The "generic" option compiles in *all* the possible hardware
support and relies on the sh_mv= kernel commandline option to choose
at runtime which routines to use. "MV" stands for "machine vector";
each of the machines below is described by a machine vector and
the "generic" option chooses to compile them all in.
> Select SolutionEngine if configuring for a Hitachi SH7709
> or SH7750 evalutation board.
>
> Select Overdrive if configuring for a ST407750 Overdrive board.
> More information at
> <http://linuxsh.sourceforge.net/docs/7750overdrive.php3>
>
> Select HP620 if configuring for a HP Jornada HP620.
> More information at
> <http://www.hp.com/jornada>.
>
> Select HP680 if configuring for a HP Jornada HP680.
> More information at
> <http://www.hp.com/jornada/products/680>.
>
> Select HP690 if configuring for a HP Jornada HP690.
> More information at <http://www.hp.com/jornada/products/680>.
You won't get any information about Linux on Jornadas at HP.
>
> Select CqREEK if configuring for a CqREEK SH7708 or SH7750.
> More information at
> <http://sources.redhat.com/ecos/hardware.html#SuperH>.
>
> Select DMIDA if configuring for a DataMyte 4000 Industrial
> Digital Assistant. More information at <http://www.dmida.com>.
>
> Select EC3104 if configuring for a system with an Eclipse
> International EC3104 chip, e.g. the Harris AD2000.
>
> Select Dreamcast if configuring for a SEGA Dreamcast.
> More information at
> <http://www.m17n.org/linux-sh/dreamcast>.
The Dreamcast project is at <http://linuxdc.sourceforge.net/>
They usually have slightly newer DC support than
linuxsh.sourceforge.net,
to which they sync regularly.
>
> Select BareCPU if you know what this means, and it applies
> to your system.
>
> Can you be any more explicit about the BareCPU option?
"Bare CPU" aka "unknown" means an SH-based system which is not
one of the specific ones mentioned above, which means you need to
enter all sorts of stuff like CONFIG_MEMORY_START because the config
system doesn't already know what it is. You get a machine vector
without any platform-specific code in it, so things like the RTC may
not work.
This option is for the early stages of porting to a new machine.
Basically the machine choices are laid out like this:
generic = all of the known machines
machine foo
machine bar
unknown = none of the known machines
> Physical memory start address
> CONFIG_MEMORY_START
> The physical memory start address will be automatically
> set to 08000000, unless you selected one of the following
> processor types: SolutionEngine, Overdrive, HP620, HP680, HP690,
> in which case the start address will be set to 0c000000.
>
> Do not change this address unless you know what you are doing.
>
> Why might someone want to change this address?
Only when porting to a new machine which is not already
known by the config system. Changing it from the known correct
value on any of the known systems will only lead to disaster.
> Early printk support
> CONFIG_SH_EARLY_PRINTK
> Say Y here to redirect kernel printks from the boot console to an
> SCI serial console as soon as one is available.
>
> This was my guess. Is it correct?
Nearly.
- the serial console can be either SCI or SCIF (the latter has a FIFO)
- the redirect happens *before* the serial console is available, and
stops when the serial console is initialised
- printks go to a BIOS conforming to the LinuxSH standard (i.e.
the SH-IPL bootloader)
Try:
Say Y here to redirect kernel messages to the serial port
used by the SH-IPL bootloader, starting very early in the boot
process and ending when the kernel's serial console is initialised.
This option is only useful porting the kernel to a new machine,
when the kernel may crash or hang before the serial console is
initialised.
> SuperH SCI (serial) support
> CONFIG_SH_SCI
> Selecting this option will allow the Linux kernel to transfer
> data over SCI (Serial Communication Interface) and/or SCIF
> which are built into the Hitachi SuperH processor.
>
> If in doubt, press "y".
>
> What data? Is this just an on-board RS232C controller?
Sorry, the description is unclear. It's an on-CPU RS232 controller,
usually used as the console. The option provides 1 to 3 (depending
on the CPU model) standard Linux tty devices, /dev/ttySC[012].
>
> Use LinuxSH standard BIOS
> CONFIG_SH_STANDARD_BIOS Say Y here if your target has the gdb-sh-stub
> package from www.m17n.org (or any conforming standard LinuxSH BIOS)
> in FLASH or EPROM. The kernel will use standard BIOS calls during
> boot for various housekeeping tasks (including calls to read and
> write characters to a system console, get a MAC address from an
> on-board Ethernet interface, and shut down the hardware). Note this
> does not work with machines with an existing operating system in
> mask ROM and no flash (WindowsCE machines fall in this category).
> If unsure, say N.
>
> Note that I mixed in some information I gathered from reasding the source.
> Please check for correctness.
That's fine.
Greg.
-- If it's a choice between being a paranoid, hyper-suspicious global village idiot, or a gullible, mega-trusting sheep, I don't look good in mint sauce. - jd, slashdot, 11Feb2000. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/