xref: /openbmc/linux/arch/Kconfig (revision 7211ec63)
1#
2# General architecture dependent options
3#
4
5config CRASH_CORE
6	bool
7
8config KEXEC_CORE
9	select CRASH_CORE
10	bool
11
12config HAVE_IMA_KEXEC
13	bool
14
15config OPROFILE
16	tristate "OProfile system profiling"
17	depends on PROFILING
18	depends on HAVE_OPROFILE
19	select RING_BUFFER
20	select RING_BUFFER_ALLOW_SWAP
21	help
22	  OProfile is a profiling system capable of profiling the
23	  whole system, include the kernel, kernel modules, libraries,
24	  and applications.
25
26	  If unsure, say N.
27
28config OPROFILE_EVENT_MULTIPLEX
29	bool "OProfile multiplexing support (EXPERIMENTAL)"
30	default n
31	depends on OPROFILE && X86
32	help
33	  The number of hardware counters is limited. The multiplexing
34	  feature enables OProfile to gather more events than counters
35	  are provided by the hardware. This is realized by switching
36	  between events at a user specified time interval.
37
38	  If unsure, say N.
39
40config HAVE_OPROFILE
41	bool
42
43config OPROFILE_NMI_TIMER
44	def_bool y
45	depends on PERF_EVENTS && HAVE_PERF_EVENTS_NMI && !PPC64
46
47config KPROBES
48	bool "Kprobes"
49	depends on MODULES
50	depends on HAVE_KPROBES
51	select KALLSYMS
52	help
53	  Kprobes allows you to trap at almost any kernel address and
54	  execute a callback function.  register_kprobe() establishes
55	  a probepoint and specifies the callback.  Kprobes is useful
56	  for kernel debugging, non-intrusive instrumentation and testing.
57	  If in doubt, say "N".
58
59config JUMP_LABEL
60       bool "Optimize very unlikely/likely branches"
61       depends on HAVE_ARCH_JUMP_LABEL
62       help
63         This option enables a transparent branch optimization that
64	 makes certain almost-always-true or almost-always-false branch
65	 conditions even cheaper to execute within the kernel.
66
67	 Certain performance-sensitive kernel code, such as trace points,
68	 scheduler functionality, networking code and KVM have such
69	 branches and include support for this optimization technique.
70
71         If it is detected that the compiler has support for "asm goto",
72	 the kernel will compile such branches with just a nop
73	 instruction. When the condition flag is toggled to true, the
74	 nop will be converted to a jump instruction to execute the
75	 conditional block of instructions.
76
77	 This technique lowers overhead and stress on the branch prediction
78	 of the processor and generally makes the kernel faster. The update
79	 of the condition is slower, but those are always very rare.
80
81	 ( On 32-bit x86, the necessary options added to the compiler
82	   flags may increase the size of the kernel slightly. )
83
84config STATIC_KEYS_SELFTEST
85	bool "Static key selftest"
86	depends on JUMP_LABEL
87	help
88	  Boot time self-test of the branch patching code.
89
90config OPTPROBES
91	def_bool y
92	depends on KPROBES && HAVE_OPTPROBES
93	depends on !PREEMPT
94
95config KPROBES_ON_FTRACE
96	def_bool y
97	depends on KPROBES && HAVE_KPROBES_ON_FTRACE
98	depends on DYNAMIC_FTRACE_WITH_REGS
99	help
100	 If function tracer is enabled and the arch supports full
101	 passing of pt_regs to function tracing, then kprobes can
102	 optimize on top of function tracing.
103
104config UPROBES
105	def_bool n
106	depends on ARCH_SUPPORTS_UPROBES
107	help
108	  Uprobes is the user-space counterpart to kprobes: they
109	  enable instrumentation applications (such as 'perf probe')
110	  to establish unintrusive probes in user-space binaries and
111	  libraries, by executing handler functions when the probes
112	  are hit by user-space applications.
113
114	  ( These probes come in the form of single-byte breakpoints,
115	    managed by the kernel and kept transparent to the probed
116	    application. )
117
118config HAVE_64BIT_ALIGNED_ACCESS
119	def_bool 64BIT && !HAVE_EFFICIENT_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
120	help
121	  Some architectures require 64 bit accesses to be 64 bit
122	  aligned, which also requires structs containing 64 bit values
123	  to be 64 bit aligned too. This includes some 32 bit
124	  architectures which can do 64 bit accesses, as well as 64 bit
125	  architectures without unaligned access.
126
127	  This symbol should be selected by an architecture if 64 bit
128	  accesses are required to be 64 bit aligned in this way even
129	  though it is not a 64 bit architecture.
130
131	  See Documentation/unaligned-memory-access.txt for more
132	  information on the topic of unaligned memory accesses.
133
134config HAVE_EFFICIENT_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
135	bool
136	help
137	  Some architectures are unable to perform unaligned accesses
138	  without the use of get_unaligned/put_unaligned. Others are
139	  unable to perform such accesses efficiently (e.g. trap on
140	  unaligned access and require fixing it up in the exception
141	  handler.)
142
143	  This symbol should be selected by an architecture if it can
144	  perform unaligned accesses efficiently to allow different
145	  code paths to be selected for these cases. Some network
146	  drivers, for example, could opt to not fix up alignment
147	  problems with received packets if doing so would not help
148	  much.
149
150	  See Documentation/unaligned-memory-access.txt for more
151	  information on the topic of unaligned memory accesses.
152
153config ARCH_USE_BUILTIN_BSWAP
154       bool
155       help
156	 Modern versions of GCC (since 4.4) have builtin functions
157	 for handling byte-swapping. Using these, instead of the old
158	 inline assembler that the architecture code provides in the
159	 __arch_bswapXX() macros, allows the compiler to see what's
160	 happening and offers more opportunity for optimisation. In
161	 particular, the compiler will be able to combine the byteswap
162	 with a nearby load or store and use load-and-swap or
163	 store-and-swap instructions if the architecture has them. It
164	 should almost *never* result in code which is worse than the
165	 hand-coded assembler in <asm/swab.h>.  But just in case it
166	 does, the use of the builtins is optional.
167
168	 Any architecture with load-and-swap or store-and-swap
169	 instructions should set this. And it shouldn't hurt to set it
170	 on architectures that don't have such instructions.
171
172config KRETPROBES
173	def_bool y
174	depends on KPROBES && HAVE_KRETPROBES
175
176config USER_RETURN_NOTIFIER
177	bool
178	depends on HAVE_USER_RETURN_NOTIFIER
179	help
180	  Provide a kernel-internal notification when a cpu is about to
181	  switch to user mode.
182
183config HAVE_IOREMAP_PROT
184	bool
185
186config HAVE_KPROBES
187	bool
188
189config HAVE_KRETPROBES
190	bool
191
192config HAVE_OPTPROBES
193	bool
194
195config HAVE_KPROBES_ON_FTRACE
196	bool
197
198config HAVE_NMI
199	bool
200
201#
202# An arch should select this if it provides all these things:
203#
204#	task_pt_regs()		in asm/processor.h or asm/ptrace.h
205#	arch_has_single_step()	if there is hardware single-step support
206#	arch_has_block_step()	if there is hardware block-step support
207#	asm/syscall.h		supplying asm-generic/syscall.h interface
208#	linux/regset.h		user_regset interfaces
209#	CORE_DUMP_USE_REGSET	#define'd in linux/elf.h
210#	TIF_SYSCALL_TRACE	calls tracehook_report_syscall_{entry,exit}
211#	TIF_NOTIFY_RESUME	calls tracehook_notify_resume()
212#	signal delivery		calls tracehook_signal_handler()
213#
214config HAVE_ARCH_TRACEHOOK
215	bool
216
217config HAVE_DMA_CONTIGUOUS
218	bool
219
220config GENERIC_SMP_IDLE_THREAD
221       bool
222
223config GENERIC_IDLE_POLL_SETUP
224       bool
225
226config ARCH_HAS_FORTIFY_SOURCE
227	bool
228	help
229	  An architecture should select this when it can successfully
230	  build and run with CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE.
231
232# Select if arch has all set_memory_ro/rw/x/nx() functions in asm/cacheflush.h
233config ARCH_HAS_SET_MEMORY
234	bool
235
236# Select if arch init_task initializer is different to init/init_task.c
237config ARCH_INIT_TASK
238       bool
239
240# Select if arch has its private alloc_task_struct() function
241config ARCH_TASK_STRUCT_ALLOCATOR
242	bool
243
244# Select if arch has its private alloc_thread_stack() function
245config ARCH_THREAD_STACK_ALLOCATOR
246	bool
247
248# Select if arch wants to size task_struct dynamically via arch_task_struct_size:
249config ARCH_WANTS_DYNAMIC_TASK_STRUCT
250	bool
251
252config HAVE_REGS_AND_STACK_ACCESS_API
253	bool
254	help
255	  This symbol should be selected by an architecure if it supports
256	  the API needed to access registers and stack entries from pt_regs,
257	  declared in asm/ptrace.h
258	  For example the kprobes-based event tracer needs this API.
259
260config HAVE_CLK
261	bool
262	help
263	  The <linux/clk.h> calls support software clock gating and
264	  thus are a key power management tool on many systems.
265
266config HAVE_DMA_API_DEBUG
267	bool
268
269config HAVE_HW_BREAKPOINT
270	bool
271	depends on PERF_EVENTS
272
273config HAVE_MIXED_BREAKPOINTS_REGS
274	bool
275	depends on HAVE_HW_BREAKPOINT
276	help
277	  Depending on the arch implementation of hardware breakpoints,
278	  some of them have separate registers for data and instruction
279	  breakpoints addresses, others have mixed registers to store
280	  them but define the access type in a control register.
281	  Select this option if your arch implements breakpoints under the
282	  latter fashion.
283
284config HAVE_USER_RETURN_NOTIFIER
285	bool
286
287config HAVE_PERF_EVENTS_NMI
288	bool
289	help
290	  System hardware can generate an NMI using the perf event
291	  subsystem.  Also has support for calculating CPU cycle events
292	  to determine how many clock cycles in a given period.
293
294config HAVE_HARDLOCKUP_DETECTOR_PERF
295	bool
296	depends on HAVE_PERF_EVENTS_NMI
297	help
298	  The arch chooses to use the generic perf-NMI-based hardlockup
299	  detector. Must define HAVE_PERF_EVENTS_NMI.
300
301config HAVE_NMI_WATCHDOG
302	depends on HAVE_NMI
303	bool
304	help
305	  The arch provides a low level NMI watchdog. It provides
306	  asm/nmi.h, and defines its own arch_touch_nmi_watchdog().
307
308config HAVE_HARDLOCKUP_DETECTOR_ARCH
309	bool
310	select HAVE_NMI_WATCHDOG
311	help
312	  The arch chooses to provide its own hardlockup detector, which is
313	  a superset of the HAVE_NMI_WATCHDOG. It also conforms to config
314	  interfaces and parameters provided by hardlockup detector subsystem.
315
316config HAVE_PERF_REGS
317	bool
318	help
319	  Support selective register dumps for perf events. This includes
320	  bit-mapping of each registers and a unique architecture id.
321
322config HAVE_PERF_USER_STACK_DUMP
323	bool
324	help
325	  Support user stack dumps for perf event samples. This needs
326	  access to the user stack pointer which is not unified across
327	  architectures.
328
329config HAVE_ARCH_JUMP_LABEL
330	bool
331
332config HAVE_RCU_TABLE_FREE
333	bool
334
335config ARCH_HAVE_NMI_SAFE_CMPXCHG
336	bool
337
338config HAVE_ALIGNED_STRUCT_PAGE
339	bool
340	help
341	  This makes sure that struct pages are double word aligned and that
342	  e.g. the SLUB allocator can perform double word atomic operations
343	  on a struct page for better performance. However selecting this
344	  might increase the size of a struct page by a word.
345
346config HAVE_CMPXCHG_LOCAL
347	bool
348
349config HAVE_CMPXCHG_DOUBLE
350	bool
351
352config ARCH_WEAK_RELEASE_ACQUIRE
353	bool
354
355config ARCH_WANT_IPC_PARSE_VERSION
356	bool
357
358config ARCH_WANT_COMPAT_IPC_PARSE_VERSION
359	bool
360
361config ARCH_WANT_OLD_COMPAT_IPC
362	select ARCH_WANT_COMPAT_IPC_PARSE_VERSION
363	bool
364
365config HAVE_ARCH_SECCOMP_FILTER
366	bool
367	help
368	  An arch should select this symbol if it provides all of these things:
369	  - syscall_get_arch()
370	  - syscall_get_arguments()
371	  - syscall_rollback()
372	  - syscall_set_return_value()
373	  - SIGSYS siginfo_t support
374	  - secure_computing is called from a ptrace_event()-safe context
375	  - secure_computing return value is checked and a return value of -1
376	    results in the system call being skipped immediately.
377	  - seccomp syscall wired up
378
379config SECCOMP_FILTER
380	def_bool y
381	depends on HAVE_ARCH_SECCOMP_FILTER && SECCOMP && NET
382	help
383	  Enable tasks to build secure computing environments defined
384	  in terms of Berkeley Packet Filter programs which implement
385	  task-defined system call filtering polices.
386
387	  See Documentation/prctl/seccomp_filter.txt for details.
388
389config HAVE_GCC_PLUGINS
390	bool
391	help
392	  An arch should select this symbol if it supports building with
393	  GCC plugins.
394
395menuconfig GCC_PLUGINS
396	bool "GCC plugins"
397	depends on HAVE_GCC_PLUGINS
398	depends on !COMPILE_TEST
399	help
400	  GCC plugins are loadable modules that provide extra features to the
401	  compiler. They are useful for runtime instrumentation and static analysis.
402
403	  See Documentation/gcc-plugins.txt for details.
404
405config GCC_PLUGIN_CYC_COMPLEXITY
406	bool "Compute the cyclomatic complexity of a function" if EXPERT
407	depends on GCC_PLUGINS
408	depends on !COMPILE_TEST
409	help
410	  The complexity M of a function's control flow graph is defined as:
411	   M = E - N + 2P
412	  where
413
414	  E = the number of edges
415	  N = the number of nodes
416	  P = the number of connected components (exit nodes).
417
418	  Enabling this plugin reports the complexity to stderr during the
419	  build. It mainly serves as a simple example of how to create a
420	  gcc plugin for the kernel.
421
422config GCC_PLUGIN_SANCOV
423	bool
424	depends on GCC_PLUGINS
425	help
426	  This plugin inserts a __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc() call at the start of
427	  basic blocks. It supports all gcc versions with plugin support (from
428	  gcc-4.5 on). It is based on the commit "Add fuzzing coverage support"
429	  by Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>.
430
431config GCC_PLUGIN_LATENT_ENTROPY
432	bool "Generate some entropy during boot and runtime"
433	depends on GCC_PLUGINS
434	help
435	  By saying Y here the kernel will instrument some kernel code to
436	  extract some entropy from both original and artificially created
437	  program state.  This will help especially embedded systems where
438	  there is little 'natural' source of entropy normally.  The cost
439	  is some slowdown of the boot process (about 0.5%) and fork and
440	  irq processing.
441
442	  Note that entropy extracted this way is not cryptographically
443	  secure!
444
445	  This plugin was ported from grsecurity/PaX. More information at:
446	   * https://grsecurity.net/
447	   * https://pax.grsecurity.net/
448
449config GCC_PLUGIN_STRUCTLEAK
450	bool "Force initialization of variables containing userspace addresses"
451	depends on GCC_PLUGINS
452	help
453	  This plugin zero-initializes any structures containing a
454	  __user attribute. This can prevent some classes of information
455	  exposures.
456
457	  This plugin was ported from grsecurity/PaX. More information at:
458	   * https://grsecurity.net/
459	   * https://pax.grsecurity.net/
460
461config GCC_PLUGIN_STRUCTLEAK_BYREF_ALL
462	bool "Force initialize all struct type variables passed by reference"
463	depends on GCC_PLUGIN_STRUCTLEAK
464	help
465	  Zero initialize any struct type local variable that may be passed by
466	  reference without having been initialized.
467
468config GCC_PLUGIN_STRUCTLEAK_VERBOSE
469	bool "Report forcefully initialized variables"
470	depends on GCC_PLUGIN_STRUCTLEAK
471	depends on !COMPILE_TEST
472	help
473	  This option will cause a warning to be printed each time the
474	  structleak plugin finds a variable it thinks needs to be
475	  initialized. Since not all existing initializers are detected
476	  by the plugin, this can produce false positive warnings.
477
478config GCC_PLUGIN_RANDSTRUCT
479	bool "Randomize layout of sensitive kernel structures"
480	depends on GCC_PLUGINS
481	select MODVERSIONS if MODULES
482	help
483	  If you say Y here, the layouts of structures that are entirely
484	  function pointers (and have not been manually annotated with
485	  __no_randomize_layout), or structures that have been explicitly
486	  marked with __randomize_layout, will be randomized at compile-time.
487	  This can introduce the requirement of an additional information
488	  exposure vulnerability for exploits targeting these structure
489	  types.
490
491	  Enabling this feature will introduce some performance impact,
492	  slightly increase memory usage, and prevent the use of forensic
493	  tools like Volatility against the system (unless the kernel
494	  source tree isn't cleaned after kernel installation).
495
496	  The seed used for compilation is located at
497	  scripts/gcc-plgins/randomize_layout_seed.h.  It remains after
498	  a make clean to allow for external modules to be compiled with
499	  the existing seed and will be removed by a make mrproper or
500	  make distclean.
501
502	  Note that the implementation requires gcc 4.7 or newer.
503
504	  This plugin was ported from grsecurity/PaX. More information at:
505	   * https://grsecurity.net/
506	   * https://pax.grsecurity.net/
507
508config GCC_PLUGIN_RANDSTRUCT_PERFORMANCE
509	bool "Use cacheline-aware structure randomization"
510	depends on GCC_PLUGIN_RANDSTRUCT
511	depends on !COMPILE_TEST
512	help
513	  If you say Y here, the RANDSTRUCT randomization will make a
514	  best effort at restricting randomization to cacheline-sized
515	  groups of elements.  It will further not randomize bitfields
516	  in structures.  This reduces the performance hit of RANDSTRUCT
517	  at the cost of weakened randomization.
518
519config HAVE_CC_STACKPROTECTOR
520	bool
521	help
522	  An arch should select this symbol if:
523	  - its compiler supports the -fstack-protector option
524	  - it has implemented a stack canary (e.g. __stack_chk_guard)
525
526config CC_STACKPROTECTOR
527	def_bool n
528	help
529	  Set when a stack-protector mode is enabled, so that the build
530	  can enable kernel-side support for the GCC feature.
531
532choice
533	prompt "Stack Protector buffer overflow detection"
534	depends on HAVE_CC_STACKPROTECTOR
535	default CC_STACKPROTECTOR_NONE
536	help
537	  This option turns on the "stack-protector" GCC feature. This
538	  feature puts, at the beginning of functions, a canary value on
539	  the stack just before the return address, and validates
540	  the value just before actually returning.  Stack based buffer
541	  overflows (that need to overwrite this return address) now also
542	  overwrite the canary, which gets detected and the attack is then
543	  neutralized via a kernel panic.
544
545config CC_STACKPROTECTOR_NONE
546	bool "None"
547	help
548	  Disable "stack-protector" GCC feature.
549
550config CC_STACKPROTECTOR_REGULAR
551	bool "Regular"
552	select CC_STACKPROTECTOR
553	help
554	  Functions will have the stack-protector canary logic added if they
555	  have an 8-byte or larger character array on the stack.
556
557	  This feature requires gcc version 4.2 or above, or a distribution
558	  gcc with the feature backported ("-fstack-protector").
559
560	  On an x86 "defconfig" build, this feature adds canary checks to
561	  about 3% of all kernel functions, which increases kernel code size
562	  by about 0.3%.
563
564config CC_STACKPROTECTOR_STRONG
565	bool "Strong"
566	select CC_STACKPROTECTOR
567	help
568	  Functions will have the stack-protector canary logic added in any
569	  of the following conditions:
570
571	  - local variable's address used as part of the right hand side of an
572	    assignment or function argument
573	  - local variable is an array (or union containing an array),
574	    regardless of array type or length
575	  - uses register local variables
576
577	  This feature requires gcc version 4.9 or above, or a distribution
578	  gcc with the feature backported ("-fstack-protector-strong").
579
580	  On an x86 "defconfig" build, this feature adds canary checks to
581	  about 20% of all kernel functions, which increases the kernel code
582	  size by about 2%.
583
584endchoice
585
586config THIN_ARCHIVES
587	def_bool y
588	help
589	  Select this if the architecture wants to use thin archives
590	  instead of ld -r to create the built-in.o files.
591
592config LD_DEAD_CODE_DATA_ELIMINATION
593	bool
594	help
595	  Select this if the architecture wants to do dead code and
596	  data elimination with the linker by compiling with
597	  -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections and linking with
598	  --gc-sections.
599
600	  This requires that the arch annotates or otherwise protects
601	  its external entry points from being discarded. Linker scripts
602	  must also merge .text.*, .data.*, and .bss.* correctly into
603	  output sections. Care must be taken not to pull in unrelated
604	  sections (e.g., '.text.init'). Typically '.' in section names
605	  is used to distinguish them from label names / C identifiers.
606
607config HAVE_ARCH_WITHIN_STACK_FRAMES
608	bool
609	help
610	  An architecture should select this if it can walk the kernel stack
611	  frames to determine if an object is part of either the arguments
612	  or local variables (i.e. that it excludes saved return addresses,
613	  and similar) by implementing an inline arch_within_stack_frames(),
614	  which is used by CONFIG_HARDENED_USERCOPY.
615
616config HAVE_CONTEXT_TRACKING
617	bool
618	help
619	  Provide kernel/user boundaries probes necessary for subsystems
620	  that need it, such as userspace RCU extended quiescent state.
621	  Syscalls need to be wrapped inside user_exit()-user_enter() through
622	  the slow path using TIF_NOHZ flag. Exceptions handlers must be
623	  wrapped as well. Irqs are already protected inside
624	  rcu_irq_enter/rcu_irq_exit() but preemption or signal handling on
625	  irq exit still need to be protected.
626
627config HAVE_VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING
628	bool
629
630config ARCH_HAS_SCALED_CPUTIME
631	bool
632
633config HAVE_VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING_GEN
634	bool
635	default y if 64BIT
636	help
637	  With VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING_GEN, cputime_t becomes 64-bit.
638	  Before enabling this option, arch code must be audited
639	  to ensure there are no races in concurrent read/write of
640	  cputime_t. For example, reading/writing 64-bit cputime_t on
641	  some 32-bit arches may require multiple accesses, so proper
642	  locking is needed to protect against concurrent accesses.
643
644
645config HAVE_IRQ_TIME_ACCOUNTING
646	bool
647	help
648	  Archs need to ensure they use a high enough resolution clock to
649	  support irq time accounting and then call enable_sched_clock_irqtime().
650
651config HAVE_ARCH_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE
652	bool
653
654config HAVE_ARCH_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_PUD
655	bool
656
657config HAVE_ARCH_HUGE_VMAP
658	bool
659
660config HAVE_ARCH_SOFT_DIRTY
661	bool
662
663config HAVE_MOD_ARCH_SPECIFIC
664	bool
665	help
666	  The arch uses struct mod_arch_specific to store data.  Many arches
667	  just need a simple module loader without arch specific data - those
668	  should not enable this.
669
670config MODULES_USE_ELF_RELA
671	bool
672	help
673	  Modules only use ELF RELA relocations.  Modules with ELF REL
674	  relocations will give an error.
675
676config MODULES_USE_ELF_REL
677	bool
678	help
679	  Modules only use ELF REL relocations.  Modules with ELF RELA
680	  relocations will give an error.
681
682config HAVE_UNDERSCORE_SYMBOL_PREFIX
683	bool
684	help
685	  Some architectures generate an _ in front of C symbols; things like
686	  module loading and assembly files need to know about this.
687
688config HAVE_IRQ_EXIT_ON_IRQ_STACK
689	bool
690	help
691	  Architecture doesn't only execute the irq handler on the irq stack
692	  but also irq_exit(). This way we can process softirqs on this irq
693	  stack instead of switching to a new one when we call __do_softirq()
694	  in the end of an hardirq.
695	  This spares a stack switch and improves cache usage on softirq
696	  processing.
697
698config PGTABLE_LEVELS
699	int
700	default 2
701
702config ARCH_HAS_ELF_RANDOMIZE
703	bool
704	help
705	  An architecture supports choosing randomized locations for
706	  stack, mmap, brk, and ET_DYN. Defined functions:
707	  - arch_mmap_rnd()
708	  - arch_randomize_brk()
709
710config HAVE_ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS
711	bool
712	help
713	  An arch should select this symbol if it supports setting a variable
714	  number of bits for use in establishing the base address for mmap
715	  allocations, has MMU enabled and provides values for both:
716	  - ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_MIN
717	  - ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_MAX
718
719config HAVE_EXIT_THREAD
720	bool
721	help
722	  An architecture implements exit_thread.
723
724config ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_MIN
725	int
726
727config ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_MAX
728	int
729
730config ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_DEFAULT
731	int
732
733config ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS
734	int "Number of bits to use for ASLR of mmap base address" if EXPERT
735	range ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_MIN ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_MAX
736	default ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_DEFAULT if ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_DEFAULT
737	default ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS_MIN
738	depends on HAVE_ARCH_MMAP_RND_BITS
739	help
740	  This value can be used to select the number of bits to use to
741	  determine the random offset to the base address of vma regions
742	  resulting from mmap allocations. This value will be bounded
743	  by the architecture's minimum and maximum supported values.
744
745	  This value can be changed after boot using the
746	  /proc/sys/vm/mmap_rnd_bits tunable
747
748config HAVE_ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS
749	bool
750	help
751	  An arch should select this symbol if it supports running applications
752	  in compatibility mode, supports setting a variable number of bits for
753	  use in establishing the base address for mmap allocations, has MMU
754	  enabled and provides values for both:
755	  - ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_MIN
756	  - ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_MAX
757
758config ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_MIN
759	int
760
761config ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_MAX
762	int
763
764config ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_DEFAULT
765	int
766
767config ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS
768	int "Number of bits to use for ASLR of mmap base address for compatible applications" if EXPERT
769	range ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_MIN ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_MAX
770	default ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_DEFAULT if ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_DEFAULT
771	default ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS_MIN
772	depends on HAVE_ARCH_MMAP_RND_COMPAT_BITS
773	help
774	  This value can be used to select the number of bits to use to
775	  determine the random offset to the base address of vma regions
776	  resulting from mmap allocations for compatible applications This
777	  value will be bounded by the architecture's minimum and maximum
778	  supported values.
779
780	  This value can be changed after boot using the
781	  /proc/sys/vm/mmap_rnd_compat_bits tunable
782
783config HAVE_ARCH_COMPAT_MMAP_BASES
784	bool
785	help
786	  This allows 64bit applications to invoke 32-bit mmap() syscall
787	  and vice-versa 32-bit applications to call 64-bit mmap().
788	  Required for applications doing different bitness syscalls.
789
790config HAVE_COPY_THREAD_TLS
791	bool
792	help
793	  Architecture provides copy_thread_tls to accept tls argument via
794	  normal C parameter passing, rather than extracting the syscall
795	  argument from pt_regs.
796
797config HAVE_STACK_VALIDATION
798	bool
799	help
800	  Architecture supports the 'objtool check' host tool command, which
801	  performs compile-time stack metadata validation.
802
803config HAVE_RELIABLE_STACKTRACE
804	bool
805	help
806	  Architecture has a save_stack_trace_tsk_reliable() function which
807	  only returns a stack trace if it can guarantee the trace is reliable.
808
809config HAVE_ARCH_HASH
810	bool
811	default n
812	help
813	  If this is set, the architecture provides an <asm/hash.h>
814	  file which provides platform-specific implementations of some
815	  functions in <linux/hash.h> or fs/namei.c.
816
817config ISA_BUS_API
818	def_bool ISA
819
820#
821# ABI hall of shame
822#
823config CLONE_BACKWARDS
824	bool
825	help
826	  Architecture has tls passed as the 4th argument of clone(2),
827	  not the 5th one.
828
829config CLONE_BACKWARDS2
830	bool
831	help
832	  Architecture has the first two arguments of clone(2) swapped.
833
834config CLONE_BACKWARDS3
835	bool
836	help
837	  Architecture has tls passed as the 3rd argument of clone(2),
838	  not the 5th one.
839
840config ODD_RT_SIGACTION
841	bool
842	help
843	  Architecture has unusual rt_sigaction(2) arguments
844
845config OLD_SIGSUSPEND
846	bool
847	help
848	  Architecture has old sigsuspend(2) syscall, of one-argument variety
849
850config OLD_SIGSUSPEND3
851	bool
852	help
853	  Even weirder antique ABI - three-argument sigsuspend(2)
854
855config OLD_SIGACTION
856	bool
857	help
858	  Architecture has old sigaction(2) syscall.  Nope, not the same
859	  as OLD_SIGSUSPEND | OLD_SIGSUSPEND3 - alpha has sigsuspend(2),
860	  but fairly different variant of sigaction(2), thanks to OSF/1
861	  compatibility...
862
863config COMPAT_OLD_SIGACTION
864	bool
865
866config ARCH_NO_COHERENT_DMA_MMAP
867	bool
868
869config CPU_NO_EFFICIENT_FFS
870	def_bool n
871
872config HAVE_ARCH_VMAP_STACK
873	def_bool n
874	help
875	  An arch should select this symbol if it can support kernel stacks
876	  in vmalloc space.  This means:
877
878	  - vmalloc space must be large enough to hold many kernel stacks.
879	    This may rule out many 32-bit architectures.
880
881	  - Stacks in vmalloc space need to work reliably.  For example, if
882	    vmap page tables are created on demand, either this mechanism
883	    needs to work while the stack points to a virtual address with
884	    unpopulated page tables or arch code (switch_to() and switch_mm(),
885	    most likely) needs to ensure that the stack's page table entries
886	    are populated before running on a possibly unpopulated stack.
887
888	  - If the stack overflows into a guard page, something reasonable
889	    should happen.  The definition of "reasonable" is flexible, but
890	    instantly rebooting without logging anything would be unfriendly.
891
892config VMAP_STACK
893	default y
894	bool "Use a virtually-mapped stack"
895	depends on HAVE_ARCH_VMAP_STACK && !KASAN
896	---help---
897	  Enable this if you want the use virtually-mapped kernel stacks
898	  with guard pages.  This causes kernel stack overflows to be
899	  caught immediately rather than causing difficult-to-diagnose
900	  corruption.
901
902	  This is presently incompatible with KASAN because KASAN expects
903	  the stack to map directly to the KASAN shadow map using a formula
904	  that is incorrect if the stack is in vmalloc space.
905
906config ARCH_OPTIONAL_KERNEL_RWX
907	def_bool n
908
909config ARCH_OPTIONAL_KERNEL_RWX_DEFAULT
910	def_bool n
911
912config ARCH_HAS_STRICT_KERNEL_RWX
913	def_bool n
914
915config STRICT_KERNEL_RWX
916	bool "Make kernel text and rodata read-only" if ARCH_OPTIONAL_KERNEL_RWX
917	depends on ARCH_HAS_STRICT_KERNEL_RWX
918	default !ARCH_OPTIONAL_KERNEL_RWX || ARCH_OPTIONAL_KERNEL_RWX_DEFAULT
919	help
920	  If this is set, kernel text and rodata memory will be made read-only,
921	  and non-text memory will be made non-executable. This provides
922	  protection against certain security exploits (e.g. executing the heap
923	  or modifying text)
924
925	  These features are considered standard security practice these days.
926	  You should say Y here in almost all cases.
927
928config ARCH_HAS_STRICT_MODULE_RWX
929	def_bool n
930
931config STRICT_MODULE_RWX
932	bool "Set loadable kernel module data as NX and text as RO" if ARCH_OPTIONAL_KERNEL_RWX
933	depends on ARCH_HAS_STRICT_MODULE_RWX && MODULES
934	default !ARCH_OPTIONAL_KERNEL_RWX || ARCH_OPTIONAL_KERNEL_RWX_DEFAULT
935	help
936	  If this is set, module text and rodata memory will be made read-only,
937	  and non-text memory will be made non-executable. This provides
938	  protection against certain security exploits (e.g. writing to text)
939
940config ARCH_WANT_RELAX_ORDER
941	bool
942
943config ARCH_HAS_REFCOUNT
944	bool
945	help
946	  An architecture selects this when it has implemented refcount_t
947	  using open coded assembly primitives that provide an optimized
948	  refcount_t implementation, possibly at the expense of some full
949	  refcount state checks of CONFIG_REFCOUNT_FULL=y.
950
951	  The refcount overflow check behavior, however, must be retained.
952	  Catching overflows is the primary security concern for protecting
953	  against bugs in reference counts.
954
955config REFCOUNT_FULL
956	bool "Perform full reference count validation at the expense of speed"
957	help
958	  Enabling this switches the refcounting infrastructure from a fast
959	  unchecked atomic_t implementation to a fully state checked
960	  implementation, which can be (slightly) slower but provides protections
961	  against various use-after-free conditions that can be used in
962	  security flaw exploits.
963
964source "kernel/gcov/Kconfig"
965