The SCSI subsystem can probe for devices while the rest of the
system continues booting, and even probe devices on different
busses in parallel, leading to a significant speed-up.
+
If you have built SCSI as modules, enabling this option can
be a problem as the devices may not have been found by the
time your system expects them to have been. You can load the
If you build your SCSI drivers into the kernel, then everything
will work fine if you say Y here.
- You can override this choice by specifying scsi_mod.scan="sync"
- or "async" on the kernel's command line.
+ You can override this choice by specifying "scsi_mod.scan=sync"
+ or async on the kernel's command line.
menu "SCSI Transports"
depends on SCSI
config ATARI_SCSI
tristate "Atari native SCSI support"
- depends on ATARI && SCSI && BROKEN
+ depends on ATARI && SCSI
select SCSI_SPI_ATTRS
---help---
If you have an Atari with built-in NCR5380 SCSI controller (TT,
The ESP was an on-board SCSI controller used on Sun 3/80
machines. Say Y here to compile in support for it.
+config SCSI_ESP_CORE
+ tristate "ESP Scsi Driver Core"
+ depends on SCSI
+ select SCSI_SPI_ATTRS
+
config SCSI_SUNESP
tristate "Sparc ESP Scsi Driver"
depends on SBUS && SCSI
+ select SCSI_ESP_CORE
help
This is the driver for the Sun ESP SCSI host adapter. The ESP
chipset is present in most SPARC SBUS-based computers.