NOTES revision 131404
1# 2# NOTES -- Lines that can be cut/pasted into kernel and hints configs. 3# 4# This file contains machine dependent kernel configuration notes. For 5# machine independent notes, look in /sys/conf/NOTES. 6# 7# $FreeBSD: head/sys/pc98/conf/NOTES 131404 2004-07-01 09:34:15Z nyan $ 8# 9 10# 11# This directive is mandatory; it defines the architecture to be 12# configured for; in this case, the 386 family based PC-98 and 13# compatibles. 14# 15machine pc98 16options PC98 17 18# 19# We want LINT to cover profiling as well. 20profile 2 21 22 23##################################################################### 24# SMP OPTIONS: 25# 26# The apic device enables the use of the I/O APIC for interrupt delivery. 27# The apic device can be used in both UP and SMP kernels, but is required 28# for SMP kernels. Thus, the apic device is not strictly an SMP option, 29# but it is a prerequisite for SMP. 30# 31# Notes: 32# 33# Be sure to disable 'cpu I386_CPU' for SMP kernels. 34# 35# By default, mixed mode is used to route IRQ0 from the AT timer via 36# the 8259A master PIC through the ExtINT pin on the first I/O APIC. 37# This can be disabled via the NO_MIXED_MODE option. In that case, 38# IRQ0 will be routed via an intpin on the first I/O APIC. Not all 39# motherboards hook IRQ0 up to the first I/O APIC even though their 40# MP table or MADT may claim to do so. That is why mixed mode is 41# enabled by default. 42# 43 44# Mandatory: 45device apic # I/O apic 46 47# Optional: 48options NO_MIXED_MODE # Disable use of mixed mode 49 50 51##################################################################### 52# CPU OPTIONS 53 54# 55# You must specify at least one CPU (the one you intend to run on); 56# deleting the specification for CPUs you don't need to use may make 57# parts of the system run faster. 58# I386_CPU is mutually exclusive with the other CPU types. 59# I386_CPU is deprecated and will be removed in 6.0-RELEASE. 60# 61#cpu I386_CPU 62cpu I486_CPU 63cpu I586_CPU # aka Pentium(tm) 64cpu I686_CPU # aka Pentium Pro(tm) 65 66# 67# Options for CPU features. 68# 69# CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_3X enables triple-clock mode on IBM Blue Lightning 70# CPU if CPU supports it. The default is double-clock mode on 71# BlueLightning CPU box. 72# 73# CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_FPU_OP_CACHE enables FPU operand cache on IBM 74# BlueLightning CPU. It works only with Cyrix FPU, and this option 75# should not be used with Intel FPU. 76# 77# CPU_BTB_EN enables branch target buffer on Cyrix 5x86 (NOTE 1). 78# 79# CPU_CYRIX_NO_LOCK enables weak locking for the entire address space 80# of Cyrix 6x86 and 6x86MX CPUs by setting the NO_LOCK bit of CCR1. 81# Otherwise, the NO_LOCK bit of CCR1 is cleared. (NOTE 3) 82# 83# CPU_DIRECT_MAPPED_CACHE sets L1 cache of Cyrix 486DLC CPU in direct 84# mapped mode. Default is 2-way set associative mode. 85# 86# CPU_DISABLE_5X86_LSSER disables load store serialize (i.e., enables 87# reorder). This option should not be used if you use memory mapped 88# I/O device(s). 89# 90# CPU_DISABLE_CMPXCHG disables the CMPXCHG instruction on > i386 IA32 91# machines. VmWare seems to emulate this instruction poorly, causing 92# the guest OS to run very slowly. Enabling this with an SMP kernel 93# will cause the kernel to be unusable. 94# 95# CPU_DISABLE_SSE explicitly prevents I686_CPU from turning on SSE. 96# 97# CPU_ENABLE_SSE enables SSE/MMX2 instructions support. This is default 98# on I686_CPU and above. 99# 100# CPU_FASTER_5X86_FPU enables faster FPU exception handler. 101# 102# CPU_I486_ON_386 enables CPU cache on i486 based CPU upgrade products 103# for i386 machines. 104# 105# CPU_IORT defines I/O clock delay time (NOTE 1). Default values of 106# I/O clock delay time on Cyrix 5x86 and 6x86 are 0 and 7,respectively 107# (no clock delay). 108# 109# CPU_L2_LATENCY specifies the L2 cache latency value. This option is used 110# only when CPU_PPRO2CELERON is defined and Mendocino Celeron is detected. 111# The default value is 5. 112# 113# CPU_LOOP_EN prevents flushing the prefetch buffer if the destination 114# of a jump is already present in the prefetch buffer on Cyrix 5x86(NOTE 115# 1). 116# 117# CPU_PPRO2CELERON enables L2 cache of Mendocino Celeron CPUs. This option 118# is useful when you use Socket 8 to Socket 370 converter, because most Pentium 119# Pro BIOSs do not enable L2 cache of Mendocino Celeron CPUs. 120# 121# CPU_RSTK_EN enables return stack on Cyrix 5x86 (NOTE 1). 122# 123# CPU_SUSP_HLT enables suspend on HALT. If this option is set, CPU 124# enters suspend mode following execution of HALT instruction. 125# 126# CPU_UPGRADE_HW_CACHE eliminates unneeded cache flush instruction(s). 127# 128# CPU_WT_ALLOC enables write allocation on Cyrix 6x86/6x86MX and AMD 129# K5/K6/K6-2 CPUs. 130# 131# CYRIX_CACHE_WORKS enables CPU cache on Cyrix 486 CPUs with cache 132# flush at hold state. 133# 134# CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS enables (1) CPU cache on Cyrix 486 CPUs 135# without cache flush at hold state, and (2) write-back CPU cache on 136# Cyrix 6x86 whose revision < 2.7 (NOTE 2). 137# 138# NO_F00F_HACK disables the hack that prevents Pentiums (and ONLY 139# Pentiums) from locking up when a LOCK CMPXCHG8B instruction is 140# executed. This option is only needed if I586_CPU is also defined, 141# and should be included for any non-Pentium CPU that defines it. 142# 143# NO_MEMORY_HOLE is an optimisation for systems with AMD K6 processors 144# which indicates that the 15-16MB range is *definitely* not being 145# occupied by an ISA memory hole. 146# 147# NOTE 1: The options, CPU_BTB_EN, CPU_LOOP_EN, CPU_IORT, 148# CPU_LOOP_EN and CPU_RSTK_EN should not be used because of CPU bugs. 149# These options may crash your system. 150# 151# NOTE 2: If CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS is not set, CPU cache is enabled 152# in write-through mode when revision < 2.7. If revision of Cyrix 153# 6x86 >= 2.7, CPU cache is always enabled in write-back mode. 154# 155# NOTE 3: This option may cause failures for software that requires 156# locked cycles in order to operate correctly. 157# 158options CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_3X 159options CPU_BLUELIGHTNING_FPU_OP_CACHE 160options CPU_BTB_EN 161options CPU_DIRECT_MAPPED_CACHE 162options CPU_DISABLE_5X86_LSSER 163options CPU_DISABLE_CMPXCHG 164#options CPU_DISABLE_SSE 165options CPU_ENABLE_SSE 166options CPU_FASTER_5X86_FPU 167options CPU_I486_ON_386 168options CPU_IORT 169options CPU_L2_LATENCY=5 170options CPU_LOOP_EN 171options CPU_PPRO2CELERON 172options CPU_RSTK_EN 173options CPU_SUSP_HLT 174options CPU_UPGRADE_HW_CACHE 175options CPU_WT_ALLOC 176options CYRIX_CACHE_WORKS 177options CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS 178#options NO_F00F_HACK 179 180# Debug options 181options NPX_DEBUG # enable npx debugging 182 183# 184# PERFMON causes the driver for Pentium/Pentium Pro performance counters 185# to be compiled. See perfmon(4) for more information. 186# 187options PERFMON 188 189 190##################################################################### 191# NETWORKING OPTIONS 192 193# 194# DEVICE_POLLING adds support for mixed interrupt-polling handling 195# of network device drivers, which has significant benefits in terms 196# of robustness to overloads and responsivity, as well as permitting 197# accurate scheduling of the CPU time between kernel network processing 198# and other activities. The drawback is a moderate (up to 1/HZ seconds) 199# potential increase in response times. 200# It is strongly recommended to use HZ=1000 or 2000 with DEVICE_POLLING 201# to achieve smoother behaviour. 202# Additionally, you can enable/disable polling at runtime with the 203# sysctl variable kern.polling.enable (defaults off), and select 204# the CPU fraction reserved to userland with the sysctl variable 205# kern.polling.user_frac (default 50, range 0..100). 206# 207# Not all device drivers support this mode of operation at the time of 208# this writing. See polling(4) for more details. 209 210options DEVICE_POLLING 211 212 213##################################################################### 214# CLOCK OPTIONS 215 216# The following options are used for debugging clock behavior only, and 217# should not be used for production systems. 218 219# CLK_CALIBRATION_LOOP causes clock calibration to be run in a loop at 220# startup until the user presses a key. (The i8254 clock is always 221# calibrated relative to the RTC (mc146818a) and this option causes the 222# calibration to be repeated.) 223options CLK_CALIBRATION_LOOP 224 225# CLK_USE_I8254_CALIBRATION causes the calibrated frequency of the i8254 226# clock to actually be used. 227options CLK_USE_I8254_CALIBRATION 228 229 230##################################################################### 231# MISCELLANEOUS DEVICES AND OPTIONS 232 233device speaker #Play IBM BASIC-style noises out your speaker 234hint.speaker.0.at="isa" 235hint.speaker.0.port="0x35" 236device gzip #Exec gzipped a.out's. REQUIRES COMPAT_AOUT! 237device apm_saver # Requires APM 238 239 240##################################################################### 241# HARDWARE BUS CONFIGURATION 242 243# 244# ISA bus 245# 246device isa 247 248# 249# Options for `isa': 250# 251# AUTO_EOI_1 enables the `automatic EOI' feature for the master 8259A 252# interrupt controller. This saves about 0.7-1.25 usec for each interrupt. 253# This option breaks suspend/resume on some portables. 254# 255# MAXMEM specifies the amount of RAM on the machine; if this is not 256# specified, FreeBSD will first read the amount of memory from the CMOS 257# RAM, so the amount of memory will initially be limited to 64MB or 16MB 258# depending on the BIOS. If the BIOS reports 64MB, a memory probe will 259# then attempt to detect the installed amount of RAM. If this probe 260# fails to detect >64MB RAM you will have to use the MAXMEM option. 261# The amount is in kilobytes, so for a machine with 128MB of RAM, it would 262# be 131072 (128 * 1024). 263# 264# BROKEN_KEYBOARD_RESET disables the use of the keyboard controller to 265# reset the CPU for reboot. This is needed on some systems with broken 266# keyboard controllers. 267 268options AUTO_EOI_1 269 270options MAXMEM=(128*1024) 271#options BROKEN_KEYBOARD_RESET 272options EPSON_BOUNCEDMA 273options EPSON_MEMWIN 274 275# 276# PCI bus & PCI options: 277# 278device pci 279 280# 281# AGP GART support 282device agp 283 284 285##################################################################### 286# HARDWARE DEVICE CONFIGURATION 287 288# PC98 keyboard 289device pckbd 290hint.pckbd.0.at="isa" 291hint.pckbd.0.port="0x041" 292hint.pckbd.0.irq="1" 293 294# These options are valid for other keyboard drivers as well. 295options KBD_DISABLE_KEYMAP_LOAD # refuse to load a keymap 296options KBD_INSTALL_CDEV # install a CDEV entry in /dev 297 298# GDC screen 299device gdc 300hint.gdc.0.at="isa" 301options LINE30 302 303# 304# The Numeric Processing eXtension driver. In addition to this, you 305# may configure a math emulator (see above). If your machine has a 306# hardware FPU and the kernel configuration includes the npx device 307# *and* a math emulator compiled into the kernel, the hardware FPU 308# will be used, unless it is found to be broken or unless "flags" to 309# npx0 includes "0x08", which requests preference for the emulator. 310device npx 311 312# 313# `flags' for npx0: 314# 0x01 don't use the npx registers to optimize bcopy. 315# 0x02 don't use the npx registers to optimize bzero. 316# 0x04 don't use the npx registers to optimize copyin or copyout. 317# 0x08 use emulator even if hardware FPU is available. 318# The npx registers are normally used to optimize copying and zeroing when 319# all of the following conditions are satisfied: 320# I586_CPU is an option 321# the cpu is an i586 (perhaps not a Pentium) 322# the probe for npx0 succeeds 323# INT 16 exception handling works. 324# Then copying and zeroing using the npx registers is normally 30-100% faster. 325# The flags can be used to control cases where it doesn't work or is slower. 326# Setting them at boot time using userconfig works right (the optimizations 327# are not used until later in the bootstrap when npx0 is attached). 328# Flag 0x08 automatically disables the i586 optimized routines. 329# 330 331# 332# Optional devices: 333# 334 335# 3Dfx Voodoo Graphics, Voodoo II /dev/3dfx CDEV support. This will create 336# the /dev/3dfx0 device to work with glide implementations. This should get 337# linked to /dev/3dfx and /dev/voodoo. Note that this is not the same as 338# the tdfx DRI module from XFree86 and is completely unrelated. 339# 340# To enable Linuxulator support, one must also include COMPAT_LINUX in the 341# config as well, or you will not have the dependencies. The other option 342# is to load both as modules. 343 344device tdfx # Enable 3Dfx Voodoo support 345options TDFX_LINUX # Enable Linuxulator support 346 347# DRM options: 348# mgadrm: AGP Matrox G200, G400, G450, G550 349# r128drm: ATI Rage 128 350# radeondrm: ATI Radeon up to 9000/9100 351# sisdrm: SiS 300/305,540,630 352# tdfxdrm: 3dfx Voodoo 3/4/5 and Banshee 353# DRM_DEBUG: include debug printfs, very slow 354# 355# mga requires AGP in the kernel, and it is recommended 356# for AGP r128 and radeon cards. 357 358device mgadrm 359device "r128drm" 360device radeondrm 361device sisdrm 362device tdfxdrm 363 364options DRM_DEBUG 365 366# 367# Bus mouse 368# 369device mse 370hint.mse.0.at="isa" 371hint.mse.0.port="0x7fd9" 372hint.mse.0.irq="13" 373 374# 375# Network interfaces: 376# 377 378# ar: Arnet SYNC/570i hdlc sync 2/4 port V.35/X.21 serial driver 379# (requires sppp) 380# cp: Cronyx Tau-PCI sync single/dual/four port 381# V.35/RS-232/RS-530/RS-449/X.21/G.703/E1/E3/T3/STS-1 382# serial adaptor (requires sppp (default), or NETGRAPH if 383# NETGRAPH_CRONYX is configured) 384# ed: Western Digital and SMC 80xx; Novell NE1000 and NE2000; 3Com 3C503 385# HP PC Lan+, various PC Card devices (refer to etc/defaults/pccard.conf) 386# (requires miibus) 387# ie: AT&T StarLAN 10 and EN100; 3Com 3C507; unknown NI5210; 388# Intel EtherExpress 389# lnc: Lance/PCnet cards (Isolan, Novell NE2100, NE32-VL, AMD Am7990 and 390# Am79C960) 391# oltr: Olicom ISA token-ring adapters OC-3115, OC-3117, OC-3118 and OC-3133. 392# Olicom PCI token-ring adapters OC-3136, OC-3137, OC-3139, OC-3140, 393# OC-3141, OC-3540 and OC-3250. 394# sbni: Granch SBNI12-xx ISA and PCI adapters 395# sr: RISCom/N2 hdlc sync 1/2 port V.35/X.21 serial driver (requires sppp) 396# wl: Lucent Wavelan (ISA card only). 397 398# Order for ISA/EISA devices is important here 399 400device ar 401device cp 402device ed 403#options ED_NO_MIIBUS # Disable ed miibus support 404hint.ed.0.at="isa" 405hint.ed.0.port="0x280" 406hint.ed.0.irq="5" 407hint.ed.0.maddr="0xd8000" 408device ie # Hints only required for Starlan 409hint.ie.2.at="isa" 410hint.ie.2.port="0x300" 411hint.ie.2.irq="5" 412hint.ie.2.maddr="0xd0000" 413device lnc 414hint.lnc.0.at="isa" 415hint.lnc.0.port="0x280" 416hint.lnc.0.irq="10" 417hint.lnc.0.drq="0" 418device sbni 419hint.sbni.0.at="isa" 420hint.sbni.0.port="0x210" 421hint.sbni.0.irq="0xefdead" 422hint.sbni.0.flags="0" 423device snc 424hint.snc.0.at="isa" 425hint.snc.0.port="0x888" 426hint.snc.0.irq="6" 427hint.snc.0.maddr="0xc0000" 428device sr 429device oltr 430device wl 431hint.wl.0.at="isa" 432hint.wl.0.port="0x300" 433options WLCACHE # enables the signal-strength cache 434options WLDEBUG # enables verbose debugging output 435 436# 437# SCSI host adapters: 438# 439# ct: WD33C93[ABC] based SCSI host adapters. 440# ncv: NCR 53C500 based SCSI host adapters. 441# nsp: Workbit Ninja SCSI-3 based PC Card SCSI host adapters. 442# stg: TMC 18C30, 18C50 based SCSI host adapters. 443 444device ct 445hint.ct.0.at="isa" 446device ncv 447device nsp 448device stg 449 450# 451# SafeNet crypto driver: can be moved to the MI NOTES as soon as 452# it's tested on a big-endian machine 453# 454device safe # SafeNet 1141 455options SAFE_DEBUG # enable debugging support: hw.safe.debug 456options SAFE_RNDTEST # enable rndtest support 457 458##################################################################### 459 460# 461# Miscellaneous hardware: 462# 463# apm: Laptop Advanced Power Management (experimental) 464# pmtimer: Timer device driver for power management events (APM or ACPI) 465# cy: Cyclades serial driver 466# digi: Digiboard driver 467 468# Notes on APM 469# The flags takes the following meaning for apm0: 470# 0x0020 Statclock is broken. 471 472device apm 473hint.apm.0.flags="0x20" 474device canbus 475device canbepm 476device cy 477options CY_PCI_FASTINTR # Use with cy_pci unless irq is shared 478device digi 479# BIOS & FEP/OS components of device digi. 480device digi_CX 481device digi_CX_PCI 482device digi_EPCX 483device digi_EPCX_PCI 484device digi_Xe 485device digi_Xem 486device digi_Xr 487device olpt 488hint.olpt.0.at="isa" 489hint.olpt.0.port="0x040" 490device pmc 491hint.pmc.0.at="isa" 492hint.pmc.0.port="0x8f0" 493device pmtimer # Adjust system timer at wakeup time 494# sx device is i386 and pc98 only at the moment. 495device sx 496options SX_DEBUG 497 498# 499# Laptop/Notebook options: 500# 501# See also: 502# apm under `Miscellaneous hardware' 503# above. 504 505# For older notebooks that signal a powerfail condition (external 506# power supply dropped, or battery state low) by issuing an NMI: 507 508options POWERFAIL_NMI # make it beep instead of panicing 509 510# 511# PC Card/PCMCIA 512# (OLDCARD) 513# 514# card: pccard slots 515# pcic: isa/pccard bridge 516device pcic 517hint.pcic.0.at="isa" 518#hint.pcic.1.at="isa" 519device card 1 520 521#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 522# ISDN4BSD 523# 524# See /usr/share/examples/isdn/ROADMAP for an introduction to isdn4bsd. 525# 526# i4b passive ISDN cards support contains the following hardware drivers: 527# 528# isic - Siemens/Infineon ISDN ISAC/HSCX/IPAC chipset driver 529# iwic - Winbond W6692 PCI bus ISDN S/T interface controller 530# ifpi - AVM Fritz!Card PCI driver 531# ifpi2 - AVM Fritz!Card PCI version 2 driver 532# ihfc - Cologne Chip HFC ISA/ISA-PnP chipset driver 533# ifpnp - AVM Fritz!Card PnP driver 534# itjc - Siemens ISAC / TJNet Tiger300/320 chipset 535# 536# i4b active ISDN cards support contains the following hardware drivers: 537# 538# iavc - AVM B1 PCI, AVM B1 ISA, AVM T1 539# 540# Note that the ``options'' (if given) and ``device'' lines must BOTH 541# be uncommented to enable support for a given card ! 542# 543# In addition to a hardware driver (and probably an option) the mandatory 544# ISDN protocol stack devices and the mandatory support device must be 545# enabled as well as one or more devices from the optional devices section. 546# 547#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 548# isic driver (Siemens/Infineon chipsets) 549# 550device isic 551# 552# PCI bus Cards: 553# -------------- 554# 555# ELSA MicroLink ISDN/PCI (same as ELSA QuickStep 1000pro PCI) 556options ELSA_QS1PCI 557# 558#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 559# ifpnp driver for AVM Fritz!Card PnP 560# 561# AVM Fritz!Card PnP 562device ifpnp 563# 564#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 565# ihfc driver for Cologne Chip ISA chipsets (experimental!) 566# 567# Teles 16.3c ISA PnP 568# AcerISDN P10 ISA PnP 569# TELEINT ISDN SPEED No.1 570device ihfc 571# 572#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 573# ifpi driver for AVM Fritz!Card PCI 574# 575# AVM Fritz!Card PCI 576device ifpi 577# 578#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 579# ifpi2 driver for AVM Fritz!Card PCI version 2 580# 581# AVM Fritz!Card PCI version 2 582device "ifpi2" 583# 584#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 585# iwic driver for Winbond W6692 chipset 586# 587# ASUSCOM P-IN100-ST-D (and other Winbond W6692 based cards) 588device iwic 589# 590#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 591# itjc driver for Siemens ISAC / TJNet Tiger300/320 chipset 592# 593# Traverse Technologies NETjet-S 594# Teles PCI-TJ 595device itjc 596# 597#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 598# iavc driver (AVM active cards, needs i4bcapi driver!) 599# 600device iavc 601# 602#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 603# ISDN Protocol Stack - mandatory for all hardware drivers 604# 605# Q.921 / layer 2 - i4b passive cards D channel handling 606device "i4bq921" 607# 608# Q.931 / layer 3 - i4b passive cards D channel handling 609device "i4bq931" 610# 611# layer 4 - i4b common passive and active card handling 612device "i4b" 613# 614#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 615# ISDN devices - mandatory for all hardware drivers 616# 617# userland driver to do ISDN tracing (for passive cards only) 618device "i4btrc" 4 619# 620# userland driver to control the whole thing 621device "i4bctl" 622# 623#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 624# ISDN devices - optional 625# 626# userland driver for access to raw B channel 627device "i4brbch" 4 628# 629# userland driver for telephony 630device "i4btel" 2 631# 632# network driver for IP over raw HDLC ISDN 633device "i4bipr" 4 634# enable VJ header compression detection for ipr i/f 635options IPR_VJ 636# enable logging of the first n IP packets to isdnd (n=32 here) 637options IPR_LOG=32 638# 639# network driver for sync PPP over ISDN; requires an equivalent 640# number of sppp device to be configured 641device "i4bisppp" 4 642# 643# B-channel interface to the netgraph subsystem 644device "i4bing" 2 645# 646# CAPI driver needed for active ISDN cards (see iavc driver above) 647device "i4bcapi" 648# 649#--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 650 651# 652# Set the number of PV entries per process. Increasing this can 653# stop panics related to heavy use of shared memory. However, that can 654# (combined with large amounts of physical memory) cause panics at 655# boot time due the kernel running out of VM space. 656# 657# If you're tweaking this, you might also want to increase the sysctls 658# "vm.v_free_min", "vm.v_free_reserved", and "vm.v_free_target". 659# 660# The value below is the one more than the default. 661# 662options PMAP_SHPGPERPROC=201 663 664# 665# Change the size of the kernel virtual address space. Due to 666# constraints in loader(8) on i386, this must be a multiple of 4. 667# 256 = 1 GB of kernel address space. Increasing this also causes 668# a reduction of the address space in user processes. 512 splits 669# the 4GB cpu address space in half (2GB user, 2GB kernel). 670# 671options KVA_PAGES=260 672 673 674##################################################################### 675# ABI Emulation 676 677# Enable iBCS2 runtime support for SCO and ISC binaries 678options IBCS2 679 680# Emulate spx device for client side of SVR3 local X interface 681options SPX_HACK 682 683# Enable Linux ABI emulation 684options COMPAT_LINUX 685 686# Enable i386 a.out binary support 687options COMPAT_AOUT 688 689# Enable the linux-like proc filesystem support (requires COMPAT_LINUX 690# and PSEUDOFS) 691options LINPROCFS 692 693# 694# SysVR4 ABI emulation 695# 696# The svr4 ABI emulator can be statically compiled into the kernel or loaded as 697# a KLD module. 698# The STREAMS network emulation code can also be compiled statically or as a 699# module. If loaded as a module, it must be loaded before the svr4 module 700# (the /usr/sbin/svr4 script does this for you). If compiling statically, 701# the `streams' device must be configured into any kernel which also 702# specifies COMPAT_SVR4. It is possible to have a statically-configured 703# STREAMS device and a dynamically loadable svr4 emulator; the /usr/sbin/svr4 704# script understands that it doesn't need to load the `streams' module under 705# those circumstances. 706# Caveat: At this time, `options KTRACE' is required for the svr4 emulator 707# (whether static or dynamic). 708# 709options COMPAT_SVR4 # build emulator statically 710options DEBUG_SVR4 # enable verbose debugging 711device streams # STREAMS network driver (required for svr4). 712 713 714##################################################################### 715# VM OPTIONS 716 717# Disable the 4 MByte page PSE CPU feature. The PSE feature allows the 718# kernel to use 4 MByte pages to map the kernel instead of 4k pages. 719# This saves on the amount of memory needed for page tables needed to 720# map the kernel. You should only disable this feature as a temporary 721# workaround if you are having problems with it enabled. 722# 723#options DISABLE_PSE 724 725# Disable the global pages PGE CPU feature. The PGE feature allows pages 726# to be marked with the PG_G bit. TLB entries for these pages are not 727# flushed from the cache when %cr3 is reloaded. This can make context 728# switches less expensive. You should only disable this feature as a 729# temporary workaround if you are having problems with it enabled. 730# 731#options DISABLE_PG_G 732 733# KSTACK_PAGES is the number of memory pages to assign to the kernel 734# stack of each thread. 735 736options KSTACK_PAGES=3 737 738##################################################################### 739 740# More undocumented options for linting. 741# Note that documenting these are not considered an affront. 742 743options FB_INSTALL_CDEV # install a CDEV entry in /dev 744 745# PECOFF module (Win32 Execution Format) 746options PECOFF_SUPPORT 747options PECOFF_DEBUG 748 749options I4B_SMP_WORKAROUND 750options I586_PMC_GUPROF=0x70000 751options KBDIO_DEBUG=2 752options KBD_MAXRETRY=4 753options KBD_MAXWAIT=6 754options KBD_RESETDELAY=201 755 756options TIMER_FREQ=((14318182+6)/12) 757 758options VM_KMEM_SIZE 759options VM_KMEM_SIZE_MAX 760options VM_KMEM_SIZE_SCALE 761 762 763##################################################################### 764# Devices we don't want to deal with 765 766nodevice atkbdc 767nodevice atkbd 768nodevice psm 769nodevice vga 770nodevice bt 771nodevice adw 772nodevice aha 773nodevice ahb 774nodevice ahd 775nodevice mpt 776nodevice trm 777nodevice wds 778nodevice asr 779nodevice dpt 780nodevice ciss 781nodevice iir 782nodevice mly 783nodevice ida # Compaq Smart RAID 784nodevice mlx # Mylex DAC960 785nodevice amr # AMI MegaRAID 786nodevice twe # 3ware ATA RAID 787nodevice ataraid 788nodevice cm 789nodevice cs 790nodevice ex 791nodevice fea 792nodevice cbb 793nodevice pccard 794nodevice cardbus 795nodevice intpm 796nodevice alpm 797nodevice ichsmb 798nodevice viapm 799nodevice amdpm 800nodevice nfpm 801 802 803##################################################################### 804# Options we don't want to deal with 805 806nooption VGA_DEBUG 807nooption VGA_WIDTH90 808nooption VGA_SLOW_IOACCESS 809nooption VGA_ALT_SEQACCESS 810nooption PSM_RESETAFTERSUSPEND 811nooption PSM_HOOKRESUME 812nooption ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP 813nooption AHD_DEBUG 814nooption AHD_DEBUG_OPTS 815nooption AHD_REG_PRETTY_PRINT 816nooption ADW_ALLOW_MEMIO 817nooption DPT_LOST_IRQ 818nooption DPT_RESET_HBA 819nooption DPT_TIMEOUT_FACTOR 820nooption AAC_DEBUG 821nooption ACPI_MAX_THREADS 822 823 824##################################################################### 825# Make options we don't want to deal with 826 827nomakeoption ATKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP 828