1 # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
3 menu "UML Character Devices"
9 console driver which dumps all printk messages to stderr.
12 bool "Virtual serial line"
14 The User-Mode Linux environment allows you to create virtual serial
15 lines on the UML that are usually made to show up on the host as
18 See <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/old/input.html> for more
19 information and command line examples of how to use this facility.
21 Unless you have a specific reason for disabling this, say Y.
24 bool "null channel support"
26 This option enables support for attaching UML consoles and serial
27 lines to a device similar to /dev/null. Data written to it disappears
28 and there is never any data to be read.
31 bool "port channel support"
33 This option enables support for attaching UML consoles and serial
34 lines to host portals. They may be accessed with 'telnet <host>
35 <port number>'. Any number of consoles and serial lines may be
36 attached to a single portal, although what UML device you get when
37 you telnet to that portal will be unpredictable.
38 It is safe to say 'Y' here.
41 bool "pty channel support"
43 This option enables support for attaching UML consoles and serial
44 lines to host pseudo-terminals. Access to both traditional
45 pseudo-terminals (/dev/pty*) and pts pseudo-terminals are controlled
46 with this option. The assignment of UML devices to host devices
47 will be announced in the kernel message log.
48 It is safe to say 'Y' here.
51 bool "tty channel support"
53 This option enables support for attaching UML consoles and serial
54 lines to host terminals. Access to both virtual consoles
55 (/dev/tty*) and the slave side of pseudo-terminals (/dev/ttyp* and
56 /dev/pts/*) are controlled by this option.
57 It is safe to say 'Y' here.
60 bool "xterm channel support"
62 This option enables support for attaching UML consoles and serial
63 lines to xterms. Each UML device so assigned will be brought up in
65 It is safe to say 'Y' here.
69 default !(XTERM_CHAN && TTY_CHAN && PTY_CHAN && PORT_CHAN && NULL_CHAN)
72 string "Default main console channel initialization"
75 This is the string describing the channel to which the main console
76 will be attached by default. This value can be overridden from the
77 command line. The default value is "fd:0,fd:1", which attaches the
78 main console to stdin and stdout.
79 It is safe to leave this unchanged.
82 string "Default console channel initialization"
85 This is the string describing the channel to which all consoles
86 except the main console will be attached by default. This value can
87 be overridden from the command line. The default value is "xterm",
88 which brings them up in xterms.
89 It is safe to leave this unchanged, although you may wish to change
90 this if you expect the UML that you build to be run in environments
91 which don't have X or xterm available.
94 string "Default serial line channel initialization"
97 This is the string describing the channel to which the serial lines
98 will be attached by default. This value can be overridden from the
99 command line. The default value is "pty", which attaches them to
100 traditional pseudo-terminals.
101 It is safe to leave this unchanged, although you may wish to change
102 this if you expect the UML that you build to be run in environments
103 which don't have a set of /dev/pty* devices.
106 tristate "Sound support"
108 This option enables UML sound support. If enabled, it will pull in
109 soundcore and the UML hostaudio relay, which acts as a intermediary
110 between the host's dsp and mixer devices and the UML sound system.
111 It is safe to say 'Y' here.
117 config SOUND_OSS_CORE
127 menu "UML Network Devices"
132 bool "Virtual network device"
134 While the User-Mode port cannot directly talk to any physical
135 hardware devices, this choice and the following transport options
136 provide one or more virtual network devices through which the UML
137 kernels can talk to each other, the host, and with the host's help,
138 machines on the outside world.
140 For more information, including explanations of the networking and
141 sample configurations, see
142 <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/old/networking.html>.
144 If you'd like to be able to enable networking in the User-Mode
145 linux environment, say Y; otherwise say N. Note that you must
146 enable at least one of the following transport options to actually
147 make use of UML networking.
149 config UML_NET_ETHERTAP
150 bool "Ethertap transport (obsolete)"
153 The Ethertap User-Mode Linux network transport allows a single
154 running UML to exchange packets with its host over one of the
155 host's Ethertap devices, such as /dev/tap0. Additional running
156 UMLs can use additional Ethertap devices, one per running UML.
157 While the UML believes it's on a (multi-device, broadcast) virtual
158 Ethernet network, it's in fact communicating over a point-to-point
161 To use this, your host kernel must have support for Ethertap
162 devices. Also, if your host kernel is 2.4.x, it must have
163 CONFIG_NETLINK_DEV configured as Y or M.
165 For more information, see
166 <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/old/networking.html> That site
167 has examples of the UML command line to use to enable Ethertap
170 NOTE: THIS TRANSPORT IS DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED SOON!!! Please
171 migrate to UML_NET_VECTOR.
175 config UML_NET_TUNTAP
176 bool "TUN/TAP transport (obsolete)"
179 The UML TUN/TAP network transport allows a UML instance to exchange
180 packets with the host over a TUN/TAP device. This option will only
181 work with a 2.4 host, unless you've applied the TUN/TAP patch to
182 your 2.2 host kernel.
184 To use this transport, your host kernel must have support for TUN/TAP
185 devices, either built-in or as a module.
187 NOTE: THIS TRANSPORT IS DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED SOON!!! Please
188 migrate to UML_NET_VECTOR.
193 bool "SLIP transport (obsolete)"
196 The slip User-Mode Linux network transport allows a running UML to
197 network with its host over a point-to-point link. Unlike Ethertap,
198 which can carry any Ethernet frame (and hence even non-IP packets),
199 the slip transport can only carry IP packets.
201 To use this, your host must support slip devices.
203 For more information, see
204 <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/old/networking.html>.
205 has examples of the UML command line to use to enable slip
206 networking, and details of a few quirks with it.
208 NOTE: THIS TRANSPORT IS DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED SOON!!! Please
209 migrate to UML_NET_VECTOR.
213 config UML_NET_DAEMON
214 bool "Daemon transport (obsolete)"
217 This User-Mode Linux network transport allows one or more running
218 UMLs on a single host to communicate with each other, but not to
221 To use this form of networking, you'll need to run the UML
222 networking daemon on the host.
224 For more information, see
225 <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/old/networking.html> That site
226 has examples of the UML command line to use to enable Daemon
229 NOTE: THIS TRANSPORT IS DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED SOON!!! Please
230 migrate to UML_NET_VECTOR.
234 config UML_NET_VECTOR
235 bool "Vector I/O high performance network devices"
237 select FORBID_STATIC_LINK
239 This User-Mode Linux network driver uses multi-message send
240 and receive functions. The host running the UML guest must have
241 a linux kernel version above 3.0 and a libc version > 2.13.
242 This driver provides tap, raw, gre and l2tpv3 network transports
243 with up to 4 times higher network throughput than the UML network
247 bool "VDE transport (obsolete)"
249 select FORBID_STATIC_LINK
251 This User-Mode Linux network transport allows one or more running
252 UMLs on a single host to communicate with each other and also
253 with the rest of the world using Virtual Distributed Ethernet,
254 an improved fork of uml_switch.
256 You must have libvdeplug installed in order to build the vde
259 To use this form of networking, you will need to run vde_switch
262 For more information, see <http://wiki.virtualsquare.org/>
263 That site has a good overview of what VDE is and also examples
264 of the UML command line to use to enable VDE networking.
266 NOTE: THIS TRANSPORT IS DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED SOON!!! Please
267 migrate to UML_NET_VECTOR.
272 bool "Multicast transport (obsolete)"
275 This Multicast User-Mode Linux network transport allows multiple
276 UMLs (even ones running on different host machines!) to talk to
277 each other over a virtual ethernet network. However, it requires
278 at least one UML with one of the other transports to act as a
279 bridge if any of them need to be able to talk to their hosts or any
282 To use this, your host kernel(s) must support IP Multicasting.
284 For more information, see
285 <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/old/networking.html> That site
286 has examples of the UML command line to use to enable Multicast
287 networking, and notes about the security of this approach.
289 NOTE: THIS TRANSPORT IS DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED SOON!!! Please
290 migrate to UML_NET_VECTOR.
295 bool "pcap transport (obsolete)"
297 select FORBID_STATIC_LINK
299 The pcap transport makes a pcap packet stream on the host look
300 like an ethernet device inside UML. This is useful for making
301 UML act as a network monitor for the host. You must have libcap
302 installed in order to build the pcap transport into UML.
304 For more information, see
305 <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/old/networking.html> That site
306 has examples of the UML command line to use to enable this option.
308 NOTE: THIS TRANSPORT IS DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED SOON!!! Please
309 migrate to UML_NET_VECTOR.
314 bool "SLiRP transport (obsolete)"
317 The SLiRP User-Mode Linux network transport allows a running UML
318 to network by invoking a program that can handle SLIP encapsulated
319 packets. This is commonly (but not limited to) the application
320 known as SLiRP, a program that can re-socket IP packets back onto
321 he host on which it is run. Only IP packets are supported,
322 unlike other network transports that can handle all Ethernet
323 frames. In general, slirp allows the UML the same IP connectivity
324 to the outside world that the host user is permitted, and unlike
325 other transports, SLiRP works without the need of root level
326 privleges, setuid binaries, or SLIP devices on the host. This
327 also means not every type of connection is possible, but most
328 situations can be accommodated with carefully crafted slirp
329 commands that can be passed along as part of the network device's
330 setup string. The effect of this transport on the UML is similar
331 that of a host behind a firewall that masquerades all network
332 connections passing through it (but is less secure).
334 NOTE: THIS TRANSPORT IS DEPRECATED AND WILL BE REMOVED SOON!!! Please
335 migrate to UML_NET_VECTOR.
339 Startup example: "eth0=slirp,FE:FD:01:02:03:04,/usr/local/bin/slirp"
344 bool "UML driver for virtio devices"
347 This driver provides support for virtio based paravirtual device
348 drivers over vhost-user sockets.