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oldlinux-files/kernel/0.1x/linux-0.12/include/linux/config.h
2024-02-19 00:24:53 -05:00

56 lines
1.6 KiB
C

#ifndef _CONFIG_H
#define _CONFIG_H
/*
* Defines for what uname() should return
*/
#define UTS_SYSNAME "Linux"
#define UTS_NODENAME "(none)" /* set by sethostname() */
#define UTS_RELEASE "0" /* patchlevel */
#define UTS_VERSION "0.12"
#define UTS_MACHINE "i386" /* hardware type */
/* Don't touch these, unless you really know what your doing. */
#define DEF_INITSEG 0x9000
#define DEF_SYSSEG 0x1000
#define DEF_SETUPSEG 0x9020
#define DEF_SYSSIZE 0x3000
/*
* The root-device is no longer hard-coded. You can change the default
* root-device by changing the line ROOT_DEV = XXX in boot/bootsect.s
*/
/*
* The keyboard is now defined in kernel/chr_dev/keyboard.S
*/
/*
* Normally, Linux can get the drive parameters from the BIOS at
* startup, but if this for some unfathomable reason fails, you'd
* be left stranded. For this case, you can define HD_TYPE, which
* contains all necessary info on your harddisk.
*
* The HD_TYPE macro should look like this:
*
* #define HD_TYPE { head, sect, cyl, wpcom, lzone, ctl}
*
* In case of two harddisks, the info should be sepatated by
* commas:
*
* #define HD_TYPE { h,s,c,wpcom,lz,ctl },{ h,s,c,wpcom,lz,ctl }
*/
/*
This is an example, two drives, first is type 2, second is type 3:
#define HD_TYPE { 4,17,615,300,615,8 }, { 6,17,615,300,615,0 }
NOTE: ctl is 0 for all drives with heads<=8, and ctl=8 for drives
with more than 8 heads.
If you want the BIOS to tell what kind of drive you have, just
leave HD_TYPE undefined. This is the normal thing to do.
*/
#endif