4 Find out whether you have a PCI motherboard. PCI is the name of a
5 bus system, i.e. the way the CPU talks to the other stuff inside
6 your box. If you have PCI, say Y, otherwise N.
8 The PCI-HOWTO, available from
9 <http://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>, contains valuable
10 information about which PCI hardware does work under Linux and which
13 config SH_PCIDMA_NONCOHERENT
14 bool "Cache and PCI noncoherent"
18 Enable this option if your platform does not have a CPU cache which
19 remains coherent with PCI DMA. It is safest to say 'Y', although you
20 will see better performance if you can say 'N', because the PCI DMA
21 code will not have to flush the CPU's caches. If you have a PCI host
22 bridge integrated with your SH CPU, refer carefully to the chip specs
23 to see if you can say 'N' here. Otherwise, leave it as 'Y'.
25 # This is also board-specific
31 config PCI_AUTO_UPDATE_RESOURCES
34 default y if !SH_DREAMCAST
36 Selecting this option will cause the PCI auto code to leave your
37 BAR values alone. Otherwise they will be updated automatically. If
38 for some reason, you have a board that simply refuses to work
39 with its resources updated beyond what they are when the device
40 is powered up, set this to N. Everyone else will want this as Y.