linux_dsm_epyc7002/drivers/misc/eeprom/Kconfig

114 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

menu "EEPROM support"
config EEPROM_AT24
tristate "I2C EEPROMs / RAMs / ROMs from most vendors"
depends on I2C && SYSFS
select NVMEM
help
Enable this driver to get read/write support to most I2C EEPROMs
and compatible devices like FRAMs, SRAMs, ROMs etc. After you
configure the driver to know about each chip on your target
board. Use these generic chip names, instead of vendor-specific
ones like at24c64, 24lc02 or fm24c04:
24c00, 24c01, 24c02, spd (readonly 24c02), 24c04, 24c08,
24c16, 24c32, 24c64, 24c128, 24c256, 24c512, 24c1024
Unless you like data loss puzzles, always be sure that any chip
you configure as a 24c32 (32 kbit) or larger is NOT really a
24c16 (16 kbit) or smaller, and vice versa. Marking the chip
as read-only won't help recover from this. Also, if your chip
has any software write-protect mechanism you may want to review the
code to make sure this driver won't turn it on by accident.
If you use this with an SMBus adapter instead of an I2C adapter,
full functionality is not available. Only smaller devices are
supported (24c16 and below, max 4 kByte).
This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
will be called at24.
config EEPROM_AT25
tristate "SPI EEPROMs from most vendors"
depends on SPI && SYSFS
select NVMEM
help
Enable this driver to get read/write support to most SPI EEPROMs,
after you configure the board init code to know about each eeprom
on your target board.
This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
will be called at25.
config EEPROM_LEGACY
tristate "Old I2C EEPROM reader"
depends on I2C && SYSFS
help
If you say yes here you get read-only access to the EEPROM data
available on modern memory DIMMs and Sony Vaio laptops via I2C. Such
EEPROMs could theoretically be available on other devices as well.
This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
will be called eeprom.
config EEPROM_MAX6875
tristate "Maxim MAX6874/5 power supply supervisor"
depends on I2C
help
If you say yes here you get read-only support for the user EEPROM of
the Maxim MAX6874/5 EEPROM-programmable, quad power-supply
sequencer/supervisor.
All other features of this chip should be accessed via i2c-dev.
This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
will be called max6875.
config EEPROM_93CX6
tristate "EEPROM 93CX6 support"
help
This is a driver for the EEPROM chipsets 93c46 and 93c66.
The driver supports both read as well as write commands.
If unsure, say N.
config EEPROM_93XX46
tristate "Microwire EEPROM 93XX46 support"
depends on SPI && SYSFS
select REGMAP
select NVMEM
help
Driver for the microwire EEPROM chipsets 93xx46x. The driver
supports both read and write commands and also the command to
erase the whole EEPROM.
This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
will be called eeprom_93xx46.
If unsure, say N.
config EEPROM_DIGSY_MTC_CFG
bool "DigsyMTC display configuration EEPROMs device"
depends on GPIO_MPC5200 && SPI_GPIO
help
This option enables access to display configuration EEPROMs
on digsy_mtc board. You have to additionally select Microwire
EEPROM 93XX46 driver. sysfs entries will be created for that
EEPROM allowing to read/write the configuration data or to
erase the whole EEPROM.
If unsure, say N.
eeprom: Add IDT 89HPESx EEPROM/CSR driver This driver provides an access to EEPROM of IDT PCIe-switches. IDT PCIe- switches expose a simple SMBus interface to perform IO-operations from/to EEPROM, which is located at private (so called Master) SMBus. The driver creates a simple binary sysfs-file to have an access to the EEPROM using the SMBus-slave interface in the i2c-device susfs-directory: /sys/bus/i2c/devices/<bus>-<devaddr>/eeprom In case if read-only flag is specified at dts-node of the device, User-space applications won't be able to write to the EEPROM sysfs-node. Additionally IDT 89HPESx SMBus interface has an ability to read/write values of device CSRs. This driver exposes debugfs-file to perform simple IO-operations using that ability for just basic debug purpose. Particularly the next file is created in the specific debugfs-directory: /sys/kernel/debug/idt_csr/ Format of the debugfs-file value is: $ cat /sys/kernel/debug/idt_csr/<bus>-<devaddr>/<devname>; <CSR address>:<CSR value> So reading the content of the file gives current CSR address and it value. If User-space application wishes to change current CSR address, it can just write a proper value to the sysfs-file: $ echo "<CSR address>" > /sys/kernel/debug/idt_csr/<bus>-<devaddr>/<devname> If it wants to change the CSR value as well, the format of the write operation is: $ echo "<CSR address>:<CSR value>" > \ /sys/kernel/debug/idt_csr/<bus>-<devaddr>/<devname>; CSR address and value can be any of hexadecimal, decimal or octal format. Signed-off-by: Serge Semin <fancer.lancer@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2017-01-13 19:16:52 +07:00
config EEPROM_IDT_89HPESX
tristate "IDT 89HPESx PCIe-swtiches EEPROM / CSR support"
depends on I2C && SYSFS
help
Enable this driver to get read/write access to EEPROM / CSRs
over IDT PCIe-swtich i2c-slave interface.
This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
will be called idt_89hpesx.
endmenu