1# 2# HID driver configuration 3# 4menuconfig HID_SUPPORT 5 bool "HID Devices" 6 depends on INPUT 7 default y 8 ---help--- 9 Say Y here to get to see options for various computer-human interface 10 device drivers. This option alone does not add any kernel code. 11 12 If you say N, all options in this submenu will be skipped and disabled. 13 14if HID_SUPPORT 15 16config HID 17 tristate "Generic HID support" 18 depends on INPUT 19 default y 20 ---help--- 21 A human interface device (HID) is a type of computer device that 22 interacts directly with and takes input from humans. The term "HID" 23 most commonly used to refer to the USB-HID specification, but other 24 devices (such as, but not strictly limited to, Bluetooth) are 25 designed using HID specification (this involves certain keyboards, 26 mice, tablets, etc). This option compiles into kernel the generic 27 HID layer code (parser, usages, etc.), which can then be used by 28 transport-specific HID implementation (like USB or Bluetooth). 29 30 For docs and specs, see http://www.usb.org/developers/hidpage/ 31 32 If unsure, say Y 33 34config HID_DEBUG 35 bool "HID debugging support" 36 default y if !EMBEDDED 37 depends on HID 38 ---help--- 39 This option lets the HID layer output diagnostics about its internal 40 state, resolve HID usages, dump HID fields, etc. Individual HID drivers 41 use this debugging facility to output information about individual HID 42 devices, etc. 43 44 This feature is useful for those who are either debugging the HID parser 45 or any HID hardware device. 46 47 If unsure, say N 48 49source "drivers/hid/usbhid/Kconfig" 50 51endif # HID_SUPPORT 52