drivers/net/wireless/mediatek/mt76/mt76x0/Kconfig
Source file repositories/reference/linux-study-clean/drivers/net/wireless/mediatek/mt76/mt76x0/Kconfig
File Facts
- System
- Linux kernel
- Corpus path
drivers/net/wireless/mediatek/mt76/mt76x0/Kconfig- Extension
[no extension]- Size
- 767 bytes
- Lines
- 30
- Domain
- Driver Families
- Bucket
- drivers/net
- Inferred role
- Driver Families: build/configuration rule
- Status
- atlas-only
Why This File Exists
Repeatable hardware-adapter layer. Deep compatibility for every driver is out of scope; this atlas records patterns, probe lifecycles, bus glue, IRQ/DMA usage, and links back to core abstractions.
- Repeatable hardware-adapter layer. Deep compatibility for every driver is out of scope; this atlas records patterns, probe lifecycles, bus glue, IRQ/DMA usage, and links back to core abstractions.
Dependency Surface
- No C-style include directives detected by the generator.
Detected Declarations
- No top-level syscall, struct, function, initcall, or export declaration detected by the generator.
Annotated Snippet
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
config MT76x0_COMMON
tristate
select MT76x02_LIB
config MT76x0U
tristate "MediaTek MT76x0U (USB) support"
select MT76x0_COMMON
select MT76x02_USB
depends on MAC80211
depends on USB
help
This adds support for MT7610U-based USB 2.0 wireless dongles,
which comply with IEEE 802.11ac standards and support 1x1
433Mbps PHY rate.
To compile this driver as a module, choose M here.
config MT76x0E
tristate "MediaTek MT76x0E (PCIe) support"
select MT76x0_COMMON
depends on MAC80211
depends on PCI
help
This adds support for MT7610/MT7630-based PCIe wireless devices,
which comply with IEEE 802.11ac standards and support 1x1
433Mbps PHY rate.
To compile this driver as a module, choose M here.
Annotation
- Atlas domain: Driver Families / drivers/net.
- Implementation status: atlas-only.
Implementation Notes
- This generated page is the file-by-file coverage layer; curated subsystem chapters should link here when they synthesize a multi-file control flow.
- Core OS pages should be promoted from atlas-only to deep-reviewed when they explain data structures, invariants, locking, lifecycle, and C implementation snippets.
- Driver-family pages are intentionally pattern-oriented unless they are part of the selected PCIe/NVMe representative device path.