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1 # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
2 config CC_VERSION_TEXT
3 string
4 default "$(CC_VERSION_TEXT)"
5 help
6 This is used in unclear ways:
7
8 - Re-run Kconfig when the compiler is updated
9 The 'default' property references the environment variable,
10 CC_VERSION_TEXT so it is recorded in include/config/auto.conf.cmd.
11 When the compiler is updated, Kconfig will be invoked.
12
13 - Ensure full rebuild when the compiler is updated
14 include/linux/compiler-version.h contains this option in the comment
15 line so fixdep adds include/config/CC_VERSION_TEXT into the
16 auto-generated dependency. When the compiler is updated, syncconfig
17 will touch it and then every file will be rebuilt.
18
19 config CC_IS_GCC
20 def_bool $(success,test "$(cc-name)" = GCC)
21
22 config GCC_VERSION
23 int
24 default $(cc-version) if CC_IS_GCC
25 default 0
26
27 config CC_IS_CLANG
28 def_bool $(success,test "$(cc-name)" = Clang)
29
30 config CLANG_VERSION
31 int
32 default $(cc-version) if CC_IS_CLANG
33 default 0
34
35 config AS_IS_GNU
36 def_bool $(success,test "$(as-name)" = GNU)
37
38 config AS_IS_LLVM
39 def_bool $(success,test "$(as-name)" = LLVM)
40
41 config AS_VERSION
42 int
43 # Use clang version if this is the integrated assembler
44 default CLANG_VERSION if AS_IS_LLVM
45 default $(as-version)
46
47 config LD_IS_BFD
48 def_bool $(success,test "$(ld-name)" = BFD)
49
50 config LD_VERSION
51 int
52 default $(ld-version) if LD_IS_BFD
53 default 0
54
55 config LD_IS_LLD
56 def_bool $(success,test "$(ld-name)" = LLD)
57
58 config LLD_VERSION
59 int
60 default $(ld-version) if LD_IS_LLD
61 default 0
62
63 config RUST_IS_AVAILABLE
64 def_bool $(success,$(srctree)/scripts/rust_is_available.sh)
65 help
66 This shows whether a suitable Rust toolchain is available (found).
67
68 Please see Documentation/rust/quick-start.rst for instructions on how
69 to satisfy the build requirements of Rust support.
70
71 In particular, the Makefile target 'rustavailable' is useful to check
72 why the Rust toolchain is not being detected.
73
74 config CC_CAN_LINK
75 bool
76 default $(success,$(srctree)/scripts/cc-can-link.sh $(CC) $(CLANG_FLAGS) $(USERCFLAGS) $(USERLDFLAGS) $(m64-flag)) if 64BIT
77 default $(success,$(srctree)/scripts/cc-can-link.sh $(CC) $(CLANG_FLAGS) $(USERCFLAGS) $(USERLDFLAGS) $(m32-flag))
78
79 config CC_CAN_LINK_STATIC
80 bool
81 default $(success,$(srctree)/scripts/cc-can-link.sh $(CC) $(CLANG_FLAGS) $(USERCFLAGS) $(USERLDFLAGS) $(m64-flag) -static) if 64BIT
82 default $(success,$(srctree)/scripts/cc-can-link.sh $(CC) $(CLANG_FLAGS) $(USERCFLAGS) $(USERLDFLAGS) $(m32-flag) -static)
83
84 config CC_HAS_ASM_GOTO_OUTPUT
85 def_bool $(success,echo 'int foo(int x) { asm goto ("": "=r"(x) ::: bar); return x; bar: return 0; }' | $(CC) -x c - -c -o /dev/null)
86
87 config CC_HAS_ASM_GOTO_TIED_OUTPUT
88 depends on CC_HAS_ASM_GOTO_OUTPUT
89 # Detect buggy gcc and clang, fixed in gcc-11 clang-14.
90 def_bool $(success,echo 'int foo(int *x) { asm goto (".long (%l[bar]) - .": "+m"(*x) ::: bar); return *x; bar: return 0; }' | $CC -x c - -c -o /dev/null)
91
92 config TOOLS_SUPPORT_RELR
93 def_bool $(success,env "CC=$(CC)" "LD=$(LD)" "NM=$(NM)" "OBJCOPY=$(OBJCOPY)" $(srctree)/scripts/tools-support-relr.sh)
94
95 config CC_HAS_ASM_INLINE
96 def_bool $(success,echo 'void foo(void) { asm inline (""); }' | $(CC) -x c - -c -o /dev/null)
97
98 config CC_HAS_NO_PROFILE_FN_ATTR
99 def_bool $(success,echo '__attribute__((no_profile_instrument_function)) int x();' | $(CC) -x c - -c -o /dev/null -Werror)
100
101 config PAHOLE_VERSION
102 int
103 default $(shell,$(srctree)/scripts/pahole-version.sh $(PAHOLE))
104
105 config CONSTRUCTORS
106 bool
107
108 config IRQ_WORK
109 bool
110
111 config BUILDTIME_TABLE_SORT
112 bool
113
114 config THREAD_INFO_IN_TASK
115 bool
116 help
117 Select this to move thread_info off the stack into task_struct. To
118 make this work, an arch will need to remove all thread_info fields
119 except flags and fix any runtime bugs.
120
121 One subtle change that will be needed is to use try_get_task_stack()
122 and put_task_stack() in save_thread_stack_tsk() and get_wchan().
123
124 menu "General setup"
125
126 config BROKEN
127 bool
128
129 config BROKEN_ON_SMP
130 bool
131 depends on BROKEN || !SMP
132 default y
133
134 config INIT_ENV_ARG_LIMIT
135 int
136 default 32 if !UML
137 default 128 if UML
138 help
139 Maximum of each of the number of arguments and environment
140 variables passed to init from the kernel command line.
141
142 config COMPILE_TEST
143 bool "Compile also drivers which will not load"
144 depends on HAS_IOMEM
145 help
146 Some drivers can be compiled on a different platform than they are
147 intended to be run on. Despite they cannot be loaded there (or even
148 when they load they cannot be used due to missing HW support),
149 developers still, opposing to distributors, might want to build such
150 drivers to compile-test them.
151
152 If you are a developer and want to build everything available, say Y
153 here. If you are a user/distributor, say N here to exclude useless
154 drivers to be distributed.
155
156 config WERROR
157 bool "Compile the kernel with warnings as errors"
158 default COMPILE_TEST
159 help
160 A kernel build should not cause any compiler warnings, and this
161 enables the '-Werror' (for C) and '-Dwarnings' (for Rust) flags
162 to enforce that rule by default. Certain warnings from other tools
163 such as the linker may be upgraded to errors with this option as
164 well.
165
166 However, if you have a new (or very old) compiler or linker with odd
167 and unusual warnings, or you have some architecture with problems,
168 you may need to disable this config option in order to
169 successfully build the kernel.
170
171 If in doubt, say Y.
172
173 config UAPI_HEADER_TEST
174 bool "Compile test UAPI headers"
175 depends on HEADERS_INSTALL && CC_CAN_LINK
176 help
177 Compile test headers exported to user-space to ensure they are
178 self-contained, i.e. compilable as standalone units.
179
180 If you are a developer or tester and want to ensure the exported
181 headers are self-contained, say Y here. Otherwise, choose N.
182
183 config LOCALVERSION
184 string "Local version - append to kernel release"
185 help
186 Append an extra string to the end of your kernel version.
187 This will show up when you type uname, for example.
188 The string you set here will be appended after the contents of
189 any files with a filename matching localversion* in your
190 object and source tree, in that order. Your total string can
191 be a maximum of 64 characters.
192
193 config LOCALVERSION_AUTO
194 bool "Automatically append version information to the version string"
195 default y
196 depends on !COMPILE_TEST
197 help
198 This will try to automatically determine if the current tree is a
199 release tree by looking for git tags that belong to the current
200 top of tree revision.
201
202 A string of the format -gxxxxxxxx will be added to the localversion
203 if a git-based tree is found. The string generated by this will be
204 appended after any matching localversion* files, and after the value
205 set in CONFIG_LOCALVERSION.
206
207 (The actual string used here is the first 12 characters produced
208 by running the command:
209
210 $ git rev-parse --verify HEAD
211
212 which is done within the script "scripts/setlocalversion".)
213
214 config BUILD_SALT
215 string "Build ID Salt"
216 default ""
217 help
218 The build ID is used to link binaries and their debug info. Setting
219 this option will use the value in the calculation of the build id.
220 This is mostly useful for distributions which want to ensure the
221 build is unique between builds. It's safe to leave the default.
222
223 config HAVE_KERNEL_GZIP
224 bool
225
226 config HAVE_KERNEL_BZIP2
227 bool
228
229 config HAVE_KERNEL_LZMA
230 bool
231
232 config HAVE_KERNEL_XZ
233 bool
234
235 config HAVE_KERNEL_LZO
236 bool
237
238 config HAVE_KERNEL_LZ4
239 bool
240
241 config HAVE_KERNEL_ZSTD
242 bool
243
244 config HAVE_KERNEL_UNCOMPRESSED
245 bool
246
247 choice
248 prompt "Kernel compression mode"
249 default KERNEL_GZIP
250 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_GZIP || HAVE_KERNEL_BZIP2 || HAVE_KERNEL_LZMA || HAVE_KERNEL_XZ || HAVE_KERNEL_LZO || HAVE_KERNEL_LZ4 || HAVE_KERNEL_ZSTD || HAVE_KERNEL_UNCOMPRESSED
251 help
252 The linux kernel is a kind of self-extracting executable.
253 Several compression algorithms are available, which differ
254 in efficiency, compression and decompression speed.
255 Compression speed is only relevant when building a kernel.
256 Decompression speed is relevant at each boot.
257
258 If you have any problems with bzip2 or lzma compressed
259 kernels, mail me (Alain Knaff) <alain@knaff.lu>. (An older
260 version of this functionality (bzip2 only), for 2.4, was
261 supplied by Christian Ludwig)
262
263 High compression options are mostly useful for users, who
264 are low on disk space (embedded systems), but for whom ram
265 size matters less.
266
267 If in doubt, select 'gzip'
268
269 config KERNEL_GZIP
270 bool "Gzip"
271 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_GZIP
272 help
273 The old and tried gzip compression. It provides a good balance
274 between compression ratio and decompression speed.
275
276 config KERNEL_BZIP2
277 bool "Bzip2"
278 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_BZIP2
279 help
280 Its compression ratio and speed is intermediate.
281 Decompression speed is slowest among the choices. The kernel
282 size is about 10% smaller with bzip2, in comparison to gzip.
283 Bzip2 uses a large amount of memory. For modern kernels you
284 will need at least 8MB RAM or more for booting.
285
286 config KERNEL_LZMA
287 bool "LZMA"
288 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_LZMA
289 help
290 This compression algorithm's ratio is best. Decompression speed
291 is between gzip and bzip2. Compression is slowest.
292 The kernel size is about 33% smaller with LZMA in comparison to gzip.
293
294 config KERNEL_XZ
295 bool "XZ"
296 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_XZ
297 help
298 XZ uses the LZMA2 algorithm and instruction set specific
299 BCJ filters which can improve compression ratio of executable
300 code. The size of the kernel is about 30% smaller with XZ in
301 comparison to gzip. On architectures for which there is a BCJ
302 filter (i386, x86_64, ARM, IA-64, PowerPC, and SPARC), XZ
303 will create a few percent smaller kernel than plain LZMA.
304
305 The speed is about the same as with LZMA: The decompression
306 speed of XZ is better than that of bzip2 but worse than gzip
307 and LZO. Compression is slow.
308
309 config KERNEL_LZO
310 bool "LZO"
311 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_LZO
312 help
313 Its compression ratio is the poorest among the choices. The kernel
314 size is about 10% bigger than gzip; however its speed
315 (both compression and decompression) is the fastest.
316
317 config KERNEL_LZ4
318 bool "LZ4"
319 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_LZ4
320 help
321 LZ4 is an LZ77-type compressor with a fixed, byte-oriented encoding.
322 A preliminary version of LZ4 de/compression tool is available at
323 <https://code.google.com/p/lz4/>.
324
325 Its compression ratio is worse than LZO. The size of the kernel
326 is about 8% bigger than LZO. But the decompression speed is
327 faster than LZO.
328
329 config KERNEL_ZSTD
330 bool "ZSTD"
331 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_ZSTD
332 help
333 ZSTD is a compression algorithm targeting intermediate compression
334 with fast decompression speed. It will compress better than GZIP and
335 decompress around the same speed as LZO, but slower than LZ4. You
336 will need at least 192 KB RAM or more for booting. The zstd command
337 line tool is required for compression.
338
339 config KERNEL_UNCOMPRESSED
340 bool "None"
341 depends on HAVE_KERNEL_UNCOMPRESSED
342 help
343 Produce uncompressed kernel image. This option is usually not what
344 you want. It is useful for debugging the kernel in slow simulation
345 environments, where decompressing and moving the kernel is awfully
346 slow. This option allows early boot code to skip the decompressor
347 and jump right at uncompressed kernel image.
348
349 endchoice
350
351 config DEFAULT_INIT
352 string "Default init path"
353 default ""
354 help
355 This option determines the default init for the system if no init=
356 option is passed on the kernel command line. If the requested path is
357 not present, we will still then move on to attempting further
358 locations (e.g. /sbin/init, etc). If this is empty, we will just use
359 the fallback list when init= is not passed.
360
361 config DEFAULT_HOSTNAME
362 string "Default hostname"
363 default "(none)"
364 help
365 This option determines the default system hostname before userspace
366 calls sethostname(2). The kernel traditionally uses "(none)" here,
367 but you may wish to use a different default here to make a minimal
368 system more usable with less configuration.
369
370 config SYSVIPC
371 bool "System V IPC"
372 help
373 Inter Process Communication is a suite of library functions and
374 system calls which let processes (running programs) synchronize and
375 exchange information. It is generally considered to be a good thing,
376 and some programs won't run unless you say Y here. In particular, if
377 you want to run the DOS emulator dosemu under Linux (read the
378 DOSEMU-HOWTO, available from <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>),
379 you'll need to say Y here.
380
381 You can find documentation about IPC with "info ipc" and also in
382 section 6.4 of the Linux Programmer's Guide, available from
383 <http://www.tldp.org/guides.html>.
384
385 config SYSVIPC_SYSCTL
386 bool
387 depends on SYSVIPC
388 depends on SYSCTL
389 default y
390
391 config SYSVIPC_COMPAT
392 def_bool y
393 depends on COMPAT && SYSVIPC
394
395 config POSIX_MQUEUE
396 bool "POSIX Message Queues"
397 depends on NET
398 help
399 POSIX variant of message queues is a part of IPC. In POSIX message
400 queues every message has a priority which decides about succession
401 of receiving it by a process. If you want to compile and run
402 programs written e.g. for Solaris with use of its POSIX message
403 queues (functions mq_*) say Y here.
404
405 POSIX message queues are visible as a filesystem called 'mqueue'
406 and can be mounted somewhere if you want to do filesystem
407 operations on message queues.
408
409 If unsure, say Y.
410
411 config POSIX_MQUEUE_SYSCTL
412 bool
413 depends on POSIX_MQUEUE
414 depends on SYSCTL
415 default y
416
417 config WATCH_QUEUE
418 bool "General notification queue"
419 default n
420 help
421
422 This is a general notification queue for the kernel to pass events to
423 userspace by splicing them into pipes. It can be used in conjunction
424 with watches for key/keyring change notifications and device
425 notifications.
426
427 See Documentation/core-api/watch_queue.rst
428
429 config CROSS_MEMORY_ATTACH
430 bool "Enable process_vm_readv/writev syscalls"
431 depends on MMU
432 default y
433 help
434 Enabling this option adds the system calls process_vm_readv and
435 process_vm_writev which allow a process with the correct privileges
436 to directly read from or write to another process' address space.
437 See the man page for more details.
438
439 config USELIB
440 bool "uselib syscall (for libc5 and earlier)"
441 default ALPHA || M68K || SPARC
442 help
443 This option enables the uselib syscall, a system call used in the
444 dynamic linker from libc5 and earlier. glibc does not use this
445 system call. If you intend to run programs built on libc5 or
446 earlier, you may need to enable this syscall. Current systems
447 running glibc can safely disable this.
448
449 config AUDIT
450 bool "Auditing support"
451 depends on NET
452 help
453 Enable auditing infrastructure that can be used with another
454 kernel subsystem, such as SELinux (which requires this for
455 logging of avc messages output). System call auditing is included
456 on architectures which support it.
457
458 config HAVE_ARCH_AUDITSYSCALL
459 bool
460
461 config AUDITSYSCALL
462 def_bool y
463 depends on AUDIT && HAVE_ARCH_AUDITSYSCALL
464 select FSNOTIFY
465
466 source "kernel/irq/Kconfig"
467 source "kernel/time/Kconfig"
468 source "kernel/bpf/Kconfig"
469 source "kernel/Kconfig.preempt"
470
471 menu "CPU/Task time and stats accounting"
472
473 config VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING
474 bool
475
476 choice
477 prompt "Cputime accounting"
478 default TICK_CPU_ACCOUNTING
479
480 # Kind of a stub config for the pure tick based cputime accounting
481 config TICK_CPU_ACCOUNTING
482 bool "Simple tick based cputime accounting"
483 depends on !S390 && !NO_HZ_FULL
484 help
485 This is the basic tick based cputime accounting that maintains
486 statistics about user, system and idle time spent on per jiffies
487 granularity.
488
489 If unsure, say Y.
490
491 config VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING_NATIVE
492 bool "Deterministic task and CPU time accounting"
493 depends on HAVE_VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING && !NO_HZ_FULL
494 select VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING
495 help
496 Select this option to enable more accurate task and CPU time
497 accounting. This is done by reading a CPU counter on each
498 kernel entry and exit and on transitions within the kernel
499 between system, softirq and hardirq state, so there is a
500 small performance impact. In the case of s390 or IBM POWER > 5,
501 this also enables accounting of stolen time on logically-partitioned
502 systems.
503
504 config VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING_GEN
505 bool "Full dynticks CPU time accounting"
506 depends on HAVE_CONTEXT_TRACKING_USER
507 depends on HAVE_VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING_GEN
508 depends on GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS
509 select VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING
510 select CONTEXT_TRACKING_USER
511 help
512 Select this option to enable task and CPU time accounting on full
513 dynticks systems. This accounting is implemented by watching every
514 kernel-user boundaries using the context tracking subsystem.
515 The accounting is thus performed at the expense of some significant
516 overhead.
517
518 For now this is only useful if you are working on the full
519 dynticks subsystem development.
520
521 If unsure, say N.
522
523 endchoice
524
525 config IRQ_TIME_ACCOUNTING
526 bool "Fine granularity task level IRQ time accounting"
527 depends on HAVE_IRQ_TIME_ACCOUNTING && !VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING_NATIVE
528 help
529 Select this option to enable fine granularity task irq time
530 accounting. This is done by reading a timestamp on each
531 transitions between softirq and hardirq state, so there can be a
532 small performance impact.
533
534 If in doubt, say N here.
535
536 config HAVE_SCHED_AVG_IRQ
537 def_bool y
538 depends on IRQ_TIME_ACCOUNTING || PARAVIRT_TIME_ACCOUNTING
539 depends on SMP
540
541 config SCHED_THERMAL_PRESSURE
542 bool
543 default y if ARM && ARM_CPU_TOPOLOGY
544 default y if ARM64
545 depends on SMP
546 depends on CPU_FREQ_THERMAL
547 help
548 Select this option to enable thermal pressure accounting in the
549 scheduler. Thermal pressure is the value conveyed to the scheduler
550 that reflects the reduction in CPU compute capacity resulted from
551 thermal throttling. Thermal throttling occurs when the performance of
552 a CPU is capped due to high operating temperatures.
553
554 If selected, the scheduler will be able to balance tasks accordingly,
555 i.e. put less load on throttled CPUs than on non/less throttled ones.
556
557 This requires the architecture to implement
558 arch_update_thermal_pressure() and arch_scale_thermal_pressure().
559
560 config BSD_PROCESS_ACCT
561 bool "BSD Process Accounting"
562 depends on MULTIUSER
563 help
564 If you say Y here, a user level program will be able to instruct the
565 kernel (via a special system call) to write process accounting
566 information to a file: whenever a process exits, information about
567 that process will be appended to the file by the kernel. The
568 information includes things such as creation time, owning user,
569 command name, memory usage, controlling terminal etc. (the complete
570 list is in the struct acct in <file:include/linux/acct.h>). It is
571 up to the user level program to do useful things with this
572 information. This is generally a good idea, so say Y.
573
574 config BSD_PROCESS_ACCT_V3
575 bool "BSD Process Accounting version 3 file format"
576 depends on BSD_PROCESS_ACCT
577 default n
578 help
579 If you say Y here, the process accounting information is written
580 in a new file format that also logs the process IDs of each
581 process and its parent. Note that this file format is incompatible
582 with previous v0/v1/v2 file formats, so you will need updated tools
583 for processing it. A preliminary version of these tools is available
584 at <http://www.gnu.org/software/acct/>.
585
586 config TASKSTATS
587 bool "Export task/process statistics through netlink"
588 depends on NET
589 depends on MULTIUSER
590 default n
591 help
592 Export selected statistics for tasks/processes through the
593 generic netlink interface. Unlike BSD process accounting, the
594 statistics are available during the lifetime of tasks/processes as
595 responses to commands. Like BSD accounting, they are sent to user
596 space on task exit.
597
598 Say N if unsure.
599
600 config TASK_DELAY_ACCT
601 bool "Enable per-task delay accounting"
602 depends on TASKSTATS
603 select SCHED_INFO
604 help
605 Collect information on time spent by a task waiting for system
606 resources like cpu, synchronous block I/O completion and swapping
607 in pages. Such statistics can help in setting a task's priorities
608 relative to other tasks for cpu, io, rss limits etc.
609
610 Say N if unsure.
611
612 config TASK_XACCT
613 bool "Enable extended accounting over taskstats"
614 depends on TASKSTATS
615 help
616 Collect extended task accounting data and send the data
617 to userland for processing over the taskstats interface.
618
619 Say N if unsure.
620
621 config TASK_IO_ACCOUNTING
622 bool "Enable per-task storage I/O accounting"
623 depends on TASK_XACCT
624 help
625 Collect information on the number of bytes of storage I/O which this
626 task has caused.
627
628 Say N if unsure.
629
630 config PSI
631 bool "Pressure stall information tracking"
632 select KERNFS
633 help
634 Collect metrics that indicate how overcommitted the CPU, memory,
635 and IO capacity are in the system.
636
637 If you say Y here, the kernel will create /proc/pressure/ with the
638 pressure statistics files cpu, memory, and io. These will indicate
639 the share of walltime in which some or all tasks in the system are
640 delayed due to contention of the respective resource.
641
642 In kernels with cgroup support, cgroups (cgroup2 only) will
643 have cpu.pressure, memory.pressure, and io.pressure files,
644 which aggregate pressure stalls for the grouped tasks only.
645
646 For more details see Documentation/accounting/psi.rst.
647
648 Say N if unsure.
649
650 config PSI_DEFAULT_DISABLED
651 bool "Require boot parameter to enable pressure stall information tracking"
652 default n
653 depends on PSI
654 help
655 If set, pressure stall information tracking will be disabled
656 per default but can be enabled through passing psi=1 on the
657 kernel commandline during boot.
658
659 This feature adds some code to the task wakeup and sleep
660 paths of the scheduler. The overhead is too low to affect
661 common scheduling-intense workloads in practice (such as
662 webservers, memcache), but it does show up in artificial
663 scheduler stress tests, such as hackbench.
664
665 If you are paranoid and not sure what the kernel will be
666 used for, say Y.
667
668 Say N if unsure.
669
670 endmenu # "CPU/Task time and stats accounting"
671
672 config CPU_ISOLATION
673 bool "CPU isolation"
674 depends on SMP || COMPILE_TEST
675 default y
676 help
677 Make sure that CPUs running critical tasks are not disturbed by
678 any source of "noise" such as unbound workqueues, timers, kthreads...
679 Unbound jobs get offloaded to housekeeping CPUs. This is driven by
680 the "isolcpus=" boot parameter.
681
682 Say Y if unsure.
683
684 source "kernel/rcu/Kconfig"
685
686 config IKCONFIG
687 tristate "Kernel .config support"
688 help
689 This option enables the complete Linux kernel ".config" file
690 contents to be saved in the kernel. It provides documentation
691 of which kernel options are used in a running kernel or in an
692 on-disk kernel. This information can be extracted from the kernel
693 image file with the script scripts/extract-ikconfig and used as
694 input to rebuild the current kernel or to build another kernel.
695 It can also be extracted from a running kernel by reading
696 /proc/config.gz if enabled (below).
697
698 config IKCONFIG_PROC
699 bool "Enable access to .config through /proc/config.gz"
700 depends on IKCONFIG && PROC_FS
701 help
702 This option enables access to the kernel configuration file
703 through /proc/config.gz.
704
705 config IKHEADERS
706 tristate "Enable kernel headers through /sys/kernel/kheaders.tar.xz"
707 depends on SYSFS
708 help
709 This option enables access to the in-kernel headers that are generated during
710 the build process. These can be used to build eBPF tracing programs,
711 or similar programs. If you build the headers as a module, a module called
712 kheaders.ko is built which can be loaded on-demand to get access to headers.
713
714 config LOG_BUF_SHIFT
715 int "Kernel log buffer size (16 => 64KB, 17 => 128KB)"
716 range 12 25
717 default 17
718 depends on PRINTK
719 help
720 Select the minimal kernel log buffer size as a power of 2.
721 The final size is affected by LOG_CPU_MAX_BUF_SHIFT config
722 parameter, see below. Any higher size also might be forced
723 by "log_buf_len" boot parameter.
724
725 Examples:
726 17 => 128 KB
727 16 => 64 KB
728 15 => 32 KB
729 14 => 16 KB
730 13 => 8 KB
731 12 => 4 KB
732
733 config LOG_CPU_MAX_BUF_SHIFT
734 int "CPU kernel log buffer size contribution (13 => 8 KB, 17 => 128KB)"
735 depends on SMP
736 range 0 21
737 default 12 if !BASE_SMALL
738 default 0 if BASE_SMALL
739 depends on PRINTK
740 help
741 This option allows to increase the default ring buffer size
742 according to the number of CPUs. The value defines the contribution
743 of each CPU as a power of 2. The used space is typically only few
744 lines however it might be much more when problems are reported,
745 e.g. backtraces.
746
747 The increased size means that a new buffer has to be allocated and
748 the original static one is unused. It makes sense only on systems
749 with more CPUs. Therefore this value is used only when the sum of
750 contributions is greater than the half of the default kernel ring
751 buffer as defined by LOG_BUF_SHIFT. The default values are set
752 so that more than 16 CPUs are needed to trigger the allocation.
753
754 Also this option is ignored when "log_buf_len" kernel parameter is
755 used as it forces an exact (power of two) size of the ring buffer.
756
757 The number of possible CPUs is used for this computation ignoring
758 hotplugging making the computation optimal for the worst case
759 scenario while allowing a simple algorithm to be used from bootup.
760
761 Examples shift values and their meaning:
762 17 => 128 KB for each CPU
763 16 => 64 KB for each CPU
764 15 => 32 KB for each CPU
765 14 => 16 KB for each CPU
766 13 => 8 KB for each CPU
767 12 => 4 KB for each CPU
768
769 config PRINTK_INDEX
770 bool "Printk indexing debugfs interface"
771 depends on PRINTK && DEBUG_FS
772 help
773 Add support for indexing of all printk formats known at compile time
774 at <debugfs>/printk/index/<module>.
775
776 This can be used as part of maintaining daemons which monitor
777 /dev/kmsg, as it permits auditing the printk formats present in a
778 kernel, allowing detection of cases where monitored printks are
779 changed or no longer present.
780
781 There is no additional runtime cost to printk with this enabled.
782
783 #
784 # Architectures with an unreliable sched_clock() should select this:
785 #
786 config HAVE_UNSTABLE_SCHED_CLOCK
787 bool
788
789 config GENERIC_SCHED_CLOCK
790 bool
791
792 menu "Scheduler features"
793
794 config UCLAMP_TASK
795 bool "Enable utilization clamping for RT/FAIR tasks"
796 depends on CPU_FREQ_GOV_SCHEDUTIL
797 help
798 This feature enables the scheduler to track the clamped utilization
799 of each CPU based on RUNNABLE tasks scheduled on that CPU.
800
801 With this option, the user can specify the min and max CPU
802 utilization allowed for RUNNABLE tasks. The max utilization defines
803 the maximum frequency a task should use while the min utilization
804 defines the minimum frequency it should use.
805
806 Both min and max utilization clamp values are hints to the scheduler,
807 aiming at improving its frequency selection policy, but they do not
808 enforce or grant any specific bandwidth for tasks.
809
810 If in doubt, say N.
811
812 config UCLAMP_BUCKETS_COUNT
813 int "Number of supported utilization clamp buckets"
814 range 5 20
815 default 5
816 depends on UCLAMP_TASK
817 help
818 Defines the number of clamp buckets to use. The range of each bucket
819 will be SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE/UCLAMP_BUCKETS_COUNT. The higher the
820 number of clamp buckets the finer their granularity and the higher
821 the precision of clamping aggregation and tracking at run-time.
822
823 For example, with the minimum configuration value we will have 5
824 clamp buckets tracking 20% utilization each. A 25% boosted tasks will
825 be refcounted in the [20..39]% bucket and will set the bucket clamp
826 effective value to 25%.
827 If a second 30% boosted task should be co-scheduled on the same CPU,
828 that task will be refcounted in the same bucket of the first task and
829 it will boost the bucket clamp effective value to 30%.
830 The clamp effective value of a bucket is reset to its nominal value
831 (20% in the example above) when there are no more tasks refcounted in
832 that bucket.
833
834 An additional boost/capping margin can be added to some tasks. In the
835 example above the 25% task will be boosted to 30% until it exits the
836 CPU. If that should be considered not acceptable on certain systems,
837 it's always possible to reduce the margin by increasing the number of
838 clamp buckets to trade off used memory for run-time tracking
839 precision.
840
841 If in doubt, use the default value.
842
843 endmenu
844
845 #
846 # For architectures that want to enable the support for NUMA-affine scheduler
847 # balancing logic:
848 #
849 config ARCH_SUPPORTS_NUMA_BALANCING
850 bool
851
852 #
853 # For architectures that prefer to flush all TLBs after a number of pages
854 # are unmapped instead of sending one IPI per page to flush. The architecture
855 # must provide guarantees on what happens if a clean TLB cache entry is
856 # written after the unmap. Details are in mm/rmap.c near the check for
857 # should_defer_flush. The architecture should also consider if the full flush
858 # and the refill costs are offset by the savings of sending fewer IPIs.
859 config ARCH_WANT_BATCHED_UNMAP_TLB_FLUSH
860 bool
861
862 config CC_HAS_INT128
863 def_bool !$(cc-option,$(m64-flag) -D__SIZEOF_INT128__=0) && 64BIT
864
865 config CC_IMPLICIT_FALLTHROUGH
866 string
867 default "-Wimplicit-fallthrough=5" if CC_IS_GCC && $(cc-option,-Wimplicit-fallthrough=5)
868 default "-Wimplicit-fallthrough" if CC_IS_CLANG && $(cc-option,-Wunreachable-code-fallthrough)
869
870 # Currently, disable gcc-11+ array-bounds globally.
871 # It's still broken in gcc-13, so no upper bound yet.
872 config GCC11_NO_ARRAY_BOUNDS
873 def_bool y
874
875 config CC_NO_ARRAY_BOUNDS
876 bool
877 default y if CC_IS_GCC && GCC_VERSION >= 110000 && GCC11_NO_ARRAY_BOUNDS
878
879 # Currently, disable -Wstringop-overflow for GCC globally.
880 config GCC_NO_STRINGOP_OVERFLOW
881 def_bool y
882
883 config CC_NO_STRINGOP_OVERFLOW
884 bool
885 default y if CC_IS_GCC && GCC_NO_STRINGOP_OVERFLOW
886
887 config CC_STRINGOP_OVERFLOW
888 bool
889 default y if CC_IS_GCC && !CC_NO_STRINGOP_OVERFLOW
890
891 #
892 # For architectures that know their GCC __int128 support is sound
893 #
894 config ARCH_SUPPORTS_INT128
895 bool
896
897 # For architectures that (ab)use NUMA to represent different memory regions
898 # all cpu-local but of different latencies, such as SuperH.
899 #
900 config ARCH_WANT_NUMA_VARIABLE_LOCALITY
901 bool
902
903 config NUMA_BALANCING
904 bool "Memory placement aware NUMA scheduler"
905 depends on ARCH_SUPPORTS_NUMA_BALANCING
906 depends on !ARCH_WANT_NUMA_VARIABLE_LOCALITY
907 depends on SMP && NUMA && MIGRATION && !PREEMPT_RT
908 help
909 This option adds support for automatic NUMA aware memory/task placement.
910 The mechanism is quite primitive and is based on migrating memory when
911 it has references to the node the task is running on.
912
913 This system will be inactive on UMA systems.
914
915 config NUMA_BALANCING_DEFAULT_ENABLED
916 bool "Automatically enable NUMA aware memory/task placement"
917 default y
918 depends on NUMA_BALANCING
919 help
920 If set, automatic NUMA balancing will be enabled if running on a NUMA
921 machine.
922
923 menuconfig CGROUPS
924 bool "Control Group support"
925 select KERNFS
926 help
927 This option adds support for grouping sets of processes together, for
928 use with process control subsystems such as Cpusets, CFS, memory
929 controls or device isolation.
930 See
931 - Documentation/scheduler/sched-design-CFS.rst (CFS)
932 - Documentation/admin-guide/cgroup-v1/ (features for grouping, isolation
933 and resource control)
934
935 Say N if unsure.
936
937 if CGROUPS
938
939 config PAGE_COUNTER
940 bool
941
942 config CGROUP_FAVOR_DYNMODS
943 bool "Favor dynamic modification latency reduction by default"
944 help
945 This option enables the "favordynmods" mount option by default
946 which reduces the latencies of dynamic cgroup modifications such
947 as task migrations and controller on/offs at the cost of making
948 hot path operations such as forks and exits more expensive.
949
950 Say N if unsure.
951
952 config MEMCG
953 bool "Memory controller"
954 select PAGE_COUNTER
955 select EVENTFD
956 help
957 Provides control over the memory footprint of tasks in a cgroup.
958
959 config MEMCG_KMEM
960 bool
961 depends on MEMCG
962 default y
963
964 config BLK_CGROUP
965 bool "IO controller"
966 depends on BLOCK
967 default n
968 help
969 Generic block IO controller cgroup interface. This is the common
970 cgroup interface which should be used by various IO controlling
971 policies.
972
973 Currently, CFQ IO scheduler uses it to recognize task groups and
974 control disk bandwidth allocation (proportional time slice allocation)
975 to such task groups. It is also used by bio throttling logic in
976 block layer to implement upper limit in IO rates on a device.
977
978 This option only enables generic Block IO controller infrastructure.
979 One needs to also enable actual IO controlling logic/policy. For
980 enabling proportional weight division of disk bandwidth in CFQ, set
981 CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED=y; for enabling throttling policy, set
982 CONFIG_BLK_DEV_THROTTLING=y.
983
984 See Documentation/admin-guide/cgroup-v1/blkio-controller.rst for more information.
985
986 config CGROUP_WRITEBACK
987 bool
988 depends on MEMCG && BLK_CGROUP
989 default y
990
991 menuconfig CGROUP_SCHED
992 bool "CPU controller"
993 default n
994 help
995 This feature lets CPU scheduler recognize task groups and control CPU
996 bandwidth allocation to such task groups. It uses cgroups to group
997 tasks.
998
999 if CGROUP_SCHED
1000 config FAIR_GROUP_SCHED
1001 bool "Group scheduling for SCHED_OTHER"
1002 depends on CGROUP_SCHED
1003 default CGROUP_SCHED
1004
1005 config CFS_BANDWIDTH
1006 bool "CPU bandwidth provisioning for FAIR_GROUP_SCHED"
1007 depends on FAIR_GROUP_SCHED
1008 default n
1009 help
1010 This option allows users to define CPU bandwidth rates (limits) for
1011 tasks running within the fair group scheduler. Groups with no limit
1012 set are considered to be unconstrained and will run with no
1013 restriction.
1014 See Documentation/scheduler/sched-bwc.rst for more information.
1015
1016 config RT_GROUP_SCHED
1017 bool "Group scheduling for SCHED_RR/FIFO"
1018 depends on CGROUP_SCHED
1019 default n
1020 help
1021 This feature lets you explicitly allocate real CPU bandwidth
1022 to task groups. If enabled, it will also make it impossible to
1023 schedule realtime tasks for non-root users until you allocate
1024 realtime bandwidth for them.
1025 See Documentation/scheduler/sched-rt-group.rst for more information.
1026
1027 endif #CGROUP_SCHED
1028
1029 config SCHED_MM_CID
1030 def_bool y
1031 depends on SMP && RSEQ
1032
1033 config UCLAMP_TASK_GROUP
1034 bool "Utilization clamping per group of tasks"
1035 depends on CGROUP_SCHED
1036 depends on UCLAMP_TASK
1037 default n
1038 help
1039 This feature enables the scheduler to track the clamped utilization
1040 of each CPU based on RUNNABLE tasks currently scheduled on that CPU.
1041
1042 When this option is enabled, the user can specify a min and max
1043 CPU bandwidth which is allowed for each single task in a group.
1044 The max bandwidth allows to clamp the maximum frequency a task
1045 can use, while the min bandwidth allows to define a minimum
1046 frequency a task will always use.
1047
1048 When task group based utilization clamping is enabled, an eventually
1049 specified task-specific clamp value is constrained by the cgroup
1050 specified clamp value. Both minimum and maximum task clamping cannot
1051 be bigger than the corresponding clamping defined at task group level.
1052
1053 If in doubt, say N.
1054
1055 config CGROUP_PIDS
1056 bool "PIDs controller"
1057 help
1058 Provides enforcement of process number limits in the scope of a
1059 cgroup. Any attempt to fork more processes than is allowed in the
1060 cgroup will fail. PIDs are fundamentally a global resource because it
1061 is fairly trivial to reach PID exhaustion before you reach even a
1062 conservative kmemcg limit. As a result, it is possible to grind a
1063 system to halt without being limited by other cgroup policies. The
1064 PIDs controller is designed to stop this from happening.
1065
1066 It should be noted that organisational operations (such as attaching
1067 to a cgroup hierarchy) will *not* be blocked by the PIDs controller,
1068 since the PIDs limit only affects a process's ability to fork, not to
1069 attach to a cgroup.
1070
1071 config CGROUP_RDMA
1072 bool "RDMA controller"
1073 help
1074 Provides enforcement of RDMA resources defined by IB stack.
1075 It is fairly easy for consumers to exhaust RDMA resources, which
1076 can result into resource unavailability to other consumers.
1077 RDMA controller is designed to stop this from happening.
1078 Attaching processes with active RDMA resources to the cgroup
1079 hierarchy is allowed even if can cross the hierarchy's limit.
1080
1081 config CGROUP_FREEZER
1082 bool "Freezer controller"
1083 help
1084 Provides a way to freeze and unfreeze all tasks in a
1085 cgroup.
1086
1087 This option affects the ORIGINAL cgroup interface. The cgroup2 memory
1088 controller includes important in-kernel memory consumers per default.
1089
1090 If you're using cgroup2, say N.
1091
1092 config CGROUP_HUGETLB
1093 bool "HugeTLB controller"
1094 depends on HUGETLB_PAGE
1095 select PAGE_COUNTER
1096 default n
1097 help
1098 Provides a cgroup controller for HugeTLB pages.
1099 When you enable this, you can put a per cgroup limit on HugeTLB usage.
1100 The limit is enforced during page fault. Since HugeTLB doesn't
1101 support page reclaim, enforcing the limit at page fault time implies
1102 that, the application will get SIGBUS signal if it tries to access
1103 HugeTLB pages beyond its limit. This requires the application to know
1104 beforehand how much HugeTLB pages it would require for its use. The
1105 control group is tracked in the third page lru pointer. This means
1106 that we cannot use the controller with huge page less than 3 pages.
1107
1108 config CPUSETS
1109 bool "Cpuset controller"
1110 depends on SMP
1111 help
1112 This option will let you create and manage CPUSETs which
1113 allow dynamically partitioning a system into sets of CPUs and
1114 Memory Nodes and assigning tasks to run only within those sets.
1115 This is primarily useful on large SMP or NUMA systems.
1116
1117 Say N if unsure.
1118
1119 config PROC_PID_CPUSET
1120 bool "Include legacy /proc/<pid>/cpuset file"
1121 depends on CPUSETS
1122 default y
1123
1124 config CGROUP_DEVICE
1125 bool "Device controller"
1126 help
1127 Provides a cgroup controller implementing whitelists for
1128 devices which a process in the cgroup can mknod or open.
1129
1130 config CGROUP_CPUACCT
1131 bool "Simple CPU accounting controller"
1132 help
1133 Provides a simple controller for monitoring the
1134 total CPU consumed by the tasks in a cgroup.
1135
1136 config CGROUP_PERF
1137 bool "Perf controller"
1138 depends on PERF_EVENTS
1139 help
1140 This option extends the perf per-cpu mode to restrict monitoring
1141 to threads which belong to the cgroup specified and run on the
1142 designated cpu. Or this can be used to have cgroup ID in samples
1143 so that it can monitor performance events among cgroups.
1144
1145 Say N if unsure.
1146
1147 config CGROUP_BPF
1148 bool "Support for eBPF programs attached to cgroups"
1149 depends on BPF_SYSCALL
1150 select SOCK_CGROUP_DATA
1151 help
1152 Allow attaching eBPF programs to a cgroup using the bpf(2)
1153 syscall command BPF_PROG_ATTACH.
1154
1155 In which context these programs are accessed depends on the type
1156 of attachment. For instance, programs that are attached using
1157 BPF_CGROUP_INET_INGRESS will be executed on the ingress path of
1158 inet sockets.
1159
1160 config CGROUP_MISC
1161 bool "Misc resource controller"
1162 default n
1163 help
1164 Provides a controller for miscellaneous resources on a host.
1165
1166 Miscellaneous scalar resources are the resources on the host system
1167 which cannot be abstracted like the other cgroups. This controller
1168 tracks and limits the miscellaneous resources used by a process
1169 attached to a cgroup hierarchy.
1170
1171 For more information, please check misc cgroup section in
1172 /Documentation/admin-guide/cgroup-v2.rst.
1173
1174 config CGROUP_DEBUG
1175 bool "Debug controller"
1176 default n
1177 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL
1178 help
1179 This option enables a simple controller that exports
1180 debugging information about the cgroups framework. This
1181 controller is for control cgroup debugging only. Its
1182 interfaces are not stable.
1183
1184 Say N.
1185
1186 config SOCK_CGROUP_DATA
1187 bool
1188 default n
1189
1190 endif # CGROUPS
1191
1192 menuconfig NAMESPACES
1193 bool "Namespaces support" if EXPERT
1194 depends on MULTIUSER
1195 default !EXPERT
1196 help
1197 Provides the way to make tasks work with different objects using
1198 the same id. For example same IPC id may refer to different objects
1199 or same user id or pid may refer to different tasks when used in
1200 different namespaces.
1201
1202 if NAMESPACES
1203
1204 config UTS_NS
1205 bool "UTS namespace"
1206 default y
1207 help
1208 In this namespace tasks see different info provided with the
1209 uname() system call
1210
1211 config TIME_NS
1212 bool "TIME namespace"
1213 depends on GENERIC_VDSO_TIME_NS
1214 default y
1215 help
1216 In this namespace boottime and monotonic clocks can be set.
1217 The time will keep going with the same pace.
1218
1219 config IPC_NS
1220 bool "IPC namespace"
1221 depends on (SYSVIPC || POSIX_MQUEUE)
1222 default y
1223 help
1224 In this namespace tasks work with IPC ids which correspond to
1225 different IPC objects in different namespaces.
1226
1227 config USER_NS
1228 bool "User namespace"
1229 default n
1230 help
1231 This allows containers, i.e. vservers, to use user namespaces
1232 to provide different user info for different servers.
1233
1234 When user namespaces are enabled in the kernel it is
1235 recommended that the MEMCG option also be enabled and that
1236 user-space use the memory control groups to limit the amount
1237 of memory a memory unprivileged users can use.
1238
1239 If unsure, say N.
1240
1241 config PID_NS
1242 bool "PID Namespaces"
1243 default y
1244 help
1245 Support process id namespaces. This allows having multiple
1246 processes with the same pid as long as they are in different
1247 pid namespaces. This is a building block of containers.
1248
1249 config NET_NS
1250 bool "Network namespace"
1251 depends on NET
1252 default y
1253 help
1254 Allow user space to create what appear to be multiple instances
1255 of the network stack.
1256
1257 endif # NAMESPACES
1258
1259 config CHECKPOINT_RESTORE
1260 bool "Checkpoint/restore support"
1261 depends on PROC_FS
1262 select PROC_CHILDREN
1263 select KCMP
1264 default n
1265 help
1266 Enables additional kernel features in a sake of checkpoint/restore.
1267 In particular it adds auxiliary prctl codes to setup process text,
1268 data and heap segment sizes, and a few additional /proc filesystem
1269 entries.
1270
1271 If unsure, say N here.
1272
1273 config SCHED_AUTOGROUP
1274 bool "Automatic process group scheduling"
1275 select CGROUPS
1276 select CGROUP_SCHED
1277 select FAIR_GROUP_SCHED
1278 help
1279 This option optimizes the scheduler for common desktop workloads by
1280 automatically creating and populating task groups. This separation
1281 of workloads isolates aggressive CPU burners (like build jobs) from
1282 desktop applications. Task group autogeneration is currently based
1283 upon task session.
1284
1285 config RELAY
1286 bool "Kernel->user space relay support (formerly relayfs)"
1287 select IRQ_WORK
1288 help
1289 This option enables support for relay interface support in
1290 certain file systems (such as debugfs).
1291 It is designed to provide an efficient mechanism for tools and
1292 facilities to relay large amounts of data from kernel space to
1293 user space.
1294
1295 If unsure, say N.
1296
1297 config BLK_DEV_INITRD
1298 bool "Initial RAM filesystem and RAM disk (initramfs/initrd) support"
1299 help
1300 The initial RAM filesystem is a ramfs which is loaded by the
1301 boot loader (loadlin or lilo) and that is mounted as root
1302 before the normal boot procedure. It is typically used to
1303 load modules needed to mount the "real" root file system,
1304 etc. See <file:Documentation/admin-guide/initrd.rst> for details.
1305
1306 If RAM disk support (BLK_DEV_RAM) is also included, this
1307 also enables initial RAM disk (initrd) support and adds
1308 15 Kbytes (more on some other architectures) to the kernel size.
1309
1310 If unsure say Y.
1311
1312 if BLK_DEV_INITRD
1313
1314 source "usr/Kconfig"
1315
1316 endif
1317
1318 config BOOT_CONFIG
1319 bool "Boot config support"
1320 select BLK_DEV_INITRD if !BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED
1321 help
1322 Extra boot config allows system admin to pass a config file as
1323 complemental extension of kernel cmdline when booting.
1324 The boot config file must be attached at the end of initramfs
1325 with checksum, size and magic word.
1326 See <file:Documentation/admin-guide/bootconfig.rst> for details.
1327
1328 If unsure, say Y.
1329
1330 config BOOT_CONFIG_FORCE
1331 bool "Force unconditional bootconfig processing"
1332 depends on BOOT_CONFIG
1333 default y if BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED
1334 help
1335 With this Kconfig option set, BOOT_CONFIG processing is carried
1336 out even when the "bootconfig" kernel-boot parameter is omitted.
1337 In fact, with this Kconfig option set, there is no way to
1338 make the kernel ignore the BOOT_CONFIG-supplied kernel-boot
1339 parameters.
1340
1341 If unsure, say N.
1342
1343 config BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED
1344 bool "Embed bootconfig file in the kernel"
1345 depends on BOOT_CONFIG
1346 help
1347 Embed a bootconfig file given by BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED_FILE in the
1348 kernel. Usually, the bootconfig file is loaded with the initrd
1349 image. But if the system doesn't support initrd, this option will
1350 help you by embedding a bootconfig file while building the kernel.
1351
1352 If unsure, say N.
1353
1354 config BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED_FILE
1355 string "Embedded bootconfig file path"
1356 depends on BOOT_CONFIG_EMBED
1357 help
1358 Specify a bootconfig file which will be embedded to the kernel.
1359 This bootconfig will be used if there is no initrd or no other
1360 bootconfig in the initrd.
1361
1362 config INITRAMFS_PRESERVE_MTIME
1363 bool "Preserve cpio archive mtimes in initramfs"
1364 default y
1365 help
1366 Each entry in an initramfs cpio archive carries an mtime value. When
1367 enabled, extracted cpio items take this mtime, with directory mtime
1368 setting deferred until after creation of any child entries.
1369
1370 If unsure, say Y.
1371
1372 choice
1373 prompt "Compiler optimization level"
1374 default CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_PERFORMANCE
1375
1376 config CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_PERFORMANCE
1377 bool "Optimize for performance (-O2)"
1378 help
1379 This is the default optimization level for the kernel, building
1380 with the "-O2" compiler flag for best performance and most
1381 helpful compile-time warnings.
1382
1383 config CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_SIZE
1384 bool "Optimize for size (-Os)"
1385 help
1386 Choosing this option will pass "-Os" to your compiler resulting
1387 in a smaller kernel.
1388
1389 endchoice
1390
1391 config HAVE_LD_DEAD_CODE_DATA_ELIMINATION
1392 bool
1393 help
1394 This requires that the arch annotates or otherwise protects
1395 its external entry points from being discarded. Linker scripts
1396 must also merge .text.*, .data.*, and .bss.* correctly into
1397 output sections. Care must be taken not to pull in unrelated
1398 sections (e.g., '.text.init'). Typically '.' in section names
1399 is used to distinguish them from label names / C identifiers.
1400
1401 config LD_DEAD_CODE_DATA_ELIMINATION
1402 bool "Dead code and data elimination (EXPERIMENTAL)"
1403 depends on HAVE_LD_DEAD_CODE_DATA_ELIMINATION
1404 depends on EXPERT
1405 depends on $(cc-option,-ffunction-sections -fdata-sections)
1406 depends on $(ld-option,--gc-sections)
1407 help
1408 Enable this if you want to do dead code and data elimination with
1409 the linker by compiling with -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections,
1410 and linking with --gc-sections.
1411
1412 This can reduce on disk and in-memory size of the kernel
1413 code and static data, particularly for small configs and
1414 on small systems. This has the possibility of introducing
1415 silently broken kernel if the required annotations are not
1416 present. This option is not well tested yet, so use at your
1417 own risk.
1418
1419 config LD_ORPHAN_WARN
1420 def_bool y
1421 depends on ARCH_WANT_LD_ORPHAN_WARN
1422 depends on $(ld-option,--orphan-handling=warn)
1423 depends on $(ld-option,--orphan-handling=error)
1424
1425 config LD_ORPHAN_WARN_LEVEL
1426 string
1427 depends on LD_ORPHAN_WARN
1428 default "error" if WERROR
1429 default "warn"
1430
1431 config SYSCTL
1432 bool
1433
1434 config HAVE_UID16
1435 bool
1436
1437 config SYSCTL_EXCEPTION_TRACE
1438 bool
1439 help
1440 Enable support for /proc/sys/debug/exception-trace.
1441
1442 config SYSCTL_ARCH_UNALIGN_NO_WARN
1443 bool
1444 help
1445 Enable support for /proc/sys/kernel/ignore-unaligned-usertrap
1446 Allows arch to define/use @no_unaligned_warning to possibly warn
1447 about unaligned access emulation going on under the hood.
1448
1449 config SYSCTL_ARCH_UNALIGN_ALLOW
1450 bool
1451 help
1452 Enable support for /proc/sys/kernel/unaligned-trap
1453 Allows arches to define/use @unaligned_enabled to runtime toggle
1454 the unaligned access emulation.
1455 see arch/parisc/kernel/unaligned.c for reference
1456
1457 config HAVE_PCSPKR_PLATFORM
1458 bool
1459
1460 # interpreter that classic socket filters depend on
1461 config BPF
1462 bool
1463 select CRYPTO_LIB_SHA1
1464
1465 menuconfig EXPERT
1466 bool "Configure standard kernel features (expert users)"
1467 # Unhide debug options, to make the on-by-default options visible
1468 select DEBUG_KERNEL
1469 help
1470 This option allows certain base kernel options and settings
1471 to be disabled or tweaked. This is for specialized
1472 environments which can tolerate a "non-standard" kernel.
1473 Only use this if you really know what you are doing.
1474
1475 config UID16
1476 bool "Enable 16-bit UID system calls" if EXPERT
1477 depends on HAVE_UID16 && MULTIUSER
1478 default y
1479 help
1480 This enables the legacy 16-bit UID syscall wrappers.
1481
1482 config MULTIUSER
1483 bool "Multiple users, groups and capabilities support" if EXPERT
1484 default y
1485 help
1486 This option enables support for non-root users, groups and
1487 capabilities.
1488
1489 If you say N here, all processes will run with UID 0, GID 0, and all
1490 possible capabilities. Saying N here also compiles out support for
1491 system calls related to UIDs, GIDs, and capabilities, such as setuid,
1492 setgid, and capset.
1493
1494 If unsure, say Y here.
1495
1496 config SGETMASK_SYSCALL
1497 bool "sgetmask/ssetmask syscalls support" if EXPERT
1498 def_bool PARISC || M68K || PPC || MIPS || X86 || SPARC || MICROBLAZE || SUPERH
1499 help
1500 sys_sgetmask and sys_ssetmask are obsolete system calls
1501 no longer supported in libc but still enabled by default in some
1502 architectures.
1503
1504 If unsure, leave the default option here.
1505
1506 config SYSFS_SYSCALL
1507 bool "Sysfs syscall support" if EXPERT
1508 default y
1509 help
1510 sys_sysfs is an obsolete system call no longer supported in libc.
1511 Note that disabling this option is more secure but might break
1512 compatibility with some systems.
1513
1514 If unsure say Y here.
1515
1516 config FHANDLE
1517 bool "open by fhandle syscalls" if EXPERT
1518 select EXPORTFS
1519 default y
1520 help
1521 If you say Y here, a user level program will be able to map
1522 file names to handle and then later use the handle for
1523 different file system operations. This is useful in implementing
1524 userspace file servers, which now track files using handles instead
1525 of names. The handle would remain the same even if file names
1526 get renamed. Enables open_by_handle_at(2) and name_to_handle_at(2)
1527 syscalls.
1528
1529 config POSIX_TIMERS
1530 bool "Posix Clocks & timers" if EXPERT
1531 default y
1532 help
1533 This includes native support for POSIX timers to the kernel.
1534 Some embedded systems have no use for them and therefore they
1535 can be configured out to reduce the size of the kernel image.
1536
1537 When this option is disabled, the following syscalls won't be
1538 available: timer_create, timer_gettime: timer_getoverrun,
1539 timer_settime, timer_delete, clock_adjtime, getitimer,
1540 setitimer, alarm. Furthermore, the clock_settime, clock_gettime,
1541 clock_getres and clock_nanosleep syscalls will be limited to
1542 CLOCK_REALTIME, CLOCK_MONOTONIC and CLOCK_BOOTTIME only.
1543
1544 If unsure say y.
1545
1546 config PRINTK
1547 default y
1548 bool "Enable support for printk" if EXPERT
1549 select IRQ_WORK
1550 help
1551 This option enables normal printk support. Removing it
1552 eliminates most of the message strings from the kernel image
1553 and makes the kernel more or less silent. As this makes it
1554 very difficult to diagnose system problems, saying N here is
1555 strongly discouraged.
1556
1557 config BUG
1558 bool "BUG() support" if EXPERT
1559 default y
1560 help
1561 Disabling this option eliminates support for BUG and WARN, reducing
1562 the size of your kernel image and potentially quietly ignoring
1563 numerous fatal conditions. You should only consider disabling this
1564 option for embedded systems with no facilities for reporting errors.
1565 Just say Y.
1566
1567 config ELF_CORE
1568 depends on COREDUMP
1569 default y
1570 bool "Enable ELF core dumps" if EXPERT
1571 help
1572 Enable support for generating core dumps. Disabling saves about 4k.
1573
1574
1575 config PCSPKR_PLATFORM
1576 bool "Enable PC-Speaker support" if EXPERT
1577 depends on HAVE_PCSPKR_PLATFORM
1578 select I8253_LOCK
1579 default y
1580 help
1581 This option allows to disable the internal PC-Speaker
1582 support, saving some memory.
1583
1584 config BASE_FULL
1585 default y
1586 bool "Enable full-sized data structures for core" if EXPERT
1587 help
1588 Disabling this option reduces the size of miscellaneous core
1589 kernel data structures. This saves memory on small machines,
1590 but may reduce performance.
1591
1592 config FUTEX
1593 bool "Enable futex support" if EXPERT
1594 depends on !(SPARC32 && SMP)
1595 default y
1596 imply RT_MUTEXES
1597 help
1598 Disabling this option will cause the kernel to be built without
1599 support for "fast userspace mutexes". The resulting kernel may not
1600 run glibc-based applications correctly.
1601
1602 config FUTEX_PI
1603 bool
1604 depends on FUTEX && RT_MUTEXES
1605 default y
1606
1607 config EPOLL
1608 bool "Enable eventpoll support" if EXPERT
1609 default y
1610 help
1611 Disabling this option will cause the kernel to be built without
1612 support for epoll family of system calls.
1613
1614 config SIGNALFD
1615 bool "Enable signalfd() system call" if EXPERT
1616 default y
1617 help
1618 Enable the signalfd() system call that allows to receive signals
1619 on a file descriptor.
1620
1621 If unsure, say Y.
1622
1623 config TIMERFD
1624 bool "Enable timerfd() system call" if EXPERT
1625 default y
1626 help
1627 Enable the timerfd() system call that allows to receive timer
1628 events on a file descriptor.
1629
1630 If unsure, say Y.
1631
1632 config EVENTFD
1633 bool "Enable eventfd() system call" if EXPERT
1634 default y
1635 help
1636 Enable the eventfd() system call that allows to receive both
1637 kernel notification (ie. KAIO) or userspace notifications.
1638
1639 If unsure, say Y.
1640
1641 config SHMEM
1642 bool "Use full shmem filesystem" if EXPERT
1643 default y
1644 depends on MMU
1645 help
1646 The shmem is an internal filesystem used to manage shared memory.
1647 It is backed by swap and manages resource limits. It is also exported
1648 to userspace as tmpfs if TMPFS is enabled. Disabling this
1649 option replaces shmem and tmpfs with the much simpler ramfs code,
1650 which may be appropriate on small systems without swap.
1651
1652 config AIO
1653 bool "Enable AIO support" if EXPERT
1654 default y
1655 help
1656 This option enables POSIX asynchronous I/O which may by used
1657 by some high performance threaded applications. Disabling
1658 this option saves about 7k.
1659
1660 config IO_URING
1661 bool "Enable IO uring support" if EXPERT
1662 select IO_WQ
1663 default y
1664 help
1665 This option enables support for the io_uring interface, enabling
1666 applications to submit and complete IO through submission and
1667 completion rings that are shared between the kernel and application.
1668
1669 config ADVISE_SYSCALLS
1670 bool "Enable madvise/fadvise syscalls" if EXPERT
1671 default y
1672 help
1673 This option enables the madvise and fadvise syscalls, used by
1674 applications to advise the kernel about their future memory or file
1675 usage, improving performance. If building an embedded system where no
1676 applications use these syscalls, you can disable this option to save
1677 space.
1678
1679 config MEMBARRIER
1680 bool "Enable membarrier() system call" if EXPERT
1681 default y
1682 help
1683 Enable the membarrier() system call that allows issuing memory
1684 barriers across all running threads, which can be used to distribute
1685 the cost of user-space memory barriers asymmetrically by transforming
1686 pairs of memory barriers into pairs consisting of membarrier() and a
1687 compiler barrier.
1688
1689 If unsure, say Y.
1690
1691 config KCMP
1692 bool "Enable kcmp() system call" if EXPERT
1693 help
1694 Enable the kernel resource comparison system call. It provides
1695 user-space with the ability to compare two processes to see if they
1696 share a common resource, such as a file descriptor or even virtual
1697 memory space.
1698
1699 If unsure, say N.
1700
1701 config RSEQ
1702 bool "Enable rseq() system call" if EXPERT
1703 default y
1704 depends on HAVE_RSEQ
1705 select MEMBARRIER
1706 help
1707 Enable the restartable sequences system call. It provides a
1708 user-space cache for the current CPU number value, which
1709 speeds up getting the current CPU number from user-space,
1710 as well as an ABI to speed up user-space operations on
1711 per-CPU data.
1712
1713 If unsure, say Y.
1714
1715 config DEBUG_RSEQ
1716 default n
1717 bool "Enable debugging of rseq() system call" if EXPERT
1718 depends on RSEQ && DEBUG_KERNEL
1719 help
1720 Enable extra debugging checks for the rseq system call.
1721
1722 If unsure, say N.
1723
1724 config CACHESTAT_SYSCALL
1725 bool "Enable cachestat() system call" if EXPERT
1726 default y
1727 help
1728 Enable the cachestat system call, which queries the page cache
1729 statistics of a file (number of cached pages, dirty pages,
1730 pages marked for writeback, (recently) evicted pages).
1731
1732 If unsure say Y here.
1733
1734 config PC104
1735 bool "PC/104 support" if EXPERT
1736 help
1737 Expose PC/104 form factor device drivers and options available for
1738 selection and configuration. Enable this option if your target
1739 machine has a PC/104 bus.
1740
1741 config KALLSYMS
1742 bool "Load all symbols for debugging/ksymoops" if EXPERT
1743 default y
1744 help
1745 Say Y here to let the kernel print out symbolic crash information and
1746 symbolic stack backtraces. This increases the size of the kernel
1747 somewhat, as all symbols have to be loaded into the kernel image.
1748
1749 config KALLSYMS_SELFTEST
1750 bool "Test the basic functions and performance of kallsyms"
1751 depends on KALLSYMS
1752 default n
1753 help
1754 Test the basic functions and performance of some interfaces, such as
1755 kallsyms_lookup_name. It also calculates the compression rate of the
1756 kallsyms compression algorithm for the current symbol set.
1757
1758 Start self-test automatically after system startup. Suggest executing
1759 "dmesg | grep kallsyms_selftest" to collect test results. "finish" is
1760 displayed in the last line, indicating that the test is complete.
1761
1762 config KALLSYMS_ALL
1763 bool "Include all symbols in kallsyms"
1764 depends on DEBUG_KERNEL && KALLSYMS
1765 help
1766 Normally kallsyms only contains the symbols of functions for nicer
1767 OOPS messages and backtraces (i.e., symbols from the text and inittext
1768 sections). This is sufficient for most cases. And only if you want to
1769 enable kernel live patching, or other less common use cases (e.g.,
1770 when a debugger is used) all symbols are required (i.e., names of
1771 variables from the data sections, etc).
1772
1773 This option makes sure that all symbols are loaded into the kernel
1774 image (i.e., symbols from all sections) in cost of increased kernel
1775 size (depending on the kernel configuration, it may be 300KiB or
1776 something like this).
1777
1778 Say N unless you really need all symbols, or kernel live patching.
1779
1780 config KALLSYMS_ABSOLUTE_PERCPU
1781 bool
1782 depends on KALLSYMS
1783 default X86_64 && SMP
1784
1785 config KALLSYMS_BASE_RELATIVE
1786 bool
1787 depends on KALLSYMS
1788 default y
1789 help
1790 Instead of emitting them as absolute values in the native word size,
1791 emit the symbol references in the kallsyms table as 32-bit entries,
1792 each containing a relative value in the range [base, base + U32_MAX]
1793 or, when KALLSYMS_ABSOLUTE_PERCPU is in effect, each containing either
1794 an absolute value in the range [0, S32_MAX] or a relative value in the
1795 range [base, base + S32_MAX], where base is the lowest relative symbol
1796 address encountered in the image.
1797
1798 On 64-bit builds, this reduces the size of the address table by 50%,
1799 but more importantly, it results in entries whose values are build
1800 time constants, and no relocation pass is required at runtime to fix
1801 up the entries based on the runtime load address of the kernel.
1802
1803 # end of the "standard kernel features (expert users)" menu
1804
1805 config ARCH_HAS_MEMBARRIER_CALLBACKS
1806 bool
1807
1808 config ARCH_HAS_MEMBARRIER_SYNC_CORE
1809 bool
1810
1811 config HAVE_PERF_EVENTS
1812 bool
1813 help
1814 See tools/perf/design.txt for details.
1815
1816 config GUEST_PERF_EVENTS
1817 bool
1818 depends on HAVE_PERF_EVENTS
1819
1820 config PERF_USE_VMALLOC
1821 bool
1822 help
1823 See tools/perf/design.txt for details
1824
1825 menu "Kernel Performance Events And Counters"
1826
1827 config PERF_EVENTS
1828 bool "Kernel performance events and counters"
1829 default y if PROFILING
1830 depends on HAVE_PERF_EVENTS
1831 select IRQ_WORK
1832 help
1833 Enable kernel support for various performance events provided
1834 by software and hardware.
1835
1836 Software events are supported either built-in or via the
1837 use of generic tracepoints.
1838
1839 Most modern CPUs support performance events via performance
1840 counter registers. These registers count the number of certain
1841 types of hw events: such as instructions executed, cachemisses
1842 suffered, or branches mis-predicted - without slowing down the
1843 kernel or applications. These registers can also trigger interrupts
1844 when a threshold number of events have passed - and can thus be
1845 used to profile the code that runs on that CPU.
1846
1847 The Linux Performance Event subsystem provides an abstraction of
1848 these software and hardware event capabilities, available via a
1849 system call and used by the "perf" utility in tools/perf/. It
1850 provides per task and per CPU counters, and it provides event
1851 capabilities on top of those.
1852
1853 Say Y if unsure.
1854
1855 config DEBUG_PERF_USE_VMALLOC
1856 default n
1857 bool "Debug: use vmalloc to back perf mmap() buffers"
1858 depends on PERF_EVENTS && DEBUG_KERNEL && !PPC
1859 select PERF_USE_VMALLOC
1860 help
1861 Use vmalloc memory to back perf mmap() buffers.
1862
1863 Mostly useful for debugging the vmalloc code on platforms
1864 that don't require it.
1865
1866 Say N if unsure.
1867
1868 endmenu
1869
1870 config SYSTEM_DATA_VERIFICATION
1871 def_bool n
1872 select SYSTEM_TRUSTED_KEYRING
1873 select KEYS
1874 select CRYPTO
1875 select CRYPTO_RSA
1876 select ASYMMETRIC_KEY_TYPE
1877 select ASYMMETRIC_PUBLIC_KEY_SUBTYPE
1878 select ASN1
1879 select OID_REGISTRY
1880 select X509_CERTIFICATE_PARSER
1881 select PKCS7_MESSAGE_PARSER
1882 help
1883 Provide PKCS#7 message verification using the contents of the system
1884 trusted keyring to provide public keys. This then can be used for
1885 module verification, kexec image verification and firmware blob
1886 verification.
1887
1888 config PROFILING
1889 bool "Profiling support"
1890 help
1891 Say Y here to enable the extended profiling support mechanisms used
1892 by profilers.
1893
1894 config RUST
1895 bool "Rust support"
1896 depends on HAVE_RUST
1897 depends on RUST_IS_AVAILABLE
1898 depends on !MODVERSIONS
1899 depends on !GCC_PLUGINS
1900 depends on !RANDSTRUCT
1901 depends on !DEBUG_INFO_BTF || PAHOLE_HAS_LANG_EXCLUDE
1902 select CONSTRUCTORS
1903 help
1904 Enables Rust support in the kernel.
1905
1906 This allows other Rust-related options, like drivers written in Rust,
1907 to be selected.
1908
1909 It is also required to be able to load external kernel modules
1910 written in Rust.
1911
1912 See Documentation/rust/ for more information.
1913
1914 If unsure, say N.
1915
1916 config RUSTC_VERSION_TEXT
1917 string
1918 depends on RUST
1919 default $(shell,command -v $(RUSTC) >/dev/null 2>&1 && $(RUSTC) --version || echo n)
1920
1921 config BINDGEN_VERSION_TEXT
1922 string
1923 depends on RUST
1924 default $(shell,command -v $(BINDGEN) >/dev/null 2>&1 && $(BINDGEN) --version || echo n)
1925
1926 #
1927 # Place an empty function call at each tracepoint site. Can be
1928 # dynamically changed for a probe function.
1929 #
1930 config TRACEPOINTS
1931 bool
1932
1933 source "kernel/Kconfig.kexec"
1934
1935 endmenu # General setup
1936
1937 source "arch/Kconfig"
1938
1939 config RT_MUTEXES
1940 bool
1941 default y if PREEMPT_RT
1942
1943 config BASE_SMALL
1944 int
1945 default 0 if BASE_FULL
1946 default 1 if !BASE_FULL
1947
1948 config MODULE_SIG_FORMAT
1949 def_bool n
1950 select SYSTEM_DATA_VERIFICATION
1951
1952 source "kernel/module/Kconfig"
1953
1954 config INIT_ALL_POSSIBLE
1955 bool
1956 help
1957 Back when each arch used to define their own cpu_online_mask and
1958 cpu_possible_mask, some of them chose to initialize cpu_possible_mask
1959 with all 1s, and others with all 0s. When they were centralised,
1960 it was better to provide this option than to break all the archs
1961 and have several arch maintainers pursuing me down dark alleys.
1962
1963 source "block/Kconfig"
1964
1965 config PREEMPT_NOTIFIERS
1966 bool
1967
1968 config PADATA
1969 depends on SMP
1970 bool
1971
1972 config ASN1
1973 tristate
1974 help
1975 Build a simple ASN.1 grammar compiler that produces a bytecode output
1976 that can be interpreted by the ASN.1 stream decoder and used to
1977 inform it as to what tags are to be expected in a stream and what
1978 functions to call on what tags.
1979
1980 source "kernel/Kconfig.locks"
1981
1982 config ARCH_HAS_NON_OVERLAPPING_ADDRESS_SPACE
1983 bool
1984
1985 config ARCH_HAS_SYNC_CORE_BEFORE_USERMODE
1986 bool
1987
1988 # It may be useful for an architecture to override the definitions of the
1989 # SYSCALL_DEFINE() and __SYSCALL_DEFINEx() macros in <linux/syscalls.h>
1990 # and the COMPAT_ variants in <linux/compat.h>, in particular to use a
1991 # different calling convention for syscalls. They can also override the
1992 # macros for not-implemented syscalls in kernel/sys_ni.c and
1993 # kernel/time/posix-stubs.c. All these overrides need to be available in
1994 # <asm/syscall_wrapper.h>.
1995 config ARCH_HAS_SYSCALL_WRAPPER
1996 def_bool n