# # For a description of the syntax of this configuration file, # see the file kconfig-language.txt in the NuttX tools repository. # config FS_HOSTFS bool "Host File System" default n depends on !DISABLE_MOUNTPOINT ---help--- The Host file system provides a mechanism to mount directories from the host OS during simulation mode. The host directory to be "mounted" is specified during the mount command using the -o command line switch, such as: mount -t hostfs -o fs=/home/user/nuttx_root /host For non-NSH operation, the option "fs=home/user/nuttx_root" would be passed to the 'mount()' routine using the optional 'void *data' parameter. The backend implementation is arch-dependent. As of writing this, it's implemented for sim, arm and xtensa. Note: depending on the backend implementions, hostfs might only provide very restricted subset of filesystem operations. Sim: It's implemented with direct calls to the host OS API. It likely consumes a lot of stack than ordinary NuttX codebase. You likely need to make task stack sizes huge (e.g. 64KB) to avoid stack overrun. Arm, xtensa: It's implemented using a special CPU instruction to trigger a trap for a hypervisor. If you are using qemu, it has the `-semihosting` command line option to enable the handling of the trap. Theoretically, it can work for other environments as well. E.g. a real hardware + JTAG + OpenOCD. config FS_HOSTFS_RPMSG bool "Host File System Rpmsg" default n depends on FS_HOSTFS depends on OPENAMP ---help--- Use Host file system to mount directories through rpmsg. This is the driver that sending the message. This effectively replaces the ordinary hostfs backend. Right now, there is no way to enable both backends. config FS_HOSTFS_RPMSG_SERVER bool "Host File System Rpmsg Server" default n depends on OPENAMP ---help--- Use Host file system to mount directories through rpmsg. This is the driver that receiving the message.