NOTES revision 201879
1281681Srpaulo# $FreeBSD: head/sys/conf/NOTES 201879 2010-01-09 01:46:38Z attilio $
2281681Srpaulo#
3281681Srpaulo# NOTES -- Lines that can be cut/pasted into kernel and hints configs.
4281681Srpaulo#
5281681Srpaulo# Lines that begin with 'device', 'options', 'machine', 'ident', 'maxusers',
6281681Srpaulo# 'makeoptions', 'hints', etc. go into the kernel configuration that you
7281681Srpaulo# run config(8) with.
8281681Srpaulo#
9281681Srpaulo# Lines that begin with 'hint.' are NOT for config(8), they go into your
10281681Srpaulo# hints file.  See /boot/device.hints and/or the 'hints' config(8) directive.
11281681Srpaulo#
12281681Srpaulo# Please use ``make LINT'' to create an old-style LINT file if you want to
13281681Srpaulo# do kernel test-builds.
14281681Srpaulo#
15281681Srpaulo# This file contains machine independent kernel configuration notes.  For
16281681Srpaulo# machine dependent notes, look in /sys/<arch>/conf/NOTES.
17281681Srpaulo#
18281681Srpaulo
19281681Srpaulo#
20281681Srpaulo# NOTES conventions and style guide:
21281681Srpaulo#
22# Large block comments should begin and end with a line containing only a
23# comment character.
24#
25# To describe a particular object, a block comment (if it exists) should
26# come first.  Next should come device, options, and hints lines in that
27# order.  All device and option lines must be described by a comment that
28# doesn't just expand the device or option name.  Use only a concise
29# comment on the same line if possible.  Very detailed descriptions of
30# devices and subsystems belong in man pages.
31#
32# A space followed by a tab separates 'options' from an option name.  Two
33# spaces followed by a tab separate 'device' from a device name.  Comments
34# after an option or device should use one space after the comment character.
35# To comment out a negative option that disables code and thus should not be
36# enabled for LINT builds, precede 'options' with "#!".
37#
38
39#
40# This is the ``identification'' of the kernel.  Usually this should
41# be the same as the name of your kernel.
42#
43ident		LINT
44
45#
46# The `maxusers' parameter controls the static sizing of a number of
47# internal system tables by a formula defined in subr_param.c.
48# Omitting this parameter or setting it to 0 will cause the system to
49# auto-size based on physical memory.
50#
51maxusers	10
52
53#
54# The `makeoptions' parameter allows variables to be passed to the
55# generated Makefile in the build area.
56#
57# CONF_CFLAGS gives some extra compiler flags that are added to ${CFLAGS}
58# after most other flags.  Here we use it to inhibit use of non-optimal
59# gcc built-in functions (e.g., memcmp).
60#
61# DEBUG happens to be magic.
62# The following is equivalent to 'config -g KERNELNAME' and creates
63# 'kernel.debug' compiled with -g debugging as well as a normal
64# 'kernel'.  Use 'make install.debug' to install the debug kernel
65# but that isn't normally necessary as the debug symbols are not loaded
66# by the kernel and are not useful there anyway.
67#
68# KERNEL can be overridden so that you can change the default name of your
69# kernel.
70#
71# MODULES_OVERRIDE can be used to limit modules built to a specific list.
72#
73makeoptions	CONF_CFLAGS=-fno-builtin  #Don't allow use of memcmp, etc.
74#makeoptions	DEBUG=-g		#Build kernel with gdb(1) debug symbols
75#makeoptions	KERNEL=foo		#Build kernel "foo" and install "/foo"
76# Only build ext2fs module plus those parts of the sound system I need.
77#makeoptions	MODULES_OVERRIDE="ext2fs sound/sound sound/driver/maestro3"
78makeoptions	DESTDIR=/tmp
79
80#
81# FreeBSD processes are subject to certain limits to their consumption
82# of system resources.  See getrlimit(2) for more details.  Each
83# resource limit has two values, a "soft" limit and a "hard" limit.
84# The soft limits can be modified during normal system operation, but
85# the hard limits are set at boot time.  Their default values are
86# in sys/<arch>/include/vmparam.h.  There are two ways to change them:
87# 
88# 1.  Set the values at kernel build time.  The options below are one
89#     way to allow that limit to grow to 1GB.  They can be increased
90#     further by changing the parameters:
91#	
92# 2.  In /boot/loader.conf, set the tunables kern.maxswzone,
93#     kern.maxbcache, kern.maxtsiz, kern.dfldsiz, kern.maxdsiz,
94#     kern.dflssiz, kern.maxssiz and kern.sgrowsiz.
95#
96# The options in /boot/loader.conf override anything in the kernel
97# configuration file.  See the function init_param1 in
98# sys/kern/subr_param.c for more details.
99#
100
101options 	MAXDSIZ=(1024UL*1024*1024)
102options 	MAXSSIZ=(128UL*1024*1024)
103options 	DFLDSIZ=(1024UL*1024*1024)
104
105#
106# BLKDEV_IOSIZE sets the default block size used in user block
107# device I/O.  Note that this value will be overridden by the label
108# when specifying a block device from a label with a non-0
109# partition blocksize.  The default is PAGE_SIZE.
110#
111options 	BLKDEV_IOSIZE=8192
112
113#
114# MAXPHYS and DFLTPHYS
115#
116# These are the max and default 'raw' I/O block device access sizes.
117# Reads and writes will be split into DFLTPHYS chunks. Some applications
118# have better performance with larger raw I/O access sizes. Typically
119# MAXPHYS should be twice the size of DFLTPHYS. Note that certain VM
120# parameters are derived from these values and making them too large
121# can make an an unbootable kernel.
122#
123# The defaults are 64K and 128K respectively.
124options 	DFLTPHYS=(64*1024)
125options 	MAXPHYS=(128*1024)
126
127
128# This allows you to actually store this configuration file into
129# the kernel binary itself. See config(8) for more details.
130#
131options 	INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE     # Include this file in kernel
132
133options 	GEOM_AES		# Don't use, use GEOM_BDE
134options 	GEOM_BDE		# Disk encryption.
135options 	GEOM_BSD		# BSD disklabels
136options 	GEOM_CACHE		# Disk cache.
137options 	GEOM_CONCAT		# Disk concatenation.
138options 	GEOM_ELI		# Disk encryption.
139options 	GEOM_FOX		# Redundant path mitigation
140options 	GEOM_GATE		# Userland services.
141options 	GEOM_JOURNAL		# Journaling.
142options 	GEOM_LABEL		# Providers labelization.
143options 	GEOM_LINUX_LVM		# Linux LVM2 volumes
144options 	GEOM_MBR		# DOS/MBR partitioning
145options 	GEOM_MIRROR		# Disk mirroring.
146options 	GEOM_MULTIPATH		# Disk multipath
147options 	GEOM_NOP		# Test class.
148options 	GEOM_PART_APM		# Apple partitioning
149options 	GEOM_PART_BSD		# BSD disklabel
150options 	GEOM_PART_EBR		# Extended Boot Records
151options 	GEOM_PART_EBR_COMPAT	# Backward compatible partition names
152options 	GEOM_PART_GPT		# GPT partitioning
153options 	GEOM_PART_MBR		# MBR partitioning
154options 	GEOM_PART_PC98		# PC-9800 disk partitioning
155options 	GEOM_PART_VTOC8		# SMI VTOC8 disk label
156options 	GEOM_PC98		# NEC PC9800 partitioning
157options 	GEOM_RAID3		# RAID3 functionality.
158options 	GEOM_SHSEC		# Shared secret.
159options 	GEOM_STRIPE		# Disk striping.
160options 	GEOM_SUNLABEL		# Sun/Solaris partitioning
161options 	GEOM_UZIP		# Read-only compressed disks
162options 	GEOM_VIRSTOR		# Virtual storage.
163options 	GEOM_VOL		# Volume names from UFS superblock
164options 	GEOM_ZERO		# Performance testing helper.
165
166#
167# The root device and filesystem type can be compiled in;
168# this provides a fallback option if the root device cannot
169# be correctly guessed by the bootstrap code, or an override if
170# the RB_DFLTROOT flag (-r) is specified when booting the kernel.
171#
172options 	ROOTDEVNAME=\"ufs:da0s2e\"
173
174
175#####################################################################
176# Scheduler options:
177#
178# Specifying one of SCHED_4BSD or SCHED_ULE is mandatory.  These options
179# select which scheduler is compiled in.
180#
181# SCHED_4BSD is the historical, proven, BSD scheduler.  It has a global run
182# queue and no CPU affinity which makes it suboptimal for SMP.  It has very
183# good interactivity and priority selection.
184#
185# SCHED_ULE provides significant performance advantages over 4BSD on many
186# workloads on SMP machines.  It supports cpu-affinity, per-cpu runqueues
187# and scheduler locks.  It also has a stronger notion of interactivity 
188# which leads to better responsiveness even on uniprocessor machines.  This
189# will eventually become the default scheduler.
190#
191# SCHED_STATS is a debugging option which keeps some stats in the sysctl
192# tree at 'kern.sched.stats' and is useful for debugging scheduling decisions.
193#
194options 	SCHED_4BSD
195options 	SCHED_STATS
196#options 	SCHED_ULE
197
198#####################################################################
199# SMP OPTIONS:
200#
201# SMP enables building of a Symmetric MultiProcessor Kernel.
202
203# Mandatory:
204options 	SMP			# Symmetric MultiProcessor Kernel
205
206# ADAPTIVE_MUTEXES changes the behavior of blocking mutexes to spin
207# if the thread that currently owns the mutex is executing on another
208# CPU.  This behaviour is enabled by default, so this option can be used
209# to disable it.
210options 	NO_ADAPTIVE_MUTEXES
211
212# ADAPTIVE_RWLOCKS changes the behavior of reader/writer locks to spin
213# if the thread that currently owns the rwlock is executing on another
214# CPU.  This behaviour is enabled by default, so this option can be used
215# to disable it.
216options 	NO_ADAPTIVE_RWLOCKS
217
218# ADAPTIVE_SX changes the behavior of sx locks to spin if the thread that
219# currently owns the sx lock is executing on another CPU.
220# This behaviour is enabled by default, so this option can be used to
221# disable it.
222options 	NO_ADAPTIVE_SX
223
224# MUTEX_NOINLINE forces mutex operations to call functions to perform each
225# operation rather than inlining the simple cases.  This can be used to
226# shrink the size of the kernel text segment.  Note that this behavior is
227# already implied by the INVARIANT_SUPPORT, INVARIANTS, KTR, LOCK_PROFILING,
228# and WITNESS options.
229options 	MUTEX_NOINLINE
230
231# RWLOCK_NOINLINE forces rwlock operations to call functions to perform each
232# operation rather than inlining the simple cases.  This can be used to
233# shrink the size of the kernel text segment.  Note that this behavior is
234# already implied by the INVARIANT_SUPPORT, INVARIANTS, KTR, LOCK_PROFILING,
235# and WITNESS options.
236options 	RWLOCK_NOINLINE
237
238# SX_NOINLINE forces sx lock operations to call functions to perform each
239# operation rather than inlining the simple cases.  This can be used to
240# shrink the size of the kernel text segment.  Note that this behavior is
241# already implied by the INVARIANT_SUPPORT, INVARIANTS, KTR, LOCK_PROFILING,
242# and WITNESS options.
243options 	SX_NOINLINE
244
245# SMP Debugging Options:
246#
247# PREEMPTION allows the threads that are in the kernel to be preempted by
248#	  higher priority [interrupt] threads.  It helps with interactivity
249#	  and allows interrupt threads to run sooner rather than waiting.
250#	  WARNING! Only tested on amd64 and i386.
251# FULL_PREEMPTION instructs the kernel to preempt non-realtime kernel
252#	  threads.  Its sole use is to expose race conditions and other
253#	  bugs during development.  Enabling this option will reduce
254#	  performance and increase the frequency of kernel panics by
255#	  design.  If you aren't sure that you need it then you don't.
256#	  Relies on the PREEMPTION option.  DON'T TURN THIS ON.
257# MUTEX_DEBUG enables various extra assertions in the mutex code.
258# SLEEPQUEUE_PROFILING enables rudimentary profiling of the hash table
259#	  used to hold active sleep queues as well as sleep wait message
260#	  frequency.
261# TURNSTILE_PROFILING enables rudimentary profiling of the hash table
262#	  used to hold active lock queues.
263# WITNESS enables the witness code which detects deadlocks and cycles
264#         during locking operations.
265# WITNESS_KDB causes the witness code to drop into the kernel debugger if
266#	  a lock hierarchy violation occurs or if locks are held when going to
267#	  sleep.
268# WITNESS_SKIPSPIN disables the witness checks on spin mutexes.
269options 	PREEMPTION
270options 	FULL_PREEMPTION
271options 	MUTEX_DEBUG
272options 	WITNESS
273options 	WITNESS_KDB
274options 	WITNESS_SKIPSPIN
275
276# LOCK_PROFILING - Profiling locks.  See LOCK_PROFILING(9) for details.
277options 	LOCK_PROFILING
278# Set the number of buffers and the hash size.  The hash size MUST be larger
279# than the number of buffers.  Hash size should be prime.
280options 	MPROF_BUFFERS="1536"
281options 	MPROF_HASH_SIZE="1543"
282
283# Profiling for internal hash tables.
284options 	SLEEPQUEUE_PROFILING
285options 	TURNSTILE_PROFILING
286
287
288#####################################################################
289# COMPATIBILITY OPTIONS
290
291#
292# Implement system calls compatible with 4.3BSD and older versions of
293# FreeBSD.  You probably do NOT want to remove this as much current code
294# still relies on the 4.3 emulation.  Note that some architectures that
295# are supported by FreeBSD do not include support for certain important
296# aspects of this compatibility option, namely those related to the
297# signal delivery mechanism.
298#
299options 	COMPAT_43
300
301# Old tty interface.
302options 	COMPAT_43TTY
303
304# Note that as a general rule, COMPAT_FREEBSD<n> depends on
305# COMPAT_FREEBSD<n+1>, COMPAT_FREEBSD<n+2>, etc.
306
307# Enable FreeBSD4 compatibility syscalls
308options 	COMPAT_FREEBSD4
309
310# Enable FreeBSD5 compatibility syscalls
311options 	COMPAT_FREEBSD5
312
313# Enable FreeBSD6 compatibility syscalls
314options 	COMPAT_FREEBSD6
315
316# Enable FreeBSD7 compatibility syscalls
317options 	COMPAT_FREEBSD7
318
319#
320# These three options provide support for System V Interface
321# Definition-style interprocess communication, in the form of shared
322# memory, semaphores, and message queues, respectively.
323#
324options 	SYSVSHM
325options 	SYSVSEM
326options 	SYSVMSG
327
328
329#####################################################################
330# DEBUGGING OPTIONS
331
332#
333# Compile with kernel debugger related code.
334#
335options 	KDB
336
337#
338# Print a stack trace of the current thread on the console for a panic.
339#
340options 	KDB_TRACE
341
342#
343# Don't enter the debugger for a panic. Intended for unattended operation
344# where you may want to enter the debugger from the console, but still want
345# the machine to recover from a panic.
346#
347options 	KDB_UNATTENDED
348
349#
350# Enable the ddb debugger backend.
351#
352options 	DDB
353
354#
355# Print the numerical value of symbols in addition to the symbolic
356# representation.
357#
358options 	DDB_NUMSYM
359
360#
361# Enable the remote gdb debugger backend.
362#
363options 	GDB
364
365#
366# Enable the kernel DTrace hooks which are required to load the DTrace
367# kernel modules.
368#
369options 	KDTRACE_HOOKS
370
371#
372# SYSCTL_DEBUG enables a 'sysctl' debug tree that can be used to dump the
373# contents of the registered sysctl nodes on the console.  It is disabled by
374# default because it generates excessively verbose console output that can
375# interfere with serial console operation.
376#
377options 	SYSCTL_DEBUG
378
379#
380# DEBUG_MEMGUARD builds and enables memguard(9), a replacement allocator
381# for the kernel used to detect modify-after-free scenarios.  See the
382# memguard(9) man page for more information on usage.
383#
384options 	DEBUG_MEMGUARD
385
386#
387# DEBUG_REDZONE enables buffer underflows and buffer overflows detection for
388# malloc(9).
389#
390options 	DEBUG_REDZONE
391
392#
393# KTRACE enables the system-call tracing facility ktrace(2).  To be more
394# SMP-friendly, KTRACE uses a worker thread to process most trace events
395# asynchronously to the thread generating the event.  This requires a
396# pre-allocated store of objects representing trace events.  The
397# KTRACE_REQUEST_POOL option specifies the initial size of this store.
398# The size of the pool can be adjusted both at boottime and runtime via
399# the kern.ktrace_request_pool tunable and sysctl.
400#
401options 	KTRACE			#kernel tracing
402options 	KTRACE_REQUEST_POOL=101
403
404#
405# KTR is a kernel tracing facility imported from BSD/OS.  It is
406# enabled with the KTR option.  KTR_ENTRIES defines the number of
407# entries in the circular trace buffer; it must be a power of two.
408# KTR_COMPILE defines the mask of events to compile into the kernel as
409# defined by the KTR_* constants in <sys/ktr.h>.  KTR_MASK defines the
410# initial value of the ktr_mask variable which determines at runtime
411# what events to trace.  KTR_CPUMASK determines which CPU's log
412# events, with bit X corresponding to CPU X.  KTR_VERBOSE enables
413# dumping of KTR events to the console by default.  This functionality
414# can be toggled via the debug.ktr_verbose sysctl and defaults to off
415# if KTR_VERBOSE is not defined.  See ktr(4) and ktrdump(8) for details.
416#
417options 	KTR
418options 	KTR_ENTRIES=1024
419options 	KTR_COMPILE=(KTR_INTR|KTR_PROC)
420options 	KTR_MASK=KTR_INTR
421options 	KTR_CPUMASK=0x3
422options 	KTR_VERBOSE
423
424#
425# ALQ(9) is a facility for the asynchronous queuing of records from the kernel
426# to a vnode, and is employed by services such as ktr(4) to produce trace
427# files based on a kernel event stream.  Records are written asynchronously
428# in a worker thread.
429#
430options 	ALQ
431options 	KTR_ALQ
432
433#
434# The INVARIANTS option is used in a number of source files to enable
435# extra sanity checking of internal structures.  This support is not
436# enabled by default because of the extra time it would take to check
437# for these conditions, which can only occur as a result of
438# programming errors.
439#
440options 	INVARIANTS
441
442#
443# The INVARIANT_SUPPORT option makes us compile in support for
444# verifying some of the internal structures.  It is a prerequisite for
445# 'INVARIANTS', as enabling 'INVARIANTS' will make these functions be
446# called.  The intent is that you can set 'INVARIANTS' for single
447# source files (by changing the source file or specifying it on the
448# command line) if you have 'INVARIANT_SUPPORT' enabled.  Also, if you
449# wish to build a kernel module with 'INVARIANTS', then adding
450# 'INVARIANT_SUPPORT' to your kernel will provide all the necessary
451# infrastructure without the added overhead.
452#
453options 	INVARIANT_SUPPORT
454
455#
456# The DIAGNOSTIC option is used to enable extra debugging information
457# from some parts of the kernel.  As this makes everything more noisy,
458# it is disabled by default.
459#
460options 	DIAGNOSTIC
461
462#
463# REGRESSION causes optional kernel interfaces necessary only for regression
464# testing to be enabled.  These interfaces may constitute security risks
465# when enabled, as they permit processes to easily modify aspects of the
466# run-time environment to reproduce unlikely or unusual (possibly normally
467# impossible) scenarios.
468#
469options 	REGRESSION
470
471#
472# RESTARTABLE_PANICS allows one to continue from a panic as if it were
473# a call to the debugger to continue from a panic as instead.  It is only
474# useful if a kernel debugger is present.  To restart from a panic, reset
475# the panicstr variable to NULL and continue execution.  This option is
476# for development use only and should NOT be used in production systems
477# to "workaround" a panic.
478#
479#options 	RESTARTABLE_PANICS
480
481#
482# This option let some drivers co-exist that can't co-exist in a running
483# system.  This is used to be able to compile all kernel code in one go for
484# quality assurance purposes (like this file, which the option takes it name
485# from.)
486#
487options 	COMPILING_LINT
488
489#
490# STACK enables the stack(9) facility, allowing the capture of kernel stack
491# for the purpose of procinfo(1), etc.  stack(9) will also be compiled in
492# automatically if DDB(4) is compiled into the kernel.
493#
494options 	STACK
495
496
497#####################################################################
498# PERFORMANCE MONITORING OPTIONS
499
500#
501# The hwpmc driver that allows the use of in-CPU performance monitoring
502# counters for performance monitoring.  The base kernel needs to configured
503# with the 'options' line, while the hwpmc device can be either compiled
504# in or loaded as a loadable kernel module.
505#
506# Additional configuration options may be required on specific architectures,
507# please see hwpmc(4).
508
509device		hwpmc			# Driver (also a loadable module)
510options 	HWPMC_HOOKS		# Other necessary kernel hooks
511
512
513#####################################################################
514# NETWORKING OPTIONS
515
516#
517# Protocol families
518#
519options 	INET			#Internet communications protocols
520options 	INET6			#IPv6 communications protocols
521
522options 	ROUTETABLES=2		# max 16. 1 is back compatible.
523
524# In order to enable IPSEC you MUST also add device crypto to 
525# your kernel configuration
526options 	IPSEC			#IP security (requires device crypto)
527#options 	IPSEC_DEBUG		#debug for IP security
528#
529# #DEPRECATED#
530# Set IPSEC_FILTERTUNNEL to change the default of the sysctl to force packets
531# coming through a tunnel to be processed by any configured packet filtering
532# twice. The default is that packets coming out of a tunnel are _not_ processed;
533# they are assumed trusted.
534#
535# IPSEC history is preserved for such packets, and can be filtered
536# using ipfw(8)'s 'ipsec' keyword, when this option is enabled.
537#
538#options 	IPSEC_FILTERTUNNEL	#filter ipsec packets from a tunnel
539#
540# Set IPSEC_NAT_T to enable NAT-Traversal support.  This enables
541# optional UDP encapsulation of ESP packets.
542#
543options		IPSEC_NAT_T		#NAT-T support, UDP encap of ESP
544
545options 	IPX			#IPX/SPX communications protocols
546
547options 	NCP			#NetWare Core protocol
548
549options 	NETATALK		#Appletalk communications protocols
550options 	NETATALKDEBUG		#Appletalk debugging
551
552#
553# SMB/CIFS requester
554# NETSMB enables support for SMB protocol, it requires LIBMCHAIN and LIBICONV
555# options.
556options 	NETSMB			#SMB/CIFS requester
557
558# mchain library. It can be either loaded as KLD or compiled into kernel
559options 	LIBMCHAIN
560
561# libalias library, performing NAT
562options 	LIBALIAS
563
564# flowtable cache
565options 	FLOWTABLE
566
567#
568# SCTP is a NEW transport protocol defined by
569# RFC2960 updated by RFC3309 and RFC3758.. and
570# soon to have a new base RFC and many many more
571# extensions. This release supports all the extensions
572# including many drafts (most about to become RFC's).
573# It is the premeier SCTP implementation in the NET
574# and is quite well tested.
575#
576# Note YOU MUST have both INET and INET6 defined.
577# you don't have to enable V6, but SCTP is 
578# dual stacked and so far we have not teased apart
579# the V6 and V4.. since an association can span
580# both a V6 and V4 address at the SAME time :-)
581#
582options 	SCTP
583# There are bunches of options:
584# this one turns on all sorts of
585# nastly printing that you can
586# do. Its all controled by a
587# bit mask (settable by socket opt and
588# by sysctl). Including will not cause
589# logging until you set the bits.. but it
590# can be quite verbose.. so without this
591# option we don't do any of the tests for
592# bits and prints.. which makes the code run
593# faster.. if you are not debugging don't use.
594options 	SCTP_DEBUG
595#
596# This option turns off the CRC32c checksum. Basically
597# You will not be able to talk to anyone else that
598# has not done this. Its more for expermentation to
599# see how much CPU the CRC32c really takes. Most new
600# cards for TCP support checksum offload.. so this 
601# option gives you a "view" into what SCTP would be
602# like with such an offload (which only exists in
603# high in iSCSI boards so far). With the new
604# splitting 8's algorithm its not as bad as it used
605# to be.. but it does speed things up try only
606# for in a captured lab environment :-)
607options 	SCTP_WITH_NO_CSUM
608#
609
610#
611# All that options after that turn on specific types of
612# logging. You can monitor CWND growth, flight size
613# and all sorts of things. Go look at the code and
614# see. I have used this to produce interesting 
615# charts and graphs as well :->
616# 
617# I have not yet commited the tools to get and print
618# the logs, I will do that eventually .. before then
619# if you want them send me an email rrs@freebsd.org
620# You basically must have ktr(4) enabled for these
621# and you then set the sysctl to turn on/off various
622# logging bits. Use ktrdump(8) to pull the log and run
623# it through a dispaly program.. and graphs and other
624# things too.
625#
626options 	SCTP_LOCK_LOGGING
627options 	SCTP_MBUF_LOGGING
628options 	SCTP_MBCNT_LOGGING
629options 	SCTP_PACKET_LOGGING
630options 	SCTP_LTRACE_CHUNKS
631options 	SCTP_LTRACE_ERRORS
632
633
634# altq(9). Enable the base part of the hooks with the ALTQ option.
635# Individual disciplines must be built into the base system and can not be
636# loaded as modules at this point. ALTQ requires a stable TSC so if yours is
637# broken or changes with CPU throttling then you must also have the ALTQ_NOPCC
638# option.
639options 	ALTQ
640options 	ALTQ_CBQ	# Class Based Queueing
641options 	ALTQ_RED	# Random Early Detection
642options 	ALTQ_RIO	# RED In/Out
643options 	ALTQ_HFSC	# Hierarchical Packet Scheduler
644options 	ALTQ_CDNR	# Traffic conditioner
645options 	ALTQ_PRIQ	# Priority Queueing
646options 	ALTQ_NOPCC	# Required if the TSC is unusable
647options 	ALTQ_DEBUG
648
649# netgraph(4). Enable the base netgraph code with the NETGRAPH option.
650# Individual node types can be enabled with the corresponding option
651# listed below; however, this is not strictly necessary as netgraph
652# will automatically load the corresponding KLD module if the node type
653# is not already compiled into the kernel. Each type below has a
654# corresponding man page, e.g., ng_async(8).
655options 	NETGRAPH		# netgraph(4) system
656options 	NETGRAPH_DEBUG		# enable extra debugging, this
657					# affects netgraph(4) and nodes
658# Node types
659options 	NETGRAPH_ASYNC
660options 	NETGRAPH_ATMLLC
661options 	NETGRAPH_ATM_ATMPIF
662options 	NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH		# ng_bluetooth(4)
663options 	NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_BT3C		# ng_bt3c(4)
664options 	NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_HCI		# ng_hci(4)
665options 	NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_L2CAP	# ng_l2cap(4)
666options 	NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_SOCKET	# ng_btsocket(4)
667options 	NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_UBT		# ng_ubt(4)
668options 	NETGRAPH_BLUETOOTH_UBTBCMFW	# ubtbcmfw(4)
669options 	NETGRAPH_BPF
670options 	NETGRAPH_BRIDGE
671options 	NETGRAPH_CAR
672options 	NETGRAPH_CISCO
673options 	NETGRAPH_DEFLATE
674options 	NETGRAPH_DEVICE
675options 	NETGRAPH_ECHO
676options 	NETGRAPH_EIFACE
677options 	NETGRAPH_ETHER
678options 	NETGRAPH_FEC
679options 	NETGRAPH_FRAME_RELAY
680options 	NETGRAPH_GIF
681options 	NETGRAPH_GIF_DEMUX
682options 	NETGRAPH_HOLE
683options 	NETGRAPH_IFACE
684options 	NETGRAPH_IP_INPUT
685options 	NETGRAPH_IPFW
686options 	NETGRAPH_KSOCKET
687options 	NETGRAPH_L2TP
688options 	NETGRAPH_LMI
689# MPPC compression requires proprietary files (not included)
690#options 	NETGRAPH_MPPC_COMPRESSION
691options 	NETGRAPH_MPPC_ENCRYPTION
692options 	NETGRAPH_NETFLOW
693options 	NETGRAPH_NAT
694options 	NETGRAPH_ONE2MANY
695options 	NETGRAPH_PIPE
696options 	NETGRAPH_PPP
697options 	NETGRAPH_PPPOE
698options 	NETGRAPH_PPTPGRE
699options 	NETGRAPH_PRED1
700options 	NETGRAPH_RFC1490
701options 	NETGRAPH_SOCKET
702options 	NETGRAPH_SPLIT
703options 	NETGRAPH_SPPP
704options 	NETGRAPH_TAG
705options 	NETGRAPH_TCPMSS
706options 	NETGRAPH_TEE
707options 	NETGRAPH_UI
708options 	NETGRAPH_VJC
709options 	NETGRAPH_VLAN
710
711# NgATM - Netgraph ATM
712options 	NGATM_ATM
713options 	NGATM_ATMBASE
714options 	NGATM_SSCOP
715options 	NGATM_SSCFU
716options 	NGATM_UNI
717options 	NGATM_CCATM
718
719device		mn	# Munich32x/Falc54 Nx64kbit/sec cards.
720
721#
722# Network interfaces:
723#  The `loop' device is MANDATORY when networking is enabled.
724device		loop
725
726#  The `ether' device provides generic code to handle
727#  Ethernets; it is MANDATORY when an Ethernet device driver is
728#  configured or token-ring is enabled.
729device		ether
730
731#  The `vlan' device implements the VLAN tagging of Ethernet frames
732#  according to IEEE 802.1Q.
733device		vlan
734
735#  The `wlan' device provides generic code to support 802.11
736#  drivers, including host AP mode; it is MANDATORY for the wi,
737#  and ath drivers and will eventually be required by all 802.11 drivers.
738device		wlan
739options 	IEEE80211_DEBUG		#enable debugging msgs
740options 	IEEE80211_AMPDU_AGE	#age frames in AMPDU reorder q's
741options 	IEEE80211_SUPPORT_MESH	#enable 802.11s D3.0 support
742options 	IEEE80211_SUPPORT_TDMA	#enable TDMA support
743
744#  The `wlan_wep', `wlan_tkip', and `wlan_ccmp' devices provide
745#  support for WEP, TKIP, and AES-CCMP crypto protocols optionally
746#  used with 802.11 devices that depend on the `wlan' module.
747device		wlan_wep
748device		wlan_ccmp
749device		wlan_tkip
750
751#  The `wlan_xauth' device provides support for external (i.e. user-mode)
752#  authenticators for use with 802.11 drivers that use the `wlan'
753#  module and support 802.1x and/or WPA security protocols.
754device		wlan_xauth
755
756#  The `wlan_acl' device provides a MAC-based access control mechanism
757#  for use with 802.11 drivers operating in ap mode and using the
758#  `wlan' module.
759#  The 'wlan_amrr' device provides AMRR transmit rate control algorithm
760device		wlan_acl
761device		wlan_amrr
762
763# Generic TokenRing
764device		token
765
766#  The `fddi' device provides generic code to support FDDI.
767device		fddi
768
769#  The `arcnet' device provides generic code to support Arcnet.
770device		arcnet
771
772#  The `sppp' device serves a similar role for certain types
773#  of synchronous PPP links (like `cx', `ar').
774device		sppp
775
776#  The `bpf' device enables the Berkeley Packet Filter.  Be
777#  aware of the legal and administrative consequences of enabling this
778#  option.  The number of devices determines the maximum number of
779#  simultaneous BPF clients programs runnable.  DHCP requires bpf.
780device		bpf
781
782#  The `disc' device implements a minimal network interface,
783#  which throws away all packets sent and never receives any.  It is
784#  included for testing and benchmarking purposes.
785device		disc
786
787# The `epair' device implements a virtual back-to-back connected Ethernet
788# like interface pair.
789device		epair
790
791#  The `edsc' device implements a minimal Ethernet interface,
792#  which discards all packets sent and receives none.
793device		edsc
794
795#  The `tap' device is a pty-like virtual Ethernet interface
796device		tap
797
798#  The `tun' device implements (user-)ppp and nos-tun(8)
799device		tun
800
801#  The `gif' device implements IPv6 over IP4 tunneling,
802#  IPv4 over IPv6 tunneling, IPv4 over IPv4 tunneling and
803#  IPv6 over IPv6 tunneling.
804#  The `gre' device implements two types of IP4 over IP4 tunneling:
805#  GRE and MOBILE, as specified in the RFC1701 and RFC2004.
806#  The XBONEHACK option allows the same pair of addresses to be configured on
807#  multiple gif interfaces.
808device		gif
809device		gre
810options 	XBONEHACK
811
812#  The `faith' device captures packets sent to it and diverts them
813#  to the IPv4/IPv6 translation daemon.
814#  The `stf' device implements 6to4 encapsulation.
815device		faith
816device		stf
817
818#  The `ef' device provides support for multiple ethernet frame types
819#  specified via ETHER_* options. See ef(4) for details.
820device		ef
821options 	ETHER_II		# enable Ethernet_II frame
822options 	ETHER_8023		# enable Ethernet_802.3 (Novell) frame
823options 	ETHER_8022		# enable Ethernet_802.2 frame
824options 	ETHER_SNAP		# enable Ethernet_802.2/SNAP frame
825
826# The pf packet filter consists of three devices:
827#  The `pf' device provides /dev/pf and the firewall code itself.
828#  The `pflog' device provides the pflog0 interface which logs packets.
829#  The `pfsync' device provides the pfsync0 interface used for
830#   synchronization of firewall state tables (over the net).
831device		pf
832device		pflog
833device		pfsync
834
835# Bridge interface.
836device		if_bridge
837
838# Common Address Redundancy Protocol. See carp(4) for more details.
839device		carp
840
841# IPsec interface.
842device		enc
843
844# Link aggregation interface.
845device		lagg
846
847#
848# Internet family options:
849#
850# MROUTING enables the kernel multicast packet forwarder, which works
851# with mrouted and XORP.
852#
853# IPFIREWALL enables support for IP firewall construction, in
854# conjunction with the `ipfw' program.  IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE sends
855# logged packets to the system logger.  IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT
856# limits the number of times a matching entry can be logged.
857#
858# WARNING:  IPFIREWALL defaults to a policy of "deny ip from any to any"
859# and if you do not add other rules during startup to allow access,
860# YOU WILL LOCK YOURSELF OUT.  It is suggested that you set firewall_type=open
861# in /etc/rc.conf when first enabling this feature, then refining the
862# firewall rules in /etc/rc.firewall after you've tested that the new kernel
863# feature works properly.
864#
865# IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT causes the default rule (at boot) to
866# allow everything.  Use with care, if a cracker can crash your
867# firewall machine, they can get to your protected machines.  However,
868# if you are using it as an as-needed filter for specific problems as
869# they arise, then this may be for you.  Changing the default to 'allow'
870# means that you won't get stuck if the kernel and /sbin/ipfw binary get
871# out of sync.
872#
873# IPDIVERT enables the divert IP sockets, used by ``ipfw divert''.  It
874# depends on IPFIREWALL if compiled into the kernel.
875#
876# IPFIREWALL_FORWARD enables changing of the packet destination either
877# to do some sort of policy routing or transparent proxying.  Used by
878# ``ipfw forward''. All  redirections apply to locally generated
879# packets too.  Because of this great care is required when
880# crafting the ruleset.
881#
882# IPFIREWALL_NAT adds support for in kernel nat in ipfw, and it requires
883# LIBALIAS.
884#
885# IPSTEALTH enables code to support stealth forwarding (i.e., forwarding
886# packets without touching the TTL).  This can be useful to hide firewalls
887# from traceroute and similar tools.
888#
889# TCPDEBUG enables code which keeps traces of the TCP state machine
890# for sockets with the SO_DEBUG option set, which can then be examined
891# using the trpt(8) utility.
892#
893options 	MROUTING		# Multicast routing
894options 	IPFIREWALL		#firewall
895options 	IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE	#enable logging to syslogd(8)
896options 	IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE_LIMIT=100	#limit verbosity
897options 	IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT	#allow everything by default
898options 	IPFIREWALL_FORWARD	#packet destination changes
899options 	IPFIREWALL_NAT		#ipfw kernel nat support
900options 	IPDIVERT		#divert sockets
901options 	IPFILTER		#ipfilter support
902options 	IPFILTER_LOG		#ipfilter logging
903options 	IPFILTER_LOOKUP		#ipfilter pools
904options 	IPFILTER_DEFAULT_BLOCK	#block all packets by default
905options 	IPSTEALTH		#support for stealth forwarding
906options 	TCPDEBUG
907
908# The MBUF_STRESS_TEST option enables options which create
909# various random failures / extreme cases related to mbuf
910# functions.  See mbuf(9) for a list of available test cases.
911# MBUF_PROFILING enables code to profile the mbuf chains
912# exiting the system (via participating interfaces) and
913# return a logarithmic histogram of monitored parameters
914# (e.g. packet size, wasted space, number of mbufs in chain).
915options 	MBUF_STRESS_TEST
916options 	MBUF_PROFILING
917
918# Statically Link in accept filters
919options 	ACCEPT_FILTER_DATA
920options 	ACCEPT_FILTER_DNS
921options 	ACCEPT_FILTER_HTTP
922
923# TCP_SIGNATURE adds support for RFC 2385 (TCP-MD5) digests. These are
924# carried in TCP option 19. This option is commonly used to protect
925# TCP sessions (e.g. BGP) where IPSEC is not available nor desirable.
926# This is enabled on a per-socket basis using the TCP_MD5SIG socket option.
927# This requires the use of 'device crypto', 'options IPSEC'
928# or 'device cryptodev'.
929options 	TCP_SIGNATURE		#include support for RFC 2385
930
931# DUMMYNET enables the "dummynet" bandwidth limiter.  You need IPFIREWALL
932# as well.  See dummynet(4) and ipfw(8) for more info.  When you run
933# DUMMYNET it is advisable to also have at least "options HZ=1000" to achieve
934# a smooth scheduling of the traffic.
935options 	DUMMYNET
936
937# Zero copy sockets support.  This enables "zero copy" for sending and
938# receiving data via a socket.  The send side works for any type of NIC,
939# the receive side only works for NICs that support MTUs greater than the
940# page size of your architecture and that support header splitting.  See
941# zero_copy(9) for more details.
942options 	ZERO_COPY_SOCKETS
943
944
945#####################################################################
946# FILESYSTEM OPTIONS
947
948#
949# Only the root, /usr, and /tmp filesystems need be statically
950# compiled; everything else will be automatically loaded at mount
951# time.  (Exception: the UFS family--- FFS --- cannot
952# currently be demand-loaded.)  Some people still prefer to statically
953# compile other filesystems as well.
954#
955# NB: The PORTAL filesystem is known to be buggy, and WILL panic your
956# system if you attempt to do anything with it.  It is included here
957# as an incentive for some enterprising soul to sit down and fix it.
958# The UNION filesystem was known to be buggy in the past.  It is now
959# being actively maintained, although there are still some issues being
960# resolved.
961#
962
963# One of these is mandatory:
964options 	FFS			#Fast filesystem
965options 	NFSCLIENT		#Network File System client
966
967# The rest are optional:
968options 	CD9660			#ISO 9660 filesystem
969options 	FDESCFS			#File descriptor filesystem
970options 	HPFS			#OS/2 File system
971options 	MSDOSFS			#MS DOS File System (FAT, FAT32)
972options 	NFSSERVER		#Network File System server
973options 	NFSLOCKD		#Network Lock Manager
974options 	NFSCL			#experimental NFS client with NFSv4
975options 	NFSD			#experimental NFS server with NFSv4
976options 	KGSSAPI			#Kernel GSSAPI implementaion
977
978# NT File System. Read-mostly, see mount_ntfs(8) for details.
979# For a full read-write NTFS support consider sysutils/fusefs-ntfs
980# port/package.
981options 	NTFS
982
983options 	NULLFS			#NULL filesystem
984# Broken (depends on NCP):
985#options 	NWFS			#NetWare filesystem
986options 	PORTALFS		#Portal filesystem
987options 	PROCFS			#Process filesystem (requires PSEUDOFS)
988options 	PSEUDOFS		#Pseudo-filesystem framework
989options 	PSEUDOFS_TRACE		#Debugging support for PSEUDOFS
990options 	SMBFS			#SMB/CIFS filesystem
991options 	UDF			#Universal Disk Format
992options 	UNIONFS			#Union filesystem
993# The xFS_ROOT options REQUIRE the associated ``options xFS''
994options 	NFS_ROOT		#NFS usable as root device
995
996# Soft updates is a technique for improving filesystem speed and
997# making abrupt shutdown less risky.
998#
999options 	SOFTUPDATES
1000
1001# Extended attributes allow additional data to be associated with files,
1002# and is used for ACLs, Capabilities, and MAC labels.
1003# See src/sys/ufs/ufs/README.extattr for more information.
1004options 	UFS_EXTATTR
1005options 	UFS_EXTATTR_AUTOSTART
1006
1007# Access Control List support for UFS filesystems.  The current ACL
1008# implementation requires extended attribute support, UFS_EXTATTR,
1009# for the underlying filesystem.
1010# See src/sys/ufs/ufs/README.acls for more information.
1011options 	UFS_ACL
1012
1013# Directory hashing improves the speed of operations on very large
1014# directories at the expense of some memory.
1015options 	UFS_DIRHASH
1016
1017# Gjournal-based UFS journaling support.
1018options 	UFS_GJOURNAL
1019
1020# Make space in the kernel for a root filesystem on a md device.
1021# Define to the number of kilobytes to reserve for the filesystem.
1022options 	MD_ROOT_SIZE=10
1023
1024# Make the md device a potential root device, either with preloaded
1025# images of type mfs_root or md_root.
1026options 	MD_ROOT
1027
1028# Disk quotas are supported when this option is enabled.
1029options 	QUOTA			#enable disk quotas
1030
1031# If you are running a machine just as a fileserver for PC and MAC
1032# users, using SAMBA or Netatalk, you may consider setting this option
1033# and keeping all those users' directories on a filesystem that is
1034# mounted with the suiddir option. This gives new files the same
1035# ownership as the directory (similar to group). It's a security hole
1036# if you let these users run programs, so confine it to file-servers
1037# (but it'll save you lots of headaches in those cases). Root owned
1038# directories are exempt and X bits are cleared. The suid bit must be
1039# set on the directory as well; see chmod(1) PC owners can't see/set
1040# ownerships so they keep getting their toes trodden on. This saves
1041# you all the support calls as the filesystem it's used on will act as
1042# they expect: "It's my dir so it must be my file".
1043#
1044options 	SUIDDIR
1045
1046# NFS options:
1047options 	NFS_MINATTRTIMO=3	# VREG attrib cache timeout in sec
1048options 	NFS_MAXATTRTIMO=60
1049options 	NFS_MINDIRATTRTIMO=30	# VDIR attrib cache timeout in sec
1050options 	NFS_MAXDIRATTRTIMO=60
1051options 	NFS_GATHERDELAY=10	# Default write gather delay (msec)
1052options 	NFS_WDELAYHASHSIZ=16	# and with this
1053options 	NFS_DEBUG		# Enable NFS Debugging
1054
1055# Coda stuff:
1056options 	CODA			#CODA filesystem.
1057device		vcoda			#coda minicache <-> venus comm.
1058# Use the old Coda 5.x venus<->kernel interface instead of the new
1059# realms-aware 6.x protocol.
1060#options 	CODA_COMPAT_5
1061
1062#
1063# Add support for the EXT2FS filesystem of Linux fame.  Be a bit
1064# careful with this - the ext2fs code has a tendency to lag behind
1065# changes and not be exercised very much, so mounting read/write could
1066# be dangerous (and even mounting read only could result in panics.)
1067#
1068options 	EXT2FS
1069
1070#
1071# Add support for the ReiserFS filesystem (used in Linux). Currently,
1072# this is limited to read-only access.
1073#
1074options 	REISERFS
1075
1076#
1077# Add support for the SGI XFS filesystem. Currently,
1078# this is limited to read-only access.
1079#
1080options 	XFS
1081
1082# Use real implementations of the aio_* system calls.  There are numerous
1083# stability and security issues in the current aio code that make it
1084# unsuitable for inclusion on machines with untrusted local users.
1085options 	VFS_AIO
1086
1087# Cryptographically secure random number generator; /dev/random
1088device		random
1089
1090# The system memory devices; /dev/mem, /dev/kmem
1091device		mem
1092
1093# The kernel symbol table device; /dev/ksyms
1094device		ksyms
1095
1096# Optional character code conversion support with LIBICONV.
1097# Each option requires their base file system and LIBICONV.
1098options 	CD9660_ICONV
1099options 	MSDOSFS_ICONV
1100options 	NTFS_ICONV
1101options 	UDF_ICONV
1102
1103
1104#####################################################################
1105# POSIX P1003.1B
1106
1107# Real time extensions added in the 1993 POSIX
1108# _KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING: Build in _POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING
1109
1110options 	_KPOSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING
1111# p1003_1b_semaphores are very experimental,
1112# user should be ready to assist in debugging if problems arise.
1113options 	P1003_1B_SEMAPHORES
1114
1115# POSIX message queue
1116options 	P1003_1B_MQUEUE
1117
1118#####################################################################
1119# SECURITY POLICY PARAMETERS
1120
1121# Support for BSM audit
1122options 	AUDIT
1123
1124# Support for Mandatory Access Control (MAC):
1125options 	MAC
1126options 	MAC_BIBA
1127options 	MAC_BSDEXTENDED
1128options 	MAC_IFOFF
1129options 	MAC_LOMAC
1130options 	MAC_MLS
1131options 	MAC_NONE
1132options 	MAC_PARTITION
1133options 	MAC_PORTACL
1134options 	MAC_SEEOTHERUIDS
1135options 	MAC_STUB
1136options 	MAC_TEST
1137
1138
1139#####################################################################
1140# CLOCK OPTIONS
1141
1142# The granularity of operation is controlled by the kernel option HZ whose
1143# default value (1000 on most architectures) means a granularity of 1ms
1144# (1s/HZ).  Historically, the default was 100, but finer granularity is
1145# required for DUMMYNET and other systems on modern hardware.  There are
1146# reasonable arguments that HZ should, in fact, be 100 still; consider,
1147# that reducing the granularity too much might cause excessive overhead in
1148# clock interrupt processing, potentially causing ticks to be missed and thus
1149# actually reducing the accuracy of operation.
1150
1151options 	HZ=100
1152
1153# Enable support for the kernel PLL to use an external PPS signal,
1154# under supervision of [x]ntpd(8)
1155# More info in ntpd documentation: http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~ntp
1156
1157options 	PPS_SYNC
1158
1159
1160#####################################################################
1161# SCSI DEVICES
1162
1163# SCSI DEVICE CONFIGURATION
1164
1165# The SCSI subsystem consists of the `base' SCSI code, a number of
1166# high-level SCSI device `type' drivers, and the low-level host-adapter
1167# device drivers.  The host adapters are listed in the ISA and PCI
1168# device configuration sections below.
1169#
1170# It is possible to wire down your SCSI devices so that a given bus,
1171# target, and LUN always come on line as the same device unit.  In
1172# earlier versions the unit numbers were assigned in the order that
1173# the devices were probed on the SCSI bus.  This means that if you
1174# removed a disk drive, you may have had to rewrite your /etc/fstab
1175# file, and also that you had to be careful when adding a new disk
1176# as it may have been probed earlier and moved your device configuration
1177# around.  (See also option GEOM_VOL for a different solution to this
1178# problem.)
1179
1180# This old behavior is maintained as the default behavior.  The unit
1181# assignment begins with the first non-wired down unit for a device
1182# type.  For example, if you wire a disk as "da3" then the first
1183# non-wired disk will be assigned da4.
1184
1185# The syntax for wiring down devices is:
1186
1187hint.scbus.0.at="ahc0"
1188hint.scbus.1.at="ahc1"
1189hint.scbus.1.bus="0"
1190hint.scbus.3.at="ahc2"
1191hint.scbus.3.bus="0"
1192hint.scbus.2.at="ahc2"
1193hint.scbus.2.bus="1"
1194hint.da.0.at="scbus0"
1195hint.da.0.target="0"
1196hint.da.0.unit="0"
1197hint.da.1.at="scbus3"
1198hint.da.1.target="1"
1199hint.da.2.at="scbus2"
1200hint.da.2.target="3"
1201hint.sa.1.at="scbus1"
1202hint.sa.1.target="6"
1203
1204# "units" (SCSI logical unit number) that are not specified are
1205# treated as if specified as LUN 0.
1206
1207# All SCSI devices allocate as many units as are required.
1208
1209# The ch driver drives SCSI Media Changer ("jukebox") devices.
1210#
1211# The da driver drives SCSI Direct Access ("disk") and Optical Media
1212# ("WORM") devices.
1213#
1214# The sa driver drives SCSI Sequential Access ("tape") devices.
1215#
1216# The cd driver drives SCSI Read Only Direct Access ("cd") devices.
1217#
1218# The ses driver drives SCSI Environment Services ("ses") and
1219# SAF-TE ("SCSI Accessible Fault-Tolerant Enclosure") devices.
1220#
1221# The pt driver drives SCSI Processor devices.
1222#
1223# The sg driver provides a passthrough API that is compatible with the
1224# Linux SG driver.  It will work in conjunction with the COMPAT_LINUX
1225# option to run linux SG apps.  It can also stand on its own and provide
1226# source level API compatiblity for porting apps to FreeBSD.
1227#
1228# Target Mode support is provided here but also requires that a SIM
1229# (SCSI Host Adapter Driver) provide support as well.
1230#
1231# The targ driver provides target mode support as a Processor type device.
1232# It exists to give the minimal context necessary to respond to Inquiry
1233# commands. There is a sample user application that shows how the rest
1234# of the command support might be done in /usr/share/examples/scsi_target.
1235#
1236# The targbh driver provides target mode support and exists to respond
1237# to incoming commands that do not otherwise have a logical unit assigned
1238# to them.
1239#
1240# The "unknown" device (uk? in pre-2.0.5) is now part of the base SCSI
1241# configuration as the "pass" driver.
1242
1243device		scbus		#base SCSI code
1244device		ch		#SCSI media changers
1245device		da		#SCSI direct access devices (aka disks)
1246device		sa		#SCSI tapes
1247device		cd		#SCSI CD-ROMs
1248device		ses		#SCSI Environmental Services (and SAF-TE)
1249device		pt		#SCSI processor
1250device		targ		#SCSI Target Mode Code
1251device		targbh		#SCSI Target Mode Blackhole Device
1252device		pass		#CAM passthrough driver
1253device		sg		#Linux SCSI passthrough
1254
1255# CAM OPTIONS:
1256# debugging options:
1257# -- NOTE --  If you specify one of the bus/target/lun options, you must
1258#             specify them all!
1259# CAMDEBUG: When defined enables debugging macros
1260# CAM_DEBUG_BUS:  Debug the given bus.  Use -1 to debug all busses.
1261# CAM_DEBUG_TARGET:  Debug the given target.  Use -1 to debug all targets.
1262# CAM_DEBUG_LUN:  Debug the given lun.  Use -1 to debug all luns.
1263# CAM_DEBUG_FLAGS:  OR together CAM_DEBUG_INFO, CAM_DEBUG_TRACE,
1264#                   CAM_DEBUG_SUBTRACE, and CAM_DEBUG_CDB
1265#
1266# CAM_MAX_HIGHPOWER: Maximum number of concurrent high power (start unit) cmds
1267# SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS: When defined disables sense descriptions
1268# SCSI_NO_OP_STRINGS: When defined disables opcode descriptions
1269# SCSI_DELAY: The number of MILLISECONDS to freeze the SIM (scsi adapter)
1270#             queue after a bus reset, and the number of milliseconds to
1271#             freeze the device queue after a bus device reset.  This
1272#             can be changed at boot and runtime with the
1273#             kern.cam.scsi_delay tunable/sysctl.
1274options 	CAMDEBUG
1275options 	CAM_DEBUG_BUS=-1
1276options 	CAM_DEBUG_TARGET=-1
1277options 	CAM_DEBUG_LUN=-1
1278options 	CAM_DEBUG_FLAGS=(CAM_DEBUG_INFO|CAM_DEBUG_TRACE|CAM_DEBUG_CDB)
1279options 	CAM_MAX_HIGHPOWER=4
1280options 	SCSI_NO_SENSE_STRINGS
1281options 	SCSI_NO_OP_STRINGS
1282options 	SCSI_DELAY=5000	# Be pessimistic about Joe SCSI device
1283
1284# Options for the CAM CDROM driver:
1285# CHANGER_MIN_BUSY_SECONDS: Guaranteed minimum time quantum for a changer LUN
1286# CHANGER_MAX_BUSY_SECONDS: Maximum time quantum per changer LUN, only
1287#                           enforced if there is I/O waiting for another LUN
1288# The compiled in defaults for these variables are 2 and 10 seconds,
1289# respectively.
1290#
1291# These can also be changed on the fly with the following sysctl variables:
1292# kern.cam.cd.changer.min_busy_seconds
1293# kern.cam.cd.changer.max_busy_seconds
1294#
1295options 	CHANGER_MIN_BUSY_SECONDS=2
1296options 	CHANGER_MAX_BUSY_SECONDS=10
1297
1298# Options for the CAM sequential access driver:
1299# SA_IO_TIMEOUT: Timeout for read/write/wfm  operations, in minutes
1300# SA_SPACE_TIMEOUT: Timeout for space operations, in minutes
1301# SA_REWIND_TIMEOUT: Timeout for rewind operations, in minutes
1302# SA_ERASE_TIMEOUT: Timeout for erase operations, in minutes
1303# SA_1FM_AT_EOD: Default to model which only has a default one filemark at EOT.
1304options 	SA_IO_TIMEOUT=4
1305options 	SA_SPACE_TIMEOUT=60
1306options 	SA_REWIND_TIMEOUT=(2*60)
1307options 	SA_ERASE_TIMEOUT=(4*60)
1308options 	SA_1FM_AT_EOD
1309
1310# Optional timeout for the CAM processor target (pt) device
1311# This is specified in seconds.  The default is 60 seconds.
1312options 	SCSI_PT_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT=60
1313
1314# Optional enable of doing SES passthrough on other devices (e.g., disks)
1315#
1316# Normally disabled because a lot of newer SCSI disks report themselves
1317# as having SES capabilities, but this can then clot up attempts to build
1318# build a topology with the SES device that's on the box these drives
1319# are in....
1320options 	SES_ENABLE_PASSTHROUGH
1321
1322
1323#####################################################################
1324# MISCELLANEOUS DEVICES AND OPTIONS
1325
1326device		pty		#BSD-style compatibility pseudo ttys
1327device		nmdm		#back-to-back tty devices
1328device		md		#Memory/malloc disk
1329device		snp		#Snoop device - to look at pty/vty/etc..
1330device		ccd		#Concatenated disk driver
1331device		firmware	#firmware(9) support
1332
1333# Kernel side iconv library
1334options 	LIBICONV
1335
1336# Size of the kernel message buffer.  Should be N * pagesize.
1337options 	MSGBUF_SIZE=40960
1338
1339
1340#####################################################################
1341# HARDWARE DEVICE CONFIGURATION
1342
1343# For ISA the required hints are listed.
1344# EISA, MCA, PCI, CardBus, SD/MMC and pccard are self identifying buses, so
1345# no hints are needed.
1346
1347#
1348# Mandatory devices:
1349#
1350
1351# These options are valid for other keyboard drivers as well.
1352options 	KBD_DISABLE_KEYMAP_LOAD	# refuse to load a keymap
1353options 	KBD_INSTALL_CDEV	# install a CDEV entry in /dev
1354
1355options 	FB_DEBUG		# Frame buffer debugging
1356
1357device		splash			# Splash screen and screen saver support
1358
1359# Various screen savers.
1360device		blank_saver
1361device		daemon_saver
1362device		dragon_saver
1363device		fade_saver
1364device		fire_saver
1365device		green_saver
1366device		logo_saver
1367device		rain_saver
1368device		snake_saver
1369device		star_saver
1370device		warp_saver
1371
1372# The syscons console driver (SCO color console compatible).
1373device		sc
1374hint.sc.0.at="isa"
1375options 	MAXCONS=16		# number of virtual consoles
1376options 	SC_ALT_MOUSE_IMAGE	# simplified mouse cursor in text mode
1377options 	SC_DFLT_FONT		# compile font in
1378makeoptions	SC_DFLT_FONT=cp850
1379options 	SC_DISABLE_KDBKEY	# disable `debug' key
1380options 	SC_DISABLE_REBOOT	# disable reboot key sequence
1381options 	SC_HISTORY_SIZE=200	# number of history buffer lines
1382options 	SC_MOUSE_CHAR=0x3	# char code for text mode mouse cursor
1383options 	SC_PIXEL_MODE		# add support for the raster text mode
1384
1385# The following options will let you change the default colors of syscons.
1386options 	SC_NORM_ATTR=(FG_GREEN|BG_BLACK)
1387options 	SC_NORM_REV_ATTR=(FG_YELLOW|BG_GREEN)
1388options 	SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTR=(FG_RED|BG_BLACK)
1389options 	SC_KERNEL_CONS_REV_ATTR=(FG_BLACK|BG_RED)
1390
1391# The following options will let you change the default behaviour of
1392# cut-n-paste feature
1393options 	SC_CUT_SPACES2TABS	# convert leading spaces into tabs
1394options 	SC_CUT_SEPCHARS=\"x09\"	# set of characters that delimit words
1395					# (default is single space - \"x20\")
1396
1397# If you have a two button mouse, you may want to add the following option
1398# to use the right button of the mouse to paste text.
1399options 	SC_TWOBUTTON_MOUSE
1400
1401# You can selectively disable features in syscons.
1402options 	SC_NO_CUTPASTE
1403options 	SC_NO_FONT_LOADING
1404options 	SC_NO_HISTORY
1405options 	SC_NO_MODE_CHANGE
1406options 	SC_NO_SYSMOUSE
1407options 	SC_NO_SUSPEND_VTYSWITCH
1408
1409# `flags' for sc
1410#	0x80	Put the video card in the VESA 800x600 dots, 16 color mode
1411#	0x100	Probe for a keyboard device periodically if one is not present
1412
1413# Enable experimental features of the syscons terminal emulator (teken).
1414options 	TEKEN_CONS25		# cons25-style terminal emulation
1415options 	TEKEN_UTF8		# UTF-8 output handling
1416
1417#
1418# Optional devices:
1419#
1420
1421#
1422# SCSI host adapters:
1423#
1424# adv: All Narrow SCSI bus AdvanSys controllers.
1425# adw: Second Generation AdvanSys controllers including the ADV940UW.
1426# aha: Adaptec 154x/1535/1640
1427# ahb: Adaptec 174x EISA controllers
1428# ahc: Adaptec 274x/284x/2910/293x/294x/394x/3950x/3960x/398X/4944/
1429#      19160x/29160x, aic7770/aic78xx
1430# ahd: Adaptec 29320/39320 Controllers.
1431# aic: Adaptec 6260/6360, APA-1460 (PC Card), NEC PC9801-100 (C-BUS)
1432# amd: Support for the AMD 53C974 SCSI host adapter chip as found on devices
1433#      such as the Tekram DC-390(T).
1434# bt:  Most Buslogic controllers: including BT-445, BT-54x, BT-64x, BT-74x,
1435#      BT-75x, BT-946, BT-948, BT-956, BT-958, SDC3211B, SDC3211F, SDC3222F
1436# esp: NCR53c9x.  Only for SBUS hardware right now.
1437# isp: Qlogic ISP 1020, 1040 and 1040B PCI SCSI host adapters,
1438#      ISP 1240 Dual Ultra SCSI, ISP 1080 and 1280 (Dual) Ultra2,
1439#      ISP 12160 Ultra3 SCSI,
1440#      Qlogic ISP 2100 and ISP 2200 1Gb Fibre Channel host adapters.
1441#      Qlogic ISP 2300 and ISP 2312 2Gb Fibre Channel host adapters.
1442#      Qlogic ISP 2322 and ISP 6322 2Gb Fibre Channel host adapters.
1443# ispfw: Firmware module for Qlogic host adapters
1444# mpt: LSI-Logic MPT/Fusion 53c1020 or 53c1030 Ultra4
1445#      or FC9x9 Fibre Channel host adapters.
1446# ncr: NCR 53C810, 53C825 self-contained SCSI host adapters.
1447# sym: Symbios/Logic 53C8XX family of PCI-SCSI I/O processors:
1448#      53C810, 53C810A, 53C815, 53C825,  53C825A, 53C860, 53C875,
1449#      53C876, 53C885,  53C895, 53C895A, 53C896,  53C897, 53C1510D,
1450#      53C1010-33, 53C1010-66.
1451# trm: Tekram DC395U/UW/F DC315U adapters.
1452# wds: WD7000
1453
1454#
1455# Note that the order is important in order for Buslogic ISA/EISA cards to be
1456# probed correctly.
1457#
1458device		bt
1459hint.bt.0.at="isa"
1460hint.bt.0.port="0x330"
1461device		adv
1462hint.adv.0.at="isa"
1463device		adw
1464device		aha
1465hint.aha.0.at="isa"
1466device		aic
1467hint.aic.0.at="isa"
1468device		ahb
1469device		ahc
1470device		ahd
1471device		amd
1472device		esp
1473device		iscsi_initiator
1474device		isp
1475hint.isp.0.disable="1"
1476hint.isp.0.role="3"
1477hint.isp.0.prefer_iomap="1"
1478hint.isp.0.prefer_memmap="1"
1479hint.isp.0.fwload_disable="1"
1480hint.isp.0.ignore_nvram="1"
1481hint.isp.0.fullduplex="1"
1482hint.isp.0.topology="lport"
1483hint.isp.0.topology="nport"
1484hint.isp.0.topology="lport-only"
1485hint.isp.0.topology="nport-only"
1486# we can't get u_int64_t types, nor can we get strings if it's got
1487# a leading 0x, hence this silly dodge.
1488hint.isp.0.portwnn="w50000000aaaa0000"
1489hint.isp.0.nodewnn="w50000000aaaa0001"
1490device		ispfw
1491device		mpt
1492device		ncr
1493device		sym
1494device		trm
1495device		wds
1496hint.wds.0.at="isa"
1497hint.wds.0.port="0x350"
1498hint.wds.0.irq="11"
1499hint.wds.0.drq="6"
1500
1501# The aic7xxx driver will attempt to use memory mapped I/O for all PCI
1502# controllers that have it configured only if this option is set. Unfortunately,
1503# this doesn't work on some motherboards, which prevents it from being the
1504# default.
1505options 	AHC_ALLOW_MEMIO
1506
1507# Dump the contents of the ahc controller configuration PROM.
1508options 	AHC_DUMP_EEPROM
1509
1510# Bitmap of units to enable targetmode operations.
1511options 	AHC_TMODE_ENABLE
1512
1513# Compile in Aic7xxx Debugging code.
1514options 	AHC_DEBUG
1515
1516# Aic7xxx driver debugging options. See sys/dev/aic7xxx/aic7xxx.h
1517options 	AHC_DEBUG_OPTS
1518
1519# Print register bitfields in debug output.  Adds ~128k to driver
1520# See ahc(4).
1521options 	AHC_REG_PRETTY_PRINT
1522
1523# Compile in aic79xx debugging code.
1524options 	AHD_DEBUG
1525
1526# Aic79xx driver debugging options.  Adds ~215k to driver.  See ahd(4).
1527options 	AHD_DEBUG_OPTS=0xFFFFFFFF
1528
1529# Print human-readable register definitions when debugging
1530options 	AHD_REG_PRETTY_PRINT
1531
1532# Bitmap of units to enable targetmode operations.
1533options 	AHD_TMODE_ENABLE
1534
1535# The adw driver will attempt to use memory mapped I/O for all PCI
1536# controllers that have it configured only if this option is set.
1537options 	ADW_ALLOW_MEMIO
1538
1539# Options used in dev/iscsi (Software iSCSI stack)
1540#
1541options 	ISCSI_INITIATOR_DEBUG=9
1542
1543# Options used in dev/isp/ (Qlogic SCSI/FC driver).
1544#
1545#	ISP_TARGET_MODE		-	enable target mode operation
1546#
1547options 	ISP_TARGET_MODE=1
1548#
1549#	ISP_DEFAULT_ROLES	-	default role
1550#		none=0
1551#		target=1
1552#		initiator=2
1553#		both=3			(not supported currently)
1554#
1555options 	ISP_DEFAULT_ROLES=2
1556
1557# Options used in dev/sym/ (Symbios SCSI driver).
1558#options 	SYM_SETUP_LP_PROBE_MAP	#-Low Priority Probe Map (bits)
1559					# Allows the ncr to take precedence
1560					# 1 (1<<0) -> 810a, 860
1561					# 2 (1<<1) -> 825a, 875, 885, 895
1562					# 4 (1<<2) -> 895a, 896, 1510d
1563#options 	SYM_SETUP_SCSI_DIFF	#-HVD support for 825a, 875, 885
1564					# disabled:0 (default), enabled:1
1565#options 	SYM_SETUP_PCI_PARITY	#-PCI parity checking
1566					# disabled:0, enabled:1 (default)
1567#options 	SYM_SETUP_MAX_LUN	#-Number of LUNs supported
1568					# default:8, range:[1..64]
1569
1570# The 'dpt' driver provides support for old DPT controllers (http://www.dpt.com/).
1571# These have hardware RAID-{0,1,5} support, and do multi-initiator I/O.
1572# The DPT controllers are commonly re-licensed under other brand-names -
1573# some controllers by Olivetti, Dec, HP, AT&T, SNI, AST, Alphatronic, NEC and
1574# Compaq are actually DPT controllers.
1575#
1576# See src/sys/dev/dpt for debugging and other subtle options.
1577#   DPT_MEASURE_PERFORMANCE Enables a set of (semi)invasive metrics. Various
1578#                           instruments are enabled.  The tools in
1579#                           /usr/sbin/dpt_* assume these to be enabled.
1580#   DPT_HANDLE_TIMEOUTS     Normally device timeouts are handled by the DPT.
1581#                           If you ant the driver to handle timeouts, enable
1582#                           this option.  If your system is very busy, this
1583#                           option will create more trouble than solve.
1584#   DPT_TIMEOUT_FACTOR      Used to compute the excessive amount of time to
1585#                           wait when timing out with the above option.
1586#  DPT_DEBUG_xxxx           These are controllable from sys/dev/dpt/dpt.h
1587#  DPT_LOST_IRQ             When enabled, will try, once per second, to catch
1588#                           any interrupt that got lost.  Seems to help in some
1589#                           DPT-firmware/Motherboard combinations.  Minimal
1590#                           cost, great benefit.
1591#  DPT_RESET_HBA            Make "reset" actually reset the controller
1592#                           instead of fudging it.  Only enable this if you
1593#			    are 100% certain you need it.
1594
1595device		dpt
1596
1597# DPT options
1598#!CAM# options 	DPT_MEASURE_PERFORMANCE
1599#!CAM# options 	DPT_HANDLE_TIMEOUTS
1600options 	DPT_TIMEOUT_FACTOR=4
1601options 	DPT_LOST_IRQ
1602options 	DPT_RESET_HBA
1603
1604#
1605# Compaq "CISS" RAID controllers (SmartRAID 5* series)
1606# These controllers have a SCSI-like interface, and require the
1607# CAM infrastructure.
1608#
1609device		ciss
1610
1611#
1612# Intel Integrated RAID controllers.
1613# This driver was developed and is maintained by Intel.  Contacts
1614# at Intel for this driver are
1615# "Kannanthanam, Boji T" <boji.t.kannanthanam@intel.com> and
1616# "Leubner, Achim" <achim.leubner@intel.com>.
1617#
1618device		iir
1619
1620#
1621# Mylex AcceleRAID and eXtremeRAID controllers with v6 and later
1622# firmware.  These controllers have a SCSI-like interface, and require
1623# the CAM infrastructure.
1624#
1625device		mly
1626
1627#
1628# Compaq Smart RAID, Mylex DAC960 and AMI MegaRAID controllers.  Only
1629# one entry is needed; the code will find and configure all supported
1630# controllers.
1631#
1632device		ida		# Compaq Smart RAID
1633device		mlx		# Mylex DAC960
1634device		amr		# AMI MegaRAID
1635device		amrp		# SCSI Passthrough interface (optional, CAM req.)
1636device		mfi		# LSI MegaRAID SAS
1637device		mfip		# LSI MegaRAID SAS passthrough, requires CAM
1638options 	MFI_DEBUG
1639
1640#
1641# 3ware ATA RAID
1642#
1643device		twe		# 3ware ATA RAID
1644
1645#
1646# Serial ATA host controllers:
1647#
1648# ahci: Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI) compatible
1649# siis: SiliconImage SiI3124/SiI3132/SiI3531 controllers
1650#
1651# These drivers are part of cam(4) subsystem. They supersede less featured
1652# ata(4) subsystem drivers, supporting same hardware.
1653
1654device		ahci
1655device		siis
1656
1657#
1658# The 'ATA' driver supports all ATA and ATAPI devices, including PC Card
1659# devices. You only need one "device ata" for it to find all
1660# PCI and PC Card ATA/ATAPI devices on modern machines.
1661# Alternatively, individual bus and chipset drivers may be chosen by using
1662# the 'atacore' driver then selecting the drivers on a per vendor basis.
1663# For example to build a system which only supports a VIA chipset,
1664# omit 'ata' and include the 'atacore', 'atapci' and 'atavia' drivers.
1665device		ata
1666device		atadisk		# ATA disk drives
1667device		ataraid		# ATA RAID drives
1668device		atapicd		# ATAPI CDROM drives
1669device		atapifd		# ATAPI floppy drives
1670device		atapist		# ATAPI tape drives
1671device		atapicam	# emulate ATAPI devices as SCSI ditto via CAM
1672				# needs CAM to be present (scbus & pass)
1673
1674# Modular ATA
1675#device		atacore		# Core ATA functionality
1676#device		atacard		# CARDBUS support
1677#device		atabus		# PC98 cbus support
1678#device		ataisa		# ISA bus support
1679#device		atapci		# PCI bus support; only generic chipset support
1680
1681# PCI ATA chipsets
1682#device		ataahci		# AHCI SATA
1683#device		ataacard	# ACARD
1684#device		ataacerlabs	# Acer Labs Inc. (ALI)
1685#device		ataadaptec	# Adaptec
1686#device		ataamd		# American Micro Devices (AMD)
1687#device		ataati		# ATI
1688#device		atacenatek	# Cenatek
1689#device		atacypress	# Cypress
1690#device		atacyrix	# Cyrix
1691#device		atahighpoint	# HighPoint
1692#device		ataintel	# Intel
1693#device		ataite		# Integrated Technology Inc. (ITE)
1694#device		atajmicron	# JMicron
1695#device		atamarvell	# Marvell
1696#device		atamicron	# Micron
1697#device		atanational	# National
1698#device		atanetcell	# NetCell
1699#device		atanvidia	# nVidia
1700#device		atapromise	# Promise
1701#device		ataserverworks	# ServerWorks
1702#device		atasiliconimage	# Silicon Image Inc. (SiI) (formerly CMD)
1703#device		atasis		# Silicon Integrated Systems Corp.(SiS)
1704#device		atavia		# VIA Technologies Inc.
1705
1706#
1707# For older non-PCI, non-PnPBIOS systems, these are the hints lines to add:
1708hint.ata.0.at="isa"
1709hint.ata.0.port="0x1f0"
1710hint.ata.0.irq="14"
1711hint.ata.1.at="isa"
1712hint.ata.1.port="0x170"
1713hint.ata.1.irq="15"
1714
1715#
1716# The following options are valid on the ATA driver:
1717#
1718# ATA_STATIC_ID:	controller numbering is static ie depends on location
1719#			else the device numbers are dynamically allocated.
1720# ATA_REQUEST_TIMEOUT:	the number of seconds to wait for an ATA request
1721#			before timing out.
1722# ATA_CAM:		Turn ata(4) subsystem controller drivers into cam(4)
1723#			interface modules. This deprecates all ata(4)
1724#			peripheral device drivers (atadisk, ataraid, atapicd,
1725#			atapifd. atapist, atapicam) and all user-level APIs.
1726#			cam(4) drivers and APIs will be connected instead.
1727
1728options 	ATA_STATIC_ID
1729#options 	ATA_REQUEST_TIMEOUT=10
1730#options 	ATA_CAM
1731
1732#
1733# Standard floppy disk controllers and floppy tapes, supports
1734# the Y-E DATA External FDD (PC Card)
1735#
1736device		fdc
1737hint.fdc.0.at="isa"
1738hint.fdc.0.port="0x3F0"
1739hint.fdc.0.irq="6"
1740hint.fdc.0.drq="2"
1741#
1742# FDC_DEBUG enables floppy debugging.  Since the debug output is huge, you
1743# gotta turn it actually on by setting the variable fd_debug with DDB,
1744# however.
1745options 	FDC_DEBUG
1746#
1747# Activate this line if you happen to have an Insight floppy tape.
1748# Probing them proved to be dangerous for people with floppy disks only,
1749# so it's "hidden" behind a flag:
1750#hint.fdc.0.flags="1"
1751
1752# Specify floppy devices
1753hint.fd.0.at="fdc0"
1754hint.fd.0.drive="0"
1755hint.fd.1.at="fdc0"
1756hint.fd.1.drive="1"
1757
1758#
1759# uart: newbusified driver for serial interfaces.  It consolidates the sio(4),
1760#	sab(4) and zs(4) drivers.
1761#
1762device		uart
1763
1764# Options for uart(4)
1765options 	UART_PPS_ON_CTS		# Do time pulse capturing using CTS
1766					# instead of DCD.
1767
1768# The following hint should only be used for pure ISA devices.  It is not
1769# needed otherwise.  Use of hints is strongly discouraged.
1770hint.uart.0.at="isa"
1771
1772# The following 3 hints are used when the UART is a system device (i.e., a
1773# console or debug port), but only on platforms that don't have any other
1774# means to pass the information to the kernel.  The unit number of the hint
1775# is only used to bundle the hints together.  There is no relation to the
1776# unit number of the probed UART.
1777hint.uart.0.port="0x3f8"
1778hint.uart.0.flags="0x10"
1779hint.uart.0.baud="115200"
1780
1781# `flags' for serial drivers that support consoles like sio(4) and uart(4):
1782#	0x10	enable console support for this unit.  Other console flags
1783#		(if applicable) are ignored unless this is set.  Enabling
1784#		console support does not make the unit the preferred console.
1785#		Boot with -h or set boot_serial=YES in the loader.  For sio(4)
1786#		specifically, the 0x20 flag can also be set (see above).
1787#		Currently, at most one unit can have console support; the
1788#		first one (in config file order) with this flag set is
1789#		preferred.  Setting this flag for sio0 gives the old behaviour.
1790#	0x80	use this port for serial line gdb support in ddb.  Also known
1791#		as debug port.
1792#
1793
1794# Options for serial drivers that support consoles:
1795options 	BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER	# A BREAK on a serial console goes to
1796					# ddb, if available.
1797
1798# Solaris implements a new BREAK which is initiated by a character
1799# sequence CR ~ ^b which is similar to a familiar pattern used on
1800# Sun servers by the Remote Console.  There are FreeBSD extentions:
1801# CR ~ ^p requests force panic and CR ~ ^r requests a clean reboot.
1802options 	ALT_BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER
1803
1804# Serial Communications Controller
1805# Supports the Siemens SAB 82532 and Zilog Z8530 multi-channel
1806# communications controllers.
1807device		scc
1808
1809# PCI Universal Communications driver
1810# Supports various multi port PCI I/O cards.
1811device		puc
1812
1813#
1814# Network interfaces:
1815#
1816# MII bus support is required for many PCI Ethernet NICs,
1817# namely those which use MII-compliant transceivers or implement
1818# transceiver control interfaces that operate like an MII.  Adding
1819# "device miibus" to the kernel config pulls in support for
1820# the generic miibus API and all of the PHY drivers, including a
1821# generic one for PHYs that aren't specifically handled by an
1822# individual driver.  Support for specific PHYs may be built by adding
1823# "device mii" then adding the appropriate PHY driver.
1824device  	miibus		# MII support including all PHYs
1825device  	mii		# Minimal MII support
1826
1827device  	acphy		# Altima Communications AC101
1828device  	amphy		# AMD AM79c873 / Davicom DM910{1,2}
1829device  	atphy		# Attansic/Atheros F1
1830device  	axphy		# Asix Semiconductor AX88x9x
1831device  	bmtphy		# Broadcom BCM5201/BCM5202 and 3Com 3c905C
1832device  	brgphy		# Broadcom BCM54xx/57xx 1000baseTX
1833device  	ciphy		# Cicada/Vitesse CS/VSC8xxx
1834device  	e1000phy	# Marvell 88E1000 1000/100/10-BT
1835device  	exphy		# 3Com internal PHY
1836device  	gentbi		# Generic 10-bit 1000BASE-{LX,SX} fiber ifaces
1837device  	icsphy		# ICS ICS1889-1893
1838device  	inphy		# Intel 82553/82555
1839device  	ip1000phy	# IC Plus IP1000A/IP1001
1840device  	jmphy		# JMicron JMP211/JMP202
1841device  	lxtphy		# Level One LXT-970
1842device  	mlphy		# Micro Linear 6692
1843device  	nsgphy		# NatSemi DP8361/DP83865/DP83891
1844device  	nsphy		# NatSemi DP83840A
1845device  	nsphyter	# NatSemi DP83843/DP83815
1846device  	pnaphy		# HomePNA
1847device  	qsphy		# Quality Semiconductor QS6612
1848device  	rgephy		# RealTek 8169S/8110S/8211B/8211C
1849device  	rlphy		# RealTek 8139
1850device  	rlswitch	# RealTek 8305
1851device  	ruephy		# RealTek RTL8150
1852device  	smcphy		# SMSC LAN91C111
1853device  	tdkphy		# TDK 89Q2120
1854device  	tlphy		# Texas Instruments ThunderLAN
1855device  	truephy		# LSI TruePHY
1856device		xmphy		# XaQti XMAC II
1857
1858# an:   Aironet 4500/4800 802.11 wireless adapters. Supports the PCMCIA,
1859#       PCI and ISA varieties.
1860# ae:   Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Attansic/Atheros
1861#       L2 PCI-Express FastEthernet controllers.
1862# age:  Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Attansic/Atheros
1863#       L1 PCI express gigabit ethernet controllers.
1864# alc:  Support for Atheros AR8131/AR8132 PCIe ethernet controllers.
1865# ale:  Support for Atheros AR8121/AR8113/AR8114 PCIe ethernet controllers.
1866# ath:  Atheros a/b/g WiFi adapters (requires ath_hal and wlan)
1867# bce:	Broadcom NetXtreme II (BCM5706/BCM5708) PCI/PCIe Gigabit Ethernet
1868#       adapters.
1869# bfe:	Broadcom BCM4401 Ethernet adapter.
1870# bge:	Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Broadcom
1871#	BCM570x family of controllers, including the 3Com 3c996-T,
1872#	the Netgear GA302T, the SysKonnect SK-9D21 and SK-9D41, and
1873#	the embedded gigE NICs on Dell PowerEdge 2550 servers.
1874# bwi:	Broadcom BCM430* and BCM431* family of wireless adapters.
1875# cas:	Sun Cassini/Cassini+ and National Semiconductor DP83065 Saturn
1876# cm:	Arcnet SMC COM90c26 / SMC COM90c56
1877#	(and SMC COM90c66 in '56 compatibility mode) adapters.
1878# dc:   Support for PCI fast ethernet adapters based on the DEC/Intel 21143
1879#       and various workalikes including:
1880#       the ADMtek AL981 Comet and AN985 Centaur, the ASIX Electronics
1881#       AX88140A and AX88141, the Davicom DM9100 and DM9102, the Lite-On
1882#       82c168 and 82c169 PNIC, the Lite-On/Macronix LC82C115 PNIC II
1883#       and the Macronix 98713/98713A/98715/98715A/98725 PMAC. This driver
1884#       replaces the old al, ax, dm, pn and mx drivers.  List of brands:
1885#       Digital DE500-BA, Kingston KNE100TX, D-Link DFE-570TX, SOHOware SFA110,
1886#       SVEC PN102-TX, CNet Pro110B, 120A, and 120B, Compex RL100-TX,
1887#       LinkSys LNE100TX, LNE100TX V2.0, Jaton XpressNet, Alfa Inc GFC2204,
1888#       KNE110TX.
1889# de:   Digital Equipment DC21040
1890# em:   Intel Pro/1000 Gigabit Ethernet 82542, 82543, 82544 based adapters.
1891# igb:  Intel Pro/1000 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet: 82575 and later adapters.
1892# ep:   3Com 3C509, 3C529, 3C556, 3C562D, 3C563D, 3C572, 3C574X, 3C579, 3C589
1893#       and PC Card devices using these chipsets.
1894# ex:   Intel EtherExpress Pro/10 and other i82595-based adapters,
1895#       Olicom Ethernet PC Card devices.
1896# fe:   Fujitsu MB86960A/MB86965A Ethernet
1897# fea:  DEC DEFEA EISA FDDI adapter
1898# fpa:  Support for the Digital DEFPA PCI FDDI. `device fddi' is also needed.
1899# fxp:  Intel EtherExpress Pro/100B
1900#	(hint of prefer_iomap can be done to prefer I/O instead of Mem mapping)
1901# gem:  Apple GMAC/Sun ERI/Sun GEM
1902# hme:  Sun HME (Happy Meal Ethernet)
1903# jme:  JMicron JMC260 Fast Ethernet/JMC250 Gigabit Ethernet based adapters.
1904# le:   AMD Am7900 LANCE and Am79C9xx PCnet
1905# lge:	Support for PCI gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Level 1
1906#	LXT1001 NetCellerator chipset. This includes the D-Link DGE-500SX,
1907#	SMC TigerCard 1000 (SMC9462SX), and some Addtron cards.
1908# msk:	Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Marvell/SysKonnect
1909#	Yukon II Gigabit controllers, including 88E8021, 88E8022, 88E8061,
1910#	88E8062, 88E8035, 88E8036, 88E8038, 88E8050, 88E8052, 88E8053,
1911#	88E8055, 88E8056 and D-Link 560T/550SX.
1912# lmc:	Support for the LMC/SBE wide-area network interface cards.
1913# my:	Myson Fast Ethernet (MTD80X, MTD89X)
1914# nge:	Support for PCI gigabit ethernet adapters based on the National
1915#	Semiconductor DP83820 and DP83821 chipset. This includes the
1916#	SMC EZ Card 1000 (SMC9462TX), D-Link DGE-500T, Asante FriendlyNet
1917#	GigaNIX 1000TA and 1000TPC, the Addtron AEG320T, the Surecom
1918#	EP-320G-TX and the Netgear GA622T.
1919# pcn:	Support for PCI fast ethernet adapters based on the AMD Am79c97x
1920#	PCnet-FAST, PCnet-FAST+, PCnet-FAST III, PCnet-PRO and PCnet-Home
1921#	chipsets. These can also be handled by the le(4) driver if the
1922#	pcn(4) driver is left out of the kernel. The le(4) driver does not
1923#	support the additional features like the MII bus and burst mode of
1924#	the PCnet-FAST and greater chipsets though.
1925# ral:	Ralink Technology IEEE 802.11 wireless adapter
1926# re:   RealTek 8139C+/8169/816xS/811xS/8101E PCI/PCIe Ethernet adapter
1927# rl:   Support for PCI fast ethernet adapters based on the RealTek 8129/8139
1928#       chipset.  Note that the RealTek driver defaults to using programmed
1929#       I/O to do register accesses because memory mapped mode seems to cause
1930#       severe lockups on SMP hardware.  This driver also supports the
1931#       Accton EN1207D `Cheetah' adapter, which uses a chip called
1932#       the MPX 5030/5038, which is either a RealTek in disguise or a
1933#       RealTek workalike.  Note that the D-Link DFE-530TX+ uses the RealTek
1934#       chipset and is supported by this driver, not the 'vr' driver.
1935# sf:   Support for Adaptec Duralink PCI fast ethernet adapters based on the
1936#       Adaptec AIC-6915 "starfire" controller.
1937#       This includes dual and quad port cards, as well as one 100baseFX card.
1938#       Most of these are 64-bit PCI devices, except for one single port
1939#       card which is 32-bit.
1940# sis:  Support for NICs based on the Silicon Integrated Systems SiS 900,
1941#       SiS 7016 and NS DP83815 PCI fast ethernet controller chips.
1942# sk:   Support for the SysKonnect SK-984x series PCI gigabit ethernet NICs.
1943#       This includes the SK-9841 and SK-9842 single port cards (single mode
1944#       and multimode fiber) and the SK-9843 and SK-9844 dual port cards
1945#       (also single mode and multimode).
1946#       The driver will autodetect the number of ports on the card and
1947#       attach each one as a separate network interface.
1948# sn:   Support for ISA and PC Card Ethernet devices using the
1949#       SMC91C90/92/94/95 chips.
1950# ste:  Sundance Technologies ST201 PCI fast ethernet controller, includes
1951#       the D-Link DFE-550TX.
1952# stge: Support for gigabit ethernet adapters based on the Sundance/Tamarack
1953#       TC9021 family of controllers, including the Sundance ST2021/ST2023,
1954#       the Sundance/Tamarack TC9021, the D-Link DL-4000 and ASUS NX1101.
1955# ti:   Support for PCI gigabit ethernet NICs based on the Alteon Networks
1956#       Tigon 1 and Tigon 2 chipsets.  This includes the Alteon AceNIC, the
1957#       3Com 3c985, the Netgear GA620 and various others.  Note that you will
1958#       probably want to bump up kern.ipc.nmbclusters a lot to use this driver.
1959# tl:   Support for the Texas Instruments TNETE100 series 'ThunderLAN'
1960#       cards and integrated ethernet controllers.  This includes several
1961#       Compaq Netelligent 10/100 cards and the built-in ethernet controllers
1962#       in several Compaq Prosignia, Proliant and Deskpro systems.  It also
1963#       supports several Olicom 10Mbps and 10/100 boards.
1964# tx:   SMC 9432 TX, BTX and FTX cards. (SMC EtherPower II series)
1965# txp:	Support for 3Com 3cR990 cards with the "Typhoon" chipset
1966# vr:   Support for various fast ethernet adapters based on the VIA
1967#       Technologies VT3043 `Rhine I' and VT86C100A `Rhine II' chips,
1968#       including the D-Link DFE530TX (see 'rl' for DFE530TX+), the Hawking
1969#       Technologies PN102TX, and the AOpen/Acer ALN-320.
1970# vx:   3Com 3C590 and 3C595
1971# wb:   Support for fast ethernet adapters based on the Winbond W89C840F chip.
1972#       Note: this is not the same as the Winbond W89C940F, which is a
1973#       NE2000 clone.
1974# wi:   Lucent WaveLAN/IEEE 802.11 PCMCIA adapters. Note: this supports both
1975#       the PCMCIA and ISA cards: the ISA card is really a PCMCIA to ISA
1976#       bridge with a PCMCIA adapter plugged into it.
1977# xe:   Xircom/Intel EtherExpress Pro100/16 PC Card ethernet controller,
1978#       Accton Fast EtherCard-16, Compaq Netelligent 10/100 PC Card,
1979#       Toshiba 10/100 Ethernet PC Card, Xircom 16-bit Ethernet + Modem 56
1980# xl:   Support for the 3Com 3c900, 3c905, 3c905B and 3c905C (Fast)
1981#       Etherlink XL cards and integrated controllers.  This includes the
1982#       integrated 3c905B-TX chips in certain Dell Optiplex and Dell
1983#       Precision desktop machines and the integrated 3c905-TX chips
1984#       in Dell Latitude laptop docking stations.
1985#       Also supported: 3Com 3c980(C)-TX, 3Com 3cSOHO100-TX, 3Com 3c450-TX
1986
1987# Order for ISA/EISA devices is important here
1988
1989device		cm
1990hint.cm.0.at="isa"
1991hint.cm.0.port="0x2e0"
1992hint.cm.0.irq="9"
1993hint.cm.0.maddr="0xdc000"
1994device		ep
1995device		ex
1996device		fe
1997hint.fe.0.at="isa"
1998hint.fe.0.port="0x300"
1999device		fea
2000device		sn
2001hint.sn.0.at="isa"
2002hint.sn.0.port="0x300"
2003hint.sn.0.irq="10"
2004device		an
2005device		wi
2006device		xe
2007
2008# PCI Ethernet NICs that use the common MII bus controller code.
2009device		ae		# Attansic/Atheros L2 FastEthernet
2010device		age		# Attansic/Atheros L1 Gigabit Ethernet
2011device		alc		# Atheros AR8131/AR8132 Ethernet
2012device		ale		# Atheros AR8121/AR8113/AR8114 Ethernet
2013device		bce		# Broadcom BCM5706/BCM5708 Gigabit Ethernet
2014device		bfe		# Broadcom BCM440x 10/100 Ethernet
2015device		bge		# Broadcom BCM570xx Gigabit Ethernet
2016device		cas		# Sun Cassini/Cassini+ and NS DP83065 Saturn
2017device		cxgb		# Chelsio T3 10 Gigabit Ethernet
2018device		cxgb_t3fw	# Chelsio T3 10 Gigabit Ethernet firmware
2019device		dc		# DEC/Intel 21143 and various workalikes
2020device		et		# Agere ET1310 10/100/Gigabit Ethernet
2021device		fxp		# Intel EtherExpress PRO/100B (82557, 82558)
2022hint.fxp.0.prefer_iomap="0"
2023device		gem		# Apple GMAC/Sun ERI/Sun GEM
2024device		hme		# Sun HME (Happy Meal Ethernet)
2025device		jme		# JMicron JMC250 Gigabit/JMC260 Fast Ethernet
2026device		lge		# Level 1 LXT1001 gigabit Ethernet
2027device		msk		# Marvell/SysKonnect Yukon II Gigabit Ethernet
2028device		my		# Myson Fast Ethernet (MTD80X, MTD89X)
2029device		nge		# NatSemi DP83820 gigabit Ethernet
2030device		re		# RealTek 8139C+/8169/8169S/8110S
2031device		rl		# RealTek 8129/8139
2032device		pcn		# AMD Am79C97x PCI 10/100 NICs
2033device		sf		# Adaptec AIC-6915 (``Starfire'')
2034device		sis		# Silicon Integrated Systems SiS 900/SiS 7016
2035device		sk		# SysKonnect SK-984x & SK-982x gigabit Ethernet
2036device		ste		# Sundance ST201 (D-Link DFE-550TX)
2037device		stge		# Sundance/Tamarack TC9021 gigabit Ethernet
2038device		tl		# Texas Instruments ThunderLAN
2039device		tx		# SMC EtherPower II (83c170 ``EPIC'')
2040device		vr		# VIA Rhine, Rhine II
2041device		wb		# Winbond W89C840F
2042device		xl		# 3Com 3c90x (``Boomerang'', ``Cyclone'')
2043
2044# PCI Ethernet NICs.
2045device		de		# DEC/Intel DC21x4x (``Tulip'')
2046device		em		# Intel Pro/1000 Gigabit Ethernet
2047device		igb		# Intel Pro/1000 PCIE Gigabit Ethernet
2048device		ixgb		# Intel Pro/10Gbe PCI-X Ethernet
2049device		ixgbe		# Intel Pro/10Gbe PCIE Ethernet
2050device		le		# AMD Am7900 LANCE and Am79C9xx PCnet
2051device		mxge		# Myricom Myri-10G 10GbE NIC
2052device		nxge		# Neterion Xframe 10GbE Server/Storage Adapter
2053device		ti		# Alteon Networks Tigon I/II gigabit Ethernet
2054device		txp		# 3Com 3cR990 (``Typhoon'')
2055device		vx		# 3Com 3c590, 3c595 (``Vortex'')
2056
2057# PCI FDDI NICs.
2058device		fpa
2059
2060# PCI WAN adapters.
2061device		lmc
2062
2063# PCI IEEE 802.11 Wireless NICs
2064device		ath		# Atheros pci/cardbus NIC's
2065device		ath_hal		# pci/cardbus chip support
2066#device		ath_ar5210	# AR5210 chips
2067#device		ath_ar5211	# AR5211 chips
2068#device		ath_ar5212	# AR5212 chips
2069#device		ath_rf2413
2070#device		ath_rf2417
2071#device		ath_rf2425
2072#device		ath_rf5111
2073#device		ath_rf5112
2074#device		ath_rf5413
2075#device		ath_ar5416	# AR5416 chips
2076options 	AH_SUPPORT_AR5416	# enable AR5416 tx/rx descriptors
2077#device		ath_ar9160	# AR9160 chips
2078#device		ath_ar9280	# AR9280 chips
2079device		ath_rate_sample	# SampleRate tx rate control for ath
2080device		bwi		# Broadcom BCM430* BCM431*
2081device		ral		# Ralink Technology RT2500 wireless NICs.
2082
2083# Use "private" jumbo buffers allocated exclusively for the ti(4) driver.
2084# This option is incompatible with the TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT option below.
2085#options 	TI_PRIVATE_JUMBOS
2086# Turn on the header splitting option for the ti(4) driver firmware.  This
2087# only works for Tigon II chips, and has no effect for Tigon I chips.
2088options 	TI_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT
2089
2090#
2091# Use header splitting feature on bce(4) adapters.
2092# This may help to reduce the amount of jumbo-sized memory buffers used.
2093#
2094options		BCE_JUMBO_HDRSPLIT
2095
2096# These two options allow manipulating the mbuf cluster size and mbuf size,
2097# respectively.  Be very careful with NIC driver modules when changing
2098# these from their default values, because that can potentially cause a
2099# mismatch between the mbuf size assumed by the kernel and the mbuf size
2100# assumed by a module.  The only driver that currently has the ability to
2101# detect a mismatch is ti(4).
2102options 	MCLSHIFT=12	# mbuf cluster shift in bits, 12 == 4KB
2103options 	MSIZE=512	# mbuf size in bytes
2104
2105#
2106# ATM related options (Cranor version)
2107# (note: this driver cannot be used with the HARP ATM stack)
2108#
2109# The `en' device provides support for Efficient Networks (ENI)
2110# ENI-155 PCI midway cards, and the Adaptec 155Mbps PCI ATM cards (ANA-59x0).
2111#
2112# The `hatm' device provides support for Fore/Marconi HE155 and HE622
2113# ATM PCI cards.
2114#
2115# The `fatm' device provides support for Fore PCA200E ATM PCI cards.
2116#
2117# The `patm' device provides support for IDT77252 based cards like
2118# ProSum's ProATM-155 and ProATM-25 and IDT's evaluation boards.
2119#
2120# atm device provides generic atm functions and is required for
2121# atm devices.
2122# NATM enables the netnatm protocol family that can be used to
2123# bypass TCP/IP.
2124#
2125# utopia provides the access to the ATM PHY chips and is required for en,
2126# hatm and fatm.
2127#
2128# the current driver supports only PVC operations (no atm-arp, no multicast).
2129# for more details, please read the original documents at
2130# http://www.ccrc.wustl.edu/pub/chuck/tech/bsdatm/bsdatm.html
2131#
2132device		atm
2133device		en
2134device		fatm			#Fore PCA200E
2135device		hatm			#Fore/Marconi HE155/622
2136device		patm			#IDT77252 cards (ProATM and IDT)
2137device		utopia			#ATM PHY driver
2138#options 	NATM			#native ATM
2139
2140options 	LIBMBPOOL		#needed by patm, iatm
2141
2142#
2143# Sound drivers
2144#
2145# sound: The generic sound driver.
2146#
2147
2148device		sound
2149
2150#
2151# snd_*: Device-specific drivers.
2152#
2153# The flags of the device tells the device a bit more info about the
2154# device that normally is obtained through the PnP interface.
2155#	bit  2..0   secondary DMA channel;
2156#	bit  4      set if the board uses two dma channels;
2157#	bit 15..8   board type, overrides autodetection; leave it
2158#		    zero if don't know what to put in (and you don't,
2159#		    since this is unsupported at the moment...).
2160#
2161# snd_ad1816:		Analog Devices AD1816 ISA PnP/non-PnP.
2162# snd_als4000:		Avance Logic ALS4000 PCI.
2163# snd_atiixp:		ATI IXP 200/300/400 PCI.
2164# snd_audiocs:		Crystal Semiconductor CS4231 SBus/EBus. Only
2165#			for sparc64.
2166# snd_cmi:		CMedia CMI8338/CMI8738 PCI.
2167# snd_cs4281:		Crystal Semiconductor CS4281 PCI.
2168# snd_csa:		Crystal Semiconductor CS461x/428x PCI. (except
2169#			4281)
2170# snd_ds1:		Yamaha DS-1 PCI.
2171# snd_emu10k1:		Creative EMU10K1 PCI and EMU10K2 (Audigy) PCI.
2172# snd_emu10kx:		Creative SoundBlaster Live! and Audigy
2173# snd_envy24:		VIA Envy24 and compatible, needs snd_spicds.
2174# snd_envy24ht:		VIA Envy24HT and compatible, needs snd_spicds.
2175# snd_es137x:		Ensoniq AudioPCI ES137x PCI.
2176# snd_ess:		Ensoniq ESS ISA PnP/non-PnP, to be used in
2177#			conjunction with snd_sbc.
2178# snd_fm801:		Forte Media FM801 PCI.
2179# snd_gusc:		Gravis UltraSound ISA PnP/non-PnP.
2180# snd_hda:		Intel High Definition Audio (Controller) and
2181#			compatible.
2182# snd_ich:		Intel ICH AC'97 and some more audio controllers
2183#			embedded in a chipset, for example nVidia
2184#			nForce controllers.
2185# snd_maestro:		ESS Technology Maestro-1/2x PCI.
2186# snd_maestro3:		ESS Technology Maestro-3/Allegro PCI.
2187# snd_mss:		Microsoft Sound System ISA PnP/non-PnP.
2188# snd_neomagic:		Neomagic 256 AV/ZX PCI.
2189# snd_sb16:		Creative SoundBlaster16, to be used in
2190#			conjunction with snd_sbc.
2191# snd_sb8:		Creative SoundBlaster (pre-16), to be used in
2192#			conjunction with snd_sbc.
2193# snd_sbc:		Creative SoundBlaster ISA PnP/non-PnP.
2194#			Supports ESS and Avance ISA chips as well.
2195# snd_spicds:		SPI codec driver, needed by Envy24/Envy24HT drivers.
2196# snd_solo:		ESS Solo-1x PCI.
2197# snd_t4dwave:		Trident 4DWave DX/NX PCI, Sis 7018 PCI and Acer Labs
2198#			M5451 PCI.
2199# snd_via8233:		VIA VT8233x PCI.
2200# snd_via82c686:	VIA VT82C686A PCI.
2201# snd_vibes:		S3 Sonicvibes PCI.
2202# snd_uaudio:		USB audio.
2203
2204device		snd_ad1816
2205device		snd_als4000
2206device		snd_atiixp
2207#device		snd_audiocs
2208device		snd_cmi
2209device		snd_cs4281
2210device		snd_csa
2211device		snd_ds1
2212device		snd_emu10k1
2213device		snd_emu10kx
2214device		snd_envy24
2215device		snd_envy24ht
2216device		snd_es137x
2217device		snd_ess
2218device		snd_fm801
2219device		snd_gusc
2220device		snd_hda
2221device		snd_ich
2222device		snd_maestro
2223device		snd_maestro3
2224device		snd_mss
2225device		snd_neomagic
2226device		snd_sb16
2227device		snd_sb8
2228device		snd_sbc
2229device		snd_solo
2230device		snd_spicds
2231device		snd_t4dwave
2232device		snd_via8233
2233device		snd_via82c686
2234device		snd_vibes
2235device		snd_uaudio
2236
2237# For non-PnP sound cards:
2238hint.pcm.0.at="isa"
2239hint.pcm.0.irq="10"
2240hint.pcm.0.drq="1"
2241hint.pcm.0.flags="0x0"
2242hint.sbc.0.at="isa"
2243hint.sbc.0.port="0x220"
2244hint.sbc.0.irq="5"
2245hint.sbc.0.drq="1"
2246hint.sbc.0.flags="0x15"
2247hint.gusc.0.at="isa"
2248hint.gusc.0.port="0x220"
2249hint.gusc.0.irq="5"
2250hint.gusc.0.drq="1"
2251hint.gusc.0.flags="0x13"
2252
2253#
2254# Following options are intended for debugging/testing purposes:
2255#
2256# SND_DEBUG                    Enable extra debugging code that includes
2257#                              sanity checking and possible increase of
2258#                              verbosity.
2259#
2260# SND_DIAGNOSTIC               Simmilar in a spirit of INVARIANTS/DIAGNOSTIC,
2261#                              zero tolerance against inconsistencies.
2262#
2263# SND_FEEDER_MULTIFORMAT       By default, only 16/32 bit feeders are compiled
2264#                              in. This options enable most feeder converters
2265#                              except for 8bit. WARNING: May bloat the kernel.
2266#
2267# SND_FEEDER_FULL_MULTIFORMAT  Ditto, but includes 8bit feeders as well.
2268#
2269# SND_FEEDER_RATE_HP           (feeder_rate) High precision 64bit arithmetic
2270#                              as much as possible (the default trying to
2271#                              avoid it). Possible slowdown.
2272#
2273# SND_PCM_64                   (Only applicable for i386/32bit arch)
2274#                              Process 32bit samples through 64bit
2275#                              integer/arithmetic. Slight increase of dynamic
2276#                              range at a cost of possible slowdown.
2277#
2278# SND_OLDSTEREO                Only 2 channels are allowed, effectively
2279#                              disabling multichannel processing.
2280#
2281options		SND_DEBUG
2282options		SND_DIAGNOSTIC
2283options		SND_FEEDER_MULTIFORMAT
2284options		SND_FEEDER_FULL_MULTIFORMAT
2285options		SND_FEEDER_RATE_HP
2286options		SND_PCM_64
2287options		SND_OLDSTEREO
2288
2289#
2290# IEEE-488 hardware:
2291# pcii:		PCIIA cards (uPD7210 based isa cards)
2292# tnt4882:	National Instruments PCI-GPIB card.
2293
2294device	pcii
2295hint.pcii.0.at="isa"
2296hint.pcii.0.port="0x2e1"
2297hint.pcii.0.irq="5"
2298hint.pcii.0.drq="1"
2299
2300device	tnt4882
2301
2302#
2303# Miscellaneous hardware:
2304#
2305# scd: Sony CD-ROM using proprietary (non-ATAPI) interface
2306# mcd: Mitsumi CD-ROM using proprietary (non-ATAPI) interface
2307# bktr: Brooktree bt848/848a/849a/878/879 video capture and TV Tuner board
2308# joy: joystick (including IO DATA PCJOY PC Card joystick)
2309# cmx: OmniKey CardMan 4040 pccard smartcard reader
2310
2311# Mitsumi CD-ROM
2312device		mcd
2313hint.mcd.0.at="isa"
2314hint.mcd.0.port="0x300"
2315# for the Sony CDU31/33A CDROM
2316device		scd
2317hint.scd.0.at="isa"
2318hint.scd.0.port="0x230"
2319device		joy			# PnP aware, hints for non-PnP only
2320hint.joy.0.at="isa"
2321hint.joy.0.port="0x201"
2322device		cmx
2323
2324#
2325# The 'bktr' device is a PCI video capture device using the Brooktree
2326# bt848/bt848a/bt849a/bt878/bt879 chipset. When used with a TV Tuner it forms a
2327# TV card, e.g. Miro PC/TV, Hauppauge WinCast/TV WinTV, VideoLogic Captivator,
2328# Intel Smart Video III, AverMedia, IMS Turbo, FlyVideo.
2329#
2330# options 	OVERRIDE_CARD=xxx
2331# options 	OVERRIDE_TUNER=xxx
2332# options 	OVERRIDE_MSP=1
2333# options 	OVERRIDE_DBX=1
2334# These options can be used to override the auto detection
2335# The current values for xxx are found in src/sys/dev/bktr/bktr_card.h
2336# Using sysctl(8) run-time overrides on a per-card basis can be made
2337#
2338# options 	BROOKTREE_SYSTEM_DEFAULT=BROOKTREE_PAL
2339# or
2340# options 	BROOKTREE_SYSTEM_DEFAULT=BROOKTREE_NTSC
2341# Specifies the default video capture mode.
2342# This is required for Dual Crystal (28&35Mhz) boards where PAL is used
2343# to prevent hangs during initialisation, e.g. VideoLogic Captivator PCI.
2344#
2345# options 	BKTR_USE_PLL
2346# This is required for PAL or SECAM boards with a 28Mhz crystal and no 35Mhz
2347# crystal, e.g. some new Bt878 cards.
2348#
2349# options 	BKTR_GPIO_ACCESS
2350# This enable IOCTLs which give user level access to the GPIO port.
2351#
2352# options 	BKTR_NO_MSP_RESET
2353# Prevents the MSP34xx reset. Good if you initialise the MSP in another OS first
2354#
2355# options 	BKTR_430_FX_MODE
2356# Switch Bt878/879 cards into Intel 430FX chipset compatibility mode.
2357#
2358# options 	BKTR_SIS_VIA_MODE
2359# Switch Bt878/879 cards into SIS/VIA chipset compatibility mode which is
2360# needed for some old SiS and VIA chipset motherboards.
2361# This also allows Bt878/879 chips to work on old OPTi (<1997) chipset
2362# motherboards and motherboards with bad or incomplete PCI 2.1 support.
2363# As a rough guess, old = before 1998
2364#
2365# options 	BKTR_NEW_MSP34XX_DRIVER
2366# Use new, more complete initialization scheme for the msp34* soundchip.
2367# Should fix stereo autodetection if the old driver does only output
2368# mono sound.
2369
2370#
2371# options 	BKTR_USE_FREEBSD_SMBUS
2372# Compile with FreeBSD SMBus implementation
2373#
2374# Brooktree driver has been ported to the new I2C framework. Thus,
2375# you'll need to have the following 3 lines in the kernel config.
2376#     device smbus
2377#     device iicbus
2378#     device iicbb
2379#     device iicsmb
2380# The iic and smb devices are only needed if you want to control other
2381# I2C slaves connected to the external connector of some cards.
2382#
2383device		bktr
2384 
2385#
2386# PC Card/PCMCIA and Cardbus
2387#
2388# cbb: pci/cardbus bridge implementing YENTA interface
2389# pccard: pccard slots
2390# cardbus: cardbus slots
2391device		cbb
2392device		pccard
2393device		cardbus
2394
2395#
2396# MMC/SD
2397#
2398# mmc 		MMC/SD bus
2399# mmcsd		MMC/SD memory card
2400# sdhci		Generic PCI SD Host Controller
2401#
2402device		mmc
2403device		mmcsd
2404device		sdhci
2405
2406#
2407# SMB bus
2408#
2409# System Management Bus support is provided by the 'smbus' device.
2410# Access to the SMBus device is via the 'smb' device (/dev/smb*),
2411# which is a child of the 'smbus' device.
2412#
2413# Supported devices:
2414# smb		standard I/O through /dev/smb*
2415#
2416# Supported SMB interfaces:
2417# iicsmb	I2C to SMB bridge with any iicbus interface
2418# bktr		brooktree848 I2C hardware interface
2419# intpm		Intel PIIX4 (82371AB, 82443MX) Power Management Unit
2420# alpm		Acer Aladdin-IV/V/Pro2 Power Management Unit
2421# ichsmb	Intel ICH SMBus controller chips (82801AA, 82801AB, 82801BA)
2422# viapm		VIA VT82C586B/596B/686A and VT8233 Power Management Unit
2423# amdpm		AMD 756 Power Management Unit
2424# amdsmb	AMD 8111 SMBus 2.0 Controller
2425# nfpm		NVIDIA nForce Power Management Unit
2426# nfsmb		NVIDIA nForce2/3/4 MCP SMBus 2.0 Controller
2427#
2428device		smbus		# Bus support, required for smb below.
2429
2430device		intpm
2431device		alpm
2432device		ichsmb
2433device		viapm
2434device		amdpm
2435device		amdsmb
2436device		nfpm
2437device		nfsmb
2438
2439device		smb
2440
2441#
2442# I2C Bus
2443#
2444# Philips i2c bus support is provided by the `iicbus' device.
2445#
2446# Supported devices:
2447# ic	i2c network interface
2448# iic	i2c standard io
2449# iicsmb i2c to smb bridge. Allow i2c i/o with smb commands.
2450#
2451# Supported interfaces:
2452# bktr	brooktree848 I2C software interface
2453#
2454# Other:
2455# iicbb	generic I2C bit-banging code (needed by lpbb, bktr)
2456#
2457device		iicbus		# Bus support, required for ic/iic/iicsmb below.
2458device		iicbb
2459
2460device		ic
2461device		iic
2462device		iicsmb		# smb over i2c bridge
2463
2464# I2C peripheral devices
2465#
2466# ds133x	Dallas Semiconductor DS1337, DS1338 and DS1339 RTC
2467# ds1672	Dallas Semiconductor DS1672 RTC
2468#
2469device		ds133x
2470device		ds1672
2471
2472# Parallel-Port Bus
2473#
2474# Parallel port bus support is provided by the `ppbus' device.
2475# Multiple devices may be attached to the parallel port, devices
2476# are automatically probed and attached when found.
2477#
2478# Supported devices:
2479# vpo	Iomega Zip Drive
2480#	Requires SCSI disk support ('scbus' and 'da'), best
2481#	performance is achieved with ports in EPP 1.9 mode.
2482# lpt	Parallel Printer
2483# plip	Parallel network interface
2484# ppi	General-purpose I/O ("Geek Port") + IEEE1284 I/O
2485# pps	Pulse per second Timing Interface
2486# lpbb	Philips official parallel port I2C bit-banging interface
2487# pcfclock Parallel port clock driver.
2488#
2489# Supported interfaces:
2490# ppc	ISA-bus parallel port interfaces.
2491#
2492
2493options 	PPC_PROBE_CHIPSET # Enable chipset specific detection
2494				  # (see flags in ppc(4))
2495options 	DEBUG_1284	# IEEE1284 signaling protocol debug
2496options 	PERIPH_1284	# Makes your computer act as an IEEE1284
2497				# compliant peripheral
2498options 	DONTPROBE_1284	# Avoid boot detection of PnP parallel devices
2499options 	VP0_DEBUG	# ZIP/ZIP+ debug
2500options 	LPT_DEBUG	# Printer driver debug
2501options 	PPC_DEBUG	# Parallel chipset level debug
2502options 	PLIP_DEBUG	# Parallel network IP interface debug
2503options 	PCFCLOCK_VERBOSE         # Verbose pcfclock driver
2504options 	PCFCLOCK_MAX_RETRIES=5   # Maximum read tries (default 10)
2505
2506device		ppc
2507hint.ppc.0.at="isa"
2508hint.ppc.0.irq="7"
2509device		ppbus
2510device		vpo
2511device		lpt
2512device		plip
2513device		ppi
2514device		pps
2515device		lpbb
2516device		pcfclock
2517
2518# Kernel BOOTP support
2519
2520options 	BOOTP		# Use BOOTP to obtain IP address/hostname
2521				# Requires NFSCLIENT and NFS_ROOT
2522options 	BOOTP_NFSROOT	# NFS mount root filesystem using BOOTP info
2523options 	BOOTP_NFSV3	# Use NFS v3 to NFS mount root
2524options 	BOOTP_COMPAT	# Workaround for broken bootp daemons.
2525options 	BOOTP_WIRED_TO=fxp0 # Use interface fxp0 for BOOTP
2526options 	BOOTP_BLOCKSIZE=8192 # Override NFS block size
2527
2528#
2529# Add software watchdog routines.
2530#
2531options 	SW_WATCHDOG
2532
2533#
2534# Add the software deadlock resolver thread.
2535#
2536options		DEADLKRES
2537
2538#
2539# Disable swapping of stack pages.  This option removes all
2540# code which actually performs swapping, so it's not possible to turn
2541# it back on at run-time.
2542#
2543# This is sometimes usable for systems which don't have any swap space
2544# (see also sysctls "vm.defer_swapspace_pageouts" and
2545# "vm.disable_swapspace_pageouts")
2546#
2547#options 	NO_SWAPPING
2548
2549# Set the number of sf_bufs to allocate. sf_bufs are virtual buffers
2550# for sendfile(2) that are used to map file VM pages, and normally
2551# default to a quantity that is roughly 16*MAXUSERS+512. You would
2552# typically want about 4 of these for each simultaneous file send.
2553#
2554options 	NSFBUFS=1024
2555
2556#
2557# Enable extra debugging code for locks.  This stores the filename and
2558# line of whatever acquired the lock in the lock itself, and change a
2559# number of function calls to pass around the relevant data.  This is
2560# not at all useful unless you are debugging lock code.  Also note
2561# that it is likely to break e.g. fstat(1) unless you recompile your
2562# userland with -DDEBUG_LOCKS as well.
2563#
2564options 	DEBUG_LOCKS
2565
2566
2567#####################################################################
2568# USB support
2569# UHCI controller
2570device		uhci
2571# OHCI controller
2572device		ohci
2573# EHCI controller
2574device		ehci
2575# SL811 Controller
2576#device		slhci
2577# General USB code (mandatory for USB)
2578device		usb
2579#
2580# USB Double Bulk Pipe devices
2581device		udbp
2582# USB Fm Radio
2583device		ufm
2584# Human Interface Device (anything with buttons and dials)
2585device		uhid
2586# USB keyboard
2587device		ukbd
2588# USB printer
2589device		ulpt
2590# USB Iomega Zip 100 Drive (Requires scbus and da)
2591device		umass
2592# USB support for Belkin F5U109 and Magic Control Technology serial adapters
2593device		umct
2594# USB modem support
2595device		umodem
2596# USB mouse
2597device		ums
2598# Diamond Rio 500 MP3 player
2599device		urio
2600#
2601# USB serial support
2602device		ucom
2603# USB support for 3G modem cards by Option, Novatel, Huawei and Sierra
2604device		u3g
2605# USB support for Technologies ARK3116 based serial adapters
2606device		uark
2607# USB support for Belkin F5U103 and compatible serial adapters
2608device		ubsa
2609# USB support for serial adapters based on the FT8U100AX and FT8U232AM
2610device		uftdi
2611# USB support for some Windows CE based serial communication.
2612device		uipaq
2613# USB support for Prolific PL-2303 serial adapters
2614device		uplcom
2615# USB support for Silicon Laboratories CP2101/CP2102 based USB serial adapters
2616device		uslcom
2617# USB Visor and Palm devices
2618device		uvisor
2619# USB serial support for DDI pocket's PHS
2620device		uvscom
2621#
2622# ADMtek USB ethernet. Supports the LinkSys USB100TX,
2623# the Billionton USB100, the Melco LU-ATX, the D-Link DSB-650TX
2624# and the SMC 2202USB. Also works with the ADMtek AN986 Pegasus
2625# eval board.
2626device		aue
2627
2628# ASIX Electronics AX88172 USB 2.0 ethernet driver. Used in the
2629# LinkSys USB200M and various other adapters.
2630device		axe
2631
2632#
2633# Devices which communicate using Ethernet over USB, particularly
2634# Communication Device Class (CDC) Ethernet specification. Supports
2635# Sharp Zaurus PDAs, some DOCSIS cable modems and so on.
2636device		cdce
2637#
2638# CATC USB-EL1201A USB ethernet. Supports the CATC Netmate
2639# and Netmate II, and the Belkin F5U111.
2640device		cue
2641#
2642# Kawasaki LSI ethernet. Supports the LinkSys USB10T,
2643# Entrega USB-NET-E45, Peracom Ethernet Adapter, the
2644# 3Com 3c19250, the ADS Technologies USB-10BT, the ATen UC10T,
2645# the Netgear EA101, the D-Link DSB-650, the SMC 2102USB
2646# and 2104USB, and the Corega USB-T.
2647device		kue
2648#
2649# RealTek RTL8150 USB to fast ethernet. Supports the Melco LUA-KTX
2650# and the GREEN HOUSE GH-USB100B.
2651device		rue
2652#
2653# Davicom DM9601E USB to fast ethernet. Supports the Corega FEther USB-TXC.
2654device		udav
2655
2656#
2657# Ralink Technology RT2501USB/RT2601USB wireless driver
2658device		rum
2659#
2660# Atheros AR5523 wireless driver
2661device		uath
2662#
2663# Ralink Technology RT2500USB wireless driver
2664device		ural
2665#
2666# ZyDas ZD1211/ZD1211B wireless driver
2667device		zyd
2668
2669# 
2670# debugging options for the USB subsystem
2671#
2672options 	USB_DEBUG
2673options 	U3G_DEBUG
2674
2675# options for ukbd:
2676options 	UKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP	# specify the built-in keymap
2677makeoptions	UKBD_DFLT_KEYMAP=it.iso
2678
2679# options for uplcom:
2680options 	UPLCOM_INTR_INTERVAL=100	# interrupt pipe interval
2681						# in milliseconds
2682
2683# options for uvscom:
2684options 	UVSCOM_DEFAULT_OPKTSIZE=8	# default output packet size
2685options 	UVSCOM_INTR_INTERVAL=100	# interrupt pipe interval
2686						# in milliseconds
2687
2688#####################################################################
2689# FireWire support
2690
2691device		firewire	# FireWire bus code
2692device		sbp		# SCSI over Firewire (Requires scbus and da)
2693device		sbp_targ	# SBP-2 Target mode  (Requires scbus and targ)
2694device		fwe		# Ethernet over FireWire (non-standard!)
2695device		fwip		# IP over FireWire (RFC2734 and RFC3146)
2696
2697#####################################################################
2698# dcons support (Dumb Console Device)
2699
2700device		dcons			# dumb console driver
2701device		dcons_crom		# FireWire attachment
2702options 	DCONS_BUF_SIZE=16384	# buffer size
2703options 	DCONS_POLL_HZ=100	# polling rate
2704options 	DCONS_FORCE_CONSOLE=0	# force to be the primary console
2705options 	DCONS_FORCE_GDB=1	# force to be the gdb device
2706
2707#####################################################################
2708# crypto subsystem
2709#
2710# This is a port of the OpenBSD crypto framework.  Include this when
2711# configuring IPSEC and when you have a h/w crypto device to accelerate
2712# user applications that link to OpenSSL.
2713#
2714# Drivers are ports from OpenBSD with some simple enhancements that have
2715# been fed back to OpenBSD.
2716
2717device		crypto		# core crypto support
2718device		cryptodev	# /dev/crypto for access to h/w
2719
2720device		rndtest		# FIPS 140-2 entropy tester
2721
2722device		hifn		# Hifn 7951, 7781, etc.
2723options 	HIFN_DEBUG	# enable debugging support: hw.hifn.debug
2724options 	HIFN_RNDTEST	# enable rndtest support
2725
2726device		ubsec		# Broadcom 5501, 5601, 58xx
2727options 	UBSEC_DEBUG	# enable debugging support: hw.ubsec.debug
2728options 	UBSEC_RNDTEST	# enable rndtest support
2729
2730#####################################################################
2731
2732
2733#
2734# Embedded system options:
2735#
2736# An embedded system might want to run something other than init.
2737options 	INIT_PATH=/sbin/init:/stand/sysinstall
2738
2739# Debug options
2740options 	BUS_DEBUG	# enable newbus debugging
2741options 	DEBUG_VFS_LOCKS	# enable VFS lock debugging
2742options 	SOCKBUF_DEBUG	# enable sockbuf last record/mb tail checking
2743
2744#
2745# Verbose SYSINIT
2746#
2747# Make the SYSINIT process performed by mi_startup() verbose.  This is very
2748# useful when porting to a new architecture.  If DDB is also enabled, this
2749# will print function names instead of addresses.
2750options 	VERBOSE_SYSINIT
2751
2752#####################################################################
2753# SYSV IPC KERNEL PARAMETERS
2754#
2755# Maximum number of entries in a semaphore map.
2756options 	SEMMAP=31
2757
2758# Maximum number of System V semaphores that can be used on the system at
2759# one time.
2760options 	SEMMNI=11
2761
2762# Total number of semaphores system wide
2763options 	SEMMNS=61
2764
2765# Total number of undo structures in system
2766options 	SEMMNU=31
2767
2768# Maximum number of System V semaphores that can be used by a single process
2769# at one time.
2770options 	SEMMSL=61
2771
2772# Maximum number of operations that can be outstanding on a single System V
2773# semaphore at one time.
2774options 	SEMOPM=101
2775
2776# Maximum number of undo operations that can be outstanding on a single
2777# System V semaphore at one time.
2778options 	SEMUME=11
2779
2780# Maximum number of shared memory pages system wide.
2781options 	SHMALL=1025
2782
2783# Maximum size, in bytes, of a single System V shared memory region.
2784options 	SHMMAX=(SHMMAXPGS*PAGE_SIZE+1)
2785options 	SHMMAXPGS=1025
2786
2787# Minimum size, in bytes, of a single System V shared memory region.
2788options 	SHMMIN=2
2789
2790# Maximum number of shared memory regions that can be used on the system
2791# at one time.
2792options 	SHMMNI=33
2793
2794# Maximum number of System V shared memory regions that can be attached to
2795# a single process at one time.
2796options 	SHMSEG=9
2797
2798# Set the amount of time (in seconds) the system will wait before
2799# rebooting automatically when a kernel panic occurs.  If set to (-1),
2800# the system will wait indefinitely until a key is pressed on the
2801# console.
2802options 	PANIC_REBOOT_WAIT_TIME=16
2803
2804# Attempt to bypass the buffer cache and put data directly into the
2805# userland buffer for read operation when O_DIRECT flag is set on the
2806# file.  Both offset and length of the read operation must be
2807# multiples of the physical media sector size.
2808#
2809options 	DIRECTIO
2810
2811# Specify a lower limit for the number of swap I/O buffers.  They are
2812# (among other things) used when bypassing the buffer cache due to
2813# DIRECTIO kernel option enabled and O_DIRECT flag set on file.
2814#
2815options 	NSWBUF_MIN=120
2816
2817#####################################################################
2818
2819# More undocumented options for linting.
2820# Note that documenting these are not considered an affront.
2821
2822options 	CAM_DEBUG_DELAY
2823
2824# VFS cluster debugging.
2825options 	CLUSTERDEBUG
2826
2827options 	DEBUG
2828
2829# Kernel filelock debugging.
2830options 	LOCKF_DEBUG
2831
2832# System V compatible message queues
2833# Please note that the values provided here are used to test kernel
2834# building.  The defaults in the sources provide almost the same numbers.
2835# MSGSSZ must be a power of 2 between 8 and 1024.
2836options 	MSGMNB=2049	# Max number of chars in queue
2837options 	MSGMNI=41	# Max number of message queue identifiers
2838options 	MSGSEG=2049	# Max number of message segments
2839options 	MSGSSZ=16	# Size of a message segment
2840options 	MSGTQL=41	# Max number of messages in system
2841
2842options 	NBUF=512	# Number of buffer headers
2843
2844options 	SCSI_NCR_DEBUG
2845options 	SCSI_NCR_MAX_SYNC=10000
2846options 	SCSI_NCR_MAX_WIDE=1
2847options 	SCSI_NCR_MYADDR=7
2848
2849options 	SC_DEBUG_LEVEL=5	# Syscons debug level
2850options 	SC_RENDER_DEBUG	# syscons rendering debugging
2851
2852options 	SHOW_BUSYBUFS	# List buffers that prevent root unmount
2853options 	VFS_BIO_DEBUG	# VFS buffer I/O debugging
2854
2855options 	KSTACK_MAX_PAGES=32 # Maximum pages to give the kernel stack
2856
2857# Adaptec Array Controller driver options
2858options 	AAC_DEBUG	# Debugging levels:
2859				# 0 - quiet, only emit warnings
2860				# 1 - noisy, emit major function
2861				#     points and things done
2862				# 2 - extremely noisy, emit trace
2863				#     items in loops, etc.
2864
2865# Yet more undocumented options for linting.
2866# BKTR_ALLOC_PAGES has no effect except to cause warnings, and
2867# BROOKTREE_ALLOC_PAGES hasn't actually been superseded by it, since the
2868# driver still mostly spells this option BROOKTREE_ALLOC_PAGES.
2869##options 	BKTR_ALLOC_PAGES=(217*4+1)
2870options 	BROOKTREE_ALLOC_PAGES=(217*4+1)
2871options 	MAXFILES=999
2872
2873