# # For a description of the syntax of this configuration file, # see extra/config/Kconfig-language.txt # config ARCH_ANY_ENDIAN bool config ARCH_BIG_ENDIAN bool config ARCH_LITTLE_ENDIAN bool if ARCH_ANY_ENDIAN choice prompt "Target Processor Endianness" help This is the endianness you wish to use. Choose either Big Endian, or Little Endian. config ARCH_WANTS_BIG_ENDIAN bool "Big Endian" select ARCH_BIG_ENDIAN config ARCH_WANTS_LITTLE_ENDIAN bool "Little Endian" select ARCH_LITTLE_ENDIAN endchoice endif # if the arch only supports one endian, just display the setting if !ARCH_ANY_ENDIAN && ARCH_LITTLE_ENDIAN comment "Using Little Endian" endif if !ARCH_ANY_ENDIAN && ARCH_BIG_ENDIAN comment "Using Big Endian" endif config ARCH_HAS_NO_MMU bool if ARCH_HAS_NO_MMU comment "Target CPU lacks a memory management unit (MMU)" endif config ARCH_HAS_MMU bool "Target CPU has a memory management unit (MMU)" depends !ARCH_HAS_NO_MMU default y help If your target CPU does not have a memory management unit (MMU), then answer N here. Normally, Linux runs on systems with an MMU. If you are building a uClinux system, answer N. Most people will answer Y. config ARCH_USE_MMU bool "Do you want to utilize the MMU?" depends on ARCH_HAS_MMU default y help If your target CPU has a MMU, and you wish to actually utilize it, then answer Y here. Normal Linux requires an MMU. If you're unsure, answer Y. config UCLIBC_HAS_FLOATS bool "Enable floating point number support" default y help This option allows you to entirely omit all floating point number support from uClibc. This will cause floating point functions like strtod() to be omitted from uClibc. Other floating point functions, such as printf() and scanf() will still be included in the library, but will not contain support for floating point numbers. Answering N to this option can reduce the size of uClibc. Most people will answer Y. config UCLIBC_HAS_FPU bool "Target CPU has a floating point unit (FPU)" depends on UCLIBC_HAS_FLOATS default y help If your target CPU does not have a Floating Point Unit (FPU) or a kernel FPU emulator, but you still wish to support floating point functions, then uClibc will need to be compiled with soft floating point support (-msoft-float). If your target CPU does not have an FPU or an FPU emulator within the Linux kernel, then you should answer N. Most people will answer Y. config UCLIBC_HAS_SOFT_FLOAT bool depends on UCLIBC_HAS_FLOATS && !UCLIBC_HAS_FPU default y config DO_C99_MATH bool "Enable full C99 math library support" depends on UCLIBC_HAS_FLOATS default n help If you want the uClibc math library to contain the full set C99 math library features, then answer Y. If you leave this set to N the math library will contain only the math functions that were listed as part of the traditional POSIX/IEEE 1003.1b-1993 standard. Leaving this option set to N will save around 35k on an x86 system. If your applications require the newer C99 math library functions, then answer Y. config KERNEL_SOURCE string "Linux kernel header location" default "/usr/src/linux" help The kernel source you use to compile with should be the same as the Linux kernel you run your apps on. uClibc doesn't even try to achieve binary compatibility across kernel versions. So don't expect, for example, uClibc compiled with Linux kernel 2.0.x to implement lchown properly, since 2.0.x can't do that. Similarly, if you compile uClibc vs Linux 2.4.x kernel headers, but then run on Linux 2.0.x, lchown will be compiled into uClibc, but won't work at all. You have been warned. config UCLIBC_UCLINUX_BROKEN_MUNMAP bool depends on !ARCH_USE_MMU default y config EXCLUDE_BRK bool depends on !ARCH_USE_MMU default y config HAVE_DOT_CONFIG bool default y