xref: /openbmc/u-boot/common/Kconfig (revision c68c03f5)
1menu "Boot timing"
2
3config BOOTSTAGE
4	bool "Boot timing and reporting"
5	help
6	  Enable recording of boot time while booting. To use it, insert
7	  calls to bootstage_mark() with a suitable BOOTSTAGE_ID from
8	  bootstage.h. Only a single entry is recorded for each ID. You can
9	  give the entry a name with bootstage_mark_name(). You can also
10	  record elapsed time in a particular stage using bootstage_start()
11	  before starting and bootstage_accum() when finished. Bootstage will
12	  add up all the accumulated time and report it.
13
14	  Normally, IDs are defined in bootstage.h but a small number of
15	  additional 'user' IDs can be used by passing BOOTSTAGE_ID_ALLOC
16	  as the ID.
17
18	  Calls to show_boot_progress() will also result in log entries but
19	  these will not have names.
20
21config SPL_BOOTSTAGE
22	bool "Boot timing and reported in SPL"
23	depends on BOOTSTAGE
24	help
25	  Enable recording of boot time in SPL. To make this visible to U-Boot
26	  proper, enable BOOTSTAGE_STASH as well. This will stash the timing
27	  information when SPL finishes and load it when U-Boot proper starts
28	  up.
29
30config BOOTSTAGE_REPORT
31	bool "Display a detailed boot timing report before booting the OS"
32	depends on BOOTSTAGE
33	help
34	  Enable output of a boot time report just before the OS is booted.
35	  This shows how long it took U-Boot to go through each stage of the
36	  boot process. The report looks something like this:
37
38		Timer summary in microseconds:
39		       Mark    Elapsed  Stage
40			  0          0  reset
41		  3,575,678  3,575,678  board_init_f start
42		  3,575,695         17  arch_cpu_init A9
43		  3,575,777         82  arch_cpu_init done
44		  3,659,598     83,821  board_init_r start
45		  3,910,375    250,777  main_loop
46		 29,916,167 26,005,792  bootm_start
47		 30,361,327    445,160  start_kernel
48
49config BOOTSTAGE_RECORD_COUNT
50	int "Number of boot stage records to store"
51	default 30
52	help
53	  This is the size of the bootstage record list and is the maximum
54	  number of bootstage records that can be recorded.
55
56config SPL_BOOTSTAGE_RECORD_COUNT
57	int "Number of boot stage records to store for SPL"
58	default 5
59	help
60	  This is the size of the bootstage record list and is the maximum
61	  number of bootstage records that can be recorded.
62
63config BOOTSTAGE_FDT
64	bool "Store boot timing information in the OS device tree"
65	depends on BOOTSTAGE
66	help
67	  Stash the bootstage information in the FDT. A root 'bootstage'
68	  node is created with each bootstage id as a child. Each child
69	  has a 'name' property and either 'mark' containing the
70	  mark time in microseconds, or 'accum' containing the
71	  accumulated time for that bootstage id in microseconds.
72	  For example:
73
74		bootstage {
75			154 {
76				name = "board_init_f";
77				mark = <3575678>;
78			};
79			170 {
80				name = "lcd";
81				accum = <33482>;
82			};
83		};
84
85	  Code in the Linux kernel can find this in /proc/devicetree.
86
87config BOOTSTAGE_STASH
88	bool "Stash the boot timing information in memory before booting OS"
89	depends on BOOTSTAGE
90	help
91	  Some OSes do not support device tree. Bootstage can instead write
92	  the boot timing information in a binary format at a given address.
93	  This happens through a call to bootstage_stash(), typically in
94	  the CPU's cleanup_before_linux() function. You can use the
95	  'bootstage stash' and 'bootstage unstash' commands to do this on
96	  the command line.
97
98config BOOTSTAGE_STASH_ADDR
99	hex "Address to stash boot timing information"
100	default 0
101	help
102	  Provide an address which will not be overwritten by the OS when it
103	  starts, so that it can read this information when ready.
104
105config BOOTSTAGE_STASH_SIZE
106	hex "Size of boot timing stash region"
107	default 0x1000
108	help
109	  This should be large enough to hold the bootstage stash. A value of
110	  4096 (4KiB) is normally plenty.
111
112endmenu
113
114menu "Boot media"
115
116config NOR_BOOT
117	bool "Support for booting from NOR flash"
118	depends on NOR
119	help
120	  Enabling this will make a U-Boot binary that is capable of being
121	  booted via NOR.  In this case we will enable certain pinmux early
122	  as the ROM only partially sets up pinmux.  We also default to using
123	  NOR for environment.
124
125config NAND_BOOT
126	bool "Support for booting from NAND flash"
127	default n
128	help
129	  Enabling this will make a U-Boot binary that is capable of being
130	  booted via NAND flash. This is not a must, some SoCs need this,
131	  some not.
132
133config ONENAND_BOOT
134	bool "Support for booting from ONENAND"
135	default n
136	help
137	  Enabling this will make a U-Boot binary that is capable of being
138	  booted via ONENAND. This is not a must, some SoCs need this,
139	  some not.
140
141config QSPI_BOOT
142	bool "Support for booting from QSPI flash"
143	default n
144	help
145	  Enabling this will make a U-Boot binary that is capable of being
146	  booted via QSPI flash. This is not a must, some SoCs need this,
147	  some not.
148
149config SATA_BOOT
150	bool "Support for booting from SATA"
151	default n
152	help
153	  Enabling this will make a U-Boot binary that is capable of being
154	  booted via SATA. This is not a must, some SoCs need this,
155	  some not.
156
157config SD_BOOT
158	bool "Support for booting from SD/EMMC"
159	default n
160	help
161	  Enabling this will make a U-Boot binary that is capable of being
162	  booted via SD/EMMC. This is not a must, some SoCs need this,
163	  some not.
164
165config SPI_BOOT
166	bool "Support for booting from SPI flash"
167	default n
168	help
169	  Enabling this will make a U-Boot binary that is capable of being
170	  booted via SPI flash. This is not a must, some SoCs need this,
171	  some not.
172
173endmenu
174
175config BOOTDELAY
176	int "delay in seconds before automatically booting"
177	default 2
178	depends on AUTOBOOT
179	help
180	  Delay before automatically running bootcmd;
181	  set to 0 to autoboot with no delay, but you can stop it by key input.
182	  set to -1 to disable autoboot.
183	  set to -2 to autoboot with no delay and not check for abort
184
185	  See doc/README.autoboot for details.
186
187config USE_BOOTARGS
188	bool "Enable boot arguments"
189	help
190	  Provide boot arguments to bootm command. Boot arguments are specified
191	  in CONFIG_BOOTARGS option. Enable this option to be able to specify
192	  CONFIG_BOOTARGS string. If this option is disabled, CONFIG_BOOTARGS
193	  will be undefined and won't take any space in U-Boot image.
194
195config BOOTARGS
196	string "Boot arguments"
197	depends on USE_BOOTARGS
198	help
199	  This can be used to pass arguments to the bootm command. The value of
200	  CONFIG_BOOTARGS goes into the environment value "bootargs". Note that
201	  this value will also override the "chosen" node in FDT blob.
202
203menu "Console"
204
205config MENU
206	bool
207	help
208	  This is the library functionality to provide a text-based menu of
209	  choices for the user to make choices with.
210
211config CONSOLE_RECORD
212	bool "Console recording"
213	help
214	  This provides a way to record console output (and provide console
215	  input) through circular buffers. This is mostly useful for testing.
216	  Console output is recorded even when the console is silent.
217	  To enable console recording, call console_record_reset_enable()
218	  from your code.
219
220config CONSOLE_RECORD_OUT_SIZE
221	hex "Output buffer size"
222	depends on CONSOLE_RECORD
223	default 0x400 if CONSOLE_RECORD
224	help
225	  Set the size of the console output buffer. When this fills up, no
226	  more data will be recorded until some is removed. The buffer is
227	  allocated immediately after the malloc() region is ready.
228
229config CONSOLE_RECORD_IN_SIZE
230	hex "Input buffer size"
231	depends on CONSOLE_RECORD
232	default 0x100 if CONSOLE_RECORD
233	help
234	  Set the size of the console input buffer. When this contains data,
235	  tstc() and getc() will use this in preference to real device input.
236	  The buffer is allocated immediately after the malloc() region is
237	  ready.
238
239config IDENT_STRING
240	string "Board specific string to be added to uboot version string"
241	help
242	  This options adds the board specific name to u-boot version.
243
244config LOGLEVEL
245	int "loglevel"
246	default 4
247	range 0 8
248	help
249	  All Messages with a loglevel smaller than the console loglevel will
250	  be compiled in. The loglevels are defined as follows:
251
252	  0 (KERN_EMERG)          system is unusable
253	  1 (KERN_ALERT)          action must be taken immediately
254	  2 (KERN_CRIT)           critical conditions
255	  3 (KERN_ERR)            error conditions
256	  4 (KERN_WARNING)        warning conditions
257	  5 (KERN_NOTICE)         normal but significant condition
258	  6 (KERN_INFO)           informational
259	  7 (KERN_DEBUG)          debug-level messages
260
261config SPL_LOGLEVEL
262	int
263	default LOGLEVEL
264
265config SILENT_CONSOLE
266	bool "Support a silent console"
267	help
268	  This option allows the console to be silenced, meaning that no
269	  output will appear on the console devices. This is controlled by
270	  setting the environment vaariable 'silent' to a non-empty value.
271	  Note this also silences the console when booting Linux.
272
273	  When the console is set up, the variable is checked, and the
274	  GD_FLG_SILENT flag is set. Changing the environment variable later
275	  will update the flag.
276
277config SILENT_U_BOOT_ONLY
278	bool "Only silence the U-Boot console"
279	depends on SILENT_CONSOLE
280	help
281	  Normally when the U-Boot console is silenced, Linux's console is
282	  also silenced (assuming the board boots into Linux). This option
283	  allows the linux console to operate normally, even if U-Boot's
284	  is silenced.
285
286config SILENT_CONSOLE_UPDATE_ON_SET
287	bool "Changes to the 'silent' environment variable update immediately"
288	depends on SILENT_CONSOLE
289	default y if SILENT_CONSOLE
290	help
291	  When the 'silent' environment variable is changed, update the
292	  console silence flag immediately. This allows 'setenv' to be used
293	  to silence or un-silence the console.
294
295	  The effect is that any change to the variable will affect the
296	  GD_FLG_SILENT flag.
297
298config SILENT_CONSOLE_UPDATE_ON_RELOC
299	bool "Allow flags to take effect on relocation"
300	depends on SILENT_CONSOLE
301	help
302	  In some cases the environment is not available until relocation
303	  (e.g. NAND). This option makes the value of the 'silent'
304	  environment variable take effect at relocation.
305
306config PRE_CONSOLE_BUFFER
307	bool "Buffer characters before the console is available"
308	help
309	  Prior to the console being initialised (i.e. serial UART
310	  initialised etc) all console output is silently discarded.
311	  Defining CONFIG_PRE_CONSOLE_BUFFER will cause U-Boot to
312	  buffer any console messages prior to the console being
313	  initialised to a buffer. The buffer is a circular buffer, so
314	  if it overflows, earlier output is discarded.
315
316	  Note that this is not currently supported in SPL. It would be
317	  useful to be able to share the pre-console buffer with SPL.
318
319config PRE_CON_BUF_SZ
320	int "Sets the size of the pre-console buffer"
321	depends on PRE_CONSOLE_BUFFER
322	default 4096
323	help
324	  The size of the pre-console buffer affects how much console output
325	  can be held before it overflows and starts discarding earlier
326	  output. Normally there is very little output at this early stage,
327	  unless debugging is enabled, so allow enough for ~10 lines of
328	  text.
329
330	  This is a useful feature if you are using a video console and
331	  want to see the full boot output on the console. Without this
332	  option only the post-relocation output will be displayed.
333
334config PRE_CON_BUF_ADDR
335	hex "Address of the pre-console buffer"
336	depends on PRE_CONSOLE_BUFFER
337	default 0x2f000000 if ARCH_SUNXI && MACH_SUN9I
338	default 0x4f000000 if ARCH_SUNXI && !MACH_SUN9I
339	help
340	  This sets the start address of the pre-console buffer. This must
341	  be in available memory and is accessed before relocation and
342	  possibly before DRAM is set up. Therefore choose an address
343	  carefully.
344
345	  We should consider removing this option and allocating the memory
346	  in board_init_f_init_reserve() instead.
347
348config CONSOLE_MUX
349	bool "Enable console multiplexing"
350	default y if DM_VIDEO || VIDEO || LCD
351	help
352	  This allows multiple devices to be used for each console 'file'.
353	  For example, stdout can be set to go to serial and video.
354	  Similarly, stdin can be set to come from serial and keyboard.
355	  Input can be provided from either source. Console multiplexing
356	  adds a small amount of size to U-Boot.  Changes to the environment
357	  variables stdout, stdin and stderr will take effect immediately.
358
359config SYS_CONSOLE_IS_IN_ENV
360	bool "Select console devices from the environment"
361	default y if CONSOLE_MUX
362	help
363	  This allows multiple input/output devices to be set at boot time.
364	  For example, if stdout is set to "serial,video" then output will
365	  be sent to both the serial and video devices on boot. The
366	  environment variables can be updated after boot to change the
367	  input/output devices.
368
369config SYS_CONSOLE_OVERWRITE_ROUTINE
370	bool "Allow board control over console overwriting"
371	help
372	  If this is enabled, and the board-specific function
373	  overwrite_console() returns 1, the stdin, stderr and stdout are
374	  switched to the serial port, else the settings in the environment
375	  are used. If this is not enabled, the console will not be switched
376	  to serial.
377
378config SYS_CONSOLE_ENV_OVERWRITE
379	bool "Update environment variables during console init"
380	help
381	  The console environment variables (stdout, stdin, stderr) can be
382	  used to determine the correct console devices on start-up. This
383	  option writes the console devices to these variables on console
384	  start-up (after relocation). This causes the environment to be
385	  updated to match the console devices actually chosen.
386
387config SYS_CONSOLE_INFO_QUIET
388	bool "Don't display the console devices on boot"
389	help
390	  Normally U-Boot displays the current settings for stdout, stdin
391	  and stderr on boot when the post-relocation console is set up.
392	  Enable this option to supress this output. It can be obtained by
393	  calling stdio_print_current_devices() from board code.
394
395config SYS_STDIO_DEREGISTER
396	bool "Allow deregistering stdio devices"
397	default y if USB_KEYBOARD
398	help
399	  Generally there is no need to deregister stdio devices since they
400	  are never deactivated. But if a stdio device is used which can be
401	  removed (for example a USB keyboard) then this option can be
402	  enabled to ensure this is handled correctly.
403
404endmenu
405
406config DEFAULT_FDT_FILE
407	string "Default fdt file"
408	help
409	  This option is used to set the default fdt file to boot OS.
410
411config VERSION_VARIABLE
412	bool "add U-Boot environment variable vers"
413	default n
414	help
415	  If this variable is defined, an environment variable
416	  named "ver" is created by U-Boot showing the U-Boot
417	  version as printed by the "version" command.
418	  Any change to this variable will be reverted at the
419	  next reset.
420
421config BOARD_LATE_INIT
422	bool
423	help
424	  Sometimes board require some initialization code that might
425	  require once the actual init done, example saving board specific env,
426	  boot-modes etc. which eventually done at late.
427
428	  So this config enable the late init code with the help of board_late_init
429	  function which should defined on respective boards.
430
431config DISPLAY_CPUINFO
432	bool "Display information about the CPU during start up"
433	default y if ARM || NIOS2 || X86 || XTENSA
434	help
435	  Display information about the CPU that U-Boot is running on
436	  when U-Boot starts up. The function print_cpuinfo() is called
437	  to do this.
438
439config DISPLAY_BOARDINFO
440	bool "Display information about the board during start up"
441	default y if ARM || M68K || MIPS || PPC || SANDBOX || XTENSA
442	help
443	  Display information about the board that U-Boot is running on
444	  when U-Boot starts up. The board function checkboard() is called
445	  to do this.
446
447menu "Start-up hooks"
448
449config ARCH_EARLY_INIT_R
450	bool "Call arch-specific init soon after relocation"
451	help
452	  With this option U-Boot will call arch_early_init_r() soon after
453	  relocation. Driver model is running by this point, and the cache
454	  is on. Note that board_early_init_r() is called first, if
455	  enabled. This can be used to set up architecture-specific devices.
456
457config ARCH_MISC_INIT
458	bool "Call arch-specific init after relocation, when console is ready"
459	help
460	  With this option U-Boot will call arch_misc_init() after
461	  relocation to allow miscellaneous arch-dependent initialisation
462	  to be performed. This function should be defined by the board
463	  and will be called after the console is set up, after relocaiton.
464
465config BOARD_EARLY_INIT_F
466	bool "Call board-specific init before relocation"
467	help
468	  Some boards need to perform initialisation as soon as possible
469	  after boot. With this option, U-Boot calls board_early_init_f()
470	  after driver model is ready in the pre-relocation init sequence.
471	  Note that the normal serial console is not yet set up, but the
472	  debug UART will be available if enabled.
473
474endmenu
475
476menu "Security support"
477
478config HASH
479	bool # "Support hashing API (SHA1, SHA256, etc.)"
480	help
481	  This provides a way to hash data in memory using various supported
482	  algorithms (such as SHA1, MD5, CRC32). The API is defined in hash.h
483	  and the algorithms it supports are defined in common/hash.c. See
484	  also CMD_HASH for command-line access.
485
486endmenu
487
488source "common/spl/Kconfig"
489