on line as the same device unit. In 1137# earlier versions the unit numbers were assigned in the order that 1138# the devices were probed on the SCSI bus. This means that if you 1139# removed a disk drive, you may have had to rewrite your /etc/fstab 1140# file, and also that you had to be careful when adding a new disk 1141# as it may have been probed earlier and moved your device configuration 1142# around. (See also option GEOM_VOL for a different solution to this 1143# problem.) 1144 1145# This old behavior is maintained as the default behavior. The unit 1146# assignment begins with the first non-wired down unit for a device 1147# type. For example, if you wire a disk as "da3" then the first 1148# non-wired disk will be assigned da4. 1149 1150# The syntax for wiring down devices is: 1151 1152hint.scbus.0.at="ahc0" 1153hint.scbus.1.at="ahc1" 1154hint.scbus.1.bus="0" 1155hint.scbus.3.at="ahc2" 1156hint.scbus.3.bus="0" 1157hint.scbus.2.at="ahc2" 1158hint.scbus.2.bus="1" 1159hint.da.0.at="scbus0" 1160hint.da.0.target="0" 1161hint.da.0.unit="0" 1162hint.da.1.at="scbus3" 1163hint.da.1.target="1" 1164hint.da.2.at="scbus2" 1165hint.da.2.target="3" 1166hint.sa.1.at="scbus1" 1167hint.sa.1.target="6" 1168 1169# "units" (SCSI logical unit number) that are not specified are 1170# treated as if specified as LUN 0. 1171 1172# All SCSI devices allocate as many units as are required. 1173 1174# The ch driver drives SCSI Media Changer ("jukebox") devices. 1175# 1176# The da driver drives SCSI Direct Access ("disk") and Optical Media 1177# ("WORM") devices. 1178# 1179# The sa driver drives SCSI Sequential Access ("tape") devices. 1180# 1181# The cd driver drives SCSI Read Only Direct Access ("cd") devices. 1182# 1183# The ses driver drives SCSI Environment Services ("ses") and 1184# SAF-TE ("SCSI Accessible Fault-Tolerant Enclosure") devices. 1185# 1186# The pt driver drives SCSI Processor devices. 1187# 1188# The sg driver provides a passthrough API that is compatible with the 1189# Linux SG driver. It will work in conjunction with the COMPAT_LINUX 1190# option to run linux SG apps. It can also stand on its own and provide 1191# source level API compatiblity for porting apps to FreeBSD. 1192# 1193# Target Mode support is provided here but also requires that a SIM 1194# (SCSI Host Adapter Driver) provide support as well. 1195# 1196# The targ driver provides target mode support as a Processor type device. 1197# It exists to give the minimal context necessary to respond to Inquiry 1198# commands. There is a sample user application that shows how the rest 1199# of the command support might be done in /usr/share/examples/scsi_target. 1200# 1201# The targbh driver provides target mode support and exists to respond 1202# to incoming commands that do not otherwise have a logical unit assigned 1203# to them. 1204# 1205# The "unknown" device (uk? in pre-2.0.5) is now part of the base SCSI 1206# configuration as the "pass" driver. 1207 1208device scbus #base SCSI code 1209device ch #SCSI media changers 1210device da #SCSI direct access devices (aka disks) 1211device sa #SCSI tapes 1212device cd #SCSI CD-ROMs 1213device ses #SCSI Environmental Services (and SAF-TE) 1214device pt #SCSI processor 1215device targ #SCSI Target Mode Code 1216device targbh #SCSI Target Mode Blackhole Device 1217device pass #CAM passthrough driver 1218device sg #Linux SCSI passthrough 1219 1220# CAM OPTIONS: 1221# debugging options: 1222# -- NOTE -- If you specify one of the bus/target/lun options, you must 1223# specify them all! 1224# CAMDEBUG: When defined enables debugging macros 1225# CAM_DEBUG_BUS: Debug the given bus. Use -1 to debug all busses. 1226# CAM_DEBUG_TARGET: Debug the given target. Use -1 to debug all targets. 1227# CAM_DEBUG_LUN: Debug the given lun. Use -1 to debug all luns. 1228# CAM_DEBUG_FLAGS: OR together CAM_DEBUG_INFO, CAM_DEBUG_TRACE, 1229# CAM_DEBUG_SUBTRACE, and CAM_DEBUG_CDB 1230# 1231# CAM_MAX_HIGHPOWER: Maximum number of concurrent high power (start unit) cmds 1232# SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS: When defined disables sense descriptions 1233# SCSI_NO_OP_STRINGS: When defined disables opcode descriptions 1234# SCSI_DELAY: The number of MILLISECONDS to freeze the SIM (scsi adapter) 1235# queue after a bus reset, and the number of milliseconds to 1236# freeze the device queue after a bus device reset. This 1237# can be changed at boot and runtime with the 1238# kern.cam.scsi_delay tunable/sysctl. 1239options CAMDEBUG 1240options CAM_DEBUG_BUS=-1 1241options CAM_DEBUG_TARGET=-1 1242options CAM_DEBUG_LUN=-1 1243options CAM_DEBUG_FLAGS=(CAM_DEBUG_INFO|CAM_DEBUG_TRACE|CAM_DEBUG_CDB) 1244options CAM_MAX_HIGHPOWER=4 1245options SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS 1246options SCSI_NO_OP_STRINGS 1247options SCSI_DELAY=5000 # Be pessimistic about Joe SCSI device 1248 1249# Options for the CAM CDROM driver: 1250# CHANGER_MIN_BUSY_SECONDS: Guaranteed minimum time quantum for a changer LUN 1251# CHANGER_MAX_BUSY_SECONDS: Maximum time quantum per changer LUN, only 1252# enforced if there is I/O waiting for another LUN 1253# The compiled in defaults for these variables are 2 and 10 seconds, 1254# respectively. 1255# 1256# These can also be changed on the fly with the following sysctl variables: 1257# kern.cam.cd.changer.min_busy_seconds 1258# kern.cam.cd.changer.max_busy_seconds 1259# 1260options CHANGER_MIN_BUSY_SECONDS=2 1261options CHANGER_MAX_BUSY_SECONDS=10 1262 1263# Options for the CAM sequential access driver: 1264# SA_IO_TIMEOUT: Timeout for read/write/wfm operations, in minutes 1265# SA_SPACE_TIMEOUT: Timeout for space operations, in minutes 1266# SA_REWIND_TIMEOUT: Timeout for rewind operations, in minutes 1267# SA_ERASE_TIMEOUT: Timeout for erase operations, in minutes 1268# SA_1FM_AT_EOD: Default to model which only has a default one filemark at EOT. 1269options SA_IO_TIMEOUT=4 1270options SA_SPACE_TIMEOUT=60 1271options SA_REWIND_TIMEOUT=(2*60) 1272options SA_ERASE_TIMEOUT=(4*60) 1273options SA_1FM_AT_EOD 1274 1275# Optional timeout for the CAM processor target (pt) device 1276# This is specified in seconds. The default is 60 seconds. 1277options SCSI_PT_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT=60 1278 1279# Optional enable of doing SES passthrough on other devices (e.g., disks) 1280# 1281# Normally disabled because a lot of newer SCSI disks report themselves 1282# as having SES capabilities, but this can then clot up attempts to build 1283# build a topology with the SES device that's on the box these drives 1284# are in.... 1285options SES_ENABLE_PASSTHROUGH 1286 1287 1288##################################################################### 1289# MISCELLANEOUS DEVICES AND OPTIONS 1290 1291device pty #BSD-style compatibility pseudo ttys 1292device nmdm #back-to-back tty devices 1293device md #Memory/malloc disk 1294device snp #Snoop device - to look at pty/vty/etc.. 1295device ccd #Concatenated disk driver 1296device firmware #firmware(9) support 1297 1298# Kernel side iconv library 1299options LIBICONV 1300 1301# Size of the kernel message buffer. Should be N * pagesize. 1302options MSGBUF_SIZE=40960 1303 1304 1305##################################################################### 1306# HARDWARE DEVICE CONFIGURATION 1307 1308# For ISA the required hints are listed. 1309# EISA, MCA, PCI, CardBus, SD/MMC and pccard are self identifying buses, so 1310# no hints are needed. 1311 1312# 1313# Mandatory devices: 1314# 1315 1316# These options are valid for other keyboard drivers as well. 1317options KBD_DISABLE_KEYMAP_LOAD # refuse to load a keymap 1318options KBD_INSTALL_CDEV # install a CDEV entry in /dev 1319 1320options FB_DEBUG # Frame buffer debugging 1321 1322device splash # Splash screen and screen saver support 1323 1324# Various screen savers. 1325device blank_saver 1326device daemon_saver 1327device dragon_saver 1328device fade_saver 1329device fire_saver 1330device green_saver 1331device logo_saver 1332device rain_saver 1333device snake_saver 1334device star_saver 1335device warp_saver 1336 1337# The syscons console driver (SCO color console compatible). 1338device sc 1339hint.sc.0.at="isa" 1340options MAXCONS=16 # number of virtual consoles 1341options SC_ALT_MOUSE_IMAGE # simplified mouse cursor in text mode 1342options SC_DFLT_FONT # compile font in 1343makeoptions SC_DFLT_FONT=cp850 1344options SC_DISABLE_KDBKEY # disable `debug' key 1345options SC_DISABLE_REBOOT # disable reboot key sequence 1346options SC_HISTORY_SIZE=200 # number of history buffer lines 1347options SC_MOUSE_CHAR=0x3 # char code for text mode mouse cursor 1348options SC_PIXEL_MODE # add support for the raster text mode 1349 1350# The following options will let you change the default colors of syscons. 1351options SC_NORM_ATTR=(FG_GREEN|BG_BLACK) 1352options SC_NORM_REV_ATTR=(FG_YELLOW|BG_GREEN) 1353options SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTR=(FG_RED|BG_BLACK) 1354options SC_KERNEL_CONS_REV_ATTR=(FG_BLACK|BG_RED) 1355 1356# The following options will let you change the default behaviour of 1357# cut-n-paste feature 1358options SC_CUT_SPACES2TABS # convert leading spaces into tabs 1359options SC_CUT_SEPCHARS=\"x09\" # set of characters that delimit words 1360 # (default is single space - \"x20\") 1361 1362# If you have a two button mouse, you may want to add the following option 1363# to use the right button of the mouse to paste text. 1364options SC_TWOBUTTON_MOUSE 1365 1366# You can selectively disable features in syscons. 1367options SC_NO_CUTPASTE 1368options SC_NO_FONT_LOADING 1369options SC_NO_HISTORY 1370options SC_NO_MODE_CHANGE 1371options SC_NO_SYSMOUSE 1372options SC_NO_SUSPEND_VTYSWITCH 1373 1374# `flags' for sc 1375# 0x80 Put the video card in the VESA 800x600 dots, 16 color mode 1376# 0x100 Probe for a keyboard device periodically if one is not present 1377 1378# Enable experimental features of the syscons terminal emulator (teken). 1379options TEKEN_UTF8 # UTF-8 output handling 1380options TEKEN_XTERM # xterm-style terminal emulation 1381 1382# 1383# Optional devices: 1384# 1385 1386# 1387# SCSI host adapters: 1388# 1389# adv: All Narrow SCSI bus AdvanSys controllers. 1390# adw: Second Generation AdvanSys controllers including the ADV940UW. 1391# aha: Adaptec 154x/1535/1640 1392# ahb: Adaptec 174x EISA controllers 1393# ahc: Adaptec 274x/284x/2910/293x/294x/394x/3950x/3960x/398X/4944/ 1394# 19160x/29160x, aic7770/aic78xx 1395# ahd: Adaptec 29320/39320 Controllers. 1396# aic: Adaptec 6260/6360, APA-1460 (PC Card), NEC PC9801-100 (C-BUS) 1397# amd: Support for the AMD 53C974 SCSI host adapter chip as found on devices 1398# such as the Tekram DC-390(T). 1399# bt: Most Buslogic controllers: including BT-445, BT-54x, BT-64x, BT-74x, 1400# BT-75x, BT-946, BT-948, BT-956, BT-958, SDC3211B, SDC3211F, SDC3222F 1401# esp: NCR53c9x. Only for SBUS hardware right now. 1402# isp: Qlogic ISP 1020, 1040 and 1040B PCI SCSI host adapters, 1403# ISP 1240 Dual Ultra SCSI, ISP 1080 and 1280 (Dual) Ultra2, 1404# ISP 12160 Ultra3 SCSI, 1405# Qlogic ISP 2100 and ISP 2200 1Gb Fibre Channel host adapters. 1406# Qlogic ISP 2300 and ISP 2312 2Gb Fibre Channel host adapters. 1407# Qlogic ISP 2322 and ISP 6322 2Gb Fibre Channel host adapters. 1408# ispfw: Firmware module for Qlogic host adapters 1409# mpt: LSI-Logic MPT/Fusion 53c1020 or 53c1030 Ultra4 1410# or FC9x9 Fibre Channel host adapters. 1411# ncr: NCR 53C810, 53C825 self-contained SCSI host adapters. 1412# sym: Symbios/Logic 53C8XX family of PCI-SCSI I/O processors: 1413# 53C810, 53C810A, 53C815, 53C825, 53C825A, 53C860, 53C875, 1414# 53C876, 53C885, 53C895, 53C895A, 53C896, 53C897, 53C1510D, 1415# 53C1010-33, 53C1010-66. 1416# trm: Tekram DC395U/UW/F DC315U adapters. 1417# wds: WD7000 1418 1419# 1420# Note that the order is important in order for Buslogic ISA/EISA cards to be 1421# probed correctly. 1422# 1423device bt 1424hint.bt.0.at="isa" 1425hint.bt.0.port="0x330" 1426device adv 1427hint.adv.0.at="isa" 1428device adw 1429device aha 1430hint.aha.0.at="isa" 1431device aic 1432hint.aic.0.at="isa" 1433device ahb 1434device ahc 1435device ahd 1436device amd 1437device esp 1438device iscsi_initiator 1439device isp 1440hint.isp.0.disable="1" 1441hint.isp.0.role="3" 1442hint.isp.0.prefer_iomap="1" 1443hint.isp.0.prefer_memmap="1" 1444hint.isp.0.fwload_disable="1" 1445hint.isp.0.ignore_nvram="1" 1446hint.isp.0.fullduplex="1" 1447hint.isp.0.topology="lport" 1448hint.isp.0.topology="nport" 1449hint.isp.0.topology="lport-only" 1450hint.isp.0.topology="nport-only" 1451# we can't get u_int64_t types, nor can we get strings if it's got 1452# a leading 0x, hence this silly dodge. 1453hint.isp.0.portwnn="w50000000aaaa0000" 1454hint.isp.0.nodewnn="w50000000aaaa0001" 1455device ispfw 1456device mpt 1457device ncr 1458device sym 1459device trm 1460device wds 1461hint.wds.0.at="isa" 1462hint.wds.0.port="0x350" 1463hint.wds.0.irq="11" 1464hint.wds.0.drq="6" 1465 1466# The aic7xxx driver will attempt to use memory mapped I/O for all PCI 1467# controllers that have it configured only if this option is set. Unfortunately, 1468# this doesn't work on some motherboards, which prevents it from being the 1469# default. 1470options AHC_ALLOW_MEMIO 1471 1472# Dump the contents of the ahc controller configuration PROM. 1473options AHC_DUMP_EEPROM 1474 1475# Bitmap of units to enable targetmode operations. 1476options AHC_TMODE_ENABLE 1477 1478# Compile in Aic7xxx Debugging code. 1479options AHC_DEBUG 1480 1481# Aic7xxx driver debugging options. See sys/dev/aic7xxx/aic7xxx.h 1482options AHC_DEBUG_OPTS 1483 1484# Print register bitfields in debug output. Adds ~128k to driver 1485# See ahc(4). 1486options AHC_REG_PRETTY_PRINT 1487 1488# Compile in aic79xx debugging code. 1489options AHD_DEBUG 1490 1491# Aic79xx driver debugging options. Adds ~215k to driver. See ahd(4). 1492options AHD_DEBUG_OPTS=0xFFFFFFFF 1493 1494# Print human-readable register definitions when debugging 1495options AHD_REG_PRETTY_PRINT 1496 1497# Bitmap of units to enable targetmode operations. 1498options AHD_TMODE_ENABLE 1499 1500# The adw driver will attempt to use memory mapped I/O for all PCI 1501# controllers that have it configured only if this option is set. 1502options ADW_ALLOW_MEMIO 1503 1504# Options used in dev/iscsi (Software iSCSI stack) 1505# 1506options ISCSI_INITIATOR_DEBUG=9 1507 1508# Options used in dev/isp/ (Qlogic SCSI/FC driver). 1509# 1510# ISP_TARGET_MODE - enable target mode operation 1511# 1512options ISP_TARGET_MODE=1 1513# 1514# ISP_DEFAULT_ROLES - default role 1515# none=0 1516# target=1 1517# initiator=2 1518# both=3 (not supported currently) 1519# 1520options ISP_DEFAULT_ROLES=2 1521 1522# Options used in dev/sym/ (Symbios SCSI driver). 1523#options SYM_SETUP_LP_PROBE_MAP #-Low Priority Probe Map (bits) 1524 # Allows the ncr to take precedence 1525 # 1 (1<<0) -> 810a, 860 1526 # 2 (1<<1) -> 825a, 875, 885, 895 1527 # 4 (1<<2) -> 895a, 896, 1510d 1528#options SYM_SETUP_SCSI_DIFF #-HVD support for 825a, 875, 885 1529 # disabled:0 (default), enabled:1 1530#options SYM_SETUP_PCI_PARITY #-PCI parity checking 1531 # disabled:0, enabled:1 (default) 1532#options SYM_SETUP_MAX_LUN #-Number of LUNs supported 1533 # default:8, range:[1..64] 1534 1535# The 'dpt' driver provides support for old DPT controllers (http://www.dpt.com/). 1536# These have hardware RAID-{0,1,5} support, and do multi-initiator I/O. 1537# The DPT controllers are commonly re-licensed under other brand-names - 1538# some controllers by Olivetti, Dec, HP, AT&T, SNI, AST, Alphatronic, NEC and 1539# Compaq are actually DPT controllers. 1540# 1541# See src/sys/dev/dpt for debugging and other subtle options. 1542# DPT_MEASURE_PERFORMANCE Enables a set of (semi)invasive metrics. Various 1543# instruments are enabled. The tools in 1544# /usr/sbin/dpt_* assume these to be enabled. 1545# DPT_HANDLE_TIMEOUTS Normally device timeouts are handled by the DPT. 1546# If you ant the driver to handle timeouts, enable 1547# this option. If your system is very busy, this 1548# option will create more trouble than solve. 1549# DPT_TIMEOUT_FACTOR Used to compute the excessive amount of time to 1550# wait when timing out with the above option. 1551# DPT_DEBUG_xxxx These are controllable from sys/dev/dpt/dpt.h 1552# DPT_LOST_IRQ When enabled, will try, once per second, to catch 1553# any interrupt that got lost. Seems to help in some 1554# DPT-firmware/Motherboard combinations. Minimal 1555# cost, great benefit. 1556# DPT_RESET_HBA Make "reset" actually reset the controller 1557# instead of fudging it. Only enable this if you 1558# are 100% certain you need it. 1559 1560device dpt 1561 1562# DPT options 1563#!CAM# options DPT_MEASURE_PERFORMANCE 1564#!CAM# options DPT_HANDLE_TIMEOUTS 1565options DPT_TIMEOUT_FACTOR=4 1566options DPT_LOST_IRQ 1567options DPT_RESET_HBA 1568 1569# 1570# Compaq "CISS" RAID controllers (SmartRAID 5* series) 1571# These controllers have a SCSI-like interface, and require the 1572# CAM infrastructure. 1573# 1574device ciss 1575 1576# 1577# Intel Integrated RAID controllers. 1578# This driver was developed and is maintained by Intel. Contacts 1579# at Intel for this driver are 1580# "Kannanthanam, Boji T" <boji.t.kannanthanam@intel.com> and 1581# "Leubner, Achim" <achim.leubner@intel.com>. 1582# 1583device iir 1584 1585# 1586# Mylex AcceleRAID and eXtremeRAID controllers with v6 and later 1587# firmware. These controllers have a SCSI-like interface, and require 1588# the CAM infrastructure. 1589# 1590device mly 1591 1592# 1593# Compaq Smart RAID, Mylex DAC960 and AMI MegaRAID controllers. Only 1594# one entry is needed; the code will find and configure all supported 1595# controllers. 1596# 1597device ida # Compaq Smart RAID 1598device mlx # Mylex DAC960 1599device amr # AMI MegaRAID 1600device amrp # SCSI Passthrough interface (optional, CAM req.) 1601device mfi # LSI MegaRAID SAS 1602device mfip # LSI MegaRAID SAS passthrough, requires CAM 1603options MFI_DEBUG 1604 1605# 1606# 3ware ATA RAID 1607# 1608device twe # 3ware ATA RAID 1609 1610# 1611# The 'ATA' driver supports all ATA and ATAPI devices, including PC Card 1612# devices. You only need one "device ata" for it to find all 1613# PCI and PC Card ATA/ATAPI devices on modern machines. 1614device ata 1615device atadisk # ATA disk drives 1616device ataraid # ATA RAID drives 1617device atapicd # ATAPI CDROM drives 1618device atapifd # ATAPI floppy drives 1619device atapist # ATAPI tape drives 1620device atapicam # emulate ATAPI devices as SCSI ditto via CAM 1621 # needs CAM to be present (scbus & pass) 1622# 1623# For older non-PCI, non-PnPBIOS systems, these are the hints lines to add: 1624hint.ata.0.at="isa" 1625hint.ata.0.port="0x1f0" 1626hint.ata.0.irq="14" 1627hint.ata.1.at="isa" 1628hint.ata.1.port="0x170" 1629hint.ata.1.irq="15" 1630 1631# 1632# The following options are valid on the ATA driver: 1633# 1634# ATA_STATIC_ID: controller numbering is static ie depends on location 1635# else the device numbers are dynamically allocated. 1636 1637options ATA_STATIC_ID 1638 1639# 1640# Standard floppy disk controllers and floppy tapes, supports 1641# the Y-E DATA External FDD (PC Card) 1642# 1643device fdc 1644hint.fdc.0.at="isa" 1645hint.fdc.0.port="0x3F0" 1646hint.fdc.0.irq="6" 1647hint.fdc.0.drq="2" 1648# 1649# FDC_DEBUG enables floppy debugging. Since the debug output is huge, you 1650# gotta turn it actually on by setting the variable fd_debug with DDB, 1651# however. 1652options FDC_DEBUG 1653# 1654# Activate this line if you happen to have an Insight floppy tape. 1655# Probing them proved to be dangerous for people with floppy disks only, 1656# so it's "hidden" behind a flag: 1657#hint.fdc.0.flags="1" 1658 1659# Specify floppy devices 1660hint.fd.0.at="fdc0" 1661hint.fd.0.drive="0" 1662hint.fd.1.at="fdc0" 1663hint.fd.1.drive="1" 1664 1665# 1666# uart: newbusified driver for serial interfaces. It consolidates the sio(4), 1667# sab(4) and zs(4) drivers. 1668# 1669device uart 1670 1671# Options for uart(4) 1672options UART_PPS_ON_CTS # Do time pulse capturing using CTS 1673 # instead of DCD. 1674 1675# The following hint should only be used for pure ISA devices. It is not 1676# needed otherwise. Use of hints is strongly discouraged. 1677hint.uart.0.at="isa" 1678 1679# The following 3 hints are used when the UART is a system device (i.e., a 1680# console or debug port), but only on platforms that don't have any other 1681# means to pass the information to the kernel. The unit number of the hint 1682# is only used to bundle the hints together. There is no relation to the 1683# unit number of the probed UART. 1684hint.uart.0.port="0x3f8" 1685hint.uart.0.flags="0x10" 1686hint.uart.0.baud="115200" 1687 1688# `flags' for serial drivers that support consoles like sio(4) and uart(4): 1689# 0x10 enable console support for this unit. Other console flags 1690# (if applicable) are ignored unless this is set. Enabling 1691# console support does not make the unit the preferred console. 1692# Boot with -h or set boot_serial=YES in the loader. For sio(4) 1693# specifically, the 0x20 flag can also be set (see above). 1694# Currently, at most one unit can have console support; the 1695# first one (in config file order) with this flag set is 1696# preferred. Setting this flag for sio0 gives the old behaviour. 1697# 0x80 use this port for serial line gdb support in ddb. Also known 1698# as debug port. 1699# 1700 1701# Options for serial drivers that support consoles: 1702options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER # A BREAK on a serial console goes to 1703 # ddb, if available. 1704 1705# Solaris implements a new BREAK which is initiated by a character 1706# sequence CR ~ ^b which is similar to a familiar pattern used on 1707# Sun servers by the Remote Console. There are FreeBSD extentions: 1708# CR ~ ^p requests force panic and CR ~ ^r requests a clean reboot. 1709options ALT_BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER 1710 1711# Serial Communications Controller 1712# Supports the Siemens SAB 82532 and Zilog Z8530 multi-channel 1713# communications controllers. 1714device scc 1715 1716# PCI Universal Communications driver 1717# Supports various multi port PCI I/O cards. 1718device puc 1719 1720# 1721# Network interfaces: 1722# 1723# MII bus support is required for some PCI 10/100 ethernet NICs, 1724# namely those which use MII-compliant transceivers or implement 1725# transceiver control interfaces that operate like an MII. Adding 1726# "device miibus" to the kernel config pulls in support for 1727# the generic miibus API and all of the PHY drivers, including a 1728# generic one for PHYs that aren't specifically handled by an 1729# individual driver. 1730device miibus 1731 1732# an: Aironet 4500/4800 802.11 wireless adapters. Supports the PCMCIA, 1733# PCI and ISA varieties. 1734# ae: Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Attansic/Atheros 1735# L2 PCI-Express FastEthernet controllers. 1736# age: Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Attansic/Atheros 1737# L1 PCI express gigabit ethernet controllers. 1738# ale: Support for Atheros AR8121/AR8113/AR8114 PCIe ethernet controllers. 1739# bce: Broadcom NetXtreme II (BCM5706/BCM5708) PCI/PCIe Gigabit Ethernet 1740# adapters. 1741# bfe: Broadcom BCM4401 Ethernet adapter. 1742# bge: Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Broadcom 1743# BCM570x family of controllers, including the 3Com 3c996-T, 1744# the Netgear GA302T, the SysKonnect SK-9D21 and SK-9D41, and 1745# the embedded gigE NICs on Dell PowerEdge 2550 servers. 1746# cm: Arcnet SMC COM90c26 / SMC COM90c56 1747# (and SMC COM90c66 in '56 compatibility mode) adapters. 1748# dc: Support for PCI fast ethernet adapters based on the DEC/Intel 21143 1749# and various workalikes including: 1750# the ADMtek AL981 Comet and AN985 Centaur, the ASIX Electronics 1751# AX88140A and AX88141, the Davicom DM9100 and DM9102, the Lite-On 1752# 82c168 and 82c169 PNIC, the Lite-On/Macronix LC82C115 PNIC II 1753# and the Macronix 98713/98713A/98715/98715A/98725 PMAC. This driver 1754# replaces the old al, ax, dm, pn and mx drivers. List of brands: 1755# Digital DE500-BA, Kingston KNE100TX, D-Link DFE-570TX, SOHOware SFA110, 1756# SVEC PN102-TX, CNet Pro110B, 120A, and 120B, Compex RL100-TX, 1757# LinkSys LNE100TX, LNE100TX V2.0, Jaton XpressNet, Alfa Inc GFC2204, 1758# KNE110TX. 1759# de: Digital Equipment DC21040 1760# em: Intel Pro/1000 Gigabit Ethernet 82542, 82543, 82544 based adapters. 1761# igb: Intel Pro/1000 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet: 82575 and later adapters. 1762# ep: 3Com 3C509, 3C529, 3C556, 3C562D, 3C563D, 3C572, 3C574X, 3C579, 3C589 1763# and PC Card devices using these chipsets. 1764# ex: Intel EtherExpress Pro/10 and other i82595-based adapters, 1765# Olicom Ethernet PC Card devices. 1766# fe: Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet 1767# fea: DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter 1768# fpa: Support for the Digital DEFPA PCI FDDI. `device fddi' is also needed. 1769# fxp: Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B 1770# (hint of prefer_iomap can be done to prefer I/O instead of Mem mapping) 1771# gem: Apple GMAC/Sun ERI/Sun GEM 1772# hme: Sun HME (Happy Meal Ethernet) 1773# jme: JMicron JMC260 Fast Ethernet/JMC250 Gigabit Ethernet based adapters. 1774# le: AMD Am7900 LANCE and Am79C9xx PCnet 1775# lge: Support for PCI gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Level 1 1776# LXT1001 NetCellerator chipset. This includes the D-Link DGE-500SX, 1777# SMC TigerCard 1000 (SMC9462SX), and some Addtron cards. 1778# msk: Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Marvell/SysKonnect 1779# Yukon II Gigabit controllers, including 88E8021, 88E8022, 88E8061, 1780# 88E8062, 88E8035, 88E8036, 88E8038, 88E8050, 88E8052, 88E8053, 1781# 88E8055, 88E8056 and D-Link 560T/550SX. 1782# lmc: Support for the LMC/SBE wide-area network interface cards. 1783# my: Myson Fast Ethernet (MTD80X, MTD89X) 1784# nge: Support for PCI gigabit ethernet adapters based on the National 1785# Semiconductor DP83820 and DP83821 chipset. This includes the 1786# SMC EZ Card 1000 (SMC9462TX), D-Link DGE-500T, Asante FriendlyNet 1787# GigaNIX 1000TA and 1000TPC, the Addtron AEG320T, the Surecom 1788# EP-320G-TX and the Netgear GA622T. 1789# pcn: Support for PCI fast ethernet adapters based on the AMD Am79c97x 1790# PCnet-FAST, PCnet-FAST+, PCnet-FAST III, PCnet-PRO and PCnet-Home 1791# chipsets. These can also be handled by the le(4) driver if the 1792# pcn(4) driver is left out of the kernel. The le(4) driver does not 1793# support the additional features like the MII bus and burst mode of 1794# the PCnet-FAST and greater chipsets though. 1795# re: RealTek 8139C+/8169/816xS/811xS/8101E PCI/PCIe Ethernet adapter 1796# rl: Support for PCI fast ethernet adapters based on the RealTek 8129/8139 1797# chipset. Note that the RealTek driver defaults to using programmed 1798# I/O to do register accesses because memory mapped mode seems to cause 1799# severe lockups on SMP hardware. This driver also supports the 1800# Accton EN1207D `Cheetah' adapter, which uses a chip called 1801# the MPX 5030/5038, which is either a RealTek in disguise or a 1802# RealTek workalike. Note that the D-Link DFE-530TX+ uses the RealTek 1803# chipset and is supported by this driver, not the 'vr' driver. 1804# sf: Support for Adaptec Duralink PCI fast ethernet adapters based on the 1805# Adaptec AIC-6915 "starfire" controller. 1806# This includes dual and quad port cards, as well as one 100baseFX card. 1807# Most of these are 64-bit PCI devices, except for one single port 1808# card which is 32-bit. 1809# sis: Support for NICs based on the Silicon Integrated Systems SiS 900, 1810# SiS 7016 and NS DP83815 PCI fast ethernet controller chips. 1811# sk: Support for the SysKonnect SK-984x series PCI gigabit ethernet NICs. 1812# This includes the SK-9841 and SK-9842 single port cards (single mode 1813# and multimode fiber) and the SK-9843 and SK-9844 dual port cards 1814# (also single mode and multimode). 1815# The driver will autodetect the number of ports on the card and 1816# attach each one as a separate network interface. 1817# sn: Support for ISA and PC Card Ethernet devices using the 1818# SMC91C90/92/94/95 chips. 1819# ste: Sundance Technologies ST201 PCI fast ethernet controller, includes 1820# the D-Link DFE-550TX. 1821# stge: Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Sundance/Tamarack 1822# TC9021 family of controllers, including the Sundance ST2021/ST2023, 1823# the Sundance/Tamarack TC9021, the D-Link DL-4000 and ASUS NX1101. 1824# ti: Support for PCI gigabit ethernet NICs based on the Alteon Networks 1825# Tigon 1 and Tigon 2 chipsets. This includes the Alteon AceNIC, the 1826# 3Com 3c985, the Netgear GA620 and various others. Note that you will 1827# probably want to bump up kern.ipc.nmbclusters a lot to use this driver. 1828# tl: Support for the Texas Instruments TNETE100 series 'ThunderLAN' 1829# cards and integrated ethernet controllers. This includes several 1830# Compaq Netelligent 10/100 cards and the built-in ethernet controllers 1831# in several Compaq Prosignia, Proliant and Deskpro systems. It also 1832# supports several Olicom 10Mbps and 10/100 boards. 1833# tx: SMC 9432 TX, BTX and FTX cards. (SMC EtherPower II series) 1834# txp: Support for 3Com 3cR990 cards with the "Typhoon" chipset 1835# vr: Support for various fast ethernet adapters based on the VIA 1836# Technologies VT3043 `Rhine I' and VT86C100A `Rhine II' chips, 1837# including the D-Link DFE530TX (see 'rl' for DFE530TX+), the Hawking 1838# Technologies PN102TX, and the AOpen/Acer ALN-320. 1839# vx: 3Com 3C590 and 3C595 1840# wb: Support for fast ethernet adapters based on the Winbond W89C840F chip. 1841# Note: this is not the same as the Winbond W89C940F, which is a 1842# NE2000 clone. 1843# wi: Lucent WaveLAN/IEEE 802.11 PCMCIA adapters. Note: this supports both 1844# the PCMCIA and ISA cards: the ISA card is really a PCMCIA to ISA 1845# bridge with a PCMCIA adapter plugged into it. 1846# xe: Xircom/Intel EtherExpress Pro100/16 PC Card ethernet controller, 1847# Accton Fast EtherCard-16, Compaq Netelligent 10/100 PC Card, 1848# Toshiba 10/100 Ethernet PC Card, Xircom 16-bit Ethernet + Modem 56 1849# xl: Support for the 3Com 3c900, 3c905, 3c905B and 3c905C (Fast) 1850# Etherlink XL cards and integrated controllers. This includes the 1851# integrated 3c905B-TX chips in certain Dell Optiplex and Dell 1852# Precision desktop machines and the integrated 3c905-TX chips 1853# in Dell Latitude laptop docking stations. 1854# Also supported: 3Com 3c980(C)-TX, 3Com 3cSOHO100-TX, 3Com 3c450-TX 1855 1856# Order for ISA/EISA devices is important here 1857 1858device cm 1859hint.cm.0.at="isa" 1860hint.cm.0.port="0x2e0" 1861hint.cm.0.irq="9" 1862hint.cm.0.maddr="0xdc000" 1863device ep 1864device ex 1865device fe 1866hint.fe.0.at="isa" 1867hint.fe.0.port="0x300" 1868device fea 1869device sn 1870hint.sn.0.at="isa" 1871hint.sn.0.port="0x300" 1872hint.sn.0.irq="10" 1873device an 1874device wi 1875device xe 1876 1877# PCI Ethernet NICs that use the common MII bus controller code. 1878device ae # Attansic/Atheros L2 FastEthernet 1879device age # Attansic/Atheros L1 Gigabit Ethernet 1880device ale # Atheros AR8121/AR8113/AR8114 Ethernet 1881device bce # Broadcom BCM5706/BCM5708 Gigabit Ethernet 1882device bfe # Broadcom BCM440x 10/100 Ethernet 1883device bge # Broadcom BCM570xx Gigabit Ethernet 1884device cxgb # Chelsio T3 10 Gigabit Ethernet 1885device cxgb_t3fw # Chelsio T3 10 Gigabit Ethernet firmware 1886device dc # DEC/Intel 21143 and various workalikes 1887device et # Agere ET1310 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet 1888device fxp # Intel EtherExpress PRO/100B (82557, 82558) 1889hint.fxp.0.prefer_iomap="0" 1890device gem # Apple GMAC/Sun ERI/Sun GEM 1891device hme # Sun HME (Happy Meal Ethernet) 1892device jme # JMicron JMC250 Gigabit/JMC260 Fast Ethernet 1893device lge # Level 1 LXT1001 gigabit Ethernet 1894device msk # Marvell/SysKonnect Yukon II Gigabit Ethernet 1895device my # Myson Fast Ethernet (MTD80X, MTD89X) 1896device nge # NatSemi DP83820 gigabit Ethernet 1897device re # RealTek 8139C+/8169/8169S/8110S 1898device rl # RealTek 8129/8139 1899device pcn # AMD Am79C97x PCI 10/100 NICs 1900device sf # Adaptec AIC-6915 (``Starfire'') 1901device sis # Silicon Integrated Systems SiS 900/SiS 7016 1902device sk # SysKonnect SK-984x & SK-982x gigabit Ethernet 1903device ste # Sundance ST201 (D-Link DFE-550TX) 1904device stge # Sundance/Tamarack TC9021 gigabit Ethernet 1905device tl # Texas Instruments ThunderLAN 1906device tx # SMC EtherPower II (83c170 ``EPIC'') 1907device vr # VIA Rhine, Rhine II 1908device wb # Winbond W89C840F 1909device xl # 3Com 3c90x (``Boomerang'', ``Cyclone'') 1910 1911# PCI Ethernet NICs. 1912device de # DEC/Intel DC21x4x (``Tulip'') 1913device em # Intel Pro/1000 Gigabit Ethernet 1914device igb # Intel Pro/1000 PCIE Gigabit Ethernet 1915#device ixgbe # Intel Pro/10Gbe PCIE Ethernet 1916device le # AMD Am7900 LANCE and Am79C9xx PCnet 1917device mxge # Myricom Myri-10G 10GbE NIC 1918device nxge # Neterion Xframe 10GbE Server/Storage Adapter 1919device ti # Alteon Networks Tigon I/II gigabit Ethernet 1920device txp # 3Com 3cR990 (``Typhoon'') 1921device vx # 3Com 3c590, 3c595 (``Vortex'') 1922 1923# PCI FDDI NICs. 1924device fpa 1925 1926# PCI WAN adapters. 1927device lmc 1928 1929# Use "private" jumbo buffers allocated exclusively for the ti(4) driver. 1930# This option is incompatible with the TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT option below. 1931#options TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS 1932# Turn on the header splitting option for the ti(4) driver firmware. This 1933# only works for Tigon II chips, and has no effect for Tigon I chips. 1934options TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT 1935 1936# These two options allow manipulating the mbuf cluster size and mbuf size, 1937# respectively. Be very careful with NIC driver modules when changing 1938# these from their default values, because that can potentially cause a 1939# mismatch between the mbuf size assumed by the kernel and the mbuf size 1940# assumed by a module. The only driver that currently has the ability to 1941# detect a mismatch is ti(4). 1942options MCLSHIFT=12 # mbuf cluster shift in bits, 12 == 4KB 1943options MSIZE=512 # mbuf size in bytes 1944 1945# 1946# ATM related options (Cranor version) 1947# (note: this driver cannot be used with the HARP ATM stack) 1948# 1949# The `en' device provides support for Efficient Networks (ENI) 1950# ENI-155 PCI midway cards, and the Adaptec 155Mbps PCI ATM cards (ANA-59x0). 1951# 1952# The `hatm' device provides support for Fore/Marconi HE155 and HE622 1953# ATM PCI cards. 1954# 1955# The `fatm' device provides support for Fore PCA200E ATM PCI cards. 1956# 1957# The `patm' device provides support for IDT77252 based cards like 1958# ProSum's ProATM-155 and ProATM-25 and IDT's evaluation boards. 1959# 1960# atm device provides generic atm functions and is required for 1961# atm devices. 1962# NATM enables the netnatm protocol family that can be used to 1963# bypass TCP/IP. 1964# 1965# utopia provides the access to the ATM PHY chips and is required for en, 1966# hatm and fatm. 1967# 1968# the current driver supports only PVC operations (no atm-arp, no multicast). 1969# for more details, please read the original documents at 1970# http://www.ccrc.wustl.edu/pub/chuck/tech/bsdatm/bsdatm.html 1971# 1972device atm 1973device en 1974device fatm #Fore PCA200E 1975device hatm #Fore/Marconi HE155/622 1976device patm #IDT77252 cards (ProATM and IDT) 1977device utopia #ATM PHY driver 1978#options NATM #native ATM 1979 1980options LIBMBPOOL #needed by patm, iatm 1981 1982# 1983# Sound drivers 1984# 1985# sound: The generic sound driver. 1986# 1987 1988device sound 1989 1990# 1991# snd_*: Device-specific drivers. 1992# 1993# The flags of the device tells the device a bit more info about the 1994# device that normally is obtained through the PnP interface. 1995# bit 2..0 secondary DMA channel; 1996# bit 4 set if the board uses two dma channels; 1997# bit 15..8 board type, overrides autodetection; leave it 1998# zero if don't know what to put in (and you don't, 1999# since this is unsupported at the moment...). 2000# 2001# snd_ad1816: Analog Devices AD1816 ISA PnP/non-PnP. 2002# snd_als4000: Avance Logic ALS4000 PCI. 2003# snd_atiixp: ATI IXP 200/300/400 PCI. 2004# snd_audiocs: Crystal Semiconductor CS4231 SBus/EBus. Only 2005# for sparc64. 2006# snd_cmi: CMedia CMI8338/CMI8738 PCI. 2007# snd_cs4281: Crystal Semiconductor CS4281 PCI. 2008# snd_csa: Crystal Semiconductor CS461x/428x PCI. (except 2009# 4281) 2010# snd_ds1: Yamaha DS-1 PCI. 2011# snd_emu10k1: Creative EMU10K1 PCI and EMU10K2 (Audigy) PCI. 2012# snd_emu10kx: Creative SoundBlaster Live! and Audigy 2013# snd_envy24: VIA Envy24 and compatible, needs snd_spicds. 2014# snd_envy24ht: VIA Envy24HT and compatible, needs snd_spicds. 2015# snd_es137x: Ensoniq AudioPCI ES137x PCI. 2016# snd_ess: Ensoniq ESS ISA PnP/non-PnP, to be used in 2017# conjunction with snd_sbc. 2018# snd_fm801: Forte Media FM801 PCI. 2019# snd_gusc: Gravis UltraSound ISA PnP/non-PnP. 2020# snd_hda: Intel High Definition Audio (Controller) and 2021# compatible. 2022# snd_ich: Intel ICH AC'97 and some more audio controllers 2023# embedded in a chipset, for example nVidia 2024# nForce controllers. 2025# snd_maestro: ESS Technology Maestro-1/2x PCI. 2026# snd_maestro3: ESS Technology Maestro-3/Allegro PCI. 2027# snd_mss: Microsoft Sound System ISA PnP/non-PnP. 2028# snd_neomagic: Neomagic 256 AV/ZX PCI. 2029# snd_sb16: Creative SoundBlaster16, to be used in 2030# conjunction with snd_sbc. 2031# snd_sb8: Creative SoundBlaster (pre-16), to be used in 2032# conjunction with snd_sbc. 2033# snd_sbc: Creative SoundBlaster ISA PnP/non-PnP. 2034# Supports ESS and Avance ISA chips as well. 2035# snd_spicds: SPI codec driver, needed by Envy24/Envy24HT drivers. 2036# snd_solo: ESS Solo-1x PCI. 2037# snd_t4dwave: Trident 4DWave DX/NX PCI, Sis 7018 PCI and Acer Labs 2038# M5451 PCI. 2039# snd_via8233: VIA VT8233x PCI. 2040# snd_via82c686: VIA VT82C686A PCI. 2041# snd_vibes: S3 Sonicvibes PCI. 2042# snd_uaudio: USB audio. 2043 2044device snd_ad1816 2045device snd_als4000 2046device snd_atiixp 2047#device snd_audiocs 2048device snd_cmi 2049device snd_cs4281 2050device snd_csa 2051device snd_ds1 2052device snd_emu10k1 2053device snd_emu10kx 2054device snd_envy24 2055device snd_envy24ht 2056device snd_es137x 2057device snd_ess 2058device snd_fm801 2059device snd_gusc 2060device snd_hda 2061device snd_ich 2062device snd_maestro 2063device snd_maestro3 2064device snd_mss 2065device snd_neomagic 2066device snd_sb16 2067device snd_sb8 2068device snd_sbc 2069device snd_solo 2070device snd_spicds 2071device snd_t4dwave 2072device snd_via8233 2073device snd_via82c686 2074device snd_vibes 2075device snd_uaudio 2076 2077# For non-PnP sound cards: 2078hint.pcm.0.at="isa" 2079hint.pcm.0.irq="10" 2080hint.pcm.0.drq="1" 2081hint.pcm.0.flags="0x0" 2082hint.sbc.0.at="isa" 2083hint.sbc.0.port="0x220" 2084hint.sbc.0.irq="5" 2085hint.sbc.0.drq="1" 2086hint.sbc.0.flags="0x15" 2087hint.gusc.0.at="isa" 2088hint.gusc.0.port="0x220" 2089hint.gusc.0.irq="5" 2090hint.gusc.0.drq="1" 2091hint.gusc.0.flags="0x13" 2092 2093# 2094# IEEE-488 hardware: 2095# pcii: PCIIA cards (uPD7210 based isa cards) 2096# tnt4882: National Instruments PCI-GPIB card. 2097 2098device pcii 2099hint.pcii.0.at="isa" 2100hint.pcii.0.port="0x2e1" 2101hint.pcii.0.irq="5" 2102hint.pcii.0.drq="1" 2103 2104device tnt4882 2105 2106# 2107# Miscellaneous hardware: 2108# 2109# scd: Sony CD-ROM using proprietary (non-ATAPI) interface 2110# mcd: Mitsumi CD-ROM using proprietary (non-ATAPI) interface 2111# bktr: Brooktree bt848/848a/849a/878/879 video capture and TV Tuner board 2112# cy: Cyclades serial driver 2113# joy: joystick (including IO DATA PCJOY PC Card joystick) 2114# rc: RISCom/8 multiport card 2115# rp: Comtrol Rocketport(ISA/PCI) - single card 2116# si: Specialix SI/XIO 4-32 port terminal multiplexor 2117# cmx: OmniKey CardMan 4040 pccard smartcard reader 2118 2119# Notes on the Comtrol Rocketport driver: 2120# 2121# The exact values used for rp0 depend on how many boards you have 2122# in the system. The manufacturer's sample configs are listed as: 2123# 2124# device rp # core driver support 2125# 2126# Comtrol Rocketport ISA single card 2127# hint.rp.0.at="isa" 2128# hint.rp.0.port="0x280" 2129# 2130# If instead you have two ISA cards, one installed at 0x100 and the 2131# second installed at 0x180, then you should add the following to 2132# your kernel probe hints: 2133# hint.rp.0.at="isa" 2134# hint.rp.0.port="0x100" 2135# hint.rp.1.at="isa" 2136# hint.rp.1.port="0x180" 2137# 2138# For 4 ISA cards, it might be something like this: 2139# hint.rp.0.at="isa" 2140# hint.rp.0.port="0x180" 2141# hint.rp.1.at="isa" 2142# hint.rp.1.port="0x100" 2143# hint.rp.2.at="isa" 2144# hint.rp.2.port="0x340" 2145# hint.rp.3.at="isa" 2146# hint.rp.3.port="0x240" 2147# 2148# For PCI cards, you need no hints. 2149 2150# Mitsumi CD-ROM 2151device mcd 2152hint.mcd.0.at="isa" 2153hint.mcd.0.port="0x300" 2154# for the Sony CDU31/33A CDROM 2155device scd 2156hint.scd.0.at="isa" 2157hint.scd.0.port="0x230" 2158device joy # PnP aware, hints for non-PnP only 2159hint.joy.0.at="isa" 2160hint.joy.0.port="0x201" 2161device cmx 2162 2163# 2164# The 'bktr' device is a PCI video capture device using the Brooktree 2165# bt848/bt848a/bt849a/bt878/bt879 chipset. When used with a TV Tuner it forms a 2166# TV card, e.g. Miro PC/TV, Hauppauge WinCast/TV WinTV, VideoLogic Captivator, 2167# Intel Smart Video III, AverMedia, IMS Turbo, FlyVideo. 2168# 2169# options OVERRIDE_CARD=xxx 2170# options OVERRIDE_TUNER=xxx 2171# options OVERRIDE_MSP=1 2172# options OVERRIDE_DBX=1 2173# These options can be used to override the auto detection 2174# The current values for xxx are found in src/sys/dev/bktr/bktr_card.h 2175# Using sysctl(8) run-time overrides on a per-card basis can be made 2176# 2177# options BROOKTREE_SYSTEM_DEFAULT=BROOKTREE_PAL 2178# or 2179# options BROOKTREE_SYSTEM_DEFAULT=BROOKTREE_NTSC 2180# Specifies the default video capture mode. 2181# This is required for Dual Crystal (28&35Mhz) boards where PAL is used 2182# to prevent hangs during initialisation, e.g. VideoLogic Captivator PCI. 2183# 2184# options BKTR_USE_PLL 2185# This is required for PAL or SECAM boards with a 28Mhz crystal and no 35Mhz 2186# crystal, e.g. some new Bt878 cards. 2187# 2188# options BKTR_GPIO_ACCESS 2189# This enable IOCTLs which give user level access to the GPIO port. 2190# 2191# options BKTR_NO_MSP_RESET 2192# Prevents the MSP34xx reset. Good if you initialise the MSP in another OS first 2193# 2194# options BKTR_430_FX_MODE 2195# Switch Bt878/879 cards into Intel 430FX chipset compatibility mode. 2196# 2197# options BKTR_SIS_VIA_MODE 2198# Switch Bt878/879 cards into SIS/VIA chipset compatibility mode which is 2199# needed for some old SiS and VIA chipset motherboards. 2200# This also allows Bt878/879 chips to work on old OPTi (<1997) chipset 2201# motherboards and motherboards with bad or incomplete PCI 2.1 support. 2202# As a rough guess, old = before 1998 2203# 2204# options BKTR_NEW_MSP34XX_DRIVER 2205# Use new, more complete initialization scheme for the msp34* soundchip. 2206# Should fix stereo autodetection if the old driver does only output 2207# mono sound. 2208 2209# 2210# options BKTR_USE_FREEBSD_SMBUS 2211# Compile with FreeBSD SMBus implementation 2212# 2213# Brooktree driver has been ported to the new I2C framework. Thus, 2214# you'll need to have the following 3 lines in the kernel config. 2215# device smbus 2216# device iicbus 2217# device iicbb 2218# device iicsmb 2219# The iic and smb devices are only needed if you want to control other 2220# I2C slaves connected to the external connector of some cards. 2221# 2222device bktr 2223 2224# 2225# PC Card/PCMCIA and Cardbus 2226# 2227# cbb: pci/cardbus bridge implementing YENTA interface 2228# pccard: pccard slots 2229# cardbus: cardbus slots 2230device cbb 2231device pccard 2232device cardbus 2233 2234# 2235# MMC/SD 2236# 2237# mmc MMC/SD bus 2238# mmcsd MMC/SD memory card 2239# sdhci Generic PCI SD Host Controller 2240# 2241device mmc 2242device mmcsd 2243device sdhci 2244 2245# 2246# SMB bus 2247# 2248# System Management Bus support is provided by the 'smbus' device. 2249# Access to the SMBus device is via the 'smb' device (/dev/smb*), 2250# which is a child of the 'smbus' device. 2251# 2252# Supported devices: 2253# smb standard I/O through /dev/smb* 2254# 2255# Supported SMB interfaces: 2256# iicsmb I2C to SMB bridge with any iicbus interface 2257# bktr brooktree848 I2C hardware interface 2258# intpm Intel PIIX4 (82371AB, 82443MX) Power Management Unit 2259# alpm Acer Aladdin-IV/V/Pro2 Power Management Unit 2260# ichsmb Intel ICH SMBus controller chips (82801AA, 82801AB, 82801BA) 2261# viapm VIA VT82C586B/596B/686A and VT8233 Power Management Unit 2262# amdpm AMD 756 Power Management Unit 2263# amdsmb AMD 8111 SMBus 2.0 Controller 2264# nfpm NVIDIA nForce Power Management Unit 2265# nfsmb NVIDIA nForce2/3/4 MCP SMBus 2.0 Controller 2266# 2267device smbus # Bus support, required for smb below. 2268 2269device intpm 2270device alpm 2271device ichsmb 2272device viapm 2273device amdpm 2274device amdsmb 2275device nfpm 2276device nfsmb 2277 2278device smb 2279 2280# 2281# I2C Bus 2282# 2283# Philips i2c bus support is provided by the `iicbus' device. 2284# 2285# Supported devices: 2286# ic i2c network interface 2287# iic i2c standard io 2288# iicsmb i2c to smb bridge. Allow i2c i/o with smb commands. 2289# 2290# Supported interfaces: 2291# bktr brooktree848 I2C software interface 2292# 2293# Other: 2294# iicbb generic I2C bit-banging code (needed by lpbb, bktr) 2295# 2296device iicbus # Bus support, required for ic/iic/iicsmb below. 2297device iicbb 2298 2299device ic 2300device iic 2301device iicsmb # smb over i2c bridge 2302 2303# I2C peripheral devices 2304# 2305# ds133x Dallas Semiconductor DS1337, DS1338 and DS1339 RTC 2306# ds1672 Dallas Semiconductor DS1672 RTC 2307# 2308device ds133x 2309device ds1672 2310 2311# Parallel-Port Bus 2312# 2313# Parallel port bus support is provided by the `ppbus' device. 2314# Multiple devices may be attached to the parallel port, devices 2315# are automatically probed and attached when found. 2316# 2317# Supported devices: 2318# vpo Iomega Zip Drive 2319# Requires SCSI disk support ('scbus' and 'da'), best 2320# performance is achieved with ports in EPP 1.9 mode. 2321# lpt Parallel Printer 2322# plip Parallel network interface 2323# ppi General-purpose I/O ("Geek Port") + IEEE1284 I/O 2324# pps Pulse per second Timing Interface 2325# lpbb Philips official parallel port I2C bit-banging interface 2326# 2327# Supported interfaces: 2328# ppc ISA-bus parallel port interfaces. 2329# 2330 2331options PPC_PROBE_CHIPSET # Enable chipset specific detection 2332 # (see flags in ppc(4)) 2333options DEBUG_1284 # IEEE1284 signaling protocol debug 2334options PERIPH_1284 # Makes your computer act as an IEEE1284 2335 # compliant peripheral 2336options DONTPROBE_1284 # Avoid boot detection of PnP parallel devices 2337options VP0_DEBUG # ZIP/ZIP+ debug 2338options LPT_DEBUG # Printer driver debug 2339options PPC_DEBUG # Parallel chipset level debug 2340options PLIP_DEBUG # Parallel network IP interface debug 2341options PCFCLOCK_VERBOSE # Verbose pcfclock driver 2342options PCFCLOCK_MAX_RETRIES=5 # Maximum read tries (default 10) 2343 2344device ppc 2345hint.ppc.0.at="isa" 2346hint.ppc.0.irq="7" 2347device ppbus 2348device vpo 2349device lpt 2350device plip 2351device ppi 2352device pps 2353device lpbb 2354device pcfclock 2355 2356# Kernel BOOTP support 2357 2358options BOOTP # Use BOOTP to obtain IP address/hostname 2359 # Requires NFSCLIENT and NFS_ROOT 2360options BOOTP_NFSROOT # NFS mount root filesystem using BOOTP info 2361options BOOTP_NFSV3 # Use NFS v3 to NFS mount root 2362options BOOTP_COMPAT # Workaround for broken bootp daemons. 2363options BOOTP_WIRED_TO=fxp0 # Use interface fxp0 for BOOTP 2364options BOOTP_BLOCKSIZE=8192 # Override NFS block size 2365 2366# 2367# Add software watchdog routines. 2368# 2369options SW_WATCHDOG 2370 2371# 2372# Disable swapping of stack pages. This option removes all 2373# code which actually performs swapping, so it's not possible to turn 2374# it back on at run-time. 2375# 2376# This is sometimes usable for systems which don't have any swap space 2377# (see also sysctls "vm.defer_swapspace_pageouts" and 2378# "vm.disable_swapspace_pageouts") 2379# 2380#options NO_SWAPPING 2381 2382# Set the number of sf_bufs to allocate. sf_bufs are virtual buffers 2383# for sendfile(2) that are used to map file VM pages, and normally 2384# default to a quantity that is roughly 16*MAXUSERS+512. You would 2385# typically want about 4 of these for each simultaneous file send. 2386# 2387options NSFBUFS=1024 2388 2389# 2390# Enable extra debugging code for locks. This stores the filename and 2391# line of whatever acquired the lock in the lock itself, and change a 2392# number of function calls to pass around the relevant data. This is 2393# not at all useful unless you are debugging lock code. Also note 2394# that it is likely to break e.g. fstat(1) unless you recompile your 2395# userland with -DDEBUG_LOCKS as well. 2396# 2397options DEBUG_LOCKS 2398 2399 2400##################################################################### 2401# USB support 2402# UHCI controller 2403device uhci 2404# OHCI controller 2405device ohci 2406# EHCI controller 2407device ehci 2408# SL811 Controller 2409device slhci 2410# General USB code (mandatory for USB) 2411device usb 2412# 2413# USB Double Bulk Pipe devices 2414device udbp 2415# USB Fm Radio 2416device ufm 2417# Generic USB device driver 2418device ugen 2419# Human Interface Device (anything with buttons and dials) 2420device uhid 2421# USB keyboard 2422device ukbd 2423# USB printer 2424device ulpt 2425# USB Iomega Zip 100 Drive (Requires scbus and da) 2426device umass 2427# USB support for Belkin F5U109 and Magic Control Technology serial adapters 2428device umct 2429# USB modem support 2430device umodem 2431# USB mouse 2432device ums 2433# Diamond Rio 500 MP3 player 2434device urio 2435# USB scanners 2436device uscanner 2437# 2438# USB serial support 2439device ucom 2440# USB support for 3G modem cards by Option, Novatel, Huawei and Sierra 2441device u3g 2442# USB support for Technologies ARK3116 based serial adapters 2443device uark 2444# USB support for Belkin F5U103 and compatible serial adapters 2445device ubsa 2446# USB support for serial adapters based on the FT8U100AX and FT8U232AM 2447device uftdi 2448# USB support for some Windows CE based serial communication. 2449device uipaq 2450# USB support for Prolific PL-2303 serial adapters 2451device uplcom 2452# USB support for Silicon Laboratories CP2101/CP2102 based USB serial adapters 2453device uslcom 2454# USB Visor and Palm devices 2455device uvisor 2456# USB serial support for DDI pocket's PHS 2457device uvscom 2458# 2459# ADMtek USB ethernet. Supports the LinkSys USB100TX, 2460# the Billionton USB100, the Melco LU-ATX, the D-Link DSB-650TX 2461# and the SMC 2202USB. Also works with the ADMtek AN986 Pegasus 2462# eval board. 2463device aue 2464 2465# ASIX Electronics AX88172 USB 2.0 ethernet driver. Used in the 2466# LinkSys USB200M and various other adapters. 2467device axe 2468 2469# 2470# Devices which communicate using Ethernet over USB, particularly 2471# Communication Device Class (CDC) Ethernet specification. Supports 2472# Sharp Zaurus PDAs, some DOCSIS cable modems and so on. 2473device cdce 2474# 2475# CATC USB-EL1201A USB ethernet. Supports the CATC Netmate 2476# and Netmate II, and the Belkin F5U111. 2477device cue 2478# 2479# Kawasaki LSI ethernet. Supports the LinkSys USB10T, 2480# Entrega USB-NET-E45, Peracom Ethernet Adapter, the 2481# 3Com 3c19250, the ADS Technologies USB-10BT, the ATen UC10T, 2482# the Netgear EA101, the D-Link DSB-650, the SMC 2102USB 2483# and 2104USB, and the Corega USB-T. 2484device kue 2485# 2486# RealTek RTL8150 USB to fast ethernet. Supports the Melco LUA-KTX 2487# and the GREEN HOUSE GH-USB100B. 2488device rue 2489# 2490# Davicom DM9601E USB to fast ethernet. Supports the Corega FEther USB-TXC. 2491device udav 2492 2493# 2494# ZyDas ZD1211/ZD1211B wireless ethernet driver 2495device zyd 2496# 2497# Ralink Technology RT2500USB chispet driver 2498device ural 2499# 2500# Ralink Technology RT2501USB/RT2601USB chispet driver 2501device rum 2502 2503# 2504# debugging options for the USB subsystem 2505# 2506options USB_DEBUG 2507options U3G_DEBUG 2508 2509# options for ukbd: 2510options UKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP # specify the built-in keymap 2511makeoptions UKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP=it.iso 2512 2513# options for uplcom: 2514options UPLCOM_INTR_INTERVAL=100 # interrupt pipe interval 2515 # in milliseconds 2516 2517# options for uvscom: 2518options UVSCOM_DEFAULT_OPKTSIZE=8 # default output packet size 2519options UVSCOM_INTR_INTERVAL=100 # interrupt pipe interval 2520 # in milliseconds 2521 2522##################################################################### 2523# FireWire support 2524 2525device firewire # FireWire bus code 2526device sbp # SCSI over Firewire (Requires scbus and da) 2527device sbp_targ # SBP-2 Target mode (Requires scbus and targ) 2528device fwe # Ethernet over FireWire (non-standard!) 2529device fwip # IP over FireWire (RFC2734 and RFC3146) 2530 2531##################################################################### 2532# dcons support (Dumb Console Device) 2533 2534device dcons # dumb console driver 2535device dcons_crom # FireWire attachment 2536options DCONS_BUF_SIZE=16384 # buffer size 2537options DCONS_POLL_HZ=100 # polling rate 2538options DCONS_FORCE_CONSOLE=0 # force to be the primary console 2539options DCONS_FORCE_GDB=1 # force to be the gdb device 2540 2541##################################################################### 2542# crypto subsystem 2543# 2544# This is a port of the OpenBSD crypto framework. Include this when 2545# configuring IPSEC and when you have a h/w crypto device to accelerate 2546# user applications that link to OpenSSL. 2547# 2548# Drivers are ports from OpenBSD with some simple enhancements that have 2549# been fed back to OpenBSD. 2550 2551device crypto # core crypto support 2552device cryptodev # /dev/crypto for access to h/w 2553 2554device rndtest # FIPS 140-2 entropy tester 2555 2556device hifn # Hifn 7951, 7781, etc. 2557options HIFN_DEBUG # enable debugging support: hw.hifn.debug 2558options HIFN_RNDTEST # enable rndtest support 2559 2560device ubsec # Broadcom 5501, 5601, 58xx 2561options UBSEC_DEBUG # enable debugging support: hw.ubsec.debug 2562options UBSEC_RNDTEST # enable rndtest support 2563 2564##################################################################### 2565 2566 2567# 2568# Embedded system options: 2569# 2570# An embedded system might want to run something other than init. 2571options INIT_PATH=/sbin/init:/stand/sysinstall 2572 2573# Debug options 2574options BUS_DEBUG # enable newbus debugging 2575options DEBUG_VFS_LOCKS # enable VFS lock debugging 2576options SOCKBUF_DEBUG # enable sockbuf last record/mb tail checking 2577 2578# 2579# Verbose SYSINIT 2580# 2581# Make the SYSINIT process performed by mi_startup() verbose. This is very 2582# useful when porting to a new architecture. If DDB is also enabled, this 2583# will print function names instead of addresses. 2584options VERBOSE_SYSINIT 2585 2586##################################################################### 2587# SYSV IPC KERNEL PARAMETERS 2588# 2589# Maximum number of entries in a semaphore map. 2590options SEMMAP=31 2591 2592# Maximum number of System V semaphores that can be used on the system at 2593# one time. 2594options SEMMNI=11 2595 2596# Total number of semaphores system wide 2597options SEMMNS=61 2598 2599# Total number of undo structures in system 2600options SEMMNU=31 2601 2602# Maximum number of System V semaphores that can be used by a single process 2603# at one time. 2604options SEMMSL=61 2605 2606# Maximum number of operations that can be outstanding on a single System V 2607# semaphore at one time. 2608options SEMOPM=101 2609 2610# Maximum number of undo operations that can be outstanding on a single 2611# System V semaphore at one time. 2612options SEMUME=11 2613 2614# Maximum number of shared memory pages system wide. 2615options SHMALL=1025 2616 2617# Maximum size, in bytes, of a single System V shared memory region. 2618options SHMMAX=(SHMMAXPGS*PAGE_SIZE+1) 2619options SHMMAXPGS=1025 2620 2621# Minimum size, in bytes, of a single System V shared memory region. 2622options SHMMIN=2 2623 2624# Maximum number of shared memory regions that can be used on the system 2625# at one time. 2626options SHMMNI=33 2627 2628# Maximum number of System V shared memory regions that can be attached to 2629# a single process at one time. 2630options SHMSEG=9 2631 2632# Set the amount of time (in seconds) the system will wait before 2633# rebooting automatically when a kernel panic occurs. If set to (-1), 2634# the system will wait indefinitely until a key is pressed on the 2635# console. 2636options PANIC_REBOOT_WAIT_TIME=16 2637 2638# Attempt to bypass the buffer cache and put data directly into the 2639# userland buffer for read operation when O_DIRECT flag is set on the 2640# file. Both offset and length of the read operation must be 2641# multiples of the physical media sector size. 2642# 2643options DIRECTIO 2644 2645# Specify a lower limit for the number of swap I/O buffers. They are 2646# (among other things) used when bypassing the buffer cache due to 2647# DIRECTIO kernel option enabled and O_DIRECT flag set on file. 2648# 2649options NSWBUF_MIN=120 2650 2651##################################################################### 2652 2653# More undocumented options for linting. 2654# Note that documenting these are not considered an affront. 2655 2656options CAM_DEBUG_DELAY 2657 2658# VFS cluster debugging. 2659options CLUSTERDEBUG 2660 2661options DEBUG 2662 2663# Kernel filelock debugging. 2664options LOCKF_DEBUG 2665 2666# System V compatible message queues 2667# Please note that the values provided here are used to test kernel 2668# building. The defaults in the sources provide almost the same numbers. 2669# MSGSSZ must be a power of 2 between 8 and 1024. 2670options MSGMNB=2049 # Max number of chars in queue 2671options MSGMNI=41 # Max number of message queue identifiers 2672options MSGSEG=2049 # Max number of message segments 2673options MSGSSZ=16 # Size of a message segment 2674options MSGTQL=41 # Max number of messages in system 2675 2676options NBUF=512 # Number of buffer headers 2677 2678options SCSI_NCR_DEBUG 2679options SCSI_NCR_MAX_SYNC=10000 2680options SCSI_NCR_MAX_WIDE=1 2681options SCSI_NCR_MYADDR=7 2682 2683options SC_DEBUG_LEVEL=5 # Syscons debug level 2684options SC_RENDER_DEBUG # syscons rendering debugging 2685 2686options SHOW_BUSYBUFS # List buffers that prevent root unmount 2687options SLIP_IFF_OPTS 2688options VFS_BIO_DEBUG # VFS buffer I/O debugging 2689 2690options KSTACK_MAX_PAGES=32 # Maximum pages to give the kernel stack 2691 2692# Adaptec Array Controller driver options 2693options AAC_DEBUG # Debugging levels: 2694 # 0 - quiet, only emit warnings 2695 # 1 - noisy, emit major function 2696 # points and things done 2697 # 2 - extremely noisy, emit trace 2698 # items in loops, etc. 2699 2700# Yet more undocumented options for linting. 2701# BKTR_ALLOC_PAGES has no effect except to cause warnings, and 2702# BROOKTREE_ALLOC_PAGES hasn't actually been superseded by it, since the 2703# driver still mostly spells this option BROOKTREE_ALLOC_PAGES. 2704##options BKTR_ALLOC_PAGES=(217*4+1) 2705options BROOKTREE_ALLOC_PAGES=(217*4+1) 2706options MAXFILES=999 2707