# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only # # Copyright (C) 2006-2014 OpenWrt.org config KERNEL_BUILD_USER string "Custom Kernel Build User Name" default "builder" if BUILDBOT default "" help Sets the Kernel build user string, which for example will be returned by 'uname -a' on running systems. If not set, uses system user at build time. config KERNEL_BUILD_DOMAIN string "Custom Kernel Build Domain Name" default "buildhost" if BUILDBOT default "" help Sets the Kernel build domain string, which for example will be returned by 'uname -a' on running systems. If not set, uses system hostname at build time. config KERNEL_PRINTK bool "Enable support for printk" default y config KERNEL_SWAP bool "Support for paging of anonymous memory (swap)" default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_PROC_STRIPPED bool "Strip non-essential /proc functionality to reduce code size" default y if SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_DEBUG_FS bool "Compile the kernel with debug filesystem enabled" default y help debugfs is a virtual file system that kernel developers use to put debugging files into. Enable this option to be able to read and write to these files. Many common debugging facilities, such as ftrace, require the existence of debugfs. config KERNEL_MIPS_FP_SUPPORT bool default y if TARGET_pistachio config KERNEL_ARM_PMU bool default y if TARGET_armsr_armv8 depends on (arm || aarch64) config KERNEL_ARM_PMUV3 bool default y if TARGET_armsr_armv8 depends on (arm_v7 || aarch64) && LINUX_6_6 config KERNEL_RISCV_PMU bool select KERNEL_RISCV_PMU_SBI depends on riscv64 config KERNEL_RISCV_PMU_SBI bool depends on riscv64 config KERNEL_X86_VSYSCALL_EMULATION bool "Enable vsyscall emulation" depends on x86_64 help This enables emulation of the legacy vsyscall page. Disabling it is roughly equivalent to booting with vsyscall=none, except that it will also disable the helpful warning if a program tries to use a vsyscall. With this option set to N, offending programs will just segfault, citing addresses of the form 0xffffffffff600?00. This option is required by many programs built before 2013, and care should be used even with newer programs if set to N. Disabling this option saves about 7K of kernel size and possibly 4K of additional runtime pagetable memory. config KERNEL_PERF_EVENTS bool "Compile the kernel with performance events and counters" select KERNEL_ARM_PMU if (arm || aarch64) select KERNEL_ARM_PMUV3 if (arm_v7 || aarch64) && LINUX_6_6 select KERNEL_RISCV_PMU if riscv64 config KERNEL_PROFILING bool "Compile the kernel with profiling enabled" select KERNEL_PERF_EVENTS help Enable the extended profiling support mechanisms used by profilers such as OProfile. config KERNEL_RPI_AXIPERF bool "Compile the kernel with RaspberryPi AXI Performance monitors" default y depends on KERNEL_PERF_EVENTS && TARGET_bcm27xx config KERNEL_UBSAN bool "Compile the kernel with undefined behaviour sanity checker" help This option enables undefined behaviour sanity checker Compile-time instrumentation is used to detect various undefined behaviours in runtime. Various types of checks may be enabled via boot parameter ubsan_handle (see: Documentation/dev-tools/ubsan.rst). config KERNEL_UBSAN_SANITIZE_ALL bool "Enable instrumentation for the entire kernel" depends on KERNEL_UBSAN default y help This option activates instrumentation for the entire kernel. If you don't enable this option, you have to explicitly specify UBSAN_SANITIZE := y for the files/directories you want to check for UB. Enabling this option will get kernel image size increased significantly. config KERNEL_UBSAN_ALIGNMENT bool "Enable checking of pointers alignment" depends on KERNEL_UBSAN help This option enables detection of unaligned memory accesses. Enabling this option on architectures that support unaligned accesses may produce a lot of false positives. config KERNEL_UBSAN_BOUNDS bool "Perform array index bounds checking" depends on KERNEL_UBSAN help This option enables detection of directly indexed out of bounds array accesses, where the array size is known at compile time. Note that this does not protect array overflows via bad calls to the {str,mem}*cpy() family of functions (that is addressed by FORTIFY_SOURCE). config KERNEL_UBSAN_NULL bool "Enable checking of null pointers" depends on KERNEL_UBSAN help This option enables detection of memory accesses via a null pointer. config KERNEL_UBSAN_TRAP bool "On Sanitizer warnings, abort the running kernel code" depends on KERNEL_UBSAN help Building kernels with Sanitizer features enabled tends to grow the kernel size by around 5%, due to adding all the debugging text on failure paths. To avoid this, Sanitizer instrumentation can just issue a trap. This reduces the kernel size overhead but turns all warnings (including potentially harmless conditions) into full exceptions that abort the running kernel code (regardless of context, locks held, etc), which may destabilize the system. For some system builders this is an acceptable trade-off. config KERNEL_KASAN bool "Compile the kernel with KASan: runtime memory debugger" select KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG depends on (x86_64 || aarch64 || arm || powerpc || riscv64) help Enables kernel address sanitizer - runtime memory debugger, designed to find out-of-bounds accesses and use-after-free bugs. This is strictly a debugging feature and it requires a gcc version of 4.9.2 or later. Detection of out of bounds accesses to stack or global variables requires gcc 5.0 or later. This feature consumes about 1/8 of available memory and brings about ~x3 performance slowdown. For better error detection enable CONFIG_STACKTRACE. Currently CONFIG_KASAN doesn't work with CONFIG_DEBUG_SLAB (the resulting kernel does not boot). config KERNEL_KASAN_VMALLOC bool "Back mappings in vmalloc space with real shadow memory" depends on KERNEL_KASAN help By default, the shadow region for vmalloc space is the read-only zero page. This means that KASAN cannot detect errors involving vmalloc space. Enabling this option will hook in to vmap/vmalloc and back those mappings with real shadow memory allocated on demand. This allows for KASAN to detect more sorts of errors (and to support vmapped stacks), but at the cost of higher memory usage. This option depends on HAVE_ARCH_KASAN_VMALLOC, but we can't depend on that in here, so it is possible that enabling this will have no effect. if KERNEL_KASAN choice prompt "KASAN mode" depends on KERNEL_KASAN default KERNEL_KASAN_GENERIC help KASAN has three modes: 1. Generic KASAN (supported by many architectures, enabled with CONFIG_KASAN_GENERIC, similar to userspace ASan), 2. Software Tag-Based KASAN (arm64 only, based on software memory tagging, enabled with CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS, similar to userspace HWASan), and 3. Hardware Tag-Based KASAN (arm64 only, based on hardware memory tagging, enabled with CONFIG_KASAN_HW_TAGS). config KERNEL_KASAN_GENERIC bool "Generic KASAN" select KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG help Enables Generic KASAN. Consumes about 1/8th of available memory at kernel start and adds an overhead of ~50% for dynamic allocations. The performance slowdown is ~x3. config KERNEL_KASAN_SW_TAGS bool "Software Tag-Based KASAN" depends on aarch64 select KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG help Enables Software Tag-Based KASAN. Supported only on arm64 CPUs and relies on Top Byte Ignore. Consumes about 1/16th of available memory at kernel start and add an overhead of ~20% for dynamic allocations. May potentially introduce problems related to pointer casting and comparison, as it embeds a tag into the top byte of each pointer. config KERNEL_KASAN_HW_TAGS bool "Hardware Tag-Based KASAN" depends on aarch64 select KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG select KERNEL_ARM64_MTE help Enables Hardware Tag-Based KASAN. Supported only on arm64 CPUs starting from ARMv8.5 and relies on Memory Tagging Extension and Top Byte Ignore. Consumes about 1/32nd of available memory. May potentially introduce problems related to pointer casting and comparison, as it embeds a tag into the top byte of each pointer. endchoice config KERNEL_ARM64_MTE def_bool n endif choice prompt "Instrumentation type" depends on KERNEL_KASAN depends on !KERNEL_KASAN_HW_TAGS default KERNEL_KASAN_OUTLINE config KERNEL_KASAN_OUTLINE bool "Outline instrumentation" help Before every memory access compiler insert function call __asan_load*/__asan_store*. These functions performs check of shadow memory. This is slower than inline instrumentation, however it doesn't bloat size of kernel's .text section so much as inline does. config KERNEL_KASAN_INLINE bool "Inline instrumentation" help Compiler directly inserts code checking shadow memory before memory accesses. This is faster than outline (in some workloads it gives about x2 boost over outline instrumentation), but make kernel's .text size much bigger. This requires a gcc version of 5.0 or later. endchoice config KERNEL_KCOV bool "Compile the kernel with code coverage for fuzzing" select KERNEL_DEBUG_FS help KCOV exposes kernel code coverage information in a form suitable for coverage-guided fuzzing (randomized testing). If RANDOMIZE_BASE is enabled, PC values will not be stable across different machines and across reboots. If you need stable PC values, disable RANDOMIZE_BASE. For more details, see Documentation/kcov.txt. config KERNEL_KCOV_ENABLE_COMPARISONS bool "Enable comparison operands collection by KCOV" depends on KERNEL_KCOV help KCOV also exposes operands of every comparison in the instrumented code along with operand sizes and PCs of the comparison instructions. These operands can be used by fuzzing engines to improve the quality of fuzzing coverage. config KERNEL_KCOV_INSTRUMENT_ALL bool "Instrument all code by default" depends on KERNEL_KCOV default y if KERNEL_KCOV help If you are doing generic system call fuzzing (like e.g. syzkaller), then you will want to instrument the whole kernel and you should say y here. If you are doing more targeted fuzzing (like e.g. filesystem fuzzing with AFL) then you will want to enable coverage for more specific subsets of files, and should say n here. config KERNEL_TASKSTATS bool "Compile the kernel with task resource/io statistics and accounting" help Enable the collection and publishing of task/io statistics and accounting. Enable this option to enable i/o monitoring in system monitors. if KERNEL_TASKSTATS config KERNEL_TASK_DELAY_ACCT def_bool y config KERNEL_TASK_IO_ACCOUNTING def_bool y config KERNEL_TASK_XACCT def_bool y endif config KERNEL_KALLSYMS bool "Compile the kernel with symbol table information" default y if !SMALL_FLASH help This will give you more information in stack traces from kernel oopses. config KERNEL_FTRACE bool "Compile the kernel with tracing support" depends on !TARGET_uml config KERNEL_FTRACE_SYSCALLS bool "Trace system calls" depends on KERNEL_FTRACE config KERNEL_ENABLE_DEFAULT_TRACERS bool "Trace process context switches and events" depends on KERNEL_FTRACE config KERNEL_FUNCTION_TRACER bool "Function tracer" depends on KERNEL_FTRACE config KERNEL_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER bool "Function graph tracer" depends on KERNEL_FUNCTION_TRACER config KERNEL_DYNAMIC_FTRACE bool "Enable/disable function tracing dynamically" depends on KERNEL_FUNCTION_TRACER config KERNEL_FUNCTION_PROFILER bool "Function profiler" depends on KERNEL_FUNCTION_TRACER config KERNEL_IRQSOFF_TRACER bool "Interrupts-off Latency Tracer" depends on KERNEL_FTRACE help This option measures the time spent in irqs-off critical sections, with microsecond accuracy. The default measurement method is a maximum search, which is disabled by default and can be runtime (re-)started via: echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/tracing_max_latency (Note that kernel size and overhead increase with this option enabled. This option and the preempt-off timing option can be used together or separately.) config KERNEL_PREEMPT_TRACER bool "Preemption-off Latency Tracer" depends on KERNEL_FTRACE help This option measures the time spent in preemption-off critical sections, with microsecond accuracy. The default measurement method is a maximum search, which is disabled by default and can be runtime (re-)started via: echo 0 > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/tracing_max_latency (Note that kernel size and overhead increase with this option enabled. This option and the irqs-off timing option can be used together or separately.) config KERNEL_HIST_TRIGGERS bool "Histogram triggers" depends on KERNEL_FTRACE help Hist triggers allow one or more arbitrary trace event fields to be aggregated into hash tables and dumped to stdout by reading a debugfs/tracefs file. They're useful for gathering quick and dirty (though precise) summaries of event activity as an initial guide for further investigation using more advanced tools. Inter-event tracing of quantities such as latencies is also supported using hist triggers under this option. config KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL bool config KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO bool "Compile the kernel with debug information" default y if !SMALL_FLASH select KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL help This will compile your kernel and modules with debug information. config KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO_BTF bool "Enable additional BTF type information" depends on !HOST_OS_MACOS depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO && !KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO_REDUCED select DWARVES help Generate BPF Type Format (BTF) information from DWARF debug info. Turning this on expects presence of pahole tool, which will convert DWARF type info into equivalent deduplicated BTF type info. Required to run BPF CO-RE applications. config KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO_BTF_MODULES def_bool y depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO_BTF config KERNEL_MODULE_ALLOW_BTF_MISMATCH bool "Allow loading modules with non-matching BTF type info" depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO_BTF_MODULES help For modules whose split BTF does not match vmlinux, load without BTF rather than refusing to load. The default behavior with module BTF enabled is to reject modules with such mismatches; this option will still load module BTF where possible but ignore it when a mismatch is found. config KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO_REDUCED bool "Reduce debugging information" default y depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO help If you say Y here gcc is instructed to generate less debugging information for structure types. This means that tools that need full debugging information (like kgdb or systemtap) won't be happy. But if you merely need debugging information to resolve line numbers there is no loss. Advantage is that build directory object sizes shrink dramatically over a full DEBUG_INFO build and compile times are reduced too. Only works with newer gcc versions. config KERNEL_FRAME_WARN int range 0 8192 default 1280 if KERNEL_KASAN && !ARCH_64BIT default 1024 if !ARCH_64BIT default 2048 if ARCH_64BIT help Tell the compiler to warn at build time for stack frames larger than this. Setting this too low will cause a lot of warnings. Setting it to 0 disables the warning. # KERNEL_DEBUG_LL symbols must have the default value set as otherwise # KConfig wont evaluate them unless KERNEL_EARLY_PRINTK is selected # which means that buildroot wont override the DEBUG_LL symbols in target # kernel configurations and lead to devices that dont have working console config KERNEL_DEBUG_LL_UART_NONE bool default n depends on arm config KERNEL_DEBUG_LL bool default n depends on arm select KERNEL_DEBUG_LL_UART_NONE help ARM low level debugging. config KERNEL_DEBUG_VIRTUAL bool "Compile the kernel with VM translations debugging" select KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL help Enable checks sanity checks to catch invalid uses of virt_to_phys()/phys_to_virt() against the non-linear address space. config KERNEL_DYNAMIC_DEBUG bool "Compile the kernel with dynamic printk" select KERNEL_DEBUG_FS help Compiles debug level messages into the kernel, which would not otherwise be available at runtime. These messages can then be enabled/disabled based on various levels of scope - per source file, function, module, format string, and line number. This mechanism implicitly compiles in all pr_debug() and dev_dbg() calls, which enlarges the kernel text size by about 2%. config KERNEL_EARLY_PRINTK bool "Compile the kernel with early printk" default y if TARGET_bcm53xx depends on arm select KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL select KERNEL_DEBUG_LL if arm help Compile the kernel with early printk support. This is only useful for debugging purposes to send messages over the serial console in early boot. Enable this to debug early boot problems. config KERNEL_KPROBES bool "Compile the kernel with kprobes support" select KERNEL_FTRACE select KERNEL_PERF_EVENTS help Compiles the kernel with KPROBES support, which allows you to trap at almost any kernel address and execute a callback function. register_kprobe() establishes a probepoint and specifies the callback. Kprobes is useful for kernel debugging, non-intrusive instrumentation and testing. If in doubt, say "N". config KERNEL_KPROBE_EVENTS bool default y if KERNEL_KPROBES config KERNEL_BPF_EVENTS bool "Compile the kernel with BPF event support" select KERNEL_KPROBES help Allows to attach BPF programs to kprobe, uprobe and tracepoint events. This is required to use BPF maps of type BPF_MAP_TYPE_PERF_EVENT_ARRAY for sending data from BPF programs to user-space for post-processing or logging. config KERNEL_PROBE_EVENTS_BTF_ARGS bool "Support BTF function arguments for probe events" depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_INFO_BTF && KERNEL_KPROBE_EVENTS && LINUX_6_6 config KERNEL_BPF_KPROBE_OVERRIDE bool depends on KERNEL_KPROBES default n config KERNEL_AIO bool "Compile the kernel with asynchronous IO support" default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_IO_URING bool "Compile the kernel with io_uring support" depends on !SMALL_FLASH default y if (x86_64 || aarch64) config KERNEL_FHANDLE bool "Compile the kernel with support for fhandle syscalls" default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_FANOTIFY bool "Compile the kernel with modern file notification support" default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_BLK_DEV_BSG bool "Compile the kernel with SCSI generic v4 support for any block device" config KERNEL_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE bool choice prompt "Transparent Hugepage Support sysfs defaults" depends on KERNEL_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE default KERNEL_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_ALWAYS config KERNEL_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_ALWAYS bool "always" config KERNEL_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE_MADVISE bool "madvise" endchoice config KERNEL_HUGETLBFS bool config KERNEL_HUGETLB_PAGE bool "Compile the kernel with HugeTLB support" select KERNEL_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE select KERNEL_HUGETLBFS config KERNEL_MAGIC_SYSRQ bool "Compile the kernel with SysRq support" default y config KERNEL_DEBUG_PINCTRL bool "Compile the kernel with pinctrl debugging" select KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL config KERNEL_DEBUG_GPIO bool "Compile the kernel with gpio debugging" select KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL config KERNEL_COREDUMP bool config KERNEL_ELF_CORE bool "Enable process core dump support" select KERNEL_COREDUMP default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_PROVE_LOCKING bool "Enable kernel lock checking" select KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL config KERNEL_SOFTLOCKUP_DETECTOR bool "Compile the kernel with detect Soft Lockups" depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL help Say Y here to enable the kernel to act as a watchdog to detect soft lockups. Softlockups are bugs that cause the kernel to loop in kernel mode for more than 20 seconds, without giving other tasks a chance to run. The current stack trace is displayed upon detection and the system will stay locked up. config KERNEL_HARDLOCKUP_DETECTOR bool "Compile the kernel with detect Hard Lockups" depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL help Say Y here to enable the kernel to act as a watchdog to detect hard lockups. Hardlockups are bugs that cause the CPU to loop in kernel mode for more than 10 seconds, without letting other interrupts have a chance to run. The current stack trace is displayed upon detection and the system will stay locked up. config KERNEL_DETECT_HUNG_TASK bool "Compile the kernel with detect Hung Tasks" depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL default KERNEL_SOFTLOCKUP_DETECTOR help Say Y here to enable the kernel to detect "hung tasks", which are bugs that cause the task to be stuck in uninterruptible "D" state indefinitely. When a hung task is detected, the kernel will print the current stack trace (which you should report), but the task will stay in uninterruptible state. If lockdep is enabled then all held locks will also be reported. This feature has negligible overhead. config KERNEL_WQ_WATCHDOG bool "Compile the kernel with detect Workqueue Stalls" depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL help Say Y here to enable stall detection on workqueues. If a worker pool doesn't make forward progress on a pending work item for over a given amount of time, 30s by default, a warning message is printed along with dump of workqueue state. This can be configured through kernel parameter "workqueue.watchdog_thresh" and its sysfs counterpart. config KERNEL_DEBUG_ATOMIC_SLEEP bool "Compile the kernel with sleep inside atomic section checking" depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL help If you say Y here, various routines which may sleep will become very noisy if they are called inside atomic sections: when a spinlock is held, inside an rcu read side critical section, inside preempt disabled sections, inside an interrupt, etc... config KERNEL_DEBUG_VM bool "Compile the kernel with debug VM" depends on KERNEL_DEBUG_KERNEL help Enable this to turn on extended checks in the virtual-memory system that may impact performance. If unsure, say N. config KERNEL_PRINTK_TIME bool "Enable printk timestamps" default y config KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG bool "Enable SLUB debugging support" help This enables various debugging features: - Accepts "slub_debug" kernel parameter - Provides caches debugging options (e.g. tracing, validating) - Adds /sys/kernel/slab/ attrs for reading amounts of *objects* - Enables /proc/slabinfo support - Prints info when running out of memory Enabling this can result in a significant increase of code size. config KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG_ON depends on KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG bool "Boot kernel with basic caches debugging enabled" help This enables by default sanity_checks, red_zone, poison and store_user debugging options for all caches. config KERNEL_SLABINFO select KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG select KERNEL_SLUB_DEBUG_ON bool "Enable /proc slab debug info" config KERNEL_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR bool "Enable /proc page monitoring" config KERNEL_RELAY bool config KERNEL_KEXEC bool "Enable kexec support" config KERNEL_PROC_VMCORE bool config KERNEL_PROC_KCORE bool config KERNEL_CRASH_DUMP depends on i386 || x86_64 || arm || armeb select KERNEL_KEXEC select KERNEL_PROC_VMCORE select KERNEL_PROC_KCORE bool "Enable support for kexec crashdump" default y config USE_RFKILL bool "Enable rfkill support" default RFKILL_SUPPORT config USE_SPARSE bool "Enable sparse check during kernel build" config KERNEL_DEVTMPFS bool "Compile the kernel with device tmpfs enabled" help devtmpfs is a simple, kernel-managed /dev filesystem. The kernel creates devices nodes for all registered devices to simplify boot, but leaves more complex tasks to userspace (e.g. udev). if KERNEL_DEVTMPFS config KERNEL_DEVTMPFS_MOUNT bool "Automatically mount devtmpfs after root filesystem is mounted" endif config KERNEL_KEYS bool "Enable kernel access key retention support" default !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_PERSISTENT_KEYRINGS bool "Enable kernel persistent keyrings" depends on KERNEL_KEYS config KERNEL_KEYS_REQUEST_CACHE bool "Enable temporary caching of the last request_key() result" depends on KERNEL_KEYS config KERNEL_BIG_KEYS bool "Enable large payload keys on kernel keyrings" depends on KERNEL_KEYS # # CGROUP support symbols # config KERNEL_CGROUPS bool "Enable kernel cgroups" default y if !SMALL_FLASH if KERNEL_CGROUPS config KERNEL_CGROUP_DEBUG bool "Example debug cgroup subsystem" help This option enables a simple cgroup subsystem that exports useful debugging information about the cgroups framework. config KERNEL_FREEZER bool config KERNEL_CGROUP_FREEZER bool "legacy Freezer cgroup subsystem" select KERNEL_FREEZER help Provides a way to freeze and unfreeze all tasks in a cgroup. (legacy cgroup1-only controller, in cgroup2 freezer is integrated in the Memory controller) config KERNEL_CGROUP_DEVICE bool "legacy Device controller for cgroups" help Provides a cgroup implementing whitelists for devices which a process in the cgroup can mknod or open. (legacy cgroup1-only controller) config KERNEL_CGROUP_HUGETLB bool "HugeTLB controller" select KERNEL_HUGETLB_PAGE config KERNEL_CGROUP_PIDS bool "PIDs cgroup subsystem" default y help Provides enforcement of process number limits in the scope of a cgroup. config KERNEL_CGROUP_RDMA bool "RDMA controller for cgroups" default y config KERNEL_CGROUP_BPF bool "Support for eBPF programs attached to cgroups" default y config KERNEL_CPUSETS bool "Cpuset support" default y help This option will let you create and manage CPUSETs which allow dynamically partitioning a system into sets of CPUs and Memory Nodes and assigning tasks to run only within those sets. This is primarily useful on large SMP or NUMA systems. config KERNEL_PROC_PID_CPUSET bool "Include legacy /proc//cpuset file" depends on KERNEL_CPUSETS config KERNEL_CGROUP_CPUACCT bool "Simple CPU accounting cgroup subsystem" default y help Provides a simple Resource Controller for monitoring the total CPU consumed by the tasks in a cgroup. config KERNEL_RESOURCE_COUNTERS bool "Resource counters" default y help This option enables controller independent resource accounting infrastructure that works with cgroups. config KERNEL_MM_OWNER bool default y if KERNEL_MEMCG config KERNEL_MEMCG bool "Memory Resource Controller for Control Groups" default y select KERNEL_FREEZER depends on KERNEL_RESOURCE_COUNTERS help Provides a memory resource controller that manages both anonymous memory and page cache. (See Documentation/cgroups/memory.txt) Note that setting this option increases fixed memory overhead associated with each page of memory in the system. By this, 20(40)bytes/PAGE_SIZE on 32(64)bit system will be occupied by memory usage tracking struct at boot. Total amount of this is printed out at boot. Only enable when you're ok with these tradeoffs and really sure you need the memory resource controller. Even when you enable this, you can set "cgroup_disable=memory" at your boot option to disable memory resource controller and you can avoid overheads (but lose benefits of memory resource controller). This config option also selects MM_OWNER config option, which could in turn add some fork/exit overhead. config KERNEL_MEMCG_SWAP bool "Memory Resource Controller Swap Extension" default y depends on KERNEL_MEMCG help Add swap management feature to memory resource controller. When you enable this, you can limit mem+swap usage per cgroup. In other words, when you disable this, memory resource controller has no cares to usage of swap...a process can exhaust all of the swap. This extension is useful when you want to avoid exhaustion swap but this itself adds more overheads and consumes memory for remembering information. Especially if you use 32bit system or small memory system, please be careful about enabling this. When memory resource controller is disabled by boot option, this will be automatically disabled and there will be no overhead from this. Even when you set this config=y, if boot option "swapaccount=0" is set, swap will not be accounted. Now, memory usage of swap_cgroup is 2 bytes per entry. If swap page size is 4096bytes, 512k per 1Gbytes of swap. config KERNEL_MEMCG_SWAP_ENABLED bool "Memory Resource Controller Swap Extension enabled by default" depends on KERNEL_MEMCG_SWAP help Memory Resource Controller Swap Extension comes with its price in a bigger memory consumption. General purpose distribution kernels which want to enable the feature but keep it disabled by default and let the user enable it by swapaccount boot command line parameter should have this option unselected. Those who want to have the feature enabled by default should select this option (if, for some reason, they need to disable it, then swapaccount=0 does the trick). config KERNEL_MEMCG_KMEM bool "Memory Resource Controller Kernel Memory accounting (EXPERIMENTAL)" default y depends on KERNEL_MEMCG help The Kernel Memory extension for Memory Resource Controller can limit the amount of memory used by kernel objects in the system. Those are fundamentally different from the entities handled by the standard Memory Controller, which are page-based, and can be swapped. Users of the kmem extension can use it to guarantee that no group of processes will ever exhaust kernel resources alone. config KERNEL_CGROUP_PERF bool "Enable perf_event per-cpu per-container group (cgroup) monitoring" select KERNEL_PERF_EVENTS help This option extends the per-cpu mode to restrict monitoring to threads which belong to the cgroup specified and run on the designated cpu. menuconfig KERNEL_CGROUP_SCHED bool "Group CPU scheduler" default y help This feature lets CPU scheduler recognize task groups and control CPU bandwidth allocation to such task groups. It uses cgroups to group tasks. if KERNEL_CGROUP_SCHED config KERNEL_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED bool "Group scheduling for SCHED_OTHER" default y config KERNEL_CFS_BANDWIDTH bool "CPU bandwidth provisioning for FAIR_GROUP_SCHED" default y depends on KERNEL_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED help This option allows users to define CPU bandwidth rates (limits) for tasks running within the fair group scheduler. Groups with no limit set are considered to be unconstrained and will run with no restriction. See tip/Documentation/scheduler/sched-bwc.txt for more information. config KERNEL_RT_GROUP_SCHED bool "Group scheduling for SCHED_RR/FIFO" default y help This feature lets you explicitly allocate real CPU bandwidth to task groups. If enabled, it will also make it impossible to schedule realtime tasks for non-root users until you allocate realtime bandwidth for them. endif config KERNEL_BLK_CGROUP bool "Block IO controller" default y help Generic block IO controller cgroup interface. This is the common cgroup interface which should be used by various IO controlling policies. Currently, CFQ IO scheduler uses it to recognize task groups and control disk bandwidth allocation (proportional time slice allocation) to such task groups. It is also used by bio throttling logic in block layer to implement upper limit in IO rates on a device. This option only enables generic Block IO controller infrastructure. One needs to also enable actual IO controlling logic/policy. For enabling proportional weight division of disk bandwidth in CFQ, set CONFIG_CFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED=y; for enabling throttling policy, set CONFIG_BLK_DEV_THROTTLING=y. if KERNEL_BLK_CGROUP config KERNEL_CFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED bool "Proportional weight of disk bandwidth in CFQ" config KERNEL_BLK_DEV_THROTTLING bool "Enable throttling policy" default y config KERNEL_BLK_DEV_THROTTLING_LOW bool "Block throttling .low limit interface support (EXPERIMENTAL)" depends on KERNEL_BLK_DEV_THROTTLING endif config KERNEL_DEBUG_BLK_CGROUP bool "Enable Block IO controller debugging" depends on KERNEL_BLK_CGROUP help Enable some debugging help. Currently it exports additional stat files in a cgroup which can be useful for debugging. config KERNEL_NET_CLS_CGROUP bool "legacy Control Group Classifier" config KERNEL_CGROUP_NET_CLASSID bool "legacy Network classid cgroup" config KERNEL_CGROUP_NET_PRIO bool "legacy Network priority cgroup" endif # # Namespace support symbols # config KERNEL_NAMESPACES bool "Enable kernel namespaces" default y if !SMALL_FLASH if KERNEL_NAMESPACES config KERNEL_UTS_NS bool "UTS namespace" default y help In this namespace, tasks see different info provided with the uname() system call. config KERNEL_IPC_NS bool "IPC namespace" default y help In this namespace, tasks work with IPC ids which correspond to different IPC objects in different namespaces. config KERNEL_USER_NS bool "User namespace (EXPERIMENTAL)" default y help This allows containers, i.e. vservers, to use user namespaces to provide different user info for different servers. config KERNEL_PID_NS bool "PID Namespaces" default y help Support process id namespaces. This allows having multiple processes with the same pid as long as they are in different pid namespaces. This is a building block of containers. config KERNEL_NET_NS bool "Network namespace" default y help Allow user space to create what appear to be multiple instances of the network stack. endif config KERNEL_DEVPTS_MULTIPLE_INSTANCES bool "Support multiple instances of devpts" default y if !SMALL_FLASH help Enable support for multiple instances of devpts filesystem. If you want to have isolated PTY namespaces (eg: in containers), say Y here. Otherwise, say N. If enabled, each mount of devpts filesystem with the '-o newinstance' option will create an independent PTY namespace. config KERNEL_POSIX_MQUEUE bool "POSIX Message Queues" default y if !SMALL_FLASH help POSIX variant of message queues is a part of IPC. In POSIX message queues every message has a priority which decides about succession of receiving it by a process. If you want to compile and run programs written e.g. for Solaris with use of its POSIX message queues (functions mq_*) say Y here. POSIX message queues are visible as a filesystem called 'mqueue' and can be mounted somewhere if you want to do filesystem operations on message queues. config KERNEL_SECCOMP_FILTER bool default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_SECCOMP bool "Enable seccomp support" depends on !(TARGET_uml) select KERNEL_SECCOMP_FILTER default y if !SMALL_FLASH help Build kernel with support for seccomp. # # IPv4 configuration # config KERNEL_IP_MROUTE bool "Enable IPv4 multicast routing" default y help Multicast routing requires a multicast routing daemon in addition to kernel support. if KERNEL_IP_MROUTE config KERNEL_IP_MROUTE_MULTIPLE_TABLES def_bool y config KERNEL_IP_PIMSM_V1 def_bool y config KERNEL_IP_PIMSM_V2 def_bool y endif # # IPv6 configuration # config KERNEL_IPV6 def_bool IPV6 if KERNEL_IPV6 config KERNEL_IPV6_MULTIPLE_TABLES def_bool y config KERNEL_IPV6_SUBTREES def_bool y config KERNEL_IPV6_MROUTE bool "Enable IPv6 multicast routing" default y help Multicast routing requires a multicast routing daemon in addition to kernel support. if KERNEL_IPV6_MROUTE config KERNEL_IPV6_MROUTE_MULTIPLE_TABLES def_bool y config KERNEL_IPV6_PIMSM_V2 def_bool y endif config KERNEL_IPV6_SEG6_LWTUNNEL bool "Enable support for lightweight tunnels" default y if !SMALL_FLASH help Using lwtunnel (needed for IPv6 segment routing) requires ip-full package. config KERNEL_LWTUNNEL_BPF def_bool n endif # # Miscellaneous network configuration # config KERNEL_NET_L3_MASTER_DEV bool "L3 Master device support" help This module provides glue between core networking code and device drivers to support L3 master devices like VRF. config KERNEL_XDP_SOCKETS bool "XDP sockets support" help XDP sockets allows a channel between XDP programs and userspace applications. config KERNEL_PAGE_POOL def_bool n config KERNEL_PAGE_POOL_STATS bool "Page pool stats support" depends on KERNEL_PAGE_POOL config KERNEL_MPTCP bool "Multi-Path TCP support" default y if !SMALL_FLASH help Select this option to enable support for Multi-Path TCP. Increases the compressed kernel size by ~214kB (as of Linux 6.6). if KERNEL_IPV6 config KERNEL_MPTCP_IPV6 bool "IPv6 support for Multipath TCP" depends on KERNEL_MPTCP default KERNEL_MPTCP endif # # NFS related symbols # config KERNEL_IP_PNP bool "Compile the kernel with rootfs on NFS" help If you want to make your kernel boot off a NFS server as root filesystem, select Y here. if KERNEL_IP_PNP config KERNEL_IP_PNP_DHCP def_bool y config KERNEL_IP_PNP_BOOTP def_bool n config KERNEL_IP_PNP_RARP def_bool n config KERNEL_NFS_FS def_bool y config KERNEL_NFS_V2 def_bool y config KERNEL_NFS_V3 def_bool y config KERNEL_ROOT_NFS def_bool y endif config KERNEL_BTRFS_FS bool "Compile the kernel with built-in BTRFS support" help Say Y here if you want to make the kernel to be able to boot off a BTRFS partition. menu "Filesystem ACL and attr support options" config USE_FS_ACL_ATTR bool "Use filesystem ACL and attr support by default" default y if !SMALL_FLASH help Make using ACLs (e.g. POSIX ACL, NFSv4 ACL) the default for kernel and packages, except old NFS. Also enable userspace extended attribute support by default. (OpenWrt already has an expection it will be present in the kernel). config KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACL support" default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_BTRFS_FS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACL for BtrFS Filesystems" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_EXT4_FS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACL for Ext4 Filesystems" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_F2FS_FS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACL for F2FS Filesystems" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_JFFS2_FS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACL for JFFS2 Filesystems" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_TMPFS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACL for TMPFS Filesystems" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_CIFS_ACL bool "Enable CIFS ACLs" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_HFS_FS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACL for HFS Filesystems" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_HFSPLUS_FS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACL for HFS+ Filesystems" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_NFS_ACL_SUPPORT bool "Enable ACLs for NFS" default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_NFS_V3_ACL_SUPPORT bool "Enable ACLs for NFSv3" config KERNEL_NFSD_V2_ACL_SUPPORT bool "Enable ACLs for NFSDv2" config KERNEL_NFSD_V3_ACL_SUPPORT bool "Enable ACLs for NFSDv3" config KERNEL_REISER_FS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACLs for ReiserFS" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_XFS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACLs for XFS" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR config KERNEL_JFS_POSIX_ACL bool "Enable POSIX ACLs for JFS" select KERNEL_FS_POSIX_ACL default y if USE_FS_ACL_ATTR endmenu config KERNEL_DEVMEM bool "/dev/mem virtual device support" help Say Y here if you want to support the /dev/mem device. The /dev/mem device is used to access areas of physical memory. config KERNEL_DEVKMEM bool "/dev/kmem virtual device support" help Say Y here if you want to support the /dev/kmem device. The /dev/kmem device is rarely used, but can be used for certain kind of kernel debugging operations. config KERNEL_SQUASHFS_FRAGMENT_CACHE_SIZE int "Number of squashfs fragments cached" default 2 if (SMALL_FLASH && !LOW_MEMORY_FOOTPRINT) default 3 config KERNEL_SQUASHFS_XATTR bool "Squashfs XATTR support" # # compile optimization setting # choice prompt "Compiler optimization level" default KERNEL_CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_SIZE if SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_PERFORMANCE bool "Optimize for performance" help This is the default optimization level for the kernel, building with the "-O2" compiler flag for best performance and most helpful compile-time warnings. config KERNEL_CC_OPTIMIZE_FOR_SIZE bool "Optimize for size" help Enabling this option will pass "-Os" instead of "-O2" to your compiler resulting in a smaller kernel. endchoice config KERNEL_AUDIT bool "Auditing support" config KERNEL_SECURITY bool "Enable different security models" config KERNEL_SECURITY_NETWORK bool "Socket and Networking Security Hooks" select KERNEL_SECURITY config KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX bool "NSA SELinux Support" select KERNEL_SECURITY_NETWORK select KERNEL_AUDIT config KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX_BOOTPARAM bool "NSA SELinux boot parameter" depends on KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX default y config KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX_DISABLE bool "NSA SELinux runtime disable" depends on KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX config KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX_DEVELOP bool "NSA SELinux Development Support" depends on KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX default y config KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX_SIDTAB_HASH_BITS int depends on KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX default 9 config KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX_SID2STR_CACHE_SIZE int depends on KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX default 256 config KERNEL_LSM string default "lockdown,yama,loadpin,safesetid,integrity,selinux" depends on KERNEL_SECURITY_SELINUX config KERNEL_EXT4_FS_SECURITY bool "Ext4 Security Labels" default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_F2FS_FS_SECURITY bool "F2FS Security Labels" default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_UBIFS_FS_SECURITY bool "UBIFS Security Labels" default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_JFFS2_FS_SECURITY bool "JFFS2 Security Labels" default y if !SMALL_FLASH config KERNEL_WERROR bool "Compile the kernel with warnings as errors" help A kernel build should not cause any compiler warnings, and this enables the '-Werror' (for C) and '-Dwarnings' (for Rust) flags to enforce that rule by default. Certain warnings from other tools such as the linker may be upgraded to errors with this option as well. However, if you have a new (or very old) compiler or linker with odd and unusual warnings, or you have some architecture with problems, you may need to disable this config option in order to successfully build the kernel.