32 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
32 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
# Option API
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The option API around the `set_option(const char *name, void *val)` and
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`get_option(void *dest, const char *name)` functions deprecated in favor
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of a type-safe API.
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Historically, options were stored in RTC battery-backed CMOS RAM inside
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the chipset on PC platforms. Nowadays, options can also be stored in the
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same flash chip as the boot firmware or through some BMC interface.
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The new type-safe option framework can be used by calling
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`enum cb_err set_uint_option(const char *name, unsigned int value)` and
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`unsigned int get_uint_option(const char *name, const unsigned int fallback)`.
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The default setting is `OPTION_BACKEND_NONE`, which disables any runtime
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configurable options. If supported by a mainboard, the `USE_OPTION_TABLE`
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and `USE_MAINBOARD_SPECIFIC_OPTION_BACKEND` choices are visible, and can
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be selected to enable runtime configurability.
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# Mainboard-specific option backend
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Mainboards with a mainboard-specific (vendor-defined) method to access
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options can select `HAVE_MAINBOARD_SPECIFIC_OPTION_BACKEND` to provide
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implementations of the option API accessors. To allow choosing between
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multiple option backends, the mainboard-specific implementation should
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only be built when `USE_MAINBOARD_SPECIFIC_OPTION_BACKEND` is selected.
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Where possible, using a generic, mainboard-independent mechanism should
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be preferred over reinventing the wheel in mainboard-specific code. The
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mainboard-specific approach should only be used when the option storage
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mechanism has to satisfy externally-imposed, vendor-defined constraints.
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