1# 2# NOTES -- Lines that can be cut/pasted into kernel and hints configs. 3# 4# This file contains machine dependent kernel configuration notes. For 5# machine independent notes, look in /sys/conf/NOTES. 6# 7# $FreeBSD$ 8# 9 10# 11# We want LINT to cover profiling as well. 12profile 2 13 14# 15# Enable the kernel DTrace hooks which are required to load the DTrace 16# kernel modules. 17# 18options KDTRACE_HOOKS 19 20 21##################################################################### 22# SMP OPTIONS: 23# 24# The apic device enables the use of the I/O APIC for interrupt delivery. 25# The apic device can be used in both UP and SMP kernels, but is required 26# for SMP kernels. Thus, the apic device is not strictly an SMP option, 27# but it is a prerequisite for SMP. 28# 29# Notes: 30# 31# HTT CPUs should only be used if they are enabled in the BIOS. For 32# the ACPI case, ACPI only correctly tells us about any HTT CPUs if 33# they are enabled. However, most HTT systems do not list HTT CPUs 34# in the MP Table if they are enabled, thus we guess at the HTT CPUs 35# for the MP Table case. However, we shouldn't try to guess and use 36# these CPUs if HTT is disabled. Thus, HTT guessing is only enabled 37# for the MP Table if the user explicitly asks for it via the 38# MPTABLE_FORCE_HTT option. Do NOT use this option if you have HTT 39# disabled in your BIOS. 40# 41# IPI_PREEMPTION instructs the kernel to preempt threads running on other 42# CPUS if needed. Relies on the PREEMPTION option 43 44# Mandatory: 45device apic # I/O apic 46 47# Optional: 48options MPTABLE_FORCE_HTT # Enable HTT CPUs with the MP Table 49options IPI_PREEMPTION 50 51# 52# Watchdog routines. 53# 54options MP_WATCHDOG 55 56# Debugging options. 57# 58options COUNT_XINVLTLB_HITS # Counters for TLB events 59options COUNT_IPIS # Per-CPU IPI interrupt counters 60 61 62 63##################################################################### 64# CPU OPTIONS 65 66# 67# You must specify at least one CPU (the one you intend to run on); 68# deleting the specification for CPUs you don't need to use may make 69# parts of the system run faster. 70# 71cpu I486_CPU 72cpu I586_CPU # aka Pentium(tm) 73cpu I686_CPU # aka Pentium Pro(tm) 74 75# 76# Options for CPU features. 77# 78# CPU_ATHLON_SSE_HACK tries to enable SSE instructions when the BIOS has 79# forgotten to enable them. 80# 81# CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_3X enables triple-clock mode on IBM Blue Lightning 82# CPU if CPU supports it. The default is double-clock mode on 83# BlueLightning CPU box. 84# 85# CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_FPU_OP_CACHE enables FPU operand cache on IBM 86# BlueLightning CPU. It works only with Cyrix FPU, and this option 87# should not be used with Intel FPU. 88# 89# CPU_BTB_EN enables branch target buffer on Cyrix 5x86 (NOTE 1). 90# 91# CPU_CYRIX_NO_LOCK enables weak locking for the entire address space 92# of Cyrix 6x86 and 6x86MX CPUs by setting the NO_LOCK bit of CCR1. 93# Otherwise, the NO_LOCK bit of CCR1 is cleared. (NOTE 3) 94# 95# CPU_DIRECT_MAPPED_CACHE sets L1 cache of Cyrix 486DLC CPU in direct 96# mapped mode. Default is 2-way set associative mode. 97# 98# CPU_DISABLE_5X86_LSSER disables load store serialize (i.e., enables 99# reorder). This option should not be used if you use memory mapped 100# I/O device(s). 101# 102# CPU_DISABLE_CMPXCHG disables the CMPXCHG instruction on > i386 IA32 103# machines. VmWare 3.x seems to emulate this instruction poorly, causing 104# the guest OS to run very slowly. This problem appears to be fixed in 105# VmWare 4.x, at least in version 4.5.2, so that enabling this option with 106# VmWare 4.x will result in locking operations to be 20-30 times slower. 107# Enabling this with an SMP kernel will cause the kernel to be unusable. 108# 109# CPU_DISABLE_SSE explicitly prevents I686_CPU from turning on SSE. 110# 111# CPU_ELAN enables support for AMDs ElanSC520 CPU. 112# CPU_ELAN_PPS enables precision timestamp code. 113# CPU_ELAN_XTAL sets the clock crystal frequency in Hz. 114# 115# CPU_ENABLE_LONGRUN enables support for Transmeta Crusoe LongRun 116# technology which allows to restrict power consumption of the CPU by 117# using group of hw.crusoe.* sysctls. 118# 119# CPU_FASTER_5X86_FPU enables faster FPU exception handler. 120# 121# CPU_GEODE is for the SC1100 Geode embedded processor. This option 122# is necessary because the i8254 timecounter is toast. 123# 124# CPU_I486_ON_386 enables CPU cache on i486 based CPU upgrade products 125# for i386 machines. 126# 127# CPU_IORT defines I/O clock delay time (NOTE 1). Default values of 128# I/O clock delay time on Cyrix 5x86 and 6x86 are 0 and 7,respectively 129# (no clock delay). 130# 131# CPU_L2_LATENCY specifies the L2 cache latency value. This option is used 132# only when CPU_PPRO2CELERON is defined and Mendocino Celeron is detected. 133# The default value is 5. 134# 135# CPU_LOOP_EN prevents flushing the prefetch buffer if the destination 136# of a jump is already present in the prefetch buffer on Cyrix 5x86(NOTE 137# 1). 138# 139# CPU_PPRO2CELERON enables L2 cache of Mendocino Celeron CPUs. This option 140# is useful when you use Socket 8 to Socket 370 converter, because most Pentium 141# Pro BIOSs do not enable L2 cache of Mendocino Celeron CPUs. 142# 143# CPU_RSTK_EN enables return stack on Cyrix 5x86 (NOTE 1). 144# 145# CPU_SOEKRIS enables support www.soekris.com hardware. 146# 147# CPU_SUSP_HLT enables suspend on HALT. If this option is set, CPU 148# enters suspend mode following execution of HALT instruction. 149# 150# CPU_UPGRADE_HW_CACHE eliminates unneeded cache flush instruction(s). 151# 152# CPU_WT_ALLOC enables write allocation on Cyrix 6x86/6x86MX and AMD 153# K5/K6/K6-2 CPUs. 154# 155# CYRIX_CACHE_WORKS enables CPU cache on Cyrix 486 CPUs with cache 156# flush at hold state. 157# 158# CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS enables (1) CPU cache on Cyrix 486 CPUs 159# without cache flush at hold state, and (2) write-back CPU cache on 160# Cyrix 6x86 whose revision < 2.7 (NOTE 2). 161# 162# NO_F00F_HACK disables the hack that prevents Pentiums (and ONLY 163# Pentiums) from locking up when a LOCK CMPXCHG8B instruction is 164# executed. This option is only needed if I586_CPU is also defined, 165# and should be included for any non-Pentium CPU that defines it. 166# 167# NO_MEMORY_HOLE is an optimisation for systems with AMD K6 processors 168# which indicates that the 15-16MB range is *definitely* not being 169# occupied by an ISA memory hole. 170# 171# NOTE 1: The options, CPU_BTB_EN, CPU_LOOP_EN, CPU_IORT, 172# CPU_LOOP_EN and CPU_RSTK_EN should not be used because of CPU bugs. 173# These options may crash your system. 174# 175# NOTE 2: If CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS is not set, CPU cache is enabled 176# in write-through mode when revision < 2.7. If revision of Cyrix 177# 6x86 >= 2.7, CPU cache is always enabled in write-back mode. 178# 179# NOTE 3: This option may cause failures for software that requires 180# locked cycles in order to operate correctly. 181# 182options CPU_ATHLON_SSE_HACK 183options CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_3X 184options CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_FPU_OP_CACHE 185options CPU_BTB_EN 186options CPU_DIRECT_MAPPED_CACHE 187options CPU_DISABLE_5X86_LSSER 188options CPU_DISABLE_CMPXCHG 189#options CPU_DISABLE_SSE 190options CPU_ELAN 191options CPU_ELAN_PPS 192options CPU_ELAN_XTAL=32768000 193options CPU_ENABLE_LONGRUN 194options CPU_FASTER_5X86_FPU 195options CPU_GEODE 196options CPU_I486_ON_386 197options CPU_IORT 198options CPU_L2_LATENCY=5 199options CPU_LOOP_EN 200options CPU_PPRO2CELERON 201options CPU_RSTK_EN 202options CPU_SOEKRIS 203options CPU_SUSP_HLT 204options CPU_UPGRADE_HW_CACHE 205options CPU_WT_ALLOC 206options CYRIX_CACHE_WORKS 207options CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS 208#options NO_F00F_HACK 209 210# Debug options 211options NPX_DEBUG # enable npx debugging 212 213# 214# PERFMON causes the driver for Pentium/Pentium Pro performance counters 215# to be compiled. See perfmon(4) for more information. 216# 217options PERFMON 218 219# 220# XBOX causes the kernel to be bootable on the Microsoft XBox console system. 221# The resulting kernel will auto-detect whether it is being booted on a XBox, 222# so kernels compiled with this option will also work on an ordinary PC. 223# This option require I686_CPU. 224# 225# xboxfb includes support for the XBox frame buffer device. It is fully USB- 226# keyboard aware, and will only be used if an xbox is detected. This option 227# (obviously) requires XBOX support in your kernel. 228# 229# NOTE: xboxfb currently conflicts with syscons(4); if you have an XBOX and 230# include both in your kernel; you will not get any video output. Ordinary 231# PC's do not suffer from this. 232# 233options XBOX 234device xboxfb 235 236 237##################################################################### 238# NETWORKING OPTIONS 239 240# 241# DEVICE_POLLING adds support for mixed interrupt-polling handling 242# of network device drivers, which has significant benefits in terms 243# of robustness to overloads and responsivity, as well as permitting 244# accurate scheduling of the CPU time between kernel network processing 245# and other activities. The drawback is a moderate (up to 1/HZ seconds) 246# potential increase in response times. 247# It is strongly recommended to use HZ=1000 or 2000 with DEVICE_POLLING 248# to achieve smoother behaviour. 249# Additionally, you can enable/disable polling at runtime with help of 250# the ifconfig(8) utility, and select the CPU fraction reserved to 251# userland with the sysctl variable kern.polling.user_frac 252# (default 50, range 0..100). 253# 254# Not all device drivers support this mode of operation at the time of 255# this writing. See polling(4) for more details. 256 257options DEVICE_POLLING 258 259# BPF_JITTER adds support for BPF just-in-time compiler. 260 261options BPF_JITTER 262 263# OpenFabrics Enterprise Distribution (Infiniband). 264options OFED 265options OFED_DEBUG_INIT 266 267# Sockets Direct Protocol 268options SDP 269options SDP_DEBUG 270 271# IP over Infiniband 272options IPOIB 273options IPOIB_DEBUG 274options IPOIB_CM 275 276 277##################################################################### 278# CLOCK OPTIONS 279 280# Provide read/write access to the memory in the clock chip. 281device nvram # Access to rtc cmos via /dev/nvram 282 283 284##################################################################### 285# MISCELLANEOUS DEVICES AND OPTIONS 286 287device speaker #Play IBM BASIC-style noises out your speaker 288hint.speaker.0.at="isa" 289hint.speaker.0.port="0x61" 290device gzip #Exec gzipped a.out's. REQUIRES COMPAT_AOUT! 291device apm_saver # Requires APM 292 293 294##################################################################### 295# HARDWARE BUS CONFIGURATION 296 297# 298# ISA bus 299# 300device isa # Required by npx(4) 301 302# 303# Options for `isa': 304# 305# AUTO_EOI_1 enables the `automatic EOI' feature for the master 8259A 306# interrupt controller. This saves about 0.7-1.25 usec for each interrupt. 307# This option breaks suspend/resume on some portables. 308# 309# AUTO_EOI_2 enables the `automatic EOI' feature for the slave 8259A 310# interrupt controller. This saves about 0.7-1.25 usec for each interrupt. 311# Automatic EOI is documented not to work for for the slave with the 312# original i8259A, but it works for some clones and some integrated 313# versions. 314# 315# MAXMEM specifies the amount of RAM on the machine; if this is not 316# specified, FreeBSD will first read the amount of memory from the CMOS 317# RAM, so the amount of memory will initially be limited to 64MB or 16MB 318# depending on the BIOS. If the BIOS reports 64MB, a memory probe will 319# then attempt to detect the installed amount of RAM. If this probe 320# fails to detect >64MB RAM you will have to use the MAXMEM option. 321# The amount is in kilobytes, so for a machine with 128MB of RAM, it would 322# be 131072 (128 * 1024). 323# 324# BROKEN_KEYBOARD_RESET disables the use of the keyboard controller to 325# reset the CPU for reboot. This is needed on some systems with broken 326# keyboard controllers. 327 328options AUTO_EOI_1 329#options AUTO_EOI_2 330 331options MAXMEM=(128*1024) 332#options BROKEN_KEYBOARD_RESET 333 334# 335# EISA bus 336# 337# The EISA bus device is `eisa'. It provides auto-detection and 338# configuration support for all devices on the EISA bus. 339 340device eisa 341 342# By default, only 10 EISA slots are probed, since the slot numbers 343# above clash with the configuration address space of the PCI subsystem, 344# and the EISA probe is not very smart about this. This is sufficient 345# for most machines, but in particular the HP NetServer LC series comes 346# with an onboard AIC7770 dual-channel SCSI controller on EISA slot #11, 347# thus you need to bump this figure to 12 for them. 348options EISA_SLOTS=12 349 350# 351# MCA bus: 352# 353# The MCA bus device is `mca'. It provides auto-detection and 354# configuration support for all devices on the MCA bus. 355# No hints are required for MCA. 356 357device mca 358 359# 360# PCI bus & PCI options: 361# 362device pci 363 364# 365# AGP GART support 366device agp 367 368# AGP debugging. 369options AGP_DEBUG 370 371 372##################################################################### 373# HARDWARE DEVICE CONFIGURATION 374 375# To include support for VGA VESA video modes 376options VESA 377 378# Turn on extra debugging checks and output for VESA support. 379options VESA_DEBUG 380 381device dpms # DPMS suspend & resume via VESA BIOS 382 383# x86 real mode BIOS emulator, required by atkbdc/dpms/vesa 384options X86BIOS 385 386# 387# The Numeric Processing eXtension driver. This is non-optional. 388device npx 389hint.npx.0.flags="0x0" 390hint.npx.0.irq="13" 391 392# 393# `flags' for npx0: 394# 0x01 don't use the npx registers to optimize bcopy. 395# 0x02 don't use the npx registers to optimize bzero. 396# 0x04 don't use the npx registers to optimize copyin or copyout. 397# The npx registers are normally used to optimize copying and zeroing when 398# all of the following conditions are satisfied: 399# I586_CPU is an option 400# the cpu is an i586 (perhaps not a Pentium) 401# the probe for npx0 succeeds 402# INT 16 exception handling works. 403# Then copying and zeroing using the npx registers is normally 30-100% faster. 404# The flags can be used to control cases where it doesn't work or is slower. 405# Setting them at boot time using hints works right (the optimizations 406# are not used until later in the bootstrap when npx0 is attached). 407# Flag 0x08 automatically disables the i586 optimized routines. 408# 409 410# 411# Optional devices: 412# 413 414# PS/2 mouse 415device psm 416hint.psm.0.at="atkbdc" 417hint.psm.0.irq="12" 418 419# Options for psm: 420options PSM_HOOKRESUME #hook the system resume event, useful 421 #for some laptops 422options PSM_RESETAFTERSUSPEND #reset the device at the resume event 423 424# The keyboard controller; it controls the keyboard and the PS/2 mouse. 425device atkbdc 426hint.atkbdc.0.at="isa" 427hint.atkbdc.0.port="0x060" 428 429# The AT keyboard 430device atkbd 431hint.atkbd.0.at="atkbdc" 432hint.atkbd.0.irq="1" 433 434# Options for atkbd: 435options ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP # specify the built-in keymap 436makeoptions ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP=jp.106 437 438# `flags' for atkbd: 439# 0x01 Force detection of keyboard, else we always assume a keyboard 440# 0x02 Don't reset keyboard, useful for some newer ThinkPads 441# 0x03 Force detection and avoid reset, might help with certain 442# dockingstations 443# 0x04 Old-style (XT) keyboard support, useful for older ThinkPads 444 445# Video card driver for VGA adapters. 446device vga 447hint.vga.0.at="isa" 448 449# Options for vga: 450# Try the following option if the mouse pointer is not drawn correctly 451# or font does not seem to be loaded properly. May cause flicker on 452# some systems. 453options VGA_ALT_SEQACCESS 454 455# If you can dispense with some vga driver features, you may want to 456# use the following options to save some memory. 457#options VGA_NO_FONT_LOADING # don't save/load font 458#options VGA_NO_MODE_CHANGE # don't change video modes 459 460# Older video cards may require this option for proper operation. 461options VGA_SLOW_IOACCESS # do byte-wide i/o's to TS and GDC regs 462 463# The following option probably won't work with the LCD displays. 464options VGA_WIDTH90 # support 90 column modes 465 466# Debugging. 467options VGA_DEBUG 468 469# vt(4) drivers. 470device vt_vga 471 472# Linear framebuffer driver for S3 VESA 1.2 cards. Works on top of VESA. 473device s3pci 474 475# 3Dfx Voodoo Graphics, Voodoo II /dev/3dfx CDEV support. This will create 476# the /dev/3dfx0 device to work with glide implementations. This should get 477# linked to /dev/3dfx and /dev/voodoo. Note that this is not the same as 478# the tdfx DRI module from XFree86 and is completely unrelated. 479# 480# To enable Linuxulator support, one must also include COMPAT_LINUX in the 481# config as well. The other option is to load both as modules. 482 483device tdfx # Enable 3Dfx Voodoo support 484device tdfx_linux # Enable Linuxulator support 485 486# 487# ACPI support using the Intel ACPI Component Architecture reference 488# implementation. 489# 490# ACPI_DEBUG enables the use of the debug.acpi.level and debug.acpi.layer 491# kernel environment variables to select initial debugging levels for the 492# Intel ACPICA code. (Note that the Intel code must also have USE_DEBUGGER 493# defined when it is built). 494 495device acpi 496options ACPI_DEBUG 497options ACPI_DMAR 498 499# ACPI WMI Mapping driver 500device acpi_wmi 501 502# ACPI Asus Extras (LCD backlight/brightness, video output, etc.) 503device acpi_asus 504 505# ACPI Fujitsu Extras (Buttons) 506device acpi_fujitsu 507 508# ACPI extras driver for HP laptops 509device acpi_hp 510 511# ACPI extras driver for IBM laptops 512device acpi_ibm 513 514# ACPI Panasonic Extras (LCD backlight/brightness, video output, etc.) 515device acpi_panasonic 516 517# ACPI Sony extra (LCD brightness) 518device acpi_sony 519 520# ACPI Toshiba Extras (LCD backlight/brightness, video output, etc.) 521device acpi_toshiba 522 523# ACPI Video Extensions (LCD backlight/brightness, video output, etc.) 524device acpi_video 525 526# ACPI Docking Station 527device acpi_dock 528 529# ACPI ASOC ATK0110 ASUSTeK AI Booster (voltage, temperature and fan sensors) 530device aibs 531 532# The cpufreq(4) driver provides support for non-ACPI CPU frequency control 533device cpufreq 534 535# Direct Rendering modules for 3D acceleration. 536device drm # DRM core module required by DRM drivers 537device i915drm # Intel i830 through i915 538device mach64drm # ATI Rage Pro, Rage Mobility P/M, Rage XL 539device mgadrm # AGP Matrox G200, G400, G450, G550 540device r128drm # ATI Rage 128 541device radeondrm # ATI Radeon 542device savagedrm # S3 Savage3D, Savage4 543device sisdrm # SiS 300/305, 540, 630 544device tdfxdrm # 3dfx Voodoo 3/4/5 and Banshee 545device viadrm # VIA 546options DRM_DEBUG # Include debug printfs (slow) 547 548# 549# mse: Logitech and ATI InPort bus mouse ports 550 551device mse 552hint.mse.0.at="isa" 553hint.mse.0.port="0x23c" 554hint.mse.0.irq="5" 555 556# 557# Network interfaces: 558# 559 560# bxe: Broadcom NetXtreme II (BCM5771X/BCM578XX) PCIe 10Gb Ethernet 561# adapters. 562# ce: Cronyx Tau-PCI/32 sync single/dual port G.703/E1 serial adaptor 563# with 32 HDLC subchannels (requires sppp (default), or NETGRAPH if 564# NETGRAPH_CRONYX is configured) 565# cp: Cronyx Tau-PCI sync single/dual/four port 566# V.35/RS-232/RS-530/RS-449/X.21/G.703/E1/E3/T3/STS-1 567# serial adaptor (requires sppp (default), or NETGRAPH if 568# NETGRAPH_CRONYX is configured) 569# cs: IBM Etherjet and other Crystal Semi CS89x0-based adapters 570# ctau: Cronyx Tau sync dual port V.35/RS-232/RS-530/RS-449/X.21/G.703/E1 571# serial adaptor (requires sppp (default), or NETGRAPH if 572# NETGRAPH_CRONYX is configured) 573# ed: Western Digital and SMC 80xx; Novell NE1000 and NE2000; 3Com 3C503 574# HP PC Lan+, various PC Card devices 575# (requires miibus) 576# ie: AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507; unknown NI5210; 577# Intel EtherExpress 578# ipw: Intel PRO/Wireless 2100 IEEE 802.11 adapter 579# iwi: Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG/2225BG/2915ABG IEEE 802.11 adapters 580# Requires the iwi firmware module 581# iwn: Intel Wireless WiFi Link 1000/105/135/2000/4965/5000/6000/6050 abgn 582# 802.11 network adapters 583# Requires the iwn firmware module 584# mlx4ib: Mellanox ConnectX HCA InfiniBand 585# mlxen: Mellanox ConnectX HCA Ethernet 586# mthca: Mellanox HCA InfiniBand 587# nfe: nVidia nForce MCP on-board Ethernet Networking (BSD open source) 588# sbni: Granch SBNI12-xx ISA and PCI adapters 589# vmx: VMware VMXNET3 Ethernet (BSD open source) 590# wl: Lucent Wavelan (ISA card only). 591# wpi: Intel 3945ABG Wireless LAN controller 592# Requires the wpi firmware module 593 594# Order for ISA/EISA devices is important here 595 596device bxe # Broadcom NetXtreme II BCM5771X/BCM578XX 10GbE 597device ce 598device cp 599device cs # Crystal Semiconductor CS89x0 NIC 600hint.cs.0.at="isa" 601hint.cs.0.port="0x300" 602device ctau 603hint.ctau.0.at="isa" 604hint.ctau.0.port="0x240" 605hint.ctau.0.irq="15" 606hint.ctau.0.drq="7" 607#options NETGRAPH_CRONYX # Enable NETGRAPH support for Cronyx adapter(s) 608device ed # NE[12]000, SMC Ultra, 3c503, DS8390 cards 609options ED_3C503 610options ED_HPP 611options ED_SIC 612hint.ed.0.at="isa" 613hint.ed.0.port="0x280" 614hint.ed.0.irq="5" 615hint.ed.0.maddr="0xd8000" 616device ie # EtherExpress 8/16, 3C507, StarLAN 10 etc. 617# Hints only required for Starlan 618hint.ie.2.at="isa" 619hint.ie.2.port="0x300" 620hint.ie.2.irq="5" 621hint.ie.2.maddr="0xd0000" 622device ipw # Intel 2100 wireless NICs. 623device iwi # Intel 2200BG/2225BG/2915ABG wireless NICs. 624device iwn # Intel 4965/1000/5000/6000 wireless NICs. 625# Hint for the i386-only ISA front-end of le(4). 626hint.le.0.at="isa" 627hint.le.0.port="0x280" 628hint.le.0.irq="10" 629hint.le.0.drq="0" 630device mlx4ib # Mellanox ConnectX HCA InfiniBand 631device mlxen # Mellanox ConnectX HCA Ethernet 632device mthca # Mellanox HCA InfiniBand 633device nfe # nVidia nForce MCP on-board Ethernet 634device sbni 635hint.sbni.0.at="isa" 636hint.sbni.0.port="0x210" 637hint.sbni.0.irq="0xefdead" 638hint.sbni.0.flags="0" 639device vmx # VMware VMXNET3 Ethernet 640device wl 641hint.wl.0.at="isa" 642hint.wl.0.port="0x300" 643options WLCACHE # enables the signal-strength cache 644options WLDEBUG # enables verbose debugging output 645device wpi # Intel 3945ABG wireless NICs. 646 647# IEEE 802.11 adapter firmware modules 648 649# Intel PRO/Wireless 2100 firmware: 650# ipwfw: BSS/IBSS/monitor mode firmware 651# ipwbssfw: BSS mode firmware 652# ipwibssfw: IBSS mode firmware 653# ipwmonitorfw: Monitor mode firmware 654# Intel PRO/Wireless 2200BG/2225BG/2915ABG firmware: 655# iwifw: BSS/IBSS/monitor mode firmware 656# iwibssfw: BSS mode firmware 657# iwiibssfw: IBSS mode firmware 658# iwimonitorfw: Monitor mode firmware 659# Intel Wireless WiFi Link 4965/1000/5000/6000 series firmware: 660# iwnfw: Single module to support all devices 661# iwn1000fw: Specific module for the 1000 only 662# iwn105fw: Specific module for the 105 only 663# iwn135fw: Specific module for the 135 only 664# iwn2000fw: Specific module for the 2000 only 665# iwn2030fw: Specific module for the 2030 only 666# iwn4965fw: Specific module for the 4965 only 667# iwn5000fw: Specific module for the 5000 only 668# iwn5150fw: Specific module for the 5150 only 669# iwn6000fw: Specific module for the 6000 only 670# iwn6000g2afw: Specific module for the 6000g2a only 671# iwn6000g2bfw: Specific module for the 6000g2b only 672# iwn6050fw: Specific module for the 6050 only 673# wpifw: Intel 3945ABG Wireless LAN Controller firmware 674 675device iwifw 676device iwibssfw 677device iwiibssfw 678device iwimonitorfw 679device ipwfw 680device ipwbssfw 681device ipwibssfw 682device ipwmonitorfw 683device iwnfw 684device iwn1000fw 685device iwn105fw 686device iwn135fw 687device iwn2000fw 688device iwn2030fw 689device iwn4965fw 690device iwn5000fw 691device iwn5150fw 692device iwn6000fw 693device iwn6000g2afw 694device iwn6000g2bfw 695device iwn6050fw 696device wpifw 697 698# 699# ATA raid adapters 700# 701device pst 702 703# 704# Areca 11xx and 12xx series of SATA II RAID controllers. 705# CAM is required. 706# 707device arcmsr # Areca SATA II RAID 708 709# 710# 3ware 9000 series PATA/SATA RAID controller driver and options. 711# The driver is implemented as a SIM, and so, needs the CAM infrastructure. 712# 713options TWA_DEBUG # 0-10; 10 prints the most messages. 714options TWA_FLASH_FIRMWARE # firmware image bundled when defined. 715device twa # 3ware 9000 series PATA/SATA RAID 716 717# 718# SCSI host adapters: 719# 720# ncv: NCR 53C500 based SCSI host adapters. 721# nsp: Workbit Ninja SCSI-3 based PC Card SCSI host adapters. 722# stg: TMC 18C30, 18C50 based SCSI host adapters. 723 724device ncv 725device nsp 726device stg 727hint.stg.0.at="isa" 728hint.stg.0.port="0x140" 729hint.stg.0.port="11" 730 731# 732# Adaptec FSA RAID controllers, including integrated DELL controllers, 733# the Dell PERC 2/QC and the HP NetRAID-4M 734device aac 735device aacp # SCSI Passthrough interface (optional, CAM required) 736 737# 738# Adaptec by PMC RAID controllers, Series 6/7/8 and upcoming families 739device aacraid # Container interface, CAM required 740 741# 742# Highpoint RocketRAID 27xx. 743device hpt27xx 744 745# 746# Highpoint RocketRAID 182x. 747device hptmv 748 749# 750# Highpoint DC7280 and R750. 751device hptnr 752 753# 754# Highpoint RocketRAID. Supports RR172x, RR222x, RR2240, RR232x, RR2340, 755# RR2210, RR174x, RR2522, RR231x, RR230x. 756device hptrr 757 758# 759# Highpoint RocketRaid 3xxx series SATA RAID 760device hptiop 761 762# 763# IBM (now Adaptec) ServeRAID controllers 764device ips 765 766# 767# Intel C600 (Patsburg) integrated SAS controller 768device isci 769options ISCI_LOGGING # enable debugging in isci HAL 770 771# 772# NVM Express (NVMe) support 773device nvme # base NVMe driver 774device nvd # expose NVMe namespaces as disks, depends on nvme 775 776# 777# SafeNet crypto driver: can be moved to the MI NOTES as soon as 778# it's tested on a big-endian machine 779# 780device safe # SafeNet 1141 781options SAFE_DEBUG # enable debugging support: hw.safe.debug 782options SAFE_RNDTEST # enable rndtest support 783 784# 785# glxiic is an I2C driver for the AMD Geode LX CS5536 System Management Bus 786# controller. Requires 'device iicbus'. 787# 788device glxiic # AMD Geode LX CS5536 System Management Bus 789 790# 791# glxsb is a driver for the Security Block in AMD Geode LX processors. 792# Requires 'device crypto'. 793# 794device glxsb # AMD Geode LX Security Block 795 796# 797# VirtIO support 798# 799# The virtio entry provides a generic bus for use by the device drivers. 800# It must be combined with an interface that communicates with the host. 801# Multiple such interfaces defined by the VirtIO specification. FreeBSD 802# only has support for PCI. Therefore, virtio_pci must be statically 803# compiled in or loaded as a module for the device drivers to function. 804# 805device virtio # Generic VirtIO bus (required) 806device virtio_pci # VirtIO PCI Interface 807device vtnet # VirtIO Ethernet device 808device virtio_blk # VirtIO Block device 809device virtio_scsi # VirtIO SCSI device 810device virtio_balloon # VirtIO Memory Balloon device 811device virtio_random # VirtIO Entropy device 812device virtio_console # VirtIO Console device 813 814device hyperv # HyperV drivers 815 816##################################################################### 817 818# 819# Miscellaneous hardware: 820# 821# apm: Laptop Advanced Power Management (experimental) 822# ipmi: Intelligent Platform Management Interface 823# smapi: System Management Application Program Interface driver 824# smbios: DMI/SMBIOS entry point 825# vpd: Vital Product Data kernel interface 826# pmtimer: Adjust system timer at wakeup time 827# pbio: Parallel (8255 PPI) basic I/O (mode 0) port (e.g. Advantech PCL-724) 828# spic: Sony Programmable I/O controller (VAIO notebooks) 829# asmc: Apple System Management Controller 830# si: Specialix International SI/XIO or SX intelligent serial card driver 831# tpm: Trusted Platform Module 832 833# Notes on APM 834# The flags takes the following meaning for apm0: 835# 0x0020 Statclock is broken. 836 837# Notes on the Specialix SI/XIO driver: 838# The host card is memory, not IO mapped. 839# The Rev 1 host cards use a 64K chunk, on a 32K boundary. 840# The Rev 2 host cards use a 32K chunk, on a 32K boundary. 841# The cards can use an IRQ of 11, 12 or 15. 842 843# Notes on the Sony Programmable I/O controller 844# This is a temporary driver that should someday be replaced by something 845# that hooks into the ACPI layer. The device is hooked to the PIIX4's 846# General Device 10 decoder, which means you have to fiddle with PCI 847# registers to map it in, even though it is otherwise treated here as 848# an ISA device. At the moment, the driver polls, although the device 849# is capable of generating interrupts. It largely undocumented. 850# The port location in the hint is where you WANT the device to be 851# mapped. 0x10a0 seems to be traditional. At the moment the jogdial 852# is the only thing truly supported, but apparently a fair percentage 853# of the Vaio extra features are controlled by this device. 854 855device apm 856hint.apm.0.flags="0x20" 857device ipmi 858device smapi 859device smbios 860device vpd 861device pmtimer 862device pbio 863hint.pbio.0.at="isa" 864hint.pbio.0.port="0x360" 865device spic 866hint.spic.0.at="isa" 867hint.spic.0.port="0x10a0" 868device asmc 869device si 870device tpm 871device padlock_rng # VIA Padlock RNG 872device rdrand_rng # Intel Bull Mountain RNG 873device aesni # AES-NI OpenCrypto module 874 875# 876# Laptop/Notebook options: 877# 878# See also: 879# apm under `Miscellaneous hardware' 880# above. 881 882# For older notebooks that signal a powerfail condition (external 883# power supply dropped, or battery state low) by issuing an NMI: 884 885options POWERFAIL_NMI # make it beep instead of panicing 886 887# 888# I2C Bus 889# 890# Philips i2c bus support is provided by the `iicbus' device. 891# 892# Supported interfaces: 893# pcf Philips PCF8584 ISA-bus controller 894# 895device pcf 896hint.pcf.0.at="isa" 897hint.pcf.0.port="0x320" 898hint.pcf.0.irq="5" 899 900# 901# Hardware watchdog timers: 902# 903# ichwd: Intel ICH watchdog timer 904# amdsbwd: AMD SB7xx watchdog timer 905# viawd: VIA south bridge watchdog timer 906# wbwd: Winbond watchdog timer 907# 908device ichwd 909device amdsbwd 910device viawd 911device wbwd 912 913# 914# Temperature sensors: 915# 916# coretemp: on-die sensor on Intel Core and newer CPUs 917# amdtemp: on-die sensor on AMD K8/K10/K11 CPUs 918# 919device coretemp 920device amdtemp 921 922# 923# CPU control pseudo-device. Provides access to MSRs, CPUID info and 924# microcode update feature. 925# 926device cpuctl 927 928# 929# System Management Bus (SMB) 930# 931options ENABLE_ALART # Control alarm on Intel intpm driver 932 933# 934# Set the number of PV entries per process. Increasing this can 935# stop panics related to heavy use of shared memory. However, that can 936# (combined with large amounts of physical memory) cause panics at 937# boot time due the kernel running out of VM space. 938# 939# If you're tweaking this, you might also want to increase the sysctls 940# "vm.v_free_min", "vm.v_free_reserved", and "vm.v_free_target". 941# 942# The value below is the one more than the default. 943# 944options PMAP_SHPGPERPROC=201 945 946# 947# Change the size of the kernel virtual address space. Due to 948# constraints in loader(8) on i386, this must be a multiple of 4. 949# 256 = 1 GB of kernel address space. Increasing this also causes 950# a reduction of the address space in user processes. 512 splits 951# the 4GB cpu address space in half (2GB user, 2GB kernel). For PAE 952# kernels, the value will need to be double non-PAE. A value of 1024 953# for PAE kernels is necessary to split the address space in half. 954# This will likely need to be increased to handle memory sizes >4GB. 955# PAE kernels default to a value of 512. 956# 957options KVA_PAGES=260 958 959# 960# Number of initial kernel page table pages used for early bootstrap. 961# This number should include enough pages to map the kernel, any 962# modules or other data loaded with the kernel by the loader, and data 963# structures allocated before the VM system is initialized such as the 964# vm_page_t array. Each page table page maps 4MB (2MB with PAE). 965# 966options NKPT=31 967 968 969##################################################################### 970# ABI Emulation 971 972# Enable iBCS2 runtime support for SCO and ISC binaries 973options IBCS2 974 975# Emulate spx device for client side of SVR3 local X interface 976options SPX_HACK 977 978# Enable Linux ABI emulation 979options COMPAT_LINUX 980 981# Enable i386 a.out binary support 982options COMPAT_AOUT 983 984# Enable the linux-like proc filesystem support (requires COMPAT_LINUX 985# and PSEUDOFS) 986options LINPROCFS 987 988#Enable the linux-like sys filesystem support (requires COMPAT_LINUX 989# and PSEUDOFS) 990options LINSYSFS 991 992# 993# SysVR4 ABI emulation 994# 995# The svr4 ABI emulator can be statically compiled into the kernel or loaded as 996# a KLD module. 997# The STREAMS network emulation code can also be compiled statically or as a 998# module. If loaded as a module, it must be loaded before the svr4 module 999# (the /usr/sbin/svr4 script does this for you). If compiling statically, 1000# the `streams' device must be configured into any kernel which also 1001# specifies COMPAT_SVR4. It is possible to have a statically-configured 1002# STREAMS device and a dynamically loadable svr4 emulator; the /usr/sbin/svr4 1003# script understands that it doesn't need to load the `streams' module under 1004# those circumstances. 1005# Caveat: At this time, `options KTRACE' is required for the svr4 emulator 1006# (whether static or dynamic). 1007# 1008options COMPAT_SVR4 # build emulator statically 1009options DEBUG_SVR4 # enable verbose debugging 1010device streams # STREAMS network driver (required for svr4). 1011 1012# Enable NDIS binary driver support 1013options NDISAPI 1014device ndis 1015 1016 1017##################################################################### 1018# VM OPTIONS 1019 1020# Disable the 4 MByte page PSE CPU feature. The PSE feature allows the 1021# kernel to use 4 MByte pages to map the kernel instead of 4k pages. 1022# This saves on the amount of memory needed for page tables needed to 1023# map the kernel. You should only disable this feature as a temporary 1024# workaround if you are having problems with it enabled. 1025# 1026#options DISABLE_PSE 1027 1028# Disable the global pages PGE CPU feature. The PGE feature allows pages 1029# to be marked with the PG_G bit. TLB entries for these pages are not 1030# flushed from the cache when %cr3 is reloaded. This can make context 1031# switches less expensive. You should only disable this feature as a 1032# temporary workaround if you are having problems with it enabled. 1033# 1034#options DISABLE_PG_G 1035 1036# KSTACK_PAGES is the number of memory pages to assign to the kernel 1037# stack of each thread. 1038 1039options KSTACK_PAGES=3 1040 1041# Enable detailed accounting by the PV entry allocator. 1042 1043options PV_STATS 1044 1045##################################################################### 1046 1047# More undocumented options for linting. 1048# Note that documenting these are not considered an affront. 1049 1050options FB_INSTALL_CDEV # install a CDEV entry in /dev 1051 1052options I586_PMC_GUPROF=0x70000 1053options KBDIO_DEBUG=2 1054options KBD_MAXRETRY=4 1055options KBD_MAXWAIT=6 1056options KBD_RESETDELAY=201 1057 1058options PSM_DEBUG=1 1059 1060options TIMER_FREQ=((14318182+6)/12) 1061 1062options VM_KMEM_SIZE 1063options VM_KMEM_SIZE_MAX 1064options VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE 1065 1066 1067