linux/drivers/net/wireless/iwlwifi/Kconfig
Wey-Yi Guy be663ab670 iwlwifi: split the drivers for agn and legacy devices 3945/4965
Intel WiFi devices 3945 and 4965 now have their own driver in the folder

	drivers/net/wireless/iwlegacy

Add support to build these drivers independently of the driver for
AGN devices. Selecting the 3945 builds iwl3945.ko and iwl_legacy.ko,
and selecting the 4965 builds iwl4965.ko and iwl_legacy.ko. iwl-legacy.ko
contains code shared between both devices.

The 3945 is an ABG/BG device, with no support for 802.11n. The 4965 is a 2x3
ABGN device.

Signed-off-by: Meenakshi Venkataraman <meenakshi.venkataraman@intel.com>
Acked-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Wey-Yi Guy <wey-yi.w.guy@intel.com>
2011-02-21 11:27:26 -08:00

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config IWLAGN
tristate "Intel Wireless WiFi Next Gen AGN - Wireless-N/Advanced-N/Ultimate-N (iwlagn) "
depends on PCI && MAC80211
select FW_LOADER
select NEW_LEDS
select LEDS_CLASS
select LEDS_TRIGGERS
select MAC80211_LEDS
---help---
Select to build the driver supporting the:
Intel Wireless WiFi Link Next-Gen AGN
This option enables support for use with the following hardware:
Intel Wireless WiFi Link 6250AGN Adapter
Intel 6000 Series Wi-Fi Adapters (6200AGN and 6300AGN)
Intel WiFi Link 1000BGN
Intel Wireless WiFi 5150AGN
Intel Wireless WiFi 5100AGN, 5300AGN, and 5350AGN
Intel 6005 Series Wi-Fi Adapters
Intel 6030 Series Wi-Fi Adapters
Intel Wireless WiFi Link 6150BGN 2 Adapter
Intel 100 Series Wi-Fi Adapters (100BGN and 130BGN)
Intel 2000 Series Wi-Fi Adapters
This driver uses the kernel's mac80211 subsystem.
In order to use this driver, you will need a microcode (uCode)
image for it. You can obtain the microcode from:
<http://intellinuxwireless.org/>.
The microcode is typically installed in /lib/firmware. You can
look in the hotplug script /etc/hotplug/firmware.agent to
determine which directory FIRMWARE_DIR is set to when the script
runs.
If you want to compile the driver as a module ( = code which can be
inserted in and removed from the running kernel whenever you want),
say M here and read <file:Documentation/kbuild/modules.txt>. The
module will be called iwlagn.
menu "Debugging Options"
depends on IWLAGN
config IWLWIFI_DEBUG
bool "Enable full debugging output in the iwlagn driver"
depends on IWLAGN
---help---
This option will enable debug tracing output for the iwlwifi drivers
This will result in the kernel module being ~100k larger. You can
control which debug output is sent to the kernel log by setting the
value in
/sys/class/net/wlan0/device/debug_level
This entry will only exist if this option is enabled.
To set a value, simply echo an 8-byte hex value to the same file:
% echo 0x43fff > /sys/class/net/wlan0/device/debug_level
You can find the list of debug mask values in:
drivers/net/wireless/iwlwifi/iwl-debug.h
If this is your first time using this driver, you should say Y here
as the debug information can assist others in helping you resolve
any problems you may encounter.
config IWLWIFI_DEBUGFS
bool "iwlagn debugfs support"
depends on IWLAGN && MAC80211_DEBUGFS
---help---
Enable creation of debugfs files for the iwlwifi drivers. This
is a low-impact option that allows getting insight into the
driver's state at runtime.
config IWLWIFI_DEBUG_EXPERIMENTAL_UCODE
bool "Experimental uCode support"
depends on IWLAGN && IWLWIFI_DEBUG
---help---
Enable use of experimental ucode for testing and debugging.
config IWLWIFI_DEVICE_TRACING
bool "iwlwifi device access tracing"
depends on IWLAGN
depends on EVENT_TRACING
help
Say Y here to trace all commands, including TX frames and IO
accesses, sent to the device. If you say yes, iwlwifi will
register with the ftrace framework for event tracing and dump
all this information to the ringbuffer, you may need to
increase the ringbuffer size. See the ftrace documentation
for more information.
When tracing is not enabled, this option still has some
(though rather small) overhead.
If unsure, say Y so we can help you better when problems
occur.
endmenu
config IWL_P2P
bool "iwlwifi experimental P2P support"
depends on IWLAGN
help
This option enables experimental P2P support for some devices
based on microcode support. Since P2P support is still under
development, this option may even enable it for some devices
now that turn out to not support it in the future due to
microcode restrictions.
To determine if your microcode supports the experimental P2P
offered by this option, check if the driver advertises AP
support when it is loaded.
Say Y only if you want to experiment with P2P.