1menu "Command line interface" 2 3config CMDLINE 4 bool "Support U-Boot commands" 5 default y 6 help 7 Enable U-Boot's command-line functions. This provides a means 8 to enter commands into U-Boot for a wide variety of purposes. It 9 also allows scripts (containing commands) to be executed. 10 Various commands and command categorys can be indivdually enabled. 11 Depending on the number of commands enabled, this can add 12 substantially to the size of U-Boot. 13 14config HUSH_PARSER 15 bool "Use hush shell" 16 depends on CMDLINE 17 help 18 This option enables the "hush" shell (from Busybox) as command line 19 interpreter, thus enabling powerful command line syntax like 20 if...then...else...fi conditionals or `&&' and '||' 21 constructs ("shell scripts"). 22 23 If disabled, you get the old, much simpler behaviour with a somewhat 24 smaller memory footprint. 25 26config SYS_PROMPT 27 string "Shell prompt" 28 default "=> " 29 help 30 This string is displayed in the command line to the left of the 31 cursor. 32 33menu "Autoboot options" 34 35config AUTOBOOT 36 bool "Autoboot" 37 default y 38 help 39 This enables the autoboot. See doc/README.autoboot for detail. 40 41config AUTOBOOT_KEYED 42 bool "Stop autobooting via specific input key / string" 43 default n 44 help 45 This option enables stopping (aborting) of the automatic 46 boot feature only by issuing a specific input key or 47 string. If not enabled, any input key will abort the 48 U-Boot automatic booting process and bring the device 49 to the U-Boot prompt for user input. 50 51config AUTOBOOT_PROMPT 52 string "Autoboot stop prompt" 53 depends on AUTOBOOT_KEYED 54 default "Autoboot in %d seconds\\n" 55 help 56 This string is displayed before the boot delay selected by 57 CONFIG_BOOTDELAY starts. If it is not defined there is no 58 output indicating that autoboot is in progress. 59 60 Note that this define is used as the (only) argument to a 61 printf() call, so it may contain '%' format specifications, 62 provided that it also includes, sepearated by commas exactly 63 like in a printf statement, the required arguments. It is 64 the responsibility of the user to select only such arguments 65 that are valid in the given context. 66 67config AUTOBOOT_ENCRYPTION 68 bool "Enable encryption in autoboot stopping" 69 depends on AUTOBOOT_KEYED 70 default n 71 72config AUTOBOOT_DELAY_STR 73 string "Delay autobooting via specific input key / string" 74 depends on AUTOBOOT_KEYED && !AUTOBOOT_ENCRYPTION 75 help 76 This option delays the automatic boot feature by issuing 77 a specific input key or string. If CONFIG_AUTOBOOT_DELAY_STR 78 or the environment variable "bootdelaykey" is specified 79 and this string is received from console input before 80 autoboot starts booting, U-Boot gives a command prompt. The 81 U-Boot prompt will time out if CONFIG_BOOT_RETRY_TIME is 82 used, otherwise it never times out. 83 84config AUTOBOOT_STOP_STR 85 string "Stop autobooting via specific input key / string" 86 depends on AUTOBOOT_KEYED && !AUTOBOOT_ENCRYPTION 87 help 88 This option enables stopping (aborting) of the automatic 89 boot feature only by issuing a specific input key or 90 string. If CONFIG_AUTOBOOT_STOP_STR or the environment 91 variable "bootstopkey" is specified and this string is 92 received from console input before autoboot starts booting, 93 U-Boot gives a command prompt. The U-Boot prompt never 94 times out, even if CONFIG_BOOT_RETRY_TIME is used. 95 96config AUTOBOOT_KEYED_CTRLC 97 bool "Enable Ctrl-C autoboot interruption" 98 depends on AUTOBOOT_KEYED && !AUTOBOOT_ENCRYPTION 99 default n 100 help 101 This option allows for the boot sequence to be interrupted 102 by ctrl-c, in addition to the "bootdelaykey" and "bootstopkey". 103 Setting this variable provides an escape sequence from the 104 limited "password" strings. 105 106config AUTOBOOT_STOP_STR_SHA256 107 string "Stop autobooting via SHA256 encrypted password" 108 depends on AUTOBOOT_KEYED && AUTOBOOT_ENCRYPTION 109 help 110 This option adds the feature to only stop the autobooting, 111 and therefore boot into the U-Boot prompt, when the input 112 string / password matches a values that is encypted via 113 a SHA256 hash and saved in the environment. 114 115endmenu 116 117source "cmd/fastboot/Kconfig" 118 119comment "Commands" 120 121menu "Info commands" 122 123config CMD_BDI 124 bool "bdinfo" 125 default y 126 help 127 Print board info 128 129config CMD_CONFIG 130 bool "config" 131 select BUILD_BIN2C 132 default SANDBOX 133 help 134 Print ".config" contents. 135 136 If this option is enabled, the ".config" file contents are embedded 137 in the U-Boot image and can be printed on the console by the "config" 138 command. This provides information of which options are enabled on 139 the running U-Boot. 140 141config CMD_CONSOLE 142 bool "coninfo" 143 default y 144 help 145 Print console devices and information. 146 147config CMD_CPU 148 bool "cpu" 149 help 150 Print information about available CPUs. This normally shows the 151 number of CPUs, type (e.g. manufacturer, architecture, product or 152 internal name) and clock frequency. Other information may be 153 available depending on the CPU driver. 154 155config CMD_LICENSE 156 bool "license" 157 select BUILD_BIN2C 158 help 159 Print GPL license text 160 161config CMD_REGINFO 162 bool "reginfo" 163 depends on PPC 164 help 165 Register dump 166 167endmenu 168 169menu "Boot commands" 170 171config CMD_BOOTD 172 bool "bootd" 173 default y 174 help 175 Run the command stored in the environment "bootcmd", i.e. 176 "bootd" does the same thing as "run bootcmd". 177 178config CMD_BOOTM 179 bool "bootm" 180 default y 181 help 182 Boot an application image from the memory. 183 184config CMD_BOOTZ 185 bool "bootz" 186 help 187 Boot the Linux zImage 188 189config CMD_BOOTI 190 bool "booti" 191 depends on ARM64 192 default y 193 help 194 Boot an AArch64 Linux Kernel image from memory. 195 196config CMD_BOOTEFI 197 bool "bootefi" 198 depends on EFI_LOADER 199 default y 200 help 201 Boot an EFI image from memory. 202 203config CMD_BOOTEFI_HELLO_COMPILE 204 bool "Compile a standard EFI hello world binary for testing" 205 depends on CMD_BOOTEFI && (ARM || X86) 206 default y 207 help 208 This compiles a standard EFI hello world application with U-Boot so 209 that it can be used with the test/py testing framework. This is useful 210 for testing that EFI is working at a basic level, and for bringing 211 up EFI support on a new architecture. 212 213 No additional space will be required in the resulting U-Boot binary 214 when this option is enabled. 215 216config CMD_BOOTEFI_HELLO 217 bool "Allow booting a standard EFI hello world for testing" 218 depends on CMD_BOOTEFI_HELLO_COMPILE 219 help 220 This adds a standard EFI hello world application to U-Boot so that 221 it can be used with the 'bootefi hello' command. This is useful 222 for testing that EFI is working at a basic level, and for bringing 223 up EFI support on a new architecture. 224 225config CMD_BOOTMENU 226 bool "bootmenu" 227 select MENU 228 help 229 Add an ANSI terminal boot menu command. 230 231config CMD_ELF 232 bool "bootelf, bootvx" 233 default y 234 help 235 Boot an ELF/vxWorks image from the memory. 236 237config CMD_FDT 238 bool "Flattened Device Tree utility commands" 239 default y 240 depends on OF_LIBFDT 241 help 242 Do FDT related setup before booting into the Operating System. 243 244config CMD_GO 245 bool "go" 246 default y 247 help 248 Start an application at a given address. 249 250config CMD_RUN 251 bool "run" 252 default y 253 help 254 Run the command in the given environment variable. 255 256config CMD_IMI 257 bool "iminfo" 258 default y 259 help 260 Print header information for application image. 261 262config CMD_IMLS 263 bool "imls" 264 default y 265 help 266 List all images found in flash 267 268config CMD_XIMG 269 bool "imxtract" 270 default y 271 help 272 Extract a part of a multi-image. 273 274config CMD_POWEROFF 275 bool "poweroff" 276 help 277 Poweroff/Shutdown the system 278 279config CMD_SPL 280 bool "spl export - Export boot information for Falcon boot" 281 depends on SPL 282 help 283 Falcon mode allows booting directly from SPL into an Operating 284 System such as Linux, thus skipping U-Boot proper. See 285 doc/README.falcon for full information about how to use this 286 command. 287 288config CMD_SPL_NAND_OFS 289 hex "Offset of OS command line args for Falcon-mode NAND boot" 290 depends on CMD_SPL 291 default 0 292 help 293 This provides the offset of the command line arguments for Linux 294 when booting from NAND in Falcon mode. See doc/README.falcon 295 for full information about how to use this option (and also see 296 board/gateworks/gw_ventana/README for an example). 297 298config CMD_SPL_WRITE_SIZE 299 hex "Size of argument area" 300 depends on CMD_SPL 301 default 0x2000 302 help 303 This provides the size of the command-line argument area in NAND 304 flash used by Falcon-mode boot. See the documentation until CMD_SPL 305 for detail. 306 307config CMD_THOR_DOWNLOAD 308 bool "thor - TIZEN 'thor' download" 309 help 310 Implements the 'thor' download protocol. This is a way of 311 downloading a software update over USB from an attached host. 312 There is no documentation about this within the U-Boot source code 313 but you should be able to find something on the interwebs. 314 315config CMD_ZBOOT 316 bool "zboot - x86 boot command" 317 help 318 With x86 machines it is common to boot a bzImage file which 319 contains both a kernel and a setup.bin file. The latter includes 320 configuration information from the dark ages which x86 boards still 321 need to pick things out of. 322 323 Consider using FIT in preference to this since it supports directly 324 booting both 32- and 64-bit kernels, as well as secure boot. 325 Documentation is available in doc/uImage.FIT/x86-fit-boot.txt 326 327endmenu 328 329menu "Environment commands" 330 331config CMD_ASKENV 332 bool "ask for env variable" 333 help 334 Ask for environment variable 335 336config CMD_EXPORTENV 337 bool "env export" 338 default y 339 help 340 Export environments. 341 342config CMD_IMPORTENV 343 bool "env import" 344 default y 345 help 346 Import environments. 347 348config CMD_EDITENV 349 bool "editenv" 350 default y 351 help 352 Edit environment variable. 353 354config CMD_GREPENV 355 bool "search env" 356 help 357 Allow for searching environment variables 358 359config CMD_SAVEENV 360 bool "saveenv" 361 default y 362 help 363 Save all environment variables into the compiled-in persistent 364 storage. 365 366config CMD_ENV_EXISTS 367 bool "env exists" 368 default y 369 help 370 Check if a variable is defined in the environment for use in 371 shell scripting. 372 373config CMD_ENV_CALLBACK 374 bool "env callbacks - print callbacks and their associated variables" 375 help 376 Some environment variable have callbacks defined by 377 U_BOOT_ENV_CALLBACK. These are called when the variable changes. 378 For example changing "baudrate" adjust the serial baud rate. This 379 command lists the currently defined callbacks. 380 381config CMD_ENV_FLAGS 382 bool "env flags -print variables that have non-default flags" 383 help 384 Some environment variables have special flags that control their 385 behaviour. For example, serial# can only be written once and cannot 386 be deleted. This command shows the variables that have special 387 flags. 388 389endmenu 390 391menu "Memory commands" 392 393config CMD_CRC32 394 bool "crc32" 395 select HASH 396 default y 397 help 398 Compute CRC32. 399 400config CRC32_VERIFY 401 bool "crc32 -v" 402 depends on CMD_CRC32 403 help 404 Add -v option to verify data against a crc32 checksum. 405 406config CMD_EEPROM 407 bool "eeprom - EEPROM subsystem" 408 help 409 (deprecated, needs conversion to driver model) 410 Provides commands to read and write EEPROM (Electrically Erasable 411 Programmable Read Only Memory) chips that are connected over an 412 I2C bus. 413 414config CMD_EEPROM_LAYOUT 415 bool "Enable layout-aware eeprom commands" 416 depends on CMD_EEPROM 417 help 418 (deprecated, needs conversion to driver model) 419 When enabled, additional eeprom sub-commands become available. 420 421 eeprom print - prints the contents of the eeprom in a human-readable 422 way (eeprom layout fields, and data formatted to be fit for human 423 consumption). 424 425 eeprom update - allows user to update eeprom fields by specifying 426 the field name, and providing the new data in a human readable format 427 (same format as displayed by the eeprom print command). 428 429 Both commands can either auto detect the layout, or be told which 430 layout to use. 431 432 Feature API: 433 __weak int parse_layout_version(char *str) 434 - override to provide your own layout name parsing 435 __weak void __eeprom_layout_assign(struct eeprom_layout *layout, 436 int layout_version); 437 - override to setup the layout metadata based on the version 438 __weak int eeprom_layout_detect(unsigned char *data) 439 - override to provide your own algorithm for detecting layout 440 version 441 eeprom_field.c 442 - contains various printing and updating functions for common 443 types of eeprom fields. Can be used for defining 444 custom layouts. 445 446config EEPROM_LAYOUT_HELP_STRING 447 string "Tells user what layout names are supported" 448 depends on CMD_EEPROM_LAYOUT 449 default "<not defined>" 450 help 451 Help printed with the LAYOUT VERSIONS part of the 'eeprom' 452 command's help. 453 454config LOOPW 455 bool "loopw" 456 help 457 Infinite write loop on address range 458 459config CMD_MD5SUM 460 bool "md5sum" 461 default n 462 select MD5 463 help 464 Compute MD5 checksum. 465 466config MD5SUM_VERIFY 467 bool "md5sum -v" 468 default n 469 depends on CMD_MD5SUM 470 help 471 Add -v option to verify data against an MD5 checksum. 472 473config CMD_MEMINFO 474 bool "meminfo" 475 help 476 Display memory information. 477 478config CMD_MEMORY 479 bool "md, mm, nm, mw, cp, cmp, base, loop" 480 default y 481 help 482 Memory commands. 483 md - memory display 484 mm - memory modify (auto-incrementing address) 485 nm - memory modify (constant address) 486 mw - memory write (fill) 487 cp - memory copy 488 cmp - memory compare 489 base - print or set address offset 490 loop - initialize loop on address range 491 492config CMD_MEMTEST 493 bool "memtest" 494 help 495 Simple RAM read/write test. 496 497config CMD_MX_CYCLIC 498 bool "mdc, mwc" 499 help 500 mdc - memory display cyclic 501 mwc - memory write cyclic 502 503config CMD_SHA1SUM 504 bool "sha1sum" 505 select SHA1 506 help 507 Compute SHA1 checksum. 508 509config SHA1SUM_VERIFY 510 bool "sha1sum -v" 511 depends on CMD_SHA1SUM 512 help 513 Add -v option to verify data against a SHA1 checksum. 514 515config CMD_STRINGS 516 bool "strings - display strings in memory" 517 help 518 This works similarly to the Unix 'strings' command except that it 519 works with a memory range. String of printable characters found 520 within the range are displayed. The minimum number of characters 521 for a sequence to be considered a string can be provided. 522 523endmenu 524 525menu "Compression commands" 526 527config CMD_LZMADEC 528 bool "lzmadec" 529 select LZMA 530 help 531 Support decompressing an LZMA (Lempel-Ziv-Markov chain algorithm) 532 image from memory. 533 534config CMD_UNZIP 535 bool "unzip" 536 help 537 Uncompress a zip-compressed memory region. 538 539config CMD_ZIP 540 bool "zip" 541 help 542 Compress a memory region with zlib deflate method. 543 544endmenu 545 546menu "Device access commands" 547 548config CMD_ARMFLASH 549 #depends on FLASH_CFI_DRIVER 550 bool "armflash" 551 help 552 ARM Ltd reference designs flash partition access 553 554config CMD_CLK 555 bool "clk - Show clock frequencies" 556 help 557 (deprecated) 558 Shows clock frequences by calling a sock_clk_dump() hook function. 559 This is depreated in favour of using the CLK uclass and accessing 560 clock values from associated drivers. However currently no command 561 exists for this. 562 563config CMD_DEMO 564 bool "demo - Demonstration commands for driver model" 565 depends on DM 566 help 567 Provides a 'demo' command which can be used to play around with 568 driver model. To use this properly you will need to enable one or 569 both of the demo devices (DM_DEMO_SHAPE and DM_DEMO_SIMPLE). 570 Otherwise you will always get an empty list of devices. The demo 571 devices are defined in the sandbox device tree, so the easiest 572 option is to use sandbox and pass the -d point to sandbox's 573 u-boot.dtb file. 574 575config CMD_DFU 576 bool "dfu" 577 select USB_FUNCTION_DFU 578 help 579 Enables the command "dfu" which is used to have U-Boot create a DFU 580 class device via USB. This command requires that the "dfu_alt_info" 581 environment variable be set and define the alt settings to expose to 582 the host. 583 584config CMD_DM 585 bool "dm - Access to driver model information" 586 depends on DM 587 default y 588 help 589 Provides access to driver model data structures and information, 590 such as a list of devices, list of uclasses and the state of each 591 device (e.g. activated). This is not required for operation, but 592 can be useful to see the state of driver model for debugging or 593 interest. 594 595config CMD_FDC 596 bool "fdcboot - Boot from floppy device" 597 help 598 The 'fdtboot' command allows booting an image from a floppy disk. 599 600config CMD_FLASH 601 bool "flinfo, erase, protect" 602 default y 603 help 604 NOR flash support. 605 flinfo - print FLASH memory information 606 erase - FLASH memory 607 protect - enable or disable FLASH write protection 608 609config CMD_FPGA 610 bool "fpga" 611 default y 612 help 613 FPGA support. 614 615config CMD_FPGA_LOADBP 616 bool "fpga loadbp - load partial bitstream (Xilinx only)" 617 depends on CMD_FPGA 618 help 619 Supports loading an FPGA device from a bitstream buffer containing 620 a partial bitstream. 621 622config CMD_FPGA_LOADFS 623 bool "fpga loadfs - load bitstream from FAT filesystem (Xilinx only)" 624 depends on CMD_FPGA 625 help 626 Supports loading an FPGA device from a FAT filesystem. 627 628config CMD_FPGA_LOADMK 629 bool "fpga loadmk - load bitstream from image" 630 depends on CMD_FPGA 631 help 632 Supports loading an FPGA device from a image generated by mkimage. 633 634config CMD_FPGA_LOADP 635 bool "fpga loadp - load partial bitstream" 636 depends on CMD_FPGA 637 help 638 Supports loading an FPGA device from a bitstream buffer containing 639 a partial bitstream. 640 641config CMD_FPGAD 642 bool "fpgad - dump FPGA registers" 643 help 644 (legacy, needs conversion to driver model) 645 Provides a way to dump FPGA registers by calling the board-specific 646 fpga_get_reg() function. This functions similarly to the 'md' 647 command. 648 649config CMD_FUSE 650 bool "fuse - support for the fuse subssystem" 651 help 652 (deprecated - needs conversion to driver model) 653 This allows reading, sensing, programming or overriding fuses 654 which control the behaviour of the device. The command uses the 655 fuse_...() API. 656 657config CMD_GPIO 658 bool "gpio" 659 help 660 GPIO support. 661 662config CMD_GPT 663 bool "GPT (GUID Partition Table) command" 664 select PARTITION_UUIDS 665 select EFI_PARTITION 666 help 667 Enable the 'gpt' command to ready and write GPT style partition 668 tables. 669 670config CMD_GPT_RENAME 671 bool "GPT partition renaming commands" 672 depends on CMD_GPT 673 help 674 Enables the 'gpt' command to interchange names on two GPT 675 partitions via the 'gpt swap' command or to rename single 676 partitions via the 'rename' command. 677 678config CMD_IDE 679 bool "ide - Support for IDE drivers" 680 select IDE 681 help 682 Provides an 'ide' command which allows accessing the IDE drive, 683 reseting the IDE interface, printing the partition table and 684 geting device info. It also enables the 'diskboot' command which 685 permits booting from an IDE drive. 686 687config CMD_IO 688 bool "io - Support for performing I/O accesses" 689 help 690 Provides an 'iod' command to display I/O space and an 'iow' command 691 to write values to the I/O space. This can be useful for manually 692 checking the state of devices during boot when debugging device 693 drivers, etc. 694 695config CMD_IOTRACE 696 bool "iotrace - Support for tracing I/O activity" 697 help 698 Provides an 'iotrace' command which supports recording I/O reads and 699 writes in a trace buffer in memory . It also maintains a checksum 700 of the trace records (even if space is exhausted) so that the 701 sequence of I/O accesses can be verified. 702 703 When debugging drivers it is useful to see what I/O accesses were 704 done and in what order. 705 706 Even if the individual accesses are of little interest it can be 707 useful to verify that the access pattern is consistent each time 708 an operation is performed. In this case a checksum can be used to 709 characterise the operation of a driver. The checksum can be compared 710 across different runs of the operation to verify that the driver is 711 working properly. 712 713 In particular, when performing major refactoring of the driver, where 714 the access pattern should not change, the checksum provides assurance 715 that the refactoring work has not broken the driver. 716 717 This works by sneaking into the io.h heder for an architecture and 718 redirecting I/O accesses through iotrace's tracing mechanism. 719 720 For now no commands are provided to examine the trace buffer. The 721 format is fairly simple, so 'md' is a reasonable substitute. 722 723 Note: The checksum feature is only useful for I/O regions where the 724 contents do not change outside of software control. Where this is not 725 suitable you can fall back to manually comparing the addresses. It 726 might be useful to enhance tracing to only checksum the accesses and 727 not the data read/written. 728 729config CMD_I2C 730 bool "i2c" 731 help 732 I2C support. 733 734config CMD_LOADB 735 bool "loadb" 736 default y 737 help 738 Load a binary file over serial line. 739 740config CMD_LOADS 741 bool "loads" 742 default y 743 help 744 Load an S-Record file over serial line 745 746config CMD_MMC 747 bool "mmc" 748 help 749 MMC memory mapped support. 750 751config CMD_NAND 752 bool "nand" 753 default y if NAND_SUNXI 754 help 755 NAND support. 756 757if CMD_NAND 758config CMD_NAND_TRIMFFS 759 bool "nand write.trimffs" 760 default y if ARCH_SUNXI 761 help 762 Allows one to skip empty pages when flashing something on a NAND. 763 764config CMD_NAND_LOCK_UNLOCK 765 bool "nand lock/unlock" 766 help 767 NAND locking support. 768 769config CMD_NAND_TORTURE 770 bool "nand torture" 771 help 772 NAND torture support. 773 774endif # CMD_NAND 775 776config CMD_MMC_SPI 777 bool "mmc_spi - Set up MMC SPI device" 778 help 779 Provides a way to set up an MMC (Multimedia Card) SPI (Serial 780 Peripheral Interface) device. The device provides a means of 781 accessing an MMC device via SPI using a single data line, limited 782 to 20MHz. It is useful since it reduces the amount of protocol code 783 required. 784 785config CMD_ONENAND 786 bool "onenand - access to onenand device" 787 help 788 OneNAND is a brand of NAND ('Not AND' gate) flash which provides 789 various useful features. This command allows reading, writing, 790 and erasing blocks. It allso provides a way to show and change 791 bad blocks, and test the device. 792 793config CMD_PART 794 bool "part" 795 select PARTITION_UUIDS 796 help 797 Read and display information about the partition table on 798 various media. 799 800config CMD_PCI 801 bool "pci - Access PCI devices" 802 help 803 Provide access to PCI (Peripheral Interconnect Bus), a type of bus 804 used on some devices to allow the CPU to communicate with its 805 peripherals. Sub-commands allow bus enumeration, displaying and 806 changing configuration space and a few other features. 807 808config CMD_PCMCIA 809 bool "pinit - Set up PCMCIA device" 810 help 811 Provides a means to initialise a PCMCIA (Personal Computer Memory 812 Card International Association) device. This is an old standard from 813 about 1990. These devices are typically removable memory or network 814 cards using a standard 68-pin connector. 815 816config CMD_READ 817 bool "read - Read binary data from a partition" 818 help 819 Provides low-level access to the data in a partition. 820 821config CMD_REMOTEPROC 822 bool "remoteproc" 823 depends on REMOTEPROC 824 help 825 Support for Remote Processor control 826 827config CMD_SATA 828 bool "sata - Access SATA subsystem" 829 select SATA 830 help 831 SATA (Serial Advanced Technology Attachment) is a serial bus 832 standard for connecting to hard drives and other storage devices. 833 This command provides information about attached devices and allows 834 reading, writing and other operations. 835 836 SATA replaces PATA (originally just ATA), which stands for Parallel AT 837 Attachment, where AT refers to an IBM AT (Advanced Technology) 838 computer released in 1984. 839 840config CMD_SAVES 841 bool "saves - Save a file over serial in S-Record format" 842 help 843 Provides a way to save a binary file using the Motorola S-Record 844 format over the serial line. 845 846config CMD_SDRAM 847 bool "sdram - Print SDRAM configuration information" 848 help 849 Provides information about attached SDRAM. This assumed that the 850 SDRAM has an EEPROM with information that can be read using the 851 I2C bus. This is only available on some boards. 852 853config CMD_SF 854 bool "sf" 855 help 856 SPI Flash support 857 858config CMD_SF_TEST 859 bool "sf test - Allow testing of SPI flash" 860 help 861 Provides a way to test that SPI flash is working correctly. The 862 test is destructive, in that an area of SPI flash must be provided 863 for the test to use. Performance information is also provided, 864 measuring the performance of reading, writing and erasing in 865 Mbps (Million Bits Per Second). This value should approximately 866 equal the SPI bus speed for a single-bit-wide SPI bus, assuming 867 everything is working properly. 868 869config CMD_SPI 870 bool "sspi" 871 help 872 SPI utility command. 873 874config CMD_TSI148 875 bool "tsi148 - Command to access tsi148 device" 876 help 877 This provides various sub-commands to initialise and configure the 878 Turndra tsi148 device. See the command help for full details. 879 880config CMD_UNIVERSE 881 bool "universe - Command to set up the Turndra Universe controller" 882 help 883 This allows setting up the VMEbus provided by this controller. 884 See the command help for full details. 885 886config CMD_USB 887 bool "usb" 888 help 889 USB support. 890 891config CMD_USB_MASS_STORAGE 892 bool "UMS usb mass storage" 893 help 894 USB mass storage support 895 896endmenu 897 898 899menu "Shell scripting commands" 900 901config CMD_ECHO 902 bool "echo" 903 default y 904 help 905 Echo args to console 906 907config CMD_ITEST 908 bool "itest" 909 default y 910 help 911 Return true/false on integer compare. 912 913config CMD_SOURCE 914 bool "source" 915 default y 916 help 917 Run script from memory 918 919config CMD_SETEXPR 920 bool "setexpr" 921 default y 922 help 923 Evaluate boolean and math expressions and store the result in an env 924 variable. 925 Also supports loading the value at a memory location into a variable. 926 If CONFIG_REGEX is enabled, setexpr also supports a gsub function. 927 928endmenu 929 930menu "Network commands" 931 932config CMD_NET 933 bool "bootp, tftpboot" 934 select NET 935 default y 936 help 937 Network commands. 938 bootp - boot image via network using BOOTP/TFTP protocol 939 tftpboot - boot image via network using TFTP protocol 940 941config CMD_TFTPPUT 942 bool "tftp put" 943 help 944 TFTP put command, for uploading files to a server 945 946config CMD_TFTPSRV 947 bool "tftpsrv" 948 help 949 Act as a TFTP server and boot the first received file 950 951config CMD_RARP 952 bool "rarpboot" 953 help 954 Boot image via network using RARP/TFTP protocol 955 956config CMD_DHCP 957 bool "dhcp" 958 help 959 Boot image via network using DHCP/TFTP protocol 960 961config CMD_PXE 962 bool "pxe" 963 select MENU 964 help 965 Boot image via network using PXE protocol 966 967config CMD_NFS 968 bool "nfs" 969 default y 970 help 971 Boot image via network using NFS protocol. 972 973config CMD_MII 974 bool "mii" 975 help 976 Enable MII utility commands. 977 978config CMD_PING 979 bool "ping" 980 help 981 Send ICMP ECHO_REQUEST to network host 982 983config CMD_CDP 984 bool "cdp" 985 help 986 Perform CDP network configuration 987 988config CMD_SNTP 989 bool "sntp" 990 help 991 Synchronize RTC via network 992 993config CMD_DNS 994 bool "dns" 995 help 996 Lookup the IP of a hostname 997 998config CMD_LINK_LOCAL 999 bool "linklocal" 1000 help 1001 Acquire a network IP address using the link-local protocol 1002 1003config CMD_ETHSW 1004 bool "ethsw" 1005 help 1006 Allow control of L2 Ethernet switch commands. These are supported 1007 by the vsc9953 Ethernet driver at present. Sub-commands allow 1008 operations such as enabling / disabling a port and 1009 viewing/maintaining the filtering database (FDB) 1010 1011endmenu 1012 1013menu "Misc commands" 1014 1015config CMD_BMP 1016 bool "Enable 'bmp' command" 1017 depends on LCD || DM_VIDEO || VIDEO 1018 help 1019 This provides a way to obtain information about a BMP-format iamge 1020 and to display it. BMP (which presumably stands for BitMaP) is a 1021 file format defined by Microsoft which supports images of various 1022 depths, formats and compression methods. Headers on the file 1023 determine the formats used. This command can be used by first loading 1024 the image into RAM, then using this command to look at it or display 1025 it. 1026 1027config CMD_BSP 1028 bool "Enable board-specific commands" 1029 help 1030 (deprecated: instead, please define a Kconfig option for each command) 1031 1032 Some boards have board-specific commands which are only enabled 1033 during developemnt and need to be turned off for production. This 1034 option provides a way to control this. The commands that are enabled 1035 vary depending on the board. 1036 1037config CMD_BKOPS_ENABLE 1038 bool "mmc bkops enable" 1039 depends on CMD_MMC 1040 default n 1041 help 1042 Enable command for setting manual background operations handshake 1043 on a eMMC device. The feature is optionally available on eMMC devices 1044 conforming to standard >= 4.41. 1045 1046config CMD_BLOCK_CACHE 1047 bool "blkcache - control and stats for block cache" 1048 depends on BLOCK_CACHE 1049 default y if BLOCK_CACHE 1050 help 1051 Enable the blkcache command, which can be used to control the 1052 operation of the cache functions. 1053 This is most useful when fine-tuning the operation of the cache 1054 during development, but also allows the cache to be disabled when 1055 it might hurt performance (e.g. when using the ums command). 1056 1057config CMD_CACHE 1058 bool "icache or dcache" 1059 help 1060 Enable the "icache" and "dcache" commands 1061 1062config CMD_DISPLAY 1063 bool "Enable the 'display' command, for character displays" 1064 help 1065 (this needs porting to driver model) 1066 This enables the 'display' command which allows a string to be 1067 displayed on a simple board-specific display. Implement 1068 display_putc() to use it. 1069 1070config CMD_LED 1071 bool "led" 1072 default y if LED 1073 help 1074 Enable the 'led' command which allows for control of LEDs supported 1075 by the board. The LEDs can be listed with 'led list' and controlled 1076 with led on/off/togle/blink. Any LED drivers can be controlled with 1077 this command, e.g. led_gpio. 1078 1079config CMD_DATE 1080 bool "date" 1081 default y if DM_RTC 1082 help 1083 Enable the 'date' command for getting/setting the time/date in RTC 1084 devices. 1085 1086config CMD_TIME 1087 bool "time" 1088 help 1089 Run commands and summarize execution time. 1090 1091config CMD_GETTIME 1092 bool "gettime - read elapsed time" 1093 help 1094 Enable the 'gettime' command which reads the elapsed time since 1095 U-Boot started running. This shows the time in seconds and 1096 milliseconds. See also the 'bootstage' command which provides more 1097 flexibility for boot timing. 1098 1099# TODO: rename to CMD_SLEEP 1100config CMD_MISC 1101 bool "sleep" 1102 default y 1103 help 1104 Delay execution for some time 1105 1106config CMD_TIMER 1107 bool "timer" 1108 help 1109 Access the system timer. 1110 1111config CMD_SOUND 1112 bool "sound" 1113 depends on SOUND 1114 help 1115 This provides basic access to the U-Boot's sound support. The main 1116 feature is to play a beep. 1117 1118 sound init - set up sound system 1119 sound play - play a sound 1120 1121config CMD_QFW 1122 bool "qfw" 1123 select QFW 1124 help 1125 This provides access to the QEMU firmware interface. The main 1126 feature is to allow easy loading of files passed to qemu-system 1127 via -kernel / -initrd 1128 1129source "cmd/mvebu/Kconfig" 1130 1131config CMD_TERMINAL 1132 bool "terminal - provides a way to attach a serial terminal" 1133 help 1134 Provides a 'cu'-like serial terminal command. This can be used to 1135 access other serial ports from the system console. The terminal 1136 is very simple with no special processing of characters. As with 1137 cu, you can press ~. (tilde followed by period) to exit. 1138 1139config CMD_UUID 1140 bool "uuid, guid - generation of unique IDs" 1141 help 1142 This enables two commands: 1143 1144 uuid - generate random Universally Unique Identifier 1145 guid - generate Globally Unique Identifier based on random UUID 1146 1147 The two commands are very similar except for the endianness of the 1148 output. 1149 1150endmenu 1151 1152config CMD_BOOTSTAGE 1153 bool "Enable the 'bootstage' command" 1154 depends on BOOTSTAGE 1155 help 1156 Add a 'bootstage' command which supports printing a report 1157 and un/stashing of bootstage data. 1158 1159menu "Power commands" 1160config CMD_PMIC 1161 bool "Enable Driver Model PMIC command" 1162 depends on DM_PMIC 1163 help 1164 This is the pmic command, based on a driver model pmic's API. 1165 Command features are unchanged: 1166 - list - list pmic devices 1167 - pmic dev <id> - show or [set] operating pmic device (NEW) 1168 - pmic dump - dump registers 1169 - pmic read address - read byte of register at address 1170 - pmic write address - write byte to register at address 1171 The only one change for this command is 'dev' subcommand. 1172 1173config CMD_REGULATOR 1174 bool "Enable Driver Model REGULATOR command" 1175 depends on DM_REGULATOR 1176 help 1177 This command is based on driver model regulator's API. 1178 User interface features: 1179 - list - list regulator devices 1180 - regulator dev <id> - show or [set] operating regulator device 1181 - regulator info - print constraints info 1182 - regulator status - print operating status 1183 - regulator value <val] <-f> - print/[set] voltage value [uV] 1184 - regulator current <val> - print/[set] current value [uA] 1185 - regulator mode <id> - print/[set] operating mode id 1186 - regulator enable - enable the regulator output 1187 - regulator disable - disable the regulator output 1188 1189 The '-f' (force) option can be used for set the value which exceeds 1190 the limits, which are found in device-tree and are kept in regulator's 1191 uclass platdata structure. 1192 1193endmenu 1194 1195menu "Security commands" 1196config CMD_AES 1197 bool "Enable the 'aes' command" 1198 select AES 1199 help 1200 This provides a means to encrypt and decrypt data using the AES 1201 (Advanced Encryption Standard). This algorithm uses a symetric key 1202 and is widely used as a streaming cipher. Different key lengths are 1203 supported by the algorithm but this command only supports 128 bits 1204 at present. 1205 1206config CMD_BLOB 1207 bool "Enable the 'blob' command" 1208 help 1209 This is used with the Freescale secure boot mechanism. 1210 1211 Freescale's SEC block has built-in Blob Protocol which provides 1212 a method for protecting user-defined data across system power 1213 cycles. SEC block protects data in a data structure called a Blob, 1214 which provides both confidentiality and integrity protection. 1215 1216 Encapsulating data as a blob 1217 Each time that the Blob Protocol is used to protect data, a 1218 different randomly generated key is used to encrypt the data. 1219 This random key is itself encrypted using a key which is derived 1220 from SoC's non-volatile secret key and a 16 bit Key identifier. 1221 The resulting encrypted key along with encrypted data is called a 1222 blob. The non-volatile secure key is available for use only during 1223 secure boot. 1224 1225 During decapsulation, the reverse process is performed to get back 1226 the original data. 1227 1228 Sub-commands: 1229 blob enc - encapsulating data as a cryptgraphic blob 1230 blob dec - decapsulating cryptgraphic blob to get the data 1231 1232 Syntax: 1233 1234 blob enc src dst len km 1235 1236 Encapsulate and create blob of data $len bytes long 1237 at address $src and store the result at address $dst. 1238 $km is the 16 byte key modifier is also required for 1239 generation/use as key for cryptographic operation. Key 1240 modifier should be 16 byte long. 1241 1242 blob dec src dst len km 1243 1244 Decapsulate the blob of data at address $src and 1245 store result of $len byte at addr $dst. 1246 $km is the 16 byte key modifier is also required for 1247 generation/use as key for cryptographic operation. Key 1248 modifier should be 16 byte long. 1249 1250config CMD_HASH 1251 bool "Support 'hash' command" 1252 select HASH 1253 help 1254 This provides a way to hash data in memory using various supported 1255 algorithms (such as SHA1, MD5, CRC32). The computed digest can be 1256 saved to memory or to an environment variable. It is also possible 1257 to verify a hash against data in memory. 1258 1259config HASH_VERIFY 1260 bool "hash -v" 1261 depends on CMD_HASH 1262 help 1263 Add -v option to verify data against a hash. 1264 1265config CMD_TPM 1266 bool "Enable the 'tpm' command" 1267 depends on TPM 1268 help 1269 This provides a means to talk to a TPM from the command line. A wide 1270 range of commands if provided - see 'tpm help' for details. The 1271 command requires a suitable TPM on your board and the correct driver 1272 must be enabled. 1273 1274config CMD_TPM_TEST 1275 bool "Enable the 'tpm test' command" 1276 depends on CMD_TPM 1277 help 1278 This provides a a series of tests to confirm that the TPM is working 1279 correctly. The tests cover initialisation, non-volatile RAM, extend, 1280 global lock and checking that timing is within expectations. The 1281 tests pass correctly on Infineon TPMs but may need to be adjusted 1282 for other devices. 1283 1284endmenu 1285 1286menu "Firmware commands" 1287config CMD_CROS_EC 1288 bool "Enable crosec command" 1289 depends on CROS_EC 1290 default y 1291 help 1292 Enable command-line access to the Chrome OS EC (Embedded 1293 Controller). This provides the 'crosec' command which has 1294 a number of sub-commands for performing EC tasks such as 1295 updating its flash, accessing a small saved context area 1296 and talking to the I2C bus behind the EC (if there is one). 1297endmenu 1298 1299menu "Filesystem commands" 1300config CMD_CBFS 1301 bool "Enable the 'cbfs' command" 1302 depends on FS_CBFS 1303 help 1304 Define this to enable support for reading from a Coreboot 1305 filesystem. This is a ROM-based filesystem used for accessing files 1306 on systems that use coreboot as the first boot-loader and then load 1307 U-Boot to actually boot the Operating System. Available commands are 1308 cbfsinit, cbfsinfo, cbfsls and cbfsload. 1309 1310config CMD_CRAMFS 1311 bool "Enable the 'cramfs' command" 1312 depends on FS_CRAMFS 1313 help 1314 This provides commands for dealing with CRAMFS (Compressed ROM 1315 filesystem). CRAMFS is useful when space is tight since files are 1316 compressed. Two commands are provided: 1317 1318 cramfsls - lists files in a cramfs image 1319 cramfsload - loads a file from a cramfs image 1320 1321config CMD_EXT2 1322 bool "ext2 command support" 1323 help 1324 Enables EXT2 FS command 1325 1326config CMD_EXT4 1327 bool "ext4 command support" 1328 help 1329 Enables EXT4 FS command 1330 1331config CMD_EXT4_WRITE 1332 depends on CMD_EXT4 1333 bool "ext4 write command support" 1334 help 1335 Enables EXT4 FS write command 1336 1337config CMD_FAT 1338 bool "FAT command support" 1339 select FS_FAT 1340 help 1341 Support for the FAT fs 1342 1343config CMD_FS_GENERIC 1344 bool "filesystem commands" 1345 help 1346 Enables filesystem commands (e.g. load, ls) that work for multiple 1347 fs types. 1348 1349config CMD_FS_UUID 1350 bool "fsuuid command" 1351 help 1352 Enables fsuuid command for filesystem UUID. 1353 1354config CMD_JFFS2 1355 bool "jffs2 command" 1356 select FS_JFFS2 1357 help 1358 Enables commands to support the JFFS2 (Journalling Flash File System 1359 version 2) filesystem. This enables fsload, ls and fsinfo which 1360 provide the ability to load files, list directories and obtain 1361 filesystem information. 1362 1363config CMD_MTDPARTS 1364 bool "MTD partition support" 1365 help 1366 MTD partition support 1367 1368config MTDIDS_DEFAULT 1369 string "Default MTD IDs" 1370 depends on CMD_MTDPARTS 1371 help 1372 Defines a default MTD ID 1373 1374config MTDPARTS_DEFAULT 1375 string "Default MTD partition scheme" 1376 depends on CMD_MTDPARTS 1377 help 1378 Defines a default MTD partitioning scheme in the Linux MTD command 1379 line partitions format 1380 1381config CMD_MTDPARTS_SPREAD 1382 bool "Padd partition size to take account of bad blocks" 1383 depends on CMD_MTDPARTS 1384 help 1385 This enables the 'spread' sub-command of the mtdparts command. 1386 This command will modify the existing mtdparts variable by increasing 1387 the size of the partitions such that 1) each partition's net size is 1388 at least as large as the size specified in the mtdparts variable and 1389 2) each partition starts on a good block. 1390 1391config CMD_REISER 1392 bool "reiser - Access to reiserfs filesystems" 1393 help 1394 This provides two commands which operate on a resierfs filesystem, 1395 commonly used some years ago: 1396 1397 reiserls - list files 1398 reiserload - load a file 1399 1400config CMD_SCSI 1401 bool "scsi - Access to SCSI devices" 1402 default y if SCSI 1403 help 1404 This provides a 'scsi' command which provides access to SCSI (Small 1405 Computer System Interface) devices. The command provides a way to 1406 scan the bus, reset the bus, read and write data and get information 1407 about devices. 1408 1409config CMD_YAFFS2 1410 bool "yaffs2 - Access of YAFFS2 filesystem" 1411 depends on YAFFS2 1412 default y 1413 help 1414 This provides commands for accessing a YAFFS2 filesystem. Yet 1415 Another Flash Filesystem 2 is a filesystem designed specifically 1416 for NAND flash. It incorporates bad-block management and ensures 1417 that device writes are sequential regardless of filesystem 1418 activity. 1419 1420config CMD_ZFS 1421 bool "zfs - Access of ZFS filesystem" 1422 help 1423 This provides commands to accessing a ZFS filesystem, commonly used 1424 on Solaris systems. Two sub-commands are provided: 1425 1426 zfsls - list files in a directory 1427 zfsload - load a file 1428 1429 See doc/README.zfs for more details. 1430 1431endmenu 1432 1433menu "Debug commands" 1434 1435config CMD_BEDBUG 1436 bool "bedbug" 1437 help 1438 The bedbug (emBEDded deBUGger) command provides debugging features 1439 for some PowerPC processors. For details please see the 1440 docuemntation in doc/README.beddbug 1441 1442config CMD_DIAG 1443 bool "diag - Board diagnostics" 1444 help 1445 This command provides access to board diagnostic tests. These are 1446 called Power-on Self Tests (POST). The command allows listing of 1447 available tests and running either all the tests, or specific tests 1448 identified by name. 1449 1450config CMD_IRQ 1451 bool "irq - Show information about interrupts" 1452 depends on !ARM && !MIPS && !SH 1453 help 1454 This enables two commands: 1455 1456 interrupts - enable or disable interrupts 1457 irqinfo - print device-specific interrupt information 1458 1459config CMD_KGDB 1460 bool "kgdb - Allow debugging of U-Boot with gdb" 1461 help 1462 This enables a 'kgdb' command which allows gdb to connect to U-Boot 1463 over a serial link for debugging purposes. This allows 1464 single-stepping, inspecting variables, etc. This is supported only 1465 on PowerPC at present. 1466 1467config CMD_TRACE 1468 bool "trace - Support tracing of function calls and timing" 1469 help 1470 Enables a command to control using of function tracing within 1471 U-Boot. This allows recording of call traces including timing 1472 information. The command can write data to memory for exporting 1473 for analsys (e.g. using bootchart). See doc/README.trace for full 1474 details. 1475 1476endmenu 1477 1478config CMD_UBI 1479 tristate "Enable UBI - Unsorted block images commands" 1480 select CRC32 1481 select MTD_UBI 1482 select CMD_MTDPARTS 1483 default y if NAND_SUNXI 1484 help 1485 UBI is a software layer above MTD layer which admits use of LVM-like 1486 logical volumes on top of MTD devices, hides some complexities of 1487 flash chips like wear and bad blocks and provides some other useful 1488 capabilities. Please, consult the MTD web site for more details 1489 (www.linux-mtd.infradead.org). Activate this option if you want 1490 to use U-Boot UBI commands. 1491 1492config CMD_UBIFS 1493 tristate "Enable UBIFS - Unsorted block images filesystem commands" 1494 depends on CMD_UBI 1495 select CRC32 1496 select LZO 1497 default y if CMD_UBI 1498 help 1499 UBIFS is a file system for flash devices which works on top of UBI. 1500 1501endmenu 1502