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# This file is part of the OpenADK project. OpenADK is copyrighted
# material, please see the LICENCE file in the top-level directory.
menu "Filesystems support"
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MISC_FILESYSTEMS
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_FILE_LOCKING
bool
default y
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_FSNOTIFY
bool
default y
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_AUTOFS4_FS
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_TMPFS_POSIX_ACL
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_TMPFS_XATTR
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_EXPORTFS
tristate
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JBD2
tristate
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRC32
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO_CRC32C
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_EXT3_FS_XATTR
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_FAT_DEFAULT_CODEPAGE
int
default 850
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_FAT_DEFAULT_IOCHARSET
string
default "iso8859-1"
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_SQUASHFS_XZ
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JFFS2_COMPRESSION_OPTIONS
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JFFS2_ZLIB
bool
menu "Filesystems"
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_EXT2_FS
tristate "EXT2 filesystem support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BLOCK
default y if ADK_TARGET_SYSTEM_LEMOTE_YEELONG
default n
help
Ext2 is a standard Linux file system for hard disks.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_EXT3_FS
tristate "EXT3 filesystem support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BLOCK
help
This is the journalling version of the Second extended file system
(often called ext3), the de facto standard Linux file system
(method to organize files on a storage device) for hard disks.
The journalling code included in this driver means you do not have
to run e2fsck (file system checker) on your file systems after a
crash. The journal keeps track of any changes that were being made
at the time the system crashed, and can ensure that your file system
is consistent without the need for a lengthy check.
Other than adding the journal to the file system, the on-disk format
of ext3 is identical to ext2. It is possible to freely switch
between using the ext3 driver and the ext2 driver, as long as the
file system has been cleanly unmounted, or e2fsck is run on the file
system.
To add a journal on an existing ext2 file system or change the
behavior of ext3 file systems, you can use the tune2fs utility ("man
tune2fs"). To modify attributes of files and directories on ext3
file systems, use chattr ("man chattr"). You need to be using
e2fsprogs version 1.20 or later in order to create ext3 journals
(available at <http://sourceforge.net/projects/e2fsprogs/>).
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_EXT4_FS
tristate "EXT4 filesystem support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BLOCK
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JBD2
help
Ext4 filesystem.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_HFSPLUS_FS
tristate "HFS+ filesystem support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BLOCK
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NLS_UTF8
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MISC_FILESYSTEMS
help
If you say Y here, you will be able to mount extended format
Macintosh-formatted hard drive partitions with full read-write access.
This file system is often called HFS+ and was introduced with
MacOS 8. It includes all Mac specific filesystem data such as
data forks and creator codes, but it also has several UNIX
style features such as file ownership and permissions.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NTFS_FS
tristate "NTFS file system support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BLOCK
help
NTFS is the file system of Microsoft Windows NT, 2000, XP and 2003.
Saying Y or M here enables read support. There is partial, but
safe, write support available. For write support you must also
say Y to "NTFS write support" below.
There are also a number of user-space tools available, called
ntfsprogs. These include ntfsundelete and ntfsresize, that work
without NTFS support enabled in the kernel.
This is a rewrite from scratch of Linux NTFS support and replaced
the old NTFS code starting with Linux 2.5.11. A backport to
the Linux 2.4 kernel series is separately available as a patch
from the project web site.
For more information see <file:Documentation/filesystems/ntfs.txt>
and <http://linux-ntfs.sourceforge.net/>.
If you are not using Windows NT, 2000, XP or 2003 in addition to
Linux on your computer it is safe to say N.
Kernel modules for NTFS support
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_VFAT_FS
tristate "VFAT filesystem support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BLOCK
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NLS_CODEPAGE_850
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_NLS_ISO8859_1
default y if ADK_TARGET_BOARD_BCM28XX
default n
help
This option provides support for normal Windows file systems with
long filenames. That includes non-compressed FAT-based file systems
used by Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT 4.0, and the Unix
programs from the mtools package.
The VFAT support enlarges your kernel by about 10 KB Please read the
file <file:Documentation/filesystems/vfat.txt> for details.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_XFS_FS
tristate "XFS filesystem support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BLOCK
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_EXPORTFS
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_LIBCRC32C
help
XFS is a high performance journaling filesystem which originated
on the SGI IRIX platform. It is completely multi-threaded, can
support large files and large filesystems, extended attributes,
variable block sizes, is extent based, and makes extensive use of
Btrees (directories, extents, free space) to aid both performance
and scalability.
Refer to the documentation at <http://oss.sgi.com/projects/xfs/>
for complete details. This implementation is on-disk compatible
with the IRIX version of XFS.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BTRFS_FS
tristate "Btrfs filesystem support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_BLOCK
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRYPTO_CRC32C
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_RAID6_PQ
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_XOR_BLOCKS
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_ZLIB_DEFLATE
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_LZO_COMPRESS
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_LZO_DECOMPRESS
help
Btrfs is a general purpose copy-on-write filesystem with extents,
writable snapshotting, support for multiple devices and many more
features focused on fault tolerance, repair and easy administration.
For more information, please see the web pages at
http://btrfs.wiki.kernel.org
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_FUSE_FS
tristate "Filesystem in Userspace support"
help
With FUSE it is possible to implement a fully functional
filesystem in a userspace program.
By enabling this, only the kernel module gets build.
For using it, you will most likely also want to enable
fuse-utils.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JOLIET
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_ISO9660_FS
tristate "ISO 9660 / JOLIET CDROM file system support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JOLIET
help
This is the standard file system used on CD-ROMs. It was previously
known as "High Sierra File System" and is called "hsfs" on other
Unix systems. The so-called Rock-Ridge extensions which allow for
long Unix filenames and symbolic links are also supported by this
driver. If you have a CD-ROM drive and want to do more with it than
just listen to audio CDs and watch its LEDs, say Y (and read
<file:Documentation/filesystems/isofs.txt> and the CD-ROM-HOWTO,
available from <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>), thereby
enlarging your kernel by about 27 KB; otherwise say N.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_UDF_FS
tristate "UDF file system support"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_CRC_ITU_T
help
This is the new file system used on some CD-ROMs and DVDs. Say Y if
you intend to mount DVD discs or CDRW's written in packet mode, or
if written to by other UDF utilities, such as DirectCD.
Please read <file:Documentation/filesystems/udf.txt>.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JFFS2_FS
tristate "JFFS2 filesystem"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MISC_FILESYSTEMS
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MTD
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MTD_BLOCK
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JFFS2_COMPRESSION_OPTIONS
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_JFFS2_ZLIB
help
JFFS2 flash filesystem
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_SQUASHFS
tristate "SquashFS filesystem"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MISC_FILESYSTEMS
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_SQUASHFS_XZ
help
Squashfs compressed read-only filesystem
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MTD_UBI_GLUEBI
bool
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MTD_UBI
tristate
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MTD
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MTD_UBI_GLUEBI
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_UBIFS_FS
tristate "UBIFS Filesystem"
select ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_MTD_UBI
help
UBIFS is a file system for flash devices which works on top of UBI.
config ADK_LINUX_KERNEL_OVERLAY_FS
bool "Overlay filesystem support"
help
This enables the overlay filesystem which is present
in upstream kernels starting with version 3.18.
endmenu
source target/linux/config/Config.in.fsopts
source target/linux/config/Config.in.part
source target/linux/config/Config.in.fsnet
source target/linux/config/Config.in.nls
endmenu
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