| # -*- shell-script -*- |
| |
| menu "IEEE 1394 (FireWire) support" |
| |
| config IEEE1394 |
| tristate "IEEE 1394 (FireWire) support" |
| depends on PCI || BROKEN |
| help |
| IEEE 1394 describes a high performance serial bus, which is also |
| known as FireWire(tm) or i.Link(tm) and is used for connecting all |
| sorts of devices (most notably digital video cameras) to your |
| computer. |
| |
| If you have FireWire hardware and want to use it, say Y here. This |
| is the core support only, you will also need to select a driver for |
| your IEEE 1394 adapter. |
| |
| To compile this driver as a module, say M here: the |
| module will be called ieee1394. |
| |
| comment "Subsystem Options" |
| depends on IEEE1394 |
| |
| config IEEE1394_VERBOSEDEBUG |
| bool "Excessive debugging output" |
| depends on IEEE1394 |
| help |
| If you say Y here, you will get very verbose debugging logs from |
| the subsystem which includes a dump of the header of every sent |
| and received packet. This can amount to a high amount of data |
| collected in a very short time which is usually also saved to |
| disk by the system logging daemons. |
| |
| Say Y if you really want or need the debugging output, everyone |
| else says N. |
| |
| comment "Device Drivers" |
| depends on IEEE1394 |
| |
| comment "Texas Instruments PCILynx requires I2C" |
| depends on IEEE1394 && I2C=n |
| |
| config IEEE1394_PCILYNX |
| tristate "Texas Instruments PCILynx support" |
| depends on PCI && IEEE1394 && I2C |
| select I2C_ALGOBIT |
| help |
| Say Y here if you have an IEEE-1394 controller with the Texas |
| Instruments PCILynx chip. Note: this driver is written for revision |
| 2 of this chip and may not work with revision 0. |
| |
| To compile this driver as a module, say M here: the |
| module will be called pcilynx. |
| |
| config IEEE1394_OHCI1394 |
| tristate "OHCI-1394 support" |
| depends on PCI && IEEE1394 |
| help |
| Enable this driver if you have an IEEE 1394 controller based on the |
| OHCI-1394 specification. The current driver is only tested with OHCI |
| chipsets made by Texas Instruments and NEC. Most third-party vendors |
| use one of these chipsets. It should work with any OHCI-1394 |
| compliant card, however. |
| |
| To compile this driver as a module, say M here: the |
| module will be called ohci1394. |
| |
| comment "Protocol Drivers" |
| depends on IEEE1394 |
| |
| config IEEE1394_VIDEO1394 |
| tristate "OHCI-1394 Video support" |
| depends on IEEE1394 && IEEE1394_OHCI1394 |
| help |
| This option enables video device usage for OHCI-1394 cards. Enable |
| this option only if you have an IEEE 1394 video device connected to |
| an OHCI-1394 card. |
| |
| comment "SBP-2 support (for storage devices) requires SCSI" |
| depends on IEEE1394 && SCSI=n |
| |
| config IEEE1394_SBP2 |
| tristate "SBP-2 support (Harddisks etc.)" |
| depends on IEEE1394 && SCSI |
| help |
| This option enables you to use SBP-2 devices connected to an IEEE |
| 1394 bus. SBP-2 devices include storage devices like harddisks and |
| DVD drives, also some other FireWire devices like scanners. |
| |
| You should also enable support for disks, CD-ROMs, etc. in the SCSI |
| configuration section. |
| |
| config IEEE1394_SBP2_PHYS_DMA |
| bool "Enable replacement for physical DMA in SBP2" |
| depends on IEEE1394 && IEEE1394_SBP2 && EXPERIMENTAL && (X86_32 || PPC_32) |
| help |
| This builds sbp2 for use with non-OHCI host adapters which do not |
| support physical DMA or for when ohci1394 is run with phys_dma=0. |
| Physical DMA is data movement without assistance of the drivers' |
| interrupt handlers. This option includes the interrupt handlers |
| that are required in absence of this hardware feature. |
| |
| This option is buggy and currently broken on some architectures. |
| If unsure, say N. |
| |
| config IEEE1394_ETH1394_ROM_ENTRY |
| depends on IEEE1394 |
| bool |
| default n |
| |
| config IEEE1394_ETH1394 |
| tristate "IP over 1394" |
| depends on IEEE1394 && EXPERIMENTAL && INET |
| select IEEE1394_ETH1394_ROM_ENTRY |
| help |
| This driver implements a functional majority of RFC 2734: IPv4 over |
| 1394. It will provide IP connectivity with implementations of RFC |
| 2734 found on other operating systems. It will not communicate with |
| older versions of this driver found in stock kernels prior to 2.6.3. |
| This driver is still considered experimental. It does not yet support |
| MCAP, therefore multicast support is significantly limited. |
| |
| The module is called eth1394 although it does not emulate Ethernet. |
| |
| config IEEE1394_DV1394 |
| tristate "OHCI-DV I/O support (deprecated)" |
| depends on IEEE1394 && IEEE1394_OHCI1394 |
| help |
| The dv1394 driver is unsupported and may be removed from Linux in a |
| future release. Its functionality is now provided by raw1394 together |
| with libraries such as libiec61883. |
| |
| config IEEE1394_RAWIO |
| tristate "Raw IEEE1394 I/O support" |
| depends on IEEE1394 |
| help |
| Say Y here if you want support for the raw device. This is generally |
| a good idea, so you should say Y here. The raw device enables |
| direct communication of user programs with the IEEE 1394 bus and |
| thus with the attached peripherals. |
| |
| To compile this driver as a module, say M here: the |
| module will be called raw1394. |
| |
| endmenu |