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Commit | Line | Data |
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ec98c681 | 1 | menuconfig MTD |
1da177e4 | 2 | tristate "Memory Technology Device (MTD) support" |
9310da0b | 3 | depends on GENERIC_IO |
1da177e4 LT |
4 | help |
5 | Memory Technology Devices are flash, RAM and similar chips, often | |
6 | used for solid state file systems on embedded devices. This option | |
7 | will provide the generic support for MTD drivers to register | |
8 | themselves with the kernel and for potential users of MTD devices | |
9 | to enumerate the devices which are present and obtain a handle on | |
97894cda | 10 | them. It will also allow you to select individual drivers for |
1da177e4 LT |
11 | particular hardware and users of MTD devices. If unsure, say N. |
12 | ||
ec98c681 JE |
13 | if MTD |
14 | ||
80f53da0 | 15 | config MTD_TESTS |
48e546b7 | 16 | tristate "MTD tests support (DANGEROUS)" |
80f53da0 MF |
17 | depends on m |
18 | help | |
19 | This option includes various MTD tests into compilation. The tests | |
20 | should normally be compiled as kernel modules. The modules perform | |
21 | various checks and verifications when loaded. | |
22 | ||
48e546b7 WS |
23 | WARNING: some of the tests will ERASE entire MTD device which they |
24 | test. Do not use these tests unless you really know what you do. | |
25 | ||
1da177e4 LT |
26 | config MTD_REDBOOT_PARTS |
27 | tristate "RedBoot partition table parsing" | |
1da177e4 LT |
28 | ---help--- |
29 | RedBoot is a ROM monitor and bootloader which deals with multiple | |
30 | 'images' in flash devices by putting a table one of the erase | |
31 | blocks on the device, similar to a partition table, which gives | |
32 | the offsets, lengths and names of all the images stored in the | |
33 | flash. | |
34 | ||
35 | If you need code which can detect and parse this table, and register | |
36 | MTD 'partitions' corresponding to each image in the table, enable | |
97894cda | 37 | this option. |
1da177e4 LT |
38 | |
39 | You will still need the parsing functions to be called by the driver | |
97894cda TG |
40 | for your particular device. It won't happen automatically. The |
41 | SA1100 map driver (CONFIG_MTD_SA1100) has an option for this, for | |
1da177e4 LT |
42 | example. |
43 | ||
b7b6e08f GL |
44 | if MTD_REDBOOT_PARTS |
45 | ||
1da177e4 LT |
46 | config MTD_REDBOOT_DIRECTORY_BLOCK |
47 | int "Location of RedBoot partition table" | |
1da177e4 LT |
48 | default "-1" |
49 | ---help--- | |
50 | This option is the Linux counterpart to the | |
51 | CYGNUM_REDBOOT_FIS_DIRECTORY_BLOCK RedBoot compile time | |
52 | option. | |
53 | ||
54 | The option specifies which Flash sectors holds the RedBoot | |
4992a9e8 | 55 | partition table. A zero or positive value gives an absolute |
1da177e4 LT |
56 | erase block number. A negative value specifies a number of |
57 | sectors before the end of the device. | |
97894cda | 58 | |
1da177e4 LT |
59 | For example "2" means block number 2, "-1" means the last |
60 | block and "-2" means the penultimate block. | |
97894cda | 61 | |
1da177e4 | 62 | config MTD_REDBOOT_PARTS_UNALLOCATED |
e55a3e8a | 63 | bool "Include unallocated flash regions" |
1da177e4 LT |
64 | help |
65 | If you need to register each unallocated flash region as a MTD | |
66 | 'partition', enable this option. | |
67 | ||
68 | config MTD_REDBOOT_PARTS_READONLY | |
e55a3e8a | 69 | bool "Force read-only for RedBoot system images" |
1da177e4 LT |
70 | help |
71 | If you need to force read-only for 'RedBoot', 'RedBoot Config' and | |
72 | 'FIS directory' images, enable this option. | |
73 | ||
b7b6e08f GL |
74 | endif # MTD_REDBOOT_PARTS |
75 | ||
1da177e4 | 76 | config MTD_CMDLINE_PARTS |
f5f172dc LR |
77 | tristate "Command line partition table parsing" |
78 | depends on MTD | |
1da177e4 | 79 | ---help--- |
4992a9e8 | 80 | Allow generic configuration of the MTD partition tables via the kernel |
1da177e4 | 81 | command line. Multiple flash resources are supported for hardware where |
97894cda | 82 | different kinds of flash memory are available. |
1da177e4 LT |
83 | |
84 | You will still need the parsing functions to be called by the driver | |
97894cda TG |
85 | for your particular device. It won't happen automatically. The |
86 | SA1100 map driver (CONFIG_MTD_SA1100) has an option for this, for | |
1da177e4 LT |
87 | example. |
88 | ||
89 | The format for the command line is as follows: | |
90 | ||
91 | mtdparts=<mtddef>[;<mtddef] | |
92 | <mtddef> := <mtd-id>:<partdef>[,<partdef>] | |
93 | <partdef> := <size>[@offset][<name>][ro] | |
94 | <mtd-id> := unique id used in mapping driver/device | |
97894cda | 95 | <size> := standard linux memsize OR "-" to denote all |
1da177e4 LT |
96 | remaining space |
97 | <name> := (NAME) | |
98 | ||
97894cda TG |
99 | Due to the way Linux handles the command line, no spaces are |
100 | allowed in the partition definition, including mtd id's and partition | |
1da177e4 LT |
101 | names. |
102 | ||
103 | Examples: | |
104 | ||
105 | 1 flash resource (mtd-id "sa1100"), with 1 single writable partition: | |
106 | mtdparts=sa1100:- | |
107 | ||
108 | Same flash, but 2 named partitions, the first one being read-only: | |
109 | mtdparts=sa1100:256k(ARMboot)ro,-(root) | |
110 | ||
111 | If unsure, say 'N'. | |
112 | ||
113 | config MTD_AFS_PARTS | |
114 | tristate "ARM Firmware Suite partition parsing" | |
b7b6e08f | 115 | depends on ARM |
1da177e4 LT |
116 | ---help--- |
117 | The ARM Firmware Suite allows the user to divide flash devices into | |
118 | multiple 'images'. Each such image has a header containing its name | |
119 | and offset/size etc. | |
120 | ||
121 | If you need code which can detect and parse these tables, and | |
122 | register MTD 'partitions' corresponding to each image detected, | |
123 | enable this option. | |
124 | ||
125 | You will still need the parsing functions to be called by the driver | |
126 | for your particular device. It won't happen automatically. The | |
adf00400 | 127 | 'physmap' map driver (CONFIG_MTD_PHYSMAP) does this, for example. |
1da177e4 | 128 | |
9a310d21 | 129 | config MTD_OF_PARTS |
d6137bad | 130 | tristate "OpenFirmware partitioning information support" |
2e929d00 | 131 | default y |
b7b6e08f | 132 | depends on OF |
9a310d21 SW |
133 | help |
134 | This provides a partition parsing function which derives | |
135 | the partition map from the children of the flash node, | |
e7606446 | 136 | as described in Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mtd/partition.txt. |
9a310d21 | 137 | |
f0797881 MC |
138 | config MTD_AR7_PARTS |
139 | tristate "TI AR7 partitioning support" | |
f0797881 MC |
140 | ---help--- |
141 | TI AR7 partitioning support | |
142 | ||
70a3c167 JG |
143 | config MTD_BCM63XX_PARTS |
144 | tristate "BCM63XX CFE partitioning support" | |
145 | depends on BCM63XX | |
146 | select CRC32 | |
147 | help | |
148 | This provides partions parsing for BCM63xx devices with CFE | |
149 | bootloaders. | |
150 | ||
3cf7f131 RM |
151 | config MTD_BCM47XX_PARTS |
152 | tristate "BCM47XX partitioning support" | |
9e3afa5f | 153 | depends on BCM47XX || ARCH_BCM_5301X |
3cf7f131 RM |
154 | help |
155 | This provides partitions parser for devices based on BCM47xx | |
156 | boards. | |
157 | ||
1da177e4 | 158 | comment "User Modules And Translation Layers" |
1da177e4 | 159 | |
7f11b4d4 EG |
160 | # |
161 | # MTD block device support is select'ed if needed | |
162 | # | |
f6a7ecb1 | 163 | config MTD_BLKDEVS |
7f11b4d4 | 164 | tristate |
f6a7ecb1 | 165 | |
1da177e4 LT |
166 | config MTD_BLOCK |
167 | tristate "Caching block device access to MTD devices" | |
ec98c681 | 168 | depends on BLOCK |
f6a7ecb1 | 169 | select MTD_BLKDEVS |
1da177e4 LT |
170 | ---help--- |
171 | Although most flash chips have an erase size too large to be useful | |
172 | as block devices, it is possible to use MTD devices which are based | |
173 | on RAM chips in this manner. This block device is a user of MTD | |
174 | devices performing that function. | |
175 | ||
176 | At the moment, it is also required for the Journalling Flash File | |
177 | System(s) to obtain a handle on the MTD device when it's mounted | |
178 | (although JFFS and JFFS2 don't actually use any of the functionality | |
179 | of the mtdblock device). | |
180 | ||
181 | Later, it may be extended to perform read/erase/modify/write cycles | |
182 | on flash chips to emulate a smaller block size. Needless to say, | |
183 | this is very unsafe, but could be useful for file systems which are | |
184 | almost never written to. | |
185 | ||
186 | You do not need this option for use with the DiskOnChip devices. For | |
187 | those, enable NFTL support (CONFIG_NFTL) instead. | |
188 | ||
189 | config MTD_BLOCK_RO | |
190 | tristate "Readonly block device access to MTD devices" | |
ec98c681 | 191 | depends on MTD_BLOCK!=y && BLOCK |
f6a7ecb1 | 192 | select MTD_BLKDEVS |
1da177e4 LT |
193 | help |
194 | This allows you to mount read-only file systems (such as cramfs) | |
195 | from an MTD device, without the overhead (and danger) of the caching | |
196 | driver. | |
197 | ||
198 | You do not need this option for use with the DiskOnChip devices. For | |
199 | those, enable NFTL support (CONFIG_NFTL) instead. | |
200 | ||
201 | config FTL | |
202 | tristate "FTL (Flash Translation Layer) support" | |
ec98c681 | 203 | depends on BLOCK |
f6a7ecb1 | 204 | select MTD_BLKDEVS |
1da177e4 LT |
205 | ---help--- |
206 | This provides support for the original Flash Translation Layer which | |
207 | is part of the PCMCIA specification. It uses a kind of pseudo- | |
208 | file system on a flash device to emulate a block device with | |
209 | 512-byte sectors, on top of which you put a 'normal' file system. | |
210 | ||
211 | You may find that the algorithms used in this code are patented | |
212 | unless you live in the Free World where software patents aren't | |
213 | legal - in the USA you are only permitted to use this on PCMCIA | |
214 | hardware, although under the terms of the GPL you're obviously | |
215 | permitted to copy, modify and distribute the code as you wish. Just | |
216 | not use it. | |
217 | ||
218 | config NFTL | |
219 | tristate "NFTL (NAND Flash Translation Layer) support" | |
ec98c681 | 220 | depends on BLOCK |
f6a7ecb1 | 221 | select MTD_BLKDEVS |
1da177e4 LT |
222 | ---help--- |
223 | This provides support for the NAND Flash Translation Layer which is | |
224 | used on M-Systems' DiskOnChip devices. It uses a kind of pseudo- | |
225 | file system on a flash device to emulate a block device with | |
226 | 512-byte sectors, on top of which you put a 'normal' file system. | |
227 | ||
228 | You may find that the algorithms used in this code are patented | |
229 | unless you live in the Free World where software patents aren't | |
230 | legal - in the USA you are only permitted to use this on DiskOnChip | |
231 | hardware, although under the terms of the GPL you're obviously | |
232 | permitted to copy, modify and distribute the code as you wish. Just | |
233 | not use it. | |
234 | ||
235 | config NFTL_RW | |
236 | bool "Write support for NFTL" | |
237 | depends on NFTL | |
238 | help | |
239 | Support for writing to the NAND Flash Translation Layer, as used | |
240 | on the DiskOnChip. | |
241 | ||
242 | config INFTL | |
243 | tristate "INFTL (Inverse NAND Flash Translation Layer) support" | |
ec98c681 | 244 | depends on BLOCK |
f6a7ecb1 | 245 | select MTD_BLKDEVS |
1da177e4 | 246 | ---help--- |
97894cda | 247 | This provides support for the Inverse NAND Flash Translation |
1da177e4 LT |
248 | Layer which is used on M-Systems' newer DiskOnChip devices. It |
249 | uses a kind of pseudo-file system on a flash device to emulate | |
250 | a block device with 512-byte sectors, on top of which you put | |
251 | a 'normal' file system. | |
252 | ||
253 | You may find that the algorithms used in this code are patented | |
254 | unless you live in the Free World where software patents aren't | |
255 | legal - in the USA you are only permitted to use this on DiskOnChip | |
256 | hardware, although under the terms of the GPL you're obviously | |
257 | permitted to copy, modify and distribute the code as you wish. Just | |
258 | not use it. | |
259 | ||
e27a9960 SY |
260 | config RFD_FTL |
261 | tristate "Resident Flash Disk (Flash Translation Layer) support" | |
ec98c681 | 262 | depends on BLOCK |
f6a7ecb1 | 263 | select MTD_BLKDEVS |
e27a9960 | 264 | ---help--- |
97894cda TG |
265 | This provides support for the flash translation layer known |
266 | as the Resident Flash Disk (RFD), as used by the Embedded BIOS | |
cd5f6346 KP |
267 | of General Software. There is a blurb at: |
268 | ||
269 | http://www.gensw.com/pages/prod/bios/rfd.htm | |
e27a9960 | 270 | |
51197abf | 271 | config SSFDC |
892e4fba | 272 | tristate "NAND SSFDC (SmartMedia) read only translation layer" |
ec98c681 | 273 | depends on BLOCK |
f6a7ecb1 | 274 | select MTD_BLKDEVS |
51197abf CL |
275 | help |
276 | This enables read only access to SmartMedia formatted NAND | |
277 | flash. You can mount it with FAT file system. | |
278 | ||
7d17c02a ML |
279 | |
280 | config SM_FTL | |
281 | tristate "SmartMedia/xD new translation layer" | |
6372680c | 282 | depends on BLOCK |
7d17c02a | 283 | select MTD_BLKDEVS |
e5f710cf | 284 | select MTD_NAND_ECC |
7d17c02a | 285 | help |
6f92355c | 286 | This enables EXPERIMENTAL R/W support for SmartMedia/xD |
7de6f798 | 287 | FTL (Flash translation layer). |
6f92355c ML |
288 | Write support is only lightly tested, therefore this driver |
289 | isn't recommended to use with valuable data (anyway if you have | |
290 | valuable data, do backups regardless of software/hardware you | |
291 | use, because you never know what will eat your data...) | |
292 | If you only need R/O access, you can use older R/O driver | |
293 | (CONFIG_SSFDC) | |
7d17c02a | 294 | |
4b23aff0 RP |
295 | config MTD_OOPS |
296 | tristate "Log panic/oops to an MTD buffer" | |
4b23aff0 RP |
297 | help |
298 | This enables panic and oops messages to be logged to a circular | |
299 | buffer in a flash partition where it can be read back at some | |
300 | later point. | |
301 | ||
a3215902 JL |
302 | config MTD_SWAP |
303 | tristate "Swap on MTD device support" | |
304 | depends on MTD && SWAP | |
305 | select MTD_BLKDEVS | |
306 | help | |
307 | Provides volatile block device driver on top of mtd partition | |
308 | suitable for swapping. The mapping of written blocks is not saved. | |
309 | The driver provides wear leveling by storing erase counter into the | |
310 | OOB. | |
311 | ||
727dc612 DE |
312 | config MTD_PARTITIONED_MASTER |
313 | bool "Retain master device when partitioned" | |
314 | default n | |
315 | depends on MTD | |
316 | help | |
317 | For historical reasons, by default, either a master is present or | |
318 | several partitions are present, but not both. The concern was that | |
319 | data listed in multiple partitions was dangerous; however, SCSI does | |
320 | this and it is frequently useful for applications. This config option | |
321 | leaves the master in even if the device is partitioned. It also makes | |
322 | the parent of the partition device be the master device, rather than | |
323 | what lies behind the master. | |
324 | ||
1da177e4 LT |
325 | source "drivers/mtd/chips/Kconfig" |
326 | ||
327 | source "drivers/mtd/maps/Kconfig" | |
328 | ||
329 | source "drivers/mtd/devices/Kconfig" | |
330 | ||
331 | source "drivers/mtd/nand/Kconfig" | |
332 | ||
cd5f6346 KP |
333 | source "drivers/mtd/onenand/Kconfig" |
334 | ||
60f26520 AK |
335 | source "drivers/mtd/lpddr/Kconfig" |
336 | ||
b199489d HS |
337 | source "drivers/mtd/spi-nor/Kconfig" |
338 | ||
801c135c AB |
339 | source "drivers/mtd/ubi/Kconfig" |
340 | ||
ec98c681 | 341 | endif # MTD |