3 menu "IEEE 1394 (FireWire) support"
6 tristate "IEEE 1394 (FireWire) support"
7 depends on PCI || BROKEN
10 IEEE 1394 describes a high performance serial bus, which is also
11 known as FireWire(tm) or i.Link(tm) and is used for connecting all
12 sorts of devices (most notably digital video cameras) to your
15 If you have FireWire hardware and want to use it, say Y here. This
16 is the core support only, you will also need to select a driver for
17 your IEEE 1394 adapter.
19 To compile this driver as a module, say M here: the
20 module will be called ieee1394.
22 comment "Subsystem Options"
25 config IEEE1394_VERBOSEDEBUG
26 bool "Excessive debugging output"
29 If you say Y here, you will get very verbose debugging logs from
30 the subsystem which includes a dump of the header of every sent
31 and received packet. This can amount to a high amount of data
32 collected in a very short time which is usually also saved to
33 disk by the system logging daemons.
35 Say Y if you really want or need the debugging output, everyone
38 config IEEE1394_OUI_DB
39 bool "OUI Database built-in (deprecated)"
42 If you say Y here, then an OUI list (vendor unique ID's) will be
43 compiled into the ieee1394 module. This doesn't really do much
44 except being able to display the vendor of a hardware node. The
45 downside is that it adds about 300k to the size of the module,
46 or kernel (depending on whether you compile ieee1394 as a
47 module, or static in the kernel).
49 This option is not needed for userspace programs like gscanbus
50 to show this information.
52 config IEEE1394_EXTRA_CONFIG_ROMS
53 bool "Build in extra config rom entries for certain functionality"
56 Some IEEE1394 functionality depends on extra config rom entries
57 being available in the host adapters CSR. These options will
58 allow you to choose which ones.
60 config IEEE1394_CONFIG_ROM_IP1394
62 depends on IEEE1394_EXTRA_CONFIG_ROMS && IEEE1394
64 Adds an entry for using IP-over-1394. If you want to use your
65 IEEE1394 bus as a network for IP systems (including interacting
66 with MacOSX and WinXP IP-over-1394), enable this option and the
69 comment "Device Drivers"
72 comment "Texas Instruments PCILynx requires I2C"
73 depends on IEEE1394 && I2C=n
75 config IEEE1394_PCILYNX
76 tristate "Texas Instruments PCILynx support"
77 depends on PCI && IEEE1394 && I2C
80 Say Y here if you have an IEEE-1394 controller with the Texas
81 Instruments PCILynx chip. Note: this driver is written for revision
82 2 of this chip and may not work with revision 0.
84 To compile this driver as a module, say M here: the
85 module will be called pcilynx.
87 config IEEE1394_OHCI1394
88 tristate "OHCI-1394 support"
89 depends on PCI && IEEE1394
91 Enable this driver if you have an IEEE 1394 controller based on the
92 OHCI-1394 specification. The current driver is only tested with OHCI
93 chipsets made by Texas Instruments and NEC. Most third-party vendors
94 use one of these chipsets. It should work with any OHCI-1394
95 compliant card, however.
97 To compile this driver as a module, say M here: the
98 module will be called ohci1394.
100 comment "Protocol Drivers"
103 config IEEE1394_VIDEO1394
104 tristate "OHCI-1394 Video support"
105 depends on IEEE1394 && IEEE1394_OHCI1394
107 This option enables video device usage for OHCI-1394 cards. Enable
108 this option only if you have an IEEE 1394 video device connected to
111 comment "SBP-2 support (for storage devices) requires SCSI"
112 depends on IEEE1394 && SCSI=n
115 tristate "SBP-2 support (Harddisks etc.)"
116 depends on IEEE1394 && SCSI
118 This option enables you to use SBP-2 devices connected to an IEEE
119 1394 bus. SBP-2 devices include storage devices like harddisks and
120 DVD drives, also some other FireWire devices like scanners.
122 You should also enable support for disks, CD-ROMs, etc. in the SCSI
123 configuration section.
125 config IEEE1394_SBP2_PHYS_DMA
126 bool "Enable replacement for physical DMA in SBP2"
127 depends on IEEE1394 && IEEE1394_SBP2 && EXPERIMENTAL && (X86_32 || PPC_32)
129 This builds sbp2 for use with non-OHCI host adapters which do not
130 support physical DMA or for when ohci1394 is run with phys_dma=0.
131 Physical DMA is data movement without assistance of the drivers'
132 interrupt handlers. This option includes the interrupt handlers
133 that are required in absence of this hardware feature.
135 This option is buggy and currently broken on some architectures.
138 config IEEE1394_ETH1394
139 tristate "Ethernet over 1394"
140 depends on IEEE1394 && EXPERIMENTAL && INET
141 select IEEE1394_CONFIG_ROM_IP1394
142 select IEEE1394_EXTRA_CONFIG_ROMS
144 This driver implements a functional majority of RFC 2734: IPv4 over
145 1394. It will provide IP connectivity with implementations of RFC
146 2734 found on other operating systems. It will not communicate with
147 older versions of this driver found in stock kernels prior to 2.6.3.
148 This driver is still considered experimental. It does not yet support
149 MCAP, therefore multicast support is significantly limited.
151 config IEEE1394_DV1394
152 tristate "OHCI-DV I/O support (deprecated)"
153 depends on IEEE1394 && IEEE1394_OHCI1394
155 The dv1394 driver will be removed from Linux in a future release.
156 Its functionality is now provided by raw1394 together with libraries
159 config IEEE1394_RAWIO
160 tristate "Raw IEEE1394 I/O support"
163 Say Y here if you want support for the raw device. This is generally
164 a good idea, so you should say Y here. The raw device enables
165 direct communication of user programs with the IEEE 1394 bus and
166 thus with the attached peripherals.
168 To compile this driver as a module, say M here: the
169 module will be called raw1394.