转自:https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.14/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.html

The kernel’s command-line parameters

The following is a consolidated list of the kernel parameters as implemented by the __setup(), core_param() and module_param() macros and sorted into English Dictionary order (defined as ignoring all punctuation and sorting digits before letters in a case insensitive manner), and with descriptions where known.

The kernel parses parameters from the kernel command line up to “–”; if it doesn’t recognize a parameter and it doesn’t contain a ‘.’, the parameter gets passed to init: parameters with ‘=’ go into init’s environment, others are passed as command line arguments to init. Everything after “–” is passed as an argument to init.

Module parameters can be specified in two ways: via the kernel command line with a module name prefix, or via modprobe, e.g.:

(kernel command line) usbcore.blinkenlights=1

(modprobe command line) modprobe usbcore blinkenlights=1

Parameters for modules which are built into the kernel need to be specified on the kernel command line. modprobe looks through the kernel command line (/proc/cmdline) and collects module parameters when it loads a module, so the kernel command line can be used for loadable modules too.

Hyphens (dashes) and underscores are equivalent in parameter names, so:

log_buf_len=1M print-fatal-signals=1

can also be entered as:

log-buf-len=1M print_fatal_signals=1

Double-quotes can be used to protect spaces in values, e.g.:

param="spaces in here"

cpu lists:

Some kernel parameters take a list of CPUs as a value, e.g. isolcpus, nohz_full, irqaffinity, rcu_nocbs. The format of this list is:

,...,

or

- (must be a positive range in ascending order)

or a mixture

,...,-

Note that for the special case of a range one can split the range into equal sized groups and for each group use some amount from the beginning of that group:

-cpu number>:/

For example one can add to the command line following parameter:

isolcpus=1,2,10-20,100-2000:2/25

where the final item represents CPUs 100,101,125,126,150,151,...

This document may not be entirely up to date and comprehensive. The command “modinfo -p ${modulename}” shows a current list of all parameters of a loadable module. Loadable modules, after being loaded into the running kernel, also reveal their parameters in /sys/module/${modulename}/parameters/. Some of these parameters may be changed at runtime by the command echo -n ${value} > /sys/module/${modulename}/parameters/${parm}.

The parameters listed below are only valid if certain kernel build options were enabled and if respective hardware is present. The text in square brackets at the beginning of each description states the restrictions within which a parameter is applicable:

ACPI ACPI support is enabled.

AGP AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port) is enabled.

ALSA ALSA sound support is enabled.

APIC APIC support is enabled.

APM Advanced Power Management support is enabled.

ARM ARM architecture is enabled.

AX25 Appropriate AX.25 support is enabled.

BLACKFIN Blackfin architecture is enabled.

CLK Common clock infrastructure is enabled.

CMA Contiguous Memory Area support is enabled.

DRM Direct Rendering Management support is enabled.

DYNAMIC_DEBUG Build in debug messages and enable them at runtime

EDD BIOS Enhanced Disk Drive Services (EDD) is enabled

EFI EFI Partitioning (GPT) is enabled

EIDE EIDE/ATAPI support is enabled.

EVM Extended Verification Module

FB The frame buffer device is enabled.

FTRACE Function tracing enabled.

GCOV GCOV profiling is enabled.

HW Appropriate hardware is enabled.

IA-64 IA-64 architecture is enabled.

IMA Integrity measurement architecture is enabled.

IOSCHED More than one I/O scheduler is enabled.

IP_PNP IP DHCP, BOOTP, or RARP is enabled.

IPV6 IPv6 support is enabled.

ISAPNP ISA PnP code is enabled.

ISDN Appropriate ISDN support is enabled.

JOY Appropriate joystick support is enabled.

KGDB Kernel debugger support is enabled.

KVM Kernel Virtual Machine support is enabled.

LIBATA Libata driver is enabled

LP Printer support is enabled.

LOOP Loopback device support is enabled.

M68k M68k architecture is enabled.

These options have more detailed description inside of

Documentation/m68k/kernel-options.txt.

MDA MDA console support is enabled.

MIPS MIPS architecture is enabled.

MOUSE Appropriate mouse support is enabled.

MSI Message Signaled Interrupts (PCI).

MTD MTD (Memory Technology Device) support is enabled.

NET Appropriate network support is enabled.

NUMA NUMA support is enabled.

NFS Appropriate NFS support is enabled.

OSS OSS sound support is enabled.

PV_OPS A paravirtualized kernel is enabled.

PARIDE The ParIDE (parallel port IDE) subsystem is enabled.

PARISC The PA-RISC architecture is enabled.

PCI PCI bus support is enabled.

PCIE PCI Express support is enabled.

PCMCIA The PCMCIA subsystem is enabled.

PNP Plug & Play support is enabled.

PPC PowerPC architecture is enabled.

PPT Parallel port support is enabled.

PS2 Appropriate PS/2 support is enabled.

RAM RAM disk support is enabled.

RDT Intel Resource Director Technology.

S390 S390 architecture is enabled.

SCSI Appropriate SCSI support is enabled.

A lot of drivers have their options described inside

the Documentation/scsi/ sub-directory.

SECURITY Different security models are enabled.

SELINUX SELinux support is enabled.

APPARMOR AppArmor support is enabled.

SERIAL Serial support is enabled.

SH SuperH architecture is enabled.

SMP The kernel is an SMP kernel.

SPARC Sparc architecture is enabled.

SWSUSP Software suspend (hibernation) is enabled.

SUSPEND System suspend states are enabled.

TPM TPM drivers are enabled.

TS Appropriate touchscreen support is enabled.

UMS USB Mass Storage support is enabled.

USB USB support is enabled.

USBHID USB Human Interface Device support is enabled.

V4L Video For Linux support is enabled.

VMMIO Driver for memory mapped virtio devices is enabled.

VGA The VGA console has been enabled.

VT Virtual terminal support is enabled.

WDT Watchdog support is enabled.

XT IBM PC/XT MFM hard disk support is enabled.

X86-32 X86-32, aka i386 architecture is enabled.

X86-64 X86-64 architecture is enabled.

More X86-64 boot options can be found in

Documentation/x86/x86_64/boot-options.txt .

X86 Either 32-bit or 64-bit x86 (same as X86-32+X86-64)

X86_UV SGI UV support is enabled.

XEN Xen support is enabled

In addition, the following text indicates that the option:

BUGS= Relates to possible processor bugs on the said processor.

KNL Is a kernel start-up parameter.

BOOT Is a boot loader parameter.

Parameters denoted with BOOT are actually interpreted by the boot loader, and have no meaning to the kernel directly. Do not modify the syntax of boot loader parameters without extreme need or coordination with .

There are also arch-specific kernel-parameters not documented here. See for example .

Note that ALL kernel parameters listed below are CASE SENSITIVE, and that a trailing = on the name of any parameter states that that parameter will be entered as an environment variable, whereas its absence indicates that it will appear as a kernel argument readable via /proc/cmdline by programs running once the system is up.

The number of kernel parameters is not limited, but the length of the complete command line (parameters including spaces etc.) is limited to a fixed number of characters. This limit depends on the architecture and is between 256 and 4096 characters. It is defined in the file ./include/asm/setup.h as COMMAND_LINE_SIZE.

Finally, the [KMG] suffix is commonly described after a number of kernel parameter values. These ‘K’, ‘M’, and ‘G’ letters represent the _binary_ multipliers ‘Kilo’, ‘Mega’, and ‘Giga’, equaling 2^10, 2^20, and 2^30 bytes respectively. Such letter suffixes can also be entirely omitted:

acpi= [HW,ACPI,X86,ARM64]

Advanced Configuration and Power Interface

Format: { force | on | off | strict | noirq | rsdt |

copy_dsdt }

force -- enable ACPI if default was off

on -- enable ACPI but allow fallback to DT [arm64]

off -- disable ACPI if default was on

noirq -- do not use ACPI for IRQ routing

strict -- Be less tolerant of platforms that are not

strictly ACPI specification compliant.

rsdt -- prefer RSDT over (default) XSDT

copy_dsdt -- copy DSDT to memory

For ARM64, ONLY "acpi=off", "acpi=on" or "acpi=force"

are available

See also Documentation/power/runtime_pm.txt, pci=noacpi

acpi_apic_instance= [ACPI, IOAPIC]

Format:

2: use 2nd APIC table, if available

1,0: use 1st APIC table

default: 0

acpi_backlight= [HW,ACPI]

acpi_backlight=vendor

acpi_backlight=video

If set to vendor, prefer vendor specific driver

(e.g. thinkpad_acpi, sony_acpi, etc.) instead

of the ACPI video.ko driver.

acpi_force_32bit_fadt_addr

force FADT to use 32 bit addresses rather than the

64 bit X_* addresses. Some firmware have broken 64

bit addresses for force ACPI ignore these and use

the older legacy 32 bit addresses.

acpica_no_return_repair [HW, ACPI]

Disable AML predefined validation mechanism

This mechanism can repair the evaluation result to make

the return objects more ACPI specification compliant.

This option is useful for developers to identify the

root cause of an AML interpreter issue when the issue

has something to do with the repair mechanism.

acpi.debug_layer= [HW,ACPI,ACPI_DEBUG]

acpi.debug_level= [HW,ACPI,ACPI_DEBUG]

Format:

CONFIG_ACPI_DEBUG must be enabled to produce any ACPI

debug output. Bits in debug_layer correspond to a

_COMPONENT in an ACPI source file, e.g.,

#define _COMPONENT ACPI_PCI_COMPONENT

Bits in debug_level correspond to a level in

ACPI_DEBUG_PRINT statements, e.g.,

ACPI_DEBUG_PRINT((ACPI_DB_INFO, ...

The debug_level mask defaults to "info". See

Documentation/acpi/debug.txt for more information about

debug layers and levels.

Enable processor driver info messages:

acpi.debug_layer=0x20000000

Enable PCI/PCI interrupt routing info messages:

acpi.debug_layer=0x400000

Enable AML "Debug" output, i.e., stores to the Debug

object while interpreting AML:

acpi.debug_layer=0xffffffff acpi.debug_level=0x2

Enable all messages related to ACPI hardware:

acpi.debug_layer=0x2 acpi.debug_level=0xffffffff

Some values produce so much output that the system is

unusable. The "log_buf_len" parameter may be useful

if you need to capture more output.

acpi_enforce_resources= [ACPI]

{ strict | lax | no }

Check for resource conflicts between native drivers

and ACPI OperationRegions (SystemIO and SystemMemory

only). IO ports and memory declared in ACPI might be

used by the ACPI subsystem in arbitrary AML code and

can interfere with legacy drivers.

strict (default): access to resources claimed by ACPI

is denied; legacy drivers trying to access reserved

resources will fail to bind to device using them.

lax: access to resources claimed by ACPI is allowed;

legacy drivers trying to access reserved resources

will bind successfully but a warning message is logged.

no: ACPI OperationRegions are not marked as reserved,

no further checks are performed.

acpi_force_table_verification [HW,ACPI]

Enable table checksum verification during early stage.

By default, this is disabled due to x86 early mapping

size limitation.

acpi_irq_balance [HW,ACPI]

ACPI will balance active IRQs

default in APIC mode

acpi_irq_nobalance [HW,ACPI]

ACPI will not move active IRQs (default)

default in PIC mode

acpi_irq_isa= [HW,ACPI] If irq_balance, mark listed IRQs used by ISA

Format: ,...

acpi_irq_pci= [HW,ACPI] If irq_balance, clear listed IRQs for

use by PCI

Format: ,...

acpi_mask_gpe= [HW,ACPI]

Due to the existence of _Lxx/_Exx, some GPEs triggered

by unsupported hardware/firmware features can result in

GPE floodings that cannot be automatically disabled by

the GPE dispatcher.

This facility can be used to prevent such uncontrolled

GPE floodings.

Format:

Support masking of GPEs numbered from 0x00 to 0x7f.

acpi_no_auto_serialize [HW,ACPI]

Disable auto-serialization of AML methods

AML control methods that contain the opcodes to create

named objects will be marked as "Serialized" by the

auto-serialization feature.

This feature is enabled by default.

This option allows to turn off the feature.

acpi_no_memhotplug [ACPI] Disable memory hotplug. Useful for kdump

kernels.

acpi_no_static_ssdt [HW,ACPI]

Disable installation of static SSDTs at early boot time

By default, SSDTs contained in the RSDT/XSDT will be

installed automatically and they will appear under

/sys/firmware/acpi/tables.

This option turns off this feature.

Note that specifying this option does not affect

dynamic table installation which will install SSDT

tables to /sys/firmware/acpi/tables/dynamic.

acpi_rsdp= [ACPI,EFI,KEXEC]

Pass the RSDP address to the kernel, mostly used

on machines running EFI runtime service to boot the

second kernel for kdump.

acpi_os_name= [HW,ACPI] Tell ACPI BIOS the name of the OS

Format: To spoof as Windows 98: ="Microsoft Windows"

acpi_rev_override [ACPI] Override the _REV object to return 5 (instead

of 2 which is mandated by ACPI 6) as the supported ACPI

specification revision (when using this switch, it may

be necessary to carry out a cold reboot _twice_ in a

row to make it take effect on the platform firmware).

acpi_osi= [HW,ACPI] Modify list of supported OS interface strings

acpi_osi="string1" # add string1

acpi_osi="!string2" # remove string2

acpi_osi=!* # remove all strings

acpi_osi=! # disable all built-in OS vendor

strings

acpi_osi=!! # enable all built-in OS vendor

strings

acpi_osi= # disable all strings

'acpi_osi=!' can be used in combination with single or

multiple 'acpi_osi="string1"' to support specific OS

vendor string(s). Note that such command can only

affect the default state of the OS vendor strings, thus

it cannot affect the default state of the feature group

strings and the current state of the OS vendor strings,

specifying it multiple times through kernel command line

is meaningless. This command is useful when one do not

care about the state of the feature group strings which

should be controlled by the OSPM.

Examples:

1. 'acpi_osi=! acpi_osi="Windows 2000"' is equivalent

to 'acpi_osi="Windows 2000" acpi_osi=!', they all

can make '_OSI("Windows 2000")' TRUE.

'acpi_osi=' cannot be used in combination with other

'acpi_osi=' command lines, the _OSI method will not

exist in the ACPI namespace. NOTE that such command can

only affect the _OSI support state, thus specifying it

multiple times through kernel command line is also

meaningless.

Examples:

1. 'acpi_osi=' can make 'CondRefOf(_OSI, Local1)'

FALSE.

'acpi_osi=!*' can be used in combination with single or

multiple 'acpi_osi="string1"' to support specific

string(s). Note that such command can affect the

current state of both the OS vendor strings and the

feature group strings, thus specifying it multiple times

through kernel command line is meaningful. But it may

still not able to affect the final state of a string if

there are quirks related to this string. This command

is useful when one want to control the state of the

feature group strings to debug BIOS issues related to

the OSPM features.

Examples:

1. 'acpi_osi="Module Device" acpi_osi=!*' can make

'_OSI("Module Device")' FALSE.

2. 'acpi_osi=!* acpi_osi="Module Device"' can make

'_OSI("Module Device")' TRUE.

3. 'acpi_osi=! acpi_osi=!* acpi_osi="Windows 2000"' is

equivalent to

'acpi_osi=!* acpi_osi=! acpi_osi="Windows 2000"'

and

'acpi_osi=!* acpi_osi="Windows 2000" acpi_osi=!',

they all will make '_OSI("Windows 2000")' TRUE.

acpi_pm_good [X86]

Override the pmtimer bug detection: force the kernel

to assume that this machine's pmtimer latches its value

and always returns good values.

acpi_sci= [HW,ACPI] ACPI System Control Interrupt trigger mode

Format: { level | edge | high | low }

acpi_skip_timer_override [HW,ACPI]

Recognize and ignore IRQ0/pin2 Interrupt Override.

For broken nForce2 BIOS resulting in XT-PIC timer.

acpi_sleep= [HW,ACPI] Sleep options

Format: { s3_bios, s3_mode, s3_beep, s4_nohwsig,

old_ordering, nonvs, sci_force_enable }

See Documentation/power/video.txt for information on

s3_bios and s3_mode.

s3_beep is for debugging; it makes the PC's speaker beep

as soon as the kernel's real-mode entry point is called.

s4_nohwsig prevents ACPI hardware signature from being

used during resume from hibernation.

old_ordering causes the ACPI 1.0 ordering of the _PTS

control method, with respect to putting devices into

low power states, to be enforced (the ACPI 2.0 ordering

of _PTS is used by default).

nonvs prevents the kernel from saving/restoring the

ACPI NVS memory during suspend/hibernation and resume.

sci_force_enable causes the kernel to set SCI_EN directly

on resume from S1/S3 (which is against the ACPI spec,

but some broken systems don't work without it).

acpi_use_timer_override [HW,ACPI]

Use timer override. For some broken Nvidia NF5 boards

that require a timer override, but don't have HPET

add_efi_memmap [EFI; X86] Include EFI memory map in

kernel's map of available physical RAM.

agp= [AGP]

{ off | try_unsupported }

off: disable AGP support

try_unsupported: try to drive unsupported chipsets

(may crash computer or cause data corruption)

ALSA [HW,ALSA]

See Documentation/sound/alsa/alsa-parameters.txt

alignment= [KNL,ARM]

Allow the default userspace alignment fault handler

behaviour to be specified. Bit 0 enables warnings,

bit 1 enables fixups, and bit 2 sends a segfault.

align_va_addr= [X86-64]

Align virtual addresses by clearing slice [14:12] when

allocating a VMA at process creation time. This option

gives you up to 3% performance improvement on AMD F15h

machines (where it is enabled by default) for a

CPU-intensive style benchmark, and it can vary highly in

a microbenchmark depending on workload and compiler.

32: only for 32-bit processes

64: only for 64-bit processes

on: enable for both 32- and 64-bit processes

off: disable for both 32- and 64-bit processes

alloc_snapshot [FTRACE]

Allocate the ftrace snapshot buffer on boot up when the

main buffer is allocated. This is handy if debugging

and you need to use tracing_snapshot() on boot up, and

do not want to use tracing_snapshot_alloc() as it needs

to be done where GFP_KERNEL allocations are allowed.

amd_iommu= [HW,X86-64]

Pass parameters to the AMD IOMMU driver in the system.

Possible values are:

fullflush - enable flushing of IO/TLB entries when

they are unmapped. Otherwise they are

flushed before they will be reused, which

is a lot of faster

off - do not initialize any AMD IOMMU found in

the system

force_isolation - Force device isolation for all

devices. The IOMMU driver is not

allowed anymore to lift isolation

requirements as needed. This option

does not override iommu=pt

amd_iommu_dump= [HW,X86-64]

Enable AMD IOMMU driver option to dump the ACPI table

for AMD IOMMU. With this option enabled, AMD IOMMU

driver will print ACPI tables for AMD IOMMU during

IOMMU initialization.

amd_iommu_intr= [HW,X86-64]

Specifies one of the following AMD IOMMU interrupt

remapping modes:

legacy - Use legacy interrupt remapping mode.

vapic - Use virtual APIC mode, which allows IOMMU

to inject interrupts directly into guest.

This mode requires kvm-amd.avic=1.

(Default when IOMMU HW support is present.)

amijoy.map= [HW,JOY] Amiga joystick support

Map of devices attached to JOY0DAT and JOY1DAT

Format: ,

See also Documentation/input/joystick.txt

analog.map= [HW,JOY] Analog joystick and gamepad support

Specifies type or capabilities of an analog joystick

connected to one of 16 gameports

Format: ,,..

apc= [HW,SPARC]

Power management functions (SPARCstation-4/5 + deriv.)

Format: noidle

Disable APC CPU standby support. SPARCstation-Fox does

not play well with APC CPU idle - disable it if you have

APC and your system crashes randomly.

apic= [APIC,X86-32] Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller

Change the output verbosity whilst booting

Format: { quiet (default) | verbose | debug }

Change the amount of debugging information output

when initialising the APIC and IO-APIC components.

apic_extnmi= [APIC,X86] External NMI delivery setting

Format: { bsp (default) | all | none }

bsp: External NMI is delivered only to CPU 0

all: External NMIs are broadcast to all CPUs as a

backup of CPU 0

none: External NMI is masked for all CPUs. This is

useful so that a dump capture kernel won't be

shot down by NMI

autoconf= [IPV6]

See Documentation/networking/ipv6.txt.

show_lapic= [APIC,X86] Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller

Limit apic dumping. The parameter defines the maximal

number of local apics being dumped. Also it is possible

to set it to "all" by meaning -- no limit here.

Format: { 1 (default) | 2 | ... | all }.

The parameter valid if only apic=debug or

apic=verbose is specified.

Example: apic=debug show_lapic=all

apm= [APM] Advanced Power Management

See header of arch/x86/kernel/apm_32.c.

arcrimi= [HW,NET] ARCnet - "RIM I" (entirely mem-mapped) cards

Format: ,,

ataflop= [HW,M68k]

atarimouse= [HW,MOUSE] Atari Mouse

atkbd.extra= [HW] Enable extra LEDs and keys on IBM RapidAccess,

EzKey and similar keyboards

atkbd.reset= [HW] Reset keyboard during initialization

atkbd.set= [HW] Select keyboard code set

Format: (2 = AT (default), 3 = PS/2)

atkbd.scroll= [HW] Enable scroll wheel on MS Office and similar

keyboards

atkbd.softraw= [HW] Choose between synthetic and real raw mode

Format: (0 = real, 1 = synthetic (default))

atkbd.softrepeat= [HW]

Use software keyboard repeat

audit= [KNL] Enable the audit sub-system

Format: { "0" | "1" } (0 = disabled, 1 = enabled)

0 - kernel audit is disabled and can not be enabled

until the next reboot

unset - kernel audit is initialized but disabled and

will be fully enabled by the userspace auditd.

1 - kernel audit is initialized and partially enabled,

storing at most audit_backlog_limit messages in

RAM until it is fully enabled by the userspace

auditd.

Default: unset

audit_backlog_limit= [KNL] Set the audit queue size limit.

Format: (must be >=0)

Default: 64

bau= [X86_UV] Enable the BAU on SGI UV. The default

behavior is to disable the BAU (i.e. bau=0).

Format: { "0" | "1" }

0 - Disable the BAU.

1 - Enable the BAU.

unset - Disable the BAU.

baycom_epp= [HW,AX25]

Format: ,

baycom_par= [HW,AX25] BayCom Parallel Port AX.25 Modem

Format: ,

See header of drivers/net/hamradio/baycom_par.c.

baycom_ser_fdx= [HW,AX25]

BayCom Serial Port AX.25 Modem (Full Duplex Mode)

Format: ,,[,]

See header of drivers/net/hamradio/baycom_ser_fdx.c.

baycom_ser_hdx= [HW,AX25]

BayCom Serial Port AX.25 Modem (Half Duplex Mode)

Format: ,,

See header of drivers/net/hamradio/baycom_ser_hdx.c.

blkdevparts= Manual partition parsing of block device(s) for

embedded devices based on command line input.

See Documentation/block/cmdline-partition.txt

boot_delay= Milliseconds to delay each printk during boot.

Values larger than 10 seconds (10000) are changed to

no delay (0).

Format: integer

bootmem_debug [KNL] Enable bootmem allocator debug messages.

bert_disable [ACPI]

Disable BERT OS support on buggy BIOSes.

bttv.card= [HW,V4L] bttv (bt848 + bt878 based grabber cards)

bttv.radio= Most important insmod options are available as

kernel args too.

bttv.pll= See Documentation/video4linux/bttv/Insmod-options

bttv.tuner=

bulk_remove=off [PPC] This parameter disables the use of the pSeries

firmware feature for flushing multiple hpte entries

at a time.

c101= [NET] Moxa C101 synchronous serial card

cachesize= [BUGS=X86-32] Override level 2 CPU cache size detection.

Sometimes CPU hardware bugs make them report the cache

size incorrectly. The kernel will attempt work arounds

to fix known problems, but for some CPUs it is not

possible to determine what the correct size should be.

This option provides an override for these situations.

ca_keys= [KEYS] This parameter identifies a specific key(s) on

the system trusted keyring to be used for certificate

trust validation.

format: { id: | builtin }

cca= [MIPS] Override the kernel pages' cache coherency

algorithm. Accepted values range from 0 to 7

inclusive. See arch/mips/include/asm/pgtable-bits.h

for platform specific values (SB1, Loongson3 and

others).

ccw_timeout_log [S390]

See Documentation/s390/CommonIO for details.

cgroup_disable= [KNL] Disable a particular controller

Format: {name of the controller(s) to disable}

The effects of cgroup_disable=foo are:

- foo isn't auto-mounted if you mount all cgroups in

a single hierarchy

- foo isn't visible as an individually mountable

subsystem

{Currently only "memory" controller deal with this and

cut the overhead, others just disable the usage. So

only cgroup_disable=memory is actually worthy}

cgroup_no_v1= [KNL] Disable one, multiple, all cgroup controllers in v1

Format: { controller[,controller...] | "all" }

Like cgroup_disable, but only applies to cgroup v1;

the blacklisted controllers remain available in cgroup2.

cgroup.memory= [KNL] Pass options to the cgroup memory controller.

Format:

nosocket -- Disable socket memory accounting.

nokmem -- Disable kernel memory accounting.

checkreqprot [SELINUX] Set initial checkreqprot flag value.

Format: { "0" | "1" }

See security/selinux/Kconfig help text.

0 -- check protection applied by kernel (includes

any implied execute protection).

1 -- check protection requested by application.

Default value is set via a kernel config option.

Value can be changed at runtime via

/selinux/checkreqprot.

cio_ignore= [S390]

See Documentation/s390/CommonIO for details.

clk_ignore_unused

[CLK]

Prevents the clock framework from automatically gating

clocks that have not been explicitly enabled by a Linux

device driver but are enabled in hardware at reset or

by the bootloader/firmware. Note that this does not

force such clocks to be always-on nor does it reserve

those clocks in any way. This parameter is useful for

debug and development, but should not be needed on a

platform with proper driver support. For more

information, see Documentation/clk.txt.

clock= [BUGS=X86-32, HW] gettimeofday clocksource override.

[Deprecated]

Forces specified clocksource (if available) to be used

when calculating gettimeofday(). If specified

clocksource is not available, it defaults to PIT.

Format: { pit | tsc | cyclone | pmtmr }

clocksource= Override the default clocksource

Format:

Override the default clocksource and use the clocksource

with the name specified.

Some clocksource names to choose from, depending on

the platform:

[all] jiffies (this is the base, fallback clocksource)

[ACPI] acpi_pm

[ARM] imx_timer1,OSTS,netx_timer,mpu_timer2,

pxa_timer,timer3,32k_counter,timer0_1

[X86-32] pit,hpet,tsc;

scx200_hrt on Geode; cyclone on IBM x440

[MIPS] MIPS

[PARISC] cr16

[S390] tod

[SH] SuperH

[SPARC64] tick

[X86-64] hpet,tsc

clocksource.arm_arch_timer.evtstrm=

[ARM,ARM64]

Format:

Enable/disable the eventstream feature of the ARM

architected timer so that code using WFE-based polling

loops can be debugged more effectively on production

systems.

clearcpuid=BITNUM [X86]

Disable CPUID feature X for the kernel. See

arch/x86/include/asm/cpufeatures.h for the valid bit

numbers. Note the Linux specific bits are not necessarily

stable over kernel options, but the vendor specific

ones should be.

Also note that user programs calling CPUID directly

or using the feature without checking anything

will still see it. This just prevents it from

being used by the kernel or shown in /proc/cpuinfo.

Also note the kernel might malfunction if you disable

some critical bits.

cma=nn[MG]@[start[MG][-end[MG]]]

[ARM,X86,KNL]

Sets the size of kernel global memory area for

contiguous memory allocations and optionally the

placement constraint by the physical address range of

memory allocations. A value of 0 disables CMA

altogether. For more information, see

include/linux/dma-contiguous.h

cmo_free_hint= [PPC] Format: { yes | no }

Specify whether pages are marked as being inactive

when they are freed. This is used in CMO environments

to determine OS memory pressure for page stealing by

a hypervisor.

Default: yes

coherent_pool=nn[KMG] [ARM,KNL]

Sets the size of memory pool for coherent, atomic dma

allocations, by default set to 256K.

code_bytes [X86] How many bytes of object code to print

in an oops report.

Range: 0 - 8192

Default: 64

com20020= [HW,NET] ARCnet - COM20020 chipset

Format:

[,[,[,[,[,]]]]]

com90io= [HW,NET] ARCnet - COM90xx chipset (IO-mapped buffers)

Format: [,]

com90xx= [HW,NET]

ARCnet - COM90xx chipset (memory-mapped buffers)

Format: [,[,]]

condev= [HW,S390] console device

conmode=

console= [KNL] Output console device and options.

tty Use the virtual console device .

ttyS[,options]

ttyUSB0[,options]

Use the specified serial port. The options are of

the form "bbbbpnf", where "bbbb" is the baud rate,

"p" is parity ("n", "o", or "e"), "n" is number of

bits, and "f" is flow control ("r" for RTS or

omit it). Default is "9600n8".

See Documentation/admin-guide/serial-console.rst for more

information. See

Documentation/networking/netconsole.txt for an

alternative.

uart[8250],io,[,options]

uart[8250],mmio,[,options]

uart[8250],mmio16,[,options]

uart[8250],mmio32,[,options]

uart[8250],0x[,options]

Start an early, polled-mode console on the 8250/16550

UART at the specified I/O port or MMIO address,

switching to the matching ttyS device later.

MMIO inter-register address stride is either 8-bit

(mmio), 16-bit (mmio16), or 32-bit (mmio32).

If none of [io|mmio|mmio16|mmio32], is assumed

to be equivalent to 'mmio'. 'options' are specified in

the same format described for ttyS above; if unspecified,

the h/w is not re-initialized.

hvc Use the hypervisor console device . This is for

both Xen and PowerPC hypervisors.

If the device connected to the port is not a TTY but a braille

device, prepend "brl," before the device type, for instance

console=brl,ttyS0

For now, only VisioBraille is supported.

consoleblank= [KNL] The console blank (screen saver) timeout in

seconds. Defaults to 10*60 = 10mins. A value of 0

disables the blank timer.

coredump_filter=

[KNL] Change the default value for

/proc//coredump_filter.

See also Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt.

coresight_cpu_debug.enable

[ARM,ARM64]

Format:

Enable/disable the CPU sampling based debugging.

0: default value, disable debugging

1: enable debugging at boot time

cpuidle.off=1 [CPU_IDLE]

disable the cpuidle sub-system

cpufreq.off=1 [CPU_FREQ]

disable the cpufreq sub-system

cpu_init_udelay=N

[X86] Delay for N microsec between assert and de-assert

of APIC INIT to start processors. This delay occurs

on every CPU online, such as boot, and resume from suspend.

Default: 10000

cpcihp_generic= [HW,PCI] Generic port I/O CompactPCI driver

Format:

,,,[,]

crashkernel=size[KMG][@offset[KMG]]

[KNL] Using kexec, Linux can switch to a 'crash kernel'

upon panic. This parameter reserves the physical

memory region [offset, offset + size] for that kernel

image. If '@offset' is omitted, then a suitable offset

is selected automatically. Check

Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt for further details.

crashkernel=range1:size1[,range2:size2,...][@offset]

[KNL] Same as above, but depends on the memory

in the running system. The syntax of range is

start-[end] where start and end are both

a memory unit (amount[KMG]). See also

Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt for an example.

crashkernel=size[KMG],high

[KNL, x86_64] range could be above 4G. Allow kernel

to allocate physical memory region from top, so could

be above 4G if system have more than 4G ram installed.

Otherwise memory region will be allocated below 4G, if

available.

It will be ignored if crashkernel=X is specified.

crashkernel=size[KMG],low

[KNL, x86_64] range under 4G. When crashkernel=X,high

is passed, kernel could allocate physical memory region

above 4G, that cause second kernel crash on system

that require some amount of low memory, e.g. swiotlb

requires at least 64M+32K low memory, also enough extra

low memory is needed to make sure DMA buffers for 32-bit

devices won't run out. Kernel would try to allocate at

at least 256M below 4G automatically.

This one let user to specify own low range under 4G

for second kernel instead.

0: to disable low allocation.

It will be ignored when crashkernel=X,high is not used

or memory reserved is below 4G.

cryptomgr.notests

[KNL] Disable crypto self-tests

cs89x0_dma= [HW,NET]

Format:

cs89x0_media= [HW,NET]

Format: { rj45 | aui | bnc }

dasd= [HW,NET]

See header of drivers/s390/block/dasd_devmap.c.

db9.dev[2|3]= [HW,JOY] Multisystem joystick support via parallel port

(one device per port)

Format: ,

See also Documentation/input/joystick-parport.txt

ddebug_query= [KNL,DYNAMIC_DEBUG] Enable debug messages at early boot

time. See

Documentation/admin-guide/dynamic-debug-howto.rst for

details. Deprecated, see dyndbg.

debug [KNL] Enable kernel debugging (events log level).

debug_locks_verbose=

[KNL] verbose self-tests

Format=<0|1>

Print debugging info while doing the locking API

self-tests.

We default to 0 (no extra messages), setting it to

1 will print _a lot_ more information - normally

only useful to kernel developers.

debug_objects [KNL] Enable object debugging

no_debug_objects

[KNL] Disable object debugging

debug_guardpage_minorder=

[KNL] When CONFIG_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC is set, this

parameter allows control of the order of pages that will

be intentionally kept free (and hence protected) by the

buddy allocator. Bigger value increase the probability

of catching random memory corruption, but reduce the

amount of memory for normal system use. The maximum

possible value is MAX_ORDER/2. Setting this parameter

to 1 or 2 should be enough to identify most random

memory corruption problems caused by bugs in kernel or

driver code when a CPU writes to (or reads from) a

random memory location. Note that there exists a class

of memory corruptions problems caused by buggy H/W or

F/W or by drivers badly programing DMA (basically when

memory is written at bus level and the CPU MMU is

bypassed) which are not detectable by

CONFIG_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC, hence this option will not help

tracking down these problems.

debug_pagealloc=

[KNL] When CONFIG_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC is set, this

parameter enables the feature at boot time. In

default, it is disabled. We can avoid allocating huge

chunk of memory for debug pagealloc if we don't enable

it at boot time and the system will work mostly same

with the kernel built without CONFIG_DEBUG_PAGEALLOC.

on: enable the feature

debugpat [X86] Enable PAT debugging

decnet.addr= [HW,NET]

Format: [,]

See also Documentation/networking/decnet.txt.

default_hugepagesz=

[same as hugepagesz=] The size of the default

HugeTLB page size. This is the size represented by

the legacy /proc/ hugepages APIs, used for SHM, and

default size when mounting hugetlbfs filesystems.

Defaults to the default architecture's huge page size

if not specified.

dhash_entries= [KNL]

Set number of hash buckets for dentry cache.

disable_1tb_segments [PPC]

Disables the use of 1TB hash page table segments. This

causes the kernel to fall back to 256MB segments which

can be useful when debugging issues that require an SLB

miss to occur.

disable= [IPV6]

See Documentation/networking/ipv6.txt.

disable_radix [PPC]

Disable RADIX MMU mode on POWER9

disable_cpu_apicid= [X86,APIC,SMP]

Format:

The number of initial APIC ID for the

corresponding CPU to be disabled at boot,

mostly used for the kdump 2nd kernel to

disable BSP to wake up multiple CPUs without

causing system reset or hang due to sending

INIT from AP to BSP.

disable_ddw [PPC/PSERIES]

Disable Dynamic DMA Window support. Use this if

to workaround buggy firmware.

disable_ipv6= [IPV6]

See Documentation/networking/ipv6.txt.

disable_mtrr_cleanup [X86]

The kernel tries to adjust MTRR layout from continuous

to discrete, to make X server driver able to add WB

entry later. This parameter disables that.

disable_mtrr_trim [X86, Intel and AMD only]

By default the kernel will trim any uncacheable

memory out of your available memory pool based on

MTRR settings. This parameter disables that behavior,

possibly causing your machine to run very slowly.

disable_timer_pin_1 [X86]

Disable PIN 1 of APIC timer

Can be useful to work around chipset bugs.

dis_ucode_ldr [X86] Disable the microcode loader.

dma_debug=off If the kernel is compiled with DMA_API_DEBUG support,

this option disables the debugging code at boot.

dma_debug_entries=

This option allows to tune the number of preallocated

entries for DMA-API debugging code. One entry is

required per DMA-API allocation. Use this if the

DMA-API debugging code disables itself because the

architectural default is too low.

dma_debug_driver=

With this option the DMA-API debugging driver

filter feature can be enabled at boot time. Just

pass the driver to filter for as the parameter.

The filter can be disabled or changed to another

driver later using sysfs.

drm_kms_helper.edid_firmware=[:][,[:]]

Broken monitors, graphic adapters, KVMs and EDIDless

panels may send no or incorrect EDID data sets.

This parameter allows to specify an EDID data sets

in the /lib/firmware directory that are used instead.

Generic built-in EDID data sets are used, if one of

edid/1024x768.bin, edid/1280x1024.bin,

edid/1680x1050.bin, or edid/1920x1080.bin is given

and no file with the same name exists. Details and

instructions how to build your own EDID data are

available in Documentation/EDID/HOWTO.txt. An EDID

data set will only be used for a particular connector,

if its name and a colon are prepended to the EDID

name. Each connector may use a unique EDID data

set by separating the files with a comma. An EDID

data set with no connector name will be used for

any connectors not explicitly specified.

dscc4.setup= [NET]

dt_cpu_ftrs= [PPC]

Format: {"off" | "known"}

Control how the dt_cpu_ftrs device-tree binding is

used for CPU feature discovery and setup (if it

exists).

off: Do not use it, fall back to legacy cpu table.

known: Do not pass through unknown features to guests

or userspace, only those that the kernel is aware of.

dump_apple_properties [X86]

Dump name and content of EFI device properties on

x86 Macs. Useful for driver authors to determine

what data is available or for reverse-engineering.

dyndbg[="val"] [KNL,DYNAMIC_DEBUG]

module.dyndbg[="val"]

Enable debug messages at boot time. See

Documentation/admin-guide/dynamic-debug-howto.rst

for details.

nompx [X86] Disables Intel Memory Protection Extensions.

See Documentation/x86/intel_mpx.txt for more

information about the feature.

nopku [X86] Disable Memory Protection Keys CPU feature found

in some Intel CPUs.

module.async_probe [KNL]

Enable asynchronous probe on this module.

early_ioremap_debug [KNL]

Enable debug messages in early_ioremap support. This

is useful for tracking down temporary early mappings

which are not unmapped.

earlycon= [KNL] Output early console device and options.

When used with no options, the early console is

determined by the stdout-path property in device

tree's chosen node.

cdns,[,options]

Start an early, polled-mode console on a Cadence

(xuartps) serial port at the specified address. Only

supported option is baud rate. If baud rate is not

specified, the serial port must already be setup and

configured.

uart[8250],io,[,options]

uart[8250],mmio,[,options]

uart[8250],mmio32,[,options]

uart[8250],mmio32be,[,options]

uart[8250],0x[,options]

Start an early, polled-mode console on the 8250/16550

UART at the specified I/O port or MMIO address.

MMIO inter-register address stride is either 8-bit

(mmio) or 32-bit (mmio32 or mmio32be).

If none of [io|mmio|mmio32|mmio32be], is assumed

to be equivalent to 'mmio'. 'options' are specified

in the same format described for "console=ttyS"; if

unspecified, the h/w is not initialized.

pl011,

pl011,mmio32,

Start an early, polled-mode console on a pl011 serial

port at the specified address. The pl011 serial port

must already be setup and configured. Options are not

yet supported. If 'mmio32' is specified, then only

the driver will use only 32-bit accessors to read/write

the device registers.

meson,

Start an early, polled-mode console on a meson serial

port at the specified address. The serial port must

already be setup and configured. Options are not yet

supported.

msm_serial,

Start an early, polled-mode console on an msm serial

port at the specified address. The serial port

must already be setup and configured. Options are not

yet supported.

msm_serial_dm,

Start an early, polled-mode console on an msm serial

dm port at the specified address. The serial port

must already be setup and configured. Options are not

yet supported.

owl,

Start an early, polled-mode console on a serial port

of an Actions Semi SoC, such as S500 or S900, at the

specified address. The serial port must already be

setup and configured. Options are not yet supported.

smh Use ARM semihosting calls for early console.

s3c2410,

s3c2412,

s3c2440,

s3c6400,

s5pv210,

exynos4210,

Use early console provided by serial driver available

on Samsung SoCs, requires selecting proper type and

a correct base address of the selected UART port. The

serial port must already be setup and configured.

Options are not yet supported.

lantiq,

Start an early, polled-mode console on a lantiq serial

(lqasc) port at the specified address. The serial port

must already be setup and configured. Options are not

yet supported.

lpuart,

lpuart32,

Use early console provided by Freescale LP UART driver

found on Freescale Vybrid and QorIQ LS1021A processors.

A valid base address must be provided, and the serial

port must already be setup and configured.

ar3700_uart,

Start an early, polled-mode console on the

Armada 3700 serial port at the specified

address. The serial port must already be setup

and configured. Options are not yet supported.

earlyprintk= [X86,SH,BLACKFIN,ARM,M68k,S390]

earlyprintk=vga

earlyprintk=efi

earlyprintk=sclp

earlyprintk=xen

earlyprintk=serial[,ttySn[,baudrate]]

earlyprintk=serial[,0x...[,baudrate]]

earlyprintk=ttySn[,baudrate]

earlyprintk=dbgp[debugController#]

earlyprintk=pciserial,bus:device.function[,baudrate]

earlyprintk=xdbc[xhciController#]

earlyprintk is useful when the kernel crashes before

the normal console is initialized. It is not enabled by

default because it has some cosmetic problems.

Append ",keep" to not disable it when the real console

takes over.

Only one of vga, efi, serial, or usb debug port can

be used at a time.

Currently only ttyS0 and ttyS1 may be specified by

name. Other I/O ports may be explicitly specified

on some architectures (x86 and arm at least) by

replacing ttySn with an I/O port address, like this:

earlyprintk=serial,0x1008,115200

You can find the port for a given device in

/proc/tty/driver/serial:

2: uart:ST16650V2 port:00001008 irq:18 ...

Interaction with the standard serial driver is not

very good.

The VGA and EFI output is eventually overwritten by

the real console.

The xen output can only be used by Xen PV guests.

The sclp output can only be used on s390.

edac_report= [HW,EDAC] Control how to report EDAC event

Format: {"on" | "off" | "force"}

on: enable EDAC to report H/W event. May be overridden

by other higher priority error reporting module.

off: disable H/W event reporting through EDAC.

force: enforce the use of EDAC to report H/W event.

default: on.

ekgdboc= [X86,KGDB] Allow early kernel console debugging

ekgdboc=kbd

This is designed to be used in conjunction with

the boot argument: earlyprintk=vga

edd= [EDD]

Format: {"off" | "on" | "skip[mbr]"}

efi= [EFI]

Format: { "old_map", "nochunk", "noruntime", "debug" }

old_map [X86-64]: switch to the old ioremap-based EFI

runtime services mapping. 32-bit still uses this one by

default.

nochunk: disable reading files in "chunks" in the EFI

boot stub, as chunking can cause problems with some

firmware implementations.

noruntime : disable EFI runtime services support

debug: enable misc debug output

efi_no_storage_paranoia [EFI; X86]

Using this parameter you can use more than 50% of

your efi variable storage. Use this parameter only if

you are really sure that your UEFI does sane gc and

fulfills the spec otherwise your board may brick.

efi_fake_mem= nn[KMG]@ss[KMG]:aa[,nn[KMG]@ss[KMG]:aa,..] [EFI; X86]

Add arbitrary attribute to specific memory range by

updating original EFI memory map.

Region of memory which aa attribute is added to is

from ss to ss+nn.

If efi_fake_mem=2G@4G:0x10000,2G@0x10a0000000:0x10000

is specified, EFI_MEMORY_MORE_RELIABLE(0x10000)

attribute is added to range 0x100000000-0x180000000 and

0x10a0000000-0x1120000000.

Using this parameter you can do debugging of EFI memmap

related feature. For example, you can do debugging of

Address Range Mirroring feature even if your box

doesn't support it.

efivar_ssdt= [EFI; X86] Name of an EFI variable that contains an SSDT

that is to be dynamically loaded by Linux. If there are

multiple variables with the same name but with different

vendor GUIDs, all of them will be loaded. See

Documentation/acpi/ssdt-overlays.txt for details.

eisa_irq_edge= [PARISC,HW]

See header of drivers/parisc/eisa.c.

elanfreq= [X86-32]

See comment before function elanfreq_setup() in

arch/x86/kernel/cpu/cpufreq/elanfreq.c.

elevator= [IOSCHED]

Format: {"cfq" | "deadline" | "noop"}

See Documentation/block/cfq-iosched.txt and

Documentation/block/deadline-iosched.txt for details.

elfcorehdr=[size[KMG]@]offset[KMG] [IA64,PPC,SH,X86,S390]

Specifies physical address of start of kernel core

image elf header and optionally the size. Generally

kexec loader will pass this option to capture kernel.

See Documentation/kdump/kdump.txt for details.

enable_mtrr_cleanup [X86]

The kernel tries to adjust MTRR layout from continuous

to discrete, to make X server driver able to add WB

entry later. This parameter enables that.

enable_timer_pin_1 [X86]

Enable PIN 1 of APIC timer

Can be useful to work around chipset bugs

(in particular on some ATI chipsets).

The kernel tries to set a reasonable default.

enforcing [SELINUX] Set initial enforcing status.

Format: {"0" | "1"}

See security/selinux/Kconfig help text.

0 -- permissive (log only, no denials).

1 -- enforcing (deny and log).

Default value is 0.

Value can be changed at runtime via /selinux/enforce.

erst_disable [ACPI]

Disable Error Record Serialization Table (ERST)

support.

ether= [HW,NET] Ethernet cards parameters

This option is obsoleted by the "netdev=" option, which

has equivalent usage. See its documentation for details.

evm= [EVM]

Format: { "fix" }

Permit 'security.evm' to be updated regardless of

current integrity status.

failslab=

fail_page_alloc=

fail_make_request=[KNL]

General fault injection mechanism.

Format: ,,,

See also Documentation/fault-injection/.

floppy= [HW]

See Documentation/blockdev/floppy.txt.

force_pal_cache_flush

[IA-64] Avoid check_sal_cache_flush which may hang on

buggy SAL_CACHE_FLUSH implementations. Using this

parameter will force ia64_sal_cache_flush to call

ia64_pal_cache_flush instead of SAL_CACHE_FLUSH.

forcepae [X86-32]

Forcefully enable Physical Address Extension (PAE).

Many Pentium M systems disable PAE but may have a

functionally usable PAE implementation.

Warning: use of this parameter will taint the kernel

and may cause unknown problems.

ftrace=[tracer]

[FTRACE] will set and start the specified tracer

as early as possible in order to facilitate early

boot debugging.

ftrace_dump_on_oops[=orig_cpu]

[FTRACE] will dump the trace buffers on oops.

If no parameter is passed, ftrace will dump

buffers of all CPUs, but if you pass orig_cpu, it will

dump only the buffer of the CPU that triggered the

oops.

ftrace_filter=[function-list]

[FTRACE] Limit the functions traced by the function

tracer at boot up. function-list is a comma separated

list of functions. This list can be changed at run

time by the set_ftrace_filter file in the debugfs

tracing directory.

ftrace_notrace=[function-list]

[FTRACE] Do not trace the functions specified in

function-list. This list can be changed at run time

by the set_ftrace_notrace file in the debugfs

tracing directory.

ftrace_graph_filter=[function-list]

[FTRACE] Limit the top level callers functions traced

by the function graph tracer at boot up.

function-list is a comma separated list of functions

that can be changed at run time by the

set_graph_function file in the debugfs tracing directory.

ftrace_graph_notrace=[function-list]

[FTRACE] Do not trace from the functions specified in

function-list. This list is a comma separated list of

functions that can be changed at run time by the

set_graph_notrace file in the debugfs tracing directory.

ftrace_graph_max_depth=

[FTRACE] Used with the function graph tracer. This is

the max depth it will trace into a function. This value

can be changed at run time by the max_graph_depth file

in the tracefs tracing directory. default: 0 (no limit)

gamecon.map[2|3]=

[HW,JOY] Multisystem joystick and NES/SNES/PSX pad

support via parallel port (up to 5 devices per port)

Format: ,,,,,

See also Documentation/input/joystick-parport.txt

gamma= [HW,DRM]

gart_fix_e820= [X86_64] disable the fix e820 for K8 GART

Format: off | on

default: on

gcov_persist= [GCOV] When non-zero (default), profiling data for

kernel modules is saved and remains accessible via

debugfs, even when the module is unloaded/reloaded.

When zero, profiling data is discarded and associated

debugfs files are removed at module unload time.

goldfish [X86] Enable the goldfish android emulator platform.

Don't use this when you are not running on the

android emulator

gpt [EFI] Forces disk with valid GPT signature but

invalid Protective MBR to be treated as GPT. If the

primary GPT is corrupted, it enables the backup/alternate

GPT to be used instead.

grcan.enable0= [HW] Configuration of physical interface 0. Determines

the "Enable 0" bit of the configuration register.

Format: 0 | 1

Default: 0

grcan.enable1= [HW] Configuration of physical interface 1. Determines

the "Enable 0" bit of the configuration register.

Format: 0 | 1

Default: 0

grcan.select= [HW] Select which physical interface to use.

Format: 0 | 1

Default: 0

grcan.txsize= [HW] Sets the size of the tx buffer.

Format: such that (txsize & ~0x1fffc0) == 0.

Default: 1024

grcan.rxsize= [HW] Sets the size of the rx buffer.

Format: such that (rxsize & ~0x1fffc0) == 0.

Default: 1024

gpio-mockup.gpio_mockup_ranges

[HW] Sets the ranges of gpiochip of for this device.

Format: ,,,...

hardlockup_all_cpu_backtrace=

[KNL] Should the hard-lockup detector generate

backtraces on all cpus.

Format:

hashdist= [KNL,NUMA] Large hashes allocated during boot

are distributed across NUMA nodes. Defaults on

for 64-bit NUMA, off otherwise.

Format: 0 | 1 (for off | on)

hcl= [IA-64] SGI's Hardware Graph compatibility layer

hd= [EIDE] (E)IDE hard drive subsystem geometry

Format: ,,

hest_disable [ACPI]

Disable Hardware Error Source Table (HEST) support;

corresponding firmware-first mode error processing

logic will be disabled.

highmem=nn[KMG] [KNL,BOOT] forces the highmem zone to have an exact

size of . This works even on boxes that have no

highmem otherwise. This also works to reduce highmem

size on bigger boxes.

highres= [KNL] Enable/disable high resolution timer mode.

Valid parameters: "on", "off"

Default: "on"

hisax= [HW,ISDN]

See Documentation/isdn/README.HiSax.

hlt [BUGS=ARM,SH]

hpet= [X86-32,HPET] option to control HPET usage

Format: { enable (default) | disable | force |

verbose }

disable: disable HPET and use PIT instead

force: allow force enabled of undocumented chips (ICH4,

VIA, nVidia)

verbose: show contents of HPET registers during setup

hpet_mmap= [X86, HPET_MMAP] Allow userspace to mmap HPET

registers. Default set by CONFIG_HPET_MMAP_DEFAULT.

hugepages= [HW,X86-32,IA-64] HugeTLB pages to allocate at boot.

hugepagesz= [HW,IA-64,PPC,X86-64] The size of the HugeTLB pages.

On x86-64 and powerpc, this option can be specified

multiple times interleaved with hugepages= to reserve

huge pages of different sizes. Valid pages sizes on

x86-64 are 2M (when the CPU supports "pse") and 1G

(when the CPU supports the "pdpe1gb" cpuinfo flag).

hvc_iucv= [S390] Number of z/VM IUCV hypervisor console (HVC)

terminal devices. Valid values: 0..8

hvc_iucv_allow= [S390] Comma-separated list of z/VM user IDs.

If specified, z/VM IUCV HVC accepts connections

from listed z/VM user IDs only.

hwthread_map= [METAG] Comma-separated list of Linux cpu id to

hardware thread id mappings.

Format: :

keep_bootcon [KNL]

Do not unregister boot console at start. This is only

useful for debugging when something happens in the window

between unregistering the boot console and initializing

the real console.

i2c_bus= [HW] Override the default board specific I2C bus speed

or register an additional I2C bus that is not

registered from board initialization code.

Format:

,

i8042.debug [HW] Toggle i8042 debug mode

i8042.unmask_kbd_data

[HW] Enable printing of interrupt data from the KBD port

(disabled by default, and as a pre-condition

requires that i8042.debug=1 be enabled)

i8042.direct [HW] Put keyboard port into non-translated mode

i8042.dumbkbd [HW] Pretend that controller can only read data from

keyboard and cannot control its state

(Don't attempt to blink the leds)

i8042.noaux [HW] Don't check for auxiliary (== mouse) port

i8042.nokbd [HW] Don't check/create keyboard port

i8042.noloop [HW] Disable the AUX Loopback command while probing

for the AUX port

i8042.nomux [HW] Don't check presence of an active multiplexing

controller

i8042.nopnp [HW] Don't use ACPIPnP / PnPBIOS to discover KBD/AUX

controllers

i8042.notimeout [HW] Ignore timeout condition signalled by controller

i8042.reset [HW] Reset the controller during init, cleanup and

suspend-to-ram transitions, only during s2r

transitions, or never reset

Format: { 1 | Y | y | 0 | N | n }

1, Y, y: always reset controller

0, N, n: don't ever reset controller

Default: only on s2r transitions on x86; most other

architectures force reset to be always executed

i8042.unlock [HW] Unlock (ignore) the keylock

i8042.kbdreset [HW] Reset device connected to KBD port

i810= [HW,DRM]

i8k.ignore_dmi [HW] Continue probing hardware even if DMI data

indicates that the driver is running on unsupported

hardware.

i8k.force [HW] Activate i8k driver even if SMM BIOS signature

does not match list of supported models.

i8k.power_status

[HW] Report power status in /proc/i8k

(disabled by default)

i8k.restricted [HW] Allow controlling fans only if SYS_ADMIN

capability is set.

i915.invert_brightness=

[DRM] Invert the sense of the variable that is used to

set the brightness of the panel backlight. Normally a

brightness value of 0 indicates backlight switched off,

and the maximum of the brightness value sets the backlight

to maximum brightness. If this parameter is set to 0

(default) and the machine requires it, or this parameter

is set to 1, a brightness value of 0 sets the backlight

to maximum brightness, and the maximum of the brightness

value switches the backlight off.

-1 -- never invert brightness

0 -- machine default

1 -- force brightness inversion

icn= [HW,ISDN]

Format: [,[,[,]]]

ide-core.nodma= [HW] (E)IDE subsystem

Format: =0.0 to prevent dma on hda, =0.1 hdb =1.0 hdc

.vlb_clock .pci_clock .noflush .nohpa .noprobe .nowerr

.cdrom .chs .ignore_cable are additional options

See Documentation/ide/ide.txt.

ide-generic.probe-mask= [HW] (E)IDE subsystem

Format:

Probe mask for legacy ISA IDE ports. Depending on

platform up to 6 ports are supported, enabled by

setting corresponding bits in the mask to 1. The

default value is 0x0, which has a special meaning.

On systems that have PCI, it triggers scanning the

PCI bus for the first and the second port, which

are then probed. On systems without PCI the value

of 0x0 enables probing the two first ports as if it

was 0x3.

ide-pci-generic.all-generic-ide [HW] (E)IDE subsystem

Claim all unknown PCI IDE storage controllers.

idle= [X86]

Format: idle=poll, idle=halt, idle=nomwait

Poll forces a polling idle loop that can slightly

improve the performance of waking up a idle CPU, but

will use a lot of power and make the system run hot.

Not recommended.

idle=halt: Halt is forced to be used for CPU idle.

In such case C2/C3 won't be used again.

idle=nomwait: Disable mwait for CPU C-states

ieee754= [MIPS] Select IEEE Std 754 conformance mode

Format: { strict | legacy | 2008 | relaxed }

Default: strict

Choose which programs will be accepted for execution

based on the IEEE 754 NaN encoding(s) supported by

the FPU and the NaN encoding requested with the value

of an ELF file header flag individually set by each

binary. Hardware implementations are permitted to

support either or both of the legacy and the 2008 NaN

encoding mode.

Available settings are as follows:

strict accept binaries that request a NaN encoding

supported by the FPU

legacy only accept legacy-NaN binaries, if supported

by the FPU

2008 only accept 2008-NaN binaries, if supported

by the FPU

relaxed accept any binaries regardless of whether

supported by the FPU

The FPU emulator is always able to support both NaN

encodings, so if no FPU hardware is present or it has

been disabled with 'nofpu', then the settings of

'legacy' and '2008' strap the emulator accordingly,

'relaxed' straps the emulator for both legacy-NaN and

2008-NaN, whereas 'strict' enables legacy-NaN only on

legacy processors and both NaN encodings on MIPS32 or

MIPS64 CPUs.

The setting for ABS.fmt/NEG.fmt instruction execution

mode generally follows that for the NaN encoding,

except where unsupported by hardware.

ignore_loglevel [KNL]

Ignore loglevel setting - this will print /all/

kernel messages to the console. Useful for debugging.

We also add it as printk module parameter, so users

could change it dynamically, usually by

/sys/module/printk/parameters/ignore_loglevel.

ignore_rlimit_data

Ignore RLIMIT_DATA setting for data mappings,

print warning at first misuse. Can be changed via

/sys/module/kernel/parameters/ignore_rlimit_data.

ihash_entries= [KNL]

Set number of hash buckets for inode cache.

ima_appraise= [IMA] appraise integrity measurements

Format: { "off" | "enforce" | "fix" | "log" }

default: "enforce"

ima_appraise_tcb [IMA]

The builtin appraise policy appraises all files

owned by uid=0.

ima_canonical_fmt [IMA]

Use the canonical format for the binary runtime

measurements, instead of host native format.

ima_hash= [IMA]

Format: { md5 | sha1 | rmd160 | sha256 | sha384

| sha512 | ... }

default: "sha1"

The list of supported hash algorithms is defined

in crypto/hash_info.h.

ima_policy= [IMA]

The builtin policies to load during IMA setup.

Format: "tcb | appraise_tcb | secure_boot"

The "tcb" policy measures all programs exec'd, files

mmap'd for exec, and all files opened with the read

mode bit set by either the effective uid (euid=0) or

uid=0.

The "appraise_tcb" policy appraises the integrity of

all files owned by root. (This is the equivalent

of ima_appraise_tcb.)

The "secure_boot" policy appraises the integrity

of files (eg. kexec kernel image, kernel modules,

firmware, policy, etc) based on file signatures.

ima_tcb [IMA] Deprecated. Use ima_policy= instead.

Load a policy which meets the needs of the Trusted

Computing Base. This means IMA will measure all

programs exec'd, files mmap'd for exec, and all files

opened for read by uid=0.

ima_template= [IMA]

Select one of defined IMA measurements template formats.

Formats: { "ima" | "ima-ng" | "ima-sig" }

Default: "ima-ng"

ima_template_fmt=

[IMA] Define a custom template format.

Format: { "field1|...|fieldN" }

ima.ahash_minsize= [IMA] Minimum file size for asynchronous hash usage

Format:

Set the minimal file size for using asynchronous hash.

If left unspecified, ahash usage is disabled.

ahash performance varies for different data sizes on

different crypto accelerators. This option can be used

to achieve the best performance for a particular HW.

ima.ahash_bufsize= [IMA] Asynchronous hash buffer size

Format:

Set hashing buffer size. Default: 4k.

ahash performance varies for different chunk sizes on

different crypto accelerators. This option can be used

to achieve best performance for particular HW.

init= [KNL]

Format:

Run specified binary instead of /sbin/init as init

process.

initcall_debug [KNL] Trace initcalls as they are executed. Useful

for working out where the kernel is dying during

startup.

initcall_blacklist= [KNL] Do not execute a comma-separated list of

initcall functions. Useful for debugging built-in

modules and initcalls.

initrd= [BOOT] Specify the location of the initial ramdisk

init_pkru= [x86] Specify the default memory protection keys rights

register contents for all processes. 0x55555554 by

default (disallow access to all but pkey 0). Can

override in debugfs after boot.

inport.irq= [HW] Inport (ATI XL and Microsoft) busmouse driver

Format:

int_pln_enable [x86] Enable power limit notification interrupt

integrity_audit=[IMA]

Format: { "0" | "1" }

0 -- basic integrity auditing messages. (Default)

1 -- additional integrity auditing messages.

intel_iommu= [DMAR] Intel IOMMU driver (DMAR) option

on

Enable intel iommu driver.

off

Disable intel iommu driver.

igfx_off [Default Off]

By default, gfx is mapped as normal device. If a gfx

device has a dedicated DMAR unit, the DMAR unit is

bypassed by not enabling DMAR with this option. In

this case, gfx device will use physical address for

DMA.

forcedac [x86_64]

With this option iommu will not optimize to look

for io virtual address below 32-bit forcing dual

address cycle on pci bus for cards supporting greater

than 32-bit addressing. The default is to look

for translation below 32-bit and if not available

then look in the higher range.

strict [Default Off]

With this option on every unmap_single operation will

result in a hardware IOTLB flush operation as opposed

to batching them for performance.

sp_off [Default Off]

By default, super page will be supported if Intel IOMMU

has the capability. With this option, super page will

not be supported.

ecs_off [Default Off]

By default, extended context tables will be supported if

the hardware advertises that it has support both for the

extended tables themselves, and also PASID support. With

this option set, extended tables will not be used even

on hardware which claims to support them.

tboot_noforce [Default Off]

Do not force the Intel IOMMU enabled under tboot.

By default, tboot will force Intel IOMMU on, which

could harm performance of some high-throughput

devices like 40GBit network cards, even if identity

mapping is enabled.

Note that using this option lowers the security

provided by tboot because it makes the system

vulnerable to DMA attacks.

intel_idle.max_cstate= [KNL,HW,ACPI,X86]

0 disables intel_idle and fall back on acpi_idle.

1 to 9 specify maximum depth of C-state.

intel_pstate= [X86]

disable

Do not enable intel_pstate as the default

scaling driver for the supported processors

passive

Use intel_pstate as a scaling driver, but configure it

to work with generic cpufreq governors (instead of

enabling its internal governor). This mode cannot be

used along with the hardware-managed P-states (HWP)

feature.

force

Enable intel_pstate on systems that prohibit it by default

in favor of acpi-cpufreq. Forcing the intel_pstate driver

instead of acpi-cpufreq may disable platform features, such

as thermal controls and power capping, that rely on ACPI

P-States information being indicated to OSPM and therefore

should be used with caution. This option does not work with

processors that aren't supported by the intel_pstate driver

or on platforms that use pcc-cpufreq instead of acpi-cpufreq.

no_hwp

Do not enable hardware P state control (HWP)

if available.

hwp_only

Only load intel_pstate on systems which support

hardware P state control (HWP) if available.

support_acpi_ppc

Enforce ACPI _PPC performance limits. If the Fixed ACPI

Description Table, specifies preferred power management

profile as "Enterprise Server" or "Performance Server",

then this feature is turned on by default.

per_cpu_perf_limits

Allow per-logical-CPU P-State performance control limits using

cpufreq sysfs interface

intremap= [X86-64, Intel-IOMMU]

on enable Interrupt Remapping (default)

off disable Interrupt Remapping

nosid disable Source ID checking

no_x2apic_optout

BIOS x2APIC opt-out request will be ignored

nopost disable Interrupt Posting

iomem= Disable strict checking of access to MMIO memory

strict regions from userspace.

relaxed

iommu= [x86]

off

force

noforce

biomerge

panic

nopanic

merge

nomerge

forcesac

soft

pt [x86, IA-64]

nobypass [PPC/POWERNV]

Disable IOMMU bypass, using IOMMU for PCI devices.

iommu.passthrough=

[ARM64] Configure DMA to bypass the IOMMU by default.

Format: { "0" | "1" }

0 - Use IOMMU translation for DMA.

1 - Bypass the IOMMU for DMA.

unset - Use IOMMU translation for DMA.

io7= [HW] IO7 for Marvel based alpha systems

See comment before marvel_specify_io7 in

arch/alpha/kernel/core_marvel.c.

io_delay= [X86] I/O delay method

0x80

Standard port 0x80 based delay

0xed

Alternate port 0xed based delay (needed on some systems)

udelay

Simple two microseconds delay

none

No delay

ip= [IP_PNP]

See Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsroot.txt.

irqaffinity= [SMP] Set the default irq affinity mask

The argument is a cpu list, as described above.

irqfixup [HW]

When an interrupt is not handled search all handlers

for it. Intended to get systems with badly broken

firmware running.

irqpoll [HW]

When an interrupt is not handled search all handlers

for it. Also check all handlers each timer

interrupt. Intended to get systems with badly broken

firmware running.

isapnp= [ISAPNP]

Format: ,,,

isolcpus= [KNL,SMP] Isolate CPUs from the general scheduler.

The argument is a cpu list, as described above.

This option can be used to specify one or more CPUs

to isolate from the general SMP balancing and scheduling

algorithms. You can move a process onto or off an

"isolated" CPU via the CPU affinity syscalls or cpuset.

begins at 0 and the maximum value is

"number of CPUs in system - 1".

This option is the preferred way to isolate CPUs. The

alternative -- manually setting the CPU mask of all

tasks in the system -- can cause problems and

suboptimal load balancer performance.

iucv= [HW,NET]

ivrs_ioapic [HW,X86_64]

Provide an override to the IOAPIC-ID<->DEVICE-ID

mapping provided in the IVRS ACPI table. For

example, to map IOAPIC-ID decimal 10 to

PCI device 00:14.0 write the parameter as:

ivrs_ioapic[10]=00:14.0

ivrs_hpet [HW,X86_64]

Provide an override to the HPET-ID<->DEVICE-ID

mapping provided in the IVRS ACPI table. For

example, to map HPET-ID decimal 0 to

PCI device 00:14.0 write the parameter as:

ivrs_hpet[0]=00:14.0

ivrs_acpihid [HW,X86_64]

Provide an override to the ACPI-HID:UID<->DEVICE-ID

mapping provided in the IVRS ACPI table. For

example, to map UART-HID:UID AMD0020:0 to

PCI device 00:14.5 write the parameter as:

ivrs_acpihid[00:14.5]=AMD0020:0

js= [HW,JOY] Analog joystick

See Documentation/input/joystick.txt.

nokaslr [KNL]

When CONFIG_RANDOMIZE_BASE is set, this disables

kernel and module base offset ASLR (Address Space

Layout Randomization).

kasan_multi_shot

[KNL] Enforce KASAN (Kernel Address Sanitizer) to print

report on every invalid memory access. Without this

parameter KASAN will print report only for the first

invalid access.

keepinitrd [HW,ARM]

kernelcore= [KNL,X86,IA-64,PPC]

Format: nn[KMGTPE] | "mirror"

This parameter

specifies the amount of memory usable by the kernel

for non-movable allocations. The requested amount is

spread evenly throughout all nodes in the system. The

remaining memory in each node is used for Movable

pages. In the event, a node is too small to have both

kernelcore and Movable pages, kernelcore pages will

take priority and other nodes will have a larger number

of Movable pages. The Movable zone is used for the

allocation of pages that may be reclaimed or moved

by the page migration subsystem. This means that

HugeTLB pages may not be allocated from this zone.

Note that allocations like PTEs-from-HighMem still

use the HighMem zone if it exists, and the Normal

zone if it does not.

Instead of specifying the amount of memory (nn[KMGTPE]),

you can specify "mirror" option. In case "mirror"

option is specified, mirrored (reliable) memory is used

for non-movable allocations and remaining memory is used

for Movable pages. nn[KMGTPE] and "mirror" are exclusive,

so you can NOT specify nn[KMGTPE] and "mirror" at the same

time.

kgdbdbgp= [KGDB,HW] kgdb over EHCI usb debug port.

Format: [,poll interval]

The controller # is the number of the ehci usb debug

port as it is probed via PCI. The poll interval is

optional and is the number seconds in between

each poll cycle to the debug port in case you need

the functionality for interrupting the kernel with

gdb or control-c on the dbgp connection. When

not using this parameter you use sysrq-g to break into

the kernel debugger.

kgdboc= [KGDB,HW] kgdb over consoles.

Requires a tty driver that supports console polling,

or a supported polling keyboard driver (non-usb).

Serial only format: [,baud]

keyboard only format: kbd

keyboard and serial format: kbd,[,baud]

Optional Kernel mode setting:

kms, kbd format: kms,kbd

kms, kbd and serial format: kms,kbd,[,baud]

kgdbwait [KGDB] Stop kernel execution and enter the

kernel debugger at the earliest opportunity.

kmac= [MIPS] korina ethernet MAC address.

Configure the RouterBoard 532 series on-chip

Ethernet adapter MAC address.

kmemleak= [KNL] Boot-time kmemleak enable/disable

Valid arguments: on, off

Default: on

Built with CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK_DEFAULT_OFF=y,

the default is off.

kmemcheck= [X86] Boot-time kmemcheck enable/disable/one-shot mode

Valid arguments: 0, 1, 2

kmemcheck=0 (disabled)

kmemcheck=1 (enabled)

kmemcheck=2 (one-shot mode)

Default: 2 (one-shot mode)

kvm.ignore_msrs=[KVM] Ignore guest accesses to unhandled MSRs.

Default is 0 (don't ignore, but inject #GP)

kvm.mmu_audit= [KVM] This is a R/W parameter which allows audit

KVM MMU at runtime.

Default is 0 (off)

kvm-amd.nested= [KVM,AMD] Allow nested virtualization in KVM/SVM.

Default is 1 (enabled)

kvm-amd.npt= [KVM,AMD] Disable nested paging (virtualized MMU)

for all guests.

Default is 1 (enabled) if in 64-bit or 32-bit PAE mode.

kvm-arm.vgic_v3_group0_trap=

[KVM,ARM] Trap guest accesses to GICv3 group-0

system registers

kvm-arm.vgic_v3_group1_trap=

[KVM,ARM] Trap guest accesses to GICv3 group-1

system registers

kvm-arm.vgic_v3_common_trap=

[KVM,ARM] Trap guest accesses to GICv3 common

system registers

kvm-intel.ept= [KVM,Intel] Disable extended page tables

(virtualized MMU) support on capable Intel chips.

Default is 1 (enabled)

kvm-intel.emulate_invalid_guest_state=

[KVM,Intel] Enable emulation of invalid guest states

Default is 0 (disabled)

kvm-intel.flexpriority=

[KVM,Intel] Disable FlexPriority feature (TPR shadow).

Default is 1 (enabled)

kvm-intel.nested=

[KVM,Intel] Enable VMX nesting (nVMX).

Default is 0 (disabled)

kvm-intel.unrestricted_guest=

[KVM,Intel] Disable unrestricted guest feature

(virtualized real and unpaged mode) on capable

Intel chips. Default is 1 (enabled)

kvm-intel.vpid= [KVM,Intel] Disable Virtual Processor Identification

feature (tagged TLBs) on capable Intel chips.

Default is 1 (enabled)

l2cr= [PPC]

l3cr= [PPC]

lapic [X86-32,APIC] Enable the local APIC even if BIOS

disabled it.

lapic= [x86,APIC] "notscdeadline" Do not use TSC deadline

value for LAPIC timer one-shot implementation. Default

back to the programmable timer unit in the LAPIC.

lapic_timer_c2_ok [X86,APIC] trust the local apic timer

in C2 power state.

libata.dma= [LIBATA] DMA control

libata.dma=0 Disable all PATA and SATA DMA

libata.dma=1 PATA and SATA Disk DMA only

libata.dma=2 ATAPI (CDROM) DMA only

libata.dma=4 Compact Flash DMA only

Combinations also work, so libata.dma=3 enables DMA

for disks and CDROMs, but not CFs.

libata.ignore_hpa= [LIBATA] Ignore HPA limit

libata.ignore_hpa=0 keep BIOS limits (default)

libata.ignore_hpa=1 ignore limits, using full disk

libata.noacpi [LIBATA] Disables use of ACPI in libata suspend/resume

when set.

Format:

libata.force= [LIBATA] Force configurations. The format is comma

separated list of "[ID:]VAL" where ID is

PORT[.DEVICE]. PORT and DEVICE are decimal numbers

matching port, link or device. Basically, it matches

the ATA ID string printed on console by libata. If

the whole ID part is omitted, the last PORT and DEVICE

values are used. If ID hasn't been specified yet, the

configuration applies to all ports, links and devices.

If only DEVICE is omitted, the parameter applies to

the port and all links and devices behind it. DEVICE

number of 0 either selects the first device or the

first fan-out link behind PMP device. It does not

select the host link. DEVICE number of 15 selects the

host link and device attached to it.

The VAL specifies the configuration to force. As long

as there's no ambiguity shortcut notation is allowed.

For example, both 1.5 and 1.5G would work for 1.5Gbps.

The following configurations can be forced.

* Cable type: 40c, 80c, short40c, unk, ign or sata.

Any ID with matching PORT is used.

* SATA link speed limit: 1.5Gbps or 3.0Gbps.

* Transfer mode: pio[0-7], mwdma[0-4] and udma[0-7].

udma[/][16,25,33,44,66,100,133] notation is also

allowed.

* [no]ncq: Turn on or off NCQ.

* [no]ncqtrim: Turn off queued DSM TRIM.

* nohrst, nosrst, norst: suppress hard, soft

and both resets.

* rstonce: only attempt one reset during

hot-unplug link recovery

* dump_id: dump IDENTIFY data.

* atapi_dmadir: Enable ATAPI DMADIR bridge support

* disable: Disable this device.

If there are multiple matching configurations changing

the same attribute, the last one is used.

memblock=debug [KNL] Enable memblock debug messages.

load_ramdisk= [RAM] List of ramdisks to load from floppy

See Documentation/blockdev/ramdisk.txt.

lockd.nlm_grace_period=P [NFS] Assign grace period.

Format:

lockd.nlm_tcpport=N [NFS] Assign TCP port.

Format:

lockd.nlm_timeout=T [NFS] Assign timeout value.

Format:

lockd.nlm_udpport=M [NFS] Assign UDP port.

Format:

locktorture.nreaders_stress= [KNL]

Set the number of locking read-acquisition kthreads.

Defaults to being automatically set based on the

number of online CPUs.

locktorture.nwriters_stress= [KNL]

Set the number of locking write-acquisition kthreads.

locktorture.onoff_holdoff= [KNL]

Set time (s) after boot for CPU-hotplug testing.

locktorture.onoff_interval= [KNL]

Set time (s) between CPU-hotplug operations, or

zero to disable CPU-hotplug testing.

locktorture.shuffle_interval= [KNL]

Set task-shuffle interval (jiffies). Shuffling

tasks allows some CPUs to go into dyntick-idle

mode during the locktorture test.

locktorture.shutdown_secs= [KNL]

Set time (s) after boot system shutdown. This

is useful for hands-off automated testing.

locktorture.stat_interval= [KNL]

Time (s) between statistics printk()s.

locktorture.stutter= [KNL]

Time (s) to stutter testing, for example,

specifying five seconds causes the test to run for

five seconds, wait for five seconds, and so on.

This tests the locking primitive's ability to

transition abruptly to and from idle.

locktorture.torture_runnable= [BOOT]

Start locktorture running at boot time.

locktorture.torture_type= [KNL]

Specify the locking implementation to test.

locktorture.verbose= [KNL]

Enable additional printk() statements.

logibm.irq= [HW,MOUSE] Logitech Bus Mouse Driver

Format:

loglevel= All Kernel Messages with a loglevel smaller than the

console loglevel will be printed to the console. It can

also be changed with klogd or other programs. The

loglevels are defined as follows:

0 (KERN_EMERG) system is unusable

1 (KERN_ALERT) action must be taken immediately

2 (KERN_CRIT) critical conditions

3 (KERN_ERR) error conditions

4 (KERN_WARNING) warning conditions

5 (KERN_NOTICE) normal but significant condition

6 (KERN_INFO) informational

7 (KERN_DEBUG) debug-level messages

log_buf_len=n[KMG] Sets the size of the printk ring buffer,

in bytes. n must be a power of two and greater

than the minimal size. The minimal size is defined

by LOG_BUF_SHIFT kernel config parameter. There is

also CONFIG_LOG_CPU_MAX_BUF_SHIFT config parameter

that allows to increase the default size depending on

the number of CPUs. See init/Kconfig for more details.

logo.nologo [FB] Disables display of the built-in Linux logo.

This may be used to provide more screen space for

kernel log messages and is useful when debugging

kernel boot problems.

lp=0 [LP] Specify parallel ports to use, e.g,

lp=port[,port...] lp=none,parport0 (lp0 not configured, lp1 uses

lp=reset first parallel port). 'lp=0' disables the

lp=auto printer driver. 'lp=reset' (which can be

specified in addition to the ports) causes

attached printers to be reset. Using

lp=port1,port2,... specifies the parallel ports

to associate lp devices with, starting with

lp0. A port specification may be 'none' to skip

that lp device, or a parport name such as

'parport0'. Specifying 'lp=auto' instead of a

port specification list means that device IDs

from each port should be examined, to see if

an IEEE 1284-compliant printer is attached; if

so, the driver will manage that printer.

See also header of drivers/char/lp.c.

lpj=n [KNL]

Sets loops_per_jiffy to given constant, thus avoiding

time-consuming boot-time autodetection (up to 250 ms per

CPU). 0 enables autodetection (default). To determine

the correct value for your kernel, boot with normal

autodetection and see what value is printed. Note that

on SMP systems the preset will be applied to all CPUs,

which is likely to cause problems if your CPUs need

significantly divergent settings. An incorrect value

will cause delays in the kernel to be wrong, leading to

unpredictable I/O errors and other breakage. Although

unlikely, in the extreme case this might damage your

hardware.

ltpc= [NET]

Format: ,,

machvec= [IA-64] Force the use of a particular machine-vector

(machvec) in a generic kernel.

Example: machvec=hpzx1_swiotlb

machtype= [Loongson] Share the same kernel image file between different

yeeloong laptop.

Example: machtype=lemote-yeeloong-2f-7inch

max_addr=nn[KMG] [KNL,BOOT,ia64] All physical memory greater

than or equal to this physical address is ignored.

maxcpus= [SMP] Maximum number of processors that an SMP kernel

will bring up during bootup. maxcpus=n : n >= 0 limits

the kernel to bring up 'n' processors. Surely after

bootup you can bring up the other plugged cpu by executing

"echo 1 > /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpuX/online". So maxcpus

only takes effect during system bootup.

While n=0 is a special case, it is equivalent to "nosmp",

which also disables the IO APIC.

max_loop= [LOOP] The number of loop block devices that get

(loop.max_loop) unconditionally pre-created at init time. The default

number is configured by BLK_DEV_LOOP_MIN_COUNT. Instead

of statically allocating a predefined number, loop

devices can be requested on-demand with the

/dev/loop-control interface.

mce [X86-32] Machine Check Exception

mce=option [X86-64] See Documentation/x86/x86_64/boot-options.txt

md= [HW] RAID subsystems devices and level

See Documentation/admin-guide/md.rst.

mdacon= [MDA]

Format: ,

Specifies range of consoles to be captured by the MDA.

mem=nn[KMG] [KNL,BOOT] Force usage of a specific amount of memory

Amount of memory to be used when the kernel is not able

to see the whole system memory or for test.

[X86] Work as limiting max address. Use together

with memmap= to avoid physical address space collisions.

Without memmap= PCI devices could be placed at addresses

belonging to unused RAM.

mem=nopentium [BUGS=X86-32] Disable usage of 4MB pages for kernel

memory.

memchunk=nn[KMG]

[KNL,SH] Allow user to override the default size for

per-device physically contiguous DMA buffers.

memhp_default_state=online/offline

[KNL] Set the initial state for the memory hotplug

onlining policy. If not specified, the default value is

set according to the

CONFIG_MEMORY_HOTPLUG_DEFAULT_ONLINE kernel config

option.

See Documentation/memory-hotplug.txt.

memmap=exactmap [KNL,X86] Enable setting of an exact

E820 memory map, as specified by the user.

Such memmap=exactmap lines can be constructed based on

BIOS output or other requirements. See the memmap=nn@ss

option description.

memmap=nn[KMG]@ss[KMG]

[KNL] Force usage of a specific region of memory.

Region of memory to be used is from ss to ss+nn.

If @ss[KMG] is omitted, it is equivalent to mem=nn[KMG],

which limits max address to nn[KMG].

Multiple different regions can be specified,

comma delimited.

Example:

memmap=100M@2G,100M#3G,1G!1024G

memmap=nn[KMG]#ss[KMG]

[KNL,ACPI] Mark specific memory as ACPI data.

Region of memory to be marked is from ss to ss+nn.

memmap=nn[KMG]$ss[KMG]

[KNL,ACPI] Mark specific memory as reserved.

Region of memory to be reserved is from ss to ss+nn.

Example: Exclude memory from 0x18690000-0x1869ffff

memmap=64K$0x18690000

or

memmap=0x10000$0x18690000

Some bootloaders may need an escape character before '$',

like Grub2, otherwise '$' and the following number

will be eaten.

memmap=nn[KMG]!ss[KMG]

[KNL,X86] Mark specific memory as protected.

Region of memory to be used, from ss to ss+nn.

The memory region may be marked as e820 type 12 (0xc)

and is NVDIMM or ADR memory.

memory_corruption_check=0/1 [X86]

Some BIOSes seem to corrupt the first 64k of

memory when doing things like suspend/resume.

Setting this option will scan the memory

looking for corruption. Enabling this will

both detect corruption and prevent the kernel

from using the memory being corrupted.

However, its intended as a diagnostic tool; if

repeatable BIOS-originated corruption always

affects the same memory, you can use memmap=

to prevent the kernel from using that memory.

memory_corruption_check_size=size [X86]

By default it checks for corruption in the low

64k, making this memory unavailable for normal

use. Use this parameter to scan for

corruption in more or less memory.

memory_corruption_check_period=seconds [X86]

By default it checks for corruption every 60

seconds. Use this parameter to check at some

other rate. 0 disables periodic checking.

memtest= [KNL,X86,ARM] Enable memtest

Format:

default : 0

Specifies the number of memtest passes to be

performed. Each pass selects another test

pattern from a given set of patterns. Memtest

fills the memory with this pattern, validates

memory contents and reserves bad memory

regions that are detected.

mem_encrypt= [X86-64] AMD Secure Memory Encryption (SME) control

Valid arguments: on, off

Default (depends on kernel configuration option):

on (CONFIG_AMD_MEM_ENCRYPT_ACTIVE_BY_DEFAULT=y)

off (CONFIG_AMD_MEM_ENCRYPT_ACTIVE_BY_DEFAULT=n)

mem_encrypt=on: Activate SME

mem_encrypt=off: Do not activate SME

Refer to Documentation/x86/amd-memory-encryption.txt

for details on when memory encryption can be activated.

mem_sleep_default= [SUSPEND] Default system suspend mode:

s2idle - Suspend-To-Idle

shallow - Power-On Suspend or equivalent (if supported)

deep - Suspend-To-RAM or equivalent (if supported)

See Documentation/power/states.txt.

meye.*= [HW] Set MotionEye Camera parameters

See Documentation/video4linux/meye.txt.

mfgpt_irq= [IA-32] Specify the IRQ to use for the

Multi-Function General Purpose Timers on AMD Geode

platforms.

mfgptfix [X86-32] Fix MFGPT timers on AMD Geode platforms when

the BIOS has incorrectly applied a workaround. TinyBIOS

version 0.98 is known to be affected, 0.99 fixes the

problem by letting the user disable the workaround.

mga= [HW,DRM]

min_addr=nn[KMG] [KNL,BOOT,ia64] All physical memory below this

physical address is ignored.

mini2440= [ARM,HW,KNL]

Format:[0..2][b][c][t]

Default: "0tb"

MINI2440 configuration specification:

0 - The attached screen is the 3.5" TFT

1 - The attached screen is the 7" TFT

2 - The VGA Shield is attached (1024x768)

Leaving out the screen size parameter will not load

the TFT driver, and the framebuffer will be left

unconfigured.

b - Enable backlight. The TFT backlight pin will be

linked to the kernel VESA blanking code and a GPIO

LED. This parameter is not necessary when using the

VGA shield.

c - Enable the s3c camera interface.

t - Reserved for enabling touchscreen support. The

touchscreen support is not enabled in the mainstream

kernel as of 2.6.30, a preliminary port can be found

in the "bleeding edge" mini2440 support kernel at

http://repo.or.cz/w/linux-2.6/mini2440.git

mminit_loglevel=

[KNL] When CONFIG_DEBUG_MEMORY_INIT is set, this

parameter allows control of the logging verbosity for

the additional memory initialisation checks. A value

of 0 disables mminit logging and a level of 4 will

log everything. Information is printed at KERN_DEBUG

so loglevel=8 may also need to be specified.

module.sig_enforce

[KNL] When CONFIG_MODULE_SIG is set, this means that

modules without (valid) signatures will fail to load.

Note that if CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_FORCE is set, that

is always true, so this option does nothing.

module_blacklist= [KNL] Do not load a comma-separated list of

modules. Useful for debugging problem modules.

mousedev.tap_time=

[MOUSE] Maximum time between finger touching and

leaving touchpad surface for touch to be considered

a tap and be reported as a left button click (for

touchpads working in absolute mode only).

Format:

mousedev.xres= [MOUSE] Horizontal screen resolution, used for devices

reporting absolute coordinates, such as tablets

mousedev.yres= [MOUSE] Vertical screen resolution, used for devices

reporting absolute coordinates, such as tablets

movablecore=nn[KMG] [KNL,X86,IA-64,PPC] This parameter

is similar to kernelcore except it specifies the

amount of memory used for migratable allocations.

If both kernelcore and movablecore is specified,

then kernelcore will be at *least* the specified

value but may be more. If movablecore on its own

is specified, the administrator must be careful

that the amount of memory usable for all allocations

is not too small.

movable_node [KNL] Boot-time switch to make hotplugable memory

NUMA nodes to be movable. This means that the memory

of such nodes will be usable only for movable

allocations which rules out almost all kernel

allocations. Use with caution!

MTD_Partition= [MTD]

Format: ,,,

MTD_Region= [MTD] Format:

,[,,,,]

mtdparts= [MTD]

See drivers/mtd/cmdlinepart.c.

multitce=off [PPC] This parameter disables the use of the pSeries

firmware feature for updating multiple TCE entries

at a time.

onenand.bdry= [HW,MTD] Flex-OneNAND Boundary Configuration

Format: [die0_boundary][,die0_lock][,die1_boundary][,die1_lock]

boundary - index of last SLC block on Flex-OneNAND.

The remaining blocks are configured as MLC blocks.

lock - Configure if Flex-OneNAND boundary should be locked.

Once locked, the boundary cannot be changed.

1 indicates lock status, 0 indicates unlock status.

mtdset= [ARM]

ARM/S3C2412 JIVE boot control

See arch/arm/mach-s3c2412/mach-jive.c

mtouchusb.raw_coordinates=

[HW] Make the MicroTouch USB driver use raw coordinates

('y', default) or cooked coordinates ('n')

mtrr_chunk_size=nn[KMG] [X86]

used for mtrr cleanup. It is largest continuous chunk

that could hold holes aka. UC entries.

mtrr_gran_size=nn[KMG] [X86]

Used for mtrr cleanup. It is granularity of mtrr block.

Default is 1.

Large value could prevent small alignment from

using up MTRRs.

mtrr_spare_reg_nr=n [X86]

Format:

Range: 0,7 : spare reg number

Default : 1

Used for mtrr cleanup. It is spare mtrr entries number.

Set to 2 or more if your graphical card needs more.

n2= [NET] SDL Inc. RISCom/N2 synchronous serial card

netdev= [NET] Network devices parameters

Format: ,,,,

Note that mem_start is often overloaded to mean

something different and driver-specific.

This usage is only documented in each driver source

file if at all.

nf_conntrack.acct=

[NETFILTER] Enable connection tracking flow accounting

0 to disable accounting

1 to enable accounting

Default value is 0.

nfsaddrs= [NFS] Deprecated. Use ip= instead.

See Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsroot.txt.

nfsroot= [NFS] nfs root filesystem for disk-less boxes.

See Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsroot.txt.

nfsrootdebug [NFS] enable nfsroot debugging messages.

See Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsroot.txt.

nfs.callback_nr_threads=

[NFSv4] set the total number of threads that the

NFS client will assign to service NFSv4 callback

requests.

nfs.callback_tcpport=

[NFS] set the TCP port on which the NFSv4 callback

channel should listen.

nfs.cache_getent=

[NFS] sets the pathname to the program which is used

to update the NFS client cache entries.

nfs.cache_getent_timeout=

[NFS] sets the timeout after which an attempt to

update a cache entry is deemed to have failed.

nfs.idmap_cache_timeout=

[NFS] set the maximum lifetime for idmapper cache

entries.

nfs.enable_ino64=

[NFS] enable 64-bit inode numbers.

If zero, the NFS client will fake up a 32-bit inode

number for the readdir() and stat() syscalls instead

of returning the full 64-bit number.

The default is to return 64-bit inode numbers.

nfs.max_session_cb_slots=

[NFSv4.1] Sets the maximum number of session

slots the client will assign to the callback

channel. This determines the maximum number of

callbacks the client will process in parallel for

a particular server.

nfs.max_session_slots=

[NFSv4.1] Sets the maximum number of session slots

the client will attempt to negotiate with the server.

This limits the number of simultaneous RPC requests

that the client can send to the NFSv4.1 server.

Note that there is little point in setting this

value higher than the max_tcp_slot_table_limit.

nfs.nfs4_disable_idmapping=

[NFSv4] When set to the default of '1', this option

ensures that both the RPC level authentication

scheme and the NFS level operations agree to use

numeric uids/gids if the mount is using the

'sec=sys' security flavour. In effect it is

disabling idmapping, which can make migration from

legacy NFSv2/v3 systems to NFSv4 easier.

Servers that do not support this mode of operation

will be autodetected by the client, and it will fall

back to using the idmapper.

To turn off this behaviour, set the value to '0'.

nfs.nfs4_unique_id=

[NFS4] Specify an additional fixed unique ident-

ification string that NFSv4 clients can insert into

their nfs_client_id4 string. This is typically a

UUID that is generated at system install time.

nfs.send_implementation_id =

[NFSv4.1] Send client implementation identification

information in exchange_id requests.

If zero, no implementation identification information

will be sent.

The default is to send the implementation identification

information.

nfs.recover_lost_locks =

[NFSv4] Attempt to recover locks that were lost due

to a lease timeout on the server. Please note that

doing this risks data corruption, since there are

no guarantees that the file will remain unchanged

after the locks are lost.

If you want to enable the kernel legacy behaviour of

attempting to recover these locks, then set this

parameter to '1'.

The default parameter value of '0' causes the kernel

not to attempt recovery of lost locks.

nfs4.layoutstats_timer =

[NFSv4.2] Change the rate at which the kernel sends

layoutstats to the pNFS metadata server.

Setting this to value to 0 causes the kernel to use

whatever value is the default set by the layout

driver. A non-zero value sets the minimum interval

in seconds between layoutstats transmissions.

nfsd.nfs4_disable_idmapping=

[NFSv4] When set to the default of '1', the NFSv4

server will return only numeric uids and gids to

clients using auth_sys, and will accept numeric uids

and gids from such clients. This is intended to ease

migration from NFSv2/v3.

nmi_debug= [KNL,SH] Specify one or more actions to take

when a NMI is triggered.

Format: [state][,regs][,debounce][,die]

nmi_watchdog= [KNL,BUGS=X86] Debugging features for SMP kernels

Format: [panic,][nopanic,][num]

Valid num: 0 or 1

0 - turn hardlockup detector in nmi_watchdog off

1 - turn hardlockup detector in nmi_watchdog on

When panic is specified, panic when an NMI watchdog

timeout occurs (or 'nopanic' to override the opposite

default). To disable both hard and soft lockup detectors,

please see 'nowatchdog'.

This is useful when you use a panic=... timeout and

need the box quickly up again.

netpoll.carrier_timeout=

[NET] Specifies amount of time (in seconds) that

netpoll should wait for a carrier. By default netpoll

waits 4 seconds.

no387 [BUGS=X86-32] Tells the kernel to use the 387 maths

emulation library even if a 387 maths coprocessor

is present.

no_console_suspend

[HW] Never suspend the console

Disable suspending of consoles during suspend and

hibernate operations. Once disabled, debugging

messages can reach various consoles while the rest

of the system is being put to sleep (ie, while

debugging driver suspend/resume hooks). This may

not work reliably with all consoles, but is known

to work with serial and VGA consoles.

To facilitate more flexible debugging, we also add

console_suspend, a printk module parameter to control

it. Users could use console_suspend (usually

/sys/module/printk/parameters/console_suspend) to

turn on/off it dynamically.

noaliencache [MM, NUMA, SLAB] Disables the allocation of alien

caches in the slab allocator. Saves per-node memory,

but will impact performance.

noalign [KNL,ARM]

noapic [SMP,APIC] Tells the kernel to not make use of any

IOAPICs that may be present in the system.

noautogroup Disable scheduler automatic task group creation.

nobats [PPC] Do not use BATs for mapping kernel lowmem

on "Classic" PPC cores.

nocache [ARM]

noclflush [BUGS=X86] Don't use the CLFLUSH instruction

nodelayacct [KNL] Disable per-task delay accounting

nodsp [SH] Disable hardware DSP at boot time.

noefi Disable EFI runtime services support.

noexec [IA-64]

noexec [X86]

On X86-32 available only on PAE configured kernels.

noexec=on: enable non-executable mappings (default)

noexec=off: disable non-executable mappings

nosmap [X86]

Disable SMAP (Supervisor Mode Access Prevention)

even if it is supported by processor.

nosmep [X86]

Disable SMEP (Supervisor Mode Execution Prevention)

even if it is supported by processor.

noexec32 [X86-64]

This affects only 32-bit executables.

noexec32=on: enable non-executable mappings (default)

read doesn't imply executable mappings

noexec32=off: disable non-executable mappings

read implies executable mappings

nofpu [MIPS,SH] Disable hardware FPU at boot time.

nofxsr [BUGS=X86-32] Disables x86 floating point extended

register save and restore. The kernel will only save

legacy floating-point registers on task switch.

nohugeiomap [KNL,x86] Disable kernel huge I/O mappings.

nosmt [KNL,S390] Disable symmetric multithreading (SMT).

Equivalent to smt=1.

noxsave [BUGS=X86] Disables x86 extended register state save

and restore using xsave. The kernel will fallback to

enabling legacy floating-point and sse state.

noxsaveopt [X86] Disables xsaveopt used in saving x86 extended

register states. The kernel will fall back to use

xsave to save the states. By using this parameter,

performance of saving the states is degraded because

xsave doesn't support modified optimization while

xsaveopt supports it on xsaveopt enabled systems.

noxsaves [X86] Disables xsaves and xrstors used in saving and

restoring x86 extended register state in compacted

form of xsave area. The kernel will fall back to use

xsaveopt and xrstor to save and restore the states

in standard form of xsave area. By using this

parameter, xsave area per process might occupy more

memory on xsaves enabled systems.

nohlt [BUGS=ARM,SH] Tells the kernel that the sleep(SH) or

wfi(ARM) instruction doesn't work correctly and not to

use it. This is also useful when using JTAG debugger.

no_file_caps Tells the kernel not to honor file capabilities. The

only way then for a file to be executed with privilege

is to be setuid root or executed by root.

nohalt [IA-64] Tells the kernel not to use the power saving

function PAL_HALT_LIGHT when idle. This increases

power-consumption. On the positive side, it reduces

interrupt wake-up latency, which may improve performance

in certain environments such as networked servers or

real-time systems.

nohibernate [HIBERNATION] Disable hibernation and resume.

nohz= [KNL] Boottime enable/disable dynamic ticks

Valid arguments: on, off

Default: on

nohz_full= [KNL,BOOT]

The argument is a cpu list, as described above.

In kernels built with CONFIG_NO_HZ_FULL=y, set

the specified list of CPUs whose tick will be stopped

whenever possible. The boot CPU will be forced outside

the range to maintain the timekeeping. Any CPUs

in this list will have their RCU callbacks offloaded,

just as if they had also been called out in the

rcu_nocbs= boot parameter.

noiotrap [SH] Disables trapped I/O port accesses.

noirqdebug [X86-32] Disables the code which attempts to detect and

disable unhandled interrupt sources.

no_timer_check [X86,APIC] Disables the code which tests for

broken timer IRQ sources.

noisapnp [ISAPNP] Disables ISA PnP code.

noinitrd [RAM] Tells the kernel not to load any configured

initial RAM disk.

nointremap [X86-64, Intel-IOMMU] Do not enable interrupt

remapping.

[Deprecated - use intremap=off]

nointroute [IA-64]

noinvpcid [X86] Disable the INVPCID cpu feature.

nojitter [IA-64] Disables jitter checking for ITC timers.

no-kvmclock [X86,KVM] Disable paravirtualized KVM clock driver

no-kvmapf [X86,KVM] Disable paravirtualized asynchronous page

fault handling.

no-vmw-sched-clock

[X86,PV_OPS] Disable paravirtualized VMware scheduler

clock and use the default one.

no-steal-acc [X86,KVM] Disable paravirtualized steal time accounting.

steal time is computed, but won't influence scheduler

behaviour

nolapic [X86-32,APIC] Do not enable or use the local APIC.

nolapic_timer [X86-32,APIC] Do not use the local APIC timer.

noltlbs [PPC] Do not use large page/tlb entries for kernel

lowmem mapping on PPC40x and PPC8xx

nomca [IA-64] Disable machine check abort handling

nomce [X86-32] Disable Machine Check Exception

nomfgpt [X86-32] Disable Multi-Function General Purpose

Timer usage (for AMD Geode machines).

nonmi_ipi [X86] Disable using NMI IPIs during panic/reboot to

shutdown the other cpus. Instead use the REBOOT_VECTOR

irq.

nomodule Disable module load

nopat [X86] Disable PAT (page attribute table extension of

pagetables) support.

nopcid [X86-64] Disable the PCID cpu feature.

norandmaps Don't use address space randomization. Equivalent to

echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/randomize_va_space

noreplace-paravirt [X86,IA-64,PV_OPS] Don't patch paravirt_ops

noreplace-smp [X86-32,SMP] Don't replace SMP instructions

with UP alternatives

nordrand [X86] Disable kernel use of the RDRAND and

RDSEED instructions even if they are supported

by the processor. RDRAND and RDSEED are still

available to user space applications.

noresume [SWSUSP] Disables resume and restores original swap

space.

no-scroll [VGA] Disables scrollback.

This is required for the Braillex ib80-piezo Braille

reader made by F.H. Papenmeier (Germany).

nosbagart [IA-64]

nosep [BUGS=X86-32] Disables x86 SYSENTER/SYSEXIT support.

nosmp [SMP] Tells an SMP kernel to act as a UP kernel,

and disable the IO APIC. legacy for "maxcpus=0".

nosoftlockup [KNL] Disable the soft-lockup detector.

nosync [HW,M68K] Disables sync negotiation for all devices.

notsc [BUGS=X86-32] Disable Time Stamp Counter

nowatchdog [KNL] Disable both lockup detectors, i.e.

soft-lockup and NMI watchdog (hard-lockup).

nowb [ARM]

nox2apic [X86-64,APIC] Do not enable x2APIC mode.

cpu0_hotplug [X86] Turn on CPU0 hotplug feature when

CONFIG_BOOTPARAM_HOTPLUG_CPU0 is off.

Some features depend on CPU0. Known dependencies are:

1. Resume from suspend/hibernate depends on CPU0.

Suspend/hibernate will fail if CPU0 is offline and you

need to online CPU0 before suspend/hibernate.

2. PIC interrupts also depend on CPU0. CPU0 can't be

removed if a PIC interrupt is detected.

It's said poweroff/reboot may depend on CPU0 on some

machines although I haven't seen such issues so far

after CPU0 is offline on a few tested machines.

If the dependencies are under your control, you can

turn on cpu0_hotplug.

nps_mtm_hs_ctr= [KNL,ARC]

This parameter sets the maximum duration, in

cycles, each HW thread of the CTOP can run

without interruptions, before HW switches it.

The actual maximum duration is 16 times this

parameter's value.

Format: integer between 1 and 255

Default: 255

nptcg= [IA-64] Override max number of concurrent global TLB

purges which is reported from either PAL_VM_SUMMARY or

SAL PALO.

nr_cpus= [SMP] Maximum number of processors that an SMP kernel

could support. nr_cpus=n : n >= 1 limits the kernel to

support 'n' processors. It could be larger than the

number of already plugged CPU during bootup, later in

runtime you can physically add extra cpu until it reaches

n. So during boot up some boot time memory for per-cpu

variables need be pre-allocated for later physical cpu

hot plugging.

nr_uarts= [SERIAL] maximum number of UARTs to be registered.

numa_balancing= [KNL,X86] Enable or disable automatic NUMA balancing.

Allowed values are enable and disable

numa_zonelist_order= [KNL, BOOT] Select zonelist order for NUMA.

'node', 'default' can be specified

This can be set from sysctl after boot.

See Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt for details.

ohci1394_dma=early [HW] enable debugging via the ohci1394 driver.

See Documentation/debugging-via-ohci1394.txt for more

info.

olpc_ec_timeout= [OLPC] ms delay when issuing EC commands

Rather than timing out after 20 ms if an EC

command is not properly ACKed, override the length

of the timeout. We have interrupts disabled while

waiting for the ACK, so if this is set too high

interrupts *may* be lost!

omap_mux= [OMAP] Override bootloader pin multiplexing.

Format: ...

For example, to override I2C bus2:

omap_mux=i2c2_scl.i2c2_scl=0x100,i2c2_sda.i2c2_sda=0x100

oprofile.timer= [HW]

Use timer interrupt instead of performance counters

oprofile.cpu_type= Force an oprofile cpu type

This might be useful if you have an older oprofile

userland or if you want common events.

Format: { arch_perfmon }

arch_perfmon: [X86] Force use of architectural

perfmon on Intel CPUs instead of the

CPU specific event set.

timer: [X86] Force use of architectural NMI

timer mode (see also oprofile.timer

for generic hr timer mode)

oops=panic Always panic on oopses. Default is to just kill the

process, but there is a small probability of

deadlocking the machine.

This will also cause panics on machine check exceptions.

Useful together with panic=30 to trigger a reboot.

OSS [HW,OSS]

See Documentation/sound/oss/oss-parameters.txt

page_owner= [KNL] Boot-time page_owner enabling option.

Storage of the information about who allocated

each page is disabled in default. With this switch,

we can turn it on.

on: enable the feature

page_poison= [KNL] Boot-time parameter changing the state of

poisoning on the buddy allocator.

off: turn off poisoning

on: turn on poisoning

panic= [KNL] Kernel behaviour on panic: delay

timeout > 0: seconds before rebooting

timeout = 0: wait forever

timeout < 0: reboot immediately

Format:

panic_on_warn panic() instead of WARN(). Useful to cause kdump

on a WARN().

crash_kexec_post_notifiers

Run kdump after running panic-notifiers and dumping

kmsg. This only for the users who doubt kdump always

succeeds in any situation.

Note that this also increases risks of kdump failure,

because some panic notifiers can make the crashed

kernel more unstable.

parkbd.port= [HW] Parallel port number the keyboard adapter is

connected to, default is 0.

Format:

parkbd.mode= [HW] Parallel port keyboard adapter mode of operation,

0 for XT, 1 for AT (default is AT).

Format:

parport= [HW,PPT] Specify parallel ports. 0 disables.

Format: { 0 | auto | 0xBBB[,IRQ[,DMA]] }

Use 'auto' to force the driver to use any

IRQ/DMA settings detected (the default is to

ignore detected IRQ/DMA settings because of

possible conflicts). You can specify the base

address, IRQ, and DMA settings; IRQ and DMA

should be numbers, or 'auto' (for using detected

settings on that particular port), or 'nofifo'

(to avoid using a FIFO even if it is detected).

Parallel ports are assigned in the order they

are specified on the command line, starting

with parport0.

parport_init_mode= [HW,PPT]

Configure VIA parallel port to operate in

a specific mode. This is necessary on Pegasos

computer where firmware has no options for setting

up parallel port mode and sets it to spp.

Currently this function knows 686a and 8231 chips.

Format: [spp|ps2|epp|ecp|ecpepp]

pause_on_oops=

Halt all CPUs after the first oops has been printed for

the specified number of seconds. This is to be used if

your oopses keep scrolling off the screen.

pcbit= [HW,ISDN]

pcd. [PARIDE]

See header of drivers/block/paride/pcd.c.

See also Documentation/blockdev/paride.txt.

pci=option[,option...] [PCI] various PCI subsystem options:

earlydump [X86] dump PCI config space before the kernel

changes anything

off [X86] don't probe for the PCI bus

bios [X86-32] force use of PCI BIOS, don't access

the hardware directly. Use this if your machine

has a non-standard PCI host bridge.

nobios [X86-32] disallow use of PCI BIOS, only direct

hardware access methods are allowed. Use this

if you experience crashes upon bootup and you

suspect they are caused by the BIOS.

conf1 [X86] Force use of PCI Configuration Access

Mechanism 1 (config address in IO port 0xCF8,

data in IO port 0xCFC, both 32-bit).

conf2 [X86] Force use of PCI Configuration Access

Mechanism 2 (IO port 0xCF8 is an 8-bit port for

the function, IO port 0xCFA, also 8-bit, sets

bus number. The config space is then accessed

through ports 0xC000-0xCFFF).

See http://wiki.osdev.org/PCI for more info

on the configuration access mechanisms.

noaer [PCIE] If the PCIEAER kernel config parameter is

enabled, this kernel boot option can be used to

disable the use of PCIE advanced error reporting.

nodomains [PCI] Disable support for multiple PCI

root domains (aka PCI segments, in ACPI-speak).

nommconf [X86] Disable use of MMCONFIG for PCI

Configuration

check_enable_amd_mmconf [X86] check for and enable

properly configured MMIO access to PCI

config space on AMD family 10h CPU

nomsi [MSI] If the PCI_MSI kernel config parameter is

enabled, this kernel boot option can be used to

disable the use of MSI interrupts system-wide.

noioapicquirk [APIC] Disable all boot interrupt quirks.

Safety option to keep boot IRQs enabled. This

should never be necessary.

ioapicreroute [APIC] Enable rerouting of boot IRQs to the

primary IO-APIC for bridges that cannot disable

boot IRQs. This fixes a source of spurious IRQs

when the system masks IRQs.

noioapicreroute [APIC] Disable workaround that uses the

boot IRQ equivalent of an IRQ that connects to

a chipset where boot IRQs cannot be disabled.

The opposite of ioapicreroute.

biosirq [X86-32] Use PCI BIOS calls to get the interrupt

routing table. These calls are known to be buggy

on several machines and they hang the machine

when used, but on other computers it's the only

way to get the interrupt routing table. Try

this option if the kernel is unable to allocate

IRQs or discover secondary PCI buses on your

motherboard.

rom [X86] Assign address space to expansion ROMs.

Use with caution as certain devices share

address decoders between ROMs and other

resources.

norom [X86] Do not assign address space to

expansion ROMs that do not already have

BIOS assigned address ranges.

nobar [X86] Do not assign address space to the

BARs that weren't assigned by the BIOS.

irqmask=0xMMMM [X86] Set a bit mask of IRQs allowed to be

assigned automatically to PCI devices. You can

make the kernel exclude IRQs of your ISA cards

this way.

pirqaddr=0xAAAAA [X86] Specify the physical address

of the PIRQ table (normally generated

by the BIOS) if it is outside the

F0000h-100000h range.

lastbus=N [X86] Scan all buses thru bus #N. Can be

useful if the kernel is unable to find your

secondary buses and you want to tell it

explicitly which ones they are.

assign-busses [X86] Always assign all PCI bus

numbers ourselves, overriding

whatever the firmware may have done.

usepirqmask [X86] Honor the possible IRQ mask stored

in the BIOS $PIR table. This is needed on

some systems with broken BIOSes, notably

some HP Pavilion N5400 and Omnibook XE3

notebooks. This will have no effect if ACPI

IRQ routing is enabled.

noacpi [X86] Do not use ACPI for IRQ routing

or for PCI scanning.

use_crs [X86] Use PCI host bridge window information

from ACPI. On BIOSes from 2008 or later, this

is enabled by default. If you need to use this,

please report a bug.

nocrs [X86] Ignore PCI host bridge windows from ACPI.

If you need to use this, please report a bug.

routeirq Do IRQ routing for all PCI devices.

This is normally done in pci_enable_device(),

so this option is a temporary workaround

for broken drivers that don't call it.

skip_isa_align [X86] do not align io start addr, so can

handle more pci cards

noearly [X86] Don't do any early type 1 scanning.

This might help on some broken boards which

machine check when some devices' config space

is read. But various workarounds are disabled

and some IOMMU drivers will not work.

bfsort Sort PCI devices into breadth-first order.

This sorting is done to get a device

order compatible with older (<= 2.4) kernels.

nobfsort Don't sort PCI devices into breadth-first order.

pcie_bus_tune_off Disable PCIe MPS (Max Payload Size)

tuning and use the BIOS-configured MPS defaults.

pcie_bus_safe Set every device's MPS to the largest value

supported by all devices below the root complex.

pcie_bus_perf Set device MPS to the largest allowable MPS

based on its parent bus. Also set MRRS (Max

Read Request Size) to the largest supported

value (no larger than the MPS that the device

or bus can support) for best performance.

pcie_bus_peer2peer Set every device's MPS to 128B, which

every device is guaranteed to support. This

configuration allows peer-to-peer DMA between

any pair of devices, possibly at the cost of

reduced performance. This also guarantees

that hot-added devices will work.

cbiosize=nn[KMG] The fixed amount of bus space which is

reserved for the CardBus bridge's IO window.

The default value is 256 bytes.

cbmemsize=nn[KMG] The fixed amount of bus space which is

reserved for the CardBus bridge's memory

window. The default value is 64 megabytes.

resource_alignment=

Format:

[@][:]:.[; ...]

[@]pci::\

[::][; ...]

Specifies alignment and device to reassign

aligned memory resources.

If is not specified,

PAGE_SIZE is used as alignment.

PCI-PCI bridge can be specified, if resource

windows need to be expanded.

To specify the alignment for several

instances of a device, the PCI vendor,

device, subvendor, and subdevice may be

specified, e.g., 4096@pci:8086:9c22:103c:198f

ecrc= Enable/disable PCIe ECRC (transaction layer

end-to-end CRC checking).

bios: Use BIOS/firmware settings. This is the

the default.

off: Turn ECRC off

on: Turn ECRC on.

hpiosize=nn[KMG] The fixed amount of bus space which is

reserved for hotplug bridge's IO window.

Default size is 256 bytes.

hpmemsize=nn[KMG] The fixed amount of bus space which is

reserved for hotplug bridge's memory window.

Default size is 2 megabytes.

hpbussize=nn The minimum amount of additional bus numbers

reserved for buses below a hotplug bridge.

Default is 1.

realloc= Enable/disable reallocating PCI bridge resources

if allocations done by BIOS are too small to

accommodate resources required by all child

devices.

off: Turn realloc off

on: Turn realloc on

realloc same as realloc=on

noari do not use PCIe ARI.

pcie_scan_all Scan all possible PCIe devices. Otherwise we

only look for one device below a PCIe downstream

port.

pcie_aspm= [PCIE] Forcibly enable or disable PCIe Active State Power

Management.

off Disable ASPM.

force Enable ASPM even on devices that claim not to support it.

WARNING: Forcing ASPM on may cause system lockups.

pcie_hp= [PCIE] PCI Express Hotplug driver options:

nomsi Do not use MSI for PCI Express Native Hotplug (this

makes all PCIe ports use INTx for hotplug services).

pcie_ports= [PCIE] PCIe ports handling:

auto Ask the BIOS whether or not to use native PCIe services

associated with PCIe ports (PME, hot-plug, AER). Use

them only if that is allowed by the BIOS.

native Use native PCIe services associated with PCIe ports

unconditionally.

compat Treat PCIe ports as PCI-to-PCI bridges, disable the PCIe

ports driver.

pcie_port_pm= [PCIE] PCIe port power management handling:

off Disable power management of all PCIe ports

force Forcibly enable power management of all PCIe ports

pcie_pme= [PCIE,PM] Native PCIe PME signaling options:

nomsi Do not use MSI for native PCIe PME signaling (this makes

all PCIe root ports use INTx for all services).

pcmv= [HW,PCMCIA] BadgePAD 4

pd_ignore_unused

[PM]

Keep all power-domains already enabled by bootloader on,

even if no driver has claimed them. This is useful

for debug and development, but should not be

needed on a platform with proper driver support.

pd. [PARIDE]

See Documentation/blockdev/paride.txt.

pdcchassis= [PARISC,HW] Disable/Enable PDC Chassis Status codes at

boot time.

Format: { 0 | 1 }

See arch/parisc/kernel/pdc_chassis.c

percpu_alloc= Select which percpu first chunk allocator to use.

Currently supported values are "embed" and "page".

Archs may support subset or none of the selections.

See comments in mm/percpu.c for details on each

allocator. This parameter is primarily for debugging

and performance comparison.

pf. [PARIDE]

See Documentation/blockdev/paride.txt.

pg. [PARIDE]

See Documentation/blockdev/paride.txt.

pirq= [SMP,APIC] Manual mp-table setup

See Documentation/x86/i386/IO-APIC.txt.

plip= [PPT,NET] Parallel port network link

Format: { parport | timid | 0 }

See also Documentation/parport.txt.

pmtmr= [X86] Manual setup of pmtmr I/O Port.

Override pmtimer IOPort with a hex value.

e.g. pmtmr=0x508

pnp.debug=1 [PNP]

Enable PNP debug messages (depends on the

CONFIG_PNP_DEBUG_MESSAGES option). Change at run-time

via /sys/module/pnp/parameters/debug. We always show

current resource usage; turning this on also shows

possible settings and some assignment information.

pnpacpi= [ACPI]

{ off }

pnpbios= [ISAPNP]

{ on | off | curr | res | no-curr | no-res }

pnp_reserve_irq=

[ISAPNP] Exclude IRQs for the autoconfiguration

pnp_reserve_dma=

[ISAPNP] Exclude DMAs for the autoconfiguration

pnp_reserve_io= [ISAPNP] Exclude I/O ports for the autoconfiguration

Ranges are in pairs (I/O port base and size).

pnp_reserve_mem=

[ISAPNP] Exclude memory regions for the

autoconfiguration.

Ranges are in pairs (memory base and size).

ports= [IP_VS_FTP] IPVS ftp helper module

Default is 21.

Up to 8 (IP_VS_APP_MAX_PORTS) ports

may be specified.

Format: ,....

powersave=off [PPC] This option disables power saving features.

It specifically disables cpuidle and sets the

platform machine description specific power_save

function to NULL. On Idle the CPU just reduces

execution priority.

ppc_strict_facility_enable

[PPC] This option catches any kernel floating point,

Altivec, VSX and SPE outside of regions specifically

allowed (eg kernel_enable_fpu()/kernel_disable_fpu()).

There is some performance impact when enabling this.

print-fatal-signals=

[KNL] debug: print fatal signals

If enabled, warn about various signal handling

related application anomalies: too many signals,

too many POSIX.1 timers, fatal signals causing a

coredump - etc.

If you hit the warning due to signal overflow,

you might want to try "ulimit -i unlimited".

default: off.

printk.always_kmsg_dump=

Trigger kmsg_dump for cases other than kernel oops or

panics

Format: (1/Y/y=enable, 0/N/n=disable)

default: disabled

printk.devkmsg={on,off,ratelimit}

Control writing to /dev/kmsg.

on - unlimited logging to /dev/kmsg from userspace

off - logging to /dev/kmsg disabled

ratelimit - ratelimit the logging

Default: ratelimit

printk.time= Show timing data prefixed to each printk message line

Format: (1/Y/y=enable, 0/N/n=disable)

processor.max_cstate= [HW,ACPI]

Limit processor to maximum C-state

max_cstate=9 overrides any DMI blacklist limit.

processor.nocst [HW,ACPI]

Ignore the _CST method to determine C-states,

instead using the legacy FADT method

profile= [KNL] Enable kernel profiling via /proc/profile

Format: [schedule,]

Param: "schedule" - profile schedule points.

Param: - step/bucket size as a power of 2 for

statistical time based profiling.

Param: "sleep" - profile D-state sleeping (millisecs).

Requires CONFIG_SCHEDSTATS

Param: "kvm" - profile VM exits.

prompt_ramdisk= [RAM] List of RAM disks to prompt for floppy disk

before loading.

See Documentation/blockdev/ramdisk.txt.

psmouse.proto= [HW,MOUSE] Highest PS2 mouse protocol extension to

probe for; one of (bare|imps|exps|lifebook|any).

psmouse.rate= [HW,MOUSE] Set desired mouse report rate, in reports

per second.

psmouse.resetafter= [HW,MOUSE]

Try to reset the device after so many bad packets

(0 = never).

psmouse.resolution=

[HW,MOUSE] Set desired mouse resolution, in dpi.

psmouse.smartscroll=

[HW,MOUSE] Controls Logitech smartscroll autorepeat.

0 = disabled, 1 = enabled (default).

pstore.backend= Specify the name of the pstore backend to use

pt. [PARIDE]

See Documentation/blockdev/paride.txt.

pty.legacy_count=

[KNL] Number of legacy pty's. Overwrites compiled-in

default number.

quiet [KNL] Disable most log messages

r128= [HW,DRM]

raid= [HW,RAID]

See Documentation/admin-guide/md.rst.

ramdisk_size= [RAM] Sizes of RAM disks in kilobytes

See Documentation/blockdev/ramdisk.txt.

ras=option[,option,...] [KNL] RAS-specific options

cec_disable [X86]

Disable the Correctable Errors Collector,

see CONFIG_RAS_CEC help text.

rcu_nocbs= [KNL]

The argument is a cpu list, as described above.

In kernels built with CONFIG_RCU_NOCB_CPU=y, set

the specified list of CPUs to be no-callback CPUs.

Invocation of these CPUs' RCU callbacks will

be offloaded to "rcuox/N" kthreads created for

that purpose, where "x" is "b" for RCU-bh, "p"

for RCU-preempt, and "s" for RCU-sched, and "N"

is the CPU number. This reduces OS jitter on the

offloaded CPUs, which can be useful for HPC and

real-time workloads. It can also improve energy

efficiency for asymmetric multiprocessors.

rcu_nocb_poll [KNL]

Rather than requiring that offloaded CPUs

(specified by rcu_nocbs= above) explicitly

awaken the corresponding "rcuoN" kthreads,

make these kthreads poll for callbacks.

This improves the real-time response for the

offloaded CPUs by relieving them of the need to

wake up the corresponding kthread, but degrades

energy efficiency by requiring that the kthreads

periodically wake up to do the polling.

rcutree.blimit= [KNL]

Set maximum number of finished RCU callbacks to

process in one batch.

rcutree.dump_tree= [KNL]

Dump the structure of the rcu_node combining tree

out at early boot. This is used for diagnostic

purposes, to verify correct tree setup.

rcutree.gp_cleanup_delay= [KNL]

Set the number of jiffies to delay each step of

RCU grace-period cleanup.

rcutree.gp_init_delay= [KNL]

Set the number of jiffies to delay each step of

RCU grace-period initialization.

rcutree.gp_preinit_delay= [KNL]

Set the number of jiffies to delay each step of

RCU grace-period pre-initialization, that is,

the propagation of recent CPU-hotplug changes up

the rcu_node combining tree.

rcutree.rcu_fanout_exact= [KNL]

Disable autobalancing of the rcu_node combining

tree. This is used by rcutorture, and might

possibly be useful for architectures having high

cache-to-cache transfer latencies.

rcutree.rcu_fanout_leaf= [KNL]

Change the number of CPUs assigned to each

leaf rcu_node structure. Useful for very

large systems, which will choose the value 64,

and for NUMA systems with large remote-access

latencies, which will choose a value aligned

with the appropriate hardware boundaries.

rcutree.jiffies_till_sched_qs= [KNL]

Set required age in jiffies for a

given grace period before RCU starts

soliciting quiescent-state help from

rcu_note_context_switch().

rcutree.jiffies_till_first_fqs= [KNL]

Set delay from grace-period initialization to

first attempt to force quiescent states.

Units are jiffies, minimum value is zero,

and maximum value is HZ.

rcutree.jiffies_till_next_fqs= [KNL]

Set delay between subsequent attempts to force

quiescent states. Units are jiffies, minimum

value is one, and maximum value is HZ.

rcutree.kthread_prio= [KNL,BOOT]

Set the SCHED_FIFO priority of the RCU per-CPU

kthreads (rcuc/N). This value is also used for

the priority of the RCU boost threads (rcub/N)

and for the RCU grace-period kthreads (rcu_bh,

rcu_preempt, and rcu_sched). If RCU_BOOST is

set, valid values are 1-99 and the default is 1

(the least-favored priority). Otherwise, when

RCU_BOOST is not set, valid values are 0-99 and

the default is zero (non-realtime operation).

rcutree.rcu_nocb_leader_stride= [KNL]

Set the number of NOCB kthread groups, which

defaults to the square root of the number of

CPUs. Larger numbers reduces the wakeup overhead

on the per-CPU grace-period kthreads, but increases

that same overhead on each group's leader.

rcutree.qhimark= [KNL]

Set threshold of queued RCU callbacks beyond which

batch limiting is disabled.

rcutree.qlowmark= [KNL]

Set threshold of queued RCU callbacks below which

batch limiting is re-enabled.

rcutree.rcu_idle_gp_delay= [KNL]

Set wakeup interval for idle CPUs that have

RCU callbacks (RCU_FAST_NO_HZ=y).

rcutree.rcu_idle_lazy_gp_delay= [KNL]

Set wakeup interval for idle CPUs that have

only "lazy" RCU callbacks (RCU_FAST_NO_HZ=y).

Lazy RCU callbacks are those which RCU can

prove do nothing more than free memory.

rcutree.rcu_kick_kthreads= [KNL]

Cause the grace-period kthread to get an extra

wake_up() if it sleeps three times longer than

it should at force-quiescent-state time.

This wake_up() will be accompanied by a

WARN_ONCE() splat and an ftrace_dump().

rcuperf.gp_async= [KNL]

Measure performance of asynchronous

grace-period primitives such as call_rcu().

rcuperf.gp_async_max= [KNL]

Specify the maximum number of outstanding

callbacks per writer thread. When a writer

thread exceeds this limit, it invokes the

corresponding flavor of rcu_barrier() to allow

previously posted callbacks to drain.

rcuperf.gp_exp= [KNL]

Measure performance of expedited synchronous

grace-period primitives.

rcuperf.holdoff= [KNL]

Set test-start holdoff period. The purpose of

this parameter is to delay the start of the

test until boot completes in order to avoid

interference.

rcuperf.nreaders= [KNL]

Set number of RCU readers. The value -1 selects

N, where N is the number of CPUs. A value

"n" less than -1 selects N-n+1, where N is again

the number of CPUs. For example, -2 selects N

(the number of CPUs), -3 selects N+1, and so on.

A value of "n" less than or equal to -N selects

a single reader.

rcuperf.nwriters= [KNL]

Set number of RCU writers. The values operate

the same as for rcuperf.nreaders.

N, where N is the number of CPUs

rcuperf.perf_runnable= [BOOT]

Start rcuperf running at boot time.

rcuperf.perf_type= [KNL]

Specify the RCU implementation to test.

rcuperf.shutdown= [KNL]

Shut the system down after performance tests

complete. This is useful for hands-off automated

testing.

rcuperf.verbose= [KNL]

Enable additional printk() statements.

rcuperf.writer_holdoff= [KNL]

Write-side holdoff between grace periods,

in microseconds. The default of zero says

no holdoff.

rcutorture.cbflood_inter_holdoff= [KNL]

Set holdoff time (jiffies) between successive

callback-flood tests.

rcutorture.cbflood_intra_holdoff= [KNL]

Set holdoff time (jiffies) between successive

bursts of callbacks within a given callback-flood

test.

rcutorture.cbflood_n_burst= [KNL]

Set the number of bursts making up a given

callback-flood test. Set this to zero to

disable callback-flood testing.

rcutorture.cbflood_n_per_burst= [KNL]

Set the number of callbacks to be registered

in a given burst of a callback-flood test.

rcutorture.fqs_duration= [KNL]

Set duration of force_quiescent_state bursts

in microseconds.

rcutorture.fqs_holdoff= [KNL]

Set holdoff time within force_quiescent_state bursts

in microseconds.

rcutorture.fqs_stutter= [KNL]

Set wait time between force_quiescent_state bursts

in seconds.

rcutorture.gp_cond= [KNL]

Use conditional/asynchronous update-side

primitives, if available.

rcutorture.gp_exp= [KNL]

Use expedited update-side primitives, if available.

rcutorture.gp_normal= [KNL]

Use normal (non-expedited) asynchronous

update-side primitives, if available.

rcutorture.gp_sync= [KNL]

Use normal (non-expedited) synchronous

update-side primitives, if available. If all

of rcutorture.gp_cond=, rcutorture.gp_exp=,

rcutorture.gp_normal=, and rcutorture.gp_sync=

are zero, rcutorture acts as if is interpreted

they are all non-zero.

rcutorture.n_barrier_cbs= [KNL]

Set callbacks/threads for rcu_barrier() testing.

rcutorture.nfakewriters= [KNL]

Set number of concurrent RCU writers. These just

stress RCU, they don't participate in the actual

test, hence the "fake".

rcutorture.nreaders= [KNL]

Set number of RCU readers. The value -1 selects

N-1, where N is the number of CPUs. A value

"n" less than -1 selects N-n-2, where N is again

the number of CPUs. For example, -2 selects N

(the number of CPUs), -3 selects N+1, and so on.

rcutorture.object_debug= [KNL]

Enable debug-object double-call_rcu() testing.

rcutorture.onoff_holdoff= [KNL]

Set time (s) after boot for CPU-hotplug testing.

rcutorture.onoff_interval= [KNL]

Set time (s) between CPU-hotplug operations, or

zero to disable CPU-hotplug testing.

rcutorture.shuffle_interval= [KNL]

Set task-shuffle interval (s). Shuffling tasks

allows some CPUs to go into dyntick-idle mode

during the rcutorture test.

rcutorture.shutdown_secs= [KNL]

Set time (s) after boot system shutdown. This

is useful for hands-off automated testing.

rcutorture.stall_cpu= [KNL]

Duration of CPU stall (s) to test RCU CPU stall

warnings, zero to disable.

rcutorture.stall_cpu_holdoff= [KNL]

Time to wait (s) after boot before inducing stall.

rcutorture.stat_interval= [KNL]

Time (s) between statistics printk()s.

rcutorture.stutter= [KNL]

Time (s) to stutter testing, for example, specifying

five seconds causes the test to run for five seconds,

wait for five seconds, and so on. This tests RCU's

ability to transition abruptly to and from idle.

rcutorture.test_boost= [KNL]

Test RCU priority boosting? 0=no, 1=maybe, 2=yes.

"Maybe" means test if the RCU implementation

under test support RCU priority boosting.

rcutorture.test_boost_duration= [KNL]

Duration (s) of each individual boost test.

rcutorture.test_boost_interval= [KNL]

Interval (s) between each boost test.

rcutorture.test_no_idle_hz= [KNL]

Test RCU's dyntick-idle handling. See also the

rcutorture.shuffle_interval parameter.

rcutorture.torture_runnable= [BOOT]

Start rcutorture running at boot time.

rcutorture.torture_type= [KNL]

Specify the RCU implementation to test.

rcutorture.verbose= [KNL]

Enable additional printk() statements.

rcupdate.rcu_cpu_stall_suppress= [KNL]

Suppress RCU CPU stall warning messages.

rcupdate.rcu_cpu_stall_timeout= [KNL]

Set timeout for RCU CPU stall warning messages.

rcupdate.rcu_expedited= [KNL]

Use expedited grace-period primitives, for

example, synchronize_rcu_expedited() instead

of synchronize_rcu(). This reduces latency,

but can increase CPU utilization, degrade

real-time latency, and degrade energy efficiency.

No effect on CONFIG_TINY_RCU kernels.

rcupdate.rcu_normal= [KNL]

Use only normal grace-period primitives,

for example, synchronize_rcu() instead of

synchronize_rcu_expedited(). This improves

real-time latency, CPU utilization, and

energy efficiency, but can expose users to

increased grace-period latency. This parameter

overrides rcupdate.rcu_expedited. No effect on

CONFIG_TINY_RCU kernels.

rcupdate.rcu_normal_after_boot= [KNL]

Once boot has completed (that is, after

rcu_end_inkernel_boot() has been invoked), use

only normal grace-period primitives. No effect

on CONFIG_TINY_RCU kernels.

rcupdate.rcu_task_stall_timeout= [KNL]

Set timeout in jiffies for RCU task stall warning

messages. Disable with a value less than or equal

to zero.

rcupdate.rcu_self_test= [KNL]

Run the RCU early boot self tests

rcupdate.rcu_self_test_bh= [KNL]

Run the RCU bh early boot self tests

rcupdate.rcu_self_test_sched= [KNL]

Run the RCU sched early boot self tests

rdinit= [KNL]

Format:

Run specified binary instead of /init from the ramdisk,

used for early userspace startup. See initrd.

rdt= [HW,X86,RDT]

Turn on/off individual RDT features. List is:

cmt, mbmtotal, mbmlocal, l3cat, l3cdp, l2cat, mba.

E.g. to turn on cmt and turn off mba use:

rdt=cmt,!mba

reboot= [KNL]

Format (x86 or x86_64):

[w[arm] | c[old] | h[ard] | s[oft] | g[pio]] \

[[,]s[mp]#### \

[[,]b[ios] | a[cpi] | k[bd] | t[riple] | e[fi] | p[ci]] \

[[,]f[orce]

Where reboot_mode is one of warm (soft) or cold (hard) or gpio,

reboot_type is one of bios, acpi, kbd, triple, efi, or pci,

reboot_force is either force or not specified,

reboot_cpu is s[mp]#### with #### being the processor

to be used for rebooting.

relax_domain_level=

[KNL, SMP] Set scheduler's default relax_domain_level.

See Documentation/cgroup-v1/cpusets.txt.

reserve= [KNL,BUGS] Force the kernel to ignore some iomem area

reservetop= [X86-32]

Format: nn[KMG]

Reserves a hole at the top of the kernel virtual

address space.

reservelow= [X86]

Format: nn[K]

Set the amount of memory to reserve for BIOS at

the bottom of the address space.

reset_devices [KNL] Force drivers to reset the underlying device

during initialization.

resume= [SWSUSP]

Specify the partition device for software suspend

Format:

{/dev/ | PARTUUID= | : | }

resume_offset= [SWSUSP]

Specify the offset from the beginning of the partition

given by "resume=" at which the swap header is located,

in units (needed only for swap files).

See Documentation/power/swsusp-and-swap-files.txt

resumedelay= [HIBERNATION] Delay (in seconds) to pause before attempting to

read the resume files

resumewait [HIBERNATION] Wait (indefinitely) for resume device to show up.

Useful for devices that are detected asynchronously

(e.g. USB and MMC devices).

hibernate= [HIBERNATION]

noresume Don't check if there's a hibernation image

present during boot.

nocompress Don't compress/decompress hibernation images.

no Disable hibernation and resume.

protect_image Turn on image protection during restoration

(that will set all pages holding image data

during restoration read-only).

retain_initrd [RAM] Keep initrd memory after extraction

rfkill.default_state=

0 "airplane mode". All wifi, bluetooth, wimax, gps, fm,

etc. communication is blocked by default.

1 Unblocked.

rfkill.master_switch_mode=

0 The "airplane mode" button does nothing.

1 The "airplane mode" button toggles between everything

blocked and the previous configuration.

2 The "airplane mode" button toggles between everything

blocked and everything unblocked.

rhash_entries= [KNL,NET]

Set number of hash buckets for route cache

ring3mwait=disable

[KNL] Disable ring 3 MONITOR/MWAIT feature on supported

CPUs.

ro [KNL] Mount root device read-only on boot

rodata= [KNL]

on Mark read-only kernel memory as read-only (default).

off Leave read-only kernel memory writable for debugging.

rockchip.usb_uart

Enable the uart passthrough on the designated usb port

on Rockchip SoCs. When active, the signals of the

debug-uart get routed to the D+ and D- pins of the usb

port and the regular usb controller gets disabled.

root= [KNL] Root filesystem

See name_to_dev_t comment in init/do_mounts.c.

rootdelay= [KNL] Delay (in seconds) to pause before attempting to

mount the root filesystem

rootflags= [KNL] Set root filesystem mount option string

rootfstype= [KNL] Set root filesystem type

rootwait [KNL] Wait (indefinitely) for root device to show up.

Useful for devices that are detected asynchronously

(e.g. USB and MMC devices).

rproc_mem=nn[KMG][@address]

[KNL,ARM,CMA] Remoteproc physical memory block.

Memory area to be used by remote processor image,

managed by CMA.

rw [KNL] Mount root device read-write on boot

S [KNL] Run init in single mode

s390_iommu= [HW,S390]

Set s390 IOTLB flushing mode

strict

With strict flushing every unmap operation will result in

an IOTLB flush. Default is lazy flushing before reuse,

which is faster.

sa1100ir [NET]

See drivers/net/irda/sa1100_ir.c.

sbni= [NET] Granch SBNI12 leased line adapter

sched_debug [KNL] Enables verbose scheduler debug messages.

schedstats= [KNL,X86] Enable or disable scheduled statistics.

Allowed values are enable and disable. This feature

incurs a small amount of overhead in the scheduler

but is useful for debugging and performance tuning.

skew_tick= [KNL] Offset the periodic timer tick per cpu to mitigate

xtime_lock contention on larger systems, and/or RCU lock

contention on all systems with CONFIG_MAXSMP set.

Format: { "0" | "1" }

0 -- disable. (may be 1 via CONFIG_CMDLINE="skew_tick=1"

1 -- enable.

Note: increases power consumption, thus should only be

enabled if running jitter sensitive (HPC/RT) workloads.

security= [SECURITY] Choose a security module to enable at boot.

If this boot parameter is not specified, only the first

security module asking for security registration will be

loaded. An invalid security module name will be treated

as if no module has been chosen.

selinux= [SELINUX] Disable or enable SELinux at boot time.

Format: { "0" | "1" }

See security/selinux/Kconfig help text.

0 -- disable.

1 -- enable.

Default value is set via kernel config option.

If enabled at boot time, /selinux/disable can be used

later to disable prior to initial policy load.

apparmor= [APPARMOR] Disable or enable AppArmor at boot time

Format: { "0" | "1" }

See security/apparmor/Kconfig help text

0 -- disable.

1 -- enable.

Default value is set via kernel config option.

serialnumber [BUGS=X86-32]

shapers= [NET]

Maximal number of shapers.

simeth= [IA-64]

simscsi=

slram= [HW,MTD]

slab_nomerge [MM]

Disable merging of slabs with similar size. May be

necessary if there is some reason to distinguish

allocs to different slabs, especially in hardened

environments where the risk of heap overflows and

layout control by attackers can usually be

frustrated by disabling merging. This will reduce

most of the exposure of a heap attack to a single

cache (risks via metadata attacks are mostly

unchanged). Debug options disable merging on their

own.

For more information see Documentation/vm/slub.txt.

slab_max_order= [MM, SLAB]

Determines the maximum allowed order for slabs.

A high setting may cause OOMs due to memory

fragmentation. Defaults to 1 for systems with

more than 32MB of RAM, 0 otherwise.

slub_debug[=options[,slabs]] [MM, SLUB]

Enabling slub_debug allows one to determine the

culprit if slab objects become corrupted. Enabling

slub_debug can create guard zones around objects and

may poison objects when not in use. Also tracks the

last alloc / free. For more information see

Documentation/vm/slub.txt.

slub_memcg_sysfs= [MM, SLUB]

Determines whether to enable sysfs directories for

memory cgroup sub-caches. 1 to enable, 0 to disable.

The default is determined by CONFIG_SLUB_MEMCG_SYSFS_ON.

Enabling this can lead to a very high number of debug

directories and files being created under

/sys/kernel/slub.

slub_max_order= [MM, SLUB]

Determines the maximum allowed order for slabs.

A high setting may cause OOMs due to memory

fragmentation. For more information see

Documentation/vm/slub.txt.

slub_min_objects= [MM, SLUB]

The minimum number of objects per slab. SLUB will

increase the slab order up to slub_max_order to

generate a sufficiently large slab able to contain

the number of objects indicated. The higher the number

of objects the smaller the overhead of tracking slabs

and the less frequently locks need to be acquired.

For more information see Documentation/vm/slub.txt.

slub_min_order= [MM, SLUB]

Determines the minimum page order for slabs. Must be

lower than slub_max_order.

For more information see Documentation/vm/slub.txt.

slub_nomerge [MM, SLUB]

Same with slab_nomerge. This is supported for legacy.

See slab_nomerge for more information.

smart2= [HW]

Format: [,[,...,]]

smsc-ircc2.nopnp [HW] Don't use PNP to discover SMC devices

smsc-ircc2.ircc_cfg= [HW] Device configuration I/O port

smsc-ircc2.ircc_sir= [HW] SIR base I/O port

smsc-ircc2.ircc_fir= [HW] FIR base I/O port

smsc-ircc2.ircc_irq= [HW] IRQ line

smsc-ircc2.ircc_dma= [HW] DMA channel

smsc-ircc2.ircc_transceiver= [HW] Transceiver type:

0: Toshiba Satellite 1800 (GP data pin select)

1: Fast pin select (default)

2: ATC IRMode

smt [KNL,S390] Set the maximum number of threads (logical

CPUs) to use per physical CPU on systems capable of

symmetric multithreading (SMT). Will be capped to the

actual hardware limit.

Format:

Default: -1 (no limit)

softlockup_panic=

[KNL] Should the soft-lockup detector generate panics.

Format:

softlockup_all_cpu_backtrace=

[KNL] Should the soft-lockup detector generate

backtraces on all cpus.

Format:

sonypi.*= [HW] Sony Programmable I/O Control Device driver

See Documentation/laptops/sonypi.txt

spia_io_base= [HW,MTD]

spia_fio_base=

spia_pedr=

spia_peddr=

srcutree.counter_wrap_check [KNL]

Specifies how frequently to check for

grace-period sequence counter wrap for the

srcu_data structure's ->srcu_gp_seq_needed field.

The greater the number of bits set in this kernel

parameter, the less frequently counter wrap will

be checked for. Note that the bottom two bits

are ignored.

srcutree.exp_holdoff [KNL]

Specifies how many nanoseconds must elapse

since the end of the last SRCU grace period for

a given srcu_struct until the next normal SRCU

grace period will be considered for automatic

expediting. Set to zero to disable automatic

expediting.

stack_guard_gap= [MM]

override the default stack gap protection. The value

is in page units and it defines how many pages prior

to (for stacks growing down) resp. after (for stacks

growing up) the main stack are reserved for no other

mapping. Default value is 256 pages.

stacktrace [FTRACE]

Enabled the stack tracer on boot up.

stacktrace_filter=[function-list]

[FTRACE] Limit the functions that the stack tracer

will trace at boot up. function-list is a comma separated

list of functions. This list can be changed at run

time by the stack_trace_filter file in the debugfs

tracing directory. Note, this enables stack tracing

and the stacktrace above is not needed.

sti= [PARISC,HW]

Format:

Set the STI (builtin display/keyboard on the HP-PARISC

machines) console (graphic card) which should be used

as the initial boot-console.

See also comment in drivers/video/console/sticore.c.

sti_font= [HW]

See comment in drivers/video/console/sticore.c.

stifb= [HW]

Format: bpp:[:[:...]]

sunrpc.min_resvport=

sunrpc.max_resvport=

[NFS,SUNRPC]

SunRPC servers often require that client requests

originate from a privileged port (i.e. a port in the

range 0 < portnr < 1024).

An administrator who wishes to reserve some of these

ports for other uses may adjust the range that the

kernel's sunrpc client considers to be privileged

using these two parameters to set the minimum and

maximum port values.

sunrpc.svc_rpc_per_connection_limit=

[NFS,SUNRPC]

Limit the number of requests that the server will

process in parallel from a single connection.

The default value is 0 (no limit).

sunrpc.pool_mode=

[NFS]

Control how the NFS server code allocates CPUs to

service thread pools. Depending on how many NICs

you have and where their interrupts are bound, this

option will affect which CPUs will do NFS serving.

Note: this parameter cannot be changed while the

NFS server is running.

auto the server chooses an appropriate mode

automatically using heuristics

global a single global pool contains all CPUs

percpu one pool for each CPU

pernode one pool for each NUMA node (equivalent

to global on non-NUMA machines)

sunrpc.tcp_slot_table_entries=

sunrpc.udp_slot_table_entries=

[NFS,SUNRPC]

Sets the upper limit on the number of simultaneous

RPC calls that can be sent from the client to a

server. Increasing these values may allow you to

improve throughput, but will also increase the

amount of memory reserved for use by the client.

suspend.pm_test_delay=

[SUSPEND]

Sets the number of seconds to remain in a suspend test

mode before resuming the system (see

/sys/power/pm_test). Only available when CONFIG_PM_DEBUG

is set. Default value is 5.

swapaccount=[0|1]

[KNL] Enable accounting of swap in memory resource

controller if no parameter or 1 is given or disable

it if 0 is given (See Documentation/cgroup-v1/memory.txt)

swiotlb= [ARM,IA-64,PPC,MIPS,X86]

Format: { | force | noforce }

-- Number of I/O TLB slabs

force -- force using of bounce buffers even if they

wouldn't be automatically used by the kernel

noforce -- Never use bounce buffers (for debugging)

switches= [HW,M68k]

sysfs.deprecated=0|1 [KNL]

Enable/disable old style sysfs layout for old udev

on older distributions. When this option is enabled

very new udev will not work anymore. When this option

is disabled (or CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED not compiled)

in older udev will not work anymore.

Default depends on CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED_V2 set in

the kernel configuration.

sysrq_always_enabled

[KNL]

Ignore sysrq setting - this boot parameter will

neutralize any effect of /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq.

Useful for debugging.

tcpmhash_entries= [KNL,NET]

Set the number of tcp_metrics_hash slots.

Default value is 8192 or 16384 depending on total

ram pages. This is used to specify the TCP metrics

cache size. See Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.txt

"tcp_no_metrics_save" section for more details.

tdfx= [HW,DRM]

test_suspend= [SUSPEND][,N]

Specify "mem" (for Suspend-to-RAM) or "standby" (for

standby suspend) or "freeze" (for suspend type freeze)

as the system sleep state during system startup with

the optional capability to repeat N number of times.

The system is woken from this state using a

wakeup-capable RTC alarm.

thash_entries= [KNL,NET]

Set number of hash buckets for TCP connection

thermal.act= [HW,ACPI]

-1: disable all active trip points in all thermal zones

: override all lowest active trip points

thermal.crt= [HW,ACPI]

-1: disable all critical trip points in all thermal zones

: override all critical trip points

thermal.nocrt= [HW,ACPI]

Set to disable actions on ACPI thermal zone

critical and hot trip points.

thermal.off= [HW,ACPI]

1: disable ACPI thermal control

thermal.psv= [HW,ACPI]

-1: disable all passive trip points

: override all passive trip points to this

value

thermal.tzp= [HW,ACPI]

Specify global default ACPI thermal zone polling rate

: poll all this frequency

0: no polling (default)

threadirqs [KNL]

Force threading of all interrupt handlers except those

marked explicitly IRQF_NO_THREAD.

tmem [KNL,XEN]

Enable the Transcendent memory driver if built-in.

tmem.cleancache=0|1 [KNL, XEN]

Default is on (1). Disable the usage of the cleancache

API to send anonymous pages to the hypervisor.

tmem.frontswap=0|1 [KNL, XEN]

Default is on (1). Disable the usage of the frontswap

API to send swap pages to the hypervisor. If disabled

the selfballooning and selfshrinking are force disabled.

tmem.selfballooning=0|1 [KNL, XEN]

Default is on (1). Disable the driving of swap pages

to the hypervisor.

tmem.selfshrinking=0|1 [KNL, XEN]

Default is on (1). Partial swapoff that immediately

transfers pages from Xen hypervisor back to the

kernel based on different criteria.

topology= [S390]

Format: {off | on}

Specify if the kernel should make use of the cpu

topology information if the hardware supports this.

The scheduler will make use of this information and

e.g. base its process migration decisions on it.

Default is on.

topology_updates= [KNL, PPC, NUMA]

Format: {off}

Specify if the kernel should ignore (off)

topology updates sent by the hypervisor to this

LPAR.

tp720= [HW,PS2]

tpm_suspend_pcr=[HW,TPM]

Format: integer pcr id

Specify that at suspend time, the tpm driver

should extend the specified pcr with zeros,

as a workaround for some chips which fail to

flush the last written pcr on TPM_SaveState.

This will guarantee that all the other pcrs

are saved.

trace_buf_size=nn[KMG]

[FTRACE] will set tracing buffer size on each cpu.

trace_event=[event-list]

[FTRACE] Set and start specified trace events in order

to facilitate early boot debugging. The event-list is a

comma separated list of trace events to enable. See

also Documentation/trace/events.txt

trace_options=[option-list]

[FTRACE] Enable or disable tracer options at boot.

The option-list is a comma delimited list of options

that can be enabled or disabled just as if you were

to echo the option name into

/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace_options

For example, to enable stacktrace option (to dump the

stack trace of each event), add to the command line:

trace_options=stacktrace

See also Documentation/trace/ftrace.txt "trace options"

section.

tp_printk[FTRACE]

Have the tracepoints sent to printk as well as the

tracing ring buffer. This is useful for early boot up

where the system hangs or reboots and does not give the

option for reading the tracing buffer or performing a

ftrace_dump_on_oops.

To turn off having tracepoints sent to printk,

echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/tracepoint_printk

Note, echoing 1 into this file without the

tracepoint_printk kernel cmdline option has no effect.

** CAUTION **

Having tracepoints sent to printk() and activating high

frequency tracepoints such as irq or sched, can cause

the system to live lock.

traceoff_on_warning

[FTRACE] enable this option to disable tracing when a

warning is hit. This turns off "tracing_on". Tracing can

be enabled again by echoing '1' into the "tracing_on"

file located in /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/

This option is useful, as it disables the trace before

the WARNING dump is called, which prevents the trace to

be filled with content caused by the warning output.

This option can also be set at run time via the sysctl

option: kernel/traceoff_on_warning

transparent_hugepage=

[KNL]

Format: [always|madvise|never]

Can be used to control the default behavior of the system

with respect to transparent hugepages.

See Documentation/vm/transhuge.txt for more details.

tsc= Disable clocksource stability checks for TSC.

Format:

[x86] reliable: mark tsc clocksource as reliable, this

disables clocksource verification at runtime, as well

as the stability checks done at bootup. Used to enable

high-resolution timer mode on older hardware, and in

virtualized environment.

[x86] noirqtime: Do not use TSC to do irq accounting.

Used to run time disable IRQ_TIME_ACCOUNTING on any

platforms where RDTSC is slow and this accounting

can add overhead.

turbografx.map[2|3]= [HW,JOY]

TurboGraFX parallel port interface

Format:

,,,,,,,

See also Documentation/input/joystick-parport.txt

udbg-immortal [PPC] When debugging early kernel crashes that

happen after console_init() and before a proper

console driver takes over, this boot options might

help "seeing" what's going on.

uhash_entries= [KNL,NET]

Set number of hash buckets for UDP/UDP-Lite connections

uhci-hcd.ignore_oc=

[USB] Ignore overcurrent events (default N).

Some badly-designed motherboards generate lots of

bogus events, for ports that aren't wired to

anything. Set this parameter to avoid log spamming.

Note that genuine overcurrent events won't be

reported either.

unknown_nmi_panic

[X86] Cause panic on unknown NMI.

usbcore.authorized_default=

[USB] Default USB device authorization:

(default -1 = authorized except for wireless USB,

0 = not authorized, 1 = authorized)

usbcore.autosuspend=

[USB] The autosuspend time delay (in seconds) used

for newly-detected USB devices (default 2). This

is the time required before an idle device will be

autosuspended. Devices for which the delay is set

to a negative value won't be autosuspended at all.

usbcore.usbfs_snoop=

[USB] Set to log all usbfs traffic (default 0 = off).

usbcore.usbfs_snoop_max=

[USB] Maximum number of bytes to snoop in each URB

(default = 65536).

usbcore.blinkenlights=

[USB] Set to cycle leds on hubs (default 0 = off).

usbcore.old_scheme_first=

[USB] Start with the old device initialization

scheme (default 0 = off).

usbcore.usbfs_memory_mb=

[USB] Memory limit (in MB) for buffers allocated by

usbfs (default = 16, 0 = max = 2047).

usbcore.use_both_schemes=

[USB] Try the other device initialization scheme

if the first one fails (default 1 = enabled).

usbcore.initial_descriptor_timeout=

[USB] Specifies timeout for the initial 64-byte

USB_REQ_GET_DESCRIPTOR request in milliseconds

(default 5000 = 5.0 seconds).

usbcore.nousb [USB] Disable the USB subsystem

usbhid.mousepoll=

[USBHID] The interval which mice are to be polled at.

usbhid.jspoll=

[USBHID] The interval which joysticks are to be polled at.

usb-storage.delay_use=

[UMS] The delay in seconds before a new device is

scanned for Logical Units (default 1).

usb-storage.quirks=

[UMS] A list of quirks entries to supplement or

override the built-in unusual_devs list. List

entries are separated by commas. Each entry has

the form VID:PID:Flags where VID and PID are Vendor

and Product ID values (4-digit hex numbers) and

Flags is a set of characters, each corresponding

to a common usb-storage quirk flag as follows:

a = SANE_SENSE (collect more than 18 bytes

of sense data);

b = BAD_SENSE (don't collect more than 18

bytes of sense data);

c = FIX_CAPACITY (decrease the reported

device capacity by one sector);

d = NO_READ_DISC_INFO (don't use

READ_DISC_INFO command);

e = NO_READ_CAPACITY_16 (don't use

READ_CAPACITY_16 command);

f = NO_REPORT_OPCODES (don't use report opcodes

command, uas only);

g = MAX_SECTORS_240 (don't transfer more than

240 sectors at a time, uas only);

h = CAPACITY_HEURISTICS (decrease the

reported device capacity by one

sector if the number is odd);

i = IGNORE_DEVICE (don't bind to this

device);

j = NO_REPORT_LUNS (don't use report luns

command, uas only);

l = NOT_LOCKABLE (don't try to lock and

unlock ejectable media);

m = MAX_SECTORS_64 (don't transfer more

than 64 sectors = 32 KB at a time);

n = INITIAL_READ10 (force a retry of the

initial READ(10) command);

o = CAPACITY_OK (accept the capacity

reported by the device);

p = WRITE_CACHE (the device cache is ON

by default);

r = IGNORE_RESIDUE (the device reports

bogus residue values);

s = SINGLE_LUN (the device has only one

Logical Unit);

t = NO_ATA_1X (don't allow ATA(12) and ATA(16)

commands, uas only);

u = IGNORE_UAS (don't bind to the uas driver);

w = NO_WP_DETECT (don't test whether the

medium is write-protected).

y = ALWAYS_SYNC (issue a SYNCHRONIZE_CACHE

even if the device claims no cache)

Example: quirks=0419:aaf5:rl,0421:0433:rc

user_debug= [KNL,ARM]

Format:

See arch/arm/Kconfig.debug help text.

1 - undefined instruction events

2 - system calls

4 - invalid data aborts

8 - SIGSEGV faults

16 - SIGBUS faults

Example: user_debug=31

userpte=

[X86] Flags controlling user PTE allocations.

nohigh = do not allocate PTE pages in

HIGHMEM regardless of setting

of CONFIG_HIGHPTE.

vdso= [X86,SH]

On X86_32, this is an alias for vdso32=. Otherwise:

vdso=1: enable VDSO (the default)

vdso=0: disable VDSO mapping

vdso32= [X86] Control the 32-bit vDSO

vdso32=1: enable 32-bit VDSO

vdso32=0 or vdso32=2: disable 32-bit VDSO

See the help text for CONFIG_COMPAT_VDSO for more

details. If CONFIG_COMPAT_VDSO is set, the default is

vdso32=0; otherwise, the default is vdso32=1.

For compatibility with older kernels, vdso32=2 is an

alias for vdso32=0.

Try vdso32=0 if you encounter an error that says:

dl_main: Assertion `(void *) ph->p_vaddr == _rtld_local._dl_sysinfo_dso' failed!

vector= [IA-64,SMP]

vector=percpu: enable percpu vector domain

video= [FB] Frame buffer configuration

See Documentation/fb/modedb.txt.

video.brightness_switch_enabled= [0,1]

If set to 1, on receiving an ACPI notify event

generated by hotkey, video driver will adjust brightness

level and then send out the event to user space through

the allocated input device; If set to 0, video driver

will only send out the event without touching backlight

brightness level.

default: 1

virtio_mmio.device=

[VMMIO] Memory mapped virtio (platform) device.

@:[:]

where:

:= size (can use standard suffixes

like K, M and G)

:= physical base address

:= interrupt number (as passed to

request_irq())

:= (optional) platform device id

example:

virtio_mmio.device=1K@0x100b0000:48:7

Can be used multiple times for multiple devices.

vga= [BOOT,X86-32] Select a particular video mode

See Documentation/x86/boot.txt and

Documentation/svga.txt.

Use vga=ask for menu.

This is actually a boot loader parameter; the value is

passed to the kernel using a special protocol.

vmalloc=nn[KMG] [KNL,BOOT] Forces the vmalloc area to have an exact

size of . This can be used to increase the

minimum size (128MB on x86). It can also be used to

decrease the size and leave more room for directly

mapped kernel RAM.

vmcp_cma=nn[MG] [KNL,S390]

Sets the memory size reserved for contiguous memory

allocations for the vmcp device driver.

vmhalt= [KNL,S390] Perform z/VM CP command after system halt.

Format:

vmpanic= [KNL,S390] Perform z/VM CP command after kernel panic.

Format:

vmpoff= [KNL,S390] Perform z/VM CP command after power off.

Format:

vsyscall= [X86-64]

Controls the behavior of vsyscalls (i.e. calls to

fixed addresses of 0xffffffffff600x00 from legacy

code). Most statically-linked binaries and older

versions of glibc use these calls. Because these

functions are at fixed addresses, they make nice

targets for exploits that can control RIP.

emulate [default] Vsyscalls turn into traps and are

emulated reasonably safely.

native Vsyscalls are native syscall instructions.

This is a little bit faster than trapping

and makes a few dynamic recompilers work

better than they would in emulation mode.

It also makes exploits much easier to write.

none Vsyscalls don't work at all. This makes

them quite hard to use for exploits but

might break your system.

vt.color= [VT] Default text color.

Format: 0xYX, X = foreground, Y = background.

Default: 0x07 = light gray on black.

vt.cur_default= [VT] Default cursor shape.

Format: 0xCCBBAA, where AA, BB, and CC are the same as

the parameters of the [?A;B;Cc escape sequence;

see VGA-softcursor.txt. Default: 2 = underline.

vt.default_blu= [VT]

Format: ,,,...,

Change the default blue palette of the console.

This is a 16-member array composed of values

ranging from 0-255.

vt.default_grn= [VT]

Format: ,,,...,

Change the default green palette of the console.

This is a 16-member array composed of values

ranging from 0-255.

vt.default_red= [VT]

Format: ,,,...,

Change the default red palette of the console.

This is a 16-member array composed of values

ranging from 0-255.

vt.default_utf8=

[VT]

Format=<0|1>

Set system-wide default UTF-8 mode for all tty's.

Default is 1, i.e. UTF-8 mode is enabled for all

newly opened terminals.

vt.global_cursor_default=

[VT]

Format=<-1|0|1>

Set system-wide default for whether a cursor

is shown on new VTs. Default is -1,

i.e. cursors will be created by default unless

overridden by individual drivers. 0 will hide

cursors, 1 will display them.

vt.italic= [VT] Default color for italic text; 0-15.

Default: 2 = green.

vt.underline= [VT] Default color for underlined text; 0-15.

Default: 3 = cyan.

watchdog timers [HW,WDT] For information on watchdog timers,

see Documentation/watchdog/watchdog-parameters.txt

or other driver-specific files in the

Documentation/watchdog/ directory.

workqueue.watchdog_thresh=

If CONFIG_WQ_WATCHDOG is configured, workqueue can

warn stall conditions and dump internal state to

help debugging. 0 disables workqueue stall

detection; otherwise, it's the stall threshold

duration in seconds. The default value is 30 and

it can be updated at runtime by writing to the

corresponding sysfs file.

workqueue.disable_numa

By default, all work items queued to unbound

workqueues are affine to the NUMA nodes they're

issued on, which results in better behavior in

general. If NUMA affinity needs to be disabled for

whatever reason, this option can be used. Note

that this also can be controlled per-workqueue for

workqueues visible under /sys/bus/workqueue/.

workqueue.power_efficient

Per-cpu workqueues are generally preferred because

they show better performance thanks to cache

locality; unfortunately, per-cpu workqueues tend to

be more power hungry than unbound workqueues.

Enabling this makes the per-cpu workqueues which

were observed to contribute significantly to power

consumption unbound, leading to measurably lower

power usage at the cost of small performance

overhead.

The default value of this parameter is determined by

the config option CONFIG_WQ_POWER_EFFICIENT_DEFAULT.

workqueue.debug_force_rr_cpu

Workqueue used to implicitly guarantee that work

items queued without explicit CPU specified are put

on the local CPU. This guarantee is no longer true

and while local CPU is still preferred work items

may be put on foreign CPUs. This debug option

forces round-robin CPU selection to flush out

usages which depend on the now broken guarantee.

When enabled, memory and cache locality will be

impacted.

x2apic_phys [X86-64,APIC] Use x2apic physical mode instead of

default x2apic cluster mode on platforms

supporting x2apic.

x86_intel_mid_timer= [X86-32,APBT]

Choose timer option for x86 Intel MID platform.

Two valid options are apbt timer only and lapic timer

plus one apbt timer for broadcast timer.

x86_intel_mid_timer=apbt_only | lapic_and_apbt

xen_512gb_limit [KNL,X86-64,XEN]

Restricts the kernel running paravirtualized under Xen

to use only up to 512 GB of RAM. The reason to do so is

crash analysis tools and Xen tools for doing domain

save/restore/migration must be enabled to handle larger

domains.

xen_emul_unplug= [HW,X86,XEN]

Unplug Xen emulated devices

Format: [unplug0,][unplug1]

ide-disks -- unplug primary master IDE devices

aux-ide-disks -- unplug non-primary-master IDE devices

nics -- unplug network devices

all -- unplug all emulated devices (NICs and IDE disks)

unnecessary -- unplugging emulated devices is

unnecessary even if the host did not respond to

the unplug protocol

never -- do not unplug even if version check succeeds

xen_nopvspin [X86,XEN]

Disables the ticketlock slowpath using Xen PV

optimizations.

xen_nopv [X86]

Disables the PV optimizations forcing the HVM guest to

run as generic HVM guest with no PV drivers.

xirc2ps_cs= [NET,PCMCIA]

Format:

,,,,,[,[,[,]]]

Todo

Add more DRM drivers.

 

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