linux-hardened/drivers/eisa/Kconfig
Yinghai Lu 4272ebfbef x86: allow more than 8 cpus to be used on 32-bit
X86_PC is the only remaining 'sub' architecture, so we dont need
it anymore.

This also cleans up a few spurious references to X86_PC in the
driver space - those certainly should be X86.

Signed-off-by: Yinghai Lu <yinghai@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu>
2009-01-30 00:20:22 +01:00

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#
# EISA configuration
#
config EISA_VLB_PRIMING
bool "Vesa Local Bus priming"
depends on X86 && EISA
default n
---help---
Activate this option if your system contains a Vesa Local
Bus (VLB) card that identify itself as an EISA card (such as
the Adaptec AHA-284x).
When in doubt, say N.
config EISA_PCI_EISA
bool "Generic PCI/EISA bridge"
depends on !PARISC && PCI && EISA
default y
---help---
Activate this option if your system contains a PCI to EISA
bridge. If your system have both PCI and EISA slots, you
certainly need this option.
When in doubt, say Y.
# Using EISA_VIRTUAL_ROOT on something other than an Alpha or
# an X86 may lead to crashes...
config EISA_VIRTUAL_ROOT
bool "EISA virtual root device"
depends on EISA && (ALPHA || X86)
default y
---help---
Activate this option if your system only have EISA bus
(no PCI slots). The Alpha Jensen is an example of such
a system.
When in doubt, say Y.
config EISA_NAMES
bool "EISA device name database"
depends on EISA
default y
---help---
By default, the kernel contains a database of all known EISA
device names to make the information in sysfs comprehensible
to the user. This database increases size of the kernel
image by about 40KB, but it gets freed after the system
boots up, so it doesn't take up kernel memory. Anyway, if
you are building an installation floppy or kernel for an
embedded system where kernel image size really matters, you
can disable this feature and you'll get device ID instead of
names.
When in doubt, say Y.