blob: 3e71817b69e1787130bbf1e204682f63f413689d [file] [log] [blame]
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -06001menu "SPL / TPL"
2
Simon Glassc2ae7d82016-09-12 23:18:22 -06003config SUPPORT_SPL
4 bool
5
6config SUPPORT_TPL
7 bool
8
9config SPL
10 bool
11 depends on SUPPORT_SPL
12 prompt "Enable SPL"
13 help
14 If you want to build SPL as well as the normal image, say Y.
15
16config SPL_SYS_MALLOC_SIMPLE
17 bool
18 depends on SPL
19 prompt "Only use malloc_simple functions in the SPL"
20 help
21 Say Y here to only use the *_simple malloc functions from
22 malloc_simple.c, rather then using the versions from dlmalloc.c;
23 this will make the SPL binary smaller at the cost of more heap
24 usage as the *_simple malloc functions do not re-use free-ed mem.
25
26config SPL_STACK_R
27 depends on SPL
28 bool "Enable SDRAM location for SPL stack"
29 help
30 SPL starts off execution in SRAM and thus typically has only a small
31 stack available. Since SPL sets up DRAM while in its board_init_f()
32 function, it is possible for the stack to move there before
33 board_init_r() is reached. This option enables a special SDRAM
34 location for the SPL stack. U-Boot SPL switches to this after
35 board_init_f() completes, and before board_init_r() starts.
36
37config SPL_STACK_R_ADDR
38 depends on SPL_STACK_R
39 hex "SDRAM location for SPL stack"
40 help
41 Specify the address in SDRAM for the SPL stack. This will be set up
42 before board_init_r() is called.
43
44config SPL_STACK_R_MALLOC_SIMPLE_LEN
45 depends on SPL_STACK_R && SPL_SYS_MALLOC_SIMPLE
46 hex "Size of malloc_simple heap after switching to DRAM SPL stack"
47 default 0x100000
48 help
49 Specify the amount of the stack to use as memory pool for
50 malloc_simple after switching the stack to DRAM. This may be set
51 to give board_init_r() a larger heap then the initial heap in
52 SRAM which is limited to SYS_MALLOC_F_LEN bytes.
53
54config SPL_SEPARATE_BSS
55 depends on SPL
56 bool "BSS section is in a different memory region from text"
57 help
58 Some platforms need a large BSS region in SPL and can provide this
59 because RAM is already set up. In this case BSS can be moved to RAM.
60 This option should then be enabled so that the correct device tree
61 location is used. Normally we put the device tree at the end of BSS
62 but with this option enabled, it goes at _image_binary_end.
63
Simon Glassa807ab32016-09-24 18:19:56 -060064config SPL_DISPLAY_PRINT
65 depends on SPL
66 bool "Display a board-specific message in SPL"
67 help
68 If this option is enabled, U-Boot will call the function
69 spl_display_print() immediately after displaying the SPL console
70 banner ("U-Boot SPL ..."). This function should be provided by
71 the board.
72
Semen Protsenko38fed8a2016-11-16 19:19:05 +020073config SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_SECTOR
74 bool "MMC raw mode: by sector"
75 depends on SPL
76 default y if ARCH_SUNXI || ARCH_DAVINCI || ARCH_UNIPHIER ||ARCH_MX6 || \
77 ARCH_ROCKCHIP || ARCH_MVEBU || ARCH_SOCFPGA || \
78 ARCH_AT91 || ARCH_ZYNQ || ARCH_KEYSTONE || OMAP34XX || \
79 OMAP44XX || OMAP54XX || AM33XX || AM43XX
80 help
81 Use sector number for specifying U-Boot location on MMC/SD in
82 raw mode.
83
84config SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_SECTOR
85 hex "Address on the MMC to load U-Boot from"
86 depends on SPL && SYS_MMCSD_RAW_MODE_U_BOOT_USE_SECTOR
87 default 0x50 if ARCH_SUNXI
88 default 0x75 if ARCH_DAVINCI
Semen Protsenko38fed8a2016-11-16 19:19:05 +020089 default 0x8a if ARCH_MX6
Masahiro Yamadac0efc312017-01-28 06:53:53 +090090 default 0x100 if ARCH_ROCKCHIP || ARCH_UNIPHIER
Semen Protsenko38fed8a2016-11-16 19:19:05 +020091 default 0x140 if ARCH_MVEBU
92 default 0x200 if ARCH_SOCFPGA || ARCH_AT91
93 default 0x300 if ARCH_ZYNQ || ARCH_KEYSTONE || OMAP34XX || OMAP44XX || \
94 OMAP54XX || AM33XX || AM43XX
95 help
96 Address on the MMC to load U-Boot from, when the MMC is being used
97 in raw mode. Units: MMC sectors (1 sector = 512 bytes).
98
Simon Glassc2ae7d82016-09-12 23:18:22 -060099config TPL
100 bool
101 depends on SPL && SUPPORT_TPL
102 prompt "Enable TPL"
103 help
104 If you want to build TPL as well as the normal image and SPL, say Y.
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -0600105
106config SPL_CRC32_SUPPORT
107 bool "Support CRC32"
108 depends on SPL_FIT
109 help
110 Enable this to support CRC32 in FIT images within SPL. This is a
111 32-bit checksum value that can be used to verify images. This is
112 the least secure type of checksum, suitable for detected
113 accidental image corruption. For secure applications you should
114 consider SHA1 or SHA256.
115
116config SPL_MD5_SUPPORT
117 bool "Support MD5"
118 depends on SPL_FIT
119 help
120 Enable this to support MD5 in FIT images within SPL. An MD5
121 checksum is a 128-bit hash value used to check that the image
122 contents have not been corrupted. Note that MD5 is not considered
123 secure as it is possible (with a brute-force attack) to adjust the
124 image while still retaining the same MD5 hash value. For secure
125 applications where images may be changed maliciously, you should
126 consider SHA1 or SHA256.
127
128config SPL_SHA1_SUPPORT
129 bool "Support SHA1"
130 depends on SPL_FIT
131 help
132 Enable this to support SHA1 in FIT images within SPL. A SHA1
133 checksum is a 160-bit (20-byte) hash value used to check that the
134 image contents have not been corrupted or maliciously altered.
135 While SHA1 is fairly secure it is coming to the end of its life
136 due to the expanding computing power avaiable to brute-force
137 attacks. For more security, consider SHA256.
138
139config SPL_SHA256_SUPPORT
140 bool "Support SHA256"
141 depends on SPL_FIT
142 help
143 Enable this to support SHA256 in FIT images within SPL. A SHA256
144 checksum is a 256-bit (32-byte) hash value used to check that the
145 image contents have not been corrupted. SHA256 is recommended for
146 use in secure applications since (as at 2016) there is no known
147 feasible attack that could produce a 'collision' with differing
148 input data. Use this for the highest security. Note that only the
149 SHA256 variant is supported: SHA512 and others are not currently
150 supported in U-Boot.
151
Simon Glass5e148df2017-01-16 07:03:29 -0700152config SPL_CPU_SUPPORT
153 bool "Support CPU drivers"
154 depends on SPL
155 help
156 Enable this to support CPU drivers in SPL. These drivers can set
157 up CPUs and provide information about them such as the model and
158 name. This can be useful in SPL since setting up the CPUs earlier
159 may improve boot performance. Enable this option to build the
160 drivers in drivers/cpu as part of an SPL build.
161
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -0600162config SPL_CRYPTO_SUPPORT
163 bool "Support crypto drivers"
164 depends on SPL
165 help
166 Enable crypto drivers in SPL. These drivers can be used to
167 accelerate secure boot processing in secure applications. Enable
168 this option to build the drivers in drivers/crypto as part of an
169 SPL build.
170
171config SPL_HASH_SUPPORT
172 bool "Support hashing drivers"
173 depends on SPL
174 help
175 Enable hashing drivers in SPL. These drivers can be used to
176 accelerate secure boot processing in secure applications. Enable
177 this option to build system-specific drivers for hash acceleration
178 as part of an SPL build.
179
180config SPL_DMA_SUPPORT
181 bool "Support DMA drivers"
182 depends on SPL
183 help
184 Enable DMA (direct-memory-access) drivers in SPL. These drivers
185 can be used to handle memory-to-peripheral data transfer without
186 the CPU moving the data. Enable this option to build the drivers
187 in drivers/dma as part of an SPL build.
188
189config SPL_DRIVERS_MISC_SUPPORT
190 bool "Support misc drivers"
191 depends on SPL
192 help
193 Enable miscellaneous drivers in SPL. These drivers perform various
194 tasks that don't fall nicely into other categories, Enable this
195 option to build the drivers in drivers/misc as part of an SPL
196 build, for those that support building in SPL (not all drivers do).
197
198config SPL_ENV_SUPPORT
199 bool "Support an environment"
200 depends on SPL
201 help
202 Enable environment support in SPL. The U-Boot environment provides
203 a number of settings (essentially name/value pairs) which can
204 control many aspects of U-Boot's operation. Normally this is not
205 needed in SPL as it has a much simpler task with less
206 configuration. But some boards use this to support 'Falcon' boot
207 on EXT2 and FAT, where SPL boots directly into Linux without
208 starting U-Boot first. Enabling this option will make getenv()
209 and setenv() available in SPL.
210
B, Ravid2d9bdf2016-09-28 14:46:18 +0530211config SPL_SAVEENV
212 bool "Support save environment"
213 depends on SPL && SPL_ENV_SUPPORT
214 help
215 Enable save environment support in SPL after setenv. By default
216 the saveenv option is not provided in SPL, but some boards need
217 this support in 'Falcon' boot, where SPL need to boot from
218 different images based on environment variable set by OS. For
219 example OS may set "reboot_image" environment variable to
220 "recovery" inorder to boot recovery image by SPL. The SPL read
221 "reboot_image" and act accordingly and change the reboot_image
222 to default mode using setenv and save the environemnt.
223
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -0600224config SPL_ETH_SUPPORT
225 bool "Support Ethernet"
226 depends on SPL_ENV_SUPPORT
227 help
228 Enable access to the network subsystem and associated Ethernet
229 drivers in SPL. This permits SPL to load U-Boot over an Ethernet
230 link rather than from an on-board peripheral. Environment support
231 is required since the network stack uses a number of environment
232 variables. See also SPL_NET_SUPPORT.
233
234config SPL_EXT_SUPPORT
235 bool "Support EXT filesystems"
236 depends on SPL
237 help
238 Enable support for EXT2/3/4 filesystems with SPL. This permits
239 U-Boot (or Linux in Falcon mode) to be loaded from an EXT
240 filesystem from within SPL. Support for the underlying block
241 device (e.g. MMC or USB) must be enabled separately.
242
243config SPL_FAT_SUPPORT
244 bool "Support FAT filesystems"
245 depends on SPL
246 help
247 Enable support for FAT and VFAT filesystems with SPL. This
248 permits U-Boot (or Linux in Falcon mode) to be loaded from a FAT
249 filesystem from within SPL. Support for the underlying block
250 device (e.g. MMC or USB) must be enabled separately.
251
252config SPL_FPGA_SUPPORT
253 bool "Support FPGAs"
254 depends on SPL
255 help
256 Enable support for FPGAs in SPL. Field-programmable Gate Arrays
257 provide software-configurable hardware which is typically used to
258 implement peripherals (such as UARTs, LCD displays, MMC) or
259 accelerate custom processing functions, such as image processing
260 or machine learning. Sometimes it is useful to program the FPGA
261 as early as possible during boot, and this option can enable that
262 within SPL.
263
264config SPL_GPIO_SUPPORT
265 bool "Support GPIO"
266 depends on SPL
267 help
268 Enable support for GPIOs (General-purpose Input/Output) in SPL.
269 GPIOs allow U-Boot to read the state of an input line (high or
270 low) and set the state of an output line. This can be used to
271 drive LEDs, control power to various system parts and read user
272 input. GPIOs can be useful in SPL to enable a 'sign-of-life' LED,
273 for example. Enable this option to build the drivers in
274 drivers/gpio as part of an SPL build.
275
276config SPL_I2C_SUPPORT
277 bool "Support I2C"
278 depends on SPL
279 help
280 Enable support for the I2C (Inter-Integrated Circuit) bus in SPL.
281 I2C works with a clock and data line which can be driven by a
282 one or more masters or slaves. It is a fairly complex bus but is
283 widely used as it only needs two lines for communication. Speeds of
284 400kbps are typical but up to 3.4Mbps is supported by some
285 hardware. I2C can be useful in SPL to configure power management
286 ICs (PMICs) before raising the CPU clock speed, for example.
287 Enable this option to build the drivers in drivers/i2c as part of
288 an SPL build.
289
290config SPL_LIBCOMMON_SUPPORT
291 bool "Support common libraries"
292 depends on SPL
293 help
294 Enable support for common U-Boot libraries within SPL. These
295 libraries include common code to deal with U-Boot images,
296 environment and USB, for example. This option is enabled on many
297 boards. Enable this option to build the code in common/ as part of
298 an SPL build.
299
300config SPL_LIBDISK_SUPPORT
301 bool "Support disk paritions"
302 depends on SPL
303 help
304 Enable support for disk partitions within SPL. 'Disk' is something
305 of a misnomer as it includes non-spinning media such as flash (as
306 used in MMC and USB sticks). Partitions provide a way for a disk
307 to be split up into separate regions, with a partition table placed
308 at the start or end which describes the location and size of each
309 'partition'. These partitions are typically uses as individual block
310 devices, typically with an EXT2 or FAT filesystem in each. This
311 option enables whatever partition support has been enabled in
312 U-Boot to also be used in SPL. It brings in the code in disk/.
313
314config SPL_LIBGENERIC_SUPPORT
315 bool "Support generic libraries"
316 depends on SPL
317 help
318 Enable support for generic U-Boot libraries within SPL. These
319 libraries include generic code to deal with device tree, hashing,
320 printf(), compression and the like. This option is enabled on many
321 boards. Enable this option to build the code in lib/ as part of an
322 SPL build.
323
324config SPL_MMC_SUPPORT
325 bool "Support MMC"
326 depends on SPL
327 help
328 Enable support for MMC (Multimedia Card) within SPL. This enables
329 the MMC protocol implementation and allows any enabled drivers to
330 be used within SPL. MMC can be used with or without disk partition
331 support depending on the application (SPL_LIBDISK_SUPPORT). Enable
332 this option to build the drivers in drivers/mmc as part of an SPL
333 build.
334
335config SPL_MPC8XXX_INIT_DDR_SUPPORT
336 bool "Support MPC8XXX DDR init"
337 depends on SPL
338 help
339 Enable support for DDR-SDRAM (double-data-rate synchronous dynamic
340 random-access memory) on the MPC8XXX family within SPL. This
341 allows DRAM to be set up before loading U-Boot into that DRAM,
342 where it can run.
343
344config SPL_MTD_SUPPORT
345 bool "Support MTD drivers"
346 depends on SPL
347 help
348 Enable support for MTD (Memory Technology Device) within SPL. MTD
349 provides a block interface over raw NAND and can also be used with
350 SPI flash. This allows SPL to load U-Boot from supported MTD
351 devices. See SPL_NAND_SUPPORT and SPL_ONENAND_SUPPORT for how
352 to enable specific MTD drivers.
353
354config SPL_MUSB_NEW_SUPPORT
355 bool "Support new Mentor Graphics USB"
356 depends on SPL
357 help
358 Enable support for Mentor Graphics USB in SPL. This is a new
359 driver used by some boards. Enable this option to build
360 the drivers in drivers/usb/musb-new as part of an SPL build. The
361 old drivers are in drivers/usb/musb.
362
363config SPL_NAND_SUPPORT
364 bool "Support NAND flash"
365 depends on SPL
366 help
367 Enable support for NAND (Negative AND) flash in SPL. NAND flash
368 can be used to allow SPL to load U-Boot from supported devices.
369 This enables the drivers in drivers/mtd/nand as part of an SPL
370 build.
371
372config SPL_NET_SUPPORT
373 bool "Support networking"
374 depends on SPL
375 help
376 Enable support for network devices (such as Ethernet) in SPL.
377 This permits SPL to load U-Boot over a network link rather than
378 from an on-board peripheral. Environment support is required since
379 the network stack uses a number of environment variables. See also
380 SPL_ETH_SUPPORT.
381
382if SPL_NET_SUPPORT
383config SPL_NET_VCI_STRING
384 string "BOOTP Vendor Class Identifier string sent by SPL"
385 help
386 As defined by RFC 2132 the vendor class identifier field can be
387 sent by the client to identify the vendor type and configuration
388 of a client. This is often used in practice to allow for the DHCP
389 server to specify different files to load depending on if the ROM,
390 SPL or U-Boot itself makes the request
391endif # if SPL_NET_SUPPORT
392
393config SPL_NO_CPU_SUPPORT
394 bool "Drop CPU code in SPL"
395 depends on SPL
396 help
397 This is specific to the ARM926EJ-S CPU. It disables the standard
398 start.S start-up code, presumably so that a replacement can be
399 used on that CPU. You should not enable it unless you know what
400 you are doing.
401
402config SPL_NOR_SUPPORT
403 bool "Support NOR flash"
404 depends on SPL
405 help
406 Enable support for loading U-Boot from memory-mapped NOR (Negative
407 OR) flash in SPL. NOR flash is slow to write but fast to read, and
408 a memory-mapped device makes it very easy to access. Loading from
409 NOR is typically achieved with just a memcpy().
410
411config SPL_ONENAND_SUPPORT
412 bool "Support OneNAND flash"
413 depends on SPL
414 help
415 Enable support for OneNAND (Negative AND) flash in SPL. OneNAND is
416 a type of NAND flash and therefore can be used to allow SPL to
417 load U-Boot from supported devices. This enables the drivers in
418 drivers/mtd/onenand as part of an SPL build.
419
Heiko Schocherc20ae2f2016-10-06 07:55:15 +0200420config SPL_OS_BOOT
421 bool "Activate Falcon Mode"
422 depends on SPL && !TI_SECURE_DEVICE
423 default n
424 help
425 Enable booting directly to an OS from SPL.
426 for more info read doc/README.falcon
427
Heiko Schocher29d3bc72016-10-06 07:55:16 +0200428if SPL_OS_BOOT
429config SYS_OS_BASE
430 hex "addr, where OS is found"
431 depends on SPL && SPL_NOR_SUPPORT
432 help
433 Specify the address, where the OS image is found, which
434 gets booted.
435
436endif # SPL_OS_BOOT
437
Simon Glass2446b6b2017-01-16 07:03:30 -0700438config SPL_PCI_SUPPORT
439 bool "Support PCI drivers"
440 depends on SPL
441 help
442 Enable support for PCI in SPL. For platforms that need PCI to boot,
443 or must perform some init using PCI in SPL, this provides the
444 necessary driver support. This enables the drivers in drivers/pci
445 as part of an SPL build.
446
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -0600447config SPL_POST_MEM_SUPPORT
448 bool "Support POST drivers"
449 depends on SPL
450 help
451 Enable support for POST (Power-on Self Test) in SPL. POST is a
452 procedure that checks that the hardware (CPU or board) appears to
453 be functionally correctly. It is a sanity check that can be
454 performed before booting. This enables the drivers in post/drivers
455 as part of an SPL build.
456
457config SPL_POWER_SUPPORT
458 bool "Support power drivers"
459 depends on SPL
460 help
461 Enable support for power control in SPL. This includes support
462 for PMICs (Power-management Integrated Circuits) and some of the
463 features provided by PMICs. In particular, voltage regulators can
464 be used to enable/disable power and vary its voltage. That can be
465 useful in SPL to turn on boot peripherals and adjust CPU voltage
466 so that the clock speed can be increased. This enables the drivers
467 in drivers/power, drivers/power/pmic and drivers/power/regulator
468 as part of an SPL build.
469
Stefan Agner22802f42016-12-23 07:51:53 +0100470config SPL_RAM_SUPPORT
471 bool "Support booting from RAM"
472 depends on SPL
473 default y if MICROBLAZE || ARCH_SOCFPGA || TEGRA || ARCH_ZYNQ
474 help
475 Enable booting of an image in RAM. The image can be preloaded or
476 it can be loaded by SPL directly into RAM (e.g. using USB).
477
Stefan Agnerf417d402016-12-23 07:51:52 +0100478config SPL_RAM_DEVICE
479 bool "Support booting from preloaded image in RAM"
Stefan Agner22802f42016-12-23 07:51:53 +0100480 depends on SPL_RAM_SUPPORT
Stefan Agnerf417d402016-12-23 07:51:52 +0100481 default y if MICROBLAZE || ARCH_SOCFPGA || TEGRA || ARCH_ZYNQ
482 help
483 Enable booting of an image already loaded in RAM. The image has to
484 be already in memory when SPL takes over, e.g. loaded by the boot
485 ROM.
486
Simon Glass30bf8a02017-01-16 07:03:31 -0700487config SPL_RTC_SUPPORT
488 bool "Support RTC drivers"
489 depends on SPL
490 help
491 Enable RTC (Real-time Clock) support in SPL. This includes support
492 for reading and setting the time. Some RTC devices also have some
493 non-volatile (battery-backed) memory which is accessible if
494 needed. This enables the drivers in drivers/rtc as part of an SPL
495 build.
496
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -0600497config SPL_SATA_SUPPORT
498 bool "Support loading from SATA"
499 depends on SPL
500 help
501 Enable support for SATA (Serial AT attachment) in SPL. This allows
502 use of SATA devices such as hard drives and flash drivers for
503 loading U-Boot. SATA is used in higher-end embedded systems and
504 can provide higher performance than MMC , at somewhat higher
505 expense and power consumption. This enables loading from SATA
506 using a configured device.
507
508config SPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT
509 bool "Support serial"
510 depends on SPL
511 help
512 Enable support for serial in SPL. This allows use of a serial UART
513 for displaying messages while SPL is running. It also brings in
514 printf() and panic() functions. This should normally be enabled
515 unless there are space reasons not to. Even then, consider
516 enabling USE_TINY_PRINTF which is a small printf() version.
517
518config SPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT
519 bool "Support SPI flash drivers"
520 depends on SPL
521 help
522 Enable support for using SPI flash in SPL, and loading U-Boot from
523 SPI flash. SPI flash (Serial Peripheral Bus flash) is named after
524 the SPI bus that is used to connect it to a system. It is a simple
525 but fast bidirectional 4-wire bus (clock, chip select and two data
526 lines). This enables the drivers in drivers/mtd/spi as part of an
527 SPL build. This normally requires SPL_SPI_SUPPORT.
528
529config SPL_SPI_SUPPORT
530 bool "Support SPI drivers"
531 depends on SPL
532 help
533 Enable support for using SPI in SPL. This is used for connecting
534 to SPI flash for loading U-Boot. See SPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT for
535 more details on that. The SPI driver provides the transport for
536 data between the SPI flash and the CPU. This option can be used to
537 enable SPI drivers that are needed for other purposes also, such
538 as a SPI PMIC.
539
Simon Glass4a6c81f2017-01-16 07:03:32 -0700540config SPL_TIMER_SUPPORT
541 bool "Support timer drivers"
542 depends on SPL
543 help
544 Enable support for timer drivers in SPL. These can be used to get
545 a timer value when in SPL, or perhaps for implementing a delay
546 function. This enables the drivers in drivers/timer as part of an
547 SPL build.
548
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -0600549config SPL_USB_HOST_SUPPORT
550 bool "Support USB host drivers"
551 depends on SPL
552 help
553 Enable access to USB (Universal Serial Bus) host devices so that
554 SPL can load U-Boot from a connected USB peripheral, such as a USB
555 flash stick. While USB takes a little longer to start up than most
556 buses, it is very flexible since many different types of storage
557 device can be attached. This option enables the drivers in
558 drivers/usb/host as part of an SPL build.
559
560config SPL_USB_SUPPORT
561 bool "Support loading from USB"
562 depends on SPL_USB_HOST_SUPPORT
563 help
564 Enable support for USB devices in SPL. This allows use of USB
565 devices such as hard drives and flash drivers for loading U-Boot.
566 The actual drivers are enabled separately using the normal U-Boot
567 config options. This enables loading from USB using a configured
568 device.
569
Stefan Agnere94793c2016-11-21 10:58:53 -0800570config SPL_USB_GADGET_SUPPORT
571 bool "Suppport USB Gadget drivers"
572 depends on SPL
573 help
574 Enable USB Gadget API which allows to enable USB device functions
575 in SPL.
576
577if SPL_USB_GADGET_SUPPORT
578
579config SPL_USBETH_SUPPORT
580 bool "Support USB Ethernet drivers"
581 help
582 Enable access to the USB network subsystem and associated
583 drivers in SPL. This permits SPL to load U-Boot over a
584 USB-connected Ethernet link (such as a USB Ethernet dongle) rather
585 than from an onboard peripheral. Environment support is required
586 since the network stack uses a number of environment variables.
587 See also SPL_NET_SUPPORT and SPL_ETH_SUPPORT.
588
Stefan Agner59917032016-11-21 10:58:52 -0800589config SPL_DFU_SUPPORT
590 bool "Support DFU (Device Firmware Upgarde)"
Stefan Agner59917032016-11-21 10:58:52 -0800591 select SPL_HASH_SUPPORT
592 help
593 This feature enables the DFU (Device Firmware Upgarde) in SPL with
594 RAM memory device support. The ROM code will load and execute
595 the SPL built with dfu. The user can load binaries (u-boot/kernel) to
596 selected device partition from host-pc using dfu-utils.
597 This feature is useful to flash the binaries to factory or bare-metal
598 boards using USB interface.
599
600choice
601 bool "DFU device selection"
602 depends on SPL_DFU_SUPPORT
603
604config SPL_DFU_RAM
605 bool "RAM device"
Stefan Agner22802f42016-12-23 07:51:53 +0100606 depends on SPL_DFU_SUPPORT && SPL_RAM_SUPPORT
Stefan Agner59917032016-11-21 10:58:52 -0800607 help
608 select RAM/DDR memory device for loading binary images
609 (u-boot/kernel) to the selected device partition using
610 DFU and execute the u-boot/kernel from RAM.
611
612endchoice
613
Stefan Agnere94793c2016-11-21 10:58:53 -0800614endif
615
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -0600616config SPL_WATCHDOG_SUPPORT
617 bool "Support watchdog drivers"
618 depends on SPL
619 help
620 Enable support for watchdog drivers in SPL. A watchdog is
621 typically a hardware peripheral which can reset the system when it
622 detects no activity for a while (such as a software crash). This
623 enables the drivers in drivers/watchdog as part of an SPL build.
624
625config SPL_YMODEM_SUPPORT
626 bool "Support loading using Ymodem"
627 depends on SPL
628 help
629 While loading from serial is slow it can be a useful backup when
630 there is no other option. The Ymodem protocol provides a reliable
631 means of transmitting U-Boot over a serial line for using in SPL,
632 with a checksum to ensure correctness.
633
Simon Glassf73329e2016-09-12 23:18:27 -0600634config TPL_ENV_SUPPORT
635 bool "Support an environment"
636 depends on TPL
637 help
638 Enable environment support in TPL. See SPL_ENV_SUPPORT for details.
639
640config TPL_I2C_SUPPORT
641 bool "Support I2C"
642 depends on TPL
643 help
644 Enable support for the I2C bus in SPL. See SPL_I2C_SUPPORT for
645 details.
646
647config TPL_LIBCOMMON_SUPPORT
648 bool "Support common libraries"
649 depends on TPL
650 help
651 Enable support for common U-Boot libraries within TPL. See
652 SPL_LIBCOMMON_SUPPORT for details.
653
654config TPL_LIBGENERIC_SUPPORT
655 bool "Support generic libraries"
656 depends on TPL
657 help
658 Enable support for generic U-Boot libraries within TPL. See
659 SPL_LIBGENERIC_SUPPORT for details.
660
661config TPL_MPC8XXX_INIT_DDR_SUPPORT
662 bool "Support MPC8XXX DDR init"
663 depends on TPL
664 help
665 Enable support for DDR-SDRAM on the MPC8XXX family within TPL. See
666 SPL_MPC8XXX_INIT_DDR_SUPPORT for details.
667
668config TPL_MMC_SUPPORT
669 bool "Support MMC"
670 depends on TPL
671 help
672 Enable support for MMC within TPL. See SPL_MMC_SUPPORT for details.
673
674config TPL_NAND_SUPPORT
675 bool "Support NAND flash"
676 depends on TPL
677 help
678 Enable support for NAND in SPL. See SPL_NAND_SUPPORT for details.
679
680config TPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT
681 bool "Support serial"
682 depends on TPL
683 help
684 Enable support for serial in SPL. See SPL_SERIAL_SUPPORT for
685 details.
686
687config TPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT
688 bool "Support SPI flash drivers"
689 depends on TPL
690 help
691 Enable support for using SPI flash in SPL. See SPL_SPI_FLASH_SUPPORT
692 for details.
693
694config TPL_SPI_SUPPORT
695 bool "Support SPI drivers"
696 depends on TPL
697 help
698 Enable support for using SPI in SPL. See SPL_SPI_SUPPORT for
699 details.
700
Simon Glass11bde1c2016-09-13 07:05:23 -0600701endmenu