############################################################################## ############################################################################## # # IMPORTANT! # # The use of this file to set options that affect only single object # files is deprecated, because changing anything in this file results # in a complete rebuild, which is slow. All options are gradually # being migrated to config.h, which does not suffer from this problem. # # Only options that affect the entire build (e.g. overriding the $(CC) # Makefile variable) should be placed in here. # ############################################################################## ############################################################################## # # Config for Etherboot/32 # # # Do not delete the tag OptionDescription and /OptionDescription # It is used to automatically generate the documentation. # # @OptionDescription@ # User interaction options: # # -DASK_BOOT=n # Ask "Boot from (N)etwork ... or (Q)uit? " # at startup, timeout after n seconds (0 = no timeout). # If unset or negative, don't ask and boot immediately # using the default. # -DBOOT_FIRST # -DBOOT_SECOND # -DBOOT_THIRD # On timeout or Return key from previous # question, selects the order to try to boot from # various devices. # (alternatives: BOOT_NIC, BOOT_DISK, # BOOT_FLOPPY, BOOT_NOTHING) # See etherboot.h for prompt and answer strings. # BOOT_DISK and BOOT_FLOPPY work only where a driver # exists, e.g. in LinuxBIOS. # They have no effect on PCBIOS. # -DBOOT_INDEX The device to boot from 0 == any device. # 1 == The first nic found. # 2 == The second nic found # ... # BOOT_INDEX only applies to the BOOT_FIRST. BOOT_SECOND # and BOOT_THIRD search through all of the boot devices. # -DBAR_PROGRESS # Use rotating bar instead of sequential dots # to indicate an IP packet transmitted. # # Boot order options: # # -DBOOT_CLASS_FIRST # -DBOOT_CLASS_SECOND # -DBOOT_CLASS_THIRD # Select the priority of the boot classes # Valid values are: # BOOT_NIC # BOOT_DISK # BOOT_FLOPPY # BOOT_DISK and BOOT_FLOPPY work only where a driver exists, # e.g. in LinuxBIOS. They have no effect on PCBIOS. # # Boot autoconfiguration protocol options: # # -DALTERNATE_DHCP_PORTS_1067_1068 # Use ports 1067 and 1068 for DHCP instead of 67 and 68. # As these ports are non-standard, you need to configure # your DHCP server to use them. This option gets around # existing DHCP servers which cannot be touched, for # one reason or another, at the cost of non-standard # boot images. # -DNO_DHCP_SUPPORT # Use BOOTP instead of DHCP. # -DRARP_NOT_BOOTP # Use RARP instead of BOOTP/DHCP. # -DREQUIRE_VCI_ETHERBOOT # Require an encapsulated Vendor Class Identifier # of "Etherboot" in the DHCP reply # Requires DHCP support. # -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID=\"Identifier\" # -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID_LEN= # -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID_TYPE= # Specify a RFC2132 Client Identifier option, length and type. # Requires DHCP support. # -DDHCP_USER_CLASS=\"UserClass\" # -DDHCP_USER_CLASS_LEN= # Specify a RFC3004 User Class option and length. Use this # option to set a UC (or multiple UCs) rather than munge the # client Vendor Class ID. # Requires DHCP support. # -DALLOW_ONLY_ENCAPSULATED # Ignore Etherboot-specific options that are not within # the Etherboot encapsulated options field. This option # should be enabled unless you have a legacy DHCP server # configuration from the bad old days before the use of # encapsulated Etherboot options. # -DDEFAULT_BOOTFILE=\"default_bootfile_name\" # Define a default bootfile for the case where your DHCP # server does not provide the information. Example: # -DDEFAULT_BOOTFILE="tftp:///tftpboot/kernel" # If you do not specify this option, then DHCP offers that # do not specify bootfiles will be ignored. # # NIC tuning parameters: # # -DALLMULTI # Turns on multicast reception in the NICs. # # Boot tuning parameters: # # -DCONGESTED # Turns on packet retransmission. Use it on a # congested network, where the normal operation # can't boot the image. # -DBACKOFF_LIMIT # Sets the maximum RFC951 backoff exponent to n. # Do not set this unreasonably low, because on networks # with many machines they can saturate the link # (the delay corresponding to the exponent is a random # time in the range 0..3.5*2^n seconds). Use 5 for a # VERY small network (max. 2 minutes delay), 7 for a # medium sized network (max. 7.5 minutes delay) or 10 # for a really huge network with many clients, frequent # congestions (max. 1 hour delay). On average the # delay time will be half the maximum value. If in # doubt about the consequences, use a larger value. # Also keep in mind that the number of retransmissions # is not changed by this setting, so the default of 20 # may no longer be appropriate. You might need to set # MAX_ARP_RETRIES, MAX_BOOTP_RETRIES, MAX_TFTP_RETRIES # and MAX_RPC_RETRIES to a larger value. # -DTIMEOUT=n # Use with care!! See above. # Sets the base of RFC2131 sleep interval to n. # This can be used with -DBACKOFF_LIMIT=0 to get a small # and constant (predictable) retry interval for embedded # devices. This is to achieve short boot delays if both # the DHCP Server and the embedded device will be powered # on the same time. Otherwise if the DHCP server is ready # the client could sleep the next exponentially timeout, # e.g. 70 seconds or more. This is not what you want. # n should be a multiple of TICKS_PER_SEC (18). # # Boot device options: # # -DTRY_FLOPPY_FIRST # If > 0, tries that many times to read the boot # sector from a floppy drive before booting from # ROM. If successful, does a local boot. # It assumes the floppy is bootable. # -DEXIT_IF_NO_OFFER # If no IP offer is obtained, exit and # let the BIOS continue. # The accessibility of the TFTP server has no effect, # so configure your DHCP/BOOTP server properly. # You should probably reduce MAX_BOOTP_RETRIES # to a small number like 3. # # Boot image options: # # -DFREEBSD_KERNEL_ENV # Pass in FreeBSD kernel environment # -DAOUT_LYNX_KDI # Add Lynx a.out KDI support # -DMULTICAST_LEVEL1 # Support for sending multicast packets # -DMULTICAST_LEVEL2 # Support for receiving multicast packets # # Interface export options: # # -DPXE_EXPORT # Export a PXE API interface. This is work in # progress. Note that you won't be able to load # PXE NBPs unless you also use -DPXE_IMAGE. # -DPXE_STRICT # Strict(er) compliance with the PXE # specification as published by Intel. This may # or may not be a good thing depending on your # view of the spec... # -DPXE_DHCP_STRICT # Strict compliance of the DHCP request packets # with the PXE specification as published by # Intel. This may or may not be a good thing # depending on your view of whether requesting # vendor options which don't actually exist is # pointless or not. You probably want this # option if you intend to use Windows RIS or # similar. # # Obscure options you probably don't need to touch: # # -DZPXE_SUFFIX_STRIP # If the last 5 characters of the filename passed to Etherboot is # ".zpxe" then strip it off. This is useful in cases where a DHCP server # is not able to be configured to support conditionals. The way it works # is that the DHCP server is configured with a filename like # "foo.nbi.zpxe" so that when PXE asks for a filename it gets that, and # loads Etherboot from that file. Etherboot then starts up and once # again asks the DHCP server for a filename and once again gets # foo.nbi.zpxe, but with this option turned on loads "foo.nbi" instead. # This allows people to use Etherboot who might not otherwise be able to # because their DHCP servers won't let them. # # -DPOWERSAVE # Halt the processor when waiting for keyboard input # which saves power while waiting for user interaction. # Good for compute clusters and VMware emulation. # But may not work for all CPUs. # # @/OptionDescription@ # These default settings compile Etherboot with a small number of options. # You may wish to enable more of the features if the size of your ROM allows. # For prompting and default on timeout # CFLAGS+= -DASK_BOOT=3 -DBOOT_FIRST=BOOT_NIC # If you would like to attempt to boot from other devices as well as the network. # CFLAGS+= -DBOOT_SECOND=BOOT_FLOPPY # CFLAGS+= -DBOOT_THIRD=BOOT_DISK # CFLAGS+= -DBOOT_INDEX=0 # If you prefer the old style rotating bar progress display # CFLAGS+= -DBAR_PROGRESS # Show size indicator # CFLAGS+= -DSIZEINDICATOR # Enabling this creates non-standard images which use ports 1067 and 1068 # for DHCP/BOOTP # CFLAGS+= -DALTERNATE_DHCP_PORTS_1067_1068 # Enabling this makes the boot ROM require a Vendor Class Identifier # of "Etherboot" in the Vendor Encapsulated Options # This can be used to reject replies from servers other than the one # we want to give out addresses to us, but it will prevent Etherboot # from getting an IP lease until you have configured DHCPD correctly # CFLAGS+= -DREQUIRE_VCI_ETHERBOOT # EXPERIMENTAL! Set DHCP_CLIENT_ID to create a Client Identifier (DHCP # option 61, see RFC2132 section 9.14) when Etherboot sends the DHCP # DISCOVER and REQUEST packets. This ID must UNIQUELY identify each # client on your local network. Set DHCP_CLIENT_ID_TYPE to the # appropriate hardware type as described in RFC2132 / RFC1700; this # almost certainly means using '1' if the Client ID is an Ethernet MAC # address and '0' otherwise. Set DHCP_CLIENT_ID_LEN to the length of # the Client ID in octets (this is not a null terminated C string, do # NOT add 1 for a terminator and do NOT add an extra 1 for the # hardware type octet). Note that to identify your client using the # normal default MAC address of your NIC, you do NOT need to set this # option, as the MAC address is automatically used in the # hwtype/chaddr field; note also that this field only sets the DHCP # option: it does NOT change the MAC address used by the client. # CFLAGS+= -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID="'C','L','I','E','N','T','0','0','1'" \ # -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID_LEN=9 -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID_TYPE=0 # CFLAGS+= -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID="0xDE,0xAD,0xBE,0xEF,0xDE,0xAD" \ # -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID_LEN=6 -DDHCP_CLIENT_ID_TYPE=1 # EXPERIMENTAL! Set DHCP_USER_CLASS to create a User Class option (see # RFC3004) when Etherboot sends the DHCP DISCOVER and REQUEST packets. # This can be used for classification of clients, typically so that a # DHCP server can send an appropriately tailored reply. Normally, a # string identifies a class of to which this client instance belongs # which is useful in your network, such as a department ('FINANCE' or # 'MARKETING') or hardware type ('THINCLIENT' or 'KIOSK'). Set # DHCP_USER_CLASS_LEN to the length of DHCP_USER_CLASS in octets. # This is NOT a null terminated C string, do NOT add 1 for a # terminator. RFC3004 advises how to lay out multiple User Class # options by using an octet for the length of each string, as in this # example. It is, of course, up to the server to parse this. # CFLAGS+= -DDHCP_USER_CLASS="'T','E','S','T','C','L','A','S','S'" \ # -DDHCP_USER_CLASS_LEN=9 # CFLAGS+= -DDHCP_USER_CLASS="5,'A','L','P','H','A',4,'B','E','T','A'" \ # -DDHCP_USER_CLASS_LEN=11 # Enabling this causes Etherboot to ignore Etherboot-specific options # that are not within an Etherboot encapsulated options field. # This option should be enabled unless you have a legacy DHCP server # configuration from the bad old days before the use of # encapsulated Etherboot options. # CFLAGS+= -DALLOW_ONLY_ENCAPSULATED # Disable DHCP support # CFLAGS+= -DNO_DHCP_SUPPORT # Specify a default bootfile to be used if the DHCP server does not # provide the information. If you do not specify this option, then # DHCP offers that do not contain bootfiles will be ignored. # CFLAGS+= -DDEFAULT_BOOTFILE=\"tftp:///tftpboot/kernel\" # Limit the delay on packet loss/congestion to a more bearable value. See # description above. If unset, do not limit the delay between resend. # CFLAGS+= -DBACKOFF_LIMIT=5 -DCONGESTED # More optional features # CFLAGS+= -DTRY_FLOPPY_FIRST=4 # CFLAGS+= -DEXIT_IF_NO_OFFER # Multicast Support # CFLAGS+= -DALLMULTI -DMULTICAST_LEVEL1 -DMULTICAST_LEVEL2 # Etherboot as a PXE network protocol ROM # CFLAGS+= -DPXE_IMAGE -DPXE_EXPORT # Etherboot stricter as a PXE network protocol ROM # CFLAGS+= -DPXE_DHCP_STRICT # Support for PXE emulation. Works only with FreeBSD to load the kernel # via pxeboot, use only with DOWNLOAD_PROTO_NFS # CFLAGS+= -DFREEBSD_PXEEMU # Garbage from Makefile.main temporarily placed here until a home can # be found for it. # NS8390 options: # -DINCLUDE_NE - Include NE1000/NE2000 support # -DNE_SCAN=list - Probe for NE base address using list of # comma separated hex addresses # -DINCLUDE_3C503 - Include 3c503 support # -DT503_SHMEM - Use 3c503 shared memory mode (off by default) # -DINCLUDE_WD - Include Western Digital/SMC support # -DWD_DEFAULT_MEM- Default memory location for WD/SMC cards # -DWD_790_PIO - Read/write to WD/SMC 790 cards in PIO mode (default # is to use shared memory) Try this if you get "Bogus # packet, ignoring" messages, common on ISA/PCI hybrid # systems. # -DCOMPEX_RL2000_FIX # # If you have a Compex RL2000 PCI 32-bit (11F6:1401), # and the bootrom hangs in "Probing...[NE*000/PCI]", # try enabling this fix... it worked for me :). # In the first packet write somehow it somehow doesn't # get back the expected data so it is stuck in a loop. # I didn't bother to investigate what or why because it works # when I interrupt the loop if it takes more then COMPEX_RL2000_TRIES. # The code will notify if it does a abort. # SomniOne - somnione@gmx.net # # 3C90X options: # Warning Warning Warning # If you use any of the XCVR options below, please do not complain about # the behaviour with Linux drivers to the kernel developers. You are # on your own if you do this. Please read 3c90x.txt to understand # what they do. If you don't understand them, ask for help on the # Etherboot mailing list. And please document what you did to the NIC # on the NIC so that people after you won't get nasty surprises. # # -DCFG_3C90X_PRESERVE_XCVR - Reset the transceiver type to the value it # had initially just before the loaded code is started. # -DCFG_3C90X_XCVR - Hardcode the tranceiver type Etherboot uses. # -DCFG_3C90X_BOOTROM_FIX - If you have a 3c905B with buggy ROM # interface, setting this option might "fix" it. Use # with caution and read the docs in 3c90x.txt! # # See the documentation file 3c90x.txt for more details. # # CS89X0 (optional) options: # -DISA_PROBE_ADDRS=list # Probe for CS89x0 base address using list of # comma separated hex addresses; increasing the # address by one (0x300 -> 0x301) will force a # more aggressive probing algorithm. This might # be neccessary after a soft-reset of the NIC. CFLAGS_3c503 = -DINCLUDE_3C503 # -DT503_SHMEM CFLAGS_ne = -DINCLUDE_NE -DNE_SCAN=0x300,0x280,0x320,0x340,0x380 CFLAGS_ns8390 = -DINCLUDE_NS8390 # NE2000/PCI! CFLAGS_wd = -DINCLUDE_WD -DWD_DEFAULT_MEM=0xCC000