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+# Kconfig in coreboot
+
+## Overview
+Kconfig is a tool used in coreboot, Linux, and many other projects as the main
+configuration mechanism. In coreboot, it allows a developer both to select
+which platform to build and to modify various features within the platform. The
+Kconfig language was developed as a way to configure the Linux kernel, and is
+still maintained as a part of the Linux kernel tree. Starting in Linux 2.5.45,
+the ncurses based menuconfig was added, which is still used as the main
+configuration front end in coreboot today.
+
+The official Kconfig source and documentation is kept at kernel.org:
+
+- [Kconfig source](https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/scripts/kconfig)
+- [Kconfig Language Documentation](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/kbuild/kconfig-language.txt)
+
+The advantage to using Kconfig is that it allows users to easily select the
+high level features of the project to be enabled or disabled at build time.
+Ultimately the Kconfig tool generates a list of values which are used by the
+source code and Makefiles of the project. This allows the source files to
+select features, and allows the build to determine which files should be
+compiled and linked to the rom.
+
+
+## Kconfig targets in Make
+The Kconfig program in coreboot is built from source in util/kconfig. There are
+various targets in the makefile to build Kconfig in different ways. These give
+the user control over how to build the platform
+
+
+### Front end configuration targets
+These are the make targets that would be used to update the configuration of
+the platform.
+- config - Text mode configuration tool, asks each configuration option in turn.
+ This does actually run in coreboot, but it is recommended that this not be
+ used as there is no way to save a partial config.
+- gconfig - Graphical configuration tool based on GTK+ 2.0.
+- menuconfig - Text mode, menu driven configuration tool.
+- nconfig - Text mode, menu driven configuration tool.
+- xconfig - Graphical front end based on QT.
+
+
+### Targets that update config files
+These options are used to update the coreboot config files, typically .config.
+The target file can be changed with variables in the environment or on the make
+command line.
+
+- defconfig - This generates a config based on another config file. Use the
+ environment variable KBUILD_DEFCONFIG to specify the base config file.
+- oldconfig - Displays the answers to all configuration questions as it
+ generates the config.h file. If an interactive question is found that does
+ not have an answer yet, it stops and queries the user for the desired value.
+- olddefconfig - Generates a config, using the default value for any symbols not
+ listed in the .config file.
+- savedefconfig - Creates a ‘mini-config’ file, stripping out all of the symbols
+ that were left as default values. This is very useful for debugging, and is
+ how config files should be saved.
+- silentoldconfig - This evaluates the .config file the same way that the
+ oldconfig target does, but does not print out each question as it is
+ evaluated. It still stops to query the user if an option with no answer in
+ the .config file is found.
+
+
+### Targets not typically used in coreboot
+- localmodconfig, localnoconfig, randconfig, allyesconfig, allnoconfig - These
+ are all used to generate various Kconfig files for testing.
+
+
+### Environment Variables that affect Kconfig
+These variables are typically set in the makefiles or on the make command line.
+
+#### Variables added to the coreboot Kconfig source
+These variables were added to Kconfig specifically for coreboot and are not
+included in the Linux version.
+
+- COREBOOT_BUILD_DIR=path for temporary files. This is used by coreboot’s
+ abuild tool.
+
+- KCONFIG_STRICT=value. Define to enable warnings as errors. This is enabled
+ in coreboot, and should not be changed.
+
+- KCONFIG_NEGATIVES=value. Define to show negative values in the autoconf.h file
+ (build/config.h). This is enabled in coreboot, and should not be changed.
+
+
+#### Variables used to control the input and output config files
+- KBUILD_DEFCONFIG=inputname of the defconfig file. This defaults to
+ ‘configs/defconfig’ and is used by the ‘defconfig’ target.
+
+- DEFCONFIG=output name of the defconfig file. This defaults to ‘defconfig’
+ and is used by ‘savedefconfig’ target as the output filename.
+
+- DOTCONFIG=name of the .config file. This defaults to '.config' and is used
+ by most config type targets.
+
+
+#### Variables used by the makefiles for controlling Kconfig
+- Kconfig=root Kconfig file. This is set to 'src/Kconfig' in the coreboot
+ makefile.
+
+- KCONFIG_CONFIG=input config file. coreboot sets this to $(DOTCONFIG).
+
+- KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER=path and filename of autoconf.h file. coreboot sets this
+ to $(obj)/config.h.
+
+- KCONFIG_DEPENDENCIES=”kbuild dependency file". This defaults to
+ auto.conf.cmd and outputs the name of all of the Kconfig files used.
+
+- KCONFIG_SPLITCONFIG=”directory name for individual SYMBOL.h files”.
+ coreboot sets this to $(obj)/config.
+
+#### Used only for ‘make menuconfig’
+- MENUCONFIG_MODE=single_menu. Set to "single_menu" to enable. All other
+ values disable the option. This makes submenus appear below the menu option
+ instead of opening a new screen.
+
+- MENUCONFIG_COLOR=<theme>. This sets the color theme for the menu from
+ these options:
+
+ - mono => selects colors suitable for monochrome displays.
+ - blackbg => selects a color scheme with black background.
+ - classic => theme with blue background. The classic look.
+ - bluetitle => an LCD friendly version of classic. (default).
+
+
+#### Used only for ‘make nconfig’
+
+- NCONFIG_MODE=single_menu
+
+ Submenus appear below the menu option instead of opening a new screen.
+
+
+#### Unused in coreboot
+
+Although these variables are not used by coreboot, their values should be left
+at the default values. Other values may have unexpected effects on the
+codebase.
+
+- KCONFIG_SEED=randconfig seed value.
+- KCONFIG_PROBABILITY=randconfig percent to set to y.
+- KCONFIG_NOSILENTUPDATE=value. Define to prevent silent updates to .config
+ file.
+- KCONFIG_OVERWRITECONFIG=value. Define to prevent breaking a .config symlink.
+- KCONFIG_TRISTATE=filename of tristate.conf file.
+- SRCTREE=path to src directory.
+- KCONFIG_AUTOCONFIG=path and filename of the auto.conf file.
+
+ coreboot sets this to $(obj)/auto.conf. Although this value is actually
+ set by coreboot, the resulting file is not used.
+
+- CONFIG_=prefix for Kconfig output symbols.
+
+ coreboot expects this to *NOT* be set.
+
+
+
+## Kconfig Language
+
+The Kconfig language has about 30 keywords, some overloaded, and some with the
+same meaning. Whitespace may have specific meaning, for example in the 'help'
+keyword. There are 8 logical operators for use in expressions, which allow
+values to be set based on other values.
+
+
+### Terminology
+
+- Symbols - There are two types of symbols, "constant" and “non-constant”.
+ - Constant symbols are alphanumeric values used in expressions for
+ comparison. The Kconfig language specification says that these must be
+ surrounded by single or double quotes.
+ - Non-constant symbols are the 'config' values that are output into the
+ saved .config, auto.conf and config.h files. Non-constant symbols are
+ typically defined with the 'config' keyword, although they can also be
+ defined with the 'choice' keyword. These symbols may be used in a file's
+ expressions before they are defined. Valid characters for non-constant
+ symbols are any combination of alphanumeric characters, underscore.
+ Although “1234” is accepted as a symbol name, as is “o_o”, convention is
+ to use all uppercase words that are descriptive of the symbol's use so
+ they make sense when turned into CONFIG_NAME #defines.
+
+- Expressions - An expression is a logical evaluation. It can be as simple as
+ a static 'y' or 'n', or can be a symbol. Alternatively, expressions can be
+ complex evaluations of multiple symbols using the various logical operators.
+ The Kconfig language allows these logical evaluations in several places. The
+ most common use for complex expressions is following 'if' or ‘depends on’
+ keywords, but they can also be used to set the value for a prompt or default
+ values.
+
+- Types - Each Kconfig symbol is one of the following types: bool, hex, int,
+ string, or tristate. The tristate type is not used for coreboot, leaving just
+ four types. As noted in the keyword summaries, a symbol must have a consistent
+ type anywhere it is defined. Also, Kconfig will simply not display a symbol
+ that has no type defined. A warning will be displayed in the terminal where
+ menuconfig was run if this happens:
+ _src/Kconfig:25:warning: config symbol defined without type_.
+
+- Prompts - Input prompts are the text associated with the symbols which shown
+ to the user. The Kconfig language definition does not require surrounding the
+ prompt’s text with quotes, however it is recommended that quotes be used for
+ maximum compatibility.
+
+- Menu Entries - These keyword blocks create the symbols and questions that are
+ visible in the front end.
+
+
+## Keywords
+
+### bool
+
+The 'bool' keyword assigns a boolean type to a symbol. The allowable values for
+a boolean type are 'n' or 'y'. The keyword can be followed by an optional prompt
+string which makes the symbol editable in one of the configuration front ends.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+bool \[prompt\] \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config ANY_TOOLCHAIN
+ bool "Allow building with any toolchain"
+ default n
+ depends on COMPILER_GCC
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Putting the prompt after the 'bool' keyword is the same as using a 'prompt'
+ keyword later. See the 'prompt' keyword for more notes.
+- Only the first type definition for each symbol is valid. Further matching
+ definitions are fine, although unnecessary. Conflicting type definitions will
+ be ignored, and a warning will be presented on the console where the
+ configuration front end was run:
+ _warning: ignoring type redefinition of 'SYMBOL' from 'hex' to 'integer'_.
+- Boolean symbols do not need a default and will default to ‘n’.
+
+
+##### Restrictions:
+
+- This keyword must be within a symbol definition block, started by the
+ 'config' keyword.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### choice
+
+This creates a selection list of one or more boolean symbols. For bools, only
+one of the symbols can be selected, and one will be be forced to be selected,
+either by a ‘default’ statement, or by selecting the first config option if
+there is no default value listed.
+
+##### Usage:
+choice \[symbol\]
+- \[prompt\]
+- \[default\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ choice TESTCHOICE
+ prompt "Test choice"
+ default TESTCHOICE2 if TESTCHOICE_DEFAULT_2
+ default TESTCHOICE3
+
+ config TESTCHOICE1
+ bool "Choice 1"
+ config TESTCHOICE2
+ bool "Choice 2"
+ config TESTCHOICE3
+ bool "Choice 3"
+ config TESTCHOICE4
+ bool "Choice 4" if TESTCHOICE_SHOW_4
+ endchoice
+
+ config TESTCHOICE_DEFAULT_2
+ def_bool y
+
+ config TESTCHOICE_SHOW_4
+ def_bool n
+
+ config TESTSTRING
+ string
+ default “String #1” if TESTCHOICE1
+ default “String #2” if TESTCHOICE2
+ default “String #4” if TESTCHOICE3
+ default “String #4” if TESTCHOICE4
+ default “”
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- If no symbol is associated with a choice, then you can not have multiple
+ definitions of that choice. If a symbol is associated to the choice, then
+ you may define the same choice (ie. with the same entries) in another place.
+ Any selection in either location will update both choice menu selections. In
+ coreboot, the value of the symbol is always 1.
+- As shown in the example above, the choice between bools can be used to set
+ the default for a non-bool type. This works best when the non-bool type
+ does not have an input prompt.
+
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- Symbols used for 'choice' entries must have input prompts defined using the
+ 'prompt' keyword.
+- Symbols used in 'choice' entries may not be enabled with a 'select'
+ statement, they can be defaulted using a second Kconfig symbol however.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### comment
+
+This keyword defines a line of text that is displayed to the user in the
+configuration frontend and is additionally written to the output files.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+comment <prompt>
+- \[depends on\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+
+ if CONSOLE_SERIAL
+ comment "I/O mapped, 8250-compatible"
+ depends on DRIVERS_UART_8250IO
+ endif
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Comments are only valid outside of config blocks, but can be within menu and
+ if blocks.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### config
+
+This is the keyword that starts a block defining a Kconfig symbol. The symbol
+modifiers follow the 'config' statement.
+
+##### Usage:
+config <symbol>
+
+- \[bool | def_bool | int | hex | string\]
+- \[depends on\]
+- \[prompt\]
+- \[help\]
+- \[range\]
+- \[select\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config SEABIOS_PS2_TIMEOUT
+ prompt "PS/2 keyboard timeout" if PAYLOAD_SEABIOS
+ default 0
+ depends on PAYLOAD_SEABIOS
+ int
+ help
+ Some PS/2 keyboard controllers don't respond to commands
+ immediately after powering on. This specifies how long
+ SeaBIOS will wait for the keyboard controller to become
+ ready before giving up.
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Non-coreboot projects also use the 'tristate' and 'def_tristate' types.
+- Ends at the next Kconfig keyword that is not valid inside the config block:
+
+ menu | endmenu | if | endif | choice | config | source | comment
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### default
+
+The ‘default’ keyword assigns a value to a symbol in the case where no preset
+value exists, i.e. the symbol is not present and assigned in .config. If there
+is no preset value, and no ‘default’ keyword, the user will be asked to enter a
+valid value when building coreboot.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+default <expr> \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config GENERATE_MP_TABLE
+ prompt "Generate an MP table" if HAVE_MP_TABLE || DRIVERS_GENERIC_IOAPIC
+ bool
+ default HAVE_MP_TABLE || DRIVERS_GENERIC_IOAPIC
+ help
+ Generate an MP table (conforming to the Intel
+ MultiProcessor specification 1.4) for this board.
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Kconfig defaults for symbols without a prompt *NEVER* affect existing legal
+ symbol definitions in a .config file. The default only affects the symbol if
+ there is no valid definition in a config file. This is a frequent source of
+ confusion. It’s covered again in the Tips section below.
+- The first valid 'default' entry for a symbol is always used. Any further
+ 'default' statements for a symbol are ignored. This means that the order of
+ Kconfig files is very important as the earlier files get to set the defaults
+ first. They should be sourced in the order from most specific (mainboard
+ Kconfig files) to the most generic (architecture-specific Kconfig files).
+- If there is no 'default' entry for a symbol, it gets set to 'n', 0, 0x0, or
+ “” depending on the type, however the 'bool' type is the only type that
+ should be left without a default value.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### def_bool
+
+‘def_bool’ is similar to the 'bool' keyword in that it sets a symbol’s type to
+boolean. It lets you set the type and default value at the same time, instead
+of setting the type and the prompt at the same time. It's typically used for
+symbols that don't have prompts.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+def_bool <expr> \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config EC_GOOGLE_CHROMEEC_LPC
+ depends on EC_GOOGLE_CHROMEEC && ARCH_X86
+ def_bool y
+ select SERIRQ_CONTINUOUS_MODE
+ help
+ Google Chrome EC via LPC bus.
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Only the first type definition for each symbol is valid. Further matching
+ definitions are fine, although unnecessary. Conflicting type definitions will
+ be ignored, and a warning will be presented on the console where the
+ configuration front end was run:
+ _warning: ignoring type redefinition of 'SYMBOL' from 'hex' to 'integer'_.
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- This keyword must be within a symbol definition block, started by the
+ 'config' keyword.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### depends on
+
+This defines a dependency for a menu entry, including symbols and comments. It
+behaves the same as surrounding the menu entry with an if/endif block. If the
+‘depends on’ expression evaluates to false, the 'prompt' value will not be
+printed, and defaults will not be set based on this block.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+depends on <expr>
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config COMMON_CBFS_SPI_WRAPPER
+ bool
+ default n
+ depends on SPI_FLASH
+ depends on !ARCH_X86
+ help
+ Use common wrapper to interface CBFS to SPI bootrom.
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Symbols that have multiple ‘depends on’ sections as above are equivalent to a
+ single ‘depends on’ statement with sections joined by &&. So the above is
+ the same as “depends on SPI_FLASH && ! ARCH_X86”.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### endchoice
+
+This ends a choice block. See the 'choice' keyword for more information and an
+example.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### endif
+
+This ends a block started by the 'if' keyword. See the 'if' keyword for more
+information and an example.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### endmenu
+
+This ends a menu block. See the 'menu' keyword for more information and an
+example.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### help
+
+The 'help' keyword defines the subsequent block of text as help for a config or
+choice block. The help block is started by the 'help' keyword on a line by
+itself, and the indentation level of the next line controls the end of the help
+block. The help ends on the next non-blank line that has an indentation level
+less than the indentation level of the first line following the 'help' keyword.
+
+##### Usage:
+help <help text>
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config COMPILER_GCC
+ bool "GCC"
+ help
+ Use the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) to build coreboot. For details
+ see http://gcc.gnu.org.
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Identical to the '---help---' keyword which isn’t used in coreboot.
+- Other keywords are allowed inside the help block, and are not recognized as
+ keywords so long as the indentation rules are followed, even if they start a
+ line.
+
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- Only used for 'config' and 'choice' keywords.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### hex
+
+This is another symbol type specifier, specifying an unsigned integer value
+formatted as hexadecimal.
+
+##### Usage:
+hex <expr> \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config INTEL_PCH_UART_CONSOLE_NUMBER
+ hex "Serial IO UART number to use for console"
+ default 0x0
+ depends on INTEL_PCH_UART_CONSOLE
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Kconfig doesn’t complain if you don’t start the default value for a hex
+ symbol with ‘0x’, but not doing so will lead to issues. It will update 10
+ to 0x10 without warning the user.
+- Putting the prompt text after the 'hex' keyword is the same as using a
+ 'prompt' keyword later. See the 'prompt' keyword for more notes.
+- Only the first type definition for each symbol is valid. Further matching
+ definitions are fine, although unnecessary. Conflicting type definitions will
+ be ignored, and a warning will be presented on the console where the
+ configuration front end was run:
+ _warning: ignoring type redefinition of 'SYMBOL' from 'hex' to 'integer'_.
+
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- This keyword must be within a symbol definition block, started by the
+ 'config' keyword.
+- 'hex' type symbols must have a 'default' entry set.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### if
+
+The 'if' keyword is overloaded, used in two different ways. The first definition
+enables and disables various other keywords, and follows the other keyword
+definition. This usage is shown in each of the other keywords' usage listings.
+
+The second usage of the 'if' keyword is part of an if/endif block. Most items
+within an if/endif block are not evaluated, while others, such as the 'source'
+keyword, ignore the existence of the if/endif block completely. Symbols defined
+within an if/endif block are still created, although their default values are
+ignored - all values are set to 'n'.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+if <expr>
+
+- \[config\]
+- \[choice\]
+- \[comment\]
+- \[menu\]
+
+endif
+
+
+##### Example:
+ if ARCH_X86
+
+ config SMP
+ bool
+ default y if MAX_CPUS != 1
+ default n
+ help
+ This option is used to enable certain functions to make
+ coreboot work correctly on symmetric multi processor (SMP) systems.
+ endif
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- Corresponding ‘if’ and ‘endif’ statements must exist in the same file.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### int
+
+A type setting keyword, defines a symbol as an integer, accepting only signed
+numeric values. The values can be further restricted with the ‘range’ keyword.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+int <expr> \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config PRE_GRAPHICS_DELAY
+ int "Graphics initialization delay in ms"
+ default 0
+ help
+ On some systems, coreboot boots so fast that connected
+ monitors (mostly TVs) won't be able to wake up fast enough
+ to talk to the VBIOS. On those systems we need to wait for a
+ bit before executing the VBIOS.
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Only the first type definition for each symbol is valid. Further matching
+ definitions are fine, although unnecessary. Conflicting type definitions will
+ be ignored, and a warning will be presented on the console where the
+ configuration front end was run:
+ _warning: ignoring type redefinition of 'SYMBOL' from 'hex' to 'integer'_.
+
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- This keyword must be within a symbol definition block, started by the 'config'
+ keyword.
+- 'int' type symbols must have a default value set.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### mainmenu
+
+The 'mainmenu' keyword sets the title or title bar of the configuration front
+ end, depending on how the configuration program decides to use it. It can only
+ be specified once and at the very beginning of the top level Kconfig file,
+ before any other statements.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+mainmenu <prompt>
+
+##### Example:
+mainmenu "coreboot configuration"
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- Must be the first statement in the top level Kconfig.
+- Must only be used once in the entire Kconfig tree.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### menu
+
+The 'menu' and 'endmenu' keywords tell the configuration front end that the
+enclosed statements are part of a group of related pieces.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+menu <prompt>
+
+- \[choice\]
+- \[config\]
+- \[menu\]
+- \[if/endif\]
+
+endmenu
+
+
+##### Example:
+ menu "On-Chip Device Power Down Control"
+ config TEMP_POWERDOWN
+ bool "Temperature sensor power-down"
+
+ config SATA_POWERDOWN
+ bool "SATA power-down"
+
+ config ADC_POWERDOWN
+ bool "ADC power-down"
+
+ config PCIE0_POWERDOWN
+ bool "PCIE0 power-down"
+
+ config MAC_POWERDOWN
+ bool "MAC power-down"
+
+ config USB1_POWERDOWN
+ bool "USB2.0 Host Controller 1 power-down"
+
+ config IDE_POWERDOWN
+ bool "IDE power-down"
+
+ endmenu
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- Must be closed by a corresponding ‘endmenu’ keyword in the same file.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### prompt
+
+The 'prompt' keyword sets the text displayed for a config symbol or choice in
+configuration front end.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+prompt <prompt> \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config REALMODE_DEBUG
+ prompt "Enable debug messages for option ROM execution"
+ bool
+ default n
+ depends on PCI_OPTION_ROM_RUN_REALMODE
+ depends on DEFAULT_CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_7 || DEFAULT_CONSOLE_LOGLEVEL_8
+ help
+ This option enables additional x86emu related debug
+ messages. Note: This option will increase the time to emulate a ROM.
+
+ If unsure, say N.
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- The same rules apply for menu entries defined by the 'prompt' keyword and
+ other prompt types such as those defined by the 'int' or 'string' keywords.
+- Redefining the prompt text in multiple instances of config symbols is allowed.
+ Only the current prompt statement for a particular entry will be displayed by
+ the front end in any given location. This means that multiple mainboards can
+ set different prompt values for a symbol, and it would appear differently in
+ each mainboard’s menu. The symbol can even have multiple entries in the same
+ menu with different prompts if desired. For example, both of these would get
+ printed, and changing either entry would change the other.
+
+ config PROMPT_TEST
+ string "Prompt value 1"
+
+ config PROMPT_TEST
+ prompt "Prompt value 2"
+
+- Although not required, it's recommended that you use quotes around prompt
+ statements.
+* If the prompt is redefined inside the SAME config entry, you will get a
+ warning:
+ _warning: prompt redefined_.
+ For example, this is not allowed:
+
+ config PROMPT_TEST
+ string "Prompt value 1"
+ prompt "Prompt value 2"
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### range
+
+This sets the allowable minimum and maximum entries for hex or int type config
+symbols.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+range <symbol> <symbol> \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config TEST1
+ hex "test 1"
+ range 0x0 0x10
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Only the first definition of a range is used for any symbol. Further
+ definitions will be ignored without warning.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### select
+
+The ‘select’ keyword is used within a bool type config block. In coreboot (and
+other projects that don't use modules), the 'select' keyword can force an
+unassociated bool type symbol to 'y'. When the symbol for the config block is
+‘y’, the ‘select’ action is taken. Otherwise the bool is unaffected.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+select <symbol> \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config TPM
+ bool
+ default n
+ select LPC_TPM if ARCH_X86
+ select I2C_TPM if ARCH_ARM
+ select I2C_TPM if ARCH_ARM64
+ help
+ Enable this option to enable TPM support in coreboot.
+ If unsure, say N.
+
+##### Notes:
+- Using the 'select' keyword can create logical contradictions in Kconfig, which
+ will create warnings and fail to save the .config. Following is an example of
+ an obviously invalid configuration, where selecting BOOLTEST violates the
+ ‘depends on’ of BOOLTEST2:
+
+ config BOOLTEST
+ bool "bool Test"
+ select BOOLTEST2
+
+ config BOOLTEST2
+ bool "Bool Test 2"
+ depends on !BOOLTEST
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- The ‘select’ keyword only works on bool type symbols.
+- Symbols created inside of choice blocks cannot be selected, and should be
+ enabled by using default values instead.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### source
+
+The 'source' keyword functions much the same as an 'include' statement in c.
+This pulls one or more files into Kconfig at the location of the 'source'
+command. This statement is always parsed - there is no way to conditionally
+source a file. coreboot has modified the source statement slightly to handle
+directory globbing. The '*' character will match with any directory.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+source <prompt>
+
+
+##### Example:
+
+ choice
+ prompt "Mainboard vendor"
+ default VENDOR_EMULATION
+
+ source "src/mainboard/*/Kconfig.name"
+
+ endchoice
+
+ source "src/mainboard/*/Kconfig"
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- As with all prompt values, the 'source' prompt may be enclosed in single or
+ double quotes, or left without any quotes. Using quotes is highly recommended
+ however.
+- The 'source' keyword loads files relative to the working directory where the
+ Kconfig command was run. For coreboot, this is the root coreboot directory, so
+ all source commands in the src directory need to start with ‘src/’.
+- In coreboot's Kconfig, if a sourced file does not exist, the statement is
+ simply ignored. This is different than other versions of Kconfig.
+- 'source' pulls a file into the Kconfig tree at the location of the keyword.
+ This allows for files containing small bits of the Kconfig tree to be pulled
+ into a larger construct. A restriction on this is that the starting/ending
+ keyword pairs must be within the same file - ‘endif’ cannot appear in a
+ different file than the ‘if’ statement that it ends. The same is true of
+ menu/endmenu and choice/endchoice pairs.
+
+The coreboot Kconfig structure uses this along with globbing to build up the
+mainboard directory. Each mainboard’s Kconfig.name file contains just two
+statements that generate a list of all the platform names:
+
+ config BOARD_AMD_NORWICH
+ bool "Norwich"
+
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- 'source' keywords always load in the specified file or files. There is no way
+ to optionally pull in a file. Putting an if/endif block around a source
+ command does not affect the source command, although it does affect the
+ content. To avoid confusion, use if/endif blocks inside sourced files to
+ remove their content if necessary.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+### string
+
+The last of the symbol type assignment keywords. 'string' allows a text value to
+be entered.
+
+
+##### Usage:
+string <expr> \[if <expr>\]
+
+
+##### Example:
+ config BOOTBLOCK_SOUTHBRIDGE_INIT
+ string
+ default "southbridge/amd/pi/hudson/bootblock.c"
+
+ config HUDSON_GEC_FWM_FILE
+ string "GEC firmware path and filename"
+ depends on HUDSON_GEC_FWM
+
+
+##### Notes:
+- Putting the prompt after the 'string' keyword is the same as using a 'prompt'
+keyword later. See the prompt keyword for more notes.
+- Only the first type definition for each symbol is valid. Further matching
+ definitions are fine, although unnecessary. Conflicting type definitions will
+ be ignored, and a warning will be presented on the console where the
+ configuration front end was run:
+ _warning: ignoring type redefinition of 'SYMBOL' from 'hex' to 'string'_.
+- Some characters may not get interpreted correctly when inside a string entry
+ depending on how they are used - inside a C file, inside a Makefile, passed
+ through a Makefile to a C file, or something else. It may be necessary to
+ escape the characters at times. Because this is very dependent upon how the
+ symbol is actually used, a definitive guide cannot be given here.
+- 'string' type variables do NOT need a default, and will default to the
+ value “”.
+
+
+##### Restrictions:
+- This keyword must be within a symbol definition block, started by the 'config'
+ keyword.
+
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+## Keywords not used in coreboot at the time of writing:
+
+- allnoconfig_y:
+- defconfig_list
+- def_tristate
+- env
+- ---help---
+- menuconfig
+- modules
+- optional
+- option
+- tristate
+- visible if
+
+
+## Build files generated by Kconfig
+
+### build/config.h
+
+The config.h file is a very basic header file made up of a list of #define
+statements:
+
+ #define SYMBOL NAME XXX
+
+
+##### Symbol types:
+- bool, int, and hex types - Every symbol of one of these types created in the
+ Kconfig tree is defined. It doesn’t matter whether they’re in an if/endif
+ block, or have a ‘depends on’ statement - they ALL end up being defined in
+ this file.
+- String - Only string types that actually have a value associated with them
+ are defined.
+
+The config.h file uses 0 and 1 to represent Kconfig's 'n' and 'y' values
+respectively. String values are placed inside double quotes.
+
+The name of the file is controlled by the $KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER environment
+variable, which is set to $(obj)/config.h by the coreboot makefiles.
+
+The prefix used for the symbols is controlled by the $CONFIG_ environment
+variable. This is not set in coreboot, which uses the default CONFIG_ prefix
+for all of its symbols.
+
+The coreboot makefile forces the config.h file to be included into all coreboot
+C files. This is done in Makefile.inc on the compiler command line using the
+“-include $(obj)/config.h” command line option.
+
+Example of various symbol types in the config.h file:
+
+ #define CONFIG_BOOTBLOCK_SOURCE "bootblock_simple.c" # String
+ #define CONFIG_CBFS_SIZE 0x00300000 # Hex
+ #define CONFIG_TTYS0_BAUD 115200 # Int
+ #define CONFIG_HAVE_ACPI_TABLES 1 # Bool enabled
+ #define CONFIG_EXPERT 0 # Bool disabled
+ #define CONFIG_NORTHBRIDGE_INTEL_I440LX 0 # Bool excluded
+
+
+### .config
+
+The .config file in the root directory is used as the input file, but also by
+the makefiles to set variable values. The main difference is that it does not
+contain all of the symbols. It excludes symbols defined in an if/endif block
+whose expression evaluated as false. Note that the symbol
+CONFIG_NORTHBRIDGE_INTEL_I440LX shown in the config.h example above is not
+present in the .config file.
+
+In addition, the .config file below contains the 'comment' prompt text from the
+Kconfig, separating the blocks.
+
+ ## General setup ##
+ CONFIG_BOOTBLOCK_SOURCE="bootblock_simple.c" # String
+ CONFIG_CBFS_SIZE=0x00300000 # Hex
+ CONFIG_TTYS0_BAUD=115200 # Int
+ CONFIG_HAVE_ACPI_TABLES=y # Bool enabled
+ # CONFIG_EXPERT is not set # Bool disabled
+
+This file is included directly by the makefile, and sets the CONFIG symbols so
+that they are available during the build process.
+
+
+### build/auto.conf
+
+Although the controlling variable for the auto.conf filename,
+KCONFIG_AUTOCONFIG, is set in the coreboot makefiles, the auto.conf file itself
+is not used by coreboot. This file has the same syntax and structure as the
+.config file, but contains all symbols in the Kconfig tree, including those that
+are not enabled, or are excluded by if/endif blocks, or the 'depends on'
+keyword. The kconfig tool could be updated to not generate this file, but since
+it's not hurting anything, it's still being generated.
+
+
+
+## Defconfig or Miniconfig files
+
+Miniconfig files are the standard .config files with all of the symbols which
+are set to their default values stripped out. These files are very useful for
+debugging your config, as well as being the best way to store your .config file.
+If you store your config as a full config file, it will be much harder to
+maintain. Any Kconfig symbols with updated default values will retain their old
+values, and any symbols which have been removed will still remain in the file.
+Storing full config files just generally leads to a lot more maintenance than
+storing miniconfig files.
+
+The easiest way to generate the miniconfig file is by running
+
+ make savedefconfig DOTCONFIG=.config DEFCONFIG=[output file]
+
+DEFCONFIG defaults to ‘defconfig’, DOTCONFIG defaults to ‘.config’.
+
+
+To turn the miniconfig back into a full config file, use one of the two targets:
+
+ make olddefconfig DOTCONFIG=[input/output file]
+
+or
+
+ make defconfig KBUILD_DEFCONFIG=[input file] DOTCONFIG=[output file]
+
+In both of these cases, DOTCONFIG defaults to .config.
+
+
+
+## Editing and updating saved .config files
+
+
+### Don’t save full config files
+
+Save miniconfig files, as mentioned in the previous section.
+
+
+### Disable values with ‘# CONFIG_SYMBOL is not set’
+
+A common mistake when trying to disable a value is to edit the .config file and
+change it from ‘CONFIG_SYMBOL=y’ to ‘CONFIG_SYMBOL=n’, but this doesn’t
+correctly disable the symbol. If the default value for the symbol is ‘n’ to
+begin with, this isn’t an issue - the symbol just gets ignored, and the default
+value is used. The problem is where the default for the symbol is ‘y’. When
+the bad entry in the .config file gets ignored, the value is set back to ‘y’,
+leading to much frustration.
+
+Always disable the Kconfig symbols in the .config file with the syntax:
+
+ # CONFIG_SYMBOL is not set
+
+### Only the LAST instance of a symbol is used
+
+When reading a saved .config file, Kconfig uses the LAST instance of a symbol
+that it comes across, and ignores any previous instances. This can be used to
+override symbols in a saved .config file by appending the new value to a config
+file.
+
+For example:
+
+A .config file that contains these two lines:
+
+ # CONFIG_BOOLTEST is not set
+ CONFIG_BOOLTEST=y
+
+After running ‘make olddefconfig’, ends up with the value:
+
+ CONFIG_BOOLTEST=y
+
+A case where this can be used is by a making a script to create two versions of
+a coreboot rom for a single platform. The first ROM could be built with serial
+console disabled, and the second ROM, built as a debug version, could have
+serial console enabled by overriding the "CONFIG_CONSOLE_SERIAL" symbol, and
+setting it to enabled.
+
+## General Kconfig Tips and Notes
+
+### Default values for config options
+
+The FIRST valid default that the Kconfig parser comes across will be used for
+each symbol. This means that the organization of the tree is very important.
+The structure should go from most specific at the top of the Kconfig tree to the
+most general later in the tree. In coreboot, the mainboard directories get
+loaded first, as they are sourced very early in the src/Kconfig file. Chipset
+Kconfig files get sourced later, and the architecture specific Kconfig files get
+sourced even later. This allows the mainboards to set their defaults early,
+overriding the default values set in chipset or architecture.
+
+Due to this mechanism, a default defined early cannot be changed by a default
+set in a later Kconfig file. There are ways around this, involving 'depends on'
+statements, but they add additional variables which are generally just used
+internal to Kconfig.
+
+
+### Select statement usage
+
+The 'select' keyword forces the value of a symbol with a bool type to 'y'. It
+overrides any dependencies of the symbol, so using it carelessly can lead to
+unpredictable results.
+
+
+
+### All bool, int, and hex Kconfig symbols are ALWAYS defined in the C code
+
+All bool, int, and hex Kconfig symbols are ALWAYS defined in the C code if they
+are in a sourced Kconfig - do NOT use #ifdef CONFIG_SYMBOL
+
+String symbols are the exception. All others (int, hex, etc.) are always
+defined in config.h. Never use an #ifdef statement for a Kconfig symbol other
+than strings in C to determine whether the symbol is enabled or disabled. So
+long as the symbol is in ANY sourced Kconfig file, it will be defined. Even if
+the symbol is only inside of an if/endif block where the if expression evaluates
+as false, the symbol STILL gets defined in the config.h file (though not in the
+.config file).
+
+Use \#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_*) to be sure (it returns false for undefined symbols
+and defined-to-0 symbols alike).
+
+
+
+### Symbols with prompts use defaults *ONLY* when initially created or enabled.
+
+Symbols with a prompt which may be user-modified are NOT updated to default
+values when changing between platforms or modifying other symbols. There are
+only two times the default values are used:
+1. When a config is initially created.
+2. When a dependency which had previously kept the symbol from being active
+ changes to allowing it to be active.
+
+Because of this, starting with a saved .config for one platform and updating it
+for another platform can lead to very different results than creating a platform
+from scratch.
+
+
+
+### Symbols with no prompt will be the default value (unless 'select' is used).
+
+Symbols that do not have a prompt will always use the first valid default value
+specified in Kconfig. They cannot be updated, even if they are modified in a
+saved .config file. As always, a 'select' statement overrides any specified
+'default' or 'depends on' statement.
+
+
+## Differences between coreboot's Kconfig and other Kconfig implementations.
+
+- coreboot has added the glob operator '*' for the 'source' keyword.
+- coreboot’s Kconfig always defines variables except for strings. In other
+ Kconfig implementations, bools set to false/0/no are not defined.
+- IS_ENABLED() is ‘false’ for undefined variables and ‘0’ variables. In Linux
+ (where the macro comes from) it’s ‘true’ as soon as the variable is defined.
+- coreboot’s version of Kconfig adds the KCONFIG_STRICT environment variable to
+ error out if there are any issues in the Kconfig files. In the Linux kernel,
+ Kconfig will generate a warning, but will still output an updated .config or
+ config.h file.
+
+
+## Kconfig Editor Highlighting
+
+#### vim:
+
+vim has syntax highlighting for Kconfig built in (or at least as a part of
+vim-common), but most editors do not.
+
+
+#### ultraedit:
+
+https://github.com/martinlroth/wordfiles/blob/master/kconfig.uew
+
+
+
+#### atom:
+
+https://github.com/martinlroth/language-kconfig
+
+
+## Syntax Checking:
+
+The Kconfig utility does some basic syntax checking on the Kconfig tree.
+Running "make silentoldconfig" will show any errors that the Kconfig utility
+sees.
+
+### util/kconfig_lint
+
+Because the Kconfig utility is relatively forgiving, and ignores issues that a
+developer might be interested in, kconfig_lint, another Kconfig checker has been
+written.
+
+The file kconfig_lint and its associated readme can be found in the coreboot
+utils/lint directory. It is useful for parsing the Kconfig tree, and for
+showing warnings, errors, and notes about coreboot’s Kconfig files.
+
+
+ kconfig_lint <options>
+ -o|--output=file Set output filename
+ -p|--print Print full output
+ -e|--errors_off Don't print warnings or errors
+ -w|--warnings_off Don't print warnings
+ -n|--notes Show minor notes
+ --path=dir Path to top level kconfig
+ -c|--config=file Filename of config file to load
+ -G|--no_git_grep Use standard grep tools instead of git grep
+
+
+The -p option is very useful for debugging Kconfig issues, because it reads all
+of the Kconfig files in the order that the Kconfig tools would read them, and
+prints it out, along with where each line came from and which menu it appears
+in.
+
+## License:
+This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
+License. To view a copy of this license, visit
+https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative
+Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA.
+
+Code examples snippets are licensed under GPLv2, and are used here under fair
+use laws.