BOOTPARAM(7) manual page
Table of Contents
bootparam - introduction to boot time parameters
of the Linux kernel
The Linux kernel accepts certain ’command-line
options’ or ’boot time parameters’ at the moment it is started. In general
this is used to supply the kernel with information about hardware parameters
that the kernel would not be able to determine on its own, or to avoid/override
the values that the kernel would otherwise detect.
When the kernel is booted
directly by the BIOS (say from a floppy to which you copied a kernel using
’cp zImage /dev/fd0’), you have no opportunity to specify any parameters.
So, in order to take advantage of this possibility you have to use a boot
loader that is able to pass parameters, such as GRUB.
The kernel command line is parsed into a list of
strings (boot arguments) separated by spaces. Most of the boot arguments
take have the form:
name[=value_1][,value_2]...[,value_10]
where ’name’ is a unique keyword that is used to identify what part of the
kernel the associated values (if any) are to be given to. Note the limit
of 10 is real, as the present code handles only 10 comma separated parameters
per keyword. (However, you can reuse the same keyword with up to an additional
10 parameters in unusually complicated situations, assuming the setup function
supports it.)
Most of the sorting is coded in the kernel source file init/main.c.
First, the kernel checks to see if the argument is any of the special arguments
’root=’, ’nfsroot=’, ’nfsaddrs=’, ’ro’, ’rw’, ’debug’ or ’init’. The meaning of these
special arguments is described below.
Then it walks a list of setup functions
(contained in the bootsetups array) to see if the specified argument string
(such as ’foo’) has been associated with a setup function (’foo_setup()’) for
a particular device or part of the kernel. If you passed the kernel the
line foo=3,4,5,6 then the kernel would search the bootsetups array to see
if ’foo’ was registered. If it was, then it would call the setup function
associated with ’foo’ (foo_setup()) and hand it the arguments 3, 4, 5, and
6 as given on the kernel command line.
Anything of the form ’foo=bar’ that
is not accepted as a setup function as described above is then interpreted
as an environment variable to be set. A (useless?) example would be to use
’TERM=vt100’ as a boot argument.
Any remaining arguments that were not picked
up by the kernel and were not interpreted as environment variables are
then passed onto process one, which is usually the init(1)
program. The
most common argument that is passed to the init process is the word ’single’
which instructs it to boot the computer in single user mode, and not launch
all the usual daemons. Check the manual page for the version of init(1)
installed on your system to see what arguments it accepts.
- ’init=...’
- This sets the initial command to be executed by the
kernel. If this is not set, or cannot be found, the kernel will try /sbin/init,
then /etc/init, then /bin/init, then /bin/sh and panic if all of this fails.
- ’nfsaddrs=...’
- This sets the nfs boot address to the given string. This boot
address is used in case of a net boot.
- ’nfsroot=...’
- This sets the nfs root name
to the given string. If this string does not begin with ’/’ or ’,’ or a digit,
then it is prefixed by ’/tftpboot/’. This root name is used in case of a net
boot.
- ’no387’
- (Only when CONFIG_BUGi386 is defined.) Some i387 coprocessor
chips have bugs that show up when used in 32 bit protected mode. For example,
some of the early ULSI-387 chips would cause solid lockups while performing
floating-point calculations. Using the ’no387’ boot argument causes Linux to
ignore the maths coprocessor even if you have one. Of course you must then
have your kernel compiled with math emulation support!
- ’no-hlt’
- (Only when
CONFIG_BUGi386 is defined.) Some of the early i486DX-100 chips have a problem
with the ’hlt’ instruction, in that they can’t reliably return to operating
mode after this instruction is used. Using the ’no-hlt’ instruction tells Linux
to just run an infinite loop when there is nothing else to do, and to not
halt the CPU. This allows people with these broken chips to use Linux.
- ’root=...’
- This argument tells the kernel what device is to be used as the root filesystem
while booting. The default of this setting is determined at compile time,
and usually is the value of the root device of the system that the kernel
was built on. To override this value, and select the second floppy drive
as the root device, one would use ’root=/dev/fd1’.
The root device can be
specified symbolically or numerically. A symbolic specification has the
form /dev/XXYN, where XX designates the device type (’hd’ for ST-506 compatible
hard disk, with Y in ’a’-’d’; ’sd’ for SCSI compatible disk, with Y in ’a’-’e’; ’ad’
for Atari ACSI disk, with Y in ’a’-’e’, ’ez’ for a Syquest EZ135 parallel port
removable drive, with Y=’a’, ’xd’ for XT compatible disk, with Y either ’a’ or
’b’; ’fd’ for floppy disk, with Y the floppy drive number--fd0 would be the DOS
’A:’ drive, and fd1 would be ’B:’), Y the driver letter or number, and N the
number (in decimal) of the partition on this device (absent in the case
of floppies). Recent kernels allow many other types, mostly for CD-ROMs:
nfs, ram, scd, mcd, cdu535, aztcd, cm206cd, gscd, sbpcd, sonycd, bpcd. (The
type nfs specifies a net boot; ram refers to a ram disk.)
Note that this
has nothing to do with the designation of these devices on your filesystem.
The ’/dev/’ part is purely conventional.
The more awkward and less portable
numeric specification of the above possible root devices in major/minor
format is also accepted. (For example, /dev/sda3 is major 8, minor 3, so
you could use ’root=0x803’ as an alternative.)
- ’rootdelay=’
- This parameter sets
the delay (in seconds) to pause before attempting to mount the root filesystem.
- ’rootflags=...’
- This parameter sets the mount option string for the root filesystem
(see also fstab(5)
).
- ’rootfstype=...’
- The ’rootfstype’ option tells the kernel
to mount the root filesystem as if it where of the type specified. This
can be useful (for example) to mount an ext3 filesystem as ext2 and then
remove the journal in the root filesystem, in fact reverting its format
from ext3 to ext2 without the need to boot the box from alternate media.
- ’ro’ and ’rw’
- The ’ro’ option tells the kernel to mount the root filesystem as
’read-only’ so that filesystem consistency check programs (fsck) can do their
work on a quiescent filesystem. No processes can write to files on the filesystem
in question until it is ’remounted’ as read/write capable, for example, by
’mount -w -n -o remount /’. (See also mount(8)
.)
The ’rw’ option tells the kernel
to mount the root filesystem read/write. This is the default.
- ’resume=...’
- This
tells the kernel the location of the suspend-to-disk data that you want the
machine to resume from after hibernation. Usually, it is the same as your
swap partition or file. Example:
resume=/dev/hda2
- ’reserve=...’
- This is used to protect I/O port regions from probes. The form
of the command is:
reserve=iobase,extent[,iobase,extent]...
In some machines it may be necessary
to prevent device drivers from checking for devices (auto-probing) in a
specific region. This may be because of hardware that reacts badly to the
probing, or hardware that would be mistakenly identified, or merely hardware
you don’t want the kernel to initialize.
The reserve boot-time argument specifies
an I/O port region that shouldn’t be probed. A device driver will not probe
a reserved region, unless another boot argument explicitly specifies that
it do so.
For example, the boot line
reserve=0x300,32 blah=0x300
- keeps all device drivers except the driver for ’blah’ from probing
- 0x300-0x31f.
- ’mem=...’
- The BIOS call defined in the PC specification that returns the amount
of installed memory was designed only to be able to report up to 64MB. Linux
uses this BIOS call at boot to determine how much memory is installed. If
you have more than 64MB of RAM installed, you can use this boot argument
to tell Linux how much memory you have. The value is in decimal or hexadecimal
(prefix 0x), and the suffixes ’k’ (times 1024) or ’M’ (times 1048576) can be
used. Here is a quote from Linus on usage of the ’mem=’ parameter.
The kernel
will accept any ’mem=xx’ parameter you give it, and if it turns out that
you lied to it, it will crash horribly sooner or later. The parameter indicates
the highest addressable RAM address, so ’mem=0x1000000’ means you have 16MB
of memory, for example. For a 96MB machine this would be ’mem=0x6000000’.
NOTE: some machines might use the top of memory for BIOS caching or whatever,
so you might not actually have up to the full 96MB addressable. The reverse
is also true: some chipsets will map the physical memory that is covered
by the BIOS area into the area just past the top of memory, so the top-of-mem
might actually be 96MB + 384kB for example. If you tell linux that it has
more memory than it actually does have, bad things will happen: maybe not
at once, but surely eventually.
You can also use the boot argument ’mem=nopentium’
to turn off 4 MB page tables on kernels configured for IA32 systems with
a pentium or newer CPU.
- ’panic=N’
- By default the kernel will not reboot after
a panic, but this option will cause a kernel reboot after N seconds (if
N is greater than zero). This panic timeout can also be set by
echo N > /proc/sys/kernel/panic
- ’reboot=[warm|cold][,[bios|hard]]’
- (Only when CONFIG_BUGi386 is defined.) Since
2.0.22 a reboot is by default a cold reboot. One asks for the old default
with ’reboot=warm’. (A cold reboot may be required to reset certain hardware,
but might destroy not yet written data in a disk cache. A warm reboot may
be faster.) By default a reboot is hard, by asking the keyboard controller
to pulse the reset line low, but there is at least one type of motherboard
where that doesn’t work. The option ’reboot=bios’ will instead jump through
the BIOS.
- ’nosmp’ and ’maxcpus=N’
- (Only when __SMP__ is defined.) A command-line
option of ’nosmp’ or ’maxcpus=0’ will disable SMP activation entirely; an option
’maxcpus=N’ limits the maximum number of CPUs activated in SMP mode to N.
- ’debug’
- Kernel messages are handed
off to the kernel log daemon klogd so that they may be logged to disk. Messages
with a priority above console_loglevel are also printed on the console.
(For these levels, see <linux/kernel.h>.) By default this variable is set to
log anything more important than debug messages. This boot argument will
cause the kernel to also print the messages of DEBUG priority. The console
loglevel can also be set at run time via an option to klogd. See klogd(8)
.
- ’profile=N’
- It is possible to enable a kernel profiling function, if one
wishes to find out where the kernel is spending its CPU cycles. Profiling
is enabled by setting the variable prof_shift to a nonzero value. This is
done either by specifying CONFIG_PROFILE at compile time, or by giving
the ’profile=’ option. Now the value that prof_shift gets will be N, when
given, or CONFIG_PROFILE_SHIFT, when that is given, or 2, the default. The
significance of this variable is that it gives the granularity of the profiling:
each clock tick, if the system was executing kernel code, a counter is
incremented:
profile[address >> prof_shift]++;
The raw profiling information can be read from /proc/profile. Probably
you’ll want to use a tool such as readprofile.c to digest it. Writing to /proc/profile
will clear the counters.
- ’swap=N1,N2,N3,N4,N5,N6,N7,N8’
- Set the eight parameters
max_page_age, page_advance, page_decline, page_initial_age, age_cluster_fract,
age_cluster_min, pageout_weight, bufferout_weight that control the kernel
swap algorithm. For kernel tuners only.
- ’buff=N1,N2,N3,N4,N5,N6’
- Set the six
parameters max_buff_age, buff_advance, buff_decline, buff_initial_age,
bufferout_weight, buffermem_grace that control kernel buffer memory management.
For kernel tuners only.
(Only if the kernel
was compiled with CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM.) In general it is a bad idea to use
a ramdisk under Linux--the system will use available memory more efficiently
itself. But while booting (or while constructing boot floppies) it is often
useful to load the floppy contents into a ramdisk. One might also have a
system in which first some modules (for filesystem or hardware) must be
loaded before the main disk can be accessed.
In Linux 1.3.48, ramdisk handling
was changed drastically. Earlier, the memory was allocated statically, and
there was a ’ramdisk=N’ parameter to tell its size. (This could also be set
in the kernel image at compile time.) These days ram disks use the buffer
cache, and grow dynamically. For a lot of information in conjunction with
the new ramdisk setup, see the kernel source file Documentation/blockdev/ramdisk.txt
(Documentation/ramdisk.txt in older kernels).
There are four parameters,
two boolean and two integral.
- ’load_ramdisk=N’
- If N=1, do load a ramdisk. If
N=0, do not load a ramdisk. (This is the default.)
- ’prompt_ramdisk=N’
- If N=1,
do prompt for insertion of the floppy. (This is the default.) If N=0, do
not prompt. (Thus, this parameter is never needed.)
- ’ramdisk_size=N’ or (obsolete)
’ramdisk=N’
- Set the maximal size of the ramdisk(s) to N kB. The default is
4096 (4 MB).
- ’ramdisk_start=N’
- Sets the starting block number (the offset
on the floppy where the ramdisk starts) to N. This is needed in case the
ramdisk follows a kernel image.
- ’noinitrd’
- (Only if the kernel was compiled
with CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM and CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD.) These days it is possible
to compile the kernel to use initrd. When this feature is enabled, the boot
process will load the kernel and an initial ramdisk; then the kernel converts
initrd into a "normal" ramdisk, which is mounted read-write as root device;
then /linuxrc is executed; afterward the "real" root filesystem is mounted,
and the initrd filesystem is moved over to /initrd; finally the usual boot
sequence (e.g., invocation of /sbin/init) is performed.
For a detailed description
of the initrd feature, see the kernel source file Documentation/initrd.txt.
The ’noinitrd’ option tells the kernel that although it was compiled for
operation with initrd, it should not go through the above steps, but leave
the initrd data under /dev/initrd. (This device can be used only once: the
data is freed as soon as the last process that used it has closed /dev/initrd.)
General notation for this section:
iobase
-- the first I/O port that the SCSI host occupies. These are specified in
hexadecimal notation, and usually lie in the range from 0x200 to 0x3ff.
irq -- the hardware interrupt that the card is configured to use. Valid values
will be dependent on the card in question, but will usually be 5, 7, 9,
10, 11, 12, and 15. The other values are usually used for common peripherals
like IDE hard disks, floppies, serial ports, and so on.
scsi-id -- the ID
that the host adapter uses to identify itself on the SCSI bus. Only some
host adapters allow you to change this value, as most have it permanently
specified internally. The usual default value is 7, but the Seagate and
Future Domain TMC-950 boards use 6.
parity -- whether the SCSI host adapter
expects the attached devices to supply a parity value with all information
exchanges. Specifying a one indicates parity checking is enabled, and a
zero disables parity checking. Again, not all adapters will support selection
of parity behavior as a boot argument.
- ’max_scsi_luns=...’
- A SCSI device can
have a number of ’subdevices’ contained within itself. The most common example
is one of the new SCSI CD-ROMs that handle more than one disk at a time.
Each CD is addressed as a ’Logical Unit Number’ (LUN) of that particular
device. But most devices, such as hard disks, tape drives and such are only
one device, and will be assigned to LUN zero.
Some poorly designed SCSI
devices cannot handle being probed for LUNs not equal to zero. Therefore,
if the compile-time flag CONFIG_SCSI_MULTI_LUN is not set, newer kernels
will by default only probe LUN zero.
To specify the number of probed LUNs
at boot, one enters ’max_scsi_luns=n’ as a boot arg, where n is a number
between one and eight. To avoid problems as described above, one would use
n=1 to avoid upsetting such broken devices.
- SCSI tape configuration
- Some
boot time configuration of the SCSI tape driver can be achieved by using
the following:
st=buf_size[,write_threshold[,max_bufs]]
The first two numbers are specified
in units of kB. The default buf_size is 32kB, and the maximum size that
can be specified is a ridiculous 16384kB. The write_threshold is the value
at which the buffer is committed to tape, with a default value of 30kB.
The maximum number of buffers varies with the number of drives detected,
and has a default of two. An example usage would be:
st=32,30,2
- Full details can be found in the file
- Documentation/scsi/st.txt (or drivers/scsi/README.st
for older kernels) in the Linux kernel source.
- Adaptec aha151x, aha152x,
aic6260, aic6360, SB16-SCSI configuration
- The aha numbers refer to cards
and the aic numbers refer to the actual SCSI chip on these type of cards,
including the Soundblaster-16 SCSI.
The probe code for these SCSI hosts
looks for an installed BIOS, and if none is present, the probe will not
find your card. Then you will have to use a boot argument of the form:
aha152x=iobase[,irq[,scsi-id[,reconnect[,parity]]]]
- If the driver was compiled
with debugging enabled, a sixth
- value can be specified to set the debug
level.
All the parameters are as described at the top of this section,
and the reconnect value will allow device disconnect/reconnect if a nonzero
value is used. An example usage is as follows:
aha152x=0x340,11,7,1
- Note that the parameters must be specified in order, meaning that if
- you
want to specify a parity setting, then you will have to specify an iobase,
irq, scsi-id and reconnect value as well.
- Adaptec aha154x configuration
- The
aha1542 series cards have an i82077 floppy controller onboard, while the
aha1540 series cards do not. These are busmastering cards, and have parameters
to set the "fairness" that is used to share the bus with other devices.
The boot argument looks like the following.
aha1542=iobase[,buson,busoff[,dmaspeed]]
- Valid iobase values are usually
one of: 0x130, 0x134, 0x230, 0x234,
- 0x330, 0x334. Clone cards may permit
other values.
The buson, busoff values refer to the number of microseconds
that the card dominates the ISA bus. The defaults are 11us on, and 4us off,
so that other cards (such as an ISA LANCE Ethernet card) have a chance
to get access to the ISA bus.
The dmaspeed value refers to the rate (in
MB/s) at which the DMA (Direct Memory Access) transfers proceed. The default
is 5MB/s. Newer revision cards allow you to select this value as part of
the soft-configuration, older cards use jumpers. You can use values up to
10MB/s assuming that your motherboard is capable of handling it. Experiment
with caution if using values over 5MB/s.
- Adaptec aha274x, aha284x, aic7xxx
configuration
- These boards can accept an argument of the form:
aic7xxx=extended,no_reset
- The
- extended value, if nonzero, indicates that
extended translation for large disks is enabled. The no_reset value, if
nonzero, tells the driver not to reset the SCSI bus when setting up the
host adapter at boot.
- AdvanSys SCSI Hosts configuration (’advansys=’)
- The
AdvanSys driver can accept up to four I/O addresses that will be probed
for an AdvanSys SCSI card. Note that these values (if used) do not effect
EISA or PCI probing in any way. They are used only for probing ISA and VLB
cards. In addition, if the driver has been compiled with debugging enabled,
the level of debugging output can be set by adding an 0xdeb[0-f] parameter.
The 0-f allows setting the level of the debugging messages to any of 16
levels of verbosity.
- AM53C974
- Syntax:
AM53C974=host-scsi-id,target-scsi-id,max-rate,max-offset
- BusLogic SCSI Hosts
configuration (’BusLogic=’)
-
Syntax:
BusLogic=N1,N2,N3,N4,N5,S1,S2,...
- For an extensive discussion of the BusLogic
command line parameters,
- see the kernel source file drivers/scsi/BusLogic.c.
The text below is a very much abbreviated extract.
The parameters N1-N5
are integers. The parameters S1,... are strings. N1 is the I/O Address at which
the Host Adapter is located. N2 is the Tagged Queue Depth to use for Target
Devices that support Tagged Queuing. N3 is the Bus Settle Time in seconds.
This is the amount of time to wait between a Host Adapter Hard Reset which
initiates a SCSI Bus Reset and issuing any SCSI Commands. N4 is the Local
Options (for one Host Adapter). N5 is the Global Options (for all Host Adapters).
The string options are used to provide control over Tagged Queuing (TQ:Default,
TQ:Enable, TQ:Disable, TQ:<Per-Target-Spec>), over Error Recovery (ER:Default,
ER:HardReset, ER:BusDeviceReset, ER:None, ER:<Per-Target-Spec>), and over Host
Adapter Probing (NoProbe, NoProbeISA, NoSortPCI).
- EATA/DMA configuration
-
The default list of I/O ports to be probed can be changed by
eata=iobase,iobase,....
- Future Domain TMC-16x0 configuration
- Syntax:
fdomain=iobase,irq[,adapter_id]
- Great Valley Products (GVP) SCSI controller
configuration
- Syntax:
gvp11=dma_transfer_bitmask
- Future Domain TMC-8xx, TMC-950 configuration
- Syntax:
tmc8xx=mem_base,irq
- The
- mem_base value is the value of the memory-mapped
I/O region that the card uses. This will usually be one of the following
values: 0xc8000, 0xca000, 0xcc000, 0xce000, 0xdc000, 0xde000.
- IN2000 configuration
- Syntax:
in2000=S
- where S is a comma-separated string of items keyword[:value].
- Recognized
keywords (possibly with value) are: ioport:addr, noreset, nosync:x, period:ns,
disconnect:x, debug:x, proc:x. For the function of these parameters, see
the kernel source file drivers/scsi/in2000.c.
- NCR5380 and NCR53C400 configuration
-
The boot argument is of the form
ncr5380=iobase,irq,dma
- or
-
ncr53c400=iobase,irq
- If the card doesn’t use interrupts, then an IRQ value
of 255 (0xff) will
- disable interrupts. An IRQ value of 254 means to autoprobe.
More details can be found in the file Documentation/scsi/g_NCR5380.txt (or
drivers/scsi/README.g_NCR5380 for older kernels) in the Linux kernel source.
- NCR53C8xx configuration
- Syntax:
ncr53c8xx=S
- where S is a comma-separated string of items keyword:value.
- Recognized
keywords are: mpar (master_parity), spar (scsi_parity), disc (disconnection),
specf (special_features), ultra (ultra_scsi), fsn (force_sync_nego), tags
(default_tags), sync (default_sync), verb (verbose), debug (debug), burst
(burst_max). For the function of the assigned values, see the kernel source
file drivers/scsi/ncr53c8xx.c.
- NCR53c406a configuration
- Syntax:
ncr53c406a=iobase[,irq[,fastpio]]
- Specify irq = 0 for noninterrupt driven
mode.
- Set fastpio = 1 for fast pio mode, 0 for slow mode.
- Pro Audio Spectrum
configuration
- The PAS16 uses a NC5380 SCSI chip, and newer models support
jumperless configuration. The boot argument is of the form:
pas16=iobase,irq
- The only difference is that you can specify an IRQ value
of 255, which
- will tell the driver to work without using interrupts, albeit
at a performance loss. The iobase is usually 0x388.
- Seagate ST-0x configuration
- If your card is not detected at boot time, you will then have to use a
boot argument of the form:
st0x=mem_base,irq
- The
- mem_base value is the value of the memory-mapped I/O
region that the card uses. This will usually be one of the following values:
0xc8000, 0xca000, 0xcc000, 0xce000, 0xdc000, 0xde000.
- Trantor T128 configuration
- These cards are also based on the NCR5380 chip, and accept the following
options:
t128=mem_base,irq
- The valid values for
- mem_base are as follows: 0xcc000,
0xc8000, 0xdc000, 0xd8000.
- UltraStor 14F/34F configuration
- The default list
of I/O ports to be probed can be changed by
eata=iobase,iobase,....
- WD7000 configuration
- Syntax:
wd7000=irq,dma,iobase
- Commodore Amiga A2091/590 SCSI controller configuration
- Syntax:
wd33c93=S
- where S is a comma-separated string of options.
- Recognized options
are nosync:bitmask, nodma:x, period:ns, disconnect:x, debug:x, clock:x,
next. For details, see the kernel source file drivers/scsi/wd33c93.c.
- IDE Disk/CD-ROM Driver Parameters
- The IDE driver accepts a number of
parameters, which range from disk geometry specifications, to support for
broken controller chips. Drive-specific options are specified by using ’hdX=’
with X in ’a’-’h’.
Non-drive-specific options are specified with the prefix ’hd=’.
Note that using a drive-specific prefix for a non-drive-specific option will
still work, and the option will just be applied as expected.
Also note
that ’hd=’ can be used to refer to the next unspecified drive in the (a,
..., h) sequence. For the following discussions, the ’hd=’ option will be cited
for brevity. See the file Documentation/ide.txt (or drivers/block/README.ide
for older kernels) in the Linux kernel source for more details.
- The ’hd=cyls,heads,sects[,wpcom[,irq]]’
options
- These options are used to specify the physical geometry of the
disk. Only the first three values are required. The cylinder/head/sectors
values will be those used by fdisk. The write precompensation value is ignored
for IDE disks. The IRQ value specified will be the IRQ used for the interface
that the drive resides on, and is not really a drive-specific parameter.
- The ’hd=serialize’ option
- The dual IDE interface CMD-640 chip is broken as
designed such that when drives on the secondary interface are used at the
same time as drives on the primary interface, it will corrupt your data.
Using this option tells the driver to make sure that both interfaces are
never used at the same time.
- The ’hd=dtc2278’ option
- This option tells the
driver that you have a DTC-2278D IDE interface. The driver then tries to
do DTC-specific operations to enable the second interface and to enable
faster transfer modes.
- The ’hd=noprobe’ option
- Do not probe for this drive.
For example,
hdb=noprobe hdb=1166,7,17
- would disable the probe, but still specify the drive geometry so
- that
it would be registered as a valid block device, and hence usable.
- The ’hd=nowerr’
option
- Some drives apparently have the WRERR_STAT bit stuck on permanently.
This enables a work-around for these broken devices.
- The ’hd=cdrom’ option
- This tells the IDE driver that there is an ATAPI compatible CD-ROM attached
in place of a normal IDE hard disk. In most cases the CD-ROM is identified
automatically, but if it isn’t then this may help.
- Standard ST-506 Disk Driver
Options (’hd=’)
- The standard disk driver can accept geometry arguments for
the disks similar to the IDE driver. Note however that it expects only three
values (C/H/S); any more or any less and it will silently ignore you. Also,
it accepts only ’hd=’ as an argument, that is, ’hda=’ and so on are not valid
here. The format is as follows:
hd=cyls,heads,sects
- If there are two disks installed, the above is repeated with the
- geometry
parameters of the second disk.
- XT Disk Driver Options (’xd=’)
- If you are unfortunate
enough to be using one of these old 8-bit cards that move data at a whopping
125kB/s, then here is the scoop. If the card is not recognized, you will
have to use a boot argument of the form:
xd=type,irq,iobase,dma_chan
- The type value specifies the particular manufacturer of the card,
- overriding
autodetection. For the types to use, consult the drivers/block/xd.c source
file of the kernel you are using. The type is an index in the list xd_sigs
and in the course of time types have been added to or deleted from the
middle of the list, changing all type numbers. Today (Linux 2.5.0) the types
are 0=generic; 1=DTC 5150cx; 2,3=DTC 5150x; 4,5=Western Digital; 6,7,8=Seagate;
9=Omti; 10=XEBEC, and where here several types are given with the same
designation, they are equivalent.
The xd_setup() function does no checking
on the values, and assumes that you entered all four values. Don’t disappoint
it. Here is an example usage for a WD1002 controller with the BIOS disabled/removed,
using the ’default’ XT controller parameters:
xd=2,5,0x320,3
- Syquest’s EZ* removable disks
- Syntax:
ez=iobase[,irq[,rep[,nybble]]]
See also the kernel source
file Documentation/mca.txt.
- PS/2 ESDI hard disks
- It is possible to specify
the desired geometry at boot time:
ed=cyls,heads,sectors.
- For a ThinkPad-720, add the option
-
tp720=1.
- IBM Microchannel SCSI Subsystem configuration
- Syntax:
ibmmcascsi=N
- where N is the
- pun (SCSI ID) of the subsystem.
- The Aztech Interface
- The syntax for this type of card is:
aztcd=iobase[,magic_number]
- If you set the magic_number to 0x79, then the driver will try and run
- anyway in the event of an unknown firmware version. All other values are
ignored.
- Parallel port CD-ROM drives
- Syntax:
pcd.driveN=prt,pro,uni,mod,slv,dly
pcd.nice=nice
- where ’port’ is the base address, ’pro’ is the protocol number, ’uni’
- is the
unit selector (for chained devices), ’mod’ is the mode (or -1 to choose the
best automatically), ’slv’ is 1 if it should be a slave, and ’dly’ is a small
integer for slowing down port accesses. The ’nice’ parameter controls the
driver’s use of idle CPU time, at the expense of some speed.
- The CDU-31A and
CDU-33A Sony Interface
- This CD-ROM interface is found on some of the Pro
Audio Spectrum sound cards, and other Sony supplied interface cards. The
syntax is as follows:
cdu31a=iobase,[irq[,is_pas_card]]
- Specifying an IRQ value of zero tells the driver that hardware
- interrupts
aren’t supported (as on some PAS cards). If your card supports interrupts,
you should use them as it cuts down on the CPU usage of the driver.
The
is_pas_card should be entered as ’PAS’ if using a Pro Audio Spectrum card,
and otherwise it should not be specified at all.
- The CDU-535 Sony Interface
- The syntax for this CD-ROM interface is:
sonycd535=iobase[,irq]
- A zero can be used for the I/O base as a ’placeholder’ if one wishes
- to
specify an IRQ value.
- The GoldStar Interface
- The syntax for this CD-ROM interface
is:
gscd=iobase
- The ISP16 CD-ROM Interface
- Syntax:
isp16=[iobase[,irq[,dma[,type]]]]
- (Three integers and a string.)
- If the type is given as ’noisp16’, the interface
will not be configured. Other recognized types are: ’Sanyo", ’Sony’, ’Panasonic’
and ’Mitsumi’.
- The Mitsumi Standard Interface
- The syntax for this CD-ROM interface
is:
mcd=iobase,[irq[,wait_value]]
- The
- wait_value is used as an internal timeout value for people who are
having problems with their drive, and may or may not be implemented depending
on a compile-time #define. The Mitsumi FX400 is an IDE/ATAPI CD-ROM player
and does not use the mcd driver.
- The Mitsumi XA/MultiSession Interface
- This
is for the same hardware as above, but the driver has extended features.
Syntax:
mcdx=iobase[,irq]
- The Optics Storage Interface
- The syntax for this type of card is:
optcd=iobase
- The Phillips CM206 Interface
- The syntax for this type of card is:
cm206=[iobase][,irq]
- The driver assumes numbers between 3 and 11 are IRQ values, and
- numbers
between 0x300 and 0x370 are I/O ports, so you can specify one, or both
numbers, in any order. It also accepts ’cm206=auto’ to enable autoprobing.
- The Sanyo Interface
- The syntax for this type of card is:
sjcd=iobase[,irq[,dma_channel]]
- The SoundBlaster Pro Interface
- The syntax for this type of card is:
sbpcd=iobase,type
- where type is one of the following (case sensitive) strings:
- ’SoundBlaster’,
’LaserMate’, or ’SPEA’. The I/O base is that of the CD-ROM interface, and not
that of the sound portion of the card.
Different drivers
make use of different parameters, but they all at least share having an
IRQ, an I/O port base value, and a name. In its most generic form, it looks
something like this:
ether=irq,iobase[,param_1[,...param_8]],name
The first nonnumeric argument is taken as the name. The param_n values
(if applicable) usually have different meanings for each different card/driver.
Typical param_n values are used to specify things like shared memory address,
interface selection, DMA channel and the like.
The most common use of this
parameter is to force probing for a second ethercard, as the default is
to probe only for one. This can be accomplished with a simple:
ether=0,0,eth1
Note that the values of zero for the IRQ and I/O base in the above example
tell the driver(s) to autoprobe.
The Ethernet-HowTo has extensive documentation
on using multiple cards and on the card/driver-specific implementation of
the param_n values where used. Interested readers should refer to the section
in that document on their particular card.
There are
many floppy driver options, and they are all listed in Documentation/floppy.txt
(or drivers/block/README.fd for older kernels) in the Linux kernel source.
This information is taken directly from that file.
- floppy=mask,allowed_drive_mask
- Sets the bit mask of allowed drives to mask. By default, only units 0 and
1 of each floppy controller are allowed. This is done because certain nonstandard
hardware (ASUS PCI motherboards) mess up the keyboard when accessing units
2 or 3. This option is somewhat obsoleted by the cmos option.
- floppy=all_drives
- Sets the bit mask of allowed drives to all drives. Use this if you have
more than two drives connected to a floppy controller.
- floppy=asus_pci
- Sets
the bit mask to allow only units 0 and 1. (The default)
- floppy=daring
- Tells
the floppy driver that you have a well behaved floppy controller. This allows
more efficient and smoother operation, but may fail on certain controllers.
This may speed up certain operations.
- floppy=0,daring
- Tells the floppy driver
that your floppy controller should be used with caution.
- floppy=one_fdc
- Tells the floppy driver that you have only floppy controller (default)
- floppy=two_fdc or floppy=address,two_fdc
- Tells the floppy driver that you
have two floppy controllers. The second floppy controller is assumed to
be at address. If address is not given, 0x370 is assumed.
- floppy=thinkpad
- Tells the floppy driver that you have a Thinkpad. Thinkpads use an inverted
convention for the disk change line.
- floppy=0,thinkpad
- Tells the floppy
driver that you don’t have a Thinkpad.
- floppy=drive,type,cmos
- Sets the cmos
type of drive to type. Additionally, this drive is allowed in the bit mask.
This is useful if you have more than two floppy drives (only two can be
described in the physical cmos), or if your BIOS uses nonstandard CMOS
types. Setting the CMOS to 0 for the first two drives (default) makes the
floppy driver read the physical cmos for those drives.
- floppy=unexpected_interrupts
- Print a warning message when an unexpected interrupt is received (default
behavior)
- floppy=no_unexpected_interrupts or floppy=L40SX
- Don’t print a
message when an unexpected interrupt is received. This is needed on IBM
L40SX laptops in certain video modes. (There seems to be an interaction
between video and floppy. The unexpected interrupts only affect performance,
and can safely be ignored.)
The sound driver can also accept
boot arguments to override the compiled in values. This is not recommended,
as it is rather complex. It is described in the Linux kernel source file
Documentation/sound/oss/README.OSS (drivers/sound/Readme.linux in older kernel
versions). It accepts a boot argument of the form:
sound=device1[,device2[,device3...[,device10]]]
- where each deviceN value is of the following format 0xTaaaId and the
- bytes
are used as follows:
T - device type: 1=FM, 2=SB, 3=PAS, 4=GUS, 5=MPU401,
6=SB16, 7=SB16-MPU401
aaa - I/O address in hex.
I - interrupt line in hex
(i.e 10=a, 11=b, ...)
d - DMA channel.
As you can see it gets pretty messy,
and you are better off to compile in your own personal values as recommended.
Using a boot argument of ’sound=0’ will disable the sound driver entirely.
- The ICN ISDN driver
- Syntax:
icn=iobase,membase,icn_id1,icn_id2
- where icn_id1,icn_id2 are two strings used to identify the
- card in kernel
messages.
- The PCBIT ISDN driver
- Syntax:
pcbit=membase1,irq1[,membase2,irq2]
- where membaseN is the shared memory base of the N’th card, and irqN is
- the interrupt setting of the N’th card. The default is IRQ 5 and membase
0xD0000.
- The Teles ISDN driver
- Syntax:
teles=iobase,irq,membase,protocol,teles_id
- where iobase is the I/O port address of the card, membase is the
- shared
memory base address of the card, irq is the interrupt channel the card
uses, and teles_id is the unique ASCII string identifier.
- The
RISCom/8 Multiport Serial Driver (’riscom8=’)
- Syntax:
riscom=iobase1[,iobase2[,iobase3[,iobase4]]]
- More details can be found in the kernel source file
- Documentation/riscom8.txt.
- The DigiBoard Driver (’digi=’)
- If this option is used, it should have precisely
six parameters. Syntax:
digi=status,type,altpin,numports,iobase,membase
- The parameters maybe given as integers, or as strings.
- If strings are used,
then iobase and membase should be given in hexadecimal. The integer arguments
(fewer may be given) are in order: status (Enable(1)
or Disable(0) this
card), type (PC/Xi(0), PC/Xe(1)
, PC/Xeve(2)
, PC/Xem(3)
), altpin (Enable(1)
or Disable(0) alternate pin arrangement), numports (number of ports on
this card), iobase (I/O Port where card is configured (in HEX)), membase
(base of memory window (in HEX)). Thus, the following two boot prompt arguments
are equivalent:
digi=E,PC/Xi,D,16,200,D0000
digi=1,0,0,16,0x200,851968
- More details can be found in the kernel source file
- Documentation/digiboard.txt.
- The Baycom Serial/Parallel Radio Modem
- Syntax:
baycom=iobase,irq,modem
- There are precisely 3 parameters; for several cards, give
- several ’baycom=’
commands. The modem parameter is a string that can take one of the values
ser12, ser12*, par96, par96*. Here the * denotes that software DCD is to
be used, and ser12/par96 chooses between the supported modem types. For
more details, see the file Documentation/networking/baycom.txt (or drivers/net/README.baycom
for older kernels) in the Linux kernel source.
- Soundcard radio modem driver
- Syntax:
soundmodem=iobase,irq,dma[,dma2[,serio[,pario]]],0,mode
- All parameters except the last are integers;
- the dummy 0 is required because
of a bug in the setup code. The mode parameter is a string with syntax hw:modem,
where hw is one of sbc, wss, or wssfdx, and modem is one of afsk1200 or
fsk9600.
- ’lp=’
Syntax:
lp=0
lp=auto
lp=reset
lp=port[,port...]
- You can tell the printer driver what ports to use and what ports not
- to
use. The latter comes in handy if you don’t want the printer driver to claim
all available parallel ports, so that other drivers (e.g., PLIP, PPA) can
use them instead.
The format of the argument is multiple port names. For
example, lp=none,parport0 would use the first parallel port for lp1, and
disable lp0. To disable the printer driver entirely, one can use lp=0.
- WDT500/501
driver
- Syntax:
wdt=io,irq
- ’bmouse=irq’
- The busmouse driver accepts only one parameter,
that being the hardware IRQ value to be used.
- ’msmouse=irq’
- And precisely
the same is true for the msmouse driver.
- ATARI mouse setup
- Syntax:
atamouse=threshold[,y-threshold]
- If only one argument is given, it is used for both
- x-threshold and y-threshold.
Otherwise, the first argument is the x-threshold, and the second the y-threshold.
These values must lie between 1 and 20 (inclusive); the default is 2.
- ’no-scroll’
- This option tells the console driver not to use hardware
scroll (where a scroll is effected by moving the screen origin in video
memory, instead of moving the data). It is required by certain Braille machines.
klogd(8)
, mount(8)
Large parts of this man page have been derived
from the Boot Parameter HOWTO (version 1.0.1) written by Paul Gortmaker. More
information may be found in this (or a more recent) HOWTO. An up-to-date source
of information is the kernel source file Documentation/kernel-parameters.txt.
This page is part of release 3.78 of the Linux man-pages project.
A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
latest version of this page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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