xref: /netbsd-src/share/man/man4/options.4 (revision 53b02e147d4ed531c0d2a5ca9b3e8026ba3e99b5)
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3.\" Copyright (c) 1996
4.\" 	Perry E. Metzger.  All rights reserved.
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32.\"
33.Dd November 16, 2021
34.Dt OPTIONS 4
35.Os
36.Sh NAME
37.Nm options
38.Nd Miscellaneous kernel configuration options
39.Sh SYNOPSIS
40.Cd cinclude ...
41.Cd config ...
42.Cd [no] file-system ...
43.Cd ident ...
44.Cd include ...
45.Cd [no] makeoptions ...
46.Cd maxusers ...
47.Cd [no] options ...
48.Cd [no] pseudo-device ...
49.Sh DESCRIPTION
50This manual page describes a number of miscellaneous kernel
51configuration options that may be specified in a kernel config
52file.
53See
54.Xr config 1
55and
56.Xr config 5
57for information on how to configure and build kernels.
58.Pp
59The
60.Ar no
61form removes a previously specified option.
62.Ss Keywords
63The following keywords are recognized in a kernel configuration file:
64.Bl -ohang
65.It Sy cinclude Qq Ar filename
66Conditionally includes another kernel configuration file whose name is
67.Ar filename ,
68which may be double-quoted and may be an explicit path or relative to
69the kernel source directory.
70Failure to open the named file is ignored.
71.It Sy config Ar exec_name No root on Ar rootdev Oo type Ar fstype Oc \
72Oo dumps on Ar dumpdev Oc
73Defines a configuration whose kernel executable is named
74.Ar exec_name ,
75normally
76.Dq netbsd ,
77with its root file system of type
78.Ar fstype
79on the device
80.Ar rootdev ,
81and optionally specifying the location of kernel core dumps on the device
82.Ar dumpdev .
83.Ar dev
84or
85.Ar dumpdev
86and
87.Ar fstype
88may be specified as
89.Dq \&? ,
90which is a wild card.
91The root
92.Ar fstype
93and
94.Ar dumpdev
95are optional and assumed to be wild carded if they are not specified.
96.It Ar device_instance No at Ar attachment \
97Oo Ar locators value Oo ... Oc Oc Oo flags Ar value Oc
98Define an instance of the device driver
99.Ar device_instance
100that attaches to the bus or device named
101.Ar attachment .
102An
103.Ar attachment
104may require additional information on where the device can be found, such
105as an address, channel, function, offset, and/or slot, referred to as
106.Ar locators ,
107whose
108.Ar value
109often may be a wild card,
110.Dq \&? .
111Some device drivers have one or more
112.Ar flags
113that can be adjusted to affect the way they operate.
114.It Sy file-system Ar fs_name Op , Ar fs_name Op ...
115Include support for the file-system
116.Ar fs_name .
117.It Sy ident Qq Ar string
118Sets the kernel identification string to
119.Ar string .
120.It Sy include Qq Ar filename
121Functions the same as
122.Ar cinclude ,
123except failure to open
124.Ar filename
125produces a fatal error.
126.It Sy makeoptions Ar name=value
127Defines a
128.Xr make 1
129macro
130.Ar name
131with the value
132.Ar value
133in the kernel Makefile.
134.It Sy maxusers Ar integer
135Set the maxusers variable in the kernel.
136.It Sy no Ar keyword Ar name Op Ar arguments Op ...
137For the
138.Xr config 1
139.Ar keywords
140file-system, makeoptions, options, and pseudo-device,
141.Ar no
142removes the file-system, makeoption, options, or pseudo-device,
143.Ar name .
144This is useful when a kernel configuration file includes another which
145has undesired options.
146.Pp
147For example, a local configuration file that wanted the kitchen sink, but
148not COMPAT_09 or bridging, might be:
149.Bd -literal -offset indent
150include "arch/i386/conf/GENERIC"
151no options COMPAT_09
152no pseudo-device bridge
153.Ed
154.It Sy options Ar option_name Op , Ar option_name=value Op ...
155Specifies (or sets) the option, or comma-separated list of options,
156.Ar option_name .
157Some options expect to be assigned a value, which may be an integer,
158a double-quoted word, a bare word, or an empty string
159.Pq Qq .
160Note that those are eventually handled by the C compiler, so the rules
161of that language apply.
162.Pp
163.Em Note :
164Options that are not defined by device definition files are passed to
165the compile process as
166.Fl D
167flags to the C compiler.
168.It Sy pseudo-device Ar name Op Ar N
169Includes support for the pseudo-device
170.Ar name .
171Some pseudo-devices can have multiple or
172.Ar N
173instances.
174.El
175.Ss Compatibility Options
176Note that compatibility options for older
177.Nx
178releases includes support for newer releases as well.
179This means that typically only one of these is necessary, with the
180.Cd COMPAT_09
181option enabling all
182.Nx
183compatibility.
184This does not include the
185.Cd COMPAT_43
186or
187.Cd COMPAT_44
188options.
189.Bl -ohang
190.It Cd options COMPAT_09
191Enable binary compatibility with
192.Nx 0.9 .
193This enables support for
19416-bit user, group, and process IDs (following revisions support
19532-bit identifiers).
196It also allows the use of the deprecated
197.Xr getdomainname 3 ,
198.Xr setdomainname 3 ,
199and
200.Xr uname 3
201syscalls.
202This option also allows using numeric file system identifiers rather
203than strings.
204Post
205.Nx 0.9
206versions use string identifiers.
207.It Cd options COMPAT_10
208Enable binary compatibility with
209.Nx 1.0 .
210This option allows the use of the file system name of
211.Dq ufs
212as an alias for
213.Dq ffs .
214The name
215.Dq ffs
216should be used post 1.0 in
217.Pa /etc/fstab
218and other files.
219It also adds old syscalls for the
220.At V
221shared memory interface.
222This was changed post 1.0 to work on 64-bit architectures.
223This option also enables
224.Dq sgtty
225compatibility, without which programs using the old interface produce
226an
227.Dq inappropriate ioctl
228error, and
229.Pa /dev/io
230only works when this option is set in the kernel,
231see
232.Xr io 4
233on ports that support it.
234.It Cd options COMPAT_11
235Enable binary compatibility with
236.Nx 1.1 .
237This allows binaries running on the i386 port to gain direct access to
238the io ports by opening
239.Pa /dev/io
240read/write.
241This functionality was replaced by
242.Xr i386_iopl 2
243post 1.1.
244On the Atari port, the location of the disk label was moved after 1.1.
245When the
246.Em COMPAT_11
247option is set, the kernel will read (pre) 1.1 style disk labels as a
248last resort.
249When a disk label is re-written, the old style label will be replaced
250with a post 1.1 style label.
251This also enables the
252.Em EXEC_ELF_NOTELESS
253option.
254.It Cd options COMPAT_12
255Enable binary compatibility with
256.Nx 1.2 .
257This allows the use of old syscalls for
258.Fn reboot
259and
260.Fn swapon .
261The syscall numbers were changed post 1.2 to add functionality to the
262.Xr reboot 2
263syscall, and the new
264.Xr swapctl 2
265interface was introduced.
266This also enables the
267.Em EXEC_ELF_NOTELESS
268option.
269.It Cd options COMPAT_13
270Enable binary compatibility with
271.Nx 1.3 .
272This allows the use of old syscalls for
273.Fn sigaltstack ,
274and also enables the old
275.Xr swapctl 2
276command
277.Dv SWAP_STATS
278(now called
279.Dv SWAP_OSTATS ) ,
280which does not include the
281.Fa se_path
282member of
283.Va struct swapent .
284.It Cd options COMPAT_14
285Enable binary compatibility with
286.Nx 1.4 .
287This allows some old
288.Xr ioctl 2
289on
290.Xr wscons 4
291to be performed, and allows the
292.Dv NFSSVC_BIOD
293mode of the
294.Xr nfssvc 2
295system call to be used for compatibility with the deprecated nfsiod program.
296.It Cd options COMPAT_15
297Enable binary compatibility with
298.Nx 1.5 .
299Since there were no API changes from
300.Nx 1.5
301and
302.Nx 1.6 ,
303this option does nothing.
304.It Cd options COMPAT_16
305Enable binary compatibility with
306.Nx 1.6 .
307This allows the use of old signal trampoline code which has been deprecated
308with the addition of
309.Xr siginfo 2 .
310.It Cd options COMPAT_20
311Enable binary compatibility with
312.Nx 2.0 .
313This allows the use of old syscalls for
314.Fn statfs ,
315.Fn fstatfs ,
316.Fn getfsstat
317and
318.Fn fhstatfs ,
319which have been deprecated with the addition of the
320.Xr statvfs 2 ,
321.Xr fstatvfs 2 ,
322.Xr getvfsstat 2
323and
324.Xr fhstatvfs 2
325system calls.
326.It Cd options COMPAT_30
327Enable binary compatibility with
328.Nx 3.0 .
329See
330.Xr compat_30 8
331for details about the changes made after the
332.Nx 3.0
333release.
334.It Cd options COMPAT_40
335Enable binary compatibility with
336.Nx 4.0 .
337This allows the use of old
338.Xr ptrace 2
339calls for the SH3 platform.
340It also enables the old
341.Xr mount 2
342system call that did not include the data length parameter.
343The power_event_t structure's pev_switch is filled in.
344.It Cd options COMPAT_43
345Enables compatibility with
346.Bx 4.3 .
347This adds an old syscall for
348.Xr lseek 2 .
349It also adds the ioctls for
350.Dv TIOCGETP
351and
352.Dv TIOCSETP .
353The return values for
354.Xr getpid 2 ,
355.Xr getgid 2 ,
356and
357.Xr getuid 2
358syscalls are modified as well, to return the parent's PID and
359UID as well as the current process's.
360It also enables the deprecated
361.Dv NTTYDISC
362terminal line discipline.
363It also provides backwards compatibility with
364.Dq old
365SIOC[GS]IF{ADDR,DSTADDR,BRDADDR,NETMASK} interface ioctls, including
366binary compatibility with code written before the introduction of the
367sa_len field in sockaddrs.
368It also enables
369support for some older pre
370.Bx 4.4
371socket calls.
372.It Cd options COMPAT_50
373Enable binary compatibility with
374.Nx 5.0 .
375This enables support for the old
376.Ft time_t
377and
378.Ft dev_t
379types as 32 bit, and all the associated kernel interface changes.
380It also enables old
381.Xr gpio 4
382and
383.Xr rnd 4
384interfaces.
385.It Cd options COMPAT_60
386Enable binary compatibility with
387.Nx 6.0 .
388This provides old
389.Xr ccd 4
390interfaces, enables support for old
391.Xr cpuctl 8
392microcode interfaces, and support for the old
393.Ft ptmget
394structure.
395.It Cd options COMPAT_70
396Enable binary compatibility with
397.Nx 7.0 .
398This provides support for old
399.Xr route 4
400interfaces.
401.It Cd options COMPAT_80
402Enable binary compatibility with
403.Nx 8.0 .
404.It Cd options COMPAT_90
405Enable binary compatibility with
406.Nx 9.0 .
407.It Cd options COMPAT_BSDPTY
408This option is currently on by default and enables the pty multiplexer
409.Xr ptm 4
410and
411.Xr ptmx 4
412to find and use ptys named
413.Pa /dev/ptyXX
414(master) and
415.Pa /dev/ttyXX
416(slave).
417Eventually this option will become optional as ptyfs based pseudo-ttys become
418the default, see
419.Xr mount_ptyfs 8 .
420.It Cd options COMPAT_LINUX
421On those architectures that support it, this enables binary
422compatibility with Linux ELF and
423.Xr a.out 5
424applications built for the same architecture.
425This currently includes the alpha, arm, i386, m68k, mips, powerpc and
426x86_64 ports.
427.It Cd options COMPAT_LINUX32
428On those 64 bit architectures that support it, this enables binary
429compatibility with 32 bit Linux binaries.
430For now this is limited to running i386 ELF Linux binaries on amd64.
431.It Cd options COMPAT_SUNOS
432On those architectures that support it, this enables binary
433compatibility with SunOS 4.1 applications built for the same architecture.
434This currently includes the sparc, sparc64 and most or all m68k ports.
435Note that the sparc64 requires the
436.Em COMPAT_NETBSD32
437option for 64-bit kernels, in addition to this option.
438.It Cd options COMPAT_ULTRIX
439On those architectures that support it, this enables binary
440compatibility with ULTRIX applications built for the same architecture.
441This currently is limited to the pmax.
442The functionality of this option is unknown.
443.It Cd options COMPAT_FREEBSD
444On those architectures that support it, this enables binary
445compatibility with
446.Fx
447applications built for the same architecture.
448At the moment this is limited to the i386 port.
449.It Cd options COMPAT_NOMID
450Enable compatibility with
451.Xr a.out 5
452executables that lack a machine ID.
453This includes
454.Nx 0.8 Ns 's
455ZMAGIC format, and 386BSD and BSDI's
456QMAGIC, NMAGIC, and OMAGIC
457.Xr a.out 5
458formats.
459.It Cd options COMPAT_NETBSD32
460On those architectures that support it, this enables binary
461compatibility with 32-bit applications built for the same architecture.
462This is currently limited to the amd64 and sparc64 ports, and only
463applicable for 64-bit kernels.
464.It Cd options COMPAT_AOUT_M68K
465On m68k architectures which have switched to ELF,
466this enables binary compatibility with
467.Nx Ns /m68k
468.Xr a.out 5
469executables on
470.Nx Ns /m68k
471ELF kernels.
472This handles alignment incompatibility of m68k ABI between
473a.out and ELF which causes the structure padding differences.
474Currently only some system calls which use
475.Va struct stat
476are adjusted and some binaries which use
477.Xr sysctl 3
478to retrieve network details would not work properly.
479.It Cd options EMUL_NATIVEROOT=string
480Just like emulated binaries first try looking up files in
481an emulation root (e.g.
482.Pa /emul/linux )
483before looking them up in real root, this option causes native
484binaries to first look up files in an "emulation" directory too.
485This can be useful to test an amd64 kernel on top of an i386 system
486before full migration: by unpacking the amd64 distribution in e.g.
487.Pa /emul/netbsd64
488and specifying that location as
489.Cd EMUL_NATIVEROOT ,
490native amd64 binaries can be run while the root file system remains
491populated with i386 binaries.
492Beware of
493.Pa /dev
494incompatibilities between i386 and amd64 if you do this.
495.It Cd options EXEC_ELF_NOTELESS
496Run unidentified ELF binaries as
497.Nx
498binaries.
499This might be needed for very old
500.Nx
501ELF binaries on some archs.
502These old binaries didn't contain an appropriate
503.Li .note.netbsd.ident
504section, and thus can't be identified by the kernel as
505.Nx
506binaries otherwise.
507Beware - if this option is on, the kernel would run
508.Em any
509unknown ELF binaries as if they were
510.Nx
511binaries.
512.El
513.Ss Debugging Options
514.Bl -ohang
515.It Cd options DDB
516Compiles in a kernel debugger for diagnosing kernel problems.
517See
518.Xr ddb 4
519for details.
520.Em NOTE :
521not available on all architectures.
522.It Cd options DDB_FROMCONSOLE=integer
523If set to non-zero, DDB may be entered by sending a break on a serial
524console or by a special key sequence on a graphics console.
525A value of "0" ignores console breaks or key sequences.
526If not explicitly specified, the default value is "1".
527Note that this sets the value of the
528.Em ddb.fromconsole
529.Xr sysctl 3
530variable which may be changed at run time \(em see
531.Xr sysctl 8
532for details.
533.It Cd options DDB_HISTORY_SIZE=integer
534If this is non-zero, enable history editing in the kernel debugger
535and set the size of the history to this value.
536.It Cd options DDB_ONPANIC
537The default if not specified is
538.Dq 1
539- just enter into DDB.
540If set to
541.Dq 0
542the kernel will attempt to print out a stack trace
543and reboot the system.
544If set to
545.Dq -1
546then neither a stack trace is printed or DDB entered -
547it is as if DDB were not compiled into the kernel.
548Note that this sets the value of the
549.Em ddb.onpanic
550.Xr sysctl 3
551variable which may be changed at run time \(em see
552.Xr sysctl 8
553for details.
554.It Cd options DDB_COMMANDONENTER=string
555This option specify commands which will be executed on each entry to DDB.
556This sets the default value of the
557.Em ddb.commandonenter
558.Xr sysctl 3
559variable which may be changed at run time.
560.It Cd options DDB_BREAK_CHAR=integer
561This option overrides using break to enter the kernel debugger
562on the serial console.
563The value given is the ASCII value to be used instead.
564This is currently only supported by the com driver.
565.It Cd options CNMAGIC=string
566This option overrides the
567.Xr cnmagic 9
568string used to enter the kernel debugger.
569.It Cd options DDB_VERBOSE_HELP
570This option adds more verbose descriptions to the
571.Em help
572command.
573.It Cd options DDB_PANICSTACKFRAMES=integer
574Number of stack frames to display on panic.
575Useful to avoid scrolling away the interesting frames on a glass tty.
576Default value is
577.Dv 65535
578(all frames), useful value around
579.Dv 10 .
580.It Cd options KGDB
581Compiles in a remote kernel debugger stub for diagnosing kernel problems
582using the
583.Dq remote target
584feature of gdb.
585See
586.Xr gdb 1
587for details.
588.Em NOTE :
589not available on all architectures.
590.It Cd options KGDB_DEV
591Device number
592.Po
593as a
594.Dv dev_t
595.Pc
596of kgdb device.
597.It Cd options KGDB_DEVADDR
598Memory address of kgdb device.
599.It Cd options KGDB_DEVMODE
600Permissions of kgdb device.
601.It Cd options KGDB_DEVNAME
602Device name of kgdb device.
603.It Cd options KGDB_DEVRATE
604Baud rate of kgdb device.
605.It Cd makeoptions DEBUG="-g"
606The
607.Fl g
608flag causes
609.Pa netbsd.gdb
610to be built in addition to
611.Pa netbsd .
612.Pa netbsd.gdb
613is useful for debugging kernel crash dumps with gdb.
614See
615.Xr gdb 1
616for details.
617.It Cd options DEBUG
618Turns on miscellaneous kernel debugging.
619Since options are turned into preprocessor defines (see above),
620.Em options DEBUG
621is equivalent to doing a
622.Em #define DEBUG
623throughout the kernel.
624Much of the kernel has
625.Em #ifdef DEBUG
626conditionalized debugging code.
627Note that many parts of the kernel (typically device drivers) include their own
628.Em #ifdef XXX_DEBUG
629conditionals instead.
630This option also turns on certain other options,
631which may decrease system performance.
632Systems with this option are not suitable for regular use, and are
633intended only for debugging or looking for bugs.
634.It Cd options DIAGNOSTIC
635Adds code to the kernel that does internal consistency checks.
636This code will cause the kernel to panic if corruption of internal data
637structures is detected.
638Historically, the performance degradation is sufficiently small that
639it is reasonable for systems with
640.Em options DIAGNOSTIC
641to be in production use, with the real consideration not being
642performance but instead a preference for more panics versus continued
643operation with undetected problems.
644.It Cd options LOCKDEBUG
645Adds code to the kernel to detect incorrect use of locking primitives
646(mutex, rwlock).
647This code will cause the kernel to check for dead lock conditions.
648It will also check for memory being freed to not contain initialised
649lock primitives.
650Functions for use in
651.Xr ddb 4
652to check lock chains etc. are also enabled.
653These checks are very expensive and can decrease performance on
654multi-processor machines by a factor of three.
655.It Cd options KDTRACE_HOOKS
656Adds hooks for the DTrace tracing facility, which allows users to
657analyze many aspects of system and application behavior.
658See
659.Xr dtrace 1
660for details.
661.It Cd options KSTACK_CHECK_MAGIC
662Check kernel stack usage and panic if stack overflow is detected.
663This check is performance sensitive because it scans stack on each context
664switch.
665.It Cd options KTRACE
666Add hooks for the system call tracing facility, which allows users to
667watch the system call invocation behavior of processes.
668See
669.Xr ktrace 1
670for details.
671.It Cd options MSGBUFSIZE=integer
672This option sets the size of the kernel message buffer.
673This buffer holds the kernel output of
674.Fn printf
675when not (yet) read by
676.Xr syslogd 8 .
677This is particularly useful when the system has crashed and you wish to lookup
678the kernel output from just before the crash.
679Also, since the autoconfig output becomes more and more verbose,
680it sometimes happens that the message buffer overflows before
681.Xr syslogd 8
682was able to read it.
683Note that not all systems are capable of obtaining a variable sized message
684buffer.
685There are also some systems on which memory contents are not preserved
686across reboots.
687.It Cd options KERNHIST
688Enables the kernel history logs, which create in-memory traces of
689various kernel activities.
690These logs can be displayed by using
691.Cm show kernhist
692from DDB.
693See the kernel source file
694.Pa sys/kern/kern_history.c
695and the
696.Xr kernhist 9
697manual for details.
698.It Cd options KERNHIST_PRINT
699Prints the kernel history logs on the system console as entries are added.
700Note that the output is
701.Em extremely
702voluminous, so this option is really only useful for debugging
703the very earliest parts of kernel initialization.
704.It Cd options UVMHIST
705Like
706.Em KERNHIST ,
707it enables the UVM history logs.
708These logs can be displayed by using
709.Cm show kernhist
710from DDB.
711See the kernel source file
712.Pa sys/uvm/uvm_stat.c
713for details.
714.It Cd options UVMHIST_PRINT
715Like
716.Em UVMHIST ,
717it prints the UVM history logs on the system console as entries are added.
718Note that the output is
719.Em extremely
720voluminous, so this option is really only useful for debugging
721the very earliest parts of kernel initialization.
722.It Cd options UVMHIST_MAPHIST_SIZE
723Set the size of the
724.Dq maphist
725kernel history.
726The default is 100.
727This option depends upon the
728.Em UVMHIST
729option.
730.It Cd options UVMHIST_PDHIST_SIZE
731Set the size of the
732.Dq pdhist
733kernel history.
734The default is 100.
735This option depends upon the
736.Em UVMHIST
737option.
738.It Cd options BIOHIST
739Like
740.Em KERNHIST ,
741it enables the BIO history logs.
742These logs can be displayed by using
743.Cm show kernhist
744from DDB, and can help in debugging problems with Buffered I/O operations.
745See the kernel source file
746.Pa sys/kern/vfs_vio.c
747for details.
748.It Cd options BIOHIST_PRINT
749Like
750.Em BIOHIST ,
751it prints the BIO history logs on the system console as entries are added.
752Note that the output is
753.Em extremely
754voluminous, so this option is really only useful for debugging
755the very earliest parts of kernel initialization.
756.It Cd options BIOHIST_SIZE
757Set the size of the
758.Dq biohist
759kernel history.
760The default is 500.
761This option depends upon the
762.Em BIOHIST
763option.
764.El
765.Ss File Systems
766.Bl -ohang
767.It Cd file-system FFS
768Includes code implementing the Berkeley Fast File System
769.Po Em FFS Pc .
770Most machines need this if they are not running diskless.
771.It Cd file-system EXT2FS
772Includes code implementing the Second Extended File System
773.Po Em ext2 Pc ,
774revision 0 and revision 1 with the
775.Em filetype ,
776.Em sparse_super
777and
778.Em large_file
779options.
780This is the most commonly used file system on the Linux operating system,
781and is provided here for compatibility.
782Some of the specific features of
783.Em ext2
784like the "behavior on errors" are not implemented.
785See
786.Xr mount_ext2fs 8
787for details.
788.It Cd file-system LFS
789.Bq Em EXPERIMENTAL
790Include the Log-structured File System
791.Po Em LFS Pc .
792See
793.Xr mount_lfs 8
794and
795.Xr newfs_lfs 8
796for details.
797.It Cd file-system MFS
798Include the Memory File System
799.Po Em MFS Pc .
800This file system stores files in swappable memory, and produces
801notable performance improvements when it is used as the file store
802for
803.Pa /tmp
804and similar file systems.
805See
806.Xr mount_mfs 8
807for details.
808.It Cd file-system NFS
809Include the client side of the Network File System (NFS)
810remote file sharing protocol.
811Although the bulk of the code implementing NFS
812is kernel based, several user level daemons are needed for it to work.
813See
814.Xr mount_nfs 8
815for details.
816.It Cd file-system CD9660
817Includes code for the ISO 9660 + Rock Ridge file system, which is
818the standard file system on many CD-ROM discs.
819Useful primarily if you have a CD-ROM drive.
820See
821.Xr mount_cd9660 8
822for details.
823.It Cd file-system MSDOSFS
824Includes the MS-DOS FAT file system, which is reportedly still used
825by unfortunate people who have not heard about
826.Nx .
827Also implements the Windows 95 extensions to the same, which permit
828the use of longer, mixed case file names.
829See
830.Xr mount_msdos 8
831and
832.Xr fsck_msdos 8
833for details.
834.It Cd file-system NTFS
835.Bq Em EXPERIMENTAL
836Includes code for the Microsoft Windows NT file system.
837See
838.Xr mount_ntfs 8
839for details.
840.It Cd file-system FDESC
841Includes code for a file system, conventionally mounted on
842.Pa /dev/fd ,
843which permits access to the per-process file descriptor space via
844special files in the file system.
845See
846.Xr mount_fdesc 8
847for details.
848Note that this facility is redundant, and thus unneeded on most
849.Nx
850systems, since the
851.Xr fd 4
852pseudo-device driver already provides identical functionality.
853On most
854.Nx
855systems, instances of
856.Xr fd 4
857are mknoded under
858.Pa /dev/fd/
859and on
860.Pa /dev/stdin ,
861.Pa /dev/stdout ,
862and
863.Pa /dev/stderr .
864.It Cd file-system KERNFS
865Includes code which permits the mounting of a special file system
866(normally mounted on
867.Pa /kern )
868in which files representing various kernel variables and parameters
869may be found.
870See
871.Xr mount_kernfs 8
872for details.
873.It Cd file-system NULLFS
874Includes code for a loopback file system.
875This permits portions of the file hierarchy to be re-mounted in other places.
876The code really exists to provide an example of a stackable file system layer.
877See
878.Xr mount_null 8
879for details.
880.It Cd file-system OVERLAY
881Includes code for a file system filter.
882This permits the overlay file system to intercept all access to an underlying
883file system.
884This file system is intended to serve as an example of a stacking file
885system which has a need to interpose itself between an underlying file
886system and all other access.
887See
888.Xr mount_overlay 8
889for details.
890.It Cd file-system PROCFS
891Includes code for a special file system (conventionally mounted on
892.Pa /proc )
893in which the process space becomes visible in the file system.
894Among
895other things, the memory spaces of processes running on the system are
896visible as files, and signals may be sent to processes by writing to
897.Pa ctl
898files in the procfs namespace.
899See
900.Xr mount_procfs 8
901for details.
902.It Cd file-system UDF
903.Bq Em EXPERIMENTAL
904Includes code for the UDF file system commonly found on CD and DVD
905media but also on USB sticks.
906Currently supports read and write access up to UDF 2.01 and somewhat limited
907write support for UDF 2.50.
908It is marked experimental since there is no
909.Xr fsck_udf 8 .
910See
911.Xr mount_udf 8
912for details.
913.It Cd file-system UMAPFS
914Includes a loopback file system in which user and group IDs may be
915remapped \(em this can be useful when mounting alien file systems with
916different UIDs and GIDs than the local system.
917See
918.Xr mount_umap 8
919for details.
920.It Cd file-system UNION
921.Bq Em EXPERIMENTAL
922Includes code for the union file system, which permits directories to
923be mounted on top of each other in such a way that both file systems
924remain visible \(em this permits tricks like allowing writing (and the
925deleting of files) on a read-only file system like a CD-ROM by
926mounting a local writable file system on top of the read-only file
927system.
928See
929.Xr mount_union 8
930for details.
931.It Cd file-system CODA
932.Bq Em EXPERIMENTAL
933Includes code for the Coda file system.
934Coda is a distributed file system like NFS and AFS.
935It is freely available, like NFS, but it functions much like AFS in being a
936.Dq stateful
937file system.
938Both Coda and AFS cache files on your local machine to improve performance.
939Then Coda goes a step further than AFS by letting you access the cached
940files when there is no available network, viz. disconnected laptops and
941network outages.
942In Coda, both the client and server are outside the kernel which makes
943them easier to experiment with.
944Coda is available for several UNIX and non-UNIX platforms.
945See
946.Lk http://www.coda.cs.cmu.edu
947for more details.
948.Em NOTE :
949You also need to enable the pseudo-device, vcoda, for the Coda
950file system to work.
951.It Cd file-system PTYFS
952Includes code for a special file system (normally mounted on
953.Pa /dev/pts )
954in which pseudo-terminal slave devices become visible in the file system.
955See
956.Xr mount_ptyfs 8
957for details.
958.It Cd file-system TMPFS
959Includes code for the efficient memory file system, normally used over
960.Pa /tmp .
961See
962.Xr mount_tmpfs 8
963for details.
964.It Cd file-system PUFFS
965Includes kernel support for the pass-to-userspace framework file system.
966It can be used to implement file system functionality in userspace.
967See
968.Xr puffs 3
969for more details.
970This enables for example sshfs:
971.Xr mount_psshfs 8 .
972.El
973.Ss File System Options
974.Bl -ohang
975.It Cd options DISKLABEL_EI
976Enable
977.Dq Endian-Independent
978.Xr disklabel 5
979support.
980This allows a system to recognize a disklabel written in the other byte order.
981For writing, when a label already exists, its byte order is preserved.
982Otherwise, a new label is written in the native byte order.
983To specify the byte order explicitly, the
984.Fl F
985option of
986.Xr disklabel 8
987should be used with the
988.Fl B
989option in order to avoid using
990.Xr ioctl 2 ,
991which results in the default behavior explained above.
992At the moment this option is restricted to the following ports:
993amd64, bebox, emips, epoc32, evbarm, i386, ibmnws, landisk, mvmeppc, prep,
994.\" riscv,
995rs6000, sandpoint,
996.\" usermode,
997xen, and zaurus;
998also to machines of the
999evbmips and evbppc ports that support
1000Master Boot Record (MBR).
1001.It Cd options MAGICLINKS
1002Enables the expansion of special strings
1003.Po
1004beginning with
1005.Dq @
1006.Pc
1007when traversing symbolic links.
1008See
1009.Xr symlink 7
1010for a list of supported strings.
1011Note that this option only controls the enabling of this feature
1012by the kernel at boot-up.
1013This feature can still be manipulated with the
1014.Xr sysctl 8
1015command regardless of the setting of this option.
1016.It Cd options NFSSERVER
1017Include the server side of the
1018.Em NFS
1019(Network File System) remote file sharing protocol.
1020Although the bulk of the code implementing
1021.Em NFS
1022is kernel based, several user level daemons are needed for it to
1023work.
1024See
1025.Xr mountd 8
1026and
1027.Xr nfsd 8
1028for details.
1029.It Cd options NVNODE=integer
1030This option sets the size of the cache used by the name-to-inode translation
1031routines, (a.k.a. the
1032.Fn namei
1033cache, though called by many other names in the kernel source).
1034By default, this cache has
1035.Dv ( NPROC + NTEXT + 100 )
1036entries (NPROC set as 20 + 16 * MAXUSERS and NTEXT as 80 + NPROC / 8).
1037A reasonable way to derive a value of
1038.Dv NVNODE ,
1039should you notice a large number of namei cache misses with a tool such as
1040.Xr systat 1 ,
1041is to examine your system's current computed value with
1042.Xr sysctl 8 ,
1043(which calls this parameter "kern.maxvnodes") and to increase this value
1044until either the namei cache hit rate improves or it is determined that
1045your system does not benefit substantially from an increase in the size of
1046the namei cache.
1047.It Cd options NAMECACHE_ENTER_REVERSE
1048Causes the namei cache to always enter a reverse mapping (vnode -> name)
1049as well as a normal one.
1050Normally, this is already done for directory vnodes, to speed up the getcwd
1051operation.
1052This option will cause longer hash chains in the reverse cache, and thus
1053slow down getcwd somewhat.
1054However, it does make vnode -> path translations possible in some cases.
1055For now, only useful if strict
1056.Pa /proc/#/maps
1057emulation for Linux binaries is required.
1058.El
1059.Ss Options for FFS/UFS File Systems
1060.Bl -ohang
1061.It Cd options APPLE_UFS
1062Enable support for UFS file systems created on Mac OS X.
1063.It Cd options FFS_EI
1064Enable
1065.Dq Endian-Independent
1066FFS support.
1067This allows a system to mount an FFS file system created for another
1068architecture, at a small performance cost for all FFS file systems.
1069See also
1070.Xr newfs 8 ,
1071.Xr fsck_ffs 8 ,
1072.Xr dumpfs 8
1073for file system byte order status and manipulation.
1074.It Cd options FFS_NO_SNAPSHOT
1075Disable support for the creation of file system internal snapshot
1076of FFS file systems.
1077Maybe useful for install media kernels, small memory systems and
1078embedded systems which don't require the snapshot support.
1079.It Cd options QUOTA
1080Enables kernel support for traditional quotas in FFS.
1081Traditional quotas store the quota information in external files and
1082require
1083.Xr quotacheck 8
1084and
1085.Xr quotaon 8
1086at boot time.
1087Traditional quotas are limited to 32-bit sizes and are at this point
1088considered a legacy feature.
1089.It Cd options QUOTA2
1090Enables kernel support for in-volume quotas in FFS.
1091The quota information is file system metadata maintained by
1092.Xr fsck 8
1093and/or WAPBL journaling.
1094MFS volumes can also use
1095.Dv QUOTA2
1096quotas; see
1097.Xr mount_mfs 8
1098for more information.
1099.It Cd options UFS_DIRHASH
1100Increase lookup performance by maintaining in-core hash tables
1101for large directories.
1102.It Cd options UFS_EXTATTR
1103Enable extended attribute support for UFS1 file systems.
1104.It Cd options WAPBL
1105Enable
1106.Dq Write Ahead Physical Block Logging file system journaling .
1107This provides rapid file system consistency checking after a system outage.
1108It also provides better general use performance over regular FFS.
1109See also
1110.Xr wapbl 4 .
1111.El
1112.Ss Options for the LFS File System
1113.Bl -ohang
1114.\" .It Cd options LFS_KERNEL_RFW
1115.\" There is no documentation for this. (XXX)
1116.\" .It Cd options LFS_QUOTA
1117.\" Enable traditional quota support for LFS.
1118.\" (It is not clear if this works.)
1119.\" .It Cd options LFS_QUOTA2
1120.\" Enable modernized 64-bit quota support for LFS.
1121.\" (This does not work yet.)
1122.It Cd options LFS_EI
1123Enable
1124.Dq Endian-Independent
1125LFS support.
1126This allows (at a small performance cost) mounting an LFS file system
1127created for another architecture.
1128.\" .It Cd options LFS_EXTATTR
1129.\" Enable extended attribute support for LFS.
1130.\" (It is not clear if this works.)
1131.It Cd options LFS_DIRHASH
1132Increase lookup performance by maintaining in-core hash tables
1133for large directories.
1134.El
1135.Ss Options for the ext2fs File System
1136.Bl -ohang
1137.It Cd options EXT2FS_SYSTEM_FLAGS
1138This option changes the behavior of the APPEND and IMMUTABLE flags
1139for a file on an
1140.Em ext2
1141file system.
1142Without this option, the superuser or owner of the file can
1143set and clear them.
1144With this option, only the superuser can set them, and
1145they can't be cleared if the securelevel is greater than 0.
1146See also
1147.Xr chflags 1
1148and
1149.Xr secmodel_securelevel 9 .
1150.El
1151.Ss Options for the NFS File System
1152.Bl -ohang
1153.It Cd options NFS_BOOT_BOOTP
1154Enable use of the BOOTP protocol (RFCs 951 and 1048) to get configuration
1155information if NFS is used to mount the root file system.
1156See
1157.Xr diskless 8
1158for details.
1159.It Cd options NFS_BOOT_BOOTSTATIC
1160Enable use of static values defined as
1161.Dq NFS_BOOTSTATIC_MYIP ,
1162.Dq NFS_BOOTSTATIC_GWIP ,
1163.Dq NFS_BOOTSTATIC_SERVADDR ,
1164and
1165.Dq NFS_BOOTSTATIC_SERVER
1166in kernel options to get configuration information
1167if NFS is used to mount the root file system.
1168.It Cd options NFS_BOOT_DHCP
1169Same as
1170.Dq NFS_BOOT_BOOTP ,
1171but use the DHCP extensions to the
1172BOOTP protocol (RFC 1541).
1173.It Cd options NFS_BOOT_BOOTP_REQFILE
1174Specifies the string sent in the bp_file field of the BOOTP/DHCP
1175request packet.
1176.It Cd options NFS_BOOT_BOOTPARAM
1177Enable use of the BOOTPARAM protocol, consisting of RARP and
1178BOOTPARAM RPC, to get configuration information if NFS
1179is used to mount the root file system.
1180See
1181.Xr diskless 8
1182for details.
1183.It Cd options NFS_BOOT_RWSIZE=value
1184Set the initial NFS read and write sizes for diskless-boot requests.
1185The normal default is 8Kbytes.
1186This option provides a way to lower the value (e.g., to 1024 bytes)
1187as a workaround for buggy network interface cards or boot PROMs.
1188Once booted, the read and write request sizes can be increased by
1189remounting the file system.
1190See
1191.Xr mount_nfs 8
1192for details.
1193.It Cd options NFS_V2_ONLY
1194Reduce the size of the NFS client code by omitting code that's only required
1195for NFSv3 and NQNFS support, leaving only that code required to use NFSv2
1196servers.
1197.It Cd options NFS_BOOT_UDP
1198Use NFS over UDP instead of the default TCP, for mounting root.
1199.El
1200.Ss Buffer queue strategy options
1201The following options enable alternative buffer queue strategies.
1202.Bl -ohang
1203.It Cd options BUFQ_READPRIO
1204Enable alternate buffer queue strategy for disk I/O.
1205In the default strategy, outstanding disk requests are ordered by
1206sector number and sent to the disk, regardless of whether the
1207operation is a read or write; this option gives priority to issuing
1208read requests over write requests.
1209Although requests may therefore be issued out of sector-order, causing
1210more seeks and thus lower overall throughput, interactive system
1211responsiveness under heavy disk I/O load may be improved, as processes
1212blocking on disk reads are serviced sooner (file writes typically
1213don't cause applications to block).
1214The performance effect varies greatly depending on the hardware, drive
1215firmware, file system configuration, workload, and desired performance
1216trade-off.
1217Systems using drive write-cache (most modern IDE disks, by default)
1218are unlikely to benefit and may well suffer; such disks acknowledge
1219writes very quickly, and optimize them internally according to
1220physical layout.
1221Giving these disks as many requests to work with as possible (the
1222standard strategy) will typically produce the best results, especially
1223if the drive has a large cache; the drive will silently complete
1224writes from cache as it seeks for reads.
1225Disks that support a large number of concurrent tagged requests (SCSI
1226disks and many hardware RAID controllers) expose this internal
1227scheduling with tagged responses, and don't block for reads; such
1228disks may not see a noticeable difference with either strategy.
1229However, if IDE disks are run with write-cache disabled for safety,
1230writes are not acknowledged until actually completed, and only one
1231request can be outstanding; a large number of small writes in one
1232locality can keep the disk busy, starving reads elsewhere on the disk.
1233Such systems are likely to see the most benefit from this option.
1234Finally, the performance interaction of this option with ffs soft
1235dependencies can be subtle, as that mechanism can drastically alter
1236the workload for file system metadata writes.
1237.It Cd options BUFQ_PRIOCSCAN
1238Enable another buffer queue strategy for disk I/O, per-priority cyclical scan.
1239.It Cd options NEW_BUFQ_STRATEGY
1240Synonym of
1241.Em BUFQ_READPRIO .
1242.El
1243.Ss Miscellaneous Options
1244.Bl -ohang
1245.It Cd options CPU_UCODE
1246Support cpu microcode loading via
1247.Xr cpuctl 8 .
1248.It Cd options MEMORY_DISK_DYNAMIC
1249This option makes the
1250.Xr md 4
1251RAM disk size dynamically sized.
1252It is incompatible with
1253.Xr mdsetimage 8 .
1254.It Cd options MEMORY_DISK_HOOKS
1255This option allows for some machine dependent functions to be called when
1256the
1257.Xr md 4
1258RAM disk driver is configured.
1259This can result in automatically loading a RAM disk from floppy on
1260open (among other things).
1261.It Cd options MEMORY_DISK_IS_ROOT
1262Forces the
1263.Xr md 4
1264RAM disk to be the root device.
1265This can only be overridden when
1266the kernel is booted in the 'ask-for-root' mode.
1267.It Cd options MEMORY_DISK_ROOT_SIZE=integer
1268Allocates the given number of 512 byte blocks as memory for the
1269.Xr md 4
1270RAM disk, to be populated with
1271.Xr mdsetimage 8 .
1272.It Cd options MEMORY_DISK_SERVER=0
1273Do not include the interface to a userland memory disk server process.
1274Per default, this option is set to 1, including the support code.
1275Useful for install media kernels.
1276.It Cd options MEMORY_DISK_RBFLAGS=value
1277This option sets the
1278.Xr reboot 2
1279flags used when booting with a memory disk as root file system.
1280Possible values include
1281.Dv RB_AUTOBOOT
1282(boot in the usual fashion - default value), and
1283.Dv RB_SINGLE
1284(boot in single-user mode).
1285.It Cd options MODULAR
1286Enables the framework for kernel modules (see
1287.Xr module 7 ) .
1288.It Cd options MODULAR_DEFAULT_AUTOLOAD
1289Enables the autoloading of kernel modules by default.
1290This sets the default value of the
1291.Em kern.module.autoload
1292.Xr sysctl 3
1293variable which may be changed at run time.
1294.It Cd options VND_COMPRESSION
1295Enables the
1296.Xr vnd 4
1297driver to also handle compressed images.
1298See
1299.Xr vndcompress 1 ,
1300.Xr vnd 4
1301and
1302.Xr vnconfig 8
1303for more information.
1304.It Cd options SPLDEBUG
1305Help the kernel programmer find bugs related to the interrupt priority
1306level.
1307When
1308.Fn spllower
1309or
1310.Fn splraise
1311changes the current CPU's interrupt priority level to or from
1312.Dv IPL_HIGH ,
1313record a backtrace.
1314Read
1315.Xr i386/return_address 9
1316for caveats about collecting backtraces.
1317This feature is experimental, and it is only available on i386.
1318See
1319.Pa sys/kern/subr_spldebug.c .
1320.It Cd options TFTPROOT
1321Download the root memory disk through TFTP at root mount time.
1322This enables the use of a root RAM disk without requiring it to be
1323embedded in the kernel using
1324.Xr mdsetimage 8 .
1325The RAM disk name is obtained using DHCP's filename parameter.
1326This option requires
1327.Em MEMORY_DISK_HOOKS
1328and
1329.Em MEMORY_DISK_DYNAMIC .
1330It is incompatible with
1331.Em MEMORY_DISK_ROOT_SIZE .
1332.It Cd options HZ=integer
1333On ports that support it, set the system clock frequency (see
1334.Xr hz 9 )
1335to the supplied value.
1336Handle with care.
1337.It Cd options NTP
1338Turns on in-kernel precision timekeeping support used by software
1339implementing
1340.Em NTP
1341(Network Time Protocol, RFC 1305).
1342The
1343.Em NTP
1344option adds an in-kernel Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) for normal
1345.Em NTP
1346operation, and a Frequency-Locked Loop (FLL) for intermittently-connected
1347operation.
1348.Xr ntpd 8
1349will employ a user-level PLL when kernel support is unavailable,
1350but the in-kernel version has lower latency and more precision, and
1351so typically keeps much better time.
1352.Pp
1353The interface to the kernel
1354.Em NTP
1355support is provided by the
1356.Xr ntp_adjtime 2
1357and
1358.Xr ntp_gettime 2
1359system calls, which are intended for use by
1360.Xr ntpd 8
1361and are enabled by the option.
1362On systems with sub-microsecond resolution timers, or where (HZ/100000)
1363is not an integer, the
1364.Em NTP
1365option also enables extended-precision arithmetic to keep track of
1366fractional clock ticks at NTP time-format precision.
1367.It Cd options PPS_SYNC
1368This option enables a kernel serial line discipline for receiving time
1369phase signals from an external reference clock such as a radio clock.
1370.Po
1371The
1372.Em NTP
1373option (which see) must be on if the
1374.Em PPS_SYNC
1375option is used
1376.Pc .
1377Some reference clocks generate a Pulse Per Second (PPS) signal in
1378phase with their time source.
1379The
1380.Em PPS
1381line discipline receives this signal on either the data leads
1382or the DCD control lead of a serial port.
1383.Pp
1384.Em NTP
1385uses the PPS signal to discipline the local clock oscillator to a high
1386degree of precision (typically less than 50 microseconds in time and
13870.1 ppm in accuracy).
1388.Em PPS
1389can also generate a serial output pulse when the system receives a PPS
1390interrupt.
1391This can be used to measure the system interrupt latency and thus calibrate
1392.Em NTP
1393to account for it.
1394Using
1395.Em PPS
1396usually requires a gadget box
1397to convert from TTL to RS-232 signal levels.
1398The gadget box and PPS are described in more detail in the HTML documentation
1399for
1400.Xr ntpd 8
1401in
1402.Pa /usr/share/doc/html/ntp .
1403.Pp
1404.Nx
1405currently supports this option in
1406.Xr com 4
1407and
1408.Xr zsc 4 .
1409.It Cd options SETUIDSCRIPTS
1410Allows scripts with the setuid bit set to execute as the effective
1411user rather than the real user, just like binary executables.
1412.Pp
1413.Em NOTE :
1414Using this option will also enable
1415.Em options FDSCRIPTS
1416.It Cd options FDSCRIPTS
1417Allows execution of scripts with the execute bit set, but not the
1418read bit, by opening the file and passing the file descriptor to
1419the shell, rather than the filename.
1420.Pp
1421.Em NOTE :
1422Execute only (non-readable) scripts will have
1423.Va argv[0]
1424set to
1425.Pa /dev/fd/* .
1426What this option allows as far as security is
1427concerned, is the ability to safely ensure that the correct script
1428is run by the interpreter, as it is passed as an already open file.
1429.It Cd options RTC_OFFSET=integer
1430The kernel (and typically the hardware battery backed-up clock on
1431those machines that have one) keeps time in
1432.Em UTC
1433(Universal Coordinated Time, once known as
1434.Em GMT ,
1435or Greenwich Mean Time)
1436and not in the time of the local time zone.
1437The
1438.Em RTC_OFFSET
1439option is used on some ports (such as the i386) to tell the kernel
1440that the hardware clock is offset from
1441.Em UTC
1442by the specified number of minutes.
1443This is typically used when a machine boots several operating
1444systems and one of them wants the hardware clock to run in the
1445local time zone and not in
1446.Em UTC ,
1447e.g.
1448.Em RTC_OFFSET=300
1449means
1450the hardware clock is set to US Eastern Time (300 minutes behind
1451.Em UTC ) ,
1452and not
1453.Em UTC .
1454(Note:
1455.Em RTC_OFFSET
1456is used to initialize a kernel variable named
1457.Va rtc_offset
1458which is the source actually used to determine the clock offset, and
1459which may be accessed via the kern.rtc_offset sysctl variable.
1460See
1461.Xr sysctl 8
1462and
1463.Xr sysctl 3
1464for details.
1465Since the kernel clock is initialized from the hardware clock very
1466early in the boot process, it is not possible to meaningfully change
1467.Va rtc_offset
1468in system initialization scripts.
1469Changing this value currently may only be done at kernel compile
1470time or by patching the kernel and rebooting).
1471.Pp
1472.Em NOTE :
1473Unfortunately, in many cases where the hardware clock
1474is kept in local time, it is adjusted for Daylight Savings
1475Time; this means that attempting to use
1476.Em RTC_OFFSET
1477to let
1478.Nx
1479coexist with such an operating system, like Windows,
1480would necessitate changing
1481.Em RTC_OFFSET
1482twice a year.
1483As such, this solution is imperfect.
1484.It Cd options MAXUPRC=integer
1485Sets the soft
1486.Dv RLIMIT_NPROC
1487resource limit, which specifies the maximum number of simultaneous
1488processes a user is permitted to run, for process 0;
1489this value is inherited by its child processes.
1490It defaults to
1491.Em CHILD_MAX ,
1492which is currently defined to be 160.
1493Setting
1494.Em MAXUPRC
1495to a value less than
1496.Em CHILD_MAX
1497is not permitted, as this would result in a violation of the semantics of
1498.St -p1003.1-90 .
1499.It Cd options NOFILE=integer
1500Sets the soft
1501.Dv RLIMIT_NOFILE
1502resource limit, which specifies the maximum number of open
1503file descriptors for each process;
1504this value is inherited by its child processes.
1505It defaults to
1506.Em OPEN_MAX ,
1507which is currently defined to be 128.
1508.It Cd options MAXFILES=integer
1509Sets the default value of the
1510.Em kern.maxfiles
1511sysctl variable, which indicates the maximum number of files that may
1512be open in the system.
1513.It Cd options DEFCORENAME=string
1514Sets the default value of the
1515.Em kern.defcorename
1516sysctl variable, otherwise it is set to
1517.Nm %n.core .
1518See
1519.Xr sysctl 8
1520and
1521.Xr sysctl 3
1522for details.
1523.It Cd options RASOPS_CLIPPING
1524Enables clipping within the
1525.Nm rasops
1526raster-console output system.
1527.Em NOTE :
1528only available on architectures that use
1529.Nm rasops
1530for console output.
1531.It Cd options RASOPS_SMALL
1532Removes optimized character writing code from the
1533.Nm rasops
1534raster-console output system.
1535.Em NOTE :
1536only available on architectures that use
1537.Nm rasops
1538for console output.
1539.It Cd options INCLUDE_CONFIG_FILE
1540Embeds the kernel config file used to define the kernel in the kernel
1541binary itself.
1542The embedded data also includes any files directly included by the config
1543file itself, e.g.
1544.Pa GENERIC.local
1545or
1546.Pa std.$MACHINE .
1547The embedded config file can be extracted from the resulting kernel with
1548.Xr config 1
1549.Fl x ,
1550or by the following command:
1551.Bd -literal -offset indent
1552strings netbsd | sed -n 's/^_CFG_//p' | unvis
1553.Ed
1554.It Cd options INCLUDE_JUST_CONFIG
1555Similar to the above option, but includes just the actual config file,
1556not any included files.
1557.It Cd options PIPE_SOCKETPAIR
1558Use slower, but smaller socketpair(2)-based pipe implementation instead
1559of default faster, but bigger one.
1560Primarily useful for installation kernels.
1561.It Cd options USERCONF
1562Compiles in the in-kernel device configuration manager.
1563See
1564.Xr userconf 4
1565for details.
1566.It Cd options SCDEBUG_DEFAULT
1567Used with the
1568.Cd options SYSCALL_DEBUG
1569described below to choose which types of events are displayed.
1570.Pp
1571.Bl -tag -width "SCDEBUG_KERNHIST" -compact -offset indent
1572.It Dv SCDEBUG_CALLS
1573Show system call entry points.
1574.It Dv SCDEBUG_RETURNS
1575Show system call exit points.
1576.It Dv SCDEBUG_ALL
1577Show all system call requests, including unimplemented calls.
1578.It Dv SCDEBUG_SHOWARGS
1579Show the arguments provided.
1580.It Dv SCDEBUG_KERNHIST
1581Store a restricted form of the system call debug in a kernel history
1582instead of printing it to the console.
1583This option relies upon
1584.Cd options KERNHIST .
1585.El
1586.Pp
1587The default value is
1588.Dv (SCDEBUG_CALLS|SCDEBUG_RETURNS|SCDEBUG_SHOWARGS) .
1589.It Cd options SYSCALL_DEBUG
1590Useful for debugging system call issues, usually in early single user bringup.
1591By default, writes entries to the system console for most system call events.
1592Can be configured with the
1593.Cd options SCDEBUG_DEFAULT
1594option to to use the
1595.Cd options KERNHIST
1596facility instead.
1597.It Cd options SYSCALL_STATS
1598Count the number of times each system call number is called.
1599The values can be read through the sysctl interface and displayed using
1600.Xr systat 1 .
1601.Em NOTE :
1602not yet available on all architectures.
1603.It Cd options SYSCALL_TIMES
1604Count the time spent (using
1605.Fn cpu_counter32 )
1606in each system call.
1607.Em NOTE :
1608Using this option will also enable
1609.Cd options SYSCALL_STATS .
1610.It Cd options SYSCALL_TIMES_HASCOUNTER
1611Force use of
1612.Fn cpu_counter32
1613even if
1614.Fn cpu_hascounter
1615reports false.
1616Useful for systems where the cycle counter doesn't run at a constant rate
1617(e.g. Soekris boxes).
1618.It Cd options XSERVER_DDB
1619A supplement to XSERVER that adds support for entering
1620.Xr ddb 4
1621while in X11.
1622.It Cd options FILEASSOC
1623Support for
1624.Xr fileassoc 9 .
1625Required for
1626.Cd options PAX_SEGVGUARD
1627and
1628.Cd pseudo-device veriexec .
1629.It Cd options FILEASSOC_NHOOKS=integer
1630Number of storage slots per file for
1631.Xr fileassoc 9 .
1632Default is 4.
1633.El
1634.Ss Networking Options
1635.Bl -ohang
1636.It Cd options GATEWAY
1637Enables
1638.Em IPFORWARDING
1639and (on most ports) increases the size of
1640.Em NMBCLUSTERS .
1641In general,
1642.Em GATEWAY
1643is used to indicate that a system should act as a router, and
1644.Em IPFORWARDING
1645is not invoked directly.
1646(Note that
1647.Em GATEWAY
1648has no impact on protocols other than IP).
1649.Em GATEWAY
1650option also compiles IPv4 and IPv6 fast forwarding code into the kernel.
1651.It Cd options IPFORWARDING=value
1652If
1653.Em value
1654is 1 this enables IP routing behavior.
1655If
1656.Em value
1657is 0 (the default), it disables it.
1658The
1659.Em GATEWAY
1660option sets this to 1 automatically.
1661With this option enabled, the machine will forward IP datagrams destined
1662for other machines between its interfaces.
1663Note that even without this option, the kernel will
1664still forward some packets (such as source routed packets) \(em removing
1665.Em GATEWAY
1666and
1667.Em IPFORWARDING
1668is insufficient to stop all routing through a bastion host on a
1669firewall \(em source routing is controlled independently.
1670Note that IP forwarding may be turned on and off independently of the
1671setting of the
1672.Em IPFORWARDING
1673option through the use of the
1674.Em net.inet.ip.forwarding
1675sysctl variable.
1676If
1677.Em net.inet.ip.forwarding
1678is 1, IP forwarding is on.
1679See
1680.Xr sysctl 8
1681and
1682.Xr sysctl 3
1683for details.
1684.It Cd options IFA_STATS
1685Tells the kernel to maintain per-address statistics on bytes sent
1686and received over (currently) Internet and AppleTalk addresses.
1687.\"This can be a fairly expensive operation, so you probably want to
1688.\"keep this disabled.
1689The option is not recommended as it degrades system stability.
1690.It Cd options IFQ_MAXLEN=value
1691Increases the allowed size of the network interface packet queues.
1692The default queue size is 50 packets, and you do not normally need
1693to increase it.
1694.It Cd options IPSELSRC
1695Includes support for source-address selection policies.
1696See
1697.Xr in_getifa 9 .
1698.It Cd options MROUTING
1699Includes support for IP multicast routers.
1700You certainly want
1701.Em INET
1702with this.
1703Multicast routing is controlled by the
1704.Xr mrouted 8
1705daemon.
1706See also option
1707.Cd PIM .
1708.It Cd options PIM
1709Includes support for Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) routing.
1710You need
1711.Em MROUTING
1712and
1713.Em INET
1714with this.
1715Software using this can be found e.g. in
1716.Pa pkgsrc/net/xorp .
1717.It Cd options INET
1718Includes support for the TCP/IP protocol stack.
1719You almost certainly want this.
1720See
1721.Xr inet 4
1722for details.
1723.It Cd options INET6
1724Includes support for the IPv6 protocol stack.
1725See
1726.Xr inet6 4
1727for details.
1728Unlike
1729.Em INET ,
1730.Em INET6
1731enables multicast routing code as well.
1732This option requires
1733.Em INET
1734at this moment, but it should not.
1735.It Cd options ND6_DEBUG
1736The option sets the default value of net.inet6.icmp6.nd6_debug to 1,
1737for debugging IPv6 neighbor discovery protocol handling.
1738See
1739.Xr sysctl 3
1740for details.
1741.It Cd options IPSEC
1742Includes support for the IPsec protocol, using the implementation derived from
1743.Ox ,
1744relying on
1745.Xr opencrypto 9
1746to carry out cryptographic operations.
1747See
1748.Xr ipsec 4
1749for details.
1750.It Cd options IPSEC_DEBUG
1751Enables debugging code in IPsec stack.
1752See
1753.Xr ipsec 4
1754for details.
1755The
1756.Cd IPSEC
1757option includes support for IPsec Network Address Translator traversal
1758(NAT-T), as described in RFCs 3947 and 3948.
1759This feature might be patent-encumbered in some countries.
1760.It Cd options ALTQ
1761Enabled ALTQ (Alternate Queueing).
1762For simple rate-limiting, use
1763.Xr tbrconfig 8
1764to set up the interface transmission rate.
1765To use queueing disciplines, their appropriate kernel options should also
1766be defined (documented below).
1767Queueing disciplines are managed by
1768.Xr altqd 8 .
1769See
1770.Xr altq 9
1771for details.
1772.It Cd options ALTQ_HFSC
1773Include support for ALTQ-implemented HFSC (Hierarchical Fair Service Curve)
1774module.
1775HFSC supports both link-sharing and guaranteed real-time services.
1776HFSC employs a service curve based QoS model, and its unique feature
1777is an ability to decouple delay and bandwidth allocation.
1778Requires
1779.Em ALTQ_RED
1780to use the RED queueing discipline on HFSC classes, or
1781.Em ALTQ_RIO
1782to use the RIO queueing discipline on HFSC classes.
1783This option assumes
1784.Em ALTQ .
1785.It Cd options ALTQ_PRIQ
1786Include support for ALTQ-implemented PRIQ (Priority Queueing).
1787PRIQ implements a simple priority-based queueing discipline.
1788A higher priority class is always served first.
1789Requires
1790.Em ALTQ_RED
1791to use the RED queueing discipline on HFSC classes, or
1792.Em ALTQ_RIO
1793to use the RIO queueing discipline on HFSC classes.
1794This option assumes
1795.Em ALTQ .
1796.It Cd options ALTQ_WFQ
1797Include support for ALTQ-implemented WFQ (Weighted Fair Queueing).
1798WFQ implements a weighted-round robin scheduler for a set of queues.
1799A weight can be assigned to each queue to give a different proportion
1800of the link capacity.
1801A hash function is used to map a flow to one of a set of queues.
1802This option assumes
1803.Em ALTQ .
1804.It Cd options ALTQ_FIFOQ
1805Include support for ALTQ-implemented FIFO queueing.
1806FIFOQ is a simple drop-tail FIFO (First In, First Out) queueing discipline.
1807This option assumes
1808.Em ALTQ .
1809.It Cd options ALTQ_RIO
1810Include support for ALTQ-implemented RIO (RED with In/Out).
1811The original RIO has 2 sets of RED parameters; one for in-profile
1812packets and the other for out-of-profile packets.
1813At the ingress of the network, profile meters tag packets as IN or
1814OUT based on contracted profiles for customers.
1815Inside the network, IN packets receive preferential treatment by
1816the RIO dropper.
1817ALTQ/RIO has 3 drop precedence levels defined for the Assured Forwarding
1818PHB of DiffServ (RFC 2597).
1819This option assumes
1820.Em ALTQ .
1821.It Cd options ALTQ_BLUE
1822Include support for ALTQ-implemented Blue buffer management.
1823Blue is another active buffer management mechanism.
1824This option assumes
1825.Em ALTQ .
1826.It Cd options ALTQ_FLOWVALVE
1827Include support for ALTQ-implemented Flowvalve.
1828Flowvalve is a simple implementation of a RED penalty box that identifies
1829and punishes misbehaving flows.
1830This option requires
1831.Em ALTQ_RED
1832and assumes
1833.Em ALTQ .
1834.It Cd options ALTQ_CDNR
1835Include support for ALTQ-implemented CDNR (diffserv traffic conditioner)
1836packet marking/manipulation.
1837Traffic conditioners are components to meter, mark, or drop incoming
1838packets according to some rules.
1839As opposed to queueing disciplines, traffic conditioners handle incoming
1840packets at an input interface.
1841This option assumes
1842.Em ALTQ .
1843.It Cd options ALTQ_NOPCC
1844Disables use of processor cycle counter to measure time in ALTQ.
1845This option should be defined for a non-Pentium i386 CPU which does not
1846have TSC, SMP (per-CPU counters are not in sync), or power management
1847which affects processor cycle counter.
1848This option assumes
1849.Em ALTQ .
1850.It Cd options ALTQ_IPSEC
1851Include support for IPsec in IPv4 ALTQ.
1852This option assumes
1853.Em ALTQ .
1854.It Cd options ALTQ_JOBS
1855Include support for ALTQ-implemented JoBS (Joint Buffer Management
1856and Scheduling).
1857This option assumes
1858.Em ALTQ .
1859.It Cd options ALTQ_AFMAP
1860Include support for an undocumented ALTQ feature that is used to map an IP
1861flow to an ATM VC (Virtual Circuit).
1862This option assumes
1863.Em ALTQ .
1864.It Cd options ALTQ_LOCALQ
1865Include support for ALTQ-implemented local queues.
1866Its practical use is undefined.
1867Assumes
1868.Em ALTQ .
1869.It Cd options SUBNETSARELOCAL
1870Sets default value for net.inet.ip.subnetsarelocal variable, which
1871controls whether non-directly-connected subnets of connected networks
1872are considered "local" for purposes of choosing the MSS for a TCP
1873connection.
1874This is mostly present for historic reasons and completely irrelevant if
1875you enable Path MTU discovery.
1876.It Cd options HOSTZEROBROADCAST
1877Sets default value for net.inet.ip.hostzerobroadcast variable, which
1878controls whether the zeroth host address of each connected subnet is
1879also considered a broadcast address.
1880Default value is "1", for compatibility with old systems; if this is
1881set to zero on all hosts on a subnet, you should be able to fit an extra
1882host per subnet on the
1883".0" address.
1884.It Cd options MCLSHIFT=value
1885This option is the base-2 logarithm of the size of mbuf clusters.
1886The
1887.Bx
1888networking stack keeps network packets in a linked
1889list, or chain, of kernel buffer objects called mbufs.
1890The system provides larger mbuf clusters as an optimization for
1891large packets, instead of using long chains for large packets.
1892The mbuf cluster size,
1893or
1894.Em MCLBYTES ,
1895must be a power of two, and is computed as two raised to the power
1896.Em MCLSHIFT .
1897On systems with Ethernet network adapters,
1898.Em MCLSHIFT
1899is often set to 11, giving 2048-byte mbuf clusters, large enough to
1900hold a 1500-byte Ethernet frame in a single cluster.
1901Systems with network interfaces supporting larger frame sizes like
1902ATM, FDDI, or HIPPI may perform better with
1903.Em MCLSHIFT
1904set to 12 or 13, giving mbuf cluster sizes of 4096 and 8192 bytes,
1905respectively.
1906.It Cd options NETATALK
1907Include support for the AppleTalk protocol stack.
1908The kernel provides provision for the
1909.Em Datagram Delivery Protocol
1910(DDP), providing SOCK_DGRAM support and AppleTalk routing.
1911This stack is used by the
1912.Em NETATALK
1913package, which adds support for AppleTalk server services via user
1914libraries and applications.
1915.It Cd options BLUETOOTH
1916Include support for the Bluetooth protocol stack.
1917See
1918.Xr bluetooth 4
1919for details.
1920.It Cd options IPNOPRIVPORTS
1921Normally, only root can bind a socket descriptor to a so-called
1922.Dq privileged
1923TCP port, that is, a port number in the range 0-1023.
1924This option eliminates those checks from the kernel.
1925This can be useful if there is a desire to allow daemons without
1926privileges to bind those ports, e.g., on firewalls.
1927The security tradeoffs in doing this are subtle.
1928This option should only be used by experts.
1929.It Cd options TCP_DEBUG
1930Record the last
1931.Em TCP_NDEBUG
1932TCP packets with SO_DEBUG set, and decode to the console if
1933.Em tcpconsdebug
1934is set.
1935.It Cd options TCP_NDEBUG
1936Number of packets to record for
1937.Em TCP_DEBUG .
1938Defaults to 100.
1939.It Cd options TCP_SENDSPACE=value
1940.It Cd options TCP_RECVSPACE=value
1941These options set the max TCP window size to other sizes than the default.
1942The TCP window sizes can be altered via
1943.Xr sysctl 8
1944as well.
1945.It Cd options TCP_INIT_WIN=value
1946This option sets the initial TCP window size for non-local connections,
1947which is used when the transmission starts.
1948The default size is 1, but if the machine should act more aggressively,
1949the initial size can be set to some other value.
1950The initial TCP window size can be set via
1951.Xr sysctl 8
1952as well.
1953.It Cd options TCP_SIGNATURE
1954Enable MD5 TCP signatures (RFC 2385) to protect BGP sessions.
1955.It Cd options IPFILTER_LOG
1956This option, in conjunction with
1957.Em pseudo-device ipfilter ,
1958enables logging of IP packets using IP-Filter.
1959.It Cd options IPFILTER_LOOKUP
1960This option enables the
1961IP-Filter
1962.Xr ippool 8
1963functionality to be enabled.
1964.It Cd options IPFILTER_COMPAT
1965This option enables older IP-Filter binaries to work.
1966.It Cd options IPFILTER_DEFAULT_BLOCK
1967This option sets the default policy of IP-Filter.
1968If it is set, IP-Filter will block packets by default.
1969.It Cd options MBUFTRACE
1970This option can help track down mbuf leaks.
1971When enabled, mbufs are tagged with the devices and protocols using them.
1972This can significantly decrease network performance, particularly
1973on MP systems.
1974This additional information can be viewed with
1975.Xr netstat 1 :
1976.Dl Ic netstat Fl mssv
1977Not all devices or protocols support this option.
1978.El
1979.Ss Sysctl Related Options
1980.Bl -ohang
1981.It Cd options SYSCTL_DISALLOW_CREATE
1982Disallows the creation or deletion of nodes from the sysctl tree, as
1983well as the assigning of descriptions to nodes that lack them, by any
1984process.
1985These operations are still available to kernel sub-systems, including
1986loadable kernel modules.
1987.It Cd options SYSCTL_DISALLOW_KWRITE
1988Prevents processes from adding nodes to the sysctl tree that make
1989existing kernel memory areas writable.
1990Sections of kernel memory can still be read and new nodes that own
1991their own data may still be writable.
1992.It Cd options SYSCTL_DEBUG_SETUP
1993Causes the SYSCTL_SETUP routines to print a brief message when they
1994are invoked.
1995This is merely meant as an aid in determining the order in which
1996sections of the tree are created.
1997.It Cd options SYSCTL_DEBUG_CREATE
1998Prints a message each time
1999.Fn sysctl_create ,
2000the function that adds nodes to the tree, is called.
2001.It Cd options SYSCTL_INCLUDE_DESCR
2002Causes the kernel to include short, human readable descriptions for
2003nodes in the sysctl tree.
2004The descriptions can be retrieved programmatically (see
2005.Xr sysctl 3 ) ,
2006or by the sysctl binary itself (see
2007.Xr sysctl 8 ) .
2008The descriptions are meant to give an indication of the purpose and/or
2009effects of a given node's value, not replace the documentation for the
2010given subsystem as a whole.
2011.El
2012.Ss System V IPC Options
2013.Bl -ohang
2014.It Cd options SYSVMSG
2015Includes support for
2016.At V
2017style message queues.
2018See
2019.Xr msgctl 2 ,
2020.Xr msgget 2 ,
2021.Xr msgrcv 2 ,
2022.Xr msgsnd 2 .
2023.It Cd options SYSVSEM
2024Includes support for
2025.At V
2026style semaphores.
2027See
2028.Xr semctl 2 ,
2029.Xr semget 2 ,
2030.Xr semop 2 .
2031.It Cd options SEMMNI=value
2032Sets the number of
2033.At V
2034style semaphore identifiers.
2035The GENERIC config file for your port will have the default.
2036.It Cd options SEMMNS=value
2037Sets the number of
2038.At V
2039style semaphores in the system.
2040The GENERIC config file for your port will have the default.
2041.It Cd options SEMUME=value
2042Sets the maximum number of undo entries per process for
2043.At V
2044style semaphores.
2045The GENERIC config file for your port will have the default.
2046.It Cd options SEMMNU=value
2047Sets the number of undo structures in the system for
2048.At V
2049style semaphores.
2050The GENERIC config file for your port will have the default.
2051.It Cd options SYSVSHM
2052Includes support for
2053.At V
2054style shared memory.
2055See
2056.Xr shmat 2 ,
2057.Xr shmctl 2 ,
2058.Xr shmdt 2 ,
2059.Xr shmget 2 .
2060.It Cd options SHMMAXPGS=value
2061Sets the maximum number of
2062.At V
2063style shared memory pages that are available through the
2064.Xr shmget 2
2065system call.
2066Default value is 1024 on most ports.
2067See
2068.Pa /usr/include/machine/vmparam.h
2069for the default.
2070.El
2071.Ss VM Related Options
2072.Bl -ohang
2073.It Cd options NMBCLUSTERS=value
2074The number of mbuf clusters the kernel supports.
2075Mbuf clusters are MCLBYTES in size (usually 2k).
2076The default value is calculated from the amount of physical memory.
2077Architectures without direct mapping also limit it based on the kmem_map size,
2078which is used as backing store.
2079Some archs limit the value with
2080.Sq NMBCLUSTERS_MAX .
2081See
2082.Pa /usr/include/machine/param.h
2083for those archs.
2084This value can be accessed via the kern.mbuf.nmbclusters sysctl variable.
2085Increase this value if you get
2086.Dq mclpool limit reached
2087messages.
2088.It Cd options NMBCLUSTERS_MAX=value
2089The upper limit of NMBCLUSTERS.
2090.It Cd options NKMEMPAGES=value
2091.It Cd options NKMEMPAGES_MIN=value
2092.It Cd options NKMEMPAGES_MAX=value
2093Size of kernel VM map
2094.Em kmem_map ,
2095in PAGE_SIZE-sized chunks (the VM page size; this value may be read
2096from the
2097.Xr sysctl 8
2098variable
2099.Em hw.pagesize
2100).
2101This VM map is used to map the kernel malloc arena.
2102The kernel attempts to auto-size this map based on the amount of
2103physical memory in the system.
2104Platform-specific code may place bounds on this computed size,
2105which may be viewed with the
2106.Xr sysctl 8
2107variable
2108.Em vm.nkmempages .
2109See
2110.Pa /usr/include/machine/param.h
2111for the default upper and lower bounds.
2112The related options
2113.Sq NKMEMPAGES_MIN
2114and
2115.Sq NKMEMPAGES_MAX
2116allow the bounds to be overridden in the kernel configuration file.
2117These options are provided in the event the computed value is
2118insufficient resulting in an
2119.Dq out of space in kmem_map
2120panic.
2121.It Cd options SB_MAX=value
2122Sets the max size in bytes that a socket buffer is allowed to occupy.
2123The default is 256k, but sometimes it needs to be increased, for example
2124when using large TCP windows.
2125This option can be changed via
2126.Xr sysctl 8
2127as well.
2128.It Cd options SOMAXKVA=value
2129Sets the maximum size of kernel virtual memory that the socket buffers
2130are allowed to use.
2131The default is 16MB, but in situations where for example large TCP
2132windows are used this value must also be increased.
2133This option can be changed via
2134.Xr sysctl 8
2135as well.
2136.It Cd options BUFCACHE=value
2137Size of the buffer cache as a percentage of total available RAM.
2138Ignored if BUFPAGES is also specified.
2139.It Cd options NBUF=value
2140Sets the number of buffer headers available, i.e., the number of
2141open files that may have a buffer cache entry.
2142Each buffer header
2143requires MAXBSIZE (machine dependent, but usually 65536) bytes.
2144The default value is machine dependent, but is usually equal to the
2145value of BUFPAGES.
2146.It Cd options BUFPAGES=value
2147These options set the number of pages available for the buffer cache.
2148Their default value is a machine dependent value, often calculated as
2149between 5% and 10% of total available RAM.
2150.It Cd options MAXTSIZ=bytes
2151Sets the maximum size limit of a process' text segment.
2152See
2153.Pa /usr/include/machine/vmparam.h
2154for the port-specific default.
2155.It Cd options DFLDSIZ=bytes
2156Sets the default size limit of a process' data segment, the value that
2157will be returned as the soft limit for
2158.Dv RLIMIT_DATA
2159(as returned by
2160.Xr getrlimit 2 ) .
2161See
2162.Pa /usr/include/machine/vmparam.h
2163for the port-specific default.
2164.It Cd options MAXDSIZ=bytes
2165Sets the maximum size limit of a process' data segment, the value that
2166will be returned as the hard limit for
2167.Dv RLIMIT_DATA
2168(as returned by
2169.Xr getrlimit 2 ) .
2170See
2171.Pa /usr/include/machine/vmparam.h
2172for the port-specific default.
2173.It Cd options DFLSSIZ=bytes
2174Sets the default size limit of a process' stack segment, the value that
2175will be returned as the soft limit for
2176.Dv RLIMIT_STACK
2177(as returned by
2178.Xr getrlimit 2 ) .
2179See
2180.Pa /usr/include/machine/vmparam.h
2181for the port-specific default.
2182.It Cd options MAXSSIZ=bytes
2183Sets the maximum size limit of a process' stack segment, the value that
2184will be returned as the hard limit for
2185.Dv RLIMIT_STACK
2186(as returned by
2187.Xr getrlimit 2 ) .
2188See
2189.Pa /usr/include/machine/vmparam.h
2190for the port-specific default.
2191.It Cd options DUMP_ON_PANIC=integer
2192Defaults to one.
2193If set to zero, the kernel will not dump to the dump device when
2194it panics, though dumps can still be forced via
2195.Xr ddb 4
2196with the
2197.Dq sync
2198command.
2199Note that this sets the value of the
2200.Em kern.dump_on_panic
2201.Xr sysctl 3
2202variable which may be changed at run time \(em see
2203.Xr sysctl 8
2204for details.
2205.It Cd options VMSWAP
2206Enable paging device/file support.
2207This option is on by default.
2208.It Cd options VMSWAP_DEFAULT_PLAINTEXT
2209Store swap in plaintext, not encrypted, which may expose secrets if the
2210underlying nonvolatile medium is disclosed.
2211This option is off by default; it is available only for extremely slow
2212machines where the performance impact of swapping early at boot
2213outweighs the security risks.
2214Swap encryption can still be turned on dynamically with the
2215.Em vm.swap_encrypt
2216.Xr sysctl 7
2217knob.
2218.It Cd options PDPOLICY_CLOCKPRO
2219Use CLOCK-Pro, an alternative page replace policy.
2220.El
2221.Ss Security Options
2222.Bl -ohang
2223.It Cd options INSECURE
2224Initializes the kernel security level with \-1 instead of 0.
2225This means that the system always starts in secure level \-1 mode, even when
2226running multiuser, unless the securelevel variable is set to value > \-1 in
2227.Pa /etc/rc.conf .
2228In this case the kernel security level will be raised to that value when the
2229.Pa /etc/rc.d/securelevel
2230script is run during system startup.
2231See the manual page for
2232.Xr init 8
2233for details on the implications of this.
2234The kernel secure level may manipulated by the superuser by altering the
2235.Em kern.securelevel
2236.Xr sysctl 3
2237variable (the secure level may only be lowered by a call from process ID 1,
2238i.e.,
2239.Xr init 8 ) .
2240See also
2241.Xr secmodel_securelevel 9 ,
2242.Xr sysctl 8
2243and
2244.Xr sysctl 3 .
2245.It Cd options VERIFIED_EXEC_FP_SHA256
2246Enables support for SHA256 hashes in Veriexec.
2247.It Cd options VERIFIED_EXEC_FP_SHA384
2248Enables support for SHA384 hashes in Veriexec.
2249.It Cd options VERIFIED_EXEC_FP_SHA512
2250Enables support for SHA512 hashes in Veriexec.
2251.It Cd options PAX_MPROTECT=value
2252Enables PaX MPROTECT,
2253.Xr mprotect 2
2254restrictions from the PaX project.
2255.Pp
2256The
2257.Ar value
2258is the default value for the
2259.Em global
2260knob, see
2261.Xr sysctl 3 .
2262If 0, PaX MPROTECT will be enabled only if explicitly set on programs
2263using
2264.Xr paxctl 8 .
2265If 1, PaX MPROTECT will be enabled for all programs.
2266Programs can be exempted using
2267.Xr paxctl 8 .
2268.Pp
2269See
2270.Xr security 7
2271for more details.
2272.It Cd options PAX_SEGVGUARD=value
2273Enables PaX Segvguard.
2274Requires
2275.Cd options FILEASSOC .
2276.Pp
2277The
2278.Ar value
2279is the default value for the
2280.Em global
2281knob, see
2282.Xr sysctl 3 .
2283If 0, PaX Segvguard will be enabled only if explicitly set on programs
2284using
2285.Xr paxctl 8 .
2286If 1, PaX Segvguard will be enabled to all programs, and exemption can
2287be done using
2288.Xr paxctl 8 .
2289.Pp
2290See
2291.Xr security 7
2292for more details.
2293.It Cd options PAX_ASLR=value
2294Enables PaX ASLR.
2295.Pp
2296The
2297.Ar value
2298is the default value for the
2299.Em global
2300knob, see
2301.Xr sysctl 3 .
2302If 0, PaX ASLR will be enabled only if explicitly set on programs
2303using
2304.Xr paxctl 8 .
2305If 1, PaX ASLR will be enabled to all programs, and exemption can
2306be done using
2307.Xr paxctl 8 .
2308.Pp
2309See
2310.Xr security 7
2311for more details.
2312.It Cd options USER_VA0_DISABLE_DEFAULT=value
2313Sets the initial value of the flag which controls whether user programs
2314can map virtual address 0.
2315The flag can be changed at runtime by
2316.Xr sysctl 3 .
2317.It Cd options KASAN
2318Enables Kernel Address Sanitizer.
2319.Em NOTE :
2320not available on all architectures.
2321.It Cd options KASLR
2322Enables Kernel ASLR.
2323This randomizes the location of the kernel image in memory.
2324.Em NOTE :
2325not available on all architectures.
2326.It Cd options SVS
2327Enables Separate Virtual Space.
2328On architectures that are designed to function with a shared address
2329space, this option explicitly isolates the kernel and user spaces.
2330.Em NOTE :
2331not available on all architectures.
2332.El
2333.Ss amiga-specific Options
2334.Bl -ohang
2335.It Cd options BB060STUPIDROM
2336When the bootloader (which passes AmigaOS ROM information) claims
2337we have a 68060 CPU without FPU, go look into the Processor
2338Configuration Register (PCR) to find out.
2339You need this with Amiga ROMs up to (at least) V40.xxx (OS3.1),
2340when you boot via the bootblocks and don't have a DraCo.
2341.It Cd options IOBZCLOCK=frequency
2342The IOBlix boards come with two different serial master clocks: older ones
2343use 24 MHz, newer ones use 22.1184 MHz.
2344The driver normally assumes the latter.
2345If your board uses 24 MHz, you can recompile your kernel with
2346options IOBZCLOCK=24000000
2347or patch the kernel variable iobzclock to the same value.
2348.It Cd options LIMITMEM=value
2349If there, limit the part of the first memory bank used by
2350.Nx
2351to value megabytes.
2352Default is unlimited.
2353.It Cd options P5PPC68KBOARD
2354Add special support for Phase5 mixed 68k+PPC boards.
2355Currently, this only affects rebooting from
2356.Nx
2357and is only needed on 68040+PPC, not on
235868060+PPC; without this, affected machines will hang after
2359.Nx
2360has shut
2361down and will only restart after a keyboard reset or a power cycle.
2362.El
2363.Ss atari-specific Options
2364.Bl -ohang
2365.It Cd options DISKLABEL_AHDI
2366Include support for AHDI (native Atari) disklabels.
2367.It Cd options DISKLABEL_NBDA
2368Include support for
2369.Nx Ns /atari
2370labels.
2371If you don't set this option, it will be set automatically.
2372.Nx Ns /atari
2373will not work without it.
2374.It Cd options FALCON_SCSI
2375Include support for the 5380-SCSI configuration as found on the Falcon.
2376.It Cd options RELOC_KERNEL
2377If set, the kernel will relocate itself to TT-RAM, if possible.
2378This will give you a slightly faster system.
2379.Em Beware
2380that on some TT030 systems,
2381the system will frequently dump with MMU-faults with this option enabled.
2382.It Cd options SERCONSOLE
2383Allow the modem1-port to act as the system-console.
2384A carrier should be active on modem1 during system boot to active
2385the console functionality.
2386.It Cd options TT_SCSI
2387Include support for the 5380-SCSI configuration as found on the TT030
2388and Hades.
2389.El
2390.Ss i386-specific Options
2391.Bl -ohang
2392.It Cd options CPURESET_DELAY=value
2393Specifies the time (in millisecond) to wait before doing a hardware reset
2394in the last phase of a reboot.
2395This gives the user a chance to see error messages from the shutdown
2396operations (like NFS unmounts, buffer cache flush, etc ...).
2397Setting this to 0 will disable the delay.
2398Default is 2 seconds.
2399.It Cd options USER_LDT
2400Include i386-specific system calls for modifying the local descriptor table,
2401used by Windows emulators.
2402.It Cd options PAE
2403Enable PAE (Physical Address Extension) mode.
2404PAE permits up to 36 bits physical addressing (64GB of physical
2405memory), and turns physical addresses to 64 bits entities in the
2406memory management subsystem.
2407Userland virtual address space remains at 32 bits (4GB).
2408PAE mode is required to enable the NX/XD (No-eXecute/eXecute Disable)
2409bit for pages, which allows marking certain ones as not being executable.
2410Any attempt to execute code from such a page will raise an exception.
2411.It Cd options REALBASEMEM=integer
2412Overrides the base memory size passed in from the boot block.
2413(Value given in kilobytes.)
2414Use this option only if the boot block reports the size incorrectly.
2415(Note that some BIOSes put the extended BIOS
2416data area at the top of base memory, and therefore report a smaller
2417base memory size to prevent programs overwriting it.
2418This is correct behavior, and you should not use the
2419.Em REALBASEMEM
2420option to access this memory).
2421.It Cd options SPECTRE_V2_GCC_MITIGATION=1
2422Enable GCC-specific Spectre variant 2 mitigations.
2423For 32-bit kernels this means these options:
2424.Bd -literal -offset indent
2425-mindirect-branch=thunk -mindirect-branch-register
2426.Ed
2427.Pp
2428For 64-bit kernels this means these options:
2429.Bd -literal -offset indent
2430-mindirect-branch=thunk-inline -mindirect-branch-register
2431.Ed
2432.It Cd options REALEXTMEM=integer
2433Overrides the extended memory size passed in from the boot block.
2434(Value given in kilobytes.
2435Extended memory does not include the first megabyte.)
2436Use this option only if the boot block reports the size incorrectly.
2437.It Cd options CYRIX_CACHE_WORKS
2438Relevant only to the Cyrix 486DLC CPU.
2439This option is used to turn on the cache in hold-flush mode.
2440It is not turned on by default because it is known to have problems in
2441certain motherboard implementations.
2442.It Cd options CYRIX_CACHE_REALLY_WORKS
2443Relevant only to the Cyrix 486DLC CPU.
2444This option is used to turn on the cache in write-back mode.
2445It is not turned on by default because it is known to have problems in
2446certain motherboard implementations.
2447In order for this option to take effect, option
2448.Em CYRIX_CACHE_WORKS
2449must also be specified.
2450.It Cd options PCIBIOS
2451Enable support for initializing the PCI bus using information from
2452the BIOS.
2453See
2454.Xr pcibios 4
2455for details.
2456.It Cd options MTRR
2457Include support for accessing MTRR registers from user-space.
2458See
2459.Xr i386_get_mtrr 2 .
2460.It Cd options BEEP_ONHALT
2461Make the system speaker emit several beeps when it is completely safe to
2462power down the computer after a
2463.Xr halt 8
2464command.
2465Requires
2466.Xr sysbeep 4
2467support.
2468.It Cd options BEEP_ONHALT_COUNT=times
2469Number of times to beep the speaker when
2470.Cd options BEEP_ONHALT
2471is enabled.
2472Defaults to 3.
2473.It Cd options BEEP_ONHALT_PITCH=hz
2474The tone frequency used when
2475.Cd options BEEP_ONHALT
2476option, in hertz.
2477Defaults to 1500.
2478.It Cd options BEEP_ONHALT_PERIOD=msecs
2479The duration of each beep when
2480.Cd options BEEP_ONHALT
2481is enabled, in milliseconds.
2482Defaults to 250.
2483.It Cd options MULTIBOOT
2484Makes the kernel Multiboot-compliant, allowing it to be booted through
2485a Multiboot-compliant boot manager such as GRUB.
2486See
2487.Xr multiboot 8
2488for more information.
2489.It Cd options SPLASHSCREEN
2490Display a splash screen during boot.
2491.El
2492.Ss isa-specific Options
2493Options specific to
2494.Xr isa 4
2495busses.
2496.Bl -ohang
2497.It Cd options PCIC_ISA_ALLOC_IOBASE=address, PCIC_ISA_ALLOC_IOSIZE=size
2498Control the section of IO bus space used for PCMCIA bus space mapping.
2499Ideally the probed defaults are satisfactory, however in practice
2500that is not always the case.
2501See
2502.Xr pcmcia 4
2503for details.
2504.It Cd options PCIC_ISA_INTR_ALLOC_MASK=mask
2505Controls the allowable interrupts that may be used for PCMCIA
2506devices.
2507This mask is a logical-or of power-of-2s of allowable interrupts:
2508.Bd -literal -offset 04n
2509.Em "IRQ Val      IRQ Val      IRQ Val       IRQ Val"
2510 0  0x0001    4  0x0010    8  0x0100    12  0x1000
2511 1  0x0002    5  0x0020    9  0x0200    13  0x2000
2512 2  0x0004    6  0x0040   10  0x0400    14  0x4000
2513 3  0x0008    7  0x0080   11  0x0800    15  0x8000
2514.Ed
2515.It Cd options PCKBC_CNATTACH_SELFTEST
2516Perform a self test of the keyboard controller before attaching it as a
2517console.
2518This might be necessary on machines where we boot on cold iron, and
2519pckbc refuses to talk until we request a self test.
2520Currently only the netwinder port uses it.
2521.It Cd options PCKBD_CNATTACH_MAY_FAIL
2522If this option is set the PS/2 keyboard will not be used as the console
2523if it cannot be found during boot.
2524This allows other keyboards, like USB, to be the console keyboard.
2525.It Cd options PCKBD_LAYOUT=layout
2526Sets the default keyboard layout, see
2527.Xr pckbd 4 .
2528.El
2529.Ss m68k-specific Options
2530.Bl -ohang
2531.It Cd options FPU_EMULATE
2532Include support for MC68881/MC68882 emulator.
2533.It Cd options FPSP
2534Include support for 68040 floating point.
2535.It Cd options M68020,M68030,M68040,M68060
2536Include support for a specific CPU,
2537at least one (the one you are using) should be specified.
2538.It Cd options M060SP
2539Include software support for 68060.
2540This provides emulation of unimplemented
2541integer instructions as well as emulation of unimplemented floating point
2542instructions and data types and software support for floating point traps.
2543.El
2544.Ss powerpc-specific Options (OEA Only)
2545.Bl -ohang
2546.It Cd options PMAP_MEMLIMIT=value
2547Limit the amount of memory seen by the kernel to
2548.Ar value
2549bytes.
2550.It Cd options PTEGCOUNT=value
2551Specify the size of the page table as
2552.Ar value
2553PTE groups.
2554Normally, one PTEG is allocated per physical page frame.
2555.El
2556.Ss sparc-specific Options
2557.Bl -ohang
2558.It Cd options AUDIO_DEBUG
2559Enable simple event debugging of the logging of the
2560.Xr audio 4
2561device.
2562.It Cd options BLINK
2563Enable blinking of LED.
2564Blink rate is full cycle every N seconds for
2565N < then current load average.
2566See
2567.Xr getloadavg 3 .
2568.\" .It Cd options COLORFONT_CACHE
2569.\" What does this do?
2570.It Cd options COUNT_SW_LEFTOVERS
2571Count how many times the sw SCSI device has left 3, 2, 1 and 0 in the
2572sw_3_leftover, sw_2_leftover, sw_1_leftover, and sw_0_leftover
2573variables accessible from
2574.Xr ddb 4 .
2575See
2576.Xr sw 4 .
2577.It Cd options DEBUG_ALIGN
2578Adds debugging messages calls when user-requested alignment fault
2579handling happens.
2580.It Cd options DEBUG_EMUL
2581Adds debugging messages calls for emulated floating point and
2582alignment fixing operations.
2583.It Cd options EXTREME_DEBUG
2584Adds debugging functions callable from
2585.Xr ddb 4 .
2586The debug_pagetables, test_region and print_fe_map
2587functions print information about page tables for the SUN4M
2588platforms only.
2589.It Cd options EXTREME_EXTREME_DEBUG
2590Adds extra info to
2591.Em options EXTREME_DEBUG .
2592.It Cd options FPU_CONTEXT
2593Make
2594.Em options COMPAT_SVR4
2595getcontext and setcontext include floating point registers.
2596.It Cd options MAGMA_DEBUG
2597Adds debugging messages to the
2598.Xr magma 4
2599device.
2600.It Cd options RASTERCONS_FULLSCREEN
2601Use the entire screen for the console.
2602.It Cd options RASTERCONS_SMALLFONT
2603Use the Fixed font on the console, instead of the normal font.
2604.It Cd options SUN4
2605Support sun4 class machines.
2606.It Cd options SUN4C
2607Support sun4c class machines.
2608.It Cd options SUN4M
2609Support sun4m class machines.
2610.It Cd options SUN4_MMU3L
2611.\" XXX ???
2612Enable support for sun4 3-level MMU machines.
2613.It Cd options V9
2614Enable SPARC V9 assembler in
2615.Xr ddb 4 .
2616.El
2617.Ss sparc64-specific Options
2618.Bl -ohang
2619.It Cd options AUDIO_DEBUG
2620Enable simple event debugging of the logging of the
2621.Xr audio 4
2622device.
2623.It Cd options BLINK
2624Enable blinking of LED.
2625Blink rate is full cycle every N seconds for
2626N < then current load average.
2627See
2628.Xr getloadavg 3 .
2629.El
2630.Ss x68k-specific Options
2631.Bl -ohang
2632.It Cd options EXTENDED_MEMORY
2633Include support for extended memory, e.g., TS-6BE16 and 060turbo on-board.
2634.It Cd options JUPITER
2635Include support for Jupiter-X MPU accelerator
2636.It Cd options ZSCONSOLE,ZSCN_SPEED=value
2637Use the built-in serial port as the system-console.
2638Speed is specified in bps, defaults to 9600.
2639.It Cd options ITE_KERNEL_ATTR=value
2640Set the kernel message attribute for ITE.
2641Value, an integer, is a logical or of the following values:
2642.Bl -tag -width 4n -compact -offset indent
2643.It 1
2644color inversed
2645.It 2
2646underlined
2647.It 4
2648bolded
2649.El
2650.El
2651.Ss x86-specific Options
2652.Bl -ohang
2653.It Cd options NO_PCI_MSI_MSIX
2654Disable support for MSI/MSIX in the kernel.
2655See
2656.Xr pci_msi 9
2657for details of MSI/MSIX support
2658.It Cd options NO_PREEMPTION
2659Disables
2660.Xr kpreempt 9
2661support in the kernel.
2662.El
2663.\" The following requests should be uncommented and used where appropriate.
2664.\" .Sh FILES
2665.\" .Sh EXAMPLES
2666.Sh SEE ALSO
2667.Xr config 1 ,
2668.Xr gcc 1 ,
2669.Xr gdb 1 ,
2670.Xr ktrace 1 ,
2671.Xr quota 1 ,
2672.Xr vndcompress 1 ,
2673.Xr gettimeofday 2 ,
2674.Xr i386_get_mtrr 2 ,
2675.Xr i386_iopl 2 ,
2676.Xr msgctl 2 ,
2677.Xr msgget 2 ,
2678.Xr msgrcv 2 ,
2679.Xr msgsnd 2 ,
2680.Xr ntp_adjtime 2 ,
2681.Xr ntp_gettime 2 ,
2682.Xr reboot 2 ,
2683.Xr semctl 2 ,
2684.Xr semget 2 ,
2685.Xr semop 2 ,
2686.Xr shmat 2 ,
2687.Xr shmctl 2 ,
2688.Xr shmdt 2 ,
2689.Xr shmget 2 ,
2690.Xr sysctl 3 ,
2691.Xr apm 4 ,
2692.Xr ddb 4 ,
2693.Xr inet 4 ,
2694.Xr md 4 ,
2695.Xr pcibios 4 ,
2696.Xr pcmcia 4 ,
2697.Xr ppp 4 ,
2698.Xr userconf 4 ,
2699.Xr vnd 4 ,
2700.Xr wscons 4 ,
2701.Xr config 5 ,
2702.Xr edquota 8 ,
2703.Xr init 8 ,
2704.Xr mdsetimage 8 ,
2705.Xr mount_cd9660 8 ,
2706.Xr mount_fdesc 8 ,
2707.Xr mount_kernfs 8 ,
2708.Xr mount_lfs 8 ,
2709.Xr mount_mfs 8 ,
2710.Xr mount_msdos 8 ,
2711.Xr mount_nfs 8 ,
2712.Xr mount_ntfs 8 ,
2713.Xr mount_null 8 ,
2714.Xr mount_portal 8 ,
2715.Xr mount_procfs 8 ,
2716.Xr mount_udf 8 ,
2717.Xr mount_umap 8 ,
2718.Xr mount_union 8 ,
2719.Xr mrouted 8 ,
2720.Xr newfs_lfs 8 ,
2721.Xr ntpd 8 ,
2722.Xr quotaon 8 ,
2723.Xr rpc.rquotad 8 ,
2724.Xr sysctl 8 ,
2725.Xr cnmagic 9 ,
2726.Xr in_getifa 9 ,
2727.Xr kernhist 9
2728.Sh HISTORY
2729The
2730.Nm
2731man page first appeared in
2732.Nx 1.3 .
2733