Magellan Linux

Contents of /trunk/mkinitrd-magellan/busybox/util-linux/Config.src

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Wed Sep 7 17:36:17 2011 UTC (12 years, 8 months ago) by niro
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-fix build with glibc-2.14, disable RPC features atm
1 #
2 # For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,
3 # see scripts/kbuild/config-language.txt.
4 #
5
6 menu "Linux System Utilities"
7
8 INSERT
9
10 config ACPID
11 bool "acpid"
12 default y
13 help
14 acpid listens to ACPI events coming either in textual form from
15 /proc/acpi/event (though it is marked deprecated it is still widely
16 used and _is_ a standard) or in binary form from specified evdevs
17 (just use /dev/input/event*).
18
19 It parses the event to retrieve ACTION and a possible PARAMETER.
20 It then spawns /etc/acpi/<ACTION>[/<PARAMETER>] either via run-parts
21 (if the resulting path is a directory) or directly as an executable.
22
23 N.B. acpid relies on run-parts so have the latter installed.
24
25 config FEATURE_ACPID_COMPAT
26 bool "Accept and ignore redundant options"
27 default y
28 depends on ACPID
29 help
30 Accept and ignore compatibility options -g -m -s -S -v.
31
32 config BLKID
33 bool "blkid"
34 default y
35 select VOLUMEID
36 help
37 Lists labels and UUIDs of all filesystems.
38 WARNING:
39 With all submodules selected, it will add ~8k to busybox.
40
41 config DMESG
42 bool "dmesg"
43 default y
44 help
45 dmesg is used to examine or control the kernel ring buffer. When the
46 Linux kernel prints messages to the system log, they are stored in
47 the kernel ring buffer. You can use dmesg to print the kernel's ring
48 buffer, clear the kernel ring buffer, change the size of the kernel
49 ring buffer, and change the priority level at which kernel messages
50 are also logged to the system console. Enable this option if you
51 wish to enable the 'dmesg' utility.
52
53 config FEATURE_DMESG_PRETTY
54 bool "Pretty dmesg output"
55 default y
56 depends on DMESG
57 help
58 If you wish to scrub the syslog level from the output, say 'Y' here.
59 The syslog level is a string prefixed to every line with the form
60 "<#>".
61
62 With this option you will see:
63 # dmesg
64 Linux version 2.6.17.4 .....
65 BIOS-provided physical RAM map:
66 BIOS-e820: 0000000000000000 - 000000000009f000 (usable)
67
68 Without this option you will see:
69 # dmesg
70 <5>Linux version 2.6.17.4 .....
71 <6>BIOS-provided physical RAM map:
72 <6> BIOS-e820: 0000000000000000 - 000000000009f000 (usable)
73
74 config FBSET
75 bool "fbset"
76 default y
77 help
78 fbset is used to show or change the settings of a Linux frame buffer
79 device. The frame buffer device provides a simple and unique
80 interface to access a graphics display. Enable this option
81 if you wish to enable the 'fbset' utility.
82
83 config FEATURE_FBSET_FANCY
84 bool "Turn on extra fbset options"
85 default y
86 depends on FBSET
87 help
88 This option enables extended fbset options, allowing one to set the
89 framebuffer size, color depth, etc. interface to access a graphics
90 display. Enable this option if you wish to enable extended fbset
91 options.
92
93 config FEATURE_FBSET_READMODE
94 bool "Turn on fbset readmode support"
95 default y
96 depends on FBSET
97 help
98 This option allows fbset to read the video mode database stored by
99 default as /etc/fb.modes, which can be used to set frame buffer
100 device to pre-defined video modes.
101
102 config FDFLUSH
103 bool "fdflush"
104 default y
105 help
106 fdflush is only needed when changing media on slightly-broken
107 removable media drives. It is used to make Linux believe that a
108 hardware disk-change switch has been actuated, which causes Linux to
109 forget anything it has cached from the previous media. If you have
110 such a slightly-broken drive, you will need to run fdflush every time
111 you change a disk. Most people have working hardware and can safely
112 leave this disabled.
113
114 config FDFORMAT
115 bool "fdformat"
116 default y
117 help
118 fdformat is used to low-level format a floppy disk.
119
120 config FDISK
121 bool "fdisk"
122 default y
123 help
124 The fdisk utility is used to divide hard disks into one or more
125 logical disks, which are generally called partitions. This utility
126 can be used to list and edit the set of partitions or BSD style
127 'disk slices' that are defined on a hard drive.
128
129 config FDISK_SUPPORT_LARGE_DISKS
130 bool "Support over 4GB disks"
131 default y
132 depends on FDISK
133 help
134 Enable this option to support large disks > 4GB.
135
136 config FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
137 bool "Write support"
138 default y
139 depends on FDISK
140 help
141 Enabling this option allows you to create or change a partition table
142 and write those changes out to disk. If you leave this option
143 disabled, you will only be able to view the partition table.
144
145 config FEATURE_AIX_LABEL
146 bool "Support AIX disklabels"
147 default n
148 depends on FDISK && FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
149 help
150 Enabling this option allows you to create or change AIX disklabels.
151 Most people can safely leave this option disabled.
152
153 config FEATURE_SGI_LABEL
154 bool "Support SGI disklabels"
155 default n
156 depends on FDISK && FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
157 help
158 Enabling this option allows you to create or change SGI disklabels.
159 Most people can safely leave this option disabled.
160
161 config FEATURE_SUN_LABEL
162 bool "Support SUN disklabels"
163 default n
164 depends on FDISK && FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
165 help
166 Enabling this option allows you to create or change SUN disklabels.
167 Most people can safely leave this option disabled.
168
169 config FEATURE_OSF_LABEL
170 bool "Support BSD disklabels"
171 default n
172 depends on FDISK && FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
173 help
174 Enabling this option allows you to create or change BSD disklabels
175 and define and edit BSD disk slices.
176
177 config FEATURE_FDISK_ADVANCED
178 bool "Support expert mode"
179 default y
180 depends on FDISK && FEATURE_FDISK_WRITABLE
181 help
182 Enabling this option allows you to do terribly unsafe things like
183 define arbitrary drive geometry, move the beginning of data in a
184 partition, and similarly evil things. Unless you have a very good
185 reason you would be wise to leave this disabled.
186
187 config FINDFS
188 bool "findfs"
189 default y
190 select VOLUMEID
191 help
192 Prints the name of a filesystem with given label or UUID.
193 WARNING:
194 With all submodules selected, it will add ~8k to busybox.
195
196 config FLOCK
197 bool "flock"
198 default y
199 help
200 Manage locks from shell scripts
201
202 config FREERAMDISK
203 bool "freeramdisk"
204 default y
205 help
206 Linux allows you to create ramdisks. This utility allows you to
207 delete them and completely free all memory that was used for the
208 ramdisk. For example, if you boot Linux into a ramdisk and later
209 pivot_root, you may want to free the memory that is allocated to the
210 ramdisk. If you have no use for freeing memory from a ramdisk, leave
211 this disabled.
212
213 config FSCK_MINIX
214 bool "fsck_minix"
215 default y
216 help
217 The minix filesystem is a nice, small, compact, read-write filesystem
218 with little overhead. It is not a journaling filesystem however and
219 can experience corruption if it is not properly unmounted or if the
220 power goes off in the middle of a write. This utility allows you to
221 check for and attempt to repair any corruption that occurs to a minix
222 filesystem.
223
224 config MKFS_EXT2
225 bool "mkfs_ext2"
226 default y
227 help
228 Utility to create EXT2 filesystems.
229
230 config MKFS_MINIX
231 bool "mkfs_minix"
232 default y
233 help
234 The minix filesystem is a nice, small, compact, read-write filesystem
235 with little overhead. If you wish to be able to create minix
236 filesystems this utility will do the job for you.
237
238 config FEATURE_MINIX2
239 bool "Support Minix fs v2 (fsck_minix/mkfs_minix)"
240 default y
241 depends on FSCK_MINIX || MKFS_MINIX
242 help
243 If you wish to be able to create version 2 minix filesystems, enable
244 this. If you enabled 'mkfs_minix' then you almost certainly want to
245 be using the version 2 filesystem support.
246
247 config MKFS_REISER
248 bool "mkfs_reiser"
249 default n
250 help
251 Utility to create ReiserFS filesystems.
252 Note: this applet needs a lot of testing and polishing.
253
254 config MKFS_VFAT
255 bool "mkfs_vfat"
256 default y
257 help
258 Utility to create FAT32 filesystems.
259
260 config GETOPT
261 bool "getopt"
262 default y
263 help
264 The getopt utility is used to break up (parse) options in command
265 lines to make it easy to write complex shell scripts that also check
266 for legal (and illegal) options. If you want to write horribly
267 complex shell scripts, or use some horribly complex shell script
268 written by others, this utility may be for you. Most people will
269 wisely leave this disabled.
270
271 config FEATURE_GETOPT_LONG
272 bool "Support option -l"
273 default y if LONG_OPTS
274 depends on GETOPT
275 help
276 Enable support for long options (option -l).
277
278 config HEXDUMP
279 bool "hexdump"
280 default y
281 help
282 The hexdump utility is used to display binary data in a readable
283 way that is comparable to the output from most hex editors.
284
285 config FEATURE_HEXDUMP_REVERSE
286 bool "Support -R, reverse of 'hexdump -Cv'"
287 default y
288 depends on HEXDUMP
289 help
290 The hexdump utility is used to display binary data in an ascii
291 readable way. This option creates binary data from an ascii input.
292 NB: this option is non-standard. It's unwise to use it in scripts
293 aimed to be portable.
294
295 config HD
296 bool "hd"
297 default y
298 depends on HEXDUMP
299 help
300 hd is an alias to hexdump -C.
301
302 config HWCLOCK
303 bool "hwclock"
304 default y
305 help
306 The hwclock utility is used to read and set the hardware clock
307 on a system. This is primarily used to set the current time on
308 shutdown in the hardware clock, so the hardware will keep the
309 correct time when Linux is _not_ running.
310
311 config FEATURE_HWCLOCK_LONG_OPTIONS
312 bool "Support long options (--hctosys,...)"
313 default y
314 depends on HWCLOCK && LONG_OPTS
315 help
316 By default, the hwclock utility only uses short options. If you
317 are overly fond of its long options, such as --hctosys, --utc, etc)
318 then enable this option.
319
320 config FEATURE_HWCLOCK_ADJTIME_FHS
321 bool "Use FHS /var/lib/hwclock/adjtime"
322 default y
323 depends on HWCLOCK
324 help
325 Starting with FHS 2.3, the adjtime state file is supposed to exist
326 at /var/lib/hwclock/adjtime instead of /etc/adjtime. If you wish
327 to use the FHS behavior, answer Y here, otherwise answer N for the
328 classic /etc/adjtime path.
329
330 pathname.com/fhs/pub/fhs-2.3.html#VARLIBHWCLOCKSTATEDIRECTORYFORHWCLO
331
332 config IPCRM
333 bool "ipcrm"
334 default y
335 select FEATURE_SUID
336 help
337 The ipcrm utility allows the removal of System V interprocess
338 communication (IPC) objects and the associated data structures
339 from the system.
340
341 config IPCS
342 bool "ipcs"
343 default y
344 select FEATURE_SUID
345 help
346 The ipcs utility is used to provide information on the currently
347 allocated System V interprocess (IPC) objects in the system.
348
349 config LOSETUP
350 bool "losetup"
351 default y
352 help
353 losetup is used to associate or detach a loop device with a regular
354 file or block device, and to query the status of a loop device. This
355 version does not currently support enabling data encryption.
356
357 config LSPCI
358 bool "lspci"
359 default y
360 help
361 lspci is a utility for displaying information about PCI buses in the
362 system and devices connected to them.
363
364 This version uses sysfs (/sys/bus/pci/devices) only.
365
366 config LSUSB
367 bool "lsusb"
368 default y
369 help
370 lsusb is a utility for displaying information about USB buses in the
371 system and devices connected to them.
372
373 This version uses sysfs (/sys/bus/usb/devices) only.
374
375 config MDEV
376 bool "mdev"
377 default y
378 help
379 mdev is a mini-udev implementation for dynamically creating device
380 nodes in the /dev directory.
381
382 For more information, please see docs/mdev.txt
383
384 config FEATURE_MDEV_CONF
385 bool "Support /etc/mdev.conf"
386 default y
387 depends on MDEV
388 help
389 Add support for the mdev config file to control ownership and
390 permissions of the device nodes.
391
392 For more information, please see docs/mdev.txt
393
394 config FEATURE_MDEV_RENAME
395 bool "Support subdirs/symlinks"
396 default y
397 depends on FEATURE_MDEV_CONF
398 help
399 Add support for renaming devices and creating symlinks.
400
401 For more information, please see docs/mdev.txt
402
403 config FEATURE_MDEV_RENAME_REGEXP
404 bool "Support regular expressions substitutions when renaming device"
405 default y
406 depends on FEATURE_MDEV_RENAME
407 help
408 Add support for regular expressions substitutions when renaming
409 device.
410
411 config FEATURE_MDEV_EXEC
412 bool "Support command execution at device addition/removal"
413 default y
414 depends on FEATURE_MDEV_CONF
415 help
416 This adds support for an optional field to /etc/mdev.conf for
417 executing commands when devices are created/removed.
418
419 For more information, please see docs/mdev.txt
420
421 config FEATURE_MDEV_LOAD_FIRMWARE
422 bool "Support loading of firmwares"
423 default y
424 depends on MDEV
425 help
426 Some devices need to load firmware before they can be usable.
427
428 These devices will request userspace look up the files in
429 /lib/firmware/ and if it exists, send it to the kernel for
430 loading into the hardware.
431
432 config MKSWAP
433 bool "mkswap"
434 default y
435 help
436 The mkswap utility is used to configure a file or disk partition as
437 Linux swap space. This allows Linux to use the entire file or
438 partition as if it were additional RAM, which can greatly increase
439 the capability of low-memory machines. This additional memory is
440 much slower than real RAM, but can be very helpful at preventing your
441 applications being killed by the Linux out of memory (OOM) killer.
442 Once you have created swap space using 'mkswap' you need to enable
443 the swap space using the 'swapon' utility.
444
445 config FEATURE_MKSWAP_UUID
446 bool "UUID support"
447 default y
448 depends on MKSWAP
449 help
450 Generate swap spaces with universally unique identifiers.
451
452 config MORE
453 bool "more"
454 default y
455 help
456 more is a simple utility which allows you to read text one screen
457 sized page at a time. If you want to read text that is larger than
458 the screen, and you are using anything faster than a 300 baud modem,
459 you will probably find this utility very helpful. If you don't have
460 any need to reading text files, you can leave this disabled.
461
462 config FEATURE_USE_TERMIOS
463 bool "Use termios to manipulate the screen"
464 default y
465 depends on MORE || TOP
466 help
467 This option allows utilities such as 'more' and 'top' to determine
468 the size of the screen. If you leave this disabled, your utilities
469 that display things on the screen will be especially primitive and
470 will be unable to determine the current screen size, and will be
471 unable to move the cursor.
472
473 config MOUNT
474 bool "mount"
475 default y
476 help
477 All files and filesystems in Unix are arranged into one big directory
478 tree. The 'mount' utility is used to graft a filesystem onto a
479 particular part of the tree. A filesystem can either live on a block
480 device, or it can be accessible over the network, as is the case with
481 NFS filesystems. Most people using BusyBox will also want to enable
482 the 'mount' utility.
483
484 config FEATURE_MOUNT_FAKE
485 bool "Support option -f"
486 default y
487 depends on MOUNT
488 help
489 Enable support for faking a file system mount.
490
491 config FEATURE_MOUNT_VERBOSE
492 bool "Support option -v"
493 default y
494 depends on MOUNT
495 help
496 Enable multi-level -v[vv...] verbose messages. Useful if you
497 debug mount problems and want to see what is exactly passed
498 to the kernel.
499
500 config FEATURE_MOUNT_HELPERS
501 bool "Support mount helpers"
502 default n
503 depends on MOUNT
504 help
505 Enable mounting of virtual file systems via external helpers.
506 E.g. "mount obexfs#-b00.11.22.33.44.55 /mnt" will in effect call
507 "obexfs -b00.11.22.33.44.55 /mnt"
508 Also "mount -t sometype [-o opts] fs /mnt" will try
509 "sometype [-o opts] fs /mnt" if simple mount syscall fails.
510 The idea is to use such virtual filesystems in /etc/fstab.
511
512 config FEATURE_MOUNT_LABEL
513 bool "Support specifying devices by label or UUID"
514 default y
515 depends on MOUNT
516 select VOLUMEID
517 help
518 This allows for specifying a device by label or uuid, rather than by
519 name. This feature utilizes the same functionality as blkid/findfs.
520 This also enables label or uuid support for swapon.
521
522 config FEATURE_MOUNT_NFS
523 bool "Support mounting NFS file systems"
524 default n
525 depends on MOUNT
526 select FEATURE_HAVE_RPC
527 select FEATURE_SYSLOG
528 help
529 Enable mounting of NFS file systems.
530
531 config FEATURE_MOUNT_CIFS
532 bool "Support mounting CIFS/SMB file systems"
533 default y
534 depends on MOUNT
535 help
536 Enable support for samba mounts.
537
538 config FEATURE_MOUNT_FLAGS
539 depends on MOUNT
540 bool "Support lots of -o flags in mount"
541 default y
542 help
543 Without this, mount only supports ro/rw/remount. With this, it
544 supports nosuid, suid, dev, nodev, exec, noexec, sync, async, atime,
545 noatime, diratime, nodiratime, loud, bind, move, shared, slave,
546 private, unbindable, rshared, rslave, rprivate, and runbindable.
547
548 config FEATURE_MOUNT_FSTAB
549 depends on MOUNT
550 bool "Support /etc/fstab and -a"
551 default y
552 help
553 Support mount all and looking for files in /etc/fstab.
554
555 config PIVOT_ROOT
556 bool "pivot_root"
557 default y
558 help
559 The pivot_root utility swaps the mount points for the root filesystem
560 with some other mounted filesystem. This allows you to do all sorts
561 of wild and crazy things with your Linux system and is far more
562 powerful than 'chroot'.
563
564 Note: This is for initrd in linux 2.4. Under initramfs (introduced
565 in linux 2.6) use switch_root instead.
566
567 config RDATE
568 bool "rdate"
569 default y
570 help
571 The rdate utility allows you to synchronize the date and time of your
572 system clock with the date and time of a remote networked system using
573 the RFC868 protocol, which is built into the inetd daemon on most
574 systems.
575
576 config RDEV
577 bool "rdev"
578 default y
579 help
580 Print the device node associated with the filesystem mounted at '/'.
581
582 config READPROFILE
583 bool "readprofile"
584 default y
585 help
586 This allows you to parse /proc/profile for basic profiling.
587
588 config RTCWAKE
589 bool "rtcwake"
590 default y
591 help
592 Enter a system sleep state until specified wakeup time.
593
594 config SCRIPT
595 bool "script"
596 default y
597 help
598 The script makes typescript of terminal session.
599
600 config SCRIPTREPLAY
601 bool "scriptreplay"
602 default y
603 help
604 This program replays a typescript, using timing information
605 given by script -t.
606
607 config SETARCH
608 bool "setarch"
609 default y
610 help
611 The linux32 utility is used to create a 32bit environment for the
612 specified program (usually a shell). It only makes sense to have
613 this util on a system that supports both 64bit and 32bit userland
614 (like amd64/x86, ppc64/ppc, sparc64/sparc, etc...).
615
616 config SWAPONOFF
617 bool "swaponoff"
618 default y
619 help
620 This option enables both the 'swapon' and the 'swapoff' utilities.
621 Once you have created some swap space using 'mkswap', you also need
622 to enable your swap space with the 'swapon' utility. The 'swapoff'
623 utility is used, typically at system shutdown, to disable any swap
624 space. If you are not using any swap space, you can leave this
625 option disabled.
626
627 config FEATURE_SWAPON_PRI
628 bool "Support priority option -p"
629 default y
630 depends on SWAPONOFF
631 help
632 Enable support for setting swap device priority in swapon.
633
634 config SWITCH_ROOT
635 bool "switch_root"
636 default y
637 help
638 The switch_root utility is used from initramfs to select a new
639 root device. Under initramfs, you have to use this instead of
640 pivot_root. (Stop reading here if you don't care why.)
641
642 Booting with initramfs extracts a gzipped cpio archive into rootfs
643 (which is a variant of ramfs/tmpfs). Because rootfs can't be moved
644 or unmounted*, pivot_root will not work from initramfs. Instead,
645 switch_root deletes everything out of rootfs (including itself),
646 does a mount --move that overmounts rootfs with the new root, and
647 then execs the specified init program.
648
649 * Because the Linux kernel uses rootfs internally as the starting
650 and ending point for searching through the kernel's doubly linked
651 list of active mount points. That's why.
652
653 config UMOUNT
654 bool "umount"
655 default y
656 help
657 When you want to remove a mounted filesystem from its current mount
658 point, for example when you are shutting down the system, the
659 'umount' utility is the tool to use. If you enabled the 'mount'
660 utility, you almost certainly also want to enable 'umount'.
661
662 config FEATURE_UMOUNT_ALL
663 bool "Support option -a"
664 default y
665 depends on UMOUNT
666 help
667 Support -a option to unmount all currently mounted filesystems.
668
669 comment "Common options for mount/umount"
670 depends on MOUNT || UMOUNT
671
672 config FEATURE_MOUNT_LOOP
673 bool "Support loopback mounts"
674 default y
675 depends on MOUNT || UMOUNT
676 help
677 Enabling this feature allows automatic mounting of files (containing
678 filesystem images) via the linux kernel's loopback devices.
679 The mount command will detect you are trying to mount a file instead
680 of a block device, and transparently associate the file with a
681 loopback device. The umount command will also free that loopback
682 device.
683
684 You can still use the 'losetup' utility (to manually associate files
685 with loop devices) if you need to do something advanced, such as
686 specify an offset or cryptographic options to the loopback device.
687 (If you don't want umount to free the loop device, use "umount -D".)
688
689 config FEATURE_MOUNT_LOOP_CREATE
690 bool "Create new loopback devices if needed"
691 default y
692 depends on FEATURE_MOUNT_LOOP
693 help
694 Linux kernels >= 2.6.24 support unlimited loopback devices. They are
695 allocated for use when trying to use a loop device. The loop device
696 must however exist.
697
698 This feature lets mount to try to create next /dev/loopN device
699 if it does not find a free one.
700
701 config FEATURE_MTAB_SUPPORT
702 bool "Support for the old /etc/mtab file"
703 default n
704 depends on MOUNT || UMOUNT
705 select FEATURE_MOUNT_FAKE
706 help
707 Historically, Unix systems kept track of the currently mounted
708 partitions in the file "/etc/mtab". These days, the kernel exports
709 the list of currently mounted partitions in "/proc/mounts", rendering
710 the old mtab file obsolete. (In modern systems, /etc/mtab should be
711 a symlink to /proc/mounts.)
712
713 The only reason to have mount maintain an /etc/mtab file itself is if
714 your stripped-down embedded system does not have a /proc directory.
715 If you must use this, keep in mind it's inherently brittle (for
716 example a mount under chroot won't update it), can't handle modern
717 features like separate per-process filesystem namespaces, requires
718 that your /etc directory be writable, tends to get easily confused
719 by --bind or --move mounts, won't update if you rename a directory
720 that contains a mount point, and so on. (In brief: avoid.)
721
722 About the only reason to use this is if you've removed /proc from
723 your kernel.
724
725 config VOLUMEID
726 bool #No description makes it a hidden option
727 default n
728
729 menu "Filesystem/Volume identification"
730 depends on VOLUMEID
731
732 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_EXT
733 bool "Ext filesystem"
734 default y
735 depends on VOLUMEID
736 help
737 TODO
738
739 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_BTRFS
740 bool "btrfs filesystem"
741 default y
742 depends on VOLUMEID
743 help
744 TODO
745
746 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_REISERFS
747 bool "Reiser filesystem"
748 default y
749 depends on VOLUMEID
750 help
751 TODO
752
753 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_FAT
754 bool "fat filesystem"
755 default y
756 depends on VOLUMEID
757 help
758 TODO
759
760 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_HFS
761 bool "hfs filesystem"
762 default y
763 depends on VOLUMEID
764 help
765 TODO
766
767 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_JFS
768 bool "jfs filesystem"
769 default y
770 depends on VOLUMEID
771 help
772 TODO
773
774 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_UFS
775 ### bool "ufs filesystem"
776 ### default y
777 ### depends on VOLUMEID
778 ### help
779 ### TODO
780
781 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_XFS
782 bool "xfs filesystem"
783 default y
784 depends on VOLUMEID
785 help
786 TODO
787
788 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_NTFS
789 bool "ntfs filesystem"
790 default y
791 depends on VOLUMEID
792 help
793 TODO
794
795 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_ISO9660
796 bool "iso9660 filesystem"
797 default y
798 depends on VOLUMEID
799 help
800 TODO
801
802 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_UDF
803 bool "udf filesystem"
804 default y
805 depends on VOLUMEID
806 help
807 TODO
808
809 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_LUKS
810 bool "luks filesystem"
811 default y
812 depends on VOLUMEID
813 help
814 TODO
815
816 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_LINUXSWAP
817 bool "linux swap filesystem"
818 default y
819 depends on VOLUMEID
820 help
821 TODO
822
823 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_LVM
824 ### bool "lvm"
825 ### default y
826 ### depends on VOLUMEID
827 ### help
828 ### TODO
829
830 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_CRAMFS
831 bool "cramfs filesystem"
832 default y
833 depends on VOLUMEID
834 help
835 TODO
836
837 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_HPFS
838 ### bool "hpfs filesystem"
839 ### default y
840 ### depends on VOLUMEID
841 ### help
842 ### TODO
843
844 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_ROMFS
845 bool "romfs filesystem"
846 default y
847 depends on VOLUMEID
848 help
849 TODO
850
851 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_SYSV
852 bool "sysv filesystem"
853 default y
854 depends on VOLUMEID
855 help
856 TODO
857
858 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_MINIX
859 ### bool "minix filesystem"
860 ### default y
861 ### depends on VOLUMEID
862 ### help
863 ### TODO
864
865 ### These only detect partition tables - not used (yet?)
866 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_MAC
867 ### bool "mac filesystem"
868 ### default y
869 ### depends on VOLUMEID
870 ### help
871 ### TODO
872 ###
873 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_MSDOS
874 ### bool "msdos filesystem"
875 ### default y
876 ### depends on VOLUMEID
877 ### help
878 ### TODO
879
880 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_OCFS2
881 bool "ocfs2 filesystem"
882 default y
883 depends on VOLUMEID
884 help
885 TODO
886
887 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_HIGHPOINTRAID
888 ### bool "highpoint raid"
889 ### default y
890 ### depends on VOLUMEID
891 ### help
892 ### TODO
893
894 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_ISWRAID
895 ### bool "intel raid"
896 ### default y
897 ### depends on VOLUMEID
898 ### help
899 ### TODO
900
901 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_LSIRAID
902 ### bool "lsi raid"
903 ### default y
904 ### depends on VOLUMEID
905 ### help
906 ### TODO
907
908 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_VIARAID
909 ### bool "via raid"
910 ### default y
911 ### depends on VOLUMEID
912 ### help
913 ### TODO
914
915 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_SILICONRAID
916 ### bool "silicon raid"
917 ### default y
918 ### depends on VOLUMEID
919 ### help
920 ### TODO
921
922 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_NVIDIARAID
923 ### bool "nvidia raid"
924 ### default y
925 ### depends on VOLUMEID
926 ### help
927 ### TODO
928
929 ### config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_PROMISERAID
930 ### bool "promise raid"
931 ### default y
932 ### depends on VOLUMEID
933 ### help
934 ### TODO
935
936 config FEATURE_VOLUMEID_LINUXRAID
937 bool "linuxraid"
938 default y
939 depends on VOLUMEID
940 help
941 TODO
942
943 endmenu
944
945 endmenu