879a9416d1
Use the correct SPL_TPL_ variable so that these features can be enabled in TPL and VPL as needed. Disable it by default in TPL to avoid any code-size increase. No boards are actually using it since the Makefile rules don't allow including drivers/block/ with TPL_DM enabled. It can be manually enabled as needed. Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org> Reviewed-by: Jaehoon Chung <jh80.chung@samsung.com>
240 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
240 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
config BLK
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bool # "Support block devices"
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depends on DM
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default y if MMC || USB || SCSI || NVME || IDE || AHCI || SATA
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default y if EFI_MEDIA || VIRTIO_BLK || PVBLOCK
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help
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Enable support for block devices, such as SCSI, MMC and USB
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flash sticks. These provide a block-level interface which permits
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reading, writing and (in some cases) erasing blocks. Block
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devices often have a partition table which allows the device to
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be partitioned into several areas, called 'partitions' in U-Boot.
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A filesystem can be placed in each partition.
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config SPL_LEGACY_BLOCK
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bool # "Enable Legacy Block Device"
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depends on SPL && !DM_SPL
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default y if SPL_MMC || SPL_USB_STORAGE || SCSI || NVME || IDE
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default y if SPL_AHCI_PCI
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help
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Some devices require block support whether or not DM is enabled. This
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is only supported in SPL. With this, the blk uclass is not used, but
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instead a legacy implementation of block devices is used, with all
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devices consisting of 'struct blk_desc' records.
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config SPL_BLK
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bool "Support block devices in SPL"
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depends on SPL_DM && BLK
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default y
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help
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Enable support for block devices, such as SCSI, MMC and USB
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flash sticks. These provide a block-level interface which permits
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reading, writing and (in some cases) erasing blocks. Block
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devices often have a partition table which allows the device to
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be partitioned into several areas, called 'partitions' in U-Boot.
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A filesystem can be placed in each partition.
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config TPL_BLK
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bool "Support block devices in TPL"
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depends on TPL_DM && BLK
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help
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Enable support for block devices, such as SCSI, MMC and USB
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flash sticks. These provide a block-level interface which permits
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reading, writing and (in some cases) erasing blocks. Block
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devices often have a partition table which allows the device to
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be partitioned into several areas, called 'partitions' in U-Boot.
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A filesystem can be placed in each partition.
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config VPL_BLK
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bool "Support block devices in VPL"
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depends on VPL_DM && BLK
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default y
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help
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Enable support for block devices, such as SCSI, MMC and USB
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flash sticks. These provide a block-level interface which permits
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reading, writing and (in some cases) erasing blocks. Block
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devices often have a partition table which allows the device to
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be partitioned into several areas, called 'partitions' in U-Boot.
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A filesystem can be placed in each partition.
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config BLOCK_CACHE
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bool "Use block device cache"
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depends on BLK
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default y
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help
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This option enables a disk-block cache for all block devices.
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This is most useful when accessing filesystems under U-Boot since
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it will prevent repeated reads from directory structures and other
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filesystem data structures.
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config SPL_BLOCK_CACHE
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bool "Use block device cache in SPL"
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depends on SPL_BLK
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help
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This option enables the disk-block cache in SPL
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config TPL_BLOCK_CACHE
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bool "Use block device cache in TPL"
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depends on TPL_BLK
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help
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This option enables the disk-block cache in TPL
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config EFI_MEDIA
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bool "Support EFI media drivers"
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default y if EFI || SANDBOX
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help
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Enable this to support media devices on top of UEFI. This enables
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just the uclass so you also need a specific driver to make this do
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anything.
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For sandbox there is a test driver.
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if EFI_MEDIA
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config EFI_MEDIA_SANDBOX
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bool "Sandbox EFI media driver"
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depends on SANDBOX
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default y
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help
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Enables a simple sandbox media driver, used for testing just the
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EFI_MEDIA uclass. It does not do anything useful, since sandbox does
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not actually support running on top of UEFI.
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config EFI_MEDIA_BLK
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bool "EFI media block driver"
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depends on EFI_APP
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default y
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help
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Enables a block driver for providing access to UEFI devices. This
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allows use of block devices detected by the underlying UEFI
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implementation. With this it is possible to use filesystems on these
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devices, for example.
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endif # EFI_MEDIA
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config IDE
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bool "Support IDE controllers"
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help
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Enables support for IDE (Integrated Drive Electronics) hard drives.
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This allows access to raw blocks and filesystems on an IDE drive
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from U-Boot. See also CMD_IDE which provides an 'ide' command for
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performing various IDE operations.
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if IDE
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config SYS_IDE_MAXBUS
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hex "Maximumm number of IDE buses"
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default 2
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help
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This is the number of IDE buses provided by the board. Each one
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can have one or two devices. One is designated the master and the
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other one the slave. It is not required to have one or both on any
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controller.
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config SYS_IDE_MAXDEVICE
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hex "Maximum number of IDE devices"
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default 2
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help
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This is the number of IDE devices which can be connected to the
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board. Normally this is 2 * CONFIG_SYS_IDE_MAXBUS since up to two
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devices can be connected to each bus. The number of devices actually
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connected is determined by probing.
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config SYS_ATA_BASE_ADDR
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hex "Base address of IDE controller"
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default 0
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help
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This is the address of the IDE controller, from which other addresses
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are calculated. Each bus is at a fixed offset from this address,
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so it assumed that they are in the same area of the I/O space or
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memory.
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config SYS_ATA_STRIDE
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hex "IDE port stride"
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default 0x1
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help
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This is the distance between each IDE register, in bytes. For an
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8-bit controller this is typically 1, meaning that the registers
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appear at consecutive bytes. If the value 2 two, that might indicate
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a 16-bit register space.
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config SYS_ATA_DATA_OFFSET
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hex "Offset of the data register"
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default 0x0
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help
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This is the offset of the controller's data register from the base
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address of the controller. This is typically 0, but may be something
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else if there are some other registers at the start of the
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controller space.
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config SYS_ATA_REG_OFFSET
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hex "Offset of the register space"
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default 0x0
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help
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This is the offset of the controller's 'register' space from the base
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address of the controller. The data register (which is typically at
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offset 0) has its own CONFIG, to deal with controllers where it is
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somewhere else. Register 1 will be at this offset + 1, register 2 at
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CONFIG_SYS_ATA_REG_OFFSET + 2, etc.
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config SYS_ATA_ALT_OFFSET
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hex "Offset of the alternative registers"
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default 0x0
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help
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This is the offset of the controller's 'alternative' space from the
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base address of the controller. This allows these registers to be
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located separately from the data and register space.
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config SYS_ATA_IDE0_OFFSET
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hex "Offset of bus 0"
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default 0x1f0
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help
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This is the start offset of bus 0 from the start of the
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controller registers. All the other registers are calculated from
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this address. using the above options. For x86 hardware this is often
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0x1f0.
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config SYS_ATA_IDE1_OFFSET
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hex "Offset of bus 1"
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default 0x170
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help
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This is the start offset of bus 1 from the start of the
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controller registers. All the other registers are calculated from
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this address. using the above options. For x86 hardware this is often
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0x170.
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config ATAPI
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bool "Enable ATAPI support"
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help
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This enabled Advanced Technology Attachment Packet Interface (ATAPI),
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a protocol that allows a greater variety of devices to be connected
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to the IDE port than with plain ATA. It allows SCSI commands to be
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sent across the bus, e.g. to support optical drives.
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config IDE_RESET
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bool "Support board-specific reset"
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help
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If this is defined, IDE Reset will be performed by calling the
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function:
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ide_set_reset(int reset)
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where reset is 1 to assert reset and 0 to de-assert it. This function
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must be defined in a board-specific file.
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endif # IDE
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config LBA48
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bool "Enable LBA support for disks larger than 137GB"
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help
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Set this to enable support for disks larger than 137GB.
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Also look at CONFIG_SYS_64BIT_LBA. Without both of these, LBA48
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support uses 32bit variables and will 'only' support disks up to
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2.1TB.
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config SYS_64BIT_LBA
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bool "Enable 64bit number of blocks on a block device"
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help
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Make the block subsystem use 64bit sector addresses, rather than the
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default of 32bit.
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