xref: /openbmc/linux/arch/arm/mm/Kconfig (revision 8e694cd2)
1comment "Processor Type"
2
3# Select CPU types depending on the architecture selected.  This selects
4# which CPUs we support in the kernel image, and the compiler instruction
5# optimiser behaviour.
6
7# ARM7TDMI
8config CPU_ARM7TDMI
9	bool
10	depends on !MMU
11	select CPU_32v4T
12	select CPU_ABRT_LV4T
13	select CPU_CACHE_V4
14	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
15	help
16	  A 32-bit RISC microprocessor based on the ARM7 processor core
17	  which has no memory control unit and cache.
18
19	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM7TDMI processor.
20	  Otherwise, say N.
21
22# ARM720T
23config CPU_ARM720T
24	bool
25	select CPU_32v4T
26	select CPU_ABRT_LV4T
27	select CPU_CACHE_V4
28	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
29	select CPU_COPY_V4WT if MMU
30	select CPU_CP15_MMU
31	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
32	select CPU_TLB_V4WT if MMU
33	help
34	  A 32-bit RISC processor with 8kByte Cache, Write Buffer and
35	  MMU built around an ARM7TDMI core.
36
37	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM720T processor.
38	  Otherwise, say N.
39
40# ARM740T
41config CPU_ARM740T
42	bool
43	depends on !MMU
44	select CPU_32v4T
45	select CPU_ABRT_LV4T
46	select CPU_CACHE_V4
47	select CPU_CP15_MPU
48	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
49	help
50	  A 32-bit RISC processor with 8KB cache or 4KB variants,
51	  write buffer and MPU(Protection Unit) built around
52	  an ARM7TDMI core.
53
54	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM740T processor.
55	  Otherwise, say N.
56
57# ARM9TDMI
58config CPU_ARM9TDMI
59	bool
60	depends on !MMU
61	select CPU_32v4T
62	select CPU_ABRT_NOMMU
63	select CPU_CACHE_V4
64	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
65	help
66	  A 32-bit RISC microprocessor based on the ARM9 processor core
67	  which has no memory control unit and cache.
68
69	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM9TDMI processor.
70	  Otherwise, say N.
71
72# ARM920T
73config CPU_ARM920T
74	bool
75	select CPU_32v4T
76	select CPU_ABRT_EV4T
77	select CPU_CACHE_V4WT
78	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
79	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU
80	select CPU_CP15_MMU
81	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
82	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
83	help
84	  The ARM920T is licensed to be produced by numerous vendors,
85	  and is used in the Cirrus EP93xx and the Samsung S3C2410.
86
87	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM920T processor.
88	  Otherwise, say N.
89
90# ARM922T
91config CPU_ARM922T
92	bool
93	select CPU_32v4T
94	select CPU_ABRT_EV4T
95	select CPU_CACHE_V4WT
96	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
97	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU
98	select CPU_CP15_MMU
99	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
100	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
101	help
102	  The ARM922T is a version of the ARM920T, but with smaller
103	  instruction and data caches. It is used in Altera's
104	  Excalibur XA device family and Micrel's KS8695 Centaur.
105
106	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM922T processor.
107	  Otherwise, say N.
108
109# ARM925T
110config CPU_ARM925T
111	bool
112	select CPU_32v4T
113	select CPU_ABRT_EV4T
114	select CPU_CACHE_V4WT
115	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
116	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU
117	select CPU_CP15_MMU
118	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
119	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
120 	help
121 	  The ARM925T is a mix between the ARM920T and ARM926T, but with
122	  different instruction and data caches. It is used in TI's OMAP
123 	  device family.
124
125 	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM925T processor.
126 	  Otherwise, say N.
127
128# ARM926T
129config CPU_ARM926T
130	bool
131	select CPU_32v5
132	select CPU_ABRT_EV5TJ
133	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
134	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU
135	select CPU_CP15_MMU
136	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
137	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
138	help
139	  This is a variant of the ARM920.  It has slightly different
140	  instruction sequences for cache and TLB operations.  Curiously,
141	  there is no documentation on it at the ARM corporate website.
142
143	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM926T processor.
144	  Otherwise, say N.
145
146# FA526
147config CPU_FA526
148	bool
149	select CPU_32v4
150	select CPU_ABRT_EV4
151	select CPU_CACHE_FA
152	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
153	select CPU_COPY_FA if MMU
154	select CPU_CP15_MMU
155	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
156	select CPU_TLB_FA if MMU
157	help
158	  The FA526 is a version of the ARMv4 compatible processor with
159	  Branch Target Buffer, Unified TLB and cache line size 16.
160
161	  Say Y if you want support for the FA526 processor.
162	  Otherwise, say N.
163
164# ARM940T
165config CPU_ARM940T
166	bool
167	depends on !MMU
168	select CPU_32v4T
169	select CPU_ABRT_NOMMU
170	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
171	select CPU_CP15_MPU
172	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
173	help
174	  ARM940T is a member of the ARM9TDMI family of general-
175	  purpose microprocessors with MPU and separate 4KB
176	  instruction and 4KB data cases, each with a 4-word line
177	  length.
178
179	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM940T processor.
180	  Otherwise, say N.
181
182# ARM946E-S
183config CPU_ARM946E
184	bool
185	depends on !MMU
186	select CPU_32v5
187	select CPU_ABRT_NOMMU
188	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
189	select CPU_CP15_MPU
190	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
191	help
192	  ARM946E-S is a member of the ARM9E-S family of high-
193	  performance, 32-bit system-on-chip processor solutions.
194	  The TCM and ARMv5TE 32-bit instruction set is supported.
195
196	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM946E-S processor.
197	  Otherwise, say N.
198
199# ARM1020 - needs validating
200config CPU_ARM1020
201	bool
202	select CPU_32v5
203	select CPU_ABRT_EV4T
204	select CPU_CACHE_V4WT
205	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
206	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU
207	select CPU_CP15_MMU
208	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
209	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
210	help
211	  The ARM1020 is the 32K cached version of the ARM10 processor,
212	  with an addition of a floating-point unit.
213
214	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM1020 processor.
215	  Otherwise, say N.
216
217# ARM1020E - needs validating
218config CPU_ARM1020E
219	bool
220	depends on n
221	select CPU_32v5
222	select CPU_ABRT_EV4T
223	select CPU_CACHE_V4WT
224	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
225	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU
226	select CPU_CP15_MMU
227	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
228	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
229
230# ARM1022E
231config CPU_ARM1022
232	bool
233	select CPU_32v5
234	select CPU_ABRT_EV4T
235	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
236	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU # can probably do better
237	select CPU_CP15_MMU
238	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
239	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
240	help
241	  The ARM1022E is an implementation of the ARMv5TE architecture
242	  based upon the ARM10 integer core with a 16KiB L1 Harvard cache,
243	  embedded trace macrocell, and a floating-point unit.
244
245	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM1022E processor.
246	  Otherwise, say N.
247
248# ARM1026EJ-S
249config CPU_ARM1026
250	bool
251	select CPU_32v5
252	select CPU_ABRT_EV5T # But need Jazelle, but EV5TJ ignores bit 10
253	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
254	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU # can probably do better
255	select CPU_CP15_MMU
256	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
257	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
258	help
259	  The ARM1026EJ-S is an implementation of the ARMv5TEJ architecture
260	  based upon the ARM10 integer core.
261
262	  Say Y if you want support for the ARM1026EJ-S processor.
263	  Otherwise, say N.
264
265# SA110
266config CPU_SA110
267	bool
268	select CPU_32v3 if ARCH_RPC
269	select CPU_32v4 if !ARCH_RPC
270	select CPU_ABRT_EV4
271	select CPU_CACHE_V4WB
272	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
273	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU
274	select CPU_CP15_MMU
275	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
276	select CPU_TLB_V4WB if MMU
277	help
278	  The Intel StrongARM(R) SA-110 is a 32-bit microprocessor and
279	  is available at five speeds ranging from 100 MHz to 233 MHz.
280	  More information is available at
281	  <http://developer.intel.com/design/strong/sa110.htm>.
282
283	  Say Y if you want support for the SA-110 processor.
284	  Otherwise, say N.
285
286# SA1100
287config CPU_SA1100
288	bool
289	select CPU_32v4
290	select CPU_ABRT_EV4
291	select CPU_CACHE_V4WB
292	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
293	select CPU_CP15_MMU
294	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
295	select CPU_TLB_V4WB if MMU
296
297# XScale
298config CPU_XSCALE
299	bool
300	select CPU_32v5
301	select CPU_ABRT_EV5T
302	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
303	select CPU_CP15_MMU
304	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
305	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
306
307# XScale Core Version 3
308config CPU_XSC3
309	bool
310	select CPU_32v5
311	select CPU_ABRT_EV5T
312	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
313	select CPU_CP15_MMU
314	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
315	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
316	select IO_36
317
318# Marvell PJ1 (Mohawk)
319config CPU_MOHAWK
320	bool
321	select CPU_32v5
322	select CPU_ABRT_EV5T
323	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
324	select CPU_COPY_V4WB if MMU
325	select CPU_CP15_MMU
326	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
327	select CPU_TLB_V4WBI if MMU
328
329# Feroceon
330config CPU_FEROCEON
331	bool
332	select CPU_32v5
333	select CPU_ABRT_EV5T
334	select CPU_CACHE_VIVT
335	select CPU_COPY_FEROCEON if MMU
336	select CPU_CP15_MMU
337	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
338	select CPU_TLB_FEROCEON if MMU
339
340config CPU_FEROCEON_OLD_ID
341	bool "Accept early Feroceon cores with an ARM926 ID"
342	depends on CPU_FEROCEON && !CPU_ARM926T
343	default y
344	help
345	  This enables the usage of some old Feroceon cores
346	  for which the CPU ID is equal to the ARM926 ID.
347	  Relevant for Feroceon-1850 and early Feroceon-2850.
348
349# Marvell PJ4
350config CPU_PJ4
351	bool
352	select ARM_THUMBEE
353	select CPU_V7
354
355config CPU_PJ4B
356	bool
357	select CPU_V7
358
359# ARMv6
360config CPU_V6
361	bool
362	select CPU_32v6
363	select CPU_ABRT_EV6
364	select CPU_CACHE_V6
365	select CPU_CACHE_VIPT
366	select CPU_COPY_V6 if MMU
367	select CPU_CP15_MMU
368	select CPU_HAS_ASID if MMU
369	select CPU_PABRT_V6
370	select CPU_TLB_V6 if MMU
371
372# ARMv6k
373config CPU_V6K
374	bool
375	select CPU_32v6
376	select CPU_32v6K
377	select CPU_ABRT_EV6
378	select CPU_CACHE_V6
379	select CPU_CACHE_VIPT
380	select CPU_COPY_V6 if MMU
381	select CPU_CP15_MMU
382	select CPU_HAS_ASID if MMU
383	select CPU_PABRT_V6
384	select CPU_TLB_V6 if MMU
385
386# ARMv7
387config CPU_V7
388	bool
389	select CPU_32v6K
390	select CPU_32v7
391	select CPU_ABRT_EV7
392	select CPU_CACHE_V7
393	select CPU_CACHE_VIPT
394	select CPU_COPY_V6 if MMU
395	select CPU_CP15_MMU if MMU
396	select CPU_CP15_MPU if !MMU
397	select CPU_HAS_ASID if MMU
398	select CPU_PABRT_V7
399	select CPU_TLB_V7 if MMU
400
401# ARMv7M
402config CPU_V7M
403	bool
404	select CPU_32v7M
405	select CPU_ABRT_NOMMU
406	select CPU_CACHE_NOP
407	select CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
408	select CPU_THUMBONLY
409
410config CPU_THUMBONLY
411	bool
412	# There are no CPUs available with MMU that don't implement an ARM ISA:
413	depends on !MMU
414	help
415	  Select this if your CPU doesn't support the 32 bit ARM instructions.
416
417# Figure out what processor architecture version we should be using.
418# This defines the compiler instruction set which depends on the machine type.
419config CPU_32v3
420	bool
421	select CPU_USE_DOMAINS if MMU
422	select NEED_KUSER_HELPERS
423	select TLS_REG_EMUL if SMP || !MMU
424	select CPU_NO_EFFICIENT_FFS
425
426config CPU_32v4
427	bool
428	select CPU_USE_DOMAINS if MMU
429	select NEED_KUSER_HELPERS
430	select TLS_REG_EMUL if SMP || !MMU
431	select CPU_NO_EFFICIENT_FFS
432
433config CPU_32v4T
434	bool
435	select CPU_USE_DOMAINS if MMU
436	select NEED_KUSER_HELPERS
437	select TLS_REG_EMUL if SMP || !MMU
438	select CPU_NO_EFFICIENT_FFS
439
440config CPU_32v5
441	bool
442	select CPU_USE_DOMAINS if MMU
443	select NEED_KUSER_HELPERS
444	select TLS_REG_EMUL if SMP || !MMU
445
446config CPU_32v6
447	bool
448	select TLS_REG_EMUL if !CPU_32v6K && !MMU
449
450config CPU_32v6K
451	bool
452
453config CPU_32v7
454	bool
455
456config CPU_32v7M
457	bool
458
459# The abort model
460config CPU_ABRT_NOMMU
461	bool
462
463config CPU_ABRT_EV4
464	bool
465
466config CPU_ABRT_EV4T
467	bool
468
469config CPU_ABRT_LV4T
470	bool
471
472config CPU_ABRT_EV5T
473	bool
474
475config CPU_ABRT_EV5TJ
476	bool
477
478config CPU_ABRT_EV6
479	bool
480
481config CPU_ABRT_EV7
482	bool
483
484config CPU_PABRT_LEGACY
485	bool
486
487config CPU_PABRT_V6
488	bool
489
490config CPU_PABRT_V7
491	bool
492
493# The cache model
494config CPU_CACHE_V4
495	bool
496
497config CPU_CACHE_V4WT
498	bool
499
500config CPU_CACHE_V4WB
501	bool
502
503config CPU_CACHE_V6
504	bool
505
506config CPU_CACHE_V7
507	bool
508
509config CPU_CACHE_NOP
510	bool
511
512config CPU_CACHE_VIVT
513	bool
514
515config CPU_CACHE_VIPT
516	bool
517
518config CPU_CACHE_FA
519	bool
520
521if MMU
522# The copy-page model
523config CPU_COPY_V4WT
524	bool
525
526config CPU_COPY_V4WB
527	bool
528
529config CPU_COPY_FEROCEON
530	bool
531
532config CPU_COPY_FA
533	bool
534
535config CPU_COPY_V6
536	bool
537
538# This selects the TLB model
539config CPU_TLB_V4WT
540	bool
541	help
542	  ARM Architecture Version 4 TLB with writethrough cache.
543
544config CPU_TLB_V4WB
545	bool
546	help
547	  ARM Architecture Version 4 TLB with writeback cache.
548
549config CPU_TLB_V4WBI
550	bool
551	help
552	  ARM Architecture Version 4 TLB with writeback cache and invalidate
553	  instruction cache entry.
554
555config CPU_TLB_FEROCEON
556	bool
557	help
558	  Feroceon TLB (v4wbi with non-outer-cachable page table walks).
559
560config CPU_TLB_FA
561	bool
562	help
563	  Faraday ARM FA526 architecture, unified TLB with writeback cache
564	  and invalidate instruction cache entry. Branch target buffer is
565	  also supported.
566
567config CPU_TLB_V6
568	bool
569
570config CPU_TLB_V7
571	bool
572
573config VERIFY_PERMISSION_FAULT
574	bool
575endif
576
577config CPU_HAS_ASID
578	bool
579	help
580	  This indicates whether the CPU has the ASID register; used to
581	  tag TLB and possibly cache entries.
582
583config CPU_CP15
584	bool
585	help
586	  Processor has the CP15 register.
587
588config CPU_CP15_MMU
589	bool
590	select CPU_CP15
591	help
592	  Processor has the CP15 register, which has MMU related registers.
593
594config CPU_CP15_MPU
595	bool
596	select CPU_CP15
597	help
598	  Processor has the CP15 register, which has MPU related registers.
599
600config CPU_USE_DOMAINS
601	bool
602	help
603	  This option enables or disables the use of domain switching
604	  via the set_fs() function.
605
606config CPU_V7M_NUM_IRQ
607	int "Number of external interrupts connected to the NVIC"
608	depends on CPU_V7M
609	default 90 if ARCH_STM32
610	default 38 if ARCH_EFM32
611	default 112 if SOC_VF610
612	default 240
613	help
614	  This option indicates the number of interrupts connected to the NVIC.
615	  The value can be larger than the real number of interrupts supported
616	  by the system, but must not be lower.
617	  The default value is 240, corresponding to the maximum number of
618	  interrupts supported by the NVIC on Cortex-M family.
619
620	  If unsure, keep default value.
621
622#
623# CPU supports 36-bit I/O
624#
625config IO_36
626	bool
627
628comment "Processor Features"
629
630config ARM_LPAE
631	bool "Support for the Large Physical Address Extension"
632	depends on MMU && CPU_32v7 && !CPU_32v6 && !CPU_32v5 && \
633		!CPU_32v4 && !CPU_32v3
634	help
635	  Say Y if you have an ARMv7 processor supporting the LPAE page
636	  table format and you would like to access memory beyond the
637	  4GB limit. The resulting kernel image will not run on
638	  processors without the LPA extension.
639
640	  If unsure, say N.
641
642config ARM_PV_FIXUP
643	def_bool y
644	depends on ARM_LPAE && ARM_PATCH_PHYS_VIRT && ARCH_KEYSTONE
645
646config ARCH_PHYS_ADDR_T_64BIT
647	def_bool ARM_LPAE
648
649config ARCH_DMA_ADDR_T_64BIT
650	bool
651
652config ARM_THUMB
653	bool "Support Thumb user binaries" if !CPU_THUMBONLY
654	depends on CPU_ARM720T || CPU_ARM740T || CPU_ARM920T || CPU_ARM922T || \
655		CPU_ARM925T || CPU_ARM926T || CPU_ARM940T || CPU_ARM946E || \
656		CPU_ARM1020 || CPU_ARM1020E || CPU_ARM1022 || CPU_ARM1026 || \
657		CPU_XSCALE || CPU_XSC3 || CPU_MOHAWK || CPU_V6 || CPU_V6K || \
658		CPU_V7 || CPU_FEROCEON || CPU_V7M
659	default y
660	help
661	  Say Y if you want to include kernel support for running user space
662	  Thumb binaries.
663
664	  The Thumb instruction set is a compressed form of the standard ARM
665	  instruction set resulting in smaller binaries at the expense of
666	  slightly less efficient code.
667
668	  If you don't know what this all is, saying Y is a safe choice.
669
670config ARM_THUMBEE
671	bool "Enable ThumbEE CPU extension"
672	depends on CPU_V7
673	help
674	  Say Y here if you have a CPU with the ThumbEE extension and code to
675	  make use of it. Say N for code that can run on CPUs without ThumbEE.
676
677config ARM_VIRT_EXT
678	bool
679	depends on MMU
680	default y if CPU_V7
681	help
682	  Enable the kernel to make use of the ARM Virtualization
683	  Extensions to install hypervisors without run-time firmware
684	  assistance.
685
686	  A compliant bootloader is required in order to make maximum
687	  use of this feature.  Refer to Documentation/arm/Booting for
688	  details.
689
690config SWP_EMULATE
691	bool "Emulate SWP/SWPB instructions" if !SMP
692	depends on CPU_V7
693	default y if SMP
694	select HAVE_PROC_CPU if PROC_FS
695	help
696	  ARMv6 architecture deprecates use of the SWP/SWPB instructions.
697	  ARMv7 multiprocessing extensions introduce the ability to disable
698	  these instructions, triggering an undefined instruction exception
699	  when executed. Say Y here to enable software emulation of these
700	  instructions for userspace (not kernel) using LDREX/STREX.
701	  Also creates /proc/cpu/swp_emulation for statistics.
702
703	  In some older versions of glibc [<=2.8] SWP is used during futex
704	  trylock() operations with the assumption that the code will not
705	  be preempted. This invalid assumption may be more likely to fail
706	  with SWP emulation enabled, leading to deadlock of the user
707	  application.
708
709	  NOTE: when accessing uncached shared regions, LDREX/STREX rely
710	  on an external transaction monitoring block called a global
711	  monitor to maintain update atomicity. If your system does not
712	  implement a global monitor, this option can cause programs that
713	  perform SWP operations to uncached memory to deadlock.
714
715	  If unsure, say Y.
716
717config CPU_BIG_ENDIAN
718	bool "Build big-endian kernel"
719	depends on ARCH_SUPPORTS_BIG_ENDIAN
720	help
721	  Say Y if you plan on running a kernel in big-endian mode.
722	  Note that your board must be properly built and your board
723	  port must properly enable any big-endian related features
724	  of your chipset/board/processor.
725
726config CPU_ENDIAN_BE8
727	bool
728	depends on CPU_BIG_ENDIAN
729	default CPU_V6 || CPU_V6K || CPU_V7
730	help
731	  Support for the BE-8 (big-endian) mode on ARMv6 and ARMv7 processors.
732
733config CPU_ENDIAN_BE32
734	bool
735	depends on CPU_BIG_ENDIAN
736	default !CPU_ENDIAN_BE8
737	help
738	  Support for the BE-32 (big-endian) mode on pre-ARMv6 processors.
739
740config CPU_HIGH_VECTOR
741	depends on !MMU && CPU_CP15 && !CPU_ARM740T
742	bool "Select the High exception vector"
743	help
744	  Say Y here to select high exception vector(0xFFFF0000~).
745	  The exception vector can vary depending on the platform
746	  design in nommu mode. If your platform needs to select
747	  high exception vector, say Y.
748	  Otherwise or if you are unsure, say N, and the low exception
749	  vector (0x00000000~) will be used.
750
751config CPU_ICACHE_DISABLE
752	bool "Disable I-Cache (I-bit)"
753	depends on CPU_CP15 && !(CPU_ARM720T || CPU_ARM740T || CPU_XSCALE || CPU_XSC3)
754	help
755	  Say Y here to disable the processor instruction cache. Unless
756	  you have a reason not to or are unsure, say N.
757
758config CPU_DCACHE_DISABLE
759	bool "Disable D-Cache (C-bit)"
760	depends on CPU_CP15 && !SMP
761	help
762	  Say Y here to disable the processor data cache. Unless
763	  you have a reason not to or are unsure, say N.
764
765config CPU_DCACHE_SIZE
766	hex
767	depends on CPU_ARM740T || CPU_ARM946E
768	default 0x00001000 if CPU_ARM740T
769	default 0x00002000 # default size for ARM946E-S
770	help
771	  Some cores are synthesizable to have various sized cache. For
772	  ARM946E-S case, it can vary from 0KB to 1MB.
773	  To support such cache operations, it is efficient to know the size
774	  before compile time.
775	  If your SoC is configured to have a different size, define the value
776	  here with proper conditions.
777
778config CPU_DCACHE_WRITETHROUGH
779	bool "Force write through D-cache"
780	depends on (CPU_ARM740T || CPU_ARM920T || CPU_ARM922T || CPU_ARM925T || CPU_ARM926T || CPU_ARM940T || CPU_ARM946E || CPU_ARM1020 || CPU_FA526) && !CPU_DCACHE_DISABLE
781	default y if CPU_ARM925T
782	help
783	  Say Y here to use the data cache in writethrough mode. Unless you
784	  specifically require this or are unsure, say N.
785
786config CPU_CACHE_ROUND_ROBIN
787	bool "Round robin I and D cache replacement algorithm"
788	depends on (CPU_ARM926T || CPU_ARM946E || CPU_ARM1020) && (!CPU_ICACHE_DISABLE || !CPU_DCACHE_DISABLE)
789	help
790	  Say Y here to use the predictable round-robin cache replacement
791	  policy.  Unless you specifically require this or are unsure, say N.
792
793config CPU_BPREDICT_DISABLE
794	bool "Disable branch prediction"
795	depends on CPU_ARM1020 || CPU_V6 || CPU_V6K || CPU_MOHAWK || CPU_XSC3 || CPU_V7 || CPU_FA526
796	help
797	  Say Y here to disable branch prediction.  If unsure, say N.
798
799config TLS_REG_EMUL
800	bool
801	select NEED_KUSER_HELPERS
802	help
803	  An SMP system using a pre-ARMv6 processor (there are apparently
804	  a few prototypes like that in existence) and therefore access to
805	  that required register must be emulated.
806
807config NEED_KUSER_HELPERS
808	bool
809
810config KUSER_HELPERS
811	bool "Enable kuser helpers in vector page" if !NEED_KUSER_HELPERS
812	depends on MMU
813	default y
814	help
815	  Warning: disabling this option may break user programs.
816
817	  Provide kuser helpers in the vector page.  The kernel provides
818	  helper code to userspace in read only form at a fixed location
819	  in the high vector page to allow userspace to be independent of
820	  the CPU type fitted to the system.  This permits binaries to be
821	  run on ARMv4 through to ARMv7 without modification.
822
823	  See Documentation/arm/kernel_user_helpers.txt for details.
824
825	  However, the fixed address nature of these helpers can be used
826	  by ROP (return orientated programming) authors when creating
827	  exploits.
828
829	  If all of the binaries and libraries which run on your platform
830	  are built specifically for your platform, and make no use of
831	  these helpers, then you can turn this option off to hinder
832	  such exploits. However, in that case, if a binary or library
833	  relying on those helpers is run, it will receive a SIGILL signal,
834	  which will terminate the program.
835
836	  Say N here only if you are absolutely certain that you do not
837	  need these helpers; otherwise, the safe option is to say Y.
838
839config VDSO
840	bool "Enable VDSO for acceleration of some system calls"
841	depends on AEABI && MMU && CPU_V7
842	default y if ARM_ARCH_TIMER
843	select GENERIC_TIME_VSYSCALL
844	help
845	  Place in the process address space an ELF shared object
846	  providing fast implementations of gettimeofday and
847	  clock_gettime.  Systems that implement the ARM architected
848	  timer will receive maximum benefit.
849
850	  You must have glibc 2.22 or later for programs to seamlessly
851	  take advantage of this.
852
853config DMA_CACHE_RWFO
854	bool "Enable read/write for ownership DMA cache maintenance"
855	depends on CPU_V6K && SMP
856	default y
857	help
858	  The Snoop Control Unit on ARM11MPCore does not detect the
859	  cache maintenance operations and the dma_{map,unmap}_area()
860	  functions may leave stale cache entries on other CPUs. By
861	  enabling this option, Read or Write For Ownership in the ARMv6
862	  DMA cache maintenance functions is performed. These LDR/STR
863	  instructions change the cache line state to shared or modified
864	  so that the cache operation has the desired effect.
865
866	  Note that the workaround is only valid on processors that do
867	  not perform speculative loads into the D-cache. For such
868	  processors, if cache maintenance operations are not broadcast
869	  in hardware, other workarounds are needed (e.g. cache
870	  maintenance broadcasting in software via FIQ).
871
872config OUTER_CACHE
873	bool
874
875config OUTER_CACHE_SYNC
876	bool
877	select ARM_HEAVY_MB
878	help
879	  The outer cache has a outer_cache_fns.sync function pointer
880	  that can be used to drain the write buffer of the outer cache.
881
882config CACHE_FEROCEON_L2
883	bool "Enable the Feroceon L2 cache controller"
884	depends on ARCH_MV78XX0 || ARCH_MVEBU
885	default y
886	select OUTER_CACHE
887	help
888	  This option enables the Feroceon L2 cache controller.
889
890config CACHE_FEROCEON_L2_WRITETHROUGH
891	bool "Force Feroceon L2 cache write through"
892	depends on CACHE_FEROCEON_L2
893	help
894	  Say Y here to use the Feroceon L2 cache in writethrough mode.
895	  Unless you specifically require this, say N for writeback mode.
896
897config MIGHT_HAVE_CACHE_L2X0
898	bool
899	help
900	  This option should be selected by machines which have a L2x0
901	  or PL310 cache controller, but where its use is optional.
902
903	  The only effect of this option is to make CACHE_L2X0 and
904	  related options available to the user for configuration.
905
906	  Boards or SoCs which always require the cache controller
907	  support to be present should select CACHE_L2X0 directly
908	  instead of this option, thus preventing the user from
909	  inadvertently configuring a broken kernel.
910
911config CACHE_L2X0
912	bool "Enable the L2x0 outer cache controller" if MIGHT_HAVE_CACHE_L2X0
913	default MIGHT_HAVE_CACHE_L2X0
914	select OUTER_CACHE
915	select OUTER_CACHE_SYNC
916	help
917	  This option enables the L2x0 PrimeCell.
918
919if CACHE_L2X0
920
921config PL310_ERRATA_588369
922	bool "PL310 errata: Clean & Invalidate maintenance operations do not invalidate clean lines"
923	help
924	   The PL310 L2 cache controller implements three types of Clean &
925	   Invalidate maintenance operations: by Physical Address
926	   (offset 0x7F0), by Index/Way (0x7F8) and by Way (0x7FC).
927	   They are architecturally defined to behave as the execution of a
928	   clean operation followed immediately by an invalidate operation,
929	   both performing to the same memory location. This functionality
930	   is not correctly implemented in PL310 prior to r2p0 (fixed in r2p0)
931	   as clean lines are not invalidated as a result of these operations.
932
933config PL310_ERRATA_727915
934	bool "PL310 errata: Background Clean & Invalidate by Way operation can cause data corruption"
935	help
936	  PL310 implements the Clean & Invalidate by Way L2 cache maintenance
937	  operation (offset 0x7FC). This operation runs in background so that
938	  PL310 can handle normal accesses while it is in progress. Under very
939	  rare circumstances, due to this erratum, write data can be lost when
940	  PL310 treats a cacheable write transaction during a Clean &
941	  Invalidate by Way operation.  Revisions prior to r3p1 are affected by
942	  this errata (fixed in r3p1).
943
944config PL310_ERRATA_753970
945	bool "PL310 errata: cache sync operation may be faulty"
946	help
947	  This option enables the workaround for the 753970 PL310 (r3p0) erratum.
948
949	  Under some condition the effect of cache sync operation on
950	  the store buffer still remains when the operation completes.
951	  This means that the store buffer is always asked to drain and
952	  this prevents it from merging any further writes. The workaround
953	  is to replace the normal offset of cache sync operation (0x730)
954	  by another offset targeting an unmapped PL310 register 0x740.
955	  This has the same effect as the cache sync operation: store buffer
956	  drain and waiting for all buffers empty.
957
958config PL310_ERRATA_769419
959	bool "PL310 errata: no automatic Store Buffer drain"
960	help
961	  On revisions of the PL310 prior to r3p2, the Store Buffer does
962	  not automatically drain. This can cause normal, non-cacheable
963	  writes to be retained when the memory system is idle, leading
964	  to suboptimal I/O performance for drivers using coherent DMA.
965	  This option adds a write barrier to the cpu_idle loop so that,
966	  on systems with an outer cache, the store buffer is drained
967	  explicitly.
968
969endif
970
971config CACHE_TAUROS2
972	bool "Enable the Tauros2 L2 cache controller"
973	depends on (ARCH_DOVE || ARCH_MMP || CPU_PJ4)
974	default y
975	select OUTER_CACHE
976	help
977	  This option enables the Tauros2 L2 cache controller (as
978	  found on PJ1/PJ4).
979
980config CACHE_UNIPHIER
981	bool "Enable the UniPhier outer cache controller"
982	depends on ARCH_UNIPHIER
983	default y
984	select OUTER_CACHE
985	select OUTER_CACHE_SYNC
986	help
987	  This option enables the UniPhier outer cache (system cache)
988	  controller.
989
990config CACHE_XSC3L2
991	bool "Enable the L2 cache on XScale3"
992	depends on CPU_XSC3
993	default y
994	select OUTER_CACHE
995	help
996	  This option enables the L2 cache on XScale3.
997
998config ARM_L1_CACHE_SHIFT_6
999	bool
1000	default y if CPU_V7
1001	help
1002	  Setting ARM L1 cache line size to 64 Bytes.
1003
1004config ARM_L1_CACHE_SHIFT
1005	int
1006	default 6 if ARM_L1_CACHE_SHIFT_6
1007	default 5
1008
1009config ARM_DMA_MEM_BUFFERABLE
1010	bool "Use non-cacheable memory for DMA" if (CPU_V6 || CPU_V6K) && !CPU_V7
1011	default y if CPU_V6 || CPU_V6K || CPU_V7
1012	help
1013	  Historically, the kernel has used strongly ordered mappings to
1014	  provide DMA coherent memory.  With the advent of ARMv7, mapping
1015	  memory with differing types results in unpredictable behaviour,
1016	  so on these CPUs, this option is forced on.
1017
1018	  Multiple mappings with differing attributes is also unpredictable
1019	  on ARMv6 CPUs, but since they do not have aggressive speculative
1020	  prefetch, no harm appears to occur.
1021
1022	  However, drivers may be missing the necessary barriers for ARMv6,
1023	  and therefore turning this on may result in unpredictable driver
1024	  behaviour.  Therefore, we offer this as an option.
1025
1026	  You are recommended say 'Y' here and debug any affected drivers.
1027
1028config ARCH_HAS_BARRIERS
1029	bool
1030	help
1031	  This option allows the use of custom mandatory barriers
1032	  included via the mach/barriers.h file.
1033
1034config ARM_HEAVY_MB
1035	bool
1036
1037config ARCH_SUPPORTS_BIG_ENDIAN
1038	bool
1039	help
1040	  This option specifies the architecture can support big endian
1041	  operation.
1042
1043config DEBUG_RODATA
1044	bool "Make kernel text and rodata read-only"
1045	depends on MMU && !XIP_KERNEL
1046	default y if CPU_V7
1047	help
1048	  If this is set, kernel text and rodata memory will be made
1049	  read-only, and non-text kernel memory will be made non-executable.
1050	  The tradeoff is that each region is padded to section-size (1MiB)
1051	  boundaries (because their permissions are different and splitting
1052	  the 1M pages into 4K ones causes TLB performance problems), which
1053	  can waste memory.
1054
1055config DEBUG_ALIGN_RODATA
1056	bool "Make rodata strictly non-executable"
1057	depends on DEBUG_RODATA
1058	default y
1059	help
1060	  If this is set, rodata will be made explicitly non-executable. This
1061	  provides protection on the rare chance that attackers might find and
1062	  use ROP gadgets that exist in the rodata section. This adds an
1063	  additional section-aligned split of rodata from kernel text so it
1064	  can be made explicitly non-executable. This padding may waste memory
1065	  space to gain the additional protection.
1066