diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/Kconfig')
-rw-r--r-- | fs/Kconfig | 66 |
1 files changed, 55 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/fs/Kconfig b/fs/Kconfig index d5255e627b5..382e3b2883d 100644 --- a/fs/Kconfig +++ b/fs/Kconfig @@ -70,6 +70,7 @@ config FS_XIP config EXT3_FS tristate "Ext3 journalling file system support" + select JBD help This is the journaling version of the Second extended file system (often called ext3), the de facto standard Linux file system @@ -138,23 +139,20 @@ config EXT3_FS_SECURITY extended attributes for file security labels, say N. config JBD -# CONFIG_JBD could be its own option (even modular), but until there are -# other users than ext3, we will simply make it be the same as CONFIG_EXT3_FS -# dep_tristate ' Journal Block Device support (JBD for ext3)' CONFIG_JBD $CONFIG_EXT3_FS tristate - default EXT3_FS help This is a generic journaling layer for block devices. It is - currently used by the ext3 file system, but it could also be used to - add journal support to other file systems or block devices such as - RAID or LVM. + currently used by the ext3 and OCFS2 file systems, but it could + also be used to add journal support to other file systems or block + devices such as RAID or LVM. - If you are using the ext3 file system, you need to say Y here. If - you are not using ext3 then you will probably want to say N. + If you are using the ext3 or OCFS2 file systems, you need to + say Y here. If you are not using ext3 OCFS2 then you will probably + want to say N. To compile this device as a module, choose M here: the module will be - called jbd. If you are compiling ext3 into the kernel, you cannot - compile this code as a module. + called jbd. If you are compiling ext3 or OCFS2 into the kernel, + you cannot compile this code as a module. config JBD_DEBUG bool "JBD (ext3) debugging support" @@ -326,6 +324,38 @@ config FS_POSIX_ACL source "fs/xfs/Kconfig" +config OCFS2_FS + tristate "OCFS2 file system support (EXPERIMENTAL)" + depends on NET && EXPERIMENTAL + select CONFIGFS_FS + select JBD + select CRC32 + select INET + help + OCFS2 is a general purpose extent based shared disk cluster file + system with many similarities to ext3. It supports 64 bit inode + numbers, and has automatically extending metadata groups which may + also make it attractive for non-clustered use. + + You'll want to install the ocfs2-tools package in order to at least + get "mount.ocfs2". + + Project web page: http://oss.oracle.com/projects/ocfs2 + Tools web page: http://oss.oracle.com/projects/ocfs2-tools + OCFS2 mailing lists: http://oss.oracle.com/projects/ocfs2/mailman/ + + Note: Features which OCFS2 does not support yet: + - extended attributes + - shared writeable mmap + - loopback is supported, but data written will not + be cluster coherent. + - quotas + - cluster aware flock + - Directory change notification (F_NOTIFY) + - Distributed Caching (F_SETLEASE/F_GETLEASE/break_lease) + - POSIX ACLs + - readpages / writepages (not user visible) + config MINIX_FS tristate "Minix fs support" help @@ -841,6 +871,20 @@ config RELAYFS_FS If unsure, say N. +config CONFIGFS_FS + tristate "Userspace-driven configuration filesystem (EXPERIMENTAL)" + depends on EXPERIMENTAL + help + configfs is a ram-based filesystem that provides the converse + of sysfs's functionality. Where sysfs is a filesystem-based + view of kernel objects, configfs is a filesystem-based manager + of kernel objects, or config_items. + + Both sysfs and configfs can and should exist together on the + same system. One is not a replacement for the other. + + If unsure, say N. + endmenu menu "Miscellaneous filesystems" |