5 Firmware can be built-in to the kernel, this means building the firmware
6 into vmlinux directly, to enable avoiding having to look for firmware from
7 the filesystem. Instead, firmware can be looked for inside the kernel
8 directly. You can enable built-in firmware using the kernel configuration
11 * CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE
12 * CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE_DIR
14 This should not be confused with CONFIG_FIRMWARE_IN_KERNEL, this is for drivers
15 which enables firmware to be built as part of the kernel build process. This
16 option, CONFIG_FIRMWARE_IN_KERNEL, will build all firmware for all drivers
17 enabled which ship its firmware inside the Linux kernel source tree.
19 There are a few reasons why you might want to consider building your firmware
20 into the kernel with CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE though:
23 * Firmware is needed for accessing the boot device, and the user doesn't
24 want to stuff the firmware into the boot initramfs.
26 Even if you have these needs there are a few reasons why you may not be
27 able to make use of built-in firmware:
29 * Legalese - firmware is non-GPL compatible
30 * Some firmware may be optional
31 * Firmware upgrades are possible, therefore a new firmware would implicate
32 a complete kernel rebuild.
33 * Some firmware files may be really large in size. The remote-proc subsystem
34 is an example subsystem which deals with these sorts of firmware
35 * The firmware may need to be scraped out from some device specific location
36 dynamically, an example is calibration data for for some WiFi chipsets. This
37 calibration data can be unique per sold device.