7 config SENSORS_LIS3LV02D
14 tristate "Analog Devices Digital Potentiometers"
15 depends on (I2C || SPI) && SYSFS
17 If you say yes here, you get support for the Analog Devices
18 AD5258, AD5259, AD5251, AD5252, AD5253, AD5254, AD5255
19 AD5160, AD5161, AD5162, AD5165, AD5200, AD5201, AD5203,
20 AD5204, AD5206, AD5207, AD5231, AD5232, AD5233, AD5235,
21 AD5260, AD5262, AD5263, AD5290, AD5291, AD5292, AD5293,
22 AD7376, AD8400, AD8402, AD8403, ADN2850, AD5241, AD5242,
23 AD5243, AD5245, AD5246, AD5247, AD5248, AD5280, AD5282,
24 ADN2860, AD5273, AD5171, AD5170, AD5172, AD5173, AD5270,
25 AD5271, AD5272, AD5274
26 digital potentiometer chips.
28 See Documentation/misc-devices/ad525x_dpot.txt for the
31 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
32 will be called ad525x_dpot.
34 config AD525X_DPOT_I2C
35 tristate "support I2C bus connection"
36 depends on AD525X_DPOT && I2C
38 Say Y here if you have a digital potentiometers hooked to an I2C bus.
40 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
41 module will be called ad525x_dpot-i2c.
43 config AD525X_DPOT_SPI
44 tristate "support SPI bus connection"
45 depends on AD525X_DPOT && SPI_MASTER
47 Say Y here if you have a digital potentiometers hooked to an SPI bus.
49 If unsure, say N (but it's safe to say "Y").
51 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
52 module will be called ad525x_dpot-spi.
55 bool "Atmel AT32/AT91 Timer/Counter Library"
56 depends on (AVR32 || ARCH_AT91)
58 Select this if you want a library to allocate the Timer/Counter
59 blocks found on many Atmel processors. This facilitates using
60 these blocks by different drivers despite processor differences.
62 config ATMEL_TCB_CLKSRC
63 bool "TC Block Clocksource"
64 depends on ATMEL_TCLIB
67 Select this to get a high precision clocksource based on a
68 TC block with a 5+ MHz base clock rate. Two timer channels
69 are combined to make a single 32-bit timer.
71 When GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS is defined, the third timer channel
72 may be used as a clock event device supporting oneshot mode
73 (delays of up to two seconds) based on the 32 KiHz clock.
75 config ATMEL_TCB_CLKSRC_BLOCK
77 depends on ATMEL_TCB_CLKSRC
78 prompt "TC Block" if CPU_AT32AP700X
82 Some chips provide more than one TC block, so you have the
83 choice of which one to use for the clock framework. The other
84 TC can be used for other purposes, such as PWM generation and
88 tristate "Dummy IRQ handler"
91 This module accepts a single 'irq' parameter, which it should register for.
92 The sole purpose of this module is to help with debugging of systems on
93 which spurious IRQs would happen on disabled IRQ vector.
96 tristate "Device driver for IBM RSA service processor"
97 depends on X86 && PCI && INPUT
98 depends on SERIAL_8250 || SERIAL_8250=n
100 This option enables device driver support for in-band access to the
101 IBM RSA (Condor) service processor in eServer xSeries systems.
102 The ibmasm device driver allows user space application to access
103 ASM (Advanced Systems Management) functions on the service
104 processor. The driver is meant to be used in conjunction with
106 The ibmasm driver also enables the OS to use the UART on the
107 service processor board as a regular serial port. To make use of
108 this feature serial driver support (CONFIG_SERIAL_8250) must be
111 WARNING: This software may not be supported or function
112 correctly on your IBM server. Please consult the IBM ServerProven
113 website <http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/info/x86servers/serverproven/compat/us/>
114 for information on the specific driver level and support statement
118 tristate "Sensable PHANToM (PCI)"
121 Say Y here if you want to build a driver for Sensable PHANToM device.
123 This driver is only for PCI PHANToMs.
125 If you choose to build module, its name will be phantom. If unsure,
129 tristate "Parallel Trace Interface for MIPI P1149.7 cJTAG standard"
130 depends on PCI && TTY && (X86_INTEL_MID || COMPILE_TEST)
133 The PTI (Parallel Trace Interface) driver directs
134 trace data routed from various parts in the system out
135 through an Intel Penwell PTI port and out of the mobile
136 device for analysis with a debugging tool (Lauterbach or Fido).
138 You should select this driver if the target kernel is meant for
139 an Intel Atom (non-netbook) mobile device containing a MIPI
140 P1149.7 standard implementation.
143 tristate "SGI IOC4 Base IO support"
146 This option enables basic support for the IOC4 chip on certain
147 SGI IO controller cards (IO9, IO10, and PCI-RT). This option
148 does not enable any specific functions on such a card, but provides
149 necessary infrastructure for other drivers to utilize.
151 If you have an SGI Altix with an IOC4-based card say Y.
155 tristate "TI Flash Media interface support"
158 If you want support for Texas Instruments(R) Flash Media adapters
159 you should select this option and then also choose an appropriate
160 host adapter, such as 'TI Flash Media PCI74xx/PCI76xx host adapter
161 support', if you have a TI PCI74xx compatible card reader, for
163 You will also have to select some flash card format drivers. MMC/SD
164 cards are supported via 'MMC/SD Card support: TI Flash Media MMC/SD
165 Interface support (MMC_TIFM_SD)'.
167 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module will
171 tristate "TI Flash Media PCI74xx/PCI76xx host adapter support"
172 depends on PCI && TIFM_CORE
175 This option enables support for Texas Instruments(R) PCI74xx and
176 PCI76xx families of Flash Media adapters, found in many laptops.
177 To make actual use of the device, you will have to select some
178 flash card format drivers, as outlined in the TIFM_CORE Help.
180 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module will
184 tristate "Integrated Circuits ICS932S401"
187 If you say yes here you get support for the Integrated Circuits
188 ICS932S401 clock control chips.
190 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
191 will be called ics932s401.
194 tristate "Device driver for Atmel SSC peripheral"
195 depends on HAS_IOMEM && (AVR32 || ARCH_AT91 || COMPILE_TEST)
197 This option enables device driver support for Atmel Synchronized
198 Serial Communication peripheral (SSC).
200 The SSC peripheral supports a wide variety of serial frame based
201 communications, i.e. I2S, SPI, etc.
205 config ENCLOSURE_SERVICES
206 tristate "Enclosure Services"
209 Provides support for intelligent enclosures (bays which
210 contain storage devices). You also need either a host
211 driver (SCSI/ATA) which supports enclosures
212 or a SCSI enclosure device (SES) to use these services.
215 tristate "Support communication between SGI SSIs"
217 depends on (IA64_GENERIC || IA64_SGI_SN2 || IA64_SGI_UV || X86_UV) && SMP
218 select IA64_UNCACHED_ALLOCATOR if IA64_GENERIC || IA64_SGI_SN2
219 select GENERIC_ALLOCATOR if IA64_GENERIC || IA64_SGI_SN2
220 select SGI_GRU if X86_64 && SMP
222 An SGI machine can be divided into multiple Single System
223 Images which act independently of each other and have
224 hardware based memory protection from the others. Enabling
225 this feature will allow for direct communication between SSIs
226 based on a network adapter and DMA messaging.
229 tristate "CS5535/CS5536 Geode Multi-Function General Purpose Timer (MFGPT) support"
230 depends on MFD_CS5535
233 This driver provides access to MFGPT functionality for other
234 drivers that need timers. MFGPTs are available in the CS5535 and
235 CS5536 companion chips that are found in AMD Geode and several
236 other platforms. They have a better resolution and max interval
237 than the generic PIT, and are suitable for use as high-res timers.
238 You probably don't want to enable this manually; other drivers that
239 make use of it should enable it.
241 config CS5535_MFGPT_DEFAULT_IRQ
243 depends on CS5535_MFGPT
246 MFGPTs on the CS5535 require an interrupt. The selected IRQ
247 can be overridden as a module option as well as by driver that
248 use the cs5535_mfgpt_ API; however, different architectures might
249 want to use a different IRQ by default. This is here for
250 architectures to set as necessary.
252 config CS5535_CLOCK_EVENT_SRC
253 tristate "CS5535/CS5536 high-res timer (MFGPT) events"
254 depends on GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS && CS5535_MFGPT
256 This driver provides a clock event source based on the MFGPT
257 timer(s) in the CS5535 and CS5536 companion chips.
258 MFGPTs have a better resolution and max interval than the
259 generic PIT, and are suitable for use as high-res timers.
262 tristate "Channel interface driver for the HP iLO processor"
266 The channel interface driver allows applications to communicate
267 with iLO management processors present on HP ProLiant servers.
268 Upon loading, the driver creates /dev/hpilo/dXccbN files, which
269 can be used to gather data from the management processor, via
270 read and write system calls.
272 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
273 module will be called hpilo.
276 tristate "Qualcomm coincell charger support"
277 depends on MFD_SPMI_PMIC || COMPILE_TEST
279 This driver supports the coincell block found inside of
280 Qualcomm PMICs. The coincell charger provides a means to
281 charge a coincell battery or backup capacitor which is used
282 to maintain PMIC register and RTC state in the absence of
286 tristate "SGI GRU driver"
287 depends on X86_UV && SMP
291 The GRU is a hardware resource located in the system chipset. The GRU
292 contains memory that can be mmapped into the user address space. This memory is
293 used to communicate with the GRU to perform functions such as load/store,
294 scatter/gather, bcopy, AMOs, etc. The GRU is directly accessed by user
295 instructions using user virtual addresses. GRU instructions (ex., bcopy) use
296 user virtual addresses for operands.
298 If you are not running on a SGI UV system, say N.
301 bool "SGI GRU driver debug"
305 This option enables additional debugging code for the SGI GRU driver.
306 If you are unsure, say N.
309 tristate "Medfield Avago APDS9802 ALS Sensor module"
312 If you say yes here you get support for the ALS APDS9802 ambient
315 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
316 will be called apds9802als.
319 tristate "Intersil ISL29003 ambient light sensor"
320 depends on I2C && SYSFS
322 If you say yes here you get support for the Intersil ISL29003
323 ambient light sensor.
325 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
326 will be called isl29003.
329 tristate "Intersil ISL29020 ambient light sensor"
332 If you say yes here you get support for the Intersil ISL29020
333 ambient light sensor.
335 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
336 will be called isl29020.
338 config SENSORS_TSL2550
339 tristate "Taos TSL2550 ambient light sensor"
340 depends on I2C && SYSFS
342 If you say yes here you get support for the Taos TSL2550
343 ambient light sensor.
345 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
346 will be called tsl2550.
348 config SENSORS_BH1780
349 tristate "ROHM BH1780GLI ambient light sensor"
350 depends on I2C && SYSFS
352 If you say yes here you get support for the ROHM BH1780GLI
353 ambient light sensor.
355 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
356 will be called bh1780gli.
358 config SENSORS_BH1770
359 tristate "BH1770GLC / SFH7770 combined ALS - Proximity sensor"
362 Say Y here if you want to build a driver for BH1770GLC (ROHM) or
363 SFH7770 (Osram) combined ambient light and proximity sensor chip.
365 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
366 module will be called bh1770glc. If unsure, say N here.
368 config SENSORS_APDS990X
369 tristate "APDS990X combined als and proximity sensors"
373 Say Y here if you want to build a driver for Avago APDS990x
374 combined ambient light and proximity sensor chip.
376 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
377 module will be called apds990x. If unsure, say N here.
380 tristate "Honeywell HMC6352 compass"
383 This driver provides support for the Honeywell HMC6352 compass,
384 providing configuration and heading data via sysfs.
387 tristate "Dallas DS1682 Total Elapsed Time Recorder with Alarm"
390 If you say yes here you get support for Dallas Semiconductor
391 DS1682 Total Elapsed Time Recorder.
393 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
394 will be called ds1682.
396 config SPEAR13XX_PCIE_GADGET
397 bool "PCIe gadget support for SPEAr13XX platform"
398 depends on ARCH_SPEAR13XX && BROKEN
401 This option enables gadget support for PCIe controller. If
402 board file defines any controller as PCIe endpoint then a sysfs
403 entry will be created for that controller. User can use these
404 sysfs node to configure PCIe EP as per his requirements.
407 tristate "Texas Instruments DAC7512"
408 depends on SPI && SYSFS
410 If you say yes here you get support for the Texas Instruments
411 DAC7512 16-bit digital-to-analog converter.
413 This driver can also be built as a module. If so, the module
414 will be called ti_dac7512.
416 config VMWARE_BALLOON
417 tristate "VMware Balloon Driver"
418 depends on VMWARE_VMCI && X86 && HYPERVISOR_GUEST
420 This is VMware physical memory management driver which acts
421 like a "balloon" that can be inflated to reclaim physical pages
422 by reserving them in the guest and invalidating them in the
423 monitor, freeing up the underlying machine pages so they can
424 be allocated to other guests. The balloon can also be deflated
425 to allow the guest to use more physical memory.
429 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
430 module will be called vmw_balloon.
433 bool "ARM Ltd. Character LCD Driver"
434 depends on PLAT_VERSATILE
436 This is a driver for the character LCD found on the ARM Ltd.
437 Versatile and RealView Platform Baseboards. It doesn't do
438 very much more than display the text "ARM Linux" on the first
439 line and the Linux version on the second line, but that's
447 tristate "BMP085 digital pressure sensor on I2C"
450 depends on I2C && SYSFS
452 Say Y here if you want to support Bosch Sensortec's digital pressure
453 sensor hooked to an I2C bus.
455 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
456 module will be called bmp085-i2c.
459 tristate "BMP085 digital pressure sensor on SPI"
462 depends on SPI_MASTER && SYSFS
464 Say Y here if you want to support Bosch Sensortec's digital pressure
465 sensor hooked to an SPI bus.
467 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
468 module will be called bmp085-spi.
471 tristate "Intel EG20T PCH/LAPIS Semicon IOH(ML7213/ML7223/ML7831) PHUB"
472 select GENERIC_NET_UTILS
473 depends on PCI && (X86_32 || MIPS || COMPILE_TEST)
475 This driver is for PCH(Platform controller Hub) PHUB(Packet Hub) of
476 Intel Topcliff which is an IOH(Input/Output Hub) for x86 embedded
477 processor. The Topcliff has MAC address and Option ROM data in SROM.
478 This driver can access MAC address and Option ROM data in SROM.
480 This driver also can be used for LAPIS Semiconductor's IOH,
481 ML7213/ML7223/ML7831.
482 ML7213 which is for IVI(In-Vehicle Infotainment) use.
483 ML7223 IOH is for MP(Media Phone) use.
484 ML7831 IOH is for general purpose use.
485 ML7213/ML7223/ML7831 is companion chip for Intel Atom E6xx series.
486 ML7213/ML7223/ML7831 is completely compatible for Intel EG20T PCH.
488 To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module will
491 config USB_SWITCH_FSA9480
492 tristate "FSA9480 USB Switch"
495 The FSA9480 is a USB port accessory detector and switch.
496 The FSA9480 is fully controlled using I2C and enables USB data,
497 stereo and mono audio, video, microphone and UART data to use
498 a common connector port.
500 config LATTICE_ECP3_CONFIG
501 tristate "Lattice ECP3 FPGA bitstream configuration via SPI"
502 depends on SPI && SYSFS
506 This option enables support for bitstream configuration (programming
507 or loading) of the Lattice ECP3 FPGA family via SPI.
512 bool "Generic on-chip SRAM driver"
514 select GENERIC_ALLOCATOR
516 This driver allows you to declare a memory region to be managed by
517 the genalloc API. It is supposed to be used for small on-chip SRAM
518 areas found on many SoCs.
520 config VEXPRESS_SYSCFG
521 bool "Versatile Express System Configuration driver"
522 depends on VEXPRESS_CONFIG
525 ARM Ltd. Versatile Express uses specialised platform configuration
526 bus. System Configuration interface is one of the possible means
527 of generating transactions on this bus.
529 tristate "Parallel port LCD/Keypad Panel support"
532 Say Y here if you have an HD44780 or KS-0074 LCD connected to your
533 parallel port. This driver also features 4 and 6-key keypads. The LCD
534 is accessible through the /dev/lcd char device (10, 156), and the
535 keypad through /dev/keypad (10, 185). Both require misc device to be
536 enabled. This code can either be compiled as a module, or linked into
537 the kernel and started at boot. If you don't understand what all this
541 int "Default parallel port number (0=LPT1)"
546 This is the index of the parallel port the panel is connected to. One
547 driver instance only supports one parallel port, so if your keypad
548 and LCD are connected to two separate ports, you have to start two
549 modules with different arguments. Numbering starts with '0' for LPT1,
553 int "Default panel profile (0-5, 0=custom)"
558 To ease configuration, the driver supports different configuration
559 profiles for past and recent wirings. These profiles can also be
560 used to define an approximative configuration, completed by a few
561 other options. Here are the profiles :
563 0 = custom (see further)
564 1 = 2x16 parallel LCD, old keypad
565 2 = 2x16 serial LCD (KS-0074), new keypad
566 3 = 2x16 parallel LCD (Hantronix), no keypad
567 4 = 2x16 parallel LCD (Nexcom NSA1045) with Nexcom's keypad
568 5 = 2x40 parallel LCD (old one), with old keypad
570 Custom configurations allow you to define how your display is
571 wired to the parallel port, and how it works. This is only intended
575 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0"
576 int "Keypad type (0=none, 1=old 6 keys, 2=new 6 keys, 3=Nexcom 4 keys)"
580 This enables and configures a keypad connected to the parallel port.
581 The keys will be read from character device 10,185. Valid values are :
583 0 : do not enable this driver
584 1 : old 6 keys keypad
585 2 : new 6 keys keypad, as used on the server at www.ant-computing.com
586 3 : Nexcom NSA1045's 4 keys keypad
588 New profiles can be described in the driver source. The driver also
589 supports simultaneous keys pressed when the keypad supports them.
592 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0"
593 int "LCD type (0=none, 1=custom, 2=old //, 3=ks0074, 4=hantronix, 5=Nexcom)"
597 This enables and configures an LCD connected to the parallel port.
598 The driver includes an interpreter for escape codes starting with
599 '\e[L' which are specific to the LCD, and a few ANSI codes. The
600 driver will be registered as character device 10,156, usually
601 under the name '/dev/lcd'. There are a total of 6 supported types :
603 0 : do not enable the driver
604 1 : custom configuration and wiring (see further)
605 2 : 2x16 & 2x40 parallel LCD (old wiring)
606 3 : 2x16 serial LCD (KS-0074 based)
607 4 : 2x16 parallel LCD (Hantronix wiring)
608 5 : 2x16 parallel LCD (Nexcom wiring)
610 When type '1' is specified, other options will appear to configure
611 more precise aspects (wiring, dimensions, protocol, ...). Please note
612 that those values changed from the 2.4 driver for better consistency.
614 config PANEL_LCD_HEIGHT
615 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1"
616 int "Number of lines on the LCD (1-2)"
620 This is the number of visible character lines on the LCD in custom profile.
621 It can either be 1 or 2.
623 config PANEL_LCD_WIDTH
624 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1"
625 int "Number of characters per line on the LCD (1-40)"
629 This is the number of characters per line on the LCD in custom profile.
630 Common values are 16,20,24,40.
632 config PANEL_LCD_BWIDTH
633 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1"
634 int "Internal LCD line width (1-40, 40 by default)"
638 Most LCDs use a standard controller which supports hardware lines of 40
639 characters, although sometimes only 16, 20 or 24 of them are really wired
640 to the terminal. This results in some non-visible but addressable characters,
641 and is the case for most parallel LCDs. Other LCDs, and some serial ones,
642 however, use the same line width internally as what is visible. The KS0074
643 for example, uses 16 characters per line for 16 visible characters per line.
645 This option lets you configure the value used by your LCD in 'custom' profile.
646 If you don't know, put '40' here.
648 config PANEL_LCD_HWIDTH
649 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1"
650 int "Hardware LCD line width (1-64, 64 by default)"
654 Most LCDs use a single address bit to differentiate line 0 and line 1. Since
655 some of them need to be able to address 40 chars with the lower bits, they
656 often use the immediately superior power of 2, which is 64, to address the
659 If you don't know what your LCD uses, in doubt let 16 here for a 2x16, and
662 config PANEL_LCD_CHARSET
663 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1"
664 int "LCD character set (0=normal, 1=KS0074)"
668 Some controllers such as the KS0074 use a somewhat strange character set
669 where many symbols are at unusual places. The driver knows how to map
670 'standard' ASCII characters to the character sets used by these controllers.
673 0 : normal (untranslated) character set
674 1 : KS0074 character set
676 If you don't know, use the normal one (0).
678 config PANEL_LCD_PROTO
679 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1"
680 int "LCD communication mode (0=parallel 8 bits, 1=serial)"
684 This driver now supports any serial or parallel LCD wired to a parallel
685 port. But before assigning signals, the driver needs to know if it will
686 be driving a serial LCD or a parallel one. Serial LCDs only use 2 wires
687 (SDA/SCL), while parallel ones use 2 or 3 wires for the control signals
688 (E, RS, sometimes RW), and 4 or 8 for the data. Use 0 here for a 8 bits
689 parallel LCD, and 1 for a serial LCD.
691 config PANEL_LCD_PIN_E
692 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1" && PANEL_LCD_PROTO="0"
693 int "Parallel port pin number & polarity connected to the LCD E signal (-17...17) "
697 This describes the number of the parallel port pin to which the LCD 'E'
698 signal has been connected. It can be :
700 0 : no connection (eg: connected to ground)
701 1..17 : directly connected to any of these pins on the DB25 plug
702 -1..-17 : connected to the same pin through an inverter (eg: transistor).
704 Default for the 'E' pin in custom profile is '14' (AUTOFEED).
706 config PANEL_LCD_PIN_RS
707 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1" && PANEL_LCD_PROTO="0"
708 int "Parallel port pin number & polarity connected to the LCD RS signal (-17...17) "
712 This describes the number of the parallel port pin to which the LCD 'RS'
713 signal has been connected. It can be :
715 0 : no connection (eg: connected to ground)
716 1..17 : directly connected to any of these pins on the DB25 plug
717 -1..-17 : connected to the same pin through an inverter (eg: transistor).
719 Default for the 'RS' pin in custom profile is '17' (SELECT IN).
721 config PANEL_LCD_PIN_RW
722 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1" && PANEL_LCD_PROTO="0"
723 int "Parallel port pin number & polarity connected to the LCD RW signal (-17...17) "
727 This describes the number of the parallel port pin to which the LCD 'RW'
728 signal has been connected. It can be :
730 0 : no connection (eg: connected to ground)
731 1..17 : directly connected to any of these pins on the DB25 plug
732 -1..-17 : connected to the same pin through an inverter (eg: transistor).
734 Default for the 'RW' pin in custom profile is '16' (INIT).
736 config PANEL_LCD_PIN_SCL
737 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1" && PANEL_LCD_PROTO!="0"
738 int "Parallel port pin number & polarity connected to the LCD SCL signal (-17...17) "
742 This describes the number of the parallel port pin to which the serial
743 LCD 'SCL' signal has been connected. It can be :
745 0 : no connection (eg: connected to ground)
746 1..17 : directly connected to any of these pins on the DB25 plug
747 -1..-17 : connected to the same pin through an inverter (eg: transistor).
749 Default for the 'SCL' pin in custom profile is '1' (STROBE).
751 config PANEL_LCD_PIN_SDA
752 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1" && PANEL_LCD_PROTO!="0"
753 int "Parallel port pin number & polarity connected to the LCD SDA signal (-17...17) "
757 This describes the number of the parallel port pin to which the serial
758 LCD 'SDA' signal has been connected. It can be :
760 0 : no connection (eg: connected to ground)
761 1..17 : directly connected to any of these pins on the DB25 plug
762 -1..-17 : connected to the same pin through an inverter (eg: transistor).
764 Default for the 'SDA' pin in custom profile is '2' (D0).
766 config PANEL_LCD_PIN_BL
767 depends on PANEL && PANEL_PROFILE="0" && PANEL_LCD="1"
768 int "Parallel port pin number & polarity connected to the LCD backlight signal (-17...17) "
772 This describes the number of the parallel port pin to which the LCD 'BL' signal
773 has been connected. It can be :
775 0 : no connection (eg: connected to ground)
776 1..17 : directly connected to any of these pins on the DB25 plug
777 -1..-17 : connected to the same pin through an inverter (eg: transistor).
779 Default for the 'BL' pin in custom profile is '0' (uncontrolled).
781 config PANEL_CHANGE_MESSAGE
783 bool "Change LCD initialization message ?"
786 This allows you to replace the boot message indicating the kernel version
787 and the driver version with a custom message. This is useful on appliances
788 where a simple 'Starting system' message can be enough to stop a customer
791 If you say 'Y' here, you'll be able to choose a message yourself. Otherwise,
792 say 'N' and keep the default message with the version.
794 config PANEL_BOOT_MESSAGE
795 depends on PANEL && PANEL_CHANGE_MESSAGE="y"
796 string "New initialization message"
799 This allows you to replace the boot message indicating the kernel version
800 and the driver version with a custom message. This is useful on appliances
801 where a simple 'Starting system' message can be enough to stop a customer
804 An empty message will only clear the display at driver init time. Any other
805 printf()-formatted message is valid with newline and escape codes.
807 source "drivers/misc/c2port/Kconfig"
808 source "drivers/misc/eeprom/Kconfig"
809 source "drivers/misc/cb710/Kconfig"
810 source "drivers/misc/ti-st/Kconfig"
811 source "drivers/misc/lis3lv02d/Kconfig"
812 source "drivers/misc/altera-stapl/Kconfig"
813 source "drivers/misc/mei/Kconfig"
814 source "drivers/misc/vmw_vmci/Kconfig"
815 source "drivers/misc/mic/Kconfig"
816 source "drivers/misc/genwqe/Kconfig"
817 source "drivers/misc/echo/Kconfig"
818 source "drivers/misc/cxl/Kconfig"