3 bool "Show timing information on printks"
5 Selecting this option causes timing information to be
6 included in printk output. This allows you to measure
7 the interval between kernel operations, including bootup
8 operations. This is useful for identifying long delays
13 bool "Kernel debugging"
15 Say Y here if you are developing drivers or trying to debug and
16 identify kernel problems.
19 bool "Magic SysRq key"
20 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && !UML
22 If you say Y here, you will have some control over the system even
23 if the system crashes for example during kernel debugging (e.g., you
24 will be able to flush the buffer cache to disk, reboot the system
25 immediately or dump some status information). This is accomplished
26 by pressing various keys while holding SysRq (Alt+PrintScreen). It
27 also works on a serial console (on PC hardware at least), if you
28 send a BREAK and then within 5 seconds a command keypress. The
29 keys are documented in <file:Documentation/sysrq.txt>. Don't say Y
30 unless you really know what this hack does.
33 int "Kernel log buffer size (16 => 64KB, 17 => 128KB)" if DEBUG_KERNEL
36 default 16 if X86_NUMAQ || IA64
40 Select kernel log buffer size as a power of 2.
41 Defaults and Examples:
42 17 => 128 KB for S/390
43 16 => 64 KB for x86 NUMAQ or IA-64
45 14 => 16 KB for uniprocessor
49 config DETECT_SOFTLOCKUP
50 bool "Detect Soft Lockups"
51 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL
54 Say Y here to enable the kernel to detect "soft lockups",
55 which are bugs that cause the kernel to loop in kernel
56 mode for more than 10 seconds, without giving other tasks a
59 When a soft-lockup is detected, the kernel will print the
60 current stack trace (which you should report), but the
61 system will stay locked up. This feature has negligible
64 (Note that "hard lockups" are separate type of bugs that
65 can be detected via the NMI-watchdog, on platforms that
69 bool "Collect scheduler statistics"
70 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && PROC_FS
72 If you say Y here, additional code will be inserted into the
73 scheduler and related routines to collect statistics about
74 scheduler behavior and provide them in /proc/schedstat. These
75 stats may be useful for both tuning and debugging the scheduler
76 If you aren't debugging the scheduler or trying to tune a specific
77 application, you can say N to avoid the very slight overhead
81 bool "Debug memory allocations"
82 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && SLAB
84 Say Y here to have the kernel do limited verification on memory
85 allocation as well as poisoning memory on free to catch use of freed
86 memory. This can make kmalloc/kfree-intensive workloads much slower.
89 bool "Debug preemptible kernel"
90 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && PREEMPT
93 If you say Y here then the kernel will use a debug variant of the
94 commonly used smp_processor_id() function and will print warnings
95 if kernel code uses it in a preemption-unsafe way. Also, the kernel
96 will detect preemption count underflows.
99 bool "Spinlock debugging"
100 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL
102 Say Y here and build SMP to catch missing spinlock initialization
103 and certain other kinds of spinlock errors commonly made. This is
104 best used in conjunction with the NMI watchdog so that spinlock
105 deadlocks are also debuggable.
107 config DEBUG_SPINLOCK_SLEEP
108 bool "Sleep-inside-spinlock checking"
109 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL
111 If you say Y here, various routines which may sleep will become very
112 noisy if they are called with a spinlock held.
115 bool "kobject debugging"
116 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL
118 If you say Y here, some extra kobject debugging messages will be sent
122 bool "Highmem debugging"
123 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && HIGHMEM
125 This options enables addition error checking for high memory systems.
126 Disable for production systems.
128 config DEBUG_BUGVERBOSE
129 bool "Verbose BUG() reporting (adds 70K)" if DEBUG_KERNEL && EMBEDDED
131 depends on ARM || ARM26 || M32R || M68K || SPARC32 || SPARC64 || X86_32 || FRV
134 Say Y here to make BUG() panics output the file name and line number
135 of the BUG call as well as the EIP and oops trace. This aids
136 debugging but costs about 70-100K of memory.
139 bool "Compile the kernel with debug info"
140 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL
142 If you say Y here the resulting kernel image will include
143 debugging info resulting in a larger kernel image.
144 Say Y here only if you plan to debug the kernel.
149 bool "Enable ioremap() debugging"
150 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && PARISC
152 Enabling this option will cause the kernel to distinguish between
153 ioremapped and physical addresses. It will print a backtrace (at
154 most one every 10 seconds), hopefully allowing you to see which
155 drivers need work. Fixing all these problems is a prerequisite
156 for turning on USE_HPPA_IOREMAP. The warnings are harmless;
157 the kernel has enough information to fix the broken drivers
158 automatically, but we'd like to make it more efficient by not
162 bool "Debug Filesystem"
163 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && SYSFS
165 debugfs is a virtual file system that kernel developers use to put
166 debugging files into. Enable this option to be able to read and
167 write to these files.
173 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL
175 Enable this to turn on extended checks in the virtual-memory system
176 that may impact performance.
181 bool "Compile the kernel with frame pointers"
182 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && (X86 || CRIS || M68K || M68KNOMMU || FRV || UML)
183 default y if DEBUG_INFO && UML
185 If you say Y here the resulting kernel image will be slightly larger
186 and slower, but it might give very useful debugging information on
187 some architectures or if you use external debuggers.
188 If you don't debug the kernel, you can say N.
190 config RCU_TORTURE_TEST
191 tristate "torture tests for RCU"
192 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL
195 This option provides a kernel module that runs torture tests
196 on the RCU infrastructure. The kernel module may be built
197 after the fact on the running kernel to be tested, if desired.
199 Say Y here if you want RCU torture tests to start automatically
200 at boot time (you probably don't).
201 Say M if you want the RCU torture tests to build as a module.
202 Say N if you are unsure.