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Config.in.network 9.1 KB

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  1. # This file is part of the OpenADK project. OpenADK is copyrighted
  2. # material, please see the LICENCE file in the top-level directory.
  3. menu "Network support"
  4. depends on ADK_TARGET_WITH_NET \
  5. || ADK_TARGET_GENERIC
  6. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NETDEVICES
  7. bool
  8. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_ETHERNET
  9. bool
  10. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET
  11. bool
  12. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PACKET
  13. bool
  14. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_UNIX
  15. bool
  16. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_CORE
  17. bool
  18. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_INET
  19. bool "Enable TCP/IP support"
  20. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET
  21. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_UNIX
  22. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PACKET
  23. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_CORE
  24. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NETDEVICES
  25. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_ETHERNET
  26. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO
  27. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO_AES
  28. default y
  29. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IP_FIB_HASH
  30. bool
  31. default y
  32. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IPV6
  33. tristate "Enable IPv6 support"
  34. select BUSYBOX_FEATURE_IPV6
  35. help
  36. This is complemental support for the IP version 6.
  37. You will still be able to do traditional IPv4 networking as well.
  38. For general information about IPv6, see
  39. <http://playground.sun.com/pub/ipng/html/ipng-main.html>.
  40. For Linux IPv6 development information, see <http://www.linux-ipv6.org>.
  41. For specific information about IPv6 under Linux, read the HOWTO at
  42. <http://www.bieringer.de/linux/IPv6/>.
  43. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IPV6_SIT
  44. tristate "IPv6-in-IPv4 tunnel (SIT driver)"
  45. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_INET_TUNNEL
  46. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IP_TUNNEL
  47. help
  48. Tunneling means encapsulating data of one protocol type within
  49. another protocol and sending it over a channel that understands the
  50. encapsulating protocol. This driver implements encapsulation of IPv6
  51. into IPv4 packets. This is useful if you want to connect two IPv6
  52. networks over an IPv4-only path.
  53. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_SYN_COOKIES
  54. bool "TCP syncookie support"
  55. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IP_PNP_BOOTP
  56. bool
  57. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IP_PNP_RARP
  58. bool
  59. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IPGRE_BROADCAST
  60. bool
  61. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IPGRE_DEMUX
  62. bool
  63. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPP_ASYNC
  64. bool
  65. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_SLHC
  66. bool
  67. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IMQ
  68. tristate
  69. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_LLC
  70. tristate
  71. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IP_MULTICAST
  72. bool "Enable IP Multicasting"
  73. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IP_MROUTE
  74. bool "Enable IP Multicasting Routing"
  75. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_ATM
  76. tristate "Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)"
  77. help
  78. ATM is a high-speed networking technology for Local Area Networks
  79. and Wide Area Networks. It uses a fixed packet size and is
  80. connection oriented, allowing for the negotiation of minimum
  81. bandwidth requirements.
  82. In order to participate in an ATM network, your Linux box needs an
  83. ATM networking card. If you have that, say Y here and to the driver
  84. of your ATM card below.
  85. Note that you need a set of user-space programs to actually make use
  86. of ATM. See the file <file:Documentation/networking/atm.txt> for
  87. further details.
  88. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_ATM_BR2684
  89. tristate "BR2684 ATM module"
  90. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_ATM
  91. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BRIDGE
  92. tristate "802.1d Ethernet Bridging"
  93. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_LLC
  94. help
  95. If you say Y here, then your Linux box will be able to act as an
  96. Ethernet bridge, which means that the different Ethernet segments it
  97. is connected to will appear as one Ethernet to the participants.
  98. Several such bridges can work together to create even larger
  99. networks of Ethernets using the IEEE 802.1 spanning tree algorithm.
  100. As this is a standard, Linux bridges will cooperate properly with
  101. other third party bridge products.
  102. In order to use the Ethernet bridge, you'll need the bridge
  103. configuration tools; see <file:Documentation/networking/bridge.txt>
  104. for location. Please read the Bridge mini-HOWTO for more
  105. information.
  106. If you enable iptables support along with the bridge support then you
  107. turn your bridge into a bridging IP firewall.
  108. iptables will then see the IP packets being bridged, so you need to
  109. take this into account when setting up your firewall rules.
  110. Enabling arptables support when bridging will let arptables see
  111. bridged ARP traffic in the arptables FORWARD chain.
  112. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_VLAN_8021Q
  113. tristate "802.1q VLAN support"
  114. help
  115. Select this and you will be able to create 802.1Q VLAN interfaces
  116. on your ethernet interfaces. 802.1Q VLAN supports almost
  117. everything a regular ethernet interface does, including
  118. firewalling, bridging, and of course IP traffic. You will need
  119. the 'vconfig' tool from the VLAN project in order to effectively
  120. use VLANs. See the VLAN web page for more information:
  121. <http://www.candelatech.com/~greear/vlan.html>
  122. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_INET_TUNNEL
  123. tristate
  124. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IP_TUNNEL
  125. tristate
  126. default n
  127. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IPIP
  128. tristate "IP in IP encapsulation support"
  129. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_INET_TUNNEL
  130. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IP_TUNNEL
  131. help
  132. Tunneling means encapsulating data of one protocol type within
  133. another protocol and sending it over a channel that understands the
  134. encapsulating protocol. This particular tunneling driver implements
  135. encapsulation of IP within IP, which sounds kind of pointless, but
  136. can be useful if you want to make your (or some other) machine
  137. appear on a different network than it physically is, or to use
  138. mobile-IP facilities (allowing laptops to seamlessly move between
  139. networks without changing their IP addresses).
  140. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IPGRE
  141. tristate "GRE tunnels over IP"
  142. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IPGRE_BROADCAST
  143. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IPGRE_DEMUX
  144. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NET_IP_TUNNEL
  145. help
  146. Tunneling means encapsulating data of one protocol type within
  147. another protocol and sending it over a channel that understands the
  148. encapsulating protocol. This particular tunneling driver implements
  149. GRE (Generic Routing Encapsulation) and at this time allows
  150. encapsulating of IPv4 or IPv6 over existing IPv4 infrastructure.
  151. This driver is useful if the other endpoint is a Cisco router: Cisco
  152. likes GRE much better than the other Linux tunneling driver ("IP
  153. tunneling" above). In addition, GRE allows multicast redistribution
  154. through the tunnel.
  155. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPP
  156. tristate "PPP support"
  157. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPP_ASYNC
  158. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_SLHC
  159. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRC_CCITT
  160. help
  161. PPP (Point to Point Protocol) is a newer and better SLIP. It serves
  162. the same purpose: sending Internet traffic over telephone (and other
  163. serial) lines. Ask your access provider if they support it, because
  164. otherwise you can't use it; most Internet access providers these
  165. days support PPP rather than SLIP.
  166. To use PPP, you need an additional program called pppd as described
  167. in the PPP-HOWTO, available at
  168. <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>. Make sure that you have
  169. the version of pppd recommended in <file:Documentation/Changes>.
  170. The PPP option enlarges your kernel by about 16 KB.
  171. There are actually two versions of PPP: the traditional PPP for
  172. asynchronous lines, such as regular analog phone lines, and
  173. synchronous PPP which can be used over digital ISDN lines for
  174. example. If you want to use PPP over phone lines or other
  175. asynchronous serial lines, you need to say Y (or M) here and also to
  176. the next option, "PPP support for async serial ports". For PPP over
  177. synchronous lines, you should say Y (or M) here and to "Support
  178. synchronous PPP", below.
  179. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPP_MPPE
  180. tristate "PPP MPPE/MPPC module"
  181. depends on ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPP
  182. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO
  183. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO_ARC4
  184. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO_SHA1
  185. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO_ECB
  186. help
  187. Support for the MPPE Encryption protocol, as employed by the
  188. Microsoft Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol.
  189. See http://pptpclient.sourceforge.net/ for information on
  190. configuring PPTP clients and servers to utilize this method.
  191. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPPOATM
  192. tristate "PPPoA (PPP over ATM) kernel support"
  193. depends on ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPP
  194. select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_ATM
  195. help
  196. Support for PPP over ATM
  197. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPPOE
  198. tristate "PPPoE (PPP over Ethernet) kernel support"
  199. depends on ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_PPP
  200. help
  201. Support for PPP over Ethernet
  202. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_TUN
  203. tristate "Universal TUN/TAP driver"
  204. help
  205. Kernel support for the TUN/TAP tunneling device
  206. config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BONDING
  207. tristate "Bonding driver support"
  208. help
  209. Say 'Y' or 'M' if you wish to be able to 'bond' multiple Ethernet
  210. Channels together. This is called 'Etherchannel' by Cisco,
  211. 'Trunking' by Sun, 802.3ad by the IEEE, and 'Bonding' in Linux.
  212. The driver supports multiple bonding modes to allow for both high
  213. performance and high availability operation.
  214. Refer to <file:Documentation/networking/bonding.txt> for more
  215. information.
  216. #config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MPTCP
  217. # bool "Multipath TCP support"
  218. # select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_IPV6
  219. # depends on ADK_TARGET_KERNEL_VERSION_3_14
  220. # help
  221. # http://www.multipath-tcp.org
  222. source target/linux/config/Config.in.sched
  223. source target/linux/config/Config.in.ipsec
  224. source target/linux/config/Config.in.ipvs
  225. endmenu