ARM: kirkwood: fix LEDs names for lsxl boards
[deliverable/linux.git] / arch / m68k / Kconfig.devices
1 if MMU
2
3 config ARCH_MAY_HAVE_PC_FDC
4 bool
5 depends on BROKEN && (Q40 || SUN3X)
6 default y
7
8 menu "Platform devices"
9
10 config HEARTBEAT
11 bool "Use power LED as a heartbeat" if AMIGA || APOLLO || ATARI || Q40
12 default y if !AMIGA && !APOLLO && !ATARI && !Q40 && HP300
13 help
14 Use the power-on LED on your machine as a load meter. The exact
15 behavior is platform-dependent, but normally the flash frequency is
16 a hyperbolic function of the 5-minute load average.
17
18 # We have a dedicated heartbeat LED. :-)
19 config PROC_HARDWARE
20 bool "/proc/hardware support"
21 help
22 Say Y here to support the /proc/hardware file, which gives you
23 access to information about the machine you're running on,
24 including the model, CPU, MMU, clock speed, BogoMIPS rating,
25 and memory size.
26
27 config NATFEAT
28 bool "ARAnyM emulator support"
29 depends on ATARI
30 help
31 This option enables support for ARAnyM native features, such as
32 access to a disk image as /dev/hda.
33
34 config NFBLOCK
35 tristate "NatFeat block device support"
36 depends on BLOCK && NATFEAT
37 help
38 Say Y to include support for the ARAnyM NatFeat block device
39 which allows direct access to the hard drives without using
40 the hardware emulation.
41
42 config NFCON
43 tristate "NatFeat console driver"
44 depends on NATFEAT
45 help
46 Say Y to include support for the ARAnyM NatFeat console driver
47 which allows the console output to be redirected to the stderr
48 output of ARAnyM.
49
50 config NFETH
51 tristate "NatFeat Ethernet support"
52 depends on ETHERNET && NATFEAT
53 help
54 Say Y to include support for the ARAnyM NatFeat network device
55 which will emulate a regular ethernet device while presenting an
56 ethertap device to the host system.
57
58 endmenu
59
60 menu "Character devices"
61
62 config ATARI_DSP56K
63 tristate "Atari DSP56k support (EXPERIMENTAL)"
64 depends on ATARI && EXPERIMENTAL
65 help
66 If you want to be able to use the DSP56001 in Falcons, say Y. This
67 driver is still experimental, and if you don't know what it is, or
68 if you don't have this processor, just say N.
69
70 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here.
71
72 config AMIGA_BUILTIN_SERIAL
73 tristate "Amiga builtin serial support"
74 depends on AMIGA
75 help
76 If you want to use your Amiga's built-in serial port in Linux,
77 answer Y.
78
79 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here.
80
81 config HPDCA
82 tristate "HP DCA serial support"
83 depends on DIO && SERIAL_8250
84 help
85 If you want to use the internal "DCA" serial ports on an HP300
86 machine, say Y here.
87
88 config HPAPCI
89 tristate "HP APCI serial support"
90 depends on HP300 && SERIAL_8250 && EXPERIMENTAL
91 help
92 If you want to use the internal "APCI" serial ports on an HP400
93 machine, say Y here.
94
95 config SERIAL_CONSOLE
96 bool "Support for serial port console"
97 depends on AMIGA_BUILTIN_SERIAL=y
98 ---help---
99 If you say Y here, it will be possible to use a serial port as the
100 system console (the system console is the device which receives all
101 kernel messages and warnings and which allows logins in single user
102 mode). This could be useful if some terminal or printer is connected
103 to that serial port.
104
105 Even if you say Y here, the currently visible virtual console
106 (/dev/tty0) will still be used as the system console by default, but
107 you can alter that using a kernel command line option such as
108 "console=ttyS1". (Try "man bootparam" or see the documentation of
109 your boot loader about how to pass options to the kernel at boot
110 time.)
111
112 If you don't have a graphical console and you say Y here, the
113 kernel will automatically use the first serial line, /dev/ttyS0, as
114 system console.
115
116 If unsure, say N.
117
118 endmenu
119
120 endif
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