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1#
2# USB device configuration
3#
4
5config USB_OHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_DESC
6 bool
7
8config USB_OHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_MMIO
9 bool
10
11config USB_OHCI_LITTLE_ENDIAN
12 bool
13 default n if STB03xxx || PPC_MPC52xx
14 default y
15
16config USB_EHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_MMIO
17 bool
18
19config USB_EHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_DESC
20 bool
21
22menuconfig USB_SUPPORT
23 bool "USB support"
24 depends on HAS_IOMEM
25 default y
26 ---help---
27 This option adds core support for Universal Serial Bus (USB).
28 You will also need drivers from the following menu to make use of it.
29
30if USB_SUPPORT
31
32config USB_COMMON
33 tristate
34 default y
35 depends on USB || USB_GADGET
36
37config USB_ARCH_HAS_HCD
38 def_bool y
39
40# ARM SA1111 chips have a non-PCI based "OHCI-compatible" USB host interface.
41config USB
42 tristate "Support for Host-side USB"
43 depends on USB_ARCH_HAS_HCD
44 select NLS # for UTF-8 strings
45 ---help---
46 Universal Serial Bus (USB) is a specification for a serial bus
47 subsystem which offers higher speeds and more features than the
48 traditional PC serial port. The bus supplies power to peripherals
49 and allows for hot swapping. Up to 127 USB peripherals can be
50 connected to a single USB host in a tree structure.
51
52 The USB host is the root of the tree, the peripherals are the
53 leaves and the inner nodes are special USB devices called hubs.
54 Most PCs now have USB host ports, used to connect peripherals
55 such as scanners, keyboards, mice, modems, cameras, disks,
56 flash memory, network links, and printers to the PC.
57
58 Say Y here if your computer has a host-side USB port and you want
59 to use USB devices. You then need to say Y to at least one of the
60 Host Controller Driver (HCD) options below. Choose a USB 1.1
61 controller, such as "UHCI HCD support" or "OHCI HCD support",
62 and "EHCI HCD (USB 2.0) support" except for older systems that
63 do not have USB 2.0 support. It doesn't normally hurt to select
64 them all if you are not certain.
65
66 If your system has a device-side USB port, used in the peripheral
67 side of the USB protocol, see the "USB Gadget" framework instead.
68
69 After choosing your HCD, then select drivers for the USB peripherals
70 you'll be using. You may want to check out the information provided
71 in <file:Documentation/usb/> and especially the links given in
72 <file:Documentation/usb/usb-help.txt>.
73
74 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
75 module will be called usbcore.
76
77if USB
78
79source "drivers/usb/core/Kconfig"
80
81source "drivers/usb/mon/Kconfig"
82
83source "drivers/usb/wusbcore/Kconfig"
84
85source "drivers/usb/host/Kconfig"
86
87source "drivers/usb/renesas_usbhs/Kconfig"
88
89source "drivers/usb/class/Kconfig"
90
91source "drivers/usb/storage/Kconfig"
92
93source "drivers/usb/image/Kconfig"
94
95source "drivers/usb/usbip/Kconfig"
96
97endif
98
99source "drivers/usb/musb/Kconfig"
100
101source "drivers/usb/dwc3/Kconfig"
102
103source "drivers/usb/dwc2/Kconfig"
104
105source "drivers/usb/chipidea/Kconfig"
106
107source "drivers/usb/isp1760/Kconfig"
108
109comment "USB port drivers"
110
111if USB
112
113config USB_USS720
114 tristate "USS720 parport driver"
115 depends on PARPORT
116 select PARPORT_NOT_PC
117 ---help---
118 This driver is for USB parallel port adapters that use the Lucent
119 Technologies USS-720 chip. These cables are plugged into your USB
120 port and provide USB compatibility to peripherals designed with
121 parallel port interfaces.
122
123 The chip has two modes: automatic mode and manual mode. In automatic
124 mode, it looks to the computer like a standard USB printer. Only
125 printers may be connected to the USS-720 in this mode. The generic
126 USB printer driver ("USB Printer support", above) may be used in
127 that mode, and you can say N here if you want to use the chip only
128 in this mode.
129
130 Manual mode is not limited to printers, any parallel port
131 device should work. This driver utilizes manual mode.
132 Note however that some operations are three orders of magnitude
133 slower than on a PCI/ISA Parallel Port, so timing critical
134 applications might not work.
135
136 Say Y here if you own an USS-720 USB->Parport cable and intend to
137 connect anything other than a printer to it.
138
139 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
140 module will be called uss720.
141
142source "drivers/usb/serial/Kconfig"
143
144source "drivers/usb/misc/Kconfig"
145
146source "drivers/usb/atm/Kconfig"
147
148endif # USB
149
150source "drivers/usb/phy/Kconfig"
151
152source "drivers/usb/gadget/Kconfig"
153
154config USB_LED_TRIG
155 bool "USB LED Triggers"
156 depends on LEDS_CLASS && USB_COMMON && LEDS_TRIGGERS
157 help
158 This option adds LED triggers for USB host and/or gadget activity.
159
160 Say Y here if you are working on a system with led-class supported
161 LEDs and you want to use them as activity indicators for USB host or
162 gadget.
163
164endif # USB_SUPPORT
1#
2# USB device configuration
3#
4
5config USB_OHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_DESC
6 bool
7
8config USB_OHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_MMIO
9 bool
10
11config USB_OHCI_LITTLE_ENDIAN
12 bool
13 default n if STB03xxx || PPC_MPC52xx
14 default y
15
16config USB_EHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_MMIO
17 bool
18
19config USB_EHCI_BIG_ENDIAN_DESC
20 bool
21
22menuconfig USB_SUPPORT
23 bool "USB support"
24 depends on HAS_IOMEM
25 default y
26 ---help---
27 This option adds core support for Universal Serial Bus (USB).
28 You will also need drivers from the following menu to make use of it.
29
30if USB_SUPPORT
31
32config USB_COMMON
33 tristate
34
35config USB_ARCH_HAS_HCD
36 def_bool y
37
38# ARM SA1111 chips have a non-PCI based "OHCI-compatible" USB host interface.
39config USB
40 tristate "Support for Host-side USB"
41 depends on USB_ARCH_HAS_HCD
42 select USB_COMMON
43 select NLS # for UTF-8 strings
44 ---help---
45 Universal Serial Bus (USB) is a specification for a serial bus
46 subsystem which offers higher speeds and more features than the
47 traditional PC serial port. The bus supplies power to peripherals
48 and allows for hot swapping. Up to 127 USB peripherals can be
49 connected to a single USB host in a tree structure.
50
51 The USB host is the root of the tree, the peripherals are the
52 leaves and the inner nodes are special USB devices called hubs.
53 Most PCs now have USB host ports, used to connect peripherals
54 such as scanners, keyboards, mice, modems, cameras, disks,
55 flash memory, network links, and printers to the PC.
56
57 Say Y here if your computer has a host-side USB port and you want
58 to use USB devices. You then need to say Y to at least one of the
59 Host Controller Driver (HCD) options below. Choose a USB 1.1
60 controller, such as "UHCI HCD support" or "OHCI HCD support",
61 and "EHCI HCD (USB 2.0) support" except for older systems that
62 do not have USB 2.0 support. It doesn't normally hurt to select
63 them all if you are not certain.
64
65 If your system has a device-side USB port, used in the peripheral
66 side of the USB protocol, see the "USB Gadget" framework instead.
67
68 After choosing your HCD, then select drivers for the USB peripherals
69 you'll be using. You may want to check out the information provided
70 in <file:Documentation/usb/> and especially the links given in
71 <file:Documentation/usb/usb-help.txt>.
72
73 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
74 module will be called usbcore.
75
76if USB
77
78source "drivers/usb/core/Kconfig"
79
80source "drivers/usb/mon/Kconfig"
81
82source "drivers/usb/wusbcore/Kconfig"
83
84source "drivers/usb/host/Kconfig"
85
86source "drivers/usb/renesas_usbhs/Kconfig"
87
88source "drivers/usb/class/Kconfig"
89
90source "drivers/usb/storage/Kconfig"
91
92source "drivers/usb/image/Kconfig"
93
94source "drivers/usb/usbip/Kconfig"
95
96endif
97
98source "drivers/usb/mtu3/Kconfig"
99
100source "drivers/usb/musb/Kconfig"
101
102source "drivers/usb/dwc3/Kconfig"
103
104source "drivers/usb/dwc2/Kconfig"
105
106source "drivers/usb/chipidea/Kconfig"
107
108source "drivers/usb/isp1760/Kconfig"
109
110comment "USB port drivers"
111
112if USB
113
114config USB_USS720
115 tristate "USS720 parport driver"
116 depends on PARPORT
117 select PARPORT_NOT_PC
118 ---help---
119 This driver is for USB parallel port adapters that use the Lucent
120 Technologies USS-720 chip. These cables are plugged into your USB
121 port and provide USB compatibility to peripherals designed with
122 parallel port interfaces.
123
124 The chip has two modes: automatic mode and manual mode. In automatic
125 mode, it looks to the computer like a standard USB printer. Only
126 printers may be connected to the USS-720 in this mode. The generic
127 USB printer driver ("USB Printer support", above) may be used in
128 that mode, and you can say N here if you want to use the chip only
129 in this mode.
130
131 Manual mode is not limited to printers, any parallel port
132 device should work. This driver utilizes manual mode.
133 Note however that some operations are three orders of magnitude
134 slower than on a PCI/ISA Parallel Port, so timing critical
135 applications might not work.
136
137 Say Y here if you own an USS-720 USB->Parport cable and intend to
138 connect anything other than a printer to it.
139
140 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
141 module will be called uss720.
142
143source "drivers/usb/serial/Kconfig"
144
145source "drivers/usb/misc/Kconfig"
146
147source "drivers/usb/atm/Kconfig"
148
149endif # USB
150
151source "drivers/usb/phy/Kconfig"
152
153source "drivers/usb/gadget/Kconfig"
154
155config USB_LED_TRIG
156 bool "USB LED Triggers"
157 depends on LEDS_CLASS && LEDS_TRIGGERS
158 select USB_COMMON
159 help
160 This option adds LED triggers for USB host and/or gadget activity.
161
162 Say Y here if you are working on a system with led-class supported
163 LEDs and you want to use them as activity indicators for USB host or
164 gadget.
165
166config USB_ULPI_BUS
167 tristate "USB ULPI PHY interface support"
168 select USB_COMMON
169 help
170 UTMI+ Low Pin Interface (ULPI) is specification for a commonly used
171 USB 2.0 PHY interface. The ULPI specification defines a standard set
172 of registers that can be used to detect the vendor and product which
173 allows ULPI to be handled as a bus. This module is the driver for that
174 bus.
175
176 The ULPI interfaces (the buses) are registered by the drivers for USB
177 controllers which support ULPI register access and have ULPI PHY
178 attached to them. The ULPI PHY drivers themselves are normal PHY
179 drivers.
180
181 ULPI PHYs provide often functions such as ADP sensing/probing (OTG
182 protocol) and USB charger detection.
183
184 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module will
185 be called ulpi.
186
187endif # USB_SUPPORT