Loading drivers/block/Kconfig +0 −17 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -204,23 +204,6 @@ config BLK_DEV_COW_COMMON bool default BLK_DEV_UBD config MMAPPER tristate "Example IO memory driver (BROKEN)" depends on UML && BROKEN ---help--- The User-Mode Linux port can provide support for IO Memory emulation with this option. This allows a host file to be specified as an I/O region on the kernel command line. That file will be mapped into UML's kernel address space where a driver can locate it and do whatever it wants with the memory, including providing an interface to it for UML processes to use. For more information, see <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/iomem.html>. If you'd like to be able to provide a simulated IO port space for User-Mode Linux processes, say Y. If unsure, say N. config BLK_DEV_LOOP tristate "Loopback device support" ---help--- Loading Loading
drivers/block/Kconfig +0 −17 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -204,23 +204,6 @@ config BLK_DEV_COW_COMMON bool default BLK_DEV_UBD config MMAPPER tristate "Example IO memory driver (BROKEN)" depends on UML && BROKEN ---help--- The User-Mode Linux port can provide support for IO Memory emulation with this option. This allows a host file to be specified as an I/O region on the kernel command line. That file will be mapped into UML's kernel address space where a driver can locate it and do whatever it wants with the memory, including providing an interface to it for UML processes to use. For more information, see <http://user-mode-linux.sourceforge.net/iomem.html>. If you'd like to be able to provide a simulated IO port space for User-Mode Linux processes, say Y. If unsure, say N. config BLK_DEV_LOOP tristate "Loopback device support" ---help--- Loading