linux_dsm_epyc7002/drivers/isdn/Kconfig
Lee Jones 7fd78edc47 isdn: Make CONFIG_ISDN depend on CONFIG_NETDEVICES
It doesn't make much sense to enable ISDN services if you don't
intend to connect to a network. Therefore insisting that ISDN
depends on NETDEVICES seems logical. We can then remove any
guards mentioning NETDEVICES inside all subordinate drivers.

This also has the nice side-effect of fixing the warning below
when ISDN_I4L && !CONFIG_NETDEVICES at compile time.

This patch fixes:
drivers/isdn/i4l/isdn_common.c: In function ‘isdn_ioctl’:
drivers/isdn/i4l/isdn_common.c:1278:8: warning: unused variable ‘s’ [-Wunused-variable]

Cc: Karsten Keil <isdn@linux-pingi.de>
Cc: netdev@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Lee Jones <lee.jones@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2012-11-07 18:59:26 -05:00

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#
# ISDN device configuration
#
menuconfig ISDN
bool "ISDN support"
depends on NET && NETDEVICES
depends on !S390 && !UML
---help---
ISDN ("Integrated Services Digital Network", called RNIS in France)
is a fully digital telephone service that can be used for voice and
data connections. If your computer is equipped with an ISDN
adapter you can use it to connect to your Internet service provider
(with SLIP or PPP) faster than via a conventional telephone modem
(though still much slower than with DSL) or to make and accept
voice calls (eg. turning your PC into a software answering machine
or PABX).
Select this option if you want your kernel to support ISDN.
if ISDN
menuconfig ISDN_I4L
tristate "Old ISDN4Linux (deprecated)"
---help---
This driver allows you to use an ISDN adapter for networking
connections and as dialin/out device. The isdn-tty's have a built
in AT-compatible modem emulator. Network devices support autodial,
channel-bundling, callback and caller-authentication without having
a daemon running. A reduced T.70 protocol is supported with tty's
suitable for German BTX. On D-Channel, the protocols EDSS1
(Euro-ISDN) and 1TR6 (German style) are supported. See
<file:Documentation/isdn/README> for more information.
ISDN support in the linux kernel is moving towards a new API,
called CAPI (Common ISDN Application Programming Interface).
Therefore the old ISDN4Linux layer will eventually become obsolete.
It is still available, though, for use with adapters that are not
supported by the new CAPI subsystem yet.
source "drivers/isdn/i4l/Kconfig"
menuconfig ISDN_CAPI
tristate "CAPI 2.0 subsystem"
help
This provides CAPI (the Common ISDN Application Programming
Interface) Version 2.0, a standard making it easy for programs to
access ISDN hardware in a device independent way. (For details see
<http://www.capi.org/>.) CAPI supports making and accepting voice
and data connections, controlling call options and protocols,
as well as ISDN supplementary services like call forwarding or
three-party conferences (if supported by the specific hardware
driver).
Select this option and the appropriate hardware driver below if
you have an ISDN adapter supported by the CAPI subsystem.
if ISDN_CAPI
source "drivers/isdn/capi/Kconfig"
source "drivers/isdn/hardware/Kconfig"
endif # ISDN_CAPI
source "drivers/isdn/gigaset/Kconfig"
source "drivers/isdn/hysdn/Kconfig"
source "drivers/isdn/mISDN/Kconfig"
config ISDN_HDLC
tristate
select CRC_CCITT
select BITREVERSE
endif # ISDN