propogate_mnt: Handle the first propogated copy being a slave
[deliverable/linux.git] / drivers / net / Kconfig
1 #
2 # Network device configuration
3 #
4
5 menuconfig NETDEVICES
6 default y if UML
7 depends on NET
8 bool "Network device support"
9 ---help---
10 You can say N here if you don't intend to connect your Linux box to
11 any other computer at all.
12
13 You'll have to say Y if your computer contains a network card that
14 you want to use under Linux. If you are going to run SLIP or PPP over
15 telephone line or null modem cable you need say Y here. Connecting
16 two machines with parallel ports using PLIP needs this, as well as
17 AX.25/KISS for sending Internet traffic over amateur radio links.
18
19 See also "The Linux Network Administrator's Guide" by Olaf Kirch and
20 Terry Dawson. Available at <http://www.tldp.org/guides.html>.
21
22 If unsure, say Y.
23
24 # All the following symbols are dependent on NETDEVICES - do not repeat
25 # that for each of the symbols.
26 if NETDEVICES
27
28 config MII
29 tristate
30
31 config NET_CORE
32 default y
33 bool "Network core driver support"
34 ---help---
35 You can say N here if you do not intend to use any of the
36 networking core drivers (i.e. VLAN, bridging, bonding, etc.)
37
38 if NET_CORE
39
40 config BONDING
41 tristate "Bonding driver support"
42 depends on INET
43 depends on IPV6 || IPV6=n
44 ---help---
45 Say 'Y' or 'M' if you wish to be able to 'bond' multiple Ethernet
46 Channels together. This is called 'Etherchannel' by Cisco,
47 'Trunking' by Sun, 802.3ad by the IEEE, and 'Bonding' in Linux.
48
49 The driver supports multiple bonding modes to allow for both high
50 performance and high availability operation.
51
52 Refer to <file:Documentation/networking/bonding.txt> for more
53 information.
54
55 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
56 will be called bonding.
57
58 config DUMMY
59 tristate "Dummy net driver support"
60 ---help---
61 This is essentially a bit-bucket device (i.e. traffic you send to
62 this device is consigned into oblivion) with a configurable IP
63 address. It is most commonly used in order to make your currently
64 inactive SLIP address seem like a real address for local programs.
65 If you use SLIP or PPP, you might want to say Y here. Since this
66 thing often comes in handy, the default is Y. It won't enlarge your
67 kernel either. What a deal. Read about it in the Network
68 Administrator's Guide, available from
69 <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#guide>.
70
71 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
72 will be called dummy.
73
74 config EQUALIZER
75 tristate "EQL (serial line load balancing) support"
76 ---help---
77 If you have two serial connections to some other computer (this
78 usually requires two modems and two telephone lines) and you use
79 SLIP (the protocol for sending Internet traffic over telephone
80 lines) or PPP (a better SLIP) on them, you can make them behave like
81 one double speed connection using this driver. Naturally, this has
82 to be supported at the other end as well, either with a similar EQL
83 Linux driver or with a Livingston Portmaster 2e.
84
85 Say Y if you want this and read
86 <file:Documentation/networking/eql.txt>. You may also want to read
87 section 6.2 of the NET-3-HOWTO, available from
88 <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>.
89
90 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
91 will be called eql. If unsure, say N.
92
93 config NET_FC
94 bool "Fibre Channel driver support"
95 depends on SCSI && PCI
96 help
97 Fibre Channel is a high speed serial protocol mainly used to connect
98 large storage devices to the computer; it is compatible with and
99 intended to replace SCSI.
100
101 If you intend to use Fibre Channel, you need to have a Fibre channel
102 adaptor card in your computer; say Y here and to the driver for your
103 adaptor below. You also should have said Y to "SCSI support" and
104 "SCSI generic support".
105
106 config IFB
107 tristate "Intermediate Functional Block support"
108 depends on NET_CLS_ACT
109 ---help---
110 This is an intermediate driver that allows sharing of
111 resources.
112 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
113 will be called ifb. If you want to use more than one ifb
114 device at a time, you need to compile this driver as a module.
115 Instead of 'ifb', the devices will then be called 'ifb0',
116 'ifb1' etc.
117 Look at the iproute2 documentation directory for usage etc
118
119 source "drivers/net/team/Kconfig"
120
121 config MACVLAN
122 tristate "MAC-VLAN support"
123 ---help---
124 This allows one to create virtual interfaces that map packets to
125 or from specific MAC addresses to a particular interface.
126
127 Macvlan devices can be added using the "ip" command from the
128 iproute2 package starting with the iproute2-2.6.23 release:
129
130 "ip link add link <real dev> [ address MAC ] [ NAME ] type macvlan"
131
132 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
133 will be called macvlan.
134
135 config MACVTAP
136 tristate "MAC-VLAN based tap driver"
137 depends on MACVLAN
138 depends on INET
139 help
140 This adds a specialized tap character device driver that is based
141 on the MAC-VLAN network interface, called macvtap. A macvtap device
142 can be added in the same way as a macvlan device, using 'type
143 macvtap', and then be accessed through the tap user space interface.
144
145 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
146 will be called macvtap.
147
148
149 config IPVLAN
150 tristate "IP-VLAN support"
151 depends on INET
152 depends on IPV6
153 ---help---
154 This allows one to create virtual devices off of a main interface
155 and packets will be delivered based on the dest L3 (IPv6/IPv4 addr)
156 on packets. All interfaces (including the main interface) share L2
157 making it transparent to the connected L2 switch.
158
159 Ipvlan devices can be added using the "ip" command from the
160 iproute2 package starting with the iproute2-3.19 release:
161
162 "ip link add link <main-dev> [ NAME ] type ipvlan"
163
164 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
165 will be called ipvlan.
166
167
168 config VXLAN
169 tristate "Virtual eXtensible Local Area Network (VXLAN)"
170 depends on INET
171 select NET_UDP_TUNNEL
172 ---help---
173 This allows one to create vxlan virtual interfaces that provide
174 Layer 2 Networks over Layer 3 Networks. VXLAN is often used
175 to tunnel virtual network infrastructure in virtualized environments.
176 For more information see:
177 http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-mahalingam-dutt-dcops-vxlan-02
178
179 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
180 will be called vxlan.
181
182 config GENEVE
183 tristate "Generic Network Virtualization Encapsulation"
184 depends on INET && NET_UDP_TUNNEL
185 select NET_IP_TUNNEL
186 ---help---
187 This allows one to create geneve virtual interfaces that provide
188 Layer 2 Networks over Layer 3 Networks. GENEVE is often used
189 to tunnel virtual network infrastructure in virtualized environments.
190 For more information see:
191 http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-gross-geneve-02
192
193 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
194 will be called geneve.
195
196 config MACSEC
197 tristate "IEEE 802.1AE MAC-level encryption (MACsec)"
198 select CRYPTO
199 select CRYPTO_AES
200 select CRYPTO_GCM
201 ---help---
202 MACsec is an encryption standard for Ethernet.
203
204 config NETCONSOLE
205 tristate "Network console logging support"
206 ---help---
207 If you want to log kernel messages over the network, enable this.
208 See <file:Documentation/networking/netconsole.txt> for details.
209
210 config NETCONSOLE_DYNAMIC
211 bool "Dynamic reconfiguration of logging targets"
212 depends on NETCONSOLE && SYSFS && CONFIGFS_FS && \
213 !(NETCONSOLE=y && CONFIGFS_FS=m)
214 help
215 This option enables the ability to dynamically reconfigure target
216 parameters (interface, IP addresses, port numbers, MAC addresses)
217 at runtime through a userspace interface exported using configfs.
218 See <file:Documentation/networking/netconsole.txt> for details.
219
220 config NETPOLL
221 def_bool NETCONSOLE
222 select SRCU
223
224 config NET_POLL_CONTROLLER
225 def_bool NETPOLL
226
227 config NTB_NETDEV
228 tristate "Virtual Ethernet over NTB Transport"
229 depends on NTB_TRANSPORT
230
231 config RIONET
232 tristate "RapidIO Ethernet over messaging driver support"
233 depends on RAPIDIO
234
235 config RIONET_TX_SIZE
236 int "Number of outbound queue entries"
237 depends on RIONET
238 default "128"
239
240 config RIONET_RX_SIZE
241 int "Number of inbound queue entries"
242 depends on RIONET
243 default "128"
244
245 config TUN
246 tristate "Universal TUN/TAP device driver support"
247 depends on INET
248 select CRC32
249 ---help---
250 TUN/TAP provides packet reception and transmission for user space
251 programs. It can be viewed as a simple Point-to-Point or Ethernet
252 device, which instead of receiving packets from a physical media,
253 receives them from user space program and instead of sending packets
254 via physical media writes them to the user space program.
255
256 When a program opens /dev/net/tun, driver creates and registers
257 corresponding net device tunX or tapX. After a program closed above
258 devices, driver will automatically delete tunXX or tapXX device and
259 all routes corresponding to it.
260
261 Please read <file:Documentation/networking/tuntap.txt> for more
262 information.
263
264 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
265 will be called tun.
266
267 If you don't know what to use this for, you don't need it.
268
269 config TUN_VNET_CROSS_LE
270 bool "Support for cross-endian vnet headers on little-endian kernels"
271 default n
272 ---help---
273 This option allows TUN/TAP and MACVTAP device drivers in a
274 little-endian kernel to parse vnet headers that come from a
275 big-endian legacy virtio device.
276
277 Userspace programs can control the feature using the TUNSETVNETBE
278 and TUNGETVNETBE ioctls.
279
280 Unless you have a little-endian system hosting a big-endian virtual
281 machine with a legacy virtio NIC, you should say N.
282
283 config VETH
284 tristate "Virtual ethernet pair device"
285 ---help---
286 This device is a local ethernet tunnel. Devices are created in pairs.
287 When one end receives the packet it appears on its pair and vice
288 versa.
289
290 config VIRTIO_NET
291 tristate "Virtio network driver"
292 depends on VIRTIO
293 ---help---
294 This is the virtual network driver for virtio. It can be used with
295 lguest or QEMU based VMMs (like KVM or Xen). Say Y or M.
296
297 config NLMON
298 tristate "Virtual netlink monitoring device"
299 ---help---
300 This option enables a monitoring net device for netlink skbs. The
301 purpose of this is to analyze netlink messages with packet sockets.
302 Thus applications like tcpdump will be able to see local netlink
303 messages if they tap into the netlink device, record pcaps for further
304 diagnostics, etc. This is mostly intended for developers or support
305 to debug netlink issues. If unsure, say N.
306
307 config NET_VRF
308 tristate "Virtual Routing and Forwarding (Lite)"
309 depends on IP_MULTIPLE_TABLES
310 depends on NET_L3_MASTER_DEV
311 depends on IPV6 || IPV6=n
312 depends on IPV6_MULTIPLE_TABLES || IPV6=n
313 ---help---
314 This option enables the support for mapping interfaces into VRF's. The
315 support enables VRF devices.
316
317 endif # NET_CORE
318
319 config SUNGEM_PHY
320 tristate
321
322 source "drivers/net/arcnet/Kconfig"
323
324 source "drivers/atm/Kconfig"
325
326 source "drivers/net/caif/Kconfig"
327
328 source "drivers/net/dsa/Kconfig"
329
330 source "drivers/net/ethernet/Kconfig"
331
332 source "drivers/net/fddi/Kconfig"
333
334 source "drivers/net/hippi/Kconfig"
335
336 config NET_SB1000
337 tristate "General Instruments Surfboard 1000"
338 depends on PNP
339 ---help---
340 This is a driver for the General Instrument (also known as
341 NextLevel) SURFboard 1000 internal
342 cable modem. This is an ISA card which is used by a number of cable
343 TV companies to provide cable modem access. It's a one-way
344 downstream-only cable modem, meaning that your upstream net link is
345 provided by your regular phone modem.
346
347 At present this driver only compiles as a module, so say M here if
348 you have this card. The module will be called sb1000. Then read
349 <file:Documentation/networking/README.sb1000> for information on how
350 to use this module, as it needs special ppp scripts for establishing
351 a connection. Further documentation and the necessary scripts can be
352 found at:
353
354 <http://www.jacksonville.net/~fventuri/>
355 <http://home.adelphia.net/~siglercm/sb1000.html>
356 <http://linuxpower.cx/~cable/>
357
358 If you don't have this card, of course say N.
359
360 source "drivers/net/phy/Kconfig"
361
362 source "drivers/net/plip/Kconfig"
363
364 source "drivers/net/ppp/Kconfig"
365
366 source "drivers/net/slip/Kconfig"
367
368 source "drivers/s390/net/Kconfig"
369
370 source "drivers/net/usb/Kconfig"
371
372 source "drivers/net/wireless/Kconfig"
373
374 source "drivers/net/wimax/Kconfig"
375
376 source "drivers/net/wan/Kconfig"
377
378 source "drivers/net/ieee802154/Kconfig"
379
380 config XEN_NETDEV_FRONTEND
381 tristate "Xen network device frontend driver"
382 depends on XEN
383 select XEN_XENBUS_FRONTEND
384 default y
385 help
386 This driver provides support for Xen paravirtual network
387 devices exported by a Xen network driver domain (often
388 domain 0).
389
390 The corresponding Linux backend driver is enabled by the
391 CONFIG_XEN_NETDEV_BACKEND option.
392
393 If you are compiling a kernel for use as Xen guest, you
394 should say Y here. To compile this driver as a module, chose
395 M here: the module will be called xen-netfront.
396
397 config XEN_NETDEV_BACKEND
398 tristate "Xen backend network device"
399 depends on XEN_BACKEND
400 help
401 This driver allows the kernel to act as a Xen network driver
402 domain which exports paravirtual network devices to other
403 Xen domains. These devices can be accessed by any operating
404 system that implements a compatible front end.
405
406 The corresponding Linux frontend driver is enabled by the
407 CONFIG_XEN_NETDEV_FRONTEND configuration option.
408
409 The backend driver presents a standard network device
410 endpoint for each paravirtual network device to the driver
411 domain network stack. These can then be bridged or routed
412 etc in order to provide full network connectivity.
413
414 If you are compiling a kernel to run in a Xen network driver
415 domain (often this is domain 0) you should say Y here. To
416 compile this driver as a module, chose M here: the module
417 will be called xen-netback.
418
419 config VMXNET3
420 tristate "VMware VMXNET3 ethernet driver"
421 depends on PCI && INET
422 help
423 This driver supports VMware's vmxnet3 virtual ethernet NIC.
424 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
425 module will be called vmxnet3.
426
427 config FUJITSU_ES
428 tristate "FUJITSU Extended Socket Network Device driver"
429 depends on ACPI
430 help
431 This driver provides support for Extended Socket network device
432 on Extended Partitioning of FUJITSU PRIMEQUEST 2000 E2 series.
433
434 source "drivers/net/hyperv/Kconfig"
435
436 endif # NETDEVICES
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