|  | # Kernel configuration options | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Copyright (c) 2014-2015 Wind River Systems, Inc. | 
|  | # SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "General Kernel Options" | 
|  |  | 
|  | module = KERNEL | 
|  | module-str = kernel | 
|  | source "subsys/logging/Kconfig.template.log_config" | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MULTITHREADING | 
|  | bool "Multi-threading" if ARCH_HAS_SINGLE_THREAD_SUPPORT | 
|  | default y | 
|  | help | 
|  | If disabled, only the main thread is available, so a main() function | 
|  | must be provided. Interrupts are available. Kernel objects will most | 
|  | probably not behave as expected, especially with regards to pending, | 
|  | since the main thread cannot pend, it being the only thread in the | 
|  | system. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Many drivers and subsystems will not work with this option | 
|  | set to 'n'; disable only when you REALLY know what you are | 
|  | doing. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config NUM_COOP_PRIORITIES | 
|  | int "Number of coop priorities" if MULTITHREADING | 
|  | default 1 if !MULTITHREADING | 
|  | default 16 | 
|  | range 0 128 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Number of cooperative priorities configured in the system. Gives access | 
|  | to priorities: | 
|  |  | 
|  | K_PRIO_COOP(0) to K_PRIO_COOP(CONFIG_NUM_COOP_PRIORITIES - 1) | 
|  |  | 
|  | or seen another way, priorities: | 
|  |  | 
|  | -CONFIG_NUM_COOP_PRIORITIES to -1 | 
|  |  | 
|  | This can be set to zero to disable cooperative scheduling. Cooperative | 
|  | threads always preempt preemptible threads. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The total number of priorities is | 
|  |  | 
|  | NUM_COOP_PRIORITIES + NUM_PREEMPT_PRIORITIES + 1 | 
|  |  | 
|  | The extra one is for the idle thread, which must run at the lowest | 
|  | priority, and be the only thread at that priority. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config NUM_PREEMPT_PRIORITIES | 
|  | int "Number of preemptible priorities" if MULTITHREADING | 
|  | default 0 if !MULTITHREADING | 
|  | default 15 | 
|  | range 0 128 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Number of preemptible priorities available in the system. Gives access | 
|  | to priorities 0 to CONFIG_NUM_PREEMPT_PRIORITIES - 1. | 
|  |  | 
|  | This can be set to 0 to disable preemptible scheduling. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The total number of priorities is | 
|  |  | 
|  | NUM_COOP_PRIORITIES + NUM_PREEMPT_PRIORITIES + 1 | 
|  |  | 
|  | The extra one is for the idle thread, which must run at the lowest | 
|  | priority, and be the only thread at that priority. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MAIN_THREAD_PRIORITY | 
|  | int "Priority of initialization/main thread" | 
|  | default -2 if !PREEMPT_ENABLED | 
|  | default 0 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Priority at which the initialization thread runs, including the start | 
|  | of the main() function. main() can then change its priority if desired. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config COOP_ENABLED | 
|  | def_bool (NUM_COOP_PRIORITIES != 0) | 
|  |  | 
|  | config PREEMPT_ENABLED | 
|  | def_bool (NUM_PREEMPT_PRIORITIES != 0) | 
|  |  | 
|  | config PRIORITY_CEILING | 
|  | int "Priority inheritance ceiling" | 
|  | default -127 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This defines the minimum priority value (i.e. the logically | 
|  | highest priority) that a thread will acquire as part of | 
|  | k_mutex priority inheritance. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config NUM_METAIRQ_PRIORITIES | 
|  | int "Number of very-high priority 'preemptor' threads" | 
|  | default 0 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This defines a set of priorities at the (numerically) lowest | 
|  | end of the range which have "meta-irq" behavior.  Runnable | 
|  | threads at these priorities will always be scheduled before | 
|  | threads at lower priorities, EVEN IF those threads are | 
|  | otherwise cooperative and/or have taken a scheduler lock. | 
|  | Making such a thread runnable in any way thus has the effect | 
|  | of "interrupting" the current task and running the meta-irq | 
|  | thread synchronously, like an exception or system call.  The | 
|  | intent is to use these priorities to implement "interrupt | 
|  | bottom half" or "tasklet" behavior, allowing driver | 
|  | subsystems to return from interrupt context but be guaranteed | 
|  | that user code will not be executed (on the current CPU) | 
|  | until the remaining work is finished.  As this breaks the | 
|  | "promise" of non-preemptibility granted by the current API | 
|  | for cooperative threads, this tool probably shouldn't be used | 
|  | from application code. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_DEADLINE | 
|  | bool "Earliest-deadline-first scheduling" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This enables a simple "earliest deadline first" scheduling | 
|  | mode where threads can set "deadline" deltas measured in | 
|  | k_cycle_get_32() units.  Priority decisions within (!!) a | 
|  | single priority will choose the next expiring deadline and | 
|  | not simply the least recently added thread. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_CPU_MASK | 
|  | bool "CPU mask affinity/pinning API" | 
|  | depends on SCHED_DUMB | 
|  | help | 
|  | When true, the application will have access to the | 
|  | k_thread_cpu_mask_*() APIs which control per-CPU affinity masks in | 
|  | SMP mode, allowing applications to pin threads to specific CPUs or | 
|  | disallow threads from running on given CPUs.  Note that as currently | 
|  | implemented, this involves an inherent O(N) scaling in the number of | 
|  | idle-but-runnable threads, and thus works only with the DUMB | 
|  | scheduler (as SCALABLE and MULTIQ would see no benefit). | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that this setting does not technically depend on SMP and is | 
|  | implemented without it for testing purposes, but for obvious reasons | 
|  | makes sense as an application API only where there is more than one | 
|  | CPU.  With one CPU, it's just a higher overhead version of | 
|  | k_thread_start/stop(). | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_CPU_MASK_PIN_ONLY | 
|  | bool "CPU mask variant with single-CPU pinning only" | 
|  | depends on SMP && SCHED_CPU_MASK | 
|  | help | 
|  | When true, enables a variant of SCHED_CPU_MASK where only | 
|  | one CPU may be specified for every thread.  Effectively, all | 
|  | threads have a single "assigned" CPU and they will never be | 
|  | scheduled symmetrically.  In general this is not helpful, | 
|  | but some applications have a carefully designed threading | 
|  | architecture and want to make their own decisions about how | 
|  | to assign work to CPUs.  In that circumstance, some moderate | 
|  | optimizations can be made (e.g. having a separate run queue | 
|  | per CPU, keeping the list length shorter).  Most | 
|  | applications don't want this. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MAIN_STACK_SIZE | 
|  | int "Size of stack for initialization and main thread" | 
|  | default 2048 if COVERAGE_GCOV | 
|  | default 1024 if TEST_ARM_CORTEX_M | 
|  | default 512 if ZTEST && !(RISCV || X86) | 
|  | default 1024 | 
|  | help | 
|  | When the initialization is complete, the thread executing it then | 
|  | executes the main() routine, so as to reuse the stack used by the | 
|  | initialization, which would be wasted RAM otherwise. | 
|  |  | 
|  | After initialization is complete, the thread runs main(). | 
|  |  | 
|  | config IDLE_STACK_SIZE | 
|  | int "Size of stack for idle thread" | 
|  | default 2048 if COVERAGE_GCOV | 
|  | default 1024 if XTENSA | 
|  | default 512 if RISCV | 
|  | default 384 if DYNAMIC_OBJECTS | 
|  | default 320 if ARC || (ARM && CPU_HAS_FPU) || (X86 && MMU) | 
|  | default 256 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Depending on the work that the idle task must do, most likely due to | 
|  | power management but possibly to other features like system event | 
|  | logging (e.g. logging when the system goes to sleep), the idle thread | 
|  | may need more stack space than the default value. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ISR_STACK_SIZE | 
|  | int "ISR and initialization stack size (in bytes)" | 
|  | default 2048 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option specifies the size of the stack used by interrupt | 
|  | service routines (ISRs), and during kernel initialization. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config THREAD_STACK_INFO | 
|  | bool "Thread stack info" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option allows each thread to store the thread stack info into | 
|  | the k_thread data structure. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config THREAD_CUSTOM_DATA | 
|  | bool "Thread custom data" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option allows each thread to store 32 bits of custom data, | 
|  | which can be accessed using the k_thread_custom_data_xxx() APIs. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config THREAD_USERSPACE_LOCAL_DATA | 
|  | bool | 
|  | depends on USERSPACE | 
|  | default y if ERRNO && !ERRNO_IN_TLS | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ERRNO | 
|  | bool "Errno support" | 
|  | default y | 
|  | help | 
|  | Enable per-thread errno in the kernel. Application and library code must | 
|  | include errno.h provided by the C library (libc) to use the errno | 
|  | symbol. The C library must access the per-thread errno via the | 
|  | z_errno() symbol. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ERRNO_IN_TLS | 
|  | bool "Store errno in thread local storage (TLS)" | 
|  | depends on ERRNO && THREAD_LOCAL_STORAGE | 
|  | default y | 
|  | help | 
|  | Use thread local storage to store errno instead of storing it in | 
|  | the kernel thread struct. This avoids a syscall if userspace is enabled. | 
|  |  | 
|  | choice SCHED_ALGORITHM | 
|  | prompt "Scheduler priority queue algorithm" | 
|  | default SCHED_DUMB | 
|  | help | 
|  | The kernel can be built with with several choices for the | 
|  | ready queue implementation, offering different choices between | 
|  | code size, constant factor runtime overhead and performance | 
|  | scaling when many threads are added. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_DUMB | 
|  | bool "Simple linked-list ready queue" | 
|  | help | 
|  | When selected, the scheduler ready queue will be implemented | 
|  | as a simple unordered list, with very fast constant time | 
|  | performance for single threads and very low code size. | 
|  | Choose this on systems with constrained code size that will | 
|  | never see more than a small number (3, maybe) of runnable | 
|  | threads in the queue at any given time.  On most platforms | 
|  | (that are not otherwise using the red/black tree) this | 
|  | results in a savings of ~2k of code size. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_SCALABLE | 
|  | bool "Red/black tree ready queue" | 
|  | help | 
|  | When selected, the scheduler ready queue will be implemented | 
|  | as a red/black tree.  This has rather slower constant-time | 
|  | insertion and removal overhead, and on most platforms (that | 
|  | are not otherwise using the rbtree somewhere) requires an | 
|  | extra ~2kb of code.  But the resulting behavior will scale | 
|  | cleanly and quickly into the many thousands of threads.  Use | 
|  | this on platforms where you may have many threads (very | 
|  | roughly: more than 20 or so) marked as runnable at a given | 
|  | time.  Most applications don't want this. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_MULTIQ | 
|  | bool "Traditional multi-queue ready queue" | 
|  | depends on !SCHED_DEADLINE | 
|  | help | 
|  | When selected, the scheduler ready queue will be implemented | 
|  | as the classic/textbook array of lists, one per priority | 
|  | (max 32 priorities).  This corresponds to the scheduler | 
|  | algorithm used in Zephyr versions prior to 1.12.  It incurs | 
|  | only a tiny code size overhead vs. the "dumb" scheduler and | 
|  | runs in O(1) time in almost all circumstances with very low | 
|  | constant factor.  But it requires a fairly large RAM budget | 
|  | to store those list heads, and the limited features make it | 
|  | incompatible with features like deadline scheduling that | 
|  | need to sort threads more finely, and SMP affinity which | 
|  | need to traverse the list of threads.  Typical applications | 
|  | with small numbers of runnable threads probably want the | 
|  | DUMB scheduler. | 
|  |  | 
|  | endchoice # SCHED_ALGORITHM | 
|  |  | 
|  | choice WAITQ_ALGORITHM | 
|  | prompt "Wait queue priority algorithm" | 
|  | default WAITQ_DUMB | 
|  | help | 
|  | The wait_q abstraction used in IPC primitives to pend | 
|  | threads for later wakeup shares the same backend data | 
|  | structure choices as the scheduler, and can use the same | 
|  | options. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config WAITQ_SCALABLE | 
|  | bool "Use scalable wait_q implementation" | 
|  | help | 
|  | When selected, the wait_q will be implemented with a | 
|  | balanced tree.  Choose this if you expect to have many | 
|  | threads waiting on individual primitives.  There is a ~2kb | 
|  | code size increase over WAITQ_DUMB (which may be shared with | 
|  | SCHED_SCALABLE) if the rbtree is not used elsewhere in the | 
|  | application, and pend/unpend operations on "small" queues | 
|  | will be somewhat slower (though this is not generally a | 
|  | performance path). | 
|  |  | 
|  | config WAITQ_DUMB | 
|  | bool "Simple linked-list wait_q" | 
|  | help | 
|  | When selected, the wait_q will be implemented with a | 
|  | doubly-linked list.  Choose this if you expect to have only | 
|  | a few threads blocked on any single IPC primitive. | 
|  |  | 
|  | endchoice # WAITQ_ALGORITHM | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "Kernel Debugging and Metrics" | 
|  |  | 
|  | config INIT_STACKS | 
|  | bool "Initialize stack areas" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option instructs the kernel to initialize stack areas with a | 
|  | known value (0xaa) before they are first used, so that the high | 
|  | water mark can be easily determined. This applies to the stack areas | 
|  | for threads, as well as to the interrupt stack. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config BOOT_BANNER | 
|  | bool "Boot banner" | 
|  | default y | 
|  | depends on CONSOLE_HAS_DRIVER | 
|  | select PRINTK | 
|  | select EARLY_CONSOLE | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option outputs a banner to the console device during boot up. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config BOOT_DELAY | 
|  | int "Boot delay in milliseconds" | 
|  | default 0 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option delays bootup for the specified amount of | 
|  | milliseconds. This is used to allow serial ports to get ready | 
|  | before starting to print information on them during boot, as | 
|  | some systems might boot to fast for a receiving endpoint to | 
|  | detect the new USB serial bus, enumerate it and get ready to | 
|  | receive before it actually gets data. A similar effect can be | 
|  | achieved by waiting for DCD on the serial port--however, not | 
|  | all serial ports have DCD. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config THREAD_MONITOR | 
|  | bool "Thread monitoring" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option instructs the kernel to maintain a list of all threads | 
|  | (excluding those that have not yet started or have already | 
|  | terminated). | 
|  |  | 
|  | config THREAD_NAME | 
|  | bool "Thread name" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option allows to set a name for a thread. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config THREAD_MAX_NAME_LEN | 
|  | int "Max length of a thread name" | 
|  | default 32 | 
|  | default 64 if ZTEST | 
|  | range 8 128 | 
|  | depends on THREAD_NAME | 
|  | help | 
|  | Thread names get stored in the k_thread struct. Indicate the max | 
|  | name length, including the terminating NULL byte. Reduce this value | 
|  | to conserve memory. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config INSTRUMENT_THREAD_SWITCHING | 
|  | bool | 
|  |  | 
|  | menuconfig THREAD_RUNTIME_STATS | 
|  | bool "Thread runtime statistics" | 
|  | help | 
|  | Gather thread runtime statistics. | 
|  |  | 
|  | For example: | 
|  | - Thread total execution cycles | 
|  | - System total execution cycles | 
|  |  | 
|  | if THREAD_RUNTIME_STATS | 
|  |  | 
|  | config THREAD_RUNTIME_STATS_USE_TIMING_FUNCTIONS | 
|  | bool "Use timing functions to gather statistics" | 
|  | select TIMING_FUNCTIONS_NEED_AT_BOOT | 
|  | help | 
|  | Use timing functions to gather thread runtime statistics. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that timing functions may use a different timer than | 
|  | the default timer for OS timekeeping. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_THREAD_USAGE | 
|  | bool "Collect thread runtime usage" | 
|  | default y | 
|  | select INSTRUMENT_THREAD_SWITCHING if !USE_SWITCH | 
|  | help | 
|  | Collect thread runtime info at context switch time | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_THREAD_USAGE_ANALYSIS | 
|  | bool "Analyze the collected thread runtime usage statistics" | 
|  | default n | 
|  | depends on SCHED_THREAD_USAGE | 
|  | select INSTRUMENT_THREAD_SWITCHING if !USE_SWITCH | 
|  | help | 
|  | Collect additional timing information related to thread scheduling | 
|  | for analysis purposes. This includes the total time that a thread | 
|  | has been scheduled, the longest time for which it was scheduled and | 
|  | others. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_THREAD_USAGE_ALL | 
|  | bool "Collect total system runtime usage" | 
|  | default y if SCHED_THREAD_USAGE | 
|  | depends on SCHED_THREAD_USAGE | 
|  | help | 
|  | Maintain a sum of all non-idle thread cycle usage. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_THREAD_USAGE_AUTO_ENABLE | 
|  | bool "Automatically enable runtime usage statistics" | 
|  | default y | 
|  | depends on SCHED_THREAD_USAGE | 
|  | help | 
|  | When set, this option automatically enables the gathering of both | 
|  | the thread and CPU usage statistics. | 
|  |  | 
|  | endif # THREAD_RUNTIME_STATS | 
|  |  | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "Work Queue Options" | 
|  | config SYSTEM_WORKQUEUE_STACK_SIZE | 
|  | int "System workqueue stack size" | 
|  | default 4096 if COVERAGE | 
|  | default 1024 | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SYSTEM_WORKQUEUE_PRIORITY | 
|  | int "System workqueue priority" | 
|  | default -2 if COOP_ENABLED && !PREEMPT_ENABLED | 
|  | default  0 if !COOP_ENABLED | 
|  | default -1 | 
|  | help | 
|  | By default, system work queue priority is the lowest cooperative | 
|  | priority. This means that any work handler, once started, won't | 
|  | be preempted by any other thread until finished. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SYSTEM_WORKQUEUE_NO_YIELD | 
|  | bool "Select whether system work queue yields" | 
|  | help | 
|  | By default, the system work queue yields between each work item, to | 
|  | prevent other threads from being starved.  Selecting this removes | 
|  | this yield, which may be useful if the work queue thread is | 
|  | cooperative and a sequence of work items is expected to complete | 
|  | without yielding. | 
|  |  | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "Atomic Operations" | 
|  | config ATOMIC_OPERATIONS_BUILTIN | 
|  | bool | 
|  | help | 
|  | Use the compiler builtin functions for atomic operations. This is | 
|  | the preferred method. However, support for all arches in GCC is | 
|  | incomplete. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ATOMIC_OPERATIONS_ARCH | 
|  | bool | 
|  | help | 
|  | Use when there isn't support for compiler built-ins, but you have | 
|  | written optimized assembly code under arch/ which implements these. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ATOMIC_OPERATIONS_C | 
|  | bool | 
|  | help | 
|  | Use atomic operations routines that are implemented entirely | 
|  | in C by locking interrupts. Selected by architectures which either | 
|  | do not have support for atomic operations in their instruction | 
|  | set, or haven't been implemented yet during bring-up, and also | 
|  | the compiler does not have support for the atomic __sync_* builtins. | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "Timer API Options" | 
|  |  | 
|  | config TIMESLICING | 
|  | bool "Thread time slicing" | 
|  | default y | 
|  | depends on SYS_CLOCK_EXISTS && (NUM_PREEMPT_PRIORITIES != 0) | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option enables time slicing between preemptible threads of | 
|  | equal priority. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config TIMESLICE_SIZE | 
|  | int "Time slice size (in ms)" | 
|  | default 0 | 
|  | range 0 2147483647 | 
|  | depends on TIMESLICING | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option specifies the maximum amount of time a thread can execute | 
|  | before other threads of equal priority are given an opportunity to run. | 
|  | A time slice size of zero means "no limit" (i.e. an infinitely large | 
|  | time slice). | 
|  |  | 
|  | config TIMESLICE_PRIORITY | 
|  | int "Time slicing thread priority ceiling" | 
|  | default 0 | 
|  | range 0 NUM_PREEMPT_PRIORITIES | 
|  | depends on TIMESLICING | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option specifies the thread priority level at which time slicing | 
|  | takes effect; threads having a higher priority than this ceiling are | 
|  | not subject to time slicing. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config TIMESLICE_PER_THREAD | 
|  | bool "Support per-thread timeslice values" | 
|  | depends on TIMESLICING | 
|  | help | 
|  | When set, this enables an API for setting timeslice values on | 
|  | a per-thread basis, with an application callback invoked when | 
|  | a thread reaches the end of its timeslice. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config POLL | 
|  | bool "Async I/O Framework" | 
|  | help | 
|  | Asynchronous notification framework. Enable the k_poll() and | 
|  | k_poll_signal_raise() APIs.  The former can wait on multiple events | 
|  | concurrently, which can be either directly triggered or triggered by | 
|  | the availability of some kernel objects (semaphores and FIFOs). | 
|  |  | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "Other Kernel Object Options" | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MEM_SLAB_TRACE_MAX_UTILIZATION | 
|  | bool "Getting maximum slab utilization" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This adds variable to the k_mem_slab structure to hold | 
|  | maximum utilization of the slab. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config NUM_MBOX_ASYNC_MSGS | 
|  | int "Maximum number of in-flight asynchronous mailbox messages" | 
|  | default 10 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option specifies the total number of asynchronous mailbox | 
|  | messages that can exist simultaneously, across all mailboxes | 
|  | in the system. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Setting this option to 0 disables support for asynchronous | 
|  | mailbox messages. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config EVENTS | 
|  | bool "Event objects" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option enables event objects. Threads may wait on event | 
|  | objects for specific events, but both threads and ISRs may deliver | 
|  | events to event objects. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that setting this option slightly increases the size of the | 
|  | thread structure. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config KERNEL_MEM_POOL | 
|  | bool "Use Kernel Memory Pool" | 
|  | default y | 
|  | help | 
|  | Enable the use of kernel memory pool. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Say y if unsure. | 
|  |  | 
|  | if KERNEL_MEM_POOL | 
|  |  | 
|  | config HEAP_MEM_POOL_SIZE | 
|  | int "Heap memory pool size (in bytes)" | 
|  | default 0 if !POSIX_MQUEUE | 
|  | default 1024 if POSIX_MQUEUE | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option specifies the size of the heap memory pool used when | 
|  | dynamically allocating memory using k_malloc(). The maximum size of | 
|  | the memory pool is only limited to available memory. A size of zero | 
|  | means that no heap memory pool is defined. | 
|  |  | 
|  | endif # KERNEL_MEM_POOL | 
|  |  | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ARCH_HAS_CUSTOM_SWAP_TO_MAIN | 
|  | bool | 
|  | help | 
|  | It's possible that an architecture port cannot use _Swap() to swap to | 
|  | the _main() thread, but instead must do something custom. It must | 
|  | enable this option in that case. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SWAP_NONATOMIC | 
|  | bool | 
|  | help | 
|  | On some architectures, the _Swap() primitive cannot be made | 
|  | atomic with respect to the irq_lock being released.  That | 
|  | is, interrupts may be received between the entry to _Swap | 
|  | and the completion of the context switch.  There are a | 
|  | handful of workaround cases in the kernel that need to be | 
|  | enabled when this is true.  Currently, this only happens on | 
|  | ARM when the PendSV exception priority sits below that of | 
|  | Zephyr-handled interrupts. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ARCH_HAS_CUSTOM_BUSY_WAIT | 
|  | bool | 
|  | help | 
|  | It's possible that an architecture port cannot or does not want to use | 
|  | the provided k_busy_wait(), but instead must do something custom. It must | 
|  | enable this option in that case. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SYS_CLOCK_TICKS_PER_SEC | 
|  | int "System tick frequency (in ticks/second)" | 
|  | default 100 if QEMU_TARGET || SOC_POSIX | 
|  | default 10000 if TICKLESS_KERNEL | 
|  | default 100 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option specifies the nominal frequency of the system clock in Hz. | 
|  |  | 
|  | For asynchronous timekeeping, the kernel defines a "ticks" concept. A | 
|  | "tick" is the internal count in which the kernel does all its internal | 
|  | uptime and timeout bookkeeping. Interrupts are expected to be delivered | 
|  | on tick boundaries to the extent practical, and no fractional ticks | 
|  | are tracked. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The choice of tick rate is configurable by this option. Also the number | 
|  | of cycles per tick should be chosen so that 1 millisecond is exactly | 
|  | represented by an integral number of ticks. Defaults on most hardware | 
|  | platforms (ones that support setting arbitrary interrupt timeouts) are | 
|  | expected to be in the range of 10 kHz, with software emulation | 
|  | platforms and legacy drivers using a more traditional 100 Hz value. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that when available and enabled, in "tickless" mode | 
|  | this config variable specifies the minimum available timing | 
|  | granularity, not necessarily the number or frequency of | 
|  | interrupts delivered to the kernel. | 
|  |  | 
|  | A value of 0 completely disables timer support in the kernel. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SYS_CLOCK_HW_CYCLES_PER_SEC | 
|  | int "System clock's h/w timer frequency" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option specifies the frequency of the hardware timer used for the | 
|  | system clock (in Hz). This option is set by the SOC's or board's Kconfig file | 
|  | and the user should generally avoid modifying it via the menu configuration. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SYS_CLOCK_EXISTS | 
|  | bool "System clock exists and is enabled" | 
|  | default y | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option specifies that the kernel lacks timer support. | 
|  | Some device configurations can eliminate significant code if | 
|  | this is disabled.  Obviously timeout-related APIs will not | 
|  | work. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config TIMEOUT_64BIT | 
|  | bool "Store kernel timeouts in 64 bit precision" | 
|  | default y | 
|  | help | 
|  | When this option is true, the k_ticks_t values passed to | 
|  | kernel APIs will be a 64 bit quantity, allowing the use of | 
|  | larger values (and higher precision tick rates) without fear | 
|  | of overflowing the 32 bit word.  This feature also gates the | 
|  | availability of absolute timeout values (which require the | 
|  | extra precision). | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SYS_CLOCK_MAX_TIMEOUT_DAYS | 
|  | int "Max timeout (in days) used in conversions" | 
|  | default 365 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Value is used in the time conversion static inline function to determine | 
|  | at compile time which algorithm to use. One algorithm is faster, takes | 
|  | less code but may overflow if multiplication of source and target | 
|  | frequency exceeds 64 bits. Second algorithm prevents that. Faster | 
|  | algorithm is selected for conversion if maximum timeout represented in | 
|  | source frequency domain multiplied by target frequency fits in 64 bits. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config XIP | 
|  | bool "Execute in place" | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option allows the kernel to operate with its text and read-only | 
|  | sections residing in ROM (or similar read-only memory). Not all boards | 
|  | support this option so it must be used with care; you must also | 
|  | supply a linker command file when building your image. Enabling this | 
|  | option increases both the code and data footprint of the image. | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "Initialization Priorities" | 
|  |  | 
|  | config KERNEL_INIT_PRIORITY_OBJECTS | 
|  | int "Kernel objects initialization priority" | 
|  | default 30 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Kernel objects use this priority for initialization. This | 
|  | priority needs to be higher than minimal default initialization | 
|  | priority. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config KERNEL_INIT_PRIORITY_DEFAULT | 
|  | int "Default init priority" | 
|  | default 40 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Default minimal init priority for each init level. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config KERNEL_INIT_PRIORITY_DEVICE | 
|  | int "Default init priority for device drivers" | 
|  | default 50 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Device driver, that depends on common components, such as | 
|  | interrupt controller, but does not depend on other devices, | 
|  | uses this init priority. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config APPLICATION_INIT_PRIORITY | 
|  | int "Default init priority for application level drivers" | 
|  | default 90 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This priority level is for end-user drivers such as sensors and display | 
|  | which have no inward dependencies. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "Security Options" | 
|  |  | 
|  | config STACK_CANARIES | 
|  | bool "Compiler stack canaries" | 
|  | depends on ENTROPY_GENERATOR || TEST_RANDOM_GENERATOR | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option enables compiler stack canaries. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If stack canaries are supported by the compiler, it will emit | 
|  | extra code that inserts a canary value into the stack frame when | 
|  | a function is entered and validates this value upon exit. | 
|  | Stack corruption (such as that caused by buffer overflow) results | 
|  | in a fatal error condition for the running entity. | 
|  | Enabling this option can result in a significant increase | 
|  | in footprint and an associated decrease in performance. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If stack canaries are not supported by the compiler an error | 
|  | will occur at build time. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config EXECUTE_XOR_WRITE | 
|  | bool "W^X for memory partitions" | 
|  | depends on USERSPACE | 
|  | depends on ARCH_HAS_EXECUTABLE_PAGE_BIT | 
|  | default y | 
|  | help | 
|  | When enabled, will enforce that a writable page isn't executable | 
|  | and vice versa.  This might not be acceptable in all scenarios, | 
|  | so this option is given for those unafraid of shooting themselves | 
|  | in the foot. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If unsure, say Y. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config STACK_POINTER_RANDOM | 
|  | int "Initial stack pointer randomization bounds" | 
|  | depends on !STACK_GROWS_UP | 
|  | depends on MULTITHREADING | 
|  | depends on TEST_RANDOM_GENERATOR || ENTROPY_HAS_DRIVER | 
|  | default 0 | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option performs a limited form of Address Space Layout | 
|  | Randomization by offsetting some random value to a thread's | 
|  | initial stack pointer upon creation. This hinders some types of | 
|  | security attacks by making the location of any given stack frame | 
|  | non-deterministic. | 
|  |  | 
|  | This feature can waste up to the specified size in bytes the stack | 
|  | region, which is carved out of the total size of the stack region. | 
|  | A reasonable minimum value would be around 100 bytes if this can | 
|  | be spared. | 
|  |  | 
|  | This is currently only implemented for systems whose stack pointers | 
|  | grow towards lower memory addresses. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config BOUNDS_CHECK_BYPASS_MITIGATION | 
|  | bool "Bounds check bypass mitigations for speculative execution" | 
|  | depends on USERSPACE | 
|  | help | 
|  | Untrusted parameters from user mode may be used in system calls to | 
|  | index arrays during speculative execution, also known as the Spectre | 
|  | V1 vulnerability. When enabled, various macros defined in | 
|  | misc/speculation.h will insert fence instructions or other appropriate | 
|  | mitigations after bounds checking any array index parameters passed | 
|  | in from untrusted sources (user mode threads). When disabled, these | 
|  | macros do nothing. | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MAX_DOMAIN_PARTITIONS | 
|  | int "Maximum number of partitions per memory domain" | 
|  | default 16 | 
|  | range 0 255 | 
|  | depends on USERSPACE | 
|  | help | 
|  | Configure the maximum number of partitions per memory domain. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ARCH_MEM_DOMAIN_DATA | 
|  | bool | 
|  | depends on USERSPACE | 
|  | help | 
|  | This hidden option is selected by the target architecture if | 
|  | architecture-specific data is needed on a per memory domain basis. | 
|  | If so, the architecture defines a 'struct arch_mem_domain' which is | 
|  | embedded within every struct k_mem_domain. The architecture | 
|  | must also define the arch_mem_domain_init() function to set this up | 
|  | when a memory domain is created. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Typical uses might be a set of page tables for that memory domain. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config ARCH_MEM_DOMAIN_SYNCHRONOUS_API | 
|  | bool | 
|  | depends on USERSPACE | 
|  | help | 
|  | This hidden option is selected by the target architecture if | 
|  | modifying a memory domain's partitions at runtime, or changing | 
|  | a memory domain's thread membership requires synchronous calls | 
|  | into the architecture layer. | 
|  |  | 
|  | If enabled, the architecture layer must implement the following | 
|  | APIs: | 
|  |  | 
|  | arch_mem_domain_thread_add | 
|  | arch_mem_domain_thread_remove | 
|  | arch_mem_domain_partition_remove | 
|  | arch_mem_domain_partition_add | 
|  |  | 
|  | It's important to note that although supervisor threads can be | 
|  | members of memory domains, they have no implications on supervisor | 
|  | thread access to memory. Memory domain APIs may only be invoked from | 
|  | supervisor mode. | 
|  |  | 
|  | For these reasons, on uniprocessor systems unless memory access | 
|  | policy is managed in separate software constructions like page | 
|  | tables, these APIs don't need to be implemented as the underlying | 
|  | memory management hardware will be reprogrammed on context switch | 
|  | anyway. | 
|  |  | 
|  | menu "SMP Options" | 
|  |  | 
|  | config USE_SWITCH | 
|  | bool "Use new-style _arch_switch instead of arch_swap" | 
|  | depends on USE_SWITCH_SUPPORTED | 
|  | help | 
|  | The _arch_switch() API is a lower level context switching | 
|  | primitive than the original arch_swap mechanism.  It is required | 
|  | for an SMP-aware scheduler, or if the architecture does not | 
|  | provide arch_swap.  In uniprocess situations where the | 
|  | architecture provides both, _arch_switch incurs more somewhat | 
|  | overhead and may be slower. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config USE_SWITCH_SUPPORTED | 
|  | bool | 
|  | help | 
|  | Indicates whether _arch_switch() API is supported by the | 
|  | currently enabled platform. This option should be selected by | 
|  | platforms that implement it. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SMP | 
|  | bool "Symmetric multithreading support" | 
|  | depends on USE_SWITCH | 
|  | help | 
|  | When true, kernel will be built with SMP support, allowing | 
|  | more than one CPU to schedule Zephyr tasks at a time. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SMP_BOOT_DELAY | 
|  | bool "Delay booting secondary cores" | 
|  | depends on SMP | 
|  | help | 
|  | By default Zephyr will boot all available CPUs during start up. | 
|  | Select this option to skip this and allow architecture code boot | 
|  | secondary CPUs at a later time. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config MP_NUM_CPUS | 
|  | int "Number of CPUs/cores" | 
|  | default 1 | 
|  | range 1 4 | 
|  | help | 
|  | Number of multiprocessing-capable cores available to the | 
|  | multicpu API and SMP features. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config SCHED_IPI_SUPPORTED | 
|  | bool | 
|  | help | 
|  | True if the architecture supports a call to | 
|  | arch_sched_ipi() to broadcast an interrupt that will call | 
|  | z_sched_ipi() on other CPUs in the system.  Required for | 
|  | k_thread_abort() to operate with reasonable latency | 
|  | (otherwise we might have to wait for the other thread to | 
|  | take an interrupt, which can be arbitrarily far in the | 
|  | future). | 
|  |  | 
|  | config TRACE_SCHED_IPI | 
|  | bool "Test IPI" | 
|  | help | 
|  | When true, it will add a hook into z_sched_ipi(), in order | 
|  | to check if schedule IPI has called or not, for testing | 
|  | purpose. | 
|  | depends on SCHED_IPI_SUPPORTED | 
|  | depends on MP_NUM_CPUS>1 | 
|  |  | 
|  | config KERNEL_COHERENCE | 
|  | bool "Place all shared data into coherent memory" | 
|  | depends on ARCH_HAS_COHERENCE | 
|  | default y if SMP && MP_NUM_CPUS > 1 | 
|  | select THREAD_STACK_INFO | 
|  | help | 
|  | When available and selected, the kernel will build in a mode | 
|  | where all shared data is placed in multiprocessor-coherent | 
|  | (generally "uncached") memory.  Thread stacks will remain | 
|  | cached, as will application memory declared with | 
|  | __incoherent.  This is intended for Zephyr SMP kernels | 
|  | running on cache-incoherent architectures only.  Note that | 
|  | when this is selected, there is an implicit API change that | 
|  | assumes cache coherence to any memory passed to the kernel. | 
|  | Code that creates kernel data structures in uncached regions | 
|  | may fail strangely.  Some assertions exist to catch these | 
|  | mistakes, but not all circumstances can be tested. | 
|  |  | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | config TICKLESS_KERNEL | 
|  | bool "Tickless kernel" | 
|  | default y if TICKLESS_CAPABLE | 
|  | depends on TICKLESS_CAPABLE | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option enables a fully event driven kernel. Periodic system | 
|  | clock interrupt generation would be stopped at all times. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config TOOLCHAIN_SUPPORTS_THREAD_LOCAL_STORAGE | 
|  | bool | 
|  | default y if "$(ZEPHYR_TOOLCHAIN_VARIANT)" = "zephyr" | 
|  | help | 
|  | Hidden option to signal that toolchain supports generating code | 
|  | with thread local storage. | 
|  |  | 
|  | config THREAD_LOCAL_STORAGE | 
|  | bool "Thread Local Storage (TLS)" | 
|  | depends on ARCH_HAS_THREAD_LOCAL_STORAGE && TOOLCHAIN_SUPPORTS_THREAD_LOCAL_STORAGE | 
|  | select NEED_LIBC_MEM_PARTITION if (CPU_CORTEX_M && USERSPACE) | 
|  | help | 
|  | This option enables thread local storage (TLS) support in kernel. | 
|  |  | 
|  | endmenu | 
|  |  | 
|  | rsource "Kconfig.vm" |