| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226 | ## For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,# see scripts/kbuild/config-language.txt.#menu "Linux Module Utilities"config BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	bool "Simplified modutils"	default n	help	  Simplified modutils.	  With this option modprobe does not require modules.dep file	  and does not use /etc/modules.conf file.	  It scans module files in /lib/modules/`uname -r` and	  determines dependencies and module alias names on the fly.	  This may make module loading slower, most notably	  when one needs to load module by alias (this requires	  scanning through module _bodies_).	  At the first attempt to load a module by alias modprobe	  will try to generate modules.dep.bb file in order to speed up	  future loads by alias. Failure to do so (read-only /lib/modules,	  etc) is not reported, and future modprobes will be slow too.	  NB: modules.dep.bb file format is not compatible	  with modules.dep file as created/used by standard module tools.	  Additional module parameters can be stored in	  /etc/modules/$module_name files.	  Apart from modprobe, other utilities are also provided:	  - insmod is an alias to modprobe	  - rmmod is an alias to modprobe -r	  - depmod generates modules.dep.bb	  As of 2008-07, this code is experimental. It is 14kb smaller	  than "non-small" modutils.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_MODPROBE_SMALL_OPTIONS_ON_CMDLINE	bool "Accept module options on modprobe command line"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  Allow insmod and modprobe take module options from command line.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_MODPROBE_SMALL_CHECK_ALREADY_LOADED	bool "Skip loading of already loaded modules"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  Check if the module is already loaded.config BUSYBOX_INSMOD	bool "insmod"	default y	depends on !BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  insmod is used to load specified modules in the running kernel.config BUSYBOX_RMMOD	bool "rmmod"	default y	depends on !BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  rmmod is used to unload specified modules from the kernel.config BUSYBOX_LSMOD	bool "lsmod"	default y	depends on !BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  lsmod is used to display a list of loaded modules.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_LSMOD_PRETTY_2_6_OUTPUT	bool "Pretty output"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_LSMOD	help	  This option makes output format of lsmod adjusted to	  the format of module-init-tools for Linux kernel 2.6.	  Increases size somewhat.config BUSYBOX_MODPROBE	bool "modprobe"	default n	depends on !BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  Handle the loading of modules, and their dependencies on a high	  level.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_MODPROBE_BLACKLIST	bool "Blacklist support"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_MODPROBE	help	  Say 'y' here to enable support for the 'blacklist' command in	  modprobe.conf. This prevents the alias resolver to resolve	  blacklisted modules. This is useful if you want to prevent your	  hardware autodetection scripts to load modules like evdev, frame	  buffer drivers etc.config BUSYBOX_DEPMOD	bool "depmod"	default n	depends on !BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  depmod generates modules.dep (and potentially modules.alias	  and modules.symbols) that contain dependency information	  for modprobe.comment "Options common to multiple modutils"config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_2_4_MODULES	bool "Support version 2.2/2.4 Linux kernels"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_INSMOD || BUSYBOX_RMMOD || BUSYBOX_LSMOD	help	  Support module loading for 2.2.x and 2.4.x Linux kernels.	  This increases size considerably. Say N unless you plan	  to run ancient kernels.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_INSMOD_VERSION_CHECKING	bool "Enable module version checking"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_FEATURE_2_4_MODULES && (BUSYBOX_INSMOD || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE)	help	  Support checking of versions for modules. This is used to	  ensure that the kernel and module are made for each other.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_INSMOD_KSYMOOPS_SYMBOLS	bool "Add module symbols to kernel symbol table"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_FEATURE_2_4_MODULES && (BUSYBOX_INSMOD || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE)	help	  By adding module symbols to the kernel symbol table, Oops messages	  occuring within kernel modules can be properly debugged. By enabling	  this feature, module symbols will always be added to the kernel symbol	  table for proper debugging support. If you are not interested in	  Oops messages from kernel modules, say N.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_INSMOD_LOADINKMEM	bool "In kernel memory optimization (uClinux only)"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_FEATURE_2_4_MODULES && (BUSYBOX_INSMOD || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE)	help	  This is a special uClinux only memory optimization that lets insmod	  load the specified kernel module directly into kernel space, reducing	  memory usage by preventing the need for two copies of the module	  being loaded into memory.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_INSMOD_LOAD_MAP	bool "Enable insmod load map (-m) option"	default n	depends on BUSYBOX_FEATURE_2_4_MODULES && BUSYBOX_INSMOD	help	  Enabling this, one would be able to get a load map	  output on stdout. This makes kernel module debugging	  easier.	  If you don't plan to debug kernel modules, you	  don't need this option.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_INSMOD_LOAD_MAP_FULL	bool "Symbols in load map"	default y	depends on BUSYBOX_FEATURE_INSMOD_LOAD_MAP && !BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  Without this option, -m will only output section	  load map. With this option, -m will also output	  symbols load map.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_CHECK_TAINTED_MODULE	bool "Support tainted module checking with new kernels"	default y	depends on (BUSYBOX_LSMOD || BUSYBOX_FEATURE_2_4_MODULES) && !BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  Support checking for tainted modules. These are usually binary	  only modules that will make the linux-kernel list ignore your	  support request.	  This option is required to support GPLONLY modules.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_MODUTILS_ALIAS	bool "Support for module.aliases file"	default y	depends on BUSYBOX_DEPMOD || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE	help	  Generate and parse modules.alias containing aliases for bus	  identifiers:	    alias pcmcia:m*c*f03fn*pfn*pa*pb*pc*pd* parport_cs	  and aliases for logical modules names e.g.:	    alias padlock_aes aes	    alias aes_i586 aes	    alias aes_generic aes	  Say Y if unsure.config BUSYBOX_FEATURE_MODUTILS_SYMBOLS	bool "Support for module.symbols file"	default y	depends on BUSYBOX_DEPMOD || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE	help	  Generate and parse modules.symbols containing aliases for	  symbol_request() kernel calls, such as:	    alias symbol:usb_sg_init usbcore	  Say Y if unsure.config BUSYBOX_DEFAULT_MODULES_DIR	string "Default directory containing modules"	default "/lib/modules"	depends on BUSYBOX_DEPMOD || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  Directory that contains kernel modules.	  Defaults to "/lib/modules"config BUSYBOX_DEFAULT_DEPMOD_FILE	string "Default name of modules.dep"	default "modules.dep"	depends on BUSYBOX_DEPMOD || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE || BUSYBOX_MODPROBE_SMALL	help	  Filename that contains kernel modules dependencies.	  Defaults to "modules.dep"endmenu
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