Kconfig 19 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375376377378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398399400401402403404405406407408409410411412413414415416417418419420421422423424425426427428429430431432433434435436437438439440441442443444445446447448449450451452453454455456457458459460461462463464465466467468469470471472473474475476477478479
  1. #
  2. # Please run the following command for opening a page with more information about this configuration file:
  3. # idf.py docs -sp api-reference/kconfig.html
  4. #
  5. mainmenu "Espressif IoT Development Framework Configuration"
  6. orsource "./components/soc/$IDF_TARGET/include/soc/Kconfig.soc_caps.in"
  7. config IDF_CMAKE
  8. bool
  9. default "y"
  10. config IDF_ENV_FPGA
  11. # This option is for internal use only
  12. bool
  13. option env="IDF_ENV_FPGA"
  14. config IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV
  15. bool
  16. default "n"
  17. config IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA
  18. bool
  19. default "n"
  20. config IDF_TARGET_ARCH
  21. string
  22. default "riscv" if IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV
  23. default "xtensa" if IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA
  24. config IDF_TARGET
  25. # This option records the IDF target when sdkconfig is generated the first time.
  26. # It is not updated if environment variable $IDF_TARGET changes later, and
  27. # the build system is responsible for detecting the mismatch between
  28. # CONFIG_IDF_TARGET and $IDF_TARGET.
  29. string
  30. default "$IDF_TARGET"
  31. config IDF_TARGET_LINUX
  32. bool
  33. default "y" if IDF_TARGET="linux"
  34. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32
  35. bool
  36. default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32"
  37. select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA
  38. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32S2
  39. bool
  40. default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32s2"
  41. select FREERTOS_UNICORE
  42. select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA
  43. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32S3
  44. bool
  45. default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32s3"
  46. select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_XTENSA
  47. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C3
  48. bool
  49. default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32c3"
  50. select FREERTOS_UNICORE
  51. select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV
  52. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2
  53. bool
  54. default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32h2"
  55. select FREERTOS_UNICORE
  56. select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV
  57. choice IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2_BETA_VERSION
  58. prompt "ESP32-H2 beta version"
  59. depends on IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2
  60. default IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2_BETA_VERSION_2
  61. help
  62. Currently ESP32-H2 has several beta versions for internal use only.
  63. Select the one that matches your chip model.
  64. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2_BETA_VERSION_1
  65. bool
  66. prompt "ESP32-H2 beta1"
  67. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2_BETA_VERSION_2
  68. bool
  69. prompt "ESP32-H2 beta2"
  70. select ESPTOOLPY_NO_STUB # TODO: IDF-4288
  71. endchoice
  72. config IDF_TARGET_ESP32C2
  73. bool
  74. default "y" if IDF_TARGET="esp32c2"
  75. select FREERTOS_UNICORE
  76. select IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV
  77. config IDF_TARGET_LINUX
  78. bool
  79. default "y" if IDF_TARGET="linux"
  80. config IDF_FIRMWARE_CHIP_ID
  81. hex
  82. default 0x0000 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32
  83. default 0x0002 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32S2
  84. default 0x0005 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32C3
  85. default 0x0009 if IDF_TARGET_ESP32S3
  86. default 0x000C if IDF_TARGET_ESP32C2
  87. default 0x000A if IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2_BETA_VERSION_1
  88. default 0x000E if IDF_TARGET_ESP32H2_BETA_VERSION_2 # ESP32H2-TODO: IDF-3475
  89. default 0xFFFF
  90. menu "Build type"
  91. choice APP_BUILD_TYPE
  92. prompt "Application build type"
  93. default APP_BUILD_TYPE_APP_2NDBOOT
  94. help
  95. Select the way the application is built.
  96. By default, the application is built as a binary file in a format compatible with
  97. the ESP-IDF bootloader. In addition to this application, 2nd stage bootloader is
  98. also built. Application and bootloader binaries can be written into flash and
  99. loaded/executed from there.
  100. Another option, useful for only very small and limited applications, is to only link
  101. the .elf file of the application, such that it can be loaded directly into RAM over
  102. JTAG. Note that since IRAM and DRAM sizes are very limited, it is not possible to
  103. build any complex application this way. However for kinds of testing and debugging,
  104. this option may provide faster iterations, since the application does not need to be
  105. written into flash.
  106. Note that at the moment, ESP-IDF does not contain all the startup code required to
  107. initialize the CPUs and ROM memory (data/bss). Therefore it is necessary to execute
  108. a bit of ROM code prior to executing the application. A gdbinit file may look as follows (for ESP32):
  109. # Connect to a running instance of OpenOCD
  110. target remote :3333
  111. # Reset and halt the target
  112. mon reset halt
  113. # Run to a specific point in ROM code,
  114. # where most of initialization is complete.
  115. thb *0x40007d54
  116. c
  117. # Load the application into RAM
  118. load
  119. # Run till app_main
  120. tb app_main
  121. c
  122. Execute this gdbinit file as follows:
  123. xtensa-esp32-elf-gdb build/app-name.elf -x gdbinit
  124. Example gdbinit files for other targets can be found in tools/test_apps/system/gdb_loadable_elf/
  125. Recommended sdkconfig.defaults for building loadable ELF files is as follows.
  126. CONFIG_APP_BUILD_TYPE_ELF_RAM is required, other options help reduce application
  127. memory footprint.
  128. CONFIG_APP_BUILD_TYPE_ELF_RAM=y
  129. CONFIG_VFS_SUPPORT_TERMIOS=
  130. CONFIG_NEWLIB_NANO_FORMAT=y
  131. CONFIG_ESP_SYSTEM_PANIC_PRINT_HALT=y
  132. CONFIG_ESP_DEBUG_STUBS_ENABLE=
  133. CONFIG_ESP_ERR_TO_NAME_LOOKUP=
  134. config APP_BUILD_TYPE_APP_2NDBOOT
  135. bool
  136. prompt "Default (binary application + 2nd stage bootloader)"
  137. depends on !IDF_TARGET_LINUX
  138. select APP_BUILD_GENERATE_BINARIES
  139. select APP_BUILD_BOOTLOADER
  140. select APP_BUILD_USE_FLASH_SECTIONS
  141. config APP_BUILD_TYPE_ELF_RAM
  142. bool
  143. prompt "ELF file, loadable into RAM (EXPERIMENTAL))"
  144. endchoice # APP_BUILD_TYPE
  145. # Hidden options, set according to the choice above
  146. config APP_BUILD_GENERATE_BINARIES
  147. bool # Whether to generate .bin files or not
  148. config APP_BUILD_BOOTLOADER
  149. bool # Whether to build the bootloader
  150. config APP_BUILD_USE_FLASH_SECTIONS
  151. bool # Whether to place code/data into memory-mapped flash sections
  152. config APP_REPRODUCIBLE_BUILD
  153. bool "Enable reproducible build"
  154. default n
  155. select COMPILER_HIDE_PATHS_MACROS
  156. help
  157. If enabled, all date, time, and path information would be eliminated. A .gdbinit file would be create
  158. automatically. (or will be append if you have one already)
  159. config APP_NO_BLOBS
  160. bool "No Binary Blobs"
  161. default n
  162. help
  163. If enabled, this disables the linking of binary libraries in the application build. Note
  164. that after enabling this Wi-Fi/Bluetooth will not work.
  165. config APP_COMPATIBLE_PRE_V2_1_BOOTLOADERS
  166. bool "App compatible with bootloaders before ESP-IDF v2.1"
  167. select APP_COMPATIBLE_PRE_V3_1_BOOTLOADERS
  168. depends on IDF_TARGET_ESP32
  169. default n
  170. help
  171. Bootloaders before ESP-IDF v2.1 did less initialisation of the
  172. system clock. This setting needs to be enabled to build an app
  173. which can be booted by these older bootloaders.
  174. If this setting is enabled, the app can be booted by any bootloader
  175. from IDF v1.0 up to the current version.
  176. If this setting is disabled, the app can only be booted by bootloaders
  177. from IDF v2.1 or newer.
  178. Enabling this setting adds approximately 1KB to the app's IRAM usage.
  179. config APP_COMPATIBLE_PRE_V3_1_BOOTLOADERS
  180. bool "App compatible with bootloader and partition table before ESP-IDF v3.1"
  181. depends on IDF_TARGET_ESP32
  182. default n
  183. help
  184. Partition tables before ESP-IDF V3.1 do not contain an MD5 checksum
  185. field, and the bootloader before ESP-IDF v3.1 cannot read a partition
  186. table that contains an MD5 checksum field.
  187. Enable this option only if your app needs to boot on a bootloader and/or
  188. partition table that was generated from a version *before* ESP-IDF v3.1.
  189. If this option and Flash Encryption are enabled at the same time, and any
  190. data partitions in the partition table are marked Encrypted, then the
  191. partition encrypted flag should be manually verified in the app before accessing
  192. the partition (see CVE-2021-27926).
  193. config APP_INIT_CLK
  194. bool
  195. depends on IDF_TARGET_ESP32
  196. default y if APP_COMPATIBLE_PRE_V2_1_BOOTLOADERS
  197. default y if APP_BUILD_TYPE_ELF_RAM
  198. endmenu # Build type
  199. source "$COMPONENT_KCONFIGS_PROJBUILD_SOURCE_FILE"
  200. menu "Compiler options"
  201. choice COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION
  202. prompt "Optimization Level"
  203. default COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_DEFAULT
  204. help
  205. This option sets compiler optimization level (gcc -O argument) for the app.
  206. - The "Default" setting will add the -0g flag to CFLAGS.
  207. - The "Size" setting will add the -0s flag to CFLAGS.
  208. - The "Performance" setting will add the -O2 flag to CFLAGS.
  209. - The "None" setting will add the -O0 flag to CFLAGS.
  210. The "Size" setting cause the compiled code to be smaller and faster, but
  211. may lead to difficulties of correlating code addresses to source file
  212. lines when debugging.
  213. The "Performance" setting causes the compiled code to be larger and faster,
  214. but will be easier to correlated code addresses to source file lines.
  215. "None" with -O0 produces compiled code without optimization.
  216. Note that custom optimization levels may be unsupported.
  217. Compiler optimization for the IDF bootloader is set separately,
  218. see the BOOTLOADER_COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION setting.
  219. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_DEFAULT
  220. bool "Debug (-Og)"
  221. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_SIZE
  222. bool "Optimize for size (-Os)"
  223. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_PERF
  224. bool "Optimize for performance (-O2)"
  225. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_NONE
  226. bool "Debug without optimization (-O0)"
  227. endchoice
  228. choice COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTION_LEVEL
  229. prompt "Assertion level"
  230. default COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_ENABLE
  231. help
  232. Assertions can be:
  233. - Enabled. Failure will print verbose assertion details. This is the default.
  234. - Set to "silent" to save code size (failed assertions will abort() but user
  235. needs to use the aborting address to find the line number with the failed assertion.)
  236. - Disabled entirely (not recommended for most configurations.) -DNDEBUG is added
  237. to CPPFLAGS in this case.
  238. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_ENABLE
  239. prompt "Enabled"
  240. bool
  241. help
  242. Enable assertions. Assertion content and line number will be printed on failure.
  243. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_SILENT
  244. prompt "Silent (saves code size)"
  245. bool
  246. help
  247. Enable silent assertions. Failed assertions will abort(), user needs to
  248. use the aborting address to find the line number with the failed assertion.
  249. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_DISABLE
  250. prompt "Disabled (sets -DNDEBUG)"
  251. bool
  252. help
  253. If assertions are disabled, -DNDEBUG is added to CPPFLAGS.
  254. endchoice # assertions
  255. choice COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM
  256. prompt "Compiler float lib source"
  257. default COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM_RVFPLIB if ESP_ROM_HAS_RVFPLIB
  258. default COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM_GCCLIB
  259. help
  260. In the soft-fp part of libgcc, riscv version is written in C,
  261. and handles all edge cases in IEEE754, which makes it larger
  262. and performance is slow.
  263. RVfplib is an optimized RISC-V library for FP arithmetic on 32-bit
  264. integer processors, for single and double-precision FP.
  265. RVfplib is "fast", but it has a few exceptions from IEEE 754 compliance.
  266. config COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM_GCCLIB
  267. bool "libgcc"
  268. config COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM_RVFPLIB
  269. depends on ESP_ROM_HAS_RVFPLIB
  270. bool "librvfp"
  271. endchoice # COMPILER_FLOAT_LIB_FROM
  272. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTION_LEVEL
  273. int
  274. default 0 if COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_DISABLE
  275. default 1 if COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_SILENT
  276. default 2 if COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_ASSERTIONS_ENABLE
  277. config COMPILER_OPTIMIZATION_CHECKS_SILENT
  278. bool "Disable messages in ESP_RETURN_ON_* and ESP_EXIT_ON_* macros"
  279. default n
  280. help
  281. If enabled, the error messages will be discarded in following check macros:
  282. - ESP_RETURN_ON_ERROR
  283. - ESP_EXIT_ON_ERROR
  284. - ESP_RETURN_ON_FALSE
  285. - ESP_EXIT_ON_FALSE
  286. menuconfig COMPILER_HIDE_PATHS_MACROS
  287. bool "Replace ESP-IDF and project paths in binaries"
  288. default y
  289. help
  290. When expanding the __FILE__ and __BASE_FILE__ macros, replace paths inside ESP-IDF
  291. with paths relative to the placeholder string "IDF", and convert paths inside the
  292. project directory to relative paths.
  293. This allows building the project with assertions or other code that embeds file paths,
  294. without the binary containing the exact path to the IDF or project directories.
  295. This option passes -fmacro-prefix-map options to the GCC command line. To replace additional
  296. paths in your binaries, modify the project CMakeLists.txt file to pass custom -fmacro-prefix-map or
  297. -ffile-prefix-map arguments.
  298. menuconfig COMPILER_CXX_EXCEPTIONS
  299. bool "Enable C++ exceptions"
  300. default n
  301. help
  302. Enabling this option compiles all IDF C++ files with exception support enabled.
  303. Disabling this option disables C++ exception support in all compiled files, and any libstdc++ code
  304. which throws an exception will abort instead.
  305. Enabling this option currently adds an additional ~500 bytes of heap overhead
  306. when an exception is thrown in user code for the first time.
  307. config COMPILER_CXX_EXCEPTIONS_EMG_POOL_SIZE
  308. int "Emergency Pool Size"
  309. default 0
  310. depends on COMPILER_CXX_EXCEPTIONS
  311. help
  312. Size (in bytes) of the emergency memory pool for C++ exceptions. This pool will be used to allocate
  313. memory for thrown exceptions when there is not enough memory on the heap.
  314. config COMPILER_CXX_RTTI
  315. bool "Enable C++ run-time type info (RTTI)"
  316. default n
  317. help
  318. Enabling this option compiles all C++ files with RTTI support enabled.
  319. This increases binary size (typically by tens of kB) but allows using
  320. dynamic_cast conversion and typeid operator.
  321. choice COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE
  322. prompt "Stack smashing protection mode"
  323. default COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_NONE
  324. help
  325. Stack smashing protection mode. Emit extra code to check for buffer overflows, such as stack
  326. smashing attacks. This is done by adding a guard variable to functions with vulnerable objects.
  327. The guards are initialized when a function is entered and then checked when the function exits.
  328. If a guard check fails, program is halted. Protection has the following modes:
  329. - In NORMAL mode (GCC flag: -fstack-protector) only functions that call alloca, and functions with
  330. buffers larger than 8 bytes are protected.
  331. - STRONG mode (GCC flag: -fstack-protector-strong) is like NORMAL, but includes additional functions
  332. to be protected -- those that have local array definitions, or have references to local frame
  333. addresses.
  334. - In OVERALL mode (GCC flag: -fstack-protector-all) all functions are protected.
  335. Modes have the following impact on code performance and coverage:
  336. - performance: NORMAL > STRONG > OVERALL
  337. - coverage: NORMAL < STRONG < OVERALL
  338. The performance impact includes increasing the amount of stack memory required for each task.
  339. config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_NONE
  340. bool "None"
  341. config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_NORM
  342. bool "Normal"
  343. config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_STRONG
  344. bool "Strong"
  345. config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_ALL
  346. bool "Overall"
  347. endchoice
  348. config COMPILER_STACK_CHECK
  349. bool
  350. default !COMPILER_STACK_CHECK_MODE_NONE
  351. help
  352. Stack smashing protection.
  353. config COMPILER_WARN_WRITE_STRINGS
  354. bool "Enable -Wwrite-strings warning flag"
  355. default "n"
  356. help
  357. Adds -Wwrite-strings flag for the C/C++ compilers.
  358. For C, this gives string constants the type ``const char[]`` so that
  359. copying the address of one into a non-const ``char *`` pointer
  360. produces a warning. This warning helps to find at compile time code
  361. that tries to write into a string constant.
  362. For C++, this warns about the deprecated conversion from string
  363. literals to ``char *``.
  364. config COMPILER_SAVE_RESTORE_LIBCALLS
  365. bool "Enable -msave-restore flag to reduce code size"
  366. depends on IDF_TARGET_ARCH_RISCV
  367. help
  368. Adds -msave-restore to C/C++ compilation flags.
  369. When this flag is enabled, compiler will call library functions to
  370. save/restore registers in function prologues/epilogues. This results
  371. in lower overall code size, at the expense of slightly reduced performance.
  372. This option can be enabled for RISC-V targets only.
  373. config COMPILER_DUMP_RTL_FILES
  374. bool "Dump RTL files during compilation"
  375. help
  376. If enabled, RTL files will be produced during compilation. These files
  377. can be used by other tools, for example to calculate call graphs.
  378. endmenu # Compiler Options
  379. menu "Component config"
  380. source "$COMPONENT_KCONFIGS_SOURCE_FILE"
  381. endmenu