Linux Audio

Check our new training course

Loading...
v6.13.7
  1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
  2#
  3# For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,
  4# see Documentation/kbuild/kconfig-language.rst.
  5#
  6
  7menu "Firmware Drivers"
  8
  9source "drivers/firmware/arm_scmi/Kconfig"
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 10
 11config ARM_SCPI_PROTOCOL
 12	tristate "ARM System Control and Power Interface (SCPI) Message Protocol"
 13	depends on ARM || ARM64 || COMPILE_TEST
 14	depends on MAILBOX
 15	help
 16	  System Control and Power Interface (SCPI) Message Protocol is
 17	  defined for the purpose of communication between the Application
 18	  Cores(AP) and the System Control Processor(SCP). The MHU peripheral
 19	  provides a mechanism for inter-processor communication between SCP
 20	  and AP.
 21
 22	  SCP controls most of the power management on the Application
 23	  Processors. It offers control and management of: the core/cluster
 24	  power states, various power domain DVFS including the core/cluster,
 25	  certain system clocks configuration, thermal sensors and many
 26	  others.
 27
 28	  This protocol library provides interface for all the client drivers
 29	  making use of the features offered by the SCP.
 30
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 31config ARM_SDE_INTERFACE
 32	bool "ARM Software Delegated Exception Interface (SDEI)"
 33	depends on ARM64
 34	depends on ACPI_APEI_GHES
 35	help
 36	  The Software Delegated Exception Interface (SDEI) is an ARM
 37	  standard for registering callbacks from the platform firmware
 38	  into the OS. This is typically used to implement RAS notifications.
 39
 40config EDD
 41	tristate "BIOS Enhanced Disk Drive calls determine boot disk"
 42	depends on X86
 43	help
 44	  Say Y or M here if you want to enable BIOS Enhanced Disk Drive
 45	  Services real mode BIOS calls to determine which disk
 46	  BIOS tries boot from.  This information is then exported via sysfs.
 47
 48	  This option is experimental and is known to fail to boot on some
 49          obscure configurations. Most disk controller BIOS vendors do
 50          not yet implement this feature.
 51
 52config EDD_OFF
 53	bool "Sets default behavior for EDD detection to off"
 54	depends on EDD
 55	default n
 56	help
 57	  Say Y if you want EDD disabled by default, even though it is compiled into the
 58	  kernel. Say N if you want EDD enabled by default. EDD can be dynamically set
 59	  using the kernel parameter 'edd={on|skipmbr|off}'.
 60
 61config FIRMWARE_MEMMAP
 62    bool "Add firmware-provided memory map to sysfs" if EXPERT
 63    default X86
 64    help
 65      Add the firmware-provided (unmodified) memory map to /sys/firmware/memmap.
 66      That memory map is used for example by kexec to set up parameter area
 67      for the next kernel, but can also be used for debugging purposes.
 68
 69      See also Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-memmap.
 70
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 71config DMIID
 72    bool "Export DMI identification via sysfs to userspace"
 73    depends on DMI
 74    default y
 75	help
 76	  Say Y here if you want to query SMBIOS/DMI system identification
 77	  information from userspace through /sys/class/dmi/id/ or if you want
 78	  DMI-based module auto-loading.
 79
 80config DMI_SYSFS
 81	tristate "DMI table support in sysfs"
 82	depends on SYSFS && DMI
 83	default n
 84	help
 85	  Say Y or M here to enable the exporting of the raw DMI table
 86	  data via sysfs.  This is useful for consuming the data without
 87	  requiring any access to /dev/mem at all.  Tables are found
 88	  under /sys/firmware/dmi when this option is enabled and
 89	  loaded.
 90
 91config DMI_SCAN_MACHINE_NON_EFI_FALLBACK
 92	bool
 93
 94config ISCSI_IBFT_FIND
 95	bool "iSCSI Boot Firmware Table Attributes"
 96	depends on X86 && ISCSI_IBFT
 97	default n
 98	help
 99	  This option enables the kernel to find the region of memory
100	  in which the ISCSI Boot Firmware Table (iBFT) resides. This
101	  is necessary for iSCSI Boot Firmware Table Attributes module to work
102	  properly.
103
104config ISCSI_IBFT
105	tristate "iSCSI Boot Firmware Table Attributes module"
106	select ISCSI_BOOT_SYSFS
107	select ISCSI_IBFT_FIND if X86
108	depends on ACPI && SCSI && SCSI_LOWLEVEL
109	default n
110	help
111	  This option enables support for detection and exposing of iSCSI
112	  Boot Firmware Table (iBFT) via sysfs to userspace. If you wish to
113	  detect iSCSI boot parameters dynamically during system boot, say Y.
114	  Otherwise, say N.
115
116config RASPBERRYPI_FIRMWARE
117	tristate "Raspberry Pi Firmware Driver"
118	depends on BCM2835_MBOX
119	help
120	  This option enables support for communicating with the firmware on the
121	  Raspberry Pi.
122
123config FW_CFG_SYSFS
124	tristate "QEMU fw_cfg device support in sysfs"
125	depends on SYSFS && (ARM || ARM64 || PARISC || PPC_PMAC || RISCV || SPARC || X86)
126	depends on HAS_IOPORT_MAP
127	default n
128	help
129	  Say Y or M here to enable the exporting of the QEMU firmware
130	  configuration (fw_cfg) file entries via sysfs. Entries are
131	  found under /sys/firmware/fw_cfg when this option is enabled
132	  and loaded.
133
134config FW_CFG_SYSFS_CMDLINE
135	bool "QEMU fw_cfg device parameter parsing"
136	depends on FW_CFG_SYSFS
137	help
138	  Allow the qemu_fw_cfg device to be initialized via the kernel
139	  command line or using a module parameter.
140	  WARNING: Using incorrect parameters (base address in particular)
141	  may crash your system.
142
143config INTEL_STRATIX10_SERVICE
144	tristate "Intel Stratix10 Service Layer"
145	depends on ARCH_INTEL_SOCFPGA && ARM64 && HAVE_ARM_SMCCC
146	default n
147	help
148	  Intel Stratix10 service layer runs at privileged exception level,
149	  interfaces with the service providers (FPGA manager is one of them)
150	  and manages secure monitor call to communicate with secure monitor
151	  software at secure monitor exception level.
152
153	  Say Y here if you want Stratix10 service layer support.
154
155config INTEL_STRATIX10_RSU
156	tristate "Intel Stratix10 Remote System Update"
157	depends on INTEL_STRATIX10_SERVICE
158	help
159	  The Intel Remote System Update (RSU) driver exposes interfaces
160	  access through the Intel Service Layer to user space via sysfs
161	  device attribute nodes. The RSU interfaces report/control some of
162	  the optional RSU features of the Stratix 10 SoC FPGA.
163
164	  The RSU provides a way for customers to update the boot
165	  configuration of a Stratix 10 SoC device with significantly reduced
166	  risk of corrupting the bitstream storage and bricking the system.
167
168	  Enable RSU support if you are using an Intel SoC FPGA with the RSU
169	  feature enabled and you want Linux user space control.
170
171	  Say Y here if you want Intel RSU support.
172
173config MTK_ADSP_IPC
174	tristate "MTK ADSP IPC Protocol driver"
175	depends on MTK_ADSP_MBOX
176	help
177	  Say yes here to add support for the MediaTek ADSP IPC
178	  between host AP (Linux) and the firmware running on ADSP.
179	  ADSP exists on some mtk processors.
180	  Client might use shared memory to exchange information with ADSP.
181
182config SYSFB
183	bool
184	select BOOT_VESA_SUPPORT
185	select SCREEN_INFO
186
187config SYSFB_SIMPLEFB
188	bool "Mark VGA/VBE/EFI FB as generic system framebuffer"
189	depends on X86 || EFI
190	select SYSFB
191	help
192	  Firmwares often provide initial graphics framebuffers so the BIOS,
193	  bootloader or kernel can show basic video-output during boot for
194	  user-guidance and debugging. Historically, x86 used the VESA BIOS
195	  Extensions and EFI-framebuffers for this, which are mostly limited
196	  to x86 BIOS or EFI systems.
197	  This option, if enabled, marks VGA/VBE/EFI framebuffers as generic
198	  framebuffers so the new generic system-framebuffer drivers can be
199	  used instead. If the framebuffer is not compatible with the generic
200	  modes, it is advertised as fallback platform framebuffer so legacy
201	  drivers like efifb, vesafb and uvesafb can pick it up.
202	  If this option is not selected, all system framebuffers are always
203	  marked as fallback platform framebuffers as usual.
204
205	  Note: Legacy fbdev drivers, including vesafb, efifb, uvesafb, will
206	  not be able to pick up generic system framebuffers if this option
207	  is selected. You are highly encouraged to enable simplefb as
208	  replacement if you select this option. simplefb can correctly deal
209	  with generic system framebuffers. But you should still keep vesafb
210	  and others enabled as fallback if a system framebuffer is
211	  incompatible with simplefb.
212
213	  If unsure, say Y.
214
215config TI_SCI_PROTOCOL
216	tristate "TI System Control Interface (TISCI) Message Protocol"
217	depends on TI_MESSAGE_MANAGER
218	help
219	  TI System Control Interface (TISCI) Message Protocol is used to manage
220	  compute systems such as ARM, DSP etc with the system controller in
221	  complex System on Chip(SoC) such as those found on certain keystone
222	  generation SoC from TI.
223
224	  System controller provides various facilities including power
225	  management function support.
226
227	  This protocol library is used by client drivers to use the features
228	  provided by the system controller.
229
230config TRUSTED_FOUNDATIONS
231	bool "Trusted Foundations secure monitor support"
232	depends on ARM && CPU_V7
233	help
234	  Some devices (including most early Tegra-based consumer devices on
235	  the market) are booted with the Trusted Foundations secure monitor
236	  active, requiring some core operations to be performed by the secure
237	  monitor instead of the kernel.
238
239	  This option allows the kernel to invoke the secure monitor whenever
240	  required on devices using Trusted Foundations. See the functions and
241	  comments in linux/firmware/trusted_foundations.h or the device tree
242	  bindings for "tlm,trusted-foundations" for details on how to use it.
243
244	  Choose N if you don't know what this is about.
245
246config TURRIS_MOX_RWTM
247	tristate "Turris Mox rWTM secure firmware driver"
248	depends on ARCH_MVEBU || COMPILE_TEST
249	depends on HAS_DMA && OF
250	depends on MAILBOX
251	select HW_RANDOM
252	select ARMADA_37XX_RWTM_MBOX
253	help
254	  This driver communicates with the firmware on the Cortex-M3 secure
255	  processor of the Turris Mox router. Enable if you are building for
256	  Turris Mox, and you will be able to read the device serial number and
257	  other manufacturing data and also utilize the Entropy Bit Generator
258	  for hardware random number generation.
259
260source "drivers/firmware/arm_ffa/Kconfig"
 
 
 
261source "drivers/firmware/broadcom/Kconfig"
262source "drivers/firmware/cirrus/Kconfig"
263source "drivers/firmware/google/Kconfig"
264source "drivers/firmware/efi/Kconfig"
265source "drivers/firmware/imx/Kconfig"
266source "drivers/firmware/meson/Kconfig"
267source "drivers/firmware/microchip/Kconfig"
268source "drivers/firmware/psci/Kconfig"
269source "drivers/firmware/qcom/Kconfig"
270source "drivers/firmware/smccc/Kconfig"
271source "drivers/firmware/tegra/Kconfig"
272source "drivers/firmware/xilinx/Kconfig"
273
274endmenu
v5.4
  1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
  2#
  3# For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,
  4# see Documentation/kbuild/kconfig-language.rst.
  5#
  6
  7menu "Firmware Drivers"
  8
  9config ARM_SCMI_PROTOCOL
 10	bool "ARM System Control and Management Interface (SCMI) Message Protocol"
 11	depends on ARM || ARM64 || COMPILE_TEST
 12	depends on MAILBOX
 13	help
 14	  ARM System Control and Management Interface (SCMI) protocol is a
 15	  set of operating system-independent software interfaces that are
 16	  used in system management. SCMI is extensible and currently provides
 17	  interfaces for: Discovery and self-description of the interfaces
 18	  it supports, Power domain management which is the ability to place
 19	  a given device or domain into the various power-saving states that
 20	  it supports, Performance management which is the ability to control
 21	  the performance of a domain that is composed of compute engines
 22	  such as application processors and other accelerators, Clock
 23	  management which is the ability to set and inquire rates on platform
 24	  managed clocks and Sensor management which is the ability to read
 25	  sensor data, and be notified of sensor value.
 26
 27	  This protocol library provides interface for all the client drivers
 28	  making use of the features offered by the SCMI.
 29
 30config ARM_SCMI_POWER_DOMAIN
 31	tristate "SCMI power domain driver"
 32	depends on ARM_SCMI_PROTOCOL || (COMPILE_TEST && OF)
 33	default y
 34	select PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS if PM
 35	help
 36	  This enables support for the SCMI power domains which can be
 37	  enabled or disabled via the SCP firmware
 38
 39	  This driver can also be built as a module.  If so, the module
 40	  will be called scmi_pm_domain. Note this may needed early in boot
 41	  before rootfs may be available.
 42
 43config ARM_SCPI_PROTOCOL
 44	tristate "ARM System Control and Power Interface (SCPI) Message Protocol"
 45	depends on ARM || ARM64 || COMPILE_TEST
 46	depends on MAILBOX
 47	help
 48	  System Control and Power Interface (SCPI) Message Protocol is
 49	  defined for the purpose of communication between the Application
 50	  Cores(AP) and the System Control Processor(SCP). The MHU peripheral
 51	  provides a mechanism for inter-processor communication between SCP
 52	  and AP.
 53
 54	  SCP controls most of the power managament on the Application
 55	  Processors. It offers control and management of: the core/cluster
 56	  power states, various power domain DVFS including the core/cluster,
 57	  certain system clocks configuration, thermal sensors and many
 58	  others.
 59
 60	  This protocol library provides interface for all the client drivers
 61	  making use of the features offered by the SCP.
 62
 63config ARM_SCPI_POWER_DOMAIN
 64	tristate "SCPI power domain driver"
 65	depends on ARM_SCPI_PROTOCOL || (COMPILE_TEST && OF)
 66	default y
 67	select PM_GENERIC_DOMAINS if PM
 68	help
 69	  This enables support for the SCPI power domains which can be
 70	  enabled or disabled via the SCP firmware
 71
 72config ARM_SDE_INTERFACE
 73	bool "ARM Software Delegated Exception Interface (SDEI)"
 74	depends on ARM64
 
 75	help
 76	  The Software Delegated Exception Interface (SDEI) is an ARM
 77	  standard for registering callbacks from the platform firmware
 78	  into the OS. This is typically used to implement RAS notifications.
 79
 80config EDD
 81	tristate "BIOS Enhanced Disk Drive calls determine boot disk"
 82	depends on X86
 83	help
 84	  Say Y or M here if you want to enable BIOS Enhanced Disk Drive
 85	  Services real mode BIOS calls to determine which disk
 86	  BIOS tries boot from.  This information is then exported via sysfs.
 87
 88	  This option is experimental and is known to fail to boot on some
 89          obscure configurations. Most disk controller BIOS vendors do
 90          not yet implement this feature.
 91
 92config EDD_OFF
 93	bool "Sets default behavior for EDD detection to off"
 94	depends on EDD
 95	default n
 96	help
 97	  Say Y if you want EDD disabled by default, even though it is compiled into the
 98	  kernel. Say N if you want EDD enabled by default. EDD can be dynamically set
 99	  using the kernel parameter 'edd={on|skipmbr|off}'.
100
101config FIRMWARE_MEMMAP
102    bool "Add firmware-provided memory map to sysfs" if EXPERT
103    default X86
104    help
105      Add the firmware-provided (unmodified) memory map to /sys/firmware/memmap.
106      That memory map is used for example by kexec to set up parameter area
107      for the next kernel, but can also be used for debugging purposes.
108
109      See also Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-firmware-memmap.
110
111config EFI_PCDP
112	bool "Console device selection via EFI PCDP or HCDP table"
113	depends on ACPI && EFI && IA64
114	default y if IA64
115	help
116	  If your firmware supplies the PCDP table, and you want to
117	  automatically use the primary console device it describes
118	  as the Linux console, say Y here.
119
120	  If your firmware supplies the HCDP table, and you want to
121	  use the first serial port it describes as the Linux console,
122	  say Y here.  If your EFI ConOut path contains only a UART
123	  device, it will become the console automatically.  Otherwise,
124	  you must specify the "console=hcdp" kernel boot argument.
125
126	  Neither the PCDP nor the HCDP affects naming of serial devices,
127	  so a serial console may be /dev/ttyS0, /dev/ttyS1, etc, depending
128	  on how the driver discovers devices.
129
130	  You must also enable the appropriate drivers (serial, VGA, etc.)
131
132	  See DIG64_HCDPv20_042804.pdf available from
133	  <http://www.dig64.org/specifications/> 
134
135config DMIID
136    bool "Export DMI identification via sysfs to userspace"
137    depends on DMI
138    default y
139	help
140	  Say Y here if you want to query SMBIOS/DMI system identification
141	  information from userspace through /sys/class/dmi/id/ or if you want
142	  DMI-based module auto-loading.
143
144config DMI_SYSFS
145	tristate "DMI table support in sysfs"
146	depends on SYSFS && DMI
147	default n
148	help
149	  Say Y or M here to enable the exporting of the raw DMI table
150	  data via sysfs.  This is useful for consuming the data without
151	  requiring any access to /dev/mem at all.  Tables are found
152	  under /sys/firmware/dmi when this option is enabled and
153	  loaded.
154
155config DMI_SCAN_MACHINE_NON_EFI_FALLBACK
156	bool
157
158config ISCSI_IBFT_FIND
159	bool "iSCSI Boot Firmware Table Attributes"
160	depends on X86 && ISCSI_IBFT
161	default n
162	help
163	  This option enables the kernel to find the region of memory
164	  in which the ISCSI Boot Firmware Table (iBFT) resides. This
165	  is necessary for iSCSI Boot Firmware Table Attributes module to work
166	  properly.
167
168config ISCSI_IBFT
169	tristate "iSCSI Boot Firmware Table Attributes module"
170	select ISCSI_BOOT_SYSFS
171	select ISCSI_IBFT_FIND if X86
172	depends on ACPI && SCSI && SCSI_LOWLEVEL
173	default	n
174	help
175	  This option enables support for detection and exposing of iSCSI
176	  Boot Firmware Table (iBFT) via sysfs to userspace. If you wish to
177	  detect iSCSI boot parameters dynamically during system boot, say Y.
178	  Otherwise, say N.
179
180config RASPBERRYPI_FIRMWARE
181	tristate "Raspberry Pi Firmware Driver"
182	depends on BCM2835_MBOX
183	help
184	  This option enables support for communicating with the firmware on the
185	  Raspberry Pi.
186
187config FW_CFG_SYSFS
188	tristate "QEMU fw_cfg device support in sysfs"
189	depends on SYSFS && (ARM || ARM64 || PPC_PMAC || SPARC || X86)
190	depends on HAS_IOPORT_MAP
191	default n
192	help
193	  Say Y or M here to enable the exporting of the QEMU firmware
194	  configuration (fw_cfg) file entries via sysfs. Entries are
195	  found under /sys/firmware/fw_cfg when this option is enabled
196	  and loaded.
197
198config FW_CFG_SYSFS_CMDLINE
199	bool "QEMU fw_cfg device parameter parsing"
200	depends on FW_CFG_SYSFS
201	help
202	  Allow the qemu_fw_cfg device to be initialized via the kernel
203	  command line or using a module parameter.
204	  WARNING: Using incorrect parameters (base address in particular)
205	  may crash your system.
206
207config INTEL_STRATIX10_SERVICE
208	tristate "Intel Stratix10 Service Layer"
209	depends on ARCH_STRATIX10 && HAVE_ARM_SMCCC
210	default n
211	help
212	  Intel Stratix10 service layer runs at privileged exception level,
213	  interfaces with the service providers (FPGA manager is one of them)
214	  and manages secure monitor call to communicate with secure monitor
215	  software at secure monitor exception level.
216
217	  Say Y here if you want Stratix10 service layer support.
218
219config INTEL_STRATIX10_RSU
220	tristate "Intel Stratix10 Remote System Update"
221	depends on INTEL_STRATIX10_SERVICE
222	help
223	  The Intel Remote System Update (RSU) driver exposes interfaces
224	  access through the Intel Service Layer to user space via sysfs
225	  device attribute nodes. The RSU interfaces report/control some of
226	  the optional RSU features of the Stratix 10 SoC FPGA.
227
228	  The RSU provides a way for customers to update the boot
229	  configuration of a Stratix 10 SoC device with significantly reduced
230	  risk of corrupting the bitstream storage and bricking the system.
231
232	  Enable RSU support if you are using an Intel SoC FPGA with the RSU
233	  feature enabled and you want Linux user space control.
234
235	  Say Y here if you want Intel RSU support.
236
237config QCOM_SCM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
238	bool
239	depends on ARM || ARM64
240	select RESET_CONTROLLER
241
242config QCOM_SCM_32
243	def_bool y
244	depends on QCOM_SCM && ARM
245
246config QCOM_SCM_64
247	def_bool y
248	depends on QCOM_SCM && ARM64
249
250config QCOM_SCM_DOWNLOAD_MODE_DEFAULT
251	bool "Qualcomm download mode enabled by default"
252	depends on QCOM_SCM
253	help
254	  A device with "download mode" enabled will upon an unexpected
255	  warm-restart enter a special debug mode that allows the user to
256	  "download" memory content over USB for offline postmortem analysis.
257	  The feature can be enabled/disabled on the kernel command line.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
258
259	  Say Y here to enable "download mode" by default.
260
261config TI_SCI_PROTOCOL
262	tristate "TI System Control Interface (TISCI) Message Protocol"
263	depends on TI_MESSAGE_MANAGER
264	help
265	  TI System Control Interface (TISCI) Message Protocol is used to manage
266	  compute systems such as ARM, DSP etc with the system controller in
267	  complex System on Chip(SoC) such as those found on certain keystone
268	  generation SoC from TI.
269
270	  System controller provides various facilities including power
271	  management function support.
272
273	  This protocol library is used by client drivers to use the features
274	  provided by the system controller.
275
276config TRUSTED_FOUNDATIONS
277	bool "Trusted Foundations secure monitor support"
278	depends on ARM && CPU_V7
279	help
280	  Some devices (including most early Tegra-based consumer devices on
281	  the market) are booted with the Trusted Foundations secure monitor
282	  active, requiring some core operations to be performed by the secure
283	  monitor instead of the kernel.
284
285	  This option allows the kernel to invoke the secure monitor whenever
286	  required on devices using Trusted Foundations. See the functions and
287	  comments in linux/firmware/trusted_foundations.h or the device tree
288	  bindings for "tlm,trusted-foundations" for details on how to use it.
289
290	  Choose N if you don't know what this is about.
291
292config TURRIS_MOX_RWTM
293	tristate "Turris Mox rWTM secure firmware driver"
294	depends on ARCH_MVEBU || COMPILE_TEST
295	depends on HAS_DMA && OF
296	depends on MAILBOX
297	select HW_RANDOM
298	select ARMADA_37XX_RWTM_MBOX
299	help
300	  This driver communicates with the firmware on the Cortex-M3 secure
301	  processor of the Turris Mox router. Enable if you are building for
302	  Turris Mox, and you will be able to read the device serial number and
303	  other manufacturing data and also utilize the Entropy Bit Generator
304	  for hardware random number generation.
305
306config HAVE_ARM_SMCCC
307	bool
308
309source "drivers/firmware/psci/Kconfig"
310source "drivers/firmware/broadcom/Kconfig"
 
311source "drivers/firmware/google/Kconfig"
312source "drivers/firmware/efi/Kconfig"
313source "drivers/firmware/imx/Kconfig"
314source "drivers/firmware/meson/Kconfig"
 
 
 
 
315source "drivers/firmware/tegra/Kconfig"
316source "drivers/firmware/xilinx/Kconfig"
317
318endmenu