GENERIC revision 1.149.2.4.2.1 1 # $NetBSD: GENERIC,v 1.149.2.4.2.1 2007/08/11 14:46:23 bouyer Exp $
2 #
3 # GENERIC machine description file
4 #
5 # This machine description file is used to generate the default NetBSD
6 # kernel. The generic kernel does not include all options, subsystems
7 # and device drivers, but should be useful for most applications.
8 #
9 # The machine description file can be customised for your specific
10 # machine to reduce the kernel size and improve its performance.
11 #
12 # For further information on compiling NetBSD kernels, see the config(8)
13 # man page.
14 #
15 # For further information on hardware support for this architecture, see
16 # the intro(4) man page. For further information about kernel options
17 # for this architecture, see the options(4) man page. For an explanation
18 # of each device driver in this file see the section 4 man page for the
19 # device.
20
21 include "arch/sparc/conf/std.sparc"
22
23 options INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE # embed config file in kernel binary
24
25 #ident "GENERIC-$Revision: 1.149.2.4.2.1 $"
26
27 maxusers 32
28
29 ## System kernel configuration. See options(4) for more detail.
30
31
32 # Options for variants of the Sun SPARC architecure.
33 # We currently support three architecture types; at least one is required.
34 options SUN4 # sun4/100, sun4/200, sun4/300
35 options SUN4C # sun4c - SS1, 1+, 2, ELC, SLC, IPC, IPX, etc.
36 options SUN4M # sun4m - SS10, SS20, Classic, etc.
37
38 options SUN4_MMU3L # sun4/400 3-level MMU
39
40 ## System options specific to the sparc machine type
41
42 # Blink the power LED on some machines to indicate the system load.
43 #options BLINK
44
45 ## Use a faster console than the PROM's slow drawing routines. Not needed
46 ## for headless (no framebuffer) machines.
47 options RASTERCONSOLE # fast rasterop console
48 options FONT_GALLANT12x22 # the console font
49 #options FONT_BOLD8x16 # a somewhat smaller font
50 ## default console colors: black-on-white; this can be changed
51 ## using the following two options.
52 #options RASTERCONSOLE_FGCOL=WSCOL_BLACK
53 #options RASTERCONSOLE_BGCOL=WSCOL_WHITE
54
55 #### System options that are the same for all ports
56
57 ## Root device configuration: change the ?'s if you are going to use a
58 ## nonstandard root partition (other than where the kernel is booted from)
59 ## and/or nonstandard root type (not ffs or nfs). Normally this can be
60 ## automagically determined at boot time.
61
62 config netbsd root on ? type ?
63
64 ## System call tracing (see ktrace(1)).
65 options KTRACE
66 options SYSTRACE # system call vetting via systrace(1)
67
68 ## Collect statistics on kernel malloc's and free's. This does have a
69 ## significant performance hit on slower machines, so it is intended for
70 ## diagnostic use only.
71 #options KMEMSTATS
72
73 ## System V compatible IPC subsystem. (msgctl(2), semctl(2), and shmctl(2))
74 options SYSVMSG # System V message queues
75 options SYSVSEM # System V semaphores
76 #options SEMMNI=10 # number of semaphore identifiers
77 #options SEMMNS=60 # number of semaphores in system
78 #options SEMUME=10 # max number of undo entries per process
79 #options SEMMNU=30 # number of undo structures in system
80 options SYSVSHM # System V shared memory
81 #options SHMMAXPGS=1024 # 1024 pages is the default
82 options P1003_1B_SEMAPHORE # p1003.1b semaphore support
83
84 ## Loadable kernel module support; still under development.
85 options LKM
86
87 options USERCONF # userconf(4) support
88 #options PIPE_SOCKETPAIR # smaller, but slower pipe(2)
89 options SYSCTL_INCLUDE_DESCR # Include sysctl descriptions in kernel
90
91 # Enable experimental buffer queue strategy for better responsiveness under
92 # high disk I/O load. Use it with caution - it's not proven to be stable yet.
93 #options NEW_BUFQ_STRATEGY
94
95 ## NFS boot options; tries DHCP/BOOTP then BOOTPARAM
96 options NFS_BOOT_BOOTPARAM
97 #options NFS_BOOT_BOOTP
98 options NFS_BOOT_DHCP
99
100 #### Debugging options
101
102 ## The DDB in-kernel debugger runs at panic (unless DDB_ONPANIC=0), or at
103 ## serial console break or keyboard reset, where the PROM would normally
104 ## intercept. DDB_HISTORY_SIZE adds up/down arrow command history.
105 #options DDB # kernel dynamic debugger
106 #options DDB_HISTORY_SIZE=100 # enable history editing in DDB
107 #options DDB_ONPANIC=1 # see also sysctl(8): `ddb.onpanic'
108
109 ## You may also use gdb, on another computer connected to this machine over
110 ## a serial port. Both KGDB_DEV and KGDB_DEVRATE should be specified;
111 ## KGDB_DEV is a dev_t encoded device number of the serial port to use, where
112 ## the minor device number encodes the PROM enumeration of the serial ports,
113 ## i.e.:
114 ## 0xc00 = ttya, 0xc01 = ttyb, 0xc02 = ttyc, 0xc03 = ttyd.
115 ## (Note: ttyc and ttyd are available only on some sun4 models)
116 #options KGDB # support for kernel gdb
117 #options KGDB_DEV=0xc01 # kgdb device number (this is `ttyb')
118 #options KGDB_DEVRATE=38400 # baud rate
119
120
121 ## Compile the kernel with debugging symbols (`netbsd.gdb' is the debug file),
122 ## such that gdb(1) can be used on a kernel coredump.
123
124 #makeoptions DEBUG="-g"
125
126
127 ## Adds code to the kernel that does internal consistency checks, and will
128 ## cause the kernel to panic if corruption of internal data structures
129 ## is detected.
130 #options DIAGNOSTIC # extra kernel sanity checking
131
132 ## Enable (possibly expensive) debugging code that may also display messages
133 ## on the system console
134 #options DEBUG
135
136 ## Make SCSI error messages more verbose when explaining their meanings.
137 options SCSIVERBOSE
138
139 options MIIVERBOSE # verbose PHY autoconfig messages
140
141 ## `INSECURE' turns off the kernel security level (securelevel = 0 always).
142 ## This allows writing to /dev/mem, loading kernel modules while multi-user,
143 ## and other insecurities good only for development work. Do not use this
144 ## option on a production machine.
145 #options INSECURE
146
147 ## `FDSCRIPTS' allows non-readable but executable scripts by providing a
148 ## pre-opened opaque file to the script interpreter. `SETUIDSCRIPTS',
149 ## which implies FDSCRIPTS, allows scripts to be set-user-id using the same
150 ## opaque file mechanism. Perl calls this "secure setuid scripts."
151
152 #options FDSCRIPTS
153 #options SETUIDSCRIPTS
154
155 ## Options for compatibility with previous releases foreign system binaries.
156 ## In the cases of COMPAT_SUNOS and COMPAT_SVR4, you may need to set up
157 ## additional user-level utilities or system configuration files. See
158 ## compat_sunos(8) and compat_svr4(8).
159
160 options COMPAT_43 # 4.3BSD system interfaces
161 options COMPAT_10 # NetBSD 1.0 binary compatibility
162 options COMPAT_11 # NetBSD 1.1 binary compatibility
163 options COMPAT_12 # NetBSD 1.2 binary compatibility
164 options COMPAT_13 # NetBSD 1.3 binary compatibility
165 options COMPAT_14 # NetBSD 1.4 binary compatibility
166 options COMPAT_16 # NetBSD 1.6 binary compatibility
167 options COMPAT_SUNOS # SunOS 4.x binary compatibility
168 options COMPAT_SVR4 # SunOS 5.x binary compatibility
169
170 ## File systems. You probably need at least one of FFS or NFS.
171 file-system FFS # Berkeley Fast Filesystem
172 file-system NFS # Sun NFS-compatible filesystem client
173 file-system KERNFS # kernel data-structure filesystem
174 file-system NULLFS # NULL layered filesystem
175 file-system OVERLAY # overlay file system
176 file-system MFS # memory-based filesystem
177 file-system FDESC # user file descriptor filesystem
178 file-system UMAPFS # uid/gid remapping filesystem
179 file-system LFS # Log-based filesystem (still experimental)
180 file-system PORTAL # portal filesystem (still experimental)
181 file-system PROCFS # /proc
182 file-system CD9660 # ISO 9660 + Rock Ridge file system
183 file-system UNION # union file system
184 file-system MSDOSFS # MS-DOS FAT filesystem(s).
185 file-system CODA # Coda File System; also needs vcoda (below)
186
187 ## File system options.
188 options NFSSERVER # Sun NFS-compatible filesystem server
189 options QUOTA # FFS quotas
190 #options FFS_EI # FFS Endian Independent support
191 options SOFTDEP # FFS soft updates support.
192
193 ## Network protocol support. In most environments, INET is required.
194 options INET # IP (Internet Protocol) v4
195 options INET6 # IPV6
196 #options IPSEC # IP security
197 #options IPSEC_ESP # IP security (encryption part; define w/IPSEC)
198 #options IPSEC_DEBUG # debug for IP security
199 #options GATEWAY # packet forwarding ("router switch")
200 #options MROUTING # packet forwarding of multicast packets
201 #options DIRECTED_BROADCAST # allow broadcasts through routers
202 options NS # Xerox NS networking
203 #options NSIP # Xerox NS tunneling over IP
204 #options ISO,TPIP # OSI networking
205 #options EON # OSI tunneling over IP
206 #options CCITT,LLC,HDLC # X.25 packet switched protocol
207 #options NETATALK # AppleTalk (over Ethernet) protocol
208 options NTP # Network Time Protocol in-kernel support
209 #options PPS_SYNC # Add serial line synchronization for NTP
210 options PFIL_HOOKS # Add pfil(9) hooks, intended for custom LKMs.
211 options IPFILTER_LOG # Add ipmon(8) logging for ipfilter device
212 #options IPFILTER_DEFAULT_BLOCK # block all packets by default
213 options PPP_BSDCOMP # Add BSD compression to ppp device
214 options PPP_DEFLATE # Add deflate (libz) compression to ppp device
215 options PPP_FILTER # Add active filters for ppp (via bpf)
216
217 #options ALTQ # Manipulate network interfaces' output queues
218 #options ALTQ_BLUE # Stochastic Fair Blue
219 #options ALTQ_CBQ # Class-Based Queueing
220 #options ALTQ_CDNR # Diffserv Traffic Conditioner
221 #options ALTQ_FIFOQ # First-In First-Out Queue
222 #options ALTQ_FLOWVALVE # RED/flow-valve (red-penalty-box)
223 #options ALTQ_HFSC # Hierarchical Fair Service Curve
224 #options ALTQ_LOCALQ # Local queueing discipline
225 #options ALTQ_PRIQ # Priority Queueing
226 #options ALTQ_RED # Random Early Detection
227 #options ALTQ_RIO # RED with IN/OUT
228 #options ALTQ_WFQ # Weighted Fair Queueing
229
230
231
232 #### Main bus and CPU .. all systems.
233 mainbus0 at root
234 cpu0 at mainbus0
235
236 #### Bus types found on SPARC systems.
237
238 sbus0 at mainbus0 # sun4c
239 obio0 at mainbus0 # sun4 and sun4m
240 sparcvme0 at mainbus0 # sun4
241 iommu0 at mainbus0 # sun4m
242 sbus0 at iommu0 # sun4m
243 sparcvme0 at iommu0 # sun4m
244 vme0 at sparcvme0 # mi VME attachment
245
246 ## SBus expander box
247 xbox* at sbus? slot ? offset ?
248 sbus* at xbox?
249
250 ## SBus to PCMCIA bridge
251 #options FULL_SPARC_BUS_SPACE
252 #nell* at sbus? slot ? offset ? # PCMCIA bridge
253 #pcmcia* at nell?
254
255 #### Standard system devices -- all required for a given architecture
256
257 ## Auxiliary system registers on sun4c and sun4m
258 auxreg0 at mainbus0 # sun4c
259 auxreg0 at obio0 # sun4m
260 auxiotwo0 at obio0 # only on Tadpole SPARCbook.
261
262 ## Power status and control register on Sun4m systems
263 power0 at obio0
264
265 ## Mostek clock found on 4/300, sun4c, and sun4m systems.
266 ## The Mostek clock NVRAM is the "eeprom" on sun4/300 systems.
267 clock0 at mainbus0 # sun4c
268 clock0 at obio0 # sun4m
269 clock0 at obio0 addr 0xf2000000 # sun4/300
270
271 ## Intersil clock found on 4/100 and 4/200 systems.
272 oclock0 at obio0 addr 0xf3000000 # sun4/200
273 oclock0 at obio0 addr 0x03000000 # sun4/100
274
275 ## Memory error registers.
276 memreg0 at mainbus0 # sun4c
277 memreg0 at obio0 # sun4m
278 memreg0 at obio0 addr 0xf4000000 # sun4/200 and sun4/300
279 memreg0 at obio0 addr 0x04000000 # sun4/100
280
281 ## ECC memory control
282 eccmemctl0 at mainbus0 # sun4m
283
284 ## Timer chip found on 4/300, sun4c, and sun4m systems.
285 timer0 at mainbus0 # sun4c
286 timer0 at obio0 # sun4m
287 timer0 at obio0 addr 0xef000000 # sun4/300
288
289 ## EEPROM found on 4/100 and 4/200 systems. Note that the 4/300
290 ## doesn't use this driver; the `EEPROM' is in the NVRAM on the
291 ## Mostek clock chip on 4/300 systems.
292 eeprom0 at obio0 addr 0xf2000000 # sun4/200
293 eeprom0 at obio0 addr 0x02000000 # sun4/100
294
295
296 #### Serial port configuration
297
298 ## Zilog 8530 serial chips. Each has two-channels.
299 ## zs0 is ttya and ttyb. zs1 is the keyboard and mouse.
300 zs0 at mainbus0 # sun4c
301 zs0 at obio0 # sun4m
302 zs0 at obio0 addr 0xf1000000 level 12 # sun4/200 and sun4/300
303 zs0 at obio0 addr 0x01000000 level 12 # sun4/100
304 zstty0 at zs0 channel 0 # ttya
305 zstty1 at zs0 channel 1 # ttyb
306
307 zs1 at mainbus0 # sun4c
308 zs1 at obio0 # sun4m
309 zs1 at obio0 addr 0xf0000000 level 12 # sun4/200 and sun4/300
310 zs1 at obio0 addr 0x00000000 level 12 # sun4/100
311 kbd0 at zs1 channel 0 # keyboard
312 ms0 at zs1 channel 1 # mouse
313
314 zs2 at obio0 addr 0xe0000000 level 12 # sun4/300
315 zstty2 at zs2 channel 0 # ttyc
316 zstty3 at zs2 channel 1 # ttyd
317
318 ## NS16x50 serial chips and clones. Present on the
319 ## Sun JavaStation-1 and Tadpole SPARCbook 3
320 com* at obio0 # sun4m
321
322 # Parallel port.
323 bpp* at sbus? slot? offset ?
324
325 ## Magma Serial/Parallel driver
326 magma* at sbus? slot ? offset ?
327 mtty* at magma?
328 mbpp* at magma?
329
330 ## PCMCIA serial interfaces
331 #com* at pcmcia?
332 #pcmcom* at pcmcia?
333 #com* at pcmcom?
334
335 #### Disk controllers and disks
336
337 #
338
339 ## The following flags may be set for the NCR53c94 based esp driver:
340 ## bits 0-7: disable disconnect/reselect for the corresponding target
341 ## bits 8-15: disable synchronous negotiation for target [bit-8]
342
343 ## sun4/300, sun4c, sun4m on-board SCSI, and FSBE/S SBus SCSI cards.
344 ## Both `dma' and `esp' are needed in all cases.
345 ## Two kinds of additional SBus SCSI interfaces are available. One uses
346 ## "esp at sbus" like the sun4c on-board; the other uses "esp at dma".
347
348 ## sun4/300 SCSI - an NCR53c94 or equivalent behind
349 ## an LSI Logic DMA controller
350
351 dma0 at obio0 addr 0xfa001000 level 4 # sun4/300
352 esp0 at obio0 addr 0xfa000000 level 4 flags 0x0000 # sun4/300
353
354 dma0 at sbus0 slot ? offset ? # sun4c/sun4m
355 esp0 at sbus0 slot ? offset ? flags 0x0000 # sun4c
356 esp0 at dma0 flags 0x0000 # sun4m
357
358 # FSBE/S SCSI & SunSwift Sbus FAS366
359 dma* at sbus? slot ? offset ? # SBus
360 esp* at sbus? slot ? offset ? flags 0x0000 # SBus
361 esp* at dma? flags 0x0000 # SBus
362
363 scsibus* at esp?
364
365 ## Qlogic ISP SBus SCSI Card
366 isp* at sbus? slot ? offset ?
367 scsibus* at isp?
368
369 ## NCR5380-based "Sun SCSI 3" VME SCSI controller.
370 ## This driver has several flags which may be enabled by OR'ing
371 ## the values and using the "flags" directive.
372 ## Valid flags are:
373 ##
374 ## 0x01 Use DMA (may be polled)
375 ## 0x02 Use DMA completion interrupts
376 ## 0x04 Allow disconnect/reselect
377 ##
378 ## E.g. the following would enable DMA, interrupts, and reselect:
379 ## si0 at vme0 addr 0x200000 irq 3 vect 0x40 flags 0x07
380 ##
381 ## By default, DMA is enabled in the driver.
382
383 si0 at vme0 addr 0x200000 irq 2 vect 0x40
384 scsibus* at si?
385
386 ## NCR5380-based "SCSI Weird" on-board SCSI interface found
387 ## on sun4/100 systems. The flags are the same as the "si"
388 ## controller. Note, while DMA is enabled by default, only
389 ## polled DMA works at this time, and reselects do not work
390 ## on this particular controller.
391
392 sw0 at obio0 addr 0x0a000000 level 3
393 scsibus* at sw?
394
395 ## PCMCIA SCSI controllers
396 #aic* at pcmcia?
397 #scsibus* at aic?
398
399
400 ## These entries find devices on all SCSI busses and assign
401 ## unit numbers dynamically.
402 sd* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # SCSI disks
403 st* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # SCSI tapes
404 cd* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # SCSI CD-ROMs
405 ch* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # SCSI changer devices
406 ss* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # SCSI scanners
407 ses* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # SCSI SES/SAF-TE
408 uk* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # unknown SCSI
409
410
411 ## Xylogics 753 or 7053 VME SMD disk controllers and disks, found
412 ## on sun4 systems.
413 xdc0 at vme0 addr 0xee80 irq 3 vect 0x44
414 xdc1 at vme0 addr 0xee90 irq 3 vect 0x45
415 xdc2 at vme0 addr 0xeea0 irq 3 vect 0x46
416 xdc3 at vme0 addr 0xeeb0 irq 3 vect 0x47
417 xd* at xdc? drive ?
418
419 ## Xylogics 451 or 451 VME SMD disk controllers and disks, found
420 ## on sun4 systems.
421 xyc0 at vme0 addr 0xee40 irq 3 vect 0x48
422 xyc1 at vme0 addr 0xee48 irq 3 vect 0x49
423 xy* at xyc? drive ?
424
425
426 ## Floppy controller and drive found on SPARCstations.
427
428 fdc0 at mainbus0 # sun4c controller
429 fdc0 at obio0 # sun4m controller
430 fd* at fdc0 # the drive itself
431
432 ## PCMCIA IDE controllers
433 #wdc* at pcmcia?
434 #atabus* at ata?
435 #wd* at atabus? drive ? flags 0x0000
436
437 ## PCMCIA wavelan card
438 #wi* at pcmcia? function ? # Lucent WaveLan IEEE (802.11)
439
440 ## A disk-like interface to files. Can be used to create floppy, CD,
441 ## miniroot images, etc.
442
443 pseudo-device vnd 4
444
445 ## Concatenated and striped disks; with this, you can create a software-based
446 ## disk array similar to a "RAID 0" setup. See ccd(4).
447
448 pseudo-device ccd 4
449
450 ## Cryptographic disk devices; See cgd(4)
451
452 #pseudo-device cgd 4
453
454 ## RAIDframe disk driver: software RAID driver. See raid(4).
455
456 pseudo-device raid 8
457 options RAID_AUTOCONFIG # auto-configuration of RAID components
458 # Options to enable various other RAIDframe RAID types.
459 # options RF_INCLUDE_EVENODD=1
460 # options RF_INCLUDE_RAID5_RS=1
461 # options RF_INCLUDE_PARITYLOGGING=1
462 # options RF_INCLUDE_CHAINDECLUSTER=1
463 # options RF_INCLUDE_INTERDECLUSTER=1
464 # options RF_INCLUDE_PARITY_DECLUSTERING=1
465 # options RF_INCLUDE_PARITY_DECLUSTERING_DS=1
466
467
468 ## Memory disk device, used on boot floppies with compressed
469 ## kernel-plus-root-disk images.
470
471 #pseudo-device md 1
472
473
474 #### Network interfaces
475
476 ## LANCE Ethernet - an AMD 7990 LANCE behind specialized DMA glue
477 ## Three flavors of additional SBus ethernets are available. One attaches
478 ## directly like the sun4c on-board, one uses the ledma device like the
479 ## sun4m on-board, and one uses the lebuffer device.
480
481 le0 at obio0 addr 0xf9000000 level 6 # sun4/300
482 le0 at sbus0 slot ? offset ? # sun4c on-board
483 ledma0 at sbus0 slot ? offset ? # sun4m on-board
484 le0 at ledma0 # sun4m on-board
485 le* at sbus? slot ? offset ? # SBus
486 ledma* at sbus? slot ? offset ? # SBus
487 le* at ledma? # SBus
488 lebuffer0 at sbus? slot ? offset ? # SBus
489 le0 at lebuffer? # SBus
490 lebuffer* at sbus? slot ? offset ? # SBus
491 le* at lebuffer? # SBus
492
493
494 ## sun4/100 and sun4/200 Ethernet - an Intel 82586 on-board
495 ## or on a Multibus/VME card.
496 ie0 at obio0 addr 0xf6000000 level 6 # sun4/200 on-board
497 ie0 at obio0 addr 0x06000000 level 6 # sun4/100 on-board
498 ## VME: the first [addr,len] pair specifies the device registers;
499 ## the second pair specifies the on-board memory buffer
500 ie1 at vme0 addr 0xe88000,0xe00000 len -1,0x40000 irq 3 vect 0x75
501 ie2 at vme0 addr 0x31ff02,0x300000 len -1,0x40000 irq 3 vect 0x76
502 ie3 at vme0 addr 0x35ff02,0x300000 len -1,0x40000 irq 3 vect 0x77
503 ie4 at vme0 addr 0x2dff02,0x200000 len -1,0x40000 irq 3 vect 0x7c
504
505 ## Quad Ethernet Controller with BigMac (be, 10/100MBd) and Mace Ethernet
506 ## (qe, 10MBd) attached.
507 qec* at sbus? slot ? offset ? # Quad Ethernet Controller
508 be* at qec? # BigMac Ethernet (10/100MBd)
509 qe* at qec? # Mace Ethernet (10MBd)
510
511 ## Happy Meal Ethernet
512 hme* at sbus? slot ? offset ?
513
514 # midway ATM
515 en0 at sbus? slot ? offset ?
516
517 # PCMCIA ethernet devices
518 #ep* at pcmcia?
519 #mbe* at pcmcia?
520 #ne* at pcmcia?
521 #sm* at pcmcia?
522
523 # MII/PHY support
524 exphy* at mii? phy ? # 3Com internal PHYs
525 icsphy* at mii? phy ? # Integrated Circuit Systems ICS189x
526 inphy* at mii? phy ? # Intel 82555 PHYs
527 lxtphy* at mii? phy ? # Level One LXT-970 PHYs
528 nsphy* at mii? phy ? # NS83840 PHYs
529 qsphy* at mii? phy ? # Quality Semiconductor QS6612 PHYs
530 sqphy* at mii? phy ? # Seeq 80220/80221/80223 PHYs
531 tlphy* at mii? phy ? # ThunderLAN PHYs
532 ukphy* at mii? phy ? # generic unknown PHYs
533
534 ## Loopback network interface; required
535 pseudo-device loop
536
537 ## SLIP and CSLIP interfaces, for IP over a serial line.
538 pseudo-device sl 2
539
540 ## PPP, the successor to SLIP. See pppd(8).
541 pseudo-device ppp 2
542
543 ## PPP over Ethernet (RFC 2516)
544 pseudo-device pppoe
545
546 ## Starmode Radio IP, a special hardware network device.
547 #pseudo-device strip 1
548
549 ## Network "tunnel" device, allowing protocol stacks to run in the userland.
550 ## This is used by the third-party user-mode "ppp" program, and others.
551 pseudo-device tun 4
552
553 ## Generic L3 over IP tunnel
554 #pseudo-device gre 2 # generic L3 over IP tunnel
555
556 ## Berkeley Packet Filter, required to run RARPD. A generic C-language
557 ## interface that allows selective examining of incoming packets.
558 pseudo-device bpfilter 8
559
560 ## IP Filter, used in firewall and NAT applications. See ipnat(8) for
561 ## one example of the use of the IP Filter.
562 pseudo-device ipfilter
563
564 ## for IPv6
565 pseudo-device gif 4 # IPv[46] over IPv[46] tunnel (RFC1933)
566 #pseudo-device faith 1 # IPv[46] tcp relay translation i/f
567 #pseudo-device stf 1 # 6to4 IPv6 over IPv4 encapsulation
568
569 ## IEEE 802.1Q Virtual LAN encapsulation, see vlan(4).
570 pseudo-device vlan
571
572 ## Simple inter-network traffic bridging
573 pseudo-device bridge
574 #options BRIDGE_IPF # bridge uses IP/IPv6 pfil hooks too
575
576 #### Audio and video devices
577
578 ## /dev/audio support (`audioamd' plus `audio')
579 ##
580 audioamd0 at mainbus0 # sun4c
581 audioamd0 at obio0 # sun4m
582 audioamd0 at sbus0 slot ? offset ? # sun4m
583 audio* at audioamd0
584
585 audiocs0 at sbus0 slot ? offset ? # SUNW,CS4231
586 audio* at audiocs0
587
588
589 ## Sun "bwtwo" black and white framebuffer, found on sun4, sun4c, and sun4m
590 ## systems. If your sun4 system has a cgfour installed in the P4 slot,
591 ## the P4 entries for "bwtwo" will attach to the overlay plane of the
592 ## "cgfour".
593
594 bwtwo0 at sbus0 slot ? offset ? # sun4c and sun4m
595 bwtwo* at sbus? slot ? offset ? #
596 bwtwo0 at obio0 addr 0xfd000000 level 4 # sun4/200
597 bwtwo0 at obio0 addr 0xfb300000 level 4 # sun4/300 in P4 slot
598 bwtwo0 at obio0 addr 0x0b300000 level 4 # sun4/100 in P4 slot
599
600 ## Sun "cgtwo" VME color framebuffer
601 cgtwo0 at vme0 addr 0x400000 irq ? vect 0xa8
602
603 ## Sun "cgthree" Sbus color framebuffer
604 cgthree0 at sbus? slot ? offset ?
605 cgthree* at sbus? slot ? offset ?
606 #cgthree0 at obio? slot ? offset ? # sun4m
607
608 ## Sun "cgfour" color framebuffer with overlay plane. See above comment
609 ## regarding overlay plane.
610 cgfour0 at obio0 addr 0xfb300000 level 4 # sun4/300 P4
611 cgfour0 at obio0 addr 0x0b300000 level 4 # sun4/100 P4
612
613 ## Sun "cgsix" accelerated color framebuffer.
614 cgsix0 at sbus? slot ? offset ?
615 cgsix* at sbus? slot ? offset ?
616 cgsix0 at obio0 addr 0xfb000000 level 4 # sun4/300 P4
617 cgsix0 at obio0 addr 0x0b000000 level 4 # sun4/100 P4
618
619 ## Sun "cgeight" 24-bit framebuffer
620 cgeight0 at obio0 addr 0xfb300000 level 4 # sun4/300 P4
621 cgeight0 at obio0 addr 0x0b300000 level 4 # sun4/100 P4
622
623 ## Sun "tcx" accelerated color framebuffer.
624 tcx0 at sbus? slot ? offset ?
625 tcx* at sbus? slot ? offset ?
626
627 # Sun "cgfourteen" accelerated 24-bit framebuffer.
628 cgfourteen0 at obio0 # sun4m
629
630 # P9100-based display on Tadpole SPARCbook 3.
631 pnozz0 at sbus? slot ? offset ?
632
633 # Sun ZX/Leo 24-bit framebuffer
634 zx* at sbus? slot ? offset ?
635
636 #### Other device configuration
637
638 # Tadpole microcontroller
639 tctrl0 at obio0
640
641 ## Pseudo ttys, required for network logins and programs like screen.
642
643 pseudo-device pty # pseudo-terminals
644
645 ## Random device, used to implement /dev/random (a source of random noise),
646 ## and generate randomness for some kernel formulae.
647
648 pseudo-device rnd
649
650 # a pseudo device needed for Coda # also needs CODA (above)
651 pseudo-device vcoda 4 # coda minicache <-> venus comm.
652
653 pseudo-device clockctl # user control of clock subsystem
654 pseudo-device ksyms # /dev/ksyms
655