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-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/devfs/ChangeLog1977
-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/devfs/README1959
-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/devfs/ToDo40
-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/devfs/boot-options65
4 files changed, 0 insertions, 4041 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/ChangeLog b/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/ChangeLog
deleted file mode 100644
index e5aba5246d7c..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/ChangeLog
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1977 +0,0 @@
1/* -*- auto-fill -*- */
2===============================================================================
3Changes for patch v1
4
5- creation of devfs
6
7- modified miscellaneous character devices to support devfs
8===============================================================================
9Changes for patch v2
10
11- bug fix with manual inode creation
12===============================================================================
13Changes for patch v3
14
15- bugfixes
16
17- documentation improvements
18
19- created a couple of scripts (one to save&restore a devfs and the
20 other to set up compatibility symlinks)
21
22- devfs support for SCSI discs. New name format is: sd_hHcCiIlL
23===============================================================================
24Changes for patch v4
25
26- bugfix for the directory reading code
27
28- bugfix for compilation with kerneld
29
30- devfs support for generic hard discs
31
32- rationalisation of the various watchdog drivers
33===============================================================================
34Changes for patch v5
35
36- support for mounting directly from entries in the devfs (it doesn't
37 need to be mounted to do this), including the root filesystem.
38 Mounting of swap partitions also works. Hence, now if you set
39 CONFIG_DEVFS_ONLY to 'Y' then you won't be able to access your discs
40 via ordinary device nodes. Naturally, the default is 'N' so that you
41 can still use your old device nodes. If you want to mount from devfs
42 entries, make sure you use: append = "root=/dev/sd_..." in your
43 lilo.conf. It seems LILO looks for the device number (major&minor)
44 and writes that into the kernel image :-(
45
46- support for character memory devices (/dev/null, /dev/zero, /dev/full
47 and so on). Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
48===============================================================================
49Changes for patch v6
50
51- support for subdirectories
52
53- support for symbolic links (created by devfs_mk_symlink(), no
54 support yet for creation via symlink(2))
55
56- SCSI disc naming now cast in stone, with the format:
57 /dev/sd/c0b1t2u3 controller=0, bus=1, ID=2, LUN=3, whole disc
58 /dev/sd/c0b1t2u3p4 controller=0, bus=1, ID=2, LUN=3, 4th partition
59
60- loop devices now appear in devfs
61
62- tty devices, console, serial ports, etc. now appear in devfs
63 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
64
65- bugs with mounting devfs-only devices now fixed
66===============================================================================
67Changes for patch v7
68
69- SCSI CD-ROMS, tapes and generic devices now appear in devfs
70===============================================================================
71Changes for patch v8
72
73- bugfix with no-rewind SCSI tapes
74
75- RAMDISCs now appear in devfs
76
77- better cleaning up of devfs entries created by various modules
78
79- interface change to <devfs_register>
80===============================================================================
81Changes for patch v9
82
83- the v8 patch was corrupted somehow, which would affect the patch for
84 linux/fs/filesystems.c
85 I've also fixed the v8 patch file on the WWW
86
87- MetaDevices (/dev/md*) should now appear in devfs
88===============================================================================
89Changes for patch v10
90
91- bugfix in meta device support for devfs
92
93- created this ChangeLog file
94
95- added devfs support to the floppy driver
96
97- added support for creating sockets in a devfs
98===============================================================================
99Changes for patch v11
100
101- added DEVFS_FL_HIDE_UNREG flag
102
103- incorporated better patch for ttyname() in libc 5.4.43 from H.J. Lu.
104
105- interface change to <devfs_mk_symlink>
106
107- support for creating symlinks with symlink(2)
108
109- parallel port printer (/dev/lp*) now appears in devfs
110===============================================================================
111Changes for patch v12
112
113- added inode check to <devfs_fill_file> function
114
115- improved devfs support when mounting from devfs
116
117- added call to <<release>> operation when removing swap areas on
118 devfs devices
119
120- increased NR_SUPER to 128 to support large numbers of devfs mounts
121 (for chroot(2) gaols)
122
123- fixed bug in SCSI disc support: was generating incorrect minors if
124 SCSI ID's did not start at 0 and increase by 1
125
126- support symlink traversal when mounting root
127===============================================================================
128Changes for patch v13
129
130- added devfs support to soundcard driver
131 Thanks to Eric Dumas <dumas@linux.eu.org> and
132 C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
133
134- added devfs support to the joystick driver
135
136- loop driver now has it's own subdirectory "/dev/loop/"
137
138- created <devfs_get_flags> and <devfs_set_flags> functions
139
140- fix problem with SCSI disc compatibility names (sd{a,b,c,d,e,f})
141 which assumes ID's start at 0 and increase by 1. Also only create
142 devfs entries for SCSI disc partitions which actually exist
143 Show new names in partition check
144 Thanks to Jakub Jelinek <jj@sunsite.ms.mff.cuni.cz>
145===============================================================================
146Changes for patch v14
147
148- bug fix in floppy driver: would not compile without
149 CONFIG_DEVFS_FS='Y'
150 Thanks to Jurgen Botz <jbotz@nova.botz.org>
151
152- bug fix in loop driver
153 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
154
155- do not create devfs entries for printers not configured
156 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
157
158- do not create devfs entries for serial ports not present
159 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
160
161- ensure <tty_register_devfs> is exported from tty_io.c
162 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
163
164- allow unregistering of devfs symlink entries
165
166- fixed bug in SCSI disc naming introduced in last patch version
167===============================================================================
168Changes for patch v15
169
170- ported to kernel 2.1.81
171===============================================================================
172Changes for patch v16
173
174- created <devfs_set_symlink_destination> function
175
176- moved DEVFS_SUPER_MAGIC into header file
177
178- added DEVFS_FL_HIDE flag
179
180- created <devfs_get_maj_min>
181
182- created <devfs_get_handle_from_inode>
183
184- fixed bugs in searching by major&minor
185
186- changed interface to <devfs_unregister>, <devfs_fill_file> and
187 <devfs_find_handle>
188
189- fixed inode times when symlink created with symlink(2)
190
191- change tty driver to do auto-creation of devfs entries
192 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
193
194- fixed bug in genhd.c: whole disc (non-SCSI) was not registered to
195 devfs
196
197- updated libc 5.4.43 patch for ttyname()
198===============================================================================
199Changes for patch v17
200
201- added CONFIG_DEVFS_TTY_COMPAT
202 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
203
204- bugfix in devfs support for drivers/char/lp.c
205 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
206
207- clean up serial driver so that PCMCIA devices unregister correctly
208 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
209
210- fixed bug in genhd.c: whole disc (non-SCSI) was not registered to
211 devfs [was missing in patch v16]
212
213- updated libc 5.4.43 patch for ttyname() [was missing in patch v16]
214
215- all SCSI devices now registered in /dev/sg
216
217- support removal of devfs entries via unlink(2)
218===============================================================================
219Changes for patch v18
220
221- added floppy/?u720 floppy entry
222
223- fixed kerneld support for entries in devfs subdirectories
224
225- incorporated latest patch for ttyname() in libc 5.4.43 from H.J. Lu.
226===============================================================================
227Changes for patch v19
228
229- bug fix when looking up unregistered entries: kerneld was not called
230
231- fixes for kernel 2.1.86 (now requires 2.1.86)
232===============================================================================
233Changes for patch v20
234
235- only create available floppy entries
236 Thanks to Andrzej Krzysztofowicz <ankry@green.mif.pg.gda.pl>
237
238- new IDE naming scheme following SCSI format (i.e. /dev/id/c0b0t0u0p1
239 instead of /dev/hda1)
240 Thanks to Andrzej Krzysztofowicz <ankry@green.mif.pg.gda.pl>
241
242- new XT disc naming scheme following SCSI format (i.e. /dev/xd/c0t0p1
243 instead of /dev/xda1)
244 Thanks to Andrzej Krzysztofowicz <ankry@green.mif.pg.gda.pl>
245
246- new non-standard CD-ROM names (i.e. /dev/sbp/c#t#)
247 Thanks to Andrzej Krzysztofowicz <ankry@green.mif.pg.gda.pl>
248
249- allow symlink traversal when mounting the root filesystem
250
251- Create entries for MD devices at MD init
252 Thanks to Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy5@capway.com>
253===============================================================================
254Changes for patch v21
255
256- ported to kernel 2.1.91
257===============================================================================
258Changes for patch v22
259
260- SCSI host number patch ("scsihosts=" kernel option)
261 Thanks to Andrzej Krzysztofowicz <ankry@green.mif.pg.gda.pl>
262===============================================================================
263Changes for patch v23
264
265- Fixed persistence bug with device numbers for manually created
266 device files
267
268- Fixed problem with recreating symlinks with different content
269
270- Added CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT (mount devfs on /dev at boot time)
271===============================================================================
272Changes for patch v24
273
274- Switched from CONFIG_KERNELD to CONFIG_KMOD: module autoloading
275 should now work again
276
277- Hide entries which are manually unlinked
278
279- Always invalidate devfs dentry cache when registering entries
280
281- Support removal of devfs directories via rmdir(2)
282
283- Ensure directories created by <devfs_mk_dir> are visible
284
285- Default no access for "other" for floppy device
286===============================================================================
287Changes for patch v25
288
289- Updates to CREDITS file and minor IDE numbering change
290 Thanks to Andrzej Krzysztofowicz <ankry@green.mif.pg.gda.pl>
291
292- Invalidate devfs dentry cache when making directories
293
294- Invalidate devfs dentry cache when removing entries
295
296- More informative message if root FS mount fails when devfs
297 configured
298
299- Fixed persistence bug with fifos
300===============================================================================
301Changes for patch v26
302
303- ported to kernel 2.1.97
304
305- Changed serial directory from "/dev/serial" to "/dev/tts" and
306 "/dev/consoles" to "/dev/vc" to be more friendly to new procps
307===============================================================================
308Changes for patch v27
309
310- Added support for IDE4 and IDE5
311 Thanks to Andrzej Krzysztofowicz <ankry@green.mif.pg.gda.pl>
312
313- Documented "scsihosts=" boot parameter
314
315- Print process command when debugging kerneld/kmod
316
317- Added debugging for register/unregister/change operations
318
319- Added "devfs=" boot options
320
321- Hide unregistered entries by default
322===============================================================================
323Changes for patch v28
324
325- No longer lock/unlock superblock in <devfs_put_super> (cope with
326 recent VFS interface change)
327
328- Do not automatically change ownership/protection of /dev/tty
329
330- Drop negative dentries when they are released
331
332- Manage dcache more efficiently
333===============================================================================
334Changes for patch v29
335
336- Added DEVFS_FL_AUTO_DEVNUM flag
337===============================================================================
338Changes for patch v30
339
340- No longer set unnecessary methods
341
342- Ported to kernel 2.1.99-pre3
343===============================================================================
344Changes for patch v31
345
346- Added PID display to <call_kerneld> debugging message
347
348- Added "diread" and "diwrite" options
349
350- Ported to kernel 2.1.102
351
352- Fixed persistence problem with permissions
353===============================================================================
354Changes for patch v32
355
356- Fixed devfs support in drivers/block/md.c
357===============================================================================
358Changes for patch v33
359
360- Support legacy device nodes
361
362- Fixed bug where recreated inodes were hidden
363
364- New IDE naming scheme: everything is under /dev/ide
365===============================================================================
366Changes for patch v34
367
368- Improved debugging in <get_vfs_inode>
369
370- Prevent duplicate calls to <devfs_mk_dir> in SCSI layer
371
372- No longer free old dentries in <devfs_mk_dir>
373
374- Free all dentries for a given entry when deleting inodes
375===============================================================================
376Changes for patch v35
377
378- Ported to kernel 2.1.105 (sound driver changes)
379===============================================================================
380Changes for patch v36
381
382- Fixed sound driver port
383===============================================================================
384Changes for patch v37
385
386- Minor documentation tweaks
387===============================================================================
388Changes for patch v38
389
390- More documentation tweaks
391
392- Fix for sound driver port
393
394- Removed ttyname-patch (grab libc 5.4.44 instead)
395
396- Ported to kernel 2.1.107-pre2 (loop driver fix)
397===============================================================================
398Changes for patch v39
399
400- Ported to kernel 2.1.107 (hd.c hunk broke due to spelling "fixes"). Sigh
401
402- Removed many #ifdef's, replaced with trickery in include/devfs_fs.h
403===============================================================================
404Changes for patch v40
405
406- Fix for sound driver port
407
408- Limit auto-device numbering to majors 128 to 239
409===============================================================================
410Changes for patch v41
411
412- Fixed inode times persistence problem
413===============================================================================
414Changes for patch v42
415
416- Ported to kernel 2.1.108 (drivers/scsi/hosts.c hunk broke)
417===============================================================================
418Changes for patch v43
419
420- Fixed spelling in <devfs_readlink> debug
421
422- Fixed bug in <devfs_setup> parsing "dilookup"
423
424- More #ifdef's removed
425
426- Supported Sparc keyboard (/dev/kbd)
427
428- Supported DSP56001 digital signal processor (/dev/dsp56k)
429
430- Supported Apple Desktop Bus (/dev/adb)
431
432- Supported Coda network file system (/dev/cfs*)
433===============================================================================
434Changes for patch v44
435
436- Fixed devfs inode leak when manually recreating inodes
437
438- Fixed permission persistence problem when recreating inodes
439===============================================================================
440Changes for patch v45
441
442- Ported to kernel 2.1.110
443===============================================================================
444Changes for patch v46
445
446- Ported to kernel 2.1.112-pre1
447
448- Removed harmless "unused variable" compiler warning
449
450- Fixed modes for manually recreated device nodes
451===============================================================================
452Changes for patch v47
453
454- Added NULL devfs inode warning in <devfs_read_inode>
455
456- Force all inode nlink values to 1
457===============================================================================
458Changes for patch v48
459
460- Added "dimknod" option
461
462- Set inode nlink to 0 when freeing dentries
463
464- Added support for virtual console capture devices (/dev/vcs*)
465 Thanks to Dennis Hou <smilax@mindmeld.yi.org>
466
467- Fixed modes for manually recreated symlinks
468===============================================================================
469Changes for patch v49
470
471- Ported to kernel 2.1.113
472===============================================================================
473Changes for patch v50
474
475- Fixed bugs in recreated directories and symlinks
476===============================================================================
477Changes for patch v51
478
479- Improved robustness of rc.devfs script
480 Thanks to Roderich Schupp <rsch@experteam.de>
481
482- Fixed bugs in recreated device nodes
483
484- Fixed bug in currently unused <devfs_get_handle_from_inode>
485
486- Defined new <devfs_handle_t> type
487
488- Improved debugging when getting entries
489
490- Fixed bug where directories could be emptied
491
492- Ported to kernel 2.1.115
493===============================================================================
494Changes for patch v52
495
496- Replaced dummy .epoch inode with .devfsd character device
497
498- Modified rc.devfs to take account of above change
499
500- Removed spurious driver warning messages when CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=n
501
502- Implemented devfsd protocol revision 0
503===============================================================================
504Changes for patch v53
505
506- Ported to kernel 2.1.116 (kmod change broke hunk)
507
508- Updated Documentation/Configure.help
509
510- Test and tty pattern patch for rc.devfs script
511 Thanks to Roderich Schupp <rsch@experteam.de>
512
513- Added soothing message to warning in <devfs_d_iput>
514===============================================================================
515Changes for patch v54
516
517- Ported to kernel 2.1.117
518
519- Fixed default permissions in sound driver
520
521- Added support for frame buffer devices (/dev/fb*)
522===============================================================================
523Changes for patch v55
524
525- Ported to kernel 2.1.119
526
527- Use GCC extensions for structure initialisations
528
529- Implemented async open notification
530
531- Incremented devfsd protocol revision to 1
532===============================================================================
533Changes for patch v56
534
535- Ported to kernel 2.1.120-pre3
536
537- Moved async open notification to end of <devfs_open>
538===============================================================================
539Changes for patch v57
540
541- Ported to kernel 2.1.121
542
543- Prepended "/dev/" to module load request
544
545- Renamed <call_kerneld> to <call_kmod>
546
547- Created sample modules.conf file
548===============================================================================
549Changes for patch v58
550
551- Fixed typo "AYSNC" -> "ASYNC"
552===============================================================================
553Changes for patch v59
554
555- Added open flag for files
556===============================================================================
557Changes for patch v60
558
559- Ported to kernel 2.1.123-pre2
560===============================================================================
561Changes for patch v61
562
563- Set i_blocks=0 and i_blksize=1024 in <devfs_read_inode>
564===============================================================================
565Changes for patch v62
566
567- Ported to kernel 2.1.123
568===============================================================================
569Changes for patch v63
570
571- Ported to kernel 2.1.124-pre2
572===============================================================================
573Changes for patch v64
574
575- Fixed Unix98 pty support
576
577- Increased buffer size in <get_partition_list> to avoid crash and
578 burn
579===============================================================================
580Changes for patch v65
581
582- More Unix98 pty support fixes
583
584- Added test for empty <<name>> in <devfs_find_handle>
585
586- Renamed <generate_path> to <devfs_generate_path> and published
587
588- Created /dev/root symlink
589 Thanks to Roderich Schupp <rsch@ExperTeam.de>
590 with further modifications by me
591===============================================================================
592Changes for patch v66
593
594- Yet more Unix98 pty support fixes (now tested)
595
596- Created <devfs_get_fops>
597
598- Support media change checks when CONFIG_DEVFS_ONLY=y
599
600- Abolished Unix98-style PTY names for old PTY devices
601===============================================================================
602Changes for patch v67
603
604- Added inline declaration for dummy <devfs_generate_path>
605
606- Removed spurious "unable to register... in devfs" messages when
607 CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=n
608
609- Fixed misc. devices when CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=n
610
611- Limit auto-device numbering to majors 144 to 239
612===============================================================================
613Changes for patch v68
614
615- Hide unopened virtual consoles from directory listings
616
617- Added support for video capture devices
618
619- Ported to kernel 2.1.125
620===============================================================================
621Changes for patch v69
622
623- Fix for CONFIG_VT=n
624===============================================================================
625Changes for patch v70
626
627- Added support for non-OSS/Free sound cards
628===============================================================================
629Changes for patch v71
630
631- Ported to kernel 2.1.126-pre2
632===============================================================================
633Changes for patch v72
634
635- #ifdef's for CONFIG_DEVFS_DISABLE_OLD_NAMES removed
636===============================================================================
637Changes for patch v73
638
639- CONFIG_DEVFS_DISABLE_OLD_NAMES replaced with "nocompat" boot option
640
641- CONFIG_DEVFS_BOOT_OPTIONS removed: boot options always available
642===============================================================================
643Changes for patch v74
644
645- Removed CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT and "mount" boot option and replaced with
646 "nomount" boot option
647
648- Documentation updates
649
650- Updated sample modules.conf
651===============================================================================
652Changes for patch v75
653
654- Updated sample modules.conf
655
656- Remount devfs after initrd finishes
657
658- Ported to kernel 2.1.127
659
660- Added support for ISDN
661 Thanks to Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy5@capway.com>
662===============================================================================
663Changes for patch v76
664
665- Updated an email address in ChangeLog
666
667- CONFIG_DEVFS_ONLY replaced with "only" boot option
668===============================================================================
669Changes for patch v77
670
671- Added DEVFS_FL_REMOVABLE flag
672
673- Check for disc change when listing directories with removable media
674 devices
675
676- Use DEVFS_FL_REMOVABLE in sd.c
677
678- Ported to kernel 2.1.128
679===============================================================================
680Changes for patch v78
681
682- Only call <scan_dir_for_removable> on first call to <devfs_readdir>
683
684- Ported to kernel 2.1.129-pre5
685
686- ISDN support improvements
687 Thanks to Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy5@capway.com>
688===============================================================================
689Changes for patch v79
690
691- Ported to kernel 2.1.130
692
693- Renamed miscdevice "apm" to "apm_bios" to be consistent with
694 devices.txt
695===============================================================================
696Changes for patch v80
697
698- Ported to kernel 2.1.131
699
700- Updated <devfs_rmdir> for VFS change in 2.1.131
701===============================================================================
702Changes for patch v81
703
704- Fixed permissions on /dev/ptmx
705===============================================================================
706Changes for patch v82
707
708- Ported to kernel 2.1.132-pre4
709
710- Changed initial permissions on /dev/pts/*
711
712- Created <devfs_mk_compat>
713
714- Added "symlinks" boot option
715
716- Changed devfs_register_blkdev() back to register_blkdev() for IDE
717
718- Check for partitions on removable media in <devfs_lookup>
719===============================================================================
720Changes for patch v83
721
722- Fixed support for ramdisc when using string-based root FS name
723
724- Ported to kernel 2.2.0-pre1
725===============================================================================
726Changes for patch v84
727
728- Ported to kernel 2.2.0-pre7
729===============================================================================
730Changes for patch v85
731
732- Compile fixes for driver/sound/sound_common.c (non-module) and
733 drivers/isdn/isdn_common.c
734 Thanks to Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy5@capway.com>
735
736- Added support for registering regular files
737
738- Created <devfs_set_file_size>
739
740- Added /dev/cpu/mtrr as an alternative interface to /proc/mtrr
741
742- Update devfs inodes from entries if not changed through FS
743===============================================================================
744Changes for patch v86
745
746- Ported to kernel 2.2.0-pre9
747===============================================================================
748Changes for patch v87
749
750- Fixed bug when mounting non-devfs devices in a devfs
751===============================================================================
752Changes for patch v88
753
754- Fixed <devfs_fill_file> to only initialise temporary inodes
755
756- Trap for NULL fops in <devfs_register>
757
758- Return -ENODEV in <devfs_fill_file> for non-driver inodes
759
760- Fixed bug when unswapping non-devfs devices in a devfs
761===============================================================================
762Changes for patch v89
763
764- Switched to C data types in include/linux/devfs_fs.h
765
766- Switched from PATH_MAX to DEVFS_PATHLEN
767
768- Updated Documentation/filesystems/devfs/modules.conf to take account
769 of reverse scanning (!) by modprobe
770
771- Ported to kernel 2.2.0
772===============================================================================
773Changes for patch v90
774
775- CONFIG_DEVFS_DISABLE_OLD_TTY_NAMES replaced with "nottycompat" boot
776 option
777
778- CONFIG_DEVFS_TTY_COMPAT removed: existing "symlinks" boot option now
779 controls this. This means you must have libc 5.4.44 or later, or a
780 recent version of libc 6 if you use the "symlinks" option
781===============================================================================
782Changes for patch v91
783
784- Switch from <devfs_mk_symlink> to <devfs_mk_compat> in
785 drivers/char/vc_screen.c to fix problems with Midnight Commander
786===============================================================================
787Changes for patch v92
788
789- Ported to kernel 2.2.2-pre5
790===============================================================================
791Changes for patch v93
792
793- Modified <sd_name> in drivers/scsi/sd.c to cope with devices that
794 don't exist (which happens with new RAID autostart code printk()s)
795===============================================================================
796Changes for patch v94
797
798- Fixed bug in joystick driver: only first joystick was registered
799===============================================================================
800Changes for patch v95
801
802- Fixed another bug in joystick driver
803
804- Fixed <devfsd_read> to not overrun event buffer
805===============================================================================
806Changes for patch v96
807
808- Ported to kernel 2.2.5-2
809
810- Created <devfs_auto_unregister>
811
812- Fixed bugs: compatibility entries were not unregistered for:
813 loop driver
814 floppy driver
815 RAMDISC driver
816 IDE tape driver
817 SCSI CD-ROM driver
818 SCSI HDD driver
819===============================================================================
820Changes for patch v97
821
822- Fixed bugs: compatibility entries were not unregistered for:
823 ALSA sound driver
824 partitions in generic disc driver
825
826- Don't return unregistred entries in <devfs_find_handle>
827
828- Panic in <devfs_unregister> if entry unregistered
829
830- Don't panic in <devfs_auto_unregister> for duplicates
831===============================================================================
832Changes for patch v98
833
834- Don't unregister already unregistered entries in <unregister>
835
836- Register entry in <sd_detect>
837
838- Unregister entry in <sd_detach>
839
840- Changed to <devfs_*register_chrdev> in drivers/char/tty_io.c
841
842- Ported to kernel 2.2.7
843===============================================================================
844Changes for patch v99
845
846- Ported to kernel 2.2.8
847
848- Fixed bug in drivers/scsi/sd.c when >16 SCSI discs
849
850- Disable warning messages when unable to read partition table for
851 removable media
852===============================================================================
853Changes for patch v100
854
855- Ported to kernel 2.3.1-pre5
856
857- Added "oops-on-panic" boot option
858
859- Improved debugging in <devfs_register> and <devfs_unregister>
860
861- Register entry in <sr_detect>
862
863- Unregister entry in <sr_detach>
864
865- Register entry in <sg_detect>
866
867- Unregister entry in <sg_detach>
868
869- Added support for ALSA drivers
870===============================================================================
871Changes for patch v101
872
873- Ported to kernel 2.3.2
874===============================================================================
875Changes for patch v102
876
877- Update serial driver to register PCMCIA entries
878 Thanks to Roch-Alexandre Nomine-Beguin <roch@samarkand.infini.fr>
879
880- Updated an email address in ChangeLog
881
882- Hide virtual console capture entries from directory listings when
883 corresponding console device is not open
884===============================================================================
885Changes for patch v103
886
887- Ported to kernel 2.3.3
888===============================================================================
889Changes for patch v104
890
891- Added documentation for some functions
892
893- Added "doc" target to fs/devfs/Makefile
894
895- Added "v4l" directory for video4linux devices
896
897- Replaced call to <devfs_unregister> in <sd_detach> with call to
898 <devfs_register_partitions>
899
900- Moved registration for sr and sg drivers from detect() to attach()
901 methods
902
903- Register entries in <st_attach> and unregister in <st_detach>
904
905- Work around IDE driver treating CD-ROM as gendisk
906
907- Use <sed> instead of <tr> in rc.devfs
908
909- Updated ToDo list
910
911- Removed "oops-on-panic" boot option: now always Oops
912===============================================================================
913Changes for patch v105
914
915- Unregister SCSI host from <scsi_host_no_list> in <scsi_unregister>
916 Thanks to Zoltán Böszörményi <zboszor@mail.externet.hu>
917
918- Don't save /dev/log in rc.devfs
919
920- Ported to kernel 2.3.4-pre1
921===============================================================================
922Changes for patch v106
923
924- Fixed silly typo in drivers/scsi/st.c
925
926- Improved debugging in <devfs_register>
927===============================================================================
928Changes for patch v107
929
930- Added "diunlink" and "nokmod" boot options
931
932- Removed superfluous warning message in <devfs_d_iput>
933===============================================================================
934Changes for patch v108
935
936- Remove entries when unloading sound module
937===============================================================================
938Changes for patch v109
939
940- Ported to kernel 2.3.6-pre2
941===============================================================================
942Changes for patch v110
943
944- Took account of change to <d_alloc_root>
945===============================================================================
946Changes for patch v111
947
948- Created separate event queue for each mounted devfs
949
950- Removed <devfs_invalidate_dcache>
951
952- Created new ioctl()s for devfsd
953
954- Incremented devfsd protocol revision to 3
955
956- Fixed bug when re-creating directories: contents were lost
957
958- Block access to inodes until devfsd updates permissions
959===============================================================================
960Changes for patch v112
961
962- Modified patch so it applies against 2.3.5 and 2.3.6
963
964- Updated an email address in ChangeLog
965
966- Do not automatically change ownership/protection of /dev/tty<n>
967
968- Updated sample modules.conf
969
970- Switched to sending process uid/gid to devfsd
971
972- Renamed <call_kmod> to <try_modload>
973
974- Added DEVFSD_NOTIFY_LOOKUP event
975
976- Added DEVFSD_NOTIFY_CHANGE event
977
978- Added DEVFSD_NOTIFY_CREATE event
979
980- Incremented devfsd protocol revision to 4
981
982- Moved kernel-specific stuff to include/linux/devfs_fs_kernel.h
983===============================================================================
984Changes for patch v113
985
986- Ported to kernel 2.3.9
987
988- Restricted permissions on some block devices
989===============================================================================
990Changes for patch v114
991
992- Added support for /dev/netlink
993 Thanks to Dennis Hou <smilax@mindmeld.yi.org>
994
995- Return EISDIR rather than EINVAL for read(2) on directories
996
997- Ported to kernel 2.3.10
998===============================================================================
999Changes for patch v115
1000
1001- Added support for all remaining character devices
1002 Thanks to Dennis Hou <smilax@mindmeld.yi.org>
1003
1004- Cleaned up netlink support
1005===============================================================================
1006Changes for patch v116
1007
1008- Added support for /dev/parport%d
1009 Thanks to Tim Waugh <tim@cyberelk.demon.co.uk>
1010
1011- Fixed parallel port ATAPI tape driver
1012
1013- Fixed Atari SLM laser printer driver
1014===============================================================================
1015Changes for patch v117
1016
1017- Added support for COSA card
1018 Thanks to Dennis Hou <smilax@mindmeld.yi.org>
1019
1020- Fixed drivers/char/ppdev.c: missing #include <linux/init.h>
1021
1022- Fixed drivers/char/ftape/zftape/zftape-init.c
1023 Thanks to Vladimir Popov <mashgrad@usa.net>
1024===============================================================================
1025Changes for patch v118
1026
1027- Ported to kernel 2.3.15-pre3
1028
1029- Fixed bug in loop driver
1030
1031- Unregister /dev/lp%d entries in drivers/char/lp.c
1032 Thanks to Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@ds2.pg.gda.pl>
1033===============================================================================
1034Changes for patch v119
1035
1036- Ported to kernel 2.3.16
1037===============================================================================
1038Changes for patch v120
1039
1040- Fixed bug in drivers/scsi/scsi.c
1041
1042- Added /dev/ppp
1043 Thanks to Dennis Hou <smilax@mindmeld.yi.org>
1044
1045- Ported to kernel 2.3.17
1046===============================================================================
1047Changes for patch v121
1048
1049- Fixed bug in drivers/block/loop.c
1050
1051- Ported to kernel 2.3.18
1052===============================================================================
1053Changes for patch v122
1054
1055- Ported to kernel 2.3.19
1056===============================================================================
1057Changes for patch v123
1058
1059- Ported to kernel 2.3.20
1060===============================================================================
1061Changes for patch v124
1062
1063- Ported to kernel 2.3.21
1064===============================================================================
1065Changes for patch v125
1066
1067- Created <devfs_get_info>, <devfs_set_info>,
1068 <devfs_get_first_child> and <devfs_get_next_sibling>
1069 Added <<dir>> parameter to <devfs_register>, <devfs_mk_compat>,
1070 <devfs_mk_dir> and <devfs_find_handle>
1071 Work sponsored by SGI
1072
1073- Fixed apparent bug in COSA driver
1074
1075- Re-instated "scsihosts=" boot option
1076===============================================================================
1077Changes for patch v126
1078
1079- Always create /dev/pts if CONFIG_UNIX98_PTYS=y
1080
1081- Fixed call to <devfs_mk_dir> in drivers/block/ide-disk.c
1082 Thanks to Dennis Hou <smilax@mindmeld.yi.org>
1083
1084- Allow multiple unregistrations
1085
1086- Created /dev/scsi hierarchy
1087 Work sponsored by SGI
1088===============================================================================
1089Changes for patch v127
1090
1091Work sponsored by SGI
1092
1093- No longer disable devpts if devfs enabled (caveat emptor)
1094
1095- Added flags array to struct gendisk and removed code from
1096 drivers/scsi/sd.c
1097
1098- Created /dev/discs hierarchy
1099===============================================================================
1100Changes for patch v128
1101
1102Work sponsored by SGI
1103
1104- Created /dev/cdroms hierarchy
1105===============================================================================
1106Changes for patch v129
1107
1108Work sponsored by SGI
1109
1110- Removed compatibility entries for sound devices
1111
1112- Removed compatibility entries for printer devices
1113
1114- Removed compatibility entries for video4linux devices
1115
1116- Removed compatibility entries for parallel port devices
1117
1118- Removed compatibility entries for frame buffer devices
1119===============================================================================
1120Changes for patch v130
1121
1122Work sponsored by SGI
1123
1124- Added major and minor number to devfsd protocol
1125
1126- Incremented devfsd protocol revision to 5
1127
1128- Removed compatibility entries for SoundBlaster CD-ROMs
1129
1130- Removed compatibility entries for netlink devices
1131
1132- Removed compatibility entries for SCSI generic devices
1133
1134- Removed compatibility entries for SCSI tape devices
1135===============================================================================
1136Changes for patch v131
1137
1138Work sponsored by SGI
1139
1140- Support info pointer for all devfs entry types
1141
1142- Added <<info>> parameter to <devfs_mk_dir> and <devfs_mk_symlink>
1143
1144- Removed /dev/st hierarchy
1145
1146- Removed /dev/sg hierarchy
1147
1148- Removed compatibility entries for loop devices
1149
1150- Removed compatibility entries for IDE tape devices
1151
1152- Removed compatibility entries for SCSI CD-ROMs
1153
1154- Removed /dev/sr hierarchy
1155===============================================================================
1156Changes for patch v132
1157
1158Work sponsored by SGI
1159
1160- Removed compatibility entries for floppy devices
1161
1162- Removed compatibility entries for RAMDISCs
1163
1164- Removed compatibility entries for meta-devices
1165
1166- Removed compatibility entries for SCSI discs
1167
1168- Created <devfs_make_root>
1169
1170- Removed /dev/sd hierarchy
1171
1172- Support "../" when searching devfs namespace
1173
1174- Created /dev/ide/host* hierarchy
1175
1176- Supported IDE hard discs in /dev/ide/host* hierarchy
1177
1178- Removed compatibility entries for IDE discs
1179
1180- Removed /dev/ide/hd hierarchy
1181
1182- Supported IDE CD-ROMs in /dev/ide/host* hierarchy
1183
1184- Removed compatibility entries for IDE CD-ROMs
1185
1186- Removed /dev/ide/cd hierarchy
1187===============================================================================
1188Changes for patch v133
1189
1190Work sponsored by SGI
1191
1192- Created <devfs_get_unregister_slave>
1193
1194- Fixed bug in fs/partitions/check.c when rescanning
1195===============================================================================
1196Changes for patch v134
1197
1198Work sponsored by SGI
1199
1200- Removed /dev/sd, /dev/sr, /dev/st and /dev/sg directories
1201
1202- Removed /dev/ide/hd directory
1203
1204- Exported <devfs_get_parent>
1205
1206- Created <devfs_register_tape> and /dev/tapes hierarchy
1207
1208- Removed /dev/ide/mt hierarchy
1209
1210- Removed /dev/ide/fd hierarchy
1211
1212- Ported to kernel 2.3.25
1213===============================================================================
1214Changes for patch v135
1215
1216Work sponsored by SGI
1217
1218- Removed compatibility entries for virtual console capture devices
1219
1220- Removed unused <devfs_set_symlink_destination>
1221
1222- Removed compatibility entries for serial devices
1223
1224- Removed compatibility entries for console devices
1225
1226- Do not hide entries from devfsd or children
1227
1228- Removed DEVFS_FL_TTY_COMPAT flag
1229
1230- Removed "nottycompat" boot option
1231
1232- Removed <devfs_mk_compat>
1233===============================================================================
1234Changes for patch v136
1235
1236Work sponsored by SGI
1237
1238- Moved BSD pty devices to /dev/pty
1239
1240- Added DEVFS_FL_WAIT flag
1241===============================================================================
1242Changes for patch v137
1243
1244Work sponsored by SGI
1245
1246- Really fixed bug in fs/partitions/check.c when rescanning
1247
1248- Support new "disc" naming scheme in <get_removable_partition>
1249
1250- Allow NULL fops in <devfs_register>
1251
1252- Removed redundant name functions in SCSI disc and IDE drivers
1253===============================================================================
1254Changes for patch v138
1255
1256Work sponsored by SGI
1257
1258- Fixed old bugs in drivers/block/paride/pt.c, drivers/char/tpqic02.c,
1259 drivers/net/wan/cosa.c and drivers/scsi/scsi.c
1260 Thanks to Sergey Kubushin <ksi@ksi-linux.com>
1261
1262- Fall back to major table if NULL fops given to <devfs_register>
1263===============================================================================
1264Changes for patch v139
1265
1266Work sponsored by SGI
1267
1268- Corrected and moved <get_blkfops> and <get_chrfops> declarations
1269 from arch/alpha/kernel/osf_sys.c to include/linux/fs.h
1270
1271- Removed name function from struct gendisk
1272
1273- Updated devfs FAQ
1274===============================================================================
1275Changes for patch v140
1276
1277Work sponsored by SGI
1278
1279- Ported to kernel 2.3.27
1280===============================================================================
1281Changes for patch v141
1282
1283Work sponsored by SGI
1284
1285- Bug fix in arch/m68k/atari/joystick.c
1286
1287- Moved ISDN and capi devices to /dev/isdn
1288===============================================================================
1289Changes for patch v142
1290
1291Work sponsored by SGI
1292
1293- Bug fix in drivers/block/ide-probe.c (patch confusion)
1294===============================================================================
1295Changes for patch v143
1296
1297Work sponsored by SGI
1298
1299- Bug fix in drivers/block/blkpg.c:partition_name()
1300===============================================================================
1301Changes for patch v144
1302
1303Work sponsored by SGI
1304
1305- Ported to kernel 2.3.29
1306
1307- Removed calls to <devfs_register> from cdu31a, cm206, mcd and mcdx
1308 CD-ROM drivers: generic driver handles this now
1309
1310- Moved joystick devices to /dev/joysticks
1311===============================================================================
1312Changes for patch v145
1313
1314Work sponsored by SGI
1315
1316- Ported to kernel 2.3.30-pre3
1317
1318- Register whole-disc entry even for invalid partition tables
1319
1320- Fixed bug in mounting root FS when initrd enabled
1321
1322- Fixed device entry leak with IDE CD-ROMs
1323
1324- Fixed compile problem with drivers/isdn/isdn_common.c
1325
1326- Moved COSA devices to /dev/cosa
1327
1328- Support fifos when unregistering
1329
1330- Created <devfs_register_series> and used in many drivers
1331
1332- Moved Coda devices to /dev/coda
1333
1334- Moved parallel port IDE tapes to /dev/pt
1335
1336- Moved parallel port IDE generic devices to /dev/pg
1337===============================================================================
1338Changes for patch v146
1339
1340Work sponsored by SGI
1341
1342- Removed obsolete DEVFS_FL_COMPAT and DEVFS_FL_TOLERANT flags
1343
1344- Fixed compile problem with fs/coda/psdev.c
1345
1346- Reinstate change to <devfs_register_blkdev> in
1347 drivers/block/ide-probe.c now that fs/isofs/inode.c is fixed
1348
1349- Switched to <devfs_register_blkdev> in drivers/block/floppy.c,
1350 drivers/scsi/sr.c and drivers/block/md.c
1351
1352- Moved DAC960 devices to /dev/dac960
1353===============================================================================
1354Changes for patch v147
1355
1356Work sponsored by SGI
1357
1358- Ported to kernel 2.3.32-pre4
1359===============================================================================
1360Changes for patch v148
1361
1362Work sponsored by SGI
1363
1364- Removed kmod support: use devfsd instead
1365
1366- Moved miscellaneous character devices to /dev/misc
1367===============================================================================
1368Changes for patch v149
1369
1370Work sponsored by SGI
1371
1372- Ensure include/linux/joystick.h is OK for user-space
1373
1374- Improved debugging in <get_vfs_inode>
1375
1376- Ensure dentries created by devfsd will be cleaned up
1377===============================================================================
1378Changes for patch v150
1379
1380Work sponsored by SGI
1381
1382- Ported to kernel 2.3.34
1383===============================================================================
1384Changes for patch v151
1385
1386Work sponsored by SGI
1387
1388- Ported to kernel 2.3.35-pre1
1389
1390- Created <devfs_get_name>
1391===============================================================================
1392Changes for patch v152
1393
1394Work sponsored by SGI
1395
1396- Updated sample modules.conf
1397
1398- Ported to kernel 2.3.36-pre1
1399===============================================================================
1400Changes for patch v153
1401
1402Work sponsored by SGI
1403
1404- Ported to kernel 2.3.42
1405
1406- Removed <devfs_fill_file>
1407===============================================================================
1408Changes for patch v154
1409
1410Work sponsored by SGI
1411
1412- Took account of device number changes for /dev/fb*
1413===============================================================================
1414Changes for patch v155
1415
1416Work sponsored by SGI
1417
1418- Ported to kernel 2.3.43-pre8
1419
1420- Moved /dev/tty0 to /dev/vc/0
1421
1422- Moved sequence number formatting from <_tty_make_name> to drivers
1423===============================================================================
1424Changes for patch v156
1425
1426Work sponsored by SGI
1427
1428- Fixed breakage in drivers/scsi/sd.c due to recent SCSI changes
1429===============================================================================
1430Changes for patch v157
1431
1432Work sponsored by SGI
1433
1434- Ported to kernel 2.3.45
1435===============================================================================
1436Changes for patch v158
1437
1438Work sponsored by SGI
1439
1440- Ported to kernel 2.3.46-pre2
1441===============================================================================
1442Changes for patch v159
1443
1444Work sponsored by SGI
1445
1446- Fixed drivers/block/md.c
1447 Thanks to Mike Galbraith <mikeg@weiden.de>
1448
1449- Documentation fixes
1450
1451- Moved device registration from <lp_init> to <lp_register>
1452 Thanks to Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>
1453===============================================================================
1454Changes for patch v160
1455
1456Work sponsored by SGI
1457
1458- Fixed drivers/char/joystick/joystick.c
1459 Thanks to Vojtech Pavlik <vojtech@suse.cz>
1460
1461- Documentation updates
1462
1463- Fixed arch/i386/kernel/mtrr.c if procfs and devfs not enabled
1464
1465- Fixed drivers/char/stallion.c
1466===============================================================================
1467Changes for patch v161
1468
1469Work sponsored by SGI
1470
1471- Remove /dev/ide when ide-mod is unloaded
1472
1473- Fixed bug in drivers/block/ide-probe.c when secondary but no primary
1474
1475- Added DEVFS_FL_NO_PERSISTENCE flag
1476
1477- Used new DEVFS_FL_NO_PERSISTENCE flag for Unix98 pty slaves
1478
1479- Removed unnecessary call to <update_devfs_inode_from_entry> in
1480 <devfs_readdir>
1481
1482- Only set auto-ownership for /dev/pty/s*
1483===============================================================================
1484Changes for patch v162
1485
1486Work sponsored by SGI
1487
1488- Set inode->i_size to correct size for symlinks
1489 Thanks to Jeremy Fitzhardinge <jeremy@goop.org>
1490
1491- Only give lookup() method to directories to comply with new VFS
1492 assumptions
1493
1494- Remove unnecessary tests in symlink methods
1495
1496- Don't kill existing block ops in <devfs_read_inode>
1497
1498- Restore auto-ownership for /dev/pty/m*
1499===============================================================================
1500Changes for patch v163
1501
1502Work sponsored by SGI
1503
1504- Don't create missing directories in <devfs_find_handle>
1505
1506- Removed Documentation/filesystems/devfs/mk-devlinks
1507
1508- Updated Documentation/filesystems/devfs/README
1509===============================================================================
1510Changes for patch v164
1511
1512Work sponsored by SGI
1513
1514- Fixed CONFIG_DEVFS breakage in drivers/char/serial.c introduced in
1515 linux-2.3.99-pre6-7
1516===============================================================================
1517Changes for patch v165
1518
1519Work sponsored by SGI
1520
1521- Ported to kernel 2.3.99-pre6
1522===============================================================================
1523Changes for patch v166
1524
1525Work sponsored by SGI
1526
1527- Added CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT
1528===============================================================================
1529Changes for patch v167
1530
1531Work sponsored by SGI
1532
1533- Updated Documentation/filesystems/devfs/README
1534
1535- Updated sample modules.conf
1536===============================================================================
1537Changes for patch v168
1538
1539Work sponsored by SGI
1540
1541- Disabled multi-mount capability (use VFS bindings instead)
1542
1543- Updated README from master HTML file
1544===============================================================================
1545Changes for patch v169
1546
1547Work sponsored by SGI
1548
1549- Removed multi-mount code
1550
1551- Removed compatibility macros: VFS has changed too much
1552===============================================================================
1553Changes for patch v170
1554
1555Work sponsored by SGI
1556
1557- Updated README from master HTML file
1558
1559- Merged devfs inode into devfs entry
1560===============================================================================
1561Changes for patch v171
1562
1563Work sponsored by SGI
1564
1565- Updated sample modules.conf
1566
1567- Removed dead code in <devfs_register> which used to call
1568 <free_dentries>
1569
1570- Ported to kernel 2.4.0-test2-pre3
1571===============================================================================
1572Changes for patch v172
1573
1574Work sponsored by SGI
1575
1576- Changed interface to <devfs_register>
1577
1578- Changed interface to <devfs_register_series>
1579===============================================================================
1580Changes for patch v173
1581
1582Work sponsored by SGI
1583
1584- Simplified interface to <devfs_mk_symlink>
1585
1586- Simplified interface to <devfs_mk_dir>
1587
1588- Simplified interface to <devfs_find_handle>
1589===============================================================================
1590Changes for patch v174
1591
1592Work sponsored by SGI
1593
1594- Updated README from master HTML file
1595===============================================================================
1596Changes for patch v175
1597
1598Work sponsored by SGI
1599
1600- DocBook update for fs/devfs/base.c
1601 Thanks to Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>
1602
1603- Removed stale fs/tunnel.c (was never used or completed)
1604===============================================================================
1605Changes for patch v176
1606
1607Work sponsored by SGI
1608
1609- Updated ToDo list
1610
1611- Removed sample modules.conf: now distributed with devfsd
1612
1613- Updated README from master HTML file
1614
1615- Ported to kernel 2.4.0-test3-pre4 (which had devfs-patch-v174)
1616===============================================================================
1617Changes for patch v177
1618
1619- Updated README from master HTML file
1620
1621- Documentation cleanups
1622
1623- Ensure <devfs_generate_path> terminates string for root entry
1624 Thanks to Tim Jansen <tim@tjansen.de>
1625
1626- Exported <devfs_get_name> to modules
1627
1628- Make <devfs_mk_symlink> send events to devfsd
1629
1630- Cleaned up option processing in <devfs_setup>
1631
1632- Fixed bugs in handling symlinks: could leak or cause Oops
1633
1634- Cleaned up directory handling by separating fops
1635 Thanks to Alexander Viro <viro@parcelfarce.linux.theplanet.co.uk>
1636===============================================================================
1637Changes for patch v178
1638
1639- Fixed handling of inverted options in <devfs_setup>
1640===============================================================================
1641Changes for patch v179
1642
1643- Adjusted <try_modload> to account for <devfs_generate_path> fix
1644===============================================================================
1645Changes for patch v180
1646
1647- Fixed !CONFIG_DEVFS_FS stub declaration of <devfs_get_info>
1648===============================================================================
1649Changes for patch v181
1650
1651- Answered question posed by Al Viro and removed his comments from <devfs_open>
1652
1653- Moved setting of registered flag after other fields are changed
1654
1655- Fixed race between <devfsd_close> and <devfsd_notify_one>
1656
1657- Global VFS changes added bogus BKL to devfsd_close(): removed
1658
1659- Widened locking in <devfs_readlink> and <devfs_follow_link>
1660
1661- Replaced <devfsd_read> stack usage with <devfsd_ioctl> kmalloc
1662
1663- Simplified locking in <devfsd_ioctl> and fixed memory leak
1664===============================================================================
1665Changes for patch v182
1666
1667- Created <devfs_*alloc_major> and <devfs_*alloc_devnum>
1668
1669- Removed broken devnum allocation and use <devfs_alloc_devnum>
1670
1671- Fixed old devnum leak by calling new <devfs_dealloc_devnum>
1672
1673- Created <devfs_*alloc_unique_number>
1674
1675- Fixed number leak for /dev/cdroms/cdrom%d
1676
1677- Fixed number leak for /dev/discs/disc%d
1678===============================================================================
1679Changes for patch v183
1680
1681- Fixed bug in <devfs_setup> which could hang boot process
1682===============================================================================
1683Changes for patch v184
1684
1685- Documentation typo fix for fs/devfs/util.c
1686
1687- Fixed drivers/char/stallion.c for devfs
1688
1689- Added DEVFSD_NOTIFY_DELETE event
1690
1691- Updated README from master HTML file
1692
1693- Removed #include <asm/segment.h> from fs/devfs/base.c
1694===============================================================================
1695Changes for patch v185
1696
1697- Made <block_semaphore> and <char_semaphore> in fs/devfs/util.c
1698 private
1699
1700- Fixed inode table races by removing it and using inode->u.generic_ip
1701 instead
1702
1703- Moved <devfs_read_inode> into <get_vfs_inode>
1704
1705- Moved <devfs_write_inode> into <devfs_notify_change>
1706===============================================================================
1707Changes for patch v186
1708
1709- Fixed race in <devfs_do_symlink> for uni-processor
1710
1711- Updated README from master HTML file
1712===============================================================================
1713Changes for patch v187
1714
1715- Fixed drivers/char/stallion.c for devfs
1716
1717- Fixed drivers/char/rocket.c for devfs
1718
1719- Fixed bug in <devfs_alloc_unique_number>: limited to 128 numbers
1720===============================================================================
1721Changes for patch v188
1722
1723- Updated major masks in fs/devfs/util.c up to Linus' "no new majors"
1724 proclamation. Block: were 126 now 122 free, char: were 26 now 19 free
1725
1726- Updated README from master HTML file
1727
1728- Removed remnant of multi-mount support in <devfs_mknod>
1729
1730- Removed unused DEVFS_FL_SHOW_UNREG flag
1731===============================================================================
1732Changes for patch v189
1733
1734- Removed nlink field from struct devfs_inode
1735
1736- Removed auto-ownership for /dev/pty/* (BSD ptys) and used
1737 DEVFS_FL_CURRENT_OWNER|DEVFS_FL_NO_PERSISTENCE for /dev/pty/s* (just
1738 like Unix98 pty slaves) and made /dev/pty/m* rw-rw-rw- access
1739===============================================================================
1740Changes for patch v190
1741
1742- Updated README from master HTML file
1743
1744- Replaced BKL with global rwsem to protect symlink data (quick and
1745 dirty hack)
1746===============================================================================
1747Changes for patch v191
1748
1749- Replaced global rwsem for symlink with per-link refcount
1750===============================================================================
1751Changes for patch v192
1752
1753- Removed unnecessary #ifdef CONFIG_DEVFS_FS from arch/i386/kernel/mtrr.c
1754
1755- Ported to kernel 2.4.10-pre11
1756
1757- Set inode->i_mapping->a_ops for block nodes in <get_vfs_inode>
1758===============================================================================
1759Changes for patch v193
1760
1761- Went back to global rwsem for symlinks (refcount scheme no good)
1762===============================================================================
1763Changes for patch v194
1764
1765- Fixed overrun in <devfs_link> by removing function (not needed)
1766
1767- Updated README from master HTML file
1768===============================================================================
1769Changes for patch v195
1770
1771- Fixed buffer underrun in <try_modload>
1772
1773- Moved down_read() from <search_for_entry_in_dir> to <find_entry>
1774===============================================================================
1775Changes for patch v196
1776
1777- Fixed race in <devfsd_ioctl> when setting event mask
1778 Thanks to Kari Hurtta <hurtta@leija.mh.fmi.fi>
1779
1780- Avoid deadlock in <devfs_follow_link> by using temporary buffer
1781===============================================================================
1782Changes for patch v197
1783
1784- First release of new locking code for devfs core (v1.0)
1785
1786- Fixed bug in drivers/cdrom/cdrom.c
1787===============================================================================
1788Changes for patch v198
1789
1790- Discard temporary buffer, now use "%s" for dentry names
1791
1792- Don't generate path in <try_modload>: use fake entry instead
1793
1794- Use "existing" directory in <_devfs_make_parent_for_leaf>
1795
1796- Use slab cache rather than fixed buffer for devfsd events
1797===============================================================================
1798Changes for patch v199
1799
1800- Removed obsolete usage of DEVFS_FL_NO_PERSISTENCE
1801
1802- Send DEVFSD_NOTIFY_REGISTERED events in <devfs_mk_dir>
1803
1804- Fixed locking bug in <devfs_d_revalidate_wait> due to typo
1805
1806- Do not send CREATE, CHANGE, ASYNC_OPEN or DELETE events from devfsd
1807 or children
1808===============================================================================
1809Changes for patch v200
1810
1811- Ported to kernel 2.5.1-pre2
1812===============================================================================
1813Changes for patch v201
1814
1815- Fixed bug in <devfsd_read>: was dereferencing freed pointer
1816===============================================================================
1817Changes for patch v202
1818
1819- Fixed bug in <devfsd_close>: was dereferencing freed pointer
1820
1821- Added process group check for devfsd privileges
1822===============================================================================
1823Changes for patch v203
1824
1825- Use SLAB_ATOMIC in <devfsd_notify_de> from <devfs_d_delete>
1826===============================================================================
1827Changes for patch v204
1828
1829- Removed long obsolete rc.devfs
1830
1831- Return old entry in <devfs_mk_dir> for 2.4.x kernels
1832
1833- Updated README from master HTML file
1834
1835- Increment refcount on module in <check_disc_changed>
1836
1837- Created <devfs_get_handle> and exported <devfs_put>
1838
1839- Increment refcount on module in <devfs_get_ops>
1840
1841- Created <devfs_put_ops> and used where needed to fix races
1842
1843- Added clarifying comments in response to preliminary EMC code review
1844
1845- Added poisoning to <devfs_put>
1846
1847- Improved debugging messages
1848
1849- Fixed unregister bugs in drivers/md/lvm-fs.c
1850===============================================================================
1851Changes for patch v205
1852
1853- Corrected (made useful) debugging message in <unregister>
1854
1855- Moved <kmem_cache_create> in <mount_devfs_fs> to <init_devfs_fs>
1856
1857- Fixed drivers/md/lvm-fs.c to create "lvm" entry
1858
1859- Added magic number to guard against scribbling drivers
1860
1861- Only return old entry in <devfs_mk_dir> if a directory
1862
1863- Defined macros for error and debug messages
1864
1865- Updated README from master HTML file
1866===============================================================================
1867Changes for patch v206
1868
1869- Added support for multiple Compaq cpqarray controllers
1870
1871- Fixed (rare, old) race in <devfs_lookup>
1872===============================================================================
1873Changes for patch v207
1874
1875- Fixed deadlock bug in <devfs_d_revalidate_wait>
1876
1877- Tag VFS deletable in <devfs_mk_symlink> if handle ignored
1878
1879- Updated README from master HTML file
1880===============================================================================
1881Changes for patch v208
1882
1883- Added KERN_* to remaining messages
1884
1885- Cleaned up declaration of <stat_read>
1886
1887- Updated README from master HTML file
1888===============================================================================
1889Changes for patch v209
1890
1891- Updated README from master HTML file
1892
1893- Removed silently introduced calls to lock_kernel() and
1894 unlock_kernel() due to recent VFS locking changes. BKL isn't
1895 required in devfs
1896
1897- Changed <devfs_rmdir> to allow later additions if not yet empty
1898
1899- Added calls to <devfs_register_partitions> in drivers/block/blkpc.c
1900 <add_partition> and <del_partition>
1901
1902- Fixed bug in <devfs_alloc_unique_number>: was clearing beyond
1903 bitfield
1904
1905- Fixed bitfield data type for <devfs_*alloc_devnum>
1906
1907- Made major bitfield type and initialiser 64 bit safe
1908===============================================================================
1909Changes for patch v210
1910
1911- Updated fs/devfs/util.c to fix shift warning on 64 bit machines
1912 Thanks to Anton Blanchard <anton@samba.org>
1913
1914- Updated README from master HTML file
1915===============================================================================
1916Changes for patch v211
1917
1918- Do not put miscellaneous character devices in /dev/misc if they
1919 specify their own directory (i.e. contain a '/' character)
1920
1921- Copied macro for error messages from fs/devfs/base.c to
1922 fs/devfs/util.c and made use of this macro
1923
1924- Removed 2.4.x compatibility code from fs/devfs/base.c
1925===============================================================================
1926Changes for patch v212
1927
1928- Added BKL to <devfs_open> because drivers still need it
1929===============================================================================
1930Changes for patch v213
1931
1932- Protected <scan_dir_for_removable> and <get_removable_partition>
1933 from changing directory contents
1934===============================================================================
1935Changes for patch v214
1936
1937- Switched to ISO C structure field initialisers
1938
1939- Switch to set_current_state() and move before add_wait_queue()
1940
1941- Updated README from master HTML file
1942
1943- Fixed devfs entry leak in <devfs_readdir> when *readdir fails
1944===============================================================================
1945Changes for patch v215
1946
1947- Created <devfs_find_and_unregister>
1948
1949- Switched many functions from <devfs_find_handle> to
1950 <devfs_find_and_unregister>
1951
1952- Switched many functions from <devfs_find_handle> to <devfs_get_handle>
1953===============================================================================
1954Changes for patch v216
1955
1956- Switched arch/ia64/sn/io/hcl.c from <devfs_find_handle> to
1957 <devfs_get_handle>
1958
1959- Removed deprecated <devfs_find_handle>
1960===============================================================================
1961Changes for patch v217
1962
1963- Exported <devfs_find_and_unregister> and <devfs_only> to modules
1964
1965- Updated README from master HTML file
1966
1967- Fixed module unload race in <devfs_open>
1968===============================================================================
1969Changes for patch v218
1970
1971- Removed DEVFS_FL_AUTO_OWNER flag
1972
1973- Switched lingering structure field initialiser to ISO C
1974
1975- Added locking when setting/clearing flags
1976
1977- Documentation fix in fs/devfs/util.c
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/README b/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/README
deleted file mode 100644
index aabfba24bc2e..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/README
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1959 +0,0 @@
1Devfs (Device File System) FAQ
2
3
4Linux Devfs (Device File System) FAQ
5Richard Gooch
620-AUG-2002
7
8
9Document languages:
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
18
19NOTE: the master copy of this document is available online at:
20
21http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/docs/devfs.html
22and looks much better than the text version distributed with the
23kernel sources. A mirror site is available at:
24
25http://www.ras.ucalgary.ca/~rgooch/linux/docs/devfs.html
26
27There is also an optional daemon that may be used with devfs. You can
28find out more about it at:
29
30http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/
31
32A mailing list is available which you may subscribe to. Send
33email
34to majordomo@oss.sgi.com with the following line in the
35body of the message:
36subscribe devfs
37To unsubscribe, send the message body:
38unsubscribe devfs
39instead. The list is archived at
40
41http://oss.sgi.com/projects/devfs/archive/.
42
43-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
44
45Contents
46
47
48What is it?
49
50Why do it?
51
52Who else does it?
53
54How it works
55
56Operational issues (essential reading)
57
58Instructions for the impatient
59Permissions persistence across reboots
60Dealing with drivers without devfs support
61All the way with Devfs
62Other Issues
63Kernel Naming Scheme
64Devfsd Naming Scheme
65Old Compatibility Names
66SCSI Host Probing Issues
67
68
69
70Device drivers currently ported
71
72Allocation of Device Numbers
73
74Questions and Answers
75
76Making things work
77Alternatives to devfs
78What I don't like about devfs
79How to report bugs
80Strange kernel messages
81Compilation problems with devfsd
82
83
84Other resources
85
86Translations of this document
87
88
89-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
90
91
92What is it?
93
94Devfs is an alternative to "real" character and block special devices
95on your root filesystem. Kernel device drivers can register devices by
96name rather than major and minor numbers. These devices will appear in
97devfs automatically, with whatever default ownership and
98protection the driver specified. A daemon (devfsd) can be used to
99override these defaults. Devfs has been in the kernel since 2.3.46.
100
101NOTE that devfs is entirely optional. If you prefer the old
102disc-based device nodes, then simply leave CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=n (the
103default). In this case, nothing will change. ALSO NOTE that if you do
104enable devfs, the defaults are such that full compatibility is
105maintained with the old devices names.
106
107There are two aspects to devfs: one is the underlying device
108namespace, which is a namespace just like any mounted filesystem. The
109other aspect is the filesystem code which provides a view of the
110device namespace. The reason I make a distinction is because devfs
111can be mounted many times, with each mount showing the same device
112namespace. Changes made are global to all mounted devfs filesystems.
113Also, because the devfs namespace exists without any devfs mounts, you
114can easily mount the root filesystem by referring to an entry in the
115devfs namespace.
116
117
118The cost of devfs is a small increase in kernel code size and memory
119usage. About 7 pages of code (some of that in __init sections) and 72
120bytes for each entry in the namespace. A modest system has only a
121couple of hundred device entries, so this costs a few more
122pages. Compare this with the suggestion to put /dev on a <a
123href="#why-faq-ramdisc">ramdisc.
124
125On a typical machine, the cost is under 0.2 percent. On a modest
126system with 64 MBytes of RAM, the cost is under 0.1 percent. The
127accusations of "bloatware" levelled at devfs are not justified.
128
129-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
130
131
132Why do it?
133
134There are several problems that devfs addresses. Some of these
135problems are more serious than others (depending on your point of
136view), and some can be solved without devfs. However, the totality of
137these problems really calls out for devfs.
138
139The choice is a patchwork of inefficient user space solutions, which
140are complex and likely to be fragile, or to use a simple and efficient
141devfs which is robust.
142
143There have been many counter-proposals to devfs, all seeking to
144provide some of the benefits without actually implementing devfs. So
145far there has been an absence of code and no proposed alternative has
146been able to provide all the features that devfs does. Further,
147alternative proposals require far more complexity in user-space (and
148still deliver less functionality than devfs). Some people have the
149mantra of reducing "kernel bloat", but don't consider the effects on
150user-space.
151
152A good solution limits the total complexity of kernel-space and
153user-space.
154
155
156Major&minor allocation
157
158The existing scheme requires the allocation of major and minor device
159numbers for each and every device. This means that a central
160co-ordinating authority is required to issue these device numbers
161(unless you're developing a "private" device driver), in order to
162preserve uniqueness. Devfs shifts the burden to a namespace. This may
163not seem like a huge benefit, but actually it is. Since driver authors
164will naturally choose a device name which reflects the functionality
165of the device, there is far less potential for namespace conflict.
166Solving this requires a kernel change.
167
168/dev management
169
170Because you currently access devices through device nodes, these must
171be created by the system administrator. For standard devices you can
172usually find a MAKEDEV programme which creates all these (hundreds!)
173of nodes. This means that changes in the kernel must be reflected by
174changes in the MAKEDEV programme, or else the system administrator
175creates device nodes by hand.
176
177The basic problem is that there are two separate databases of
178major and minor numbers. One is in the kernel and one is in /dev (or
179in a MAKEDEV programme, if you want to look at it that way). This is
180duplication of information, which is not good practice.
181Solving this requires a kernel change.
182
183/dev growth
184
185A typical /dev has over 1200 nodes! Most of these devices simply don't
186exist because the hardware is not available. A huge /dev increases the
187time to access devices (I'm just referring to the dentry lookup times
188and the time taken to read inodes off disc: the next subsection shows
189some more horrors).
190
191An example of how big /dev can grow is if we consider SCSI devices:
192
193host 6 bits (say up to 64 hosts on a really big machine)
194channel 4 bits (say up to 16 SCSI buses per host)
195id 4 bits
196lun 3 bits
197partition 6 bits
198TOTAL 23 bits
199
200
201This requires 8 Mega (1024*1024) inodes if we want to store all
202possible device nodes. Even if we scrap everything but id,partition
203and assume a single host adapter with a single SCSI bus and only one
204logical unit per SCSI target (id), that's still 10 bits or 1024
205inodes. Each VFS inode takes around 256 bytes (kernel 2.1.78), so
206that's 256 kBytes of inode storage on disc (assuming real inodes take
207a similar amount of space as VFS inodes). This is actually not so bad,
208because disc is cheap these days. Embedded systems would care about
209256 kBytes of /dev inodes, but you could argue that embedded systems
210would have hand-tuned /dev directories. I've had to do just that on my
211embedded systems, but I would rather just leave it to devfs.
212
213Another issue is the time taken to lookup an inode when first
214referenced. Not only does this take time in scanning through a list in
215memory, but also the seek times to read the inodes off disc.
216This could be solved in user-space using a clever programme which
217scanned the kernel logs and deleted /dev entries which are not
218available and created them when they were available. This programme
219would need to be run every time a new module was loaded, which would
220slow things down a lot.
221
222There is an existing programme called scsidev which will automatically
223create device nodes for SCSI devices. It can do this by scanning files
224in /proc/scsi. Unfortunately, to extend this idea to other device
225nodes would require significant modifications to existing drivers (so
226they too would provide information in /proc). This is a non-trivial
227change (I should know: devfs has had to do something similar). Once
228you go to this much effort, you may as well use devfs itself (which
229also provides this information). Furthermore, such a system would
230likely be implemented in an ad-hoc fashion, as different drivers will
231provide their information in different ways.
232
233Devfs is much cleaner, because it (naturally) has a uniform mechanism
234to provide this information: the device nodes themselves!
235
236
237Node to driver file_operations translation
238
239There is an important difference between the way disc-based character
240and block nodes and devfs entries make the connection between an entry
241in /dev and the actual device driver.
242
243With the current 8 bit major and minor numbers the connection between
244disc-based c&b nodes and per-major drivers is done through a
245fixed-length table of 128 entries. The various filesystem types set
246the inode operations for c&b nodes to {chr,blk}dev_inode_operations,
247so when a device is opened a few quick levels of indirection bring us
248to the driver file_operations.
249
250For miscellaneous character devices a second step is required: there
251is a scan for the driver entry with the same minor number as the file
252that was opened, and the appropriate minor open method is called. This
253scanning is done *every time* you open a device node. Potentially, you
254may be searching through dozens of misc. entries before you find your
255open method. While not an enormous performance overhead, this does
256seem pointless.
257
258Linux *must* move beyond the 8 bit major and minor barrier,
259somehow. If we simply increase each to 16 bits, then the indexing
260scheme used for major driver lookup becomes untenable, because the
261major tables (one each for character and block devices) would need to
262be 64 k entries long (512 kBytes on x86, 1 MByte for 64 bit
263systems). So we would have to use a scheme like that used for
264miscellaneous character devices, which means the search time goes up
265linearly with the average number of major device drivers on your
266system. Not all "devices" are hardware, some are higher-level drivers
267like KGI, so you can get more "devices" without adding hardware
268You can improve this by creating an ordered (balanced:-)
269binary tree, in which case your search time becomes log(N).
270Alternatively, you can use hashing to speed up the search.
271But why do that search at all if you don't have to? Once again, it
272seems pointless.
273
274Note that devfs doesn't use the major&minor system. For devfs
275entries, the connection is done when you lookup the /dev entry. When
276devfs_register() is called, an internal table is appended which has
277the entry name and the file_operations. If the dentry cache doesn't
278have the /dev entry already, this internal table is scanned to get the
279file_operations, and an inode is created. If the dentry cache already
280has the entry, there is *no lookup time* (other than the dentry scan
281itself, but we can't avoid that anyway, and besides Linux dentries
282cream other OS's which don't have them:-). Furthermore, the number of
283node entries in a devfs is only the number of available device
284entries, not the number of *conceivable* entries. Even if you remove
285unnecessary entries in a disc-based /dev, the number of conceivable
286entries remains the same: you just limit yourself in order to save
287space.
288
289Devfs provides a fast connection between a VFS node and the device
290driver, in a scalable way.
291
292/dev as a system administration tool
293
294Right now /dev contains a list of conceivable devices, most of which I
295don't have. Devfs only shows those devices available on my
296system. This means that listing /dev is a handy way of checking what
297devices are available.
298
299Major&minor size
300
301Existing major and minor numbers are limited to 8 bits each. This is
302now a limiting factor for some drivers, particularly the SCSI disc
303driver, which consumes a single major number. Only 16 discs are
304supported, and each disc may have only 15 partitions. Maybe this isn't
305a problem for you, but some of us are building huge Linux systems with
306disc arrays. With devfs an arbitrary pointer can be associated with
307each device entry, which can be used to give an effective 32 bit
308device identifier (i.e. that's like having a 32 bit minor
309number). Since this is private to the kernel, there are no C library
310compatibility issues which you would have with increasing major and
311minor number sizes. See the section on "Allocation of Device Numbers"
312for details on maintaining compatibility with userspace.
313
314Solving this requires a kernel change.
315
316Since writing this, the kernel has been modified so that the SCSI disc
317driver has more major numbers allocated to it and now supports up to
318128 discs. Since these major numbers are non-contiguous (a result of
319unplanned expansion), the implementation is a little more cumbersome
320than originally.
321
322Just like the changes to IPv4 to fix impending limitations in the
323address space, people find ways around the limitations. In the long
324run, however, solutions like IPv6 or devfs can't be put off forever.
325
326Read-only root filesystem
327
328Having your device nodes on the root filesystem means that you can't
329operate properly with a read-only root filesystem. This is because you
330want to change ownerships and protections of tty devices. Existing
331practice prevents you using a CD-ROM as your root filesystem for a
332*real* system. Sure, you can boot off a CD-ROM, but you can't change
333tty ownerships, so it's only good for installing.
334
335Also, you can't use a shared NFS root filesystem for a cluster of
336discless Linux machines (having tty ownerships changed on a common
337/dev is not good). Nor can you embed your root filesystem in a
338ROM-FS.
339
340You can get around this by creating a RAMDISC at boot time, making
341an ext2 filesystem in it, mounting it somewhere and copying the
342contents of /dev into it, then unmounting it and mounting it over
343/dev.
344
345A devfs is a cleaner way of solving this.
346
347Non-Unix root filesystem
348
349Non-Unix filesystems (such as NTFS) can't be used for a root
350filesystem because they variously don't support character and block
351special files or symbolic links. You can't have a separate disc-based
352or RAMDISC-based filesystem mounted on /dev because you need device
353nodes before you can mount these. Devfs can be mounted without any
354device nodes. Devlinks won't work because symlinks aren't supported.
355An alternative solution is to use initrd to mount a RAMDISC initial
356root filesystem (which is populated with a minimal set of device
357nodes), and then construct a new /dev in another RAMDISC, and finally
358switch to your non-Unix root filesystem. This requires clever boot
359scripts and a fragile and conceptually complex boot procedure.
360
361Devfs solves this in a robust and conceptually simple way.
362
363PTY security
364
365Current pseudo-tty (pty) devices are owned by root and read-writable
366by everyone. The user of a pty-pair cannot change
367ownership/protections without being suid-root.
368
369This could be solved with a secure user-space daemon which runs as
370root and does the actual creation of pty-pairs. Such a daemon would
371require modification to *every* programme that wants to use this new
372mechanism. It also slows down creation of pty-pairs.
373
374An alternative is to create a new open_pty() syscall which does much
375the same thing as the user-space daemon. Once again, this requires
376modifications to pty-handling programmes.
377
378The devfs solution allows a device driver to "tag" certain device
379files so that when an unopened device is opened, the ownerships are
380changed to the current euid and egid of the opening process, and the
381protections are changed to the default registered by the driver. When
382the device is closed ownership is set back to root and protections are
383set back to read-write for everybody. No programme need be changed.
384The devpts filesystem provides this auto-ownership feature for Unix98
385ptys. It doesn't support old-style pty devices, nor does it have all
386the other features of devfs.
387
388Intelligent device management
389
390Devfs implements a simple yet powerful protocol for communication with
391a device management daemon (devfsd) which runs in user space. It is
392possible to send a message (either synchronously or asynchronously) to
393devfsd on any event, such as registration/unregistration of device
394entries, opening and closing devices, looking up inodes, scanning
395directories and more. This has many possibilities. Some of these are
396already implemented. See:
397
398
399http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/
400
401Device entry registration events can be used by devfsd to change
402permissions of newly-created device nodes. This is one mechanism to
403control device permissions.
404
405Device entry registration/unregistration events can be used to run
406programmes or scripts. This can be used to provide automatic mounting
407of filesystems when a new block device media is inserted into the
408drive.
409
410Asynchronous device open and close events can be used to implement
411clever permissions management. For example, the default permissions on
412/dev/dsp do not allow everybody to read from the device. This is
413sensible, as you don't want some remote user recording what you say at
414your console. However, the console user is also prevented from
415recording. This behaviour is not desirable. With asynchronous device
416open and close events, you can have devfsd run a programme or script
417when console devices are opened to change the ownerships for *other*
418device nodes (such as /dev/dsp). On closure, you can run a different
419script to restore permissions. An advantage of this scheme over
420modifying the C library tty handling is that this works even if your
421programme crashes (how many times have you seen the utmp database with
422lingering entries for non-existent logins?).
423
424Synchronous device open events can be used to perform intelligent
425device access protections. Before the device driver open() method is
426called, the daemon must first validate the open attempt, by running an
427external programme or script. This is far more flexible than access
428control lists, as access can be determined on the basis of other
429system conditions instead of just the UID and GID.
430
431Inode lookup events can be used to authenticate module autoload
432requests. Instead of using kmod directly, the event is sent to
433devfsd which can implement an arbitrary authentication before loading
434the module itself.
435
436Inode lookup events can also be used to construct arbitrary
437namespaces, without having to resort to populating devfs with symlinks
438to devices that don't exist.
439
440Speculative Device Scanning
441
442Consider an application (like cdparanoia) that wants to find all
443CD-ROM devices on the system (SCSI, IDE and other types), whether or
444not their respective modules are loaded. The application must
445speculatively open certain device nodes (such as /dev/sr0 for the SCSI
446CD-ROMs) in order to make sure the module is loaded. This requires
447that all Linux distributions follow the standard device naming scheme
448(last time I looked RedHat did things differently). Devfs solves the
449naming problem.
450
451The same application also wants to see which devices are actually
452available on the system. With the existing system it needs to read the
453/dev directory and speculatively open each /dev/sr* device to
454determine if the device exists or not. With a large /dev this is an
455inefficient operation, especially if there are many /dev/sr* nodes. A
456solution like scsidev could reduce the number of /dev/sr* entries (but
457of course that also requires all that inefficient directory scanning).
458
459With devfs, the application can open the /dev/sr directory
460(which triggers the module autoloading if required), and proceed to
461read /dev/sr. Since only the available devices will have
462entries, there are no inefficencies in directory scanning or device
463openings.
464
465-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
466
467Who else does it?
468
469FreeBSD has a devfs implementation. Solaris and AIX each have a
470pseudo-devfs (something akin to scsidev but for all devices, with some
471unspecified kernel support). BeOS, Plan9 and QNX also have it. SGI's
472IRIX 6.4 and above also have a device filesystem.
473
474While we shouldn't just automatically do something because others do
475it, we should not ignore the work of others either. FreeBSD has a lot
476of competent people working on it, so their opinion should not be
477blithely ignored.
478
479-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
480
481
482How it works
483
484Registering device entries
485
486For every entry (device node) in a devfs-based /dev a driver must call
487devfs_register(). This adds the name of the device entry, the
488file_operations structure pointer and a few other things to an
489internal table. Device entries may be added and removed at any
490time. When a device entry is registered, it automagically appears in
491any mounted devfs'.
492
493Inode lookup
494
495When a lookup operation on an entry is performed and if there is no
496driver information for that entry devfs will attempt to call
497devfsd. If still no driver information can be found then a negative
498dentry is yielded and the next stage operation will be called by the
499VFS (such as create() or mknod() inode methods). If driver information
500can be found, an inode is created (if one does not exist already) and
501all is well.
502
503Manually creating device nodes
504
505The mknod() method allows you to create an ordinary named pipe in the
506devfs, or you can create a character or block special inode if one
507does not already exist. You may wish to create a character or block
508special inode so that you can set permissions and ownership. Later, if
509a device driver registers an entry with the same name, the
510permissions, ownership and times are retained. This is how you can set
511the protections on a device even before the driver is loaded. Once you
512create an inode it appears in the directory listing.
513
514Unregistering device entries
515
516A device driver calls devfs_unregister() to unregister an entry.
517
518Chroot() gaols
519
5202.2.x kernels
521
522The semantics of inode creation are different when devfs is mounted
523with the "explicit" option. Now, when a device entry is registered, it
524will not appear until you use mknod() to create the device. It doesn't
525matter if you mknod() before or after the device is registered with
526devfs_register(). The purpose of this behaviour is to support
527chroot(2) gaols, where you want to mount a minimal devfs inside the
528gaol. Only the devices you specifically want to be available (through
529your mknod() setup) will be accessible.
530
5312.4.x kernels
532
533As of kernel 2.3.99, the VFS has had the ability to rebind parts of
534the global filesystem namespace into another part of the namespace.
535This now works even at the leaf-node level, which means that
536individual files and device nodes may be bound into other parts of the
537namespace. This is like making links, but better, because it works
538across filesystems (unlike hard links) and works through chroot()
539gaols (unlike symbolic links).
540
541Because of these improvements to the VFS, the multi-mount capability
542in devfs is no longer needed. The administrator may create a minimal
543device tree inside a chroot(2) gaol by using VFS bindings. As this
544provides most of the features of the devfs multi-mount capability, I
545removed the multi-mount support code (after issuing an RFC). This
546yielded code size reductions and simplifications.
547
548If you want to construct a minimal chroot() gaol, the following
549command should suffice:
550
551mount --bind /dev/null /gaol/dev/null
552
553
554Repeat for other device nodes you want to expose. Simple!
555
556-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
557
558
559Operational issues
560
561
562Instructions for the impatient
563
564Nobody likes reading documentation. People just want to get in there
565and play. So this section tells you quickly the steps you need to take
566to run with devfs mounted over /dev. Skip these steps and you will end
567up with a nearly unbootable system. Subsequent sections describe the
568issues in more detail, and discuss non-essential configuration
569options.
570
571Devfsd
572OK, if you're reading this, I assume you want to play with
573devfs. First you should ensure that /usr/src/linux contains a
574recent kernel source tree. Then you need to compile devfsd, the device
575management daemon, available at
576
577http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/.
578Because the kernel has a naming scheme
579which is quite different from the old naming scheme, you need to
580install devfsd so that software and configuration files that use the
581old naming scheme will not break.
582
583Compile and install devfsd. You will be provided with a default
584configuration file /etc/devfsd.conf which will provide
585compatibility symlinks for the old naming scheme. Don't change this
586config file unless you know what you're doing. Even if you think you
587do know what you're doing, don't change it until you've followed all
588the steps below and booted a devfs-enabled system and verified that it
589works.
590
591Now edit your main system boot script so that devfsd is started at the
592very beginning (before any filesystem
593checks). /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is often the main boot script
594on systems with SysV-style boot scripts. On systems with BSD-style
595boot scripts it is often /etc/rc. Also check
596/sbin/rc.
597
598NOTE that the line you put into the boot
599script should be exactly:
600
601/sbin/devfsd /dev
602
603DO NOT use some special daemon-launching
604programme, otherwise the boot script may not wait for devfsd to finish
605initialising.
606
607System Libraries
608There may still be some problems because of broken software making
609assumptions about device names. In particular, some software does not
610handle devices which are symbolic links. If you are running a libc 5
611based system, install libc 5.4.44 (if you have libc 5.4.46, go back to
612libc 5.4.44, which is actually correct). If you are running a glibc
613based system, make sure you have glibc 2.1.3 or later.
614
615/etc/securetty
616PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) is supposed to be a flexible
617mechanism for providing better user authentication and access to
618services. Unfortunately, it's also fragile, complex and undocumented
619(check out RedHat 6.1, and probably other distributions as well). PAM
620has problems with symbolic links. Append the following lines to your
621/etc/securetty file:
622
623vc/1
624vc/2
625vc/3
626vc/4
627vc/5
628vc/6
629vc/7
630vc/8
631
632This will not weaken security. If you have a version of util-linux
633earlier than 2.10.h, please upgrade to 2.10.h or later. If you
634absolutely cannot upgrade, then also append the following lines to
635your /etc/securetty file:
636
6371
6382
6393
6404
6415
6426
6437
6448
645
646This may potentially weaken security by allowing root logins over the
647network (a password is still required, though). However, since there
648are problems with dealing with symlinks, I'm suspicious of the level
649of security offered in any case.
650
651XFree86
652While not essential, it's probably a good idea to upgrade to XFree86
6534.0, as patches went in to make it more devfs-friendly. If you don't,
654you'll probably need to apply the following patch to
655/etc/security/console.perms so that ordinary users can run
656startx. Note that not all distributions have this file (e.g. Debian),
657so if it's not present, don't worry about it.
658
659--- /etc/security/console.perms.orig Sat Apr 17 16:26:47 1999
660+++ /etc/security/console.perms Fri Feb 25 23:53:55 2000
661@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
662 # man 5 console.perms
663
664 # file classes -- these are regular expressions
665-<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9]
666+<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* vc/[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9]
667
668 # device classes -- these are shell-style globs
669 <floppy>=/dev/fd[0-1]*
670
671If the patch does not apply, then change the line:
672
673<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9]
674
675with:
676
677<console>=tty[0-9][0-9]* vc/[0-9][0-9]* :[0-9]\.[0-9] :[0-9]
678
679
680Disable devpts
681I've had a report of devpts mounted on /dev/pts not working
682correctly. Since devfs will also manage /dev/pts, there is no
683need to mount devpts as well. You should either edit your
684/etc/fstab so devpts is not mounted, or disable devpts from
685your kernel configuration.
686
687Unsupported drivers
688Not all drivers have devfs support. If you depend on one of these
689drivers, you will need to create a script or tarfile that you can use
690at boot time to create device nodes as appropriate. There is a
691section which describes this. Another
692section lists the drivers which have
693devfs support.
694
695/dev/mouse
696
697Many disributions configure /dev/mouse to be the mouse device
698for XFree86 and GPM. I actually think this is a bad idea, because it
699adds another level of indirection. When looking at a config file, if
700you see /dev/mouse you're left wondering which mouse
701is being referred to. Hence I recommend putting the actual mouse
702device (for example /dev/psaux) into your
703/etc/X11/XF86Config file (and similarly for the GPM
704configuration file).
705
706Alternatively, use the same technique used for unsupported drivers
707described above.
708
709The Kernel
710Finally, you need to make sure devfs is compiled into your kernel. Set
711CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL=y, CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y and CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT=y by
712using favourite configuration tool (i.e. make config or
713make xconfig) and then make clean and then recompile your kernel and
714modules. At boot, devfs will be mounted onto /dev.
715
716If you encounter problems booting (for example if you forgot a
717configuration step), you can pass devfs=nomount at the kernel
718boot command line. This will prevent the kernel from mounting devfs at
719boot time onto /dev.
720
721In general, a kernel built with CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y but without mounting
722devfs onto /dev is completely safe, and requires no
723configuration changes. One exception to take note of is when
724LABEL= directives are used in /etc/fstab. In this
725case you will be unable to boot properly. This is because the
726mount(8) programme uses /proc/partitions as part of
727the volume label search process, and the device names it finds are not
728available, because setting CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y changes the names in
729/proc/partitions, irrespective of whether devfs is mounted.
730
731Now you've finished all the steps required. You're now ready to boot
732your shiny new kernel. Enjoy.
733
734Changing the configuration
735
736OK, you've now booted a devfs-enabled system, and everything works.
737Now you may feel like changing the configuration (common targets are
738/etc/fstab and /etc/devfsd.conf). Since you have a
739system that works, if you make any changes and it doesn't work, you
740now know that you only have to restore your configuration files to the
741default and it will work again.
742
743
744Permissions persistence across reboots
745
746If you don't use mknod(2) to create a device file, nor use chmod(2) or
747chown(2) to change the ownerships/permissions, the inode ctime will
748remain at 0 (the epoch, 12 am, 1-JAN-1970, GMT). Anything with a ctime
749later than this has had it's ownership/permissions changed. Hence, a
750simple script or programme may be used to tar up all changed inodes,
751prior to shutdown. Although effective, many consider this approach a
752kludge.
753
754A much better approach is to use devfsd to save and restore
755permissions. It may be configured to record changes in permissions and
756will save them in a database (in fact a directory tree), and restore
757these upon boot. This is an efficient method and results in immediate
758saving of current permissions (unlike the tar approach, which saves
759permissions at some unspecified future time).
760
761The default configuration file supplied with devfsd has config entries
762which you may uncomment to enable persistence management.
763
764If you decide to use the tar approach anyway, be aware that tar will
765first unlink(2) an inode before creating a new device node. The
766unlink(2) has the effect of breaking the connection between a devfs
767entry and the device driver. If you use the "devfs=only" boot option,
768you lose access to the device driver, requiring you to reload the
769module. I consider this a bug in tar (there is no real need to
770unlink(2) the inode first).
771
772Alternatively, you can use devfsd to provide more sophisticated
773management of device permissions. You can use devfsd to store
774permissions for whole groups of devices with a single configuration
775entry, rather than the conventional single entry per device entry.
776
777Permissions database stored in mounted-over /dev
778
779If you wish to save and restore your device permissions into the
780disc-based /dev while still mounting devfs onto /dev
781you may do so. This requires a 2.4.x kernel (in fact, 2.3.99 or
782later), which has the VFS binding facility. You need to do the
783following to set this up:
784
785
786
787make sure the kernel does not mount devfs at boot time
788
789
790make sure you have a correct /dev/console entry in your
791root file-system (where your disc-based /dev lives)
792
793create the /dev-state directory
794
795
796add the following lines near the very beginning of your boot
797scripts:
798
799mount --bind /dev /dev-state
800mount -t devfs none /dev
801devfsd /dev
802
803
804
805
806add the following lines to your /etc/devfsd.conf file:
807
808REGISTER ^pt[sy] IGNORE
809CREATE ^pt[sy] IGNORE
810CHANGE ^pt[sy] IGNORE
811DELETE ^pt[sy] IGNORE
812REGISTER .* COPY /dev-state/$devname $devpath
813CREATE .* COPY $devpath /dev-state/$devname
814CHANGE .* COPY $devpath /dev-state/$devname
815DELETE .* CFUNCTION GLOBAL unlink /dev-state/$devname
816RESTORE /dev-state
817
818Note that the sample devfsd.conf file contains these lines,
819as well as other sample configurations you may find useful. See the
820devfsd distribution
821
822
823reboot.
824
825
826
827
828Permissions database stored in normal directory
829
830If you are using an older kernel which doesn't support VFS binding,
831then you won't be able to have the permissions database in a
832mounted-over /dev. However, you can still use a regular
833directory to store the database. The sample /etc/devfsd.conf
834file above may still be used. You will need to create the
835/dev-state directory prior to installing devfsd. If you have
836old permissions in /dev, then just copy (or move) the device
837nodes over to the new directory.
838
839Which method is better?
840
841The best method is to have the permissions database stored in the
842mounted-over /dev. This is because you will not need to copy
843device nodes over to /dev-state, and because it allows you to
844switch between devfs and non-devfs kernels, without requiring you to
845copy permissions between /dev-state (for devfs) and
846/dev (for non-devfs).
847
848
849Dealing with drivers without devfs support
850
851Currently, not all device drivers in the kernel have been modified to
852use devfs. Device drivers which do not yet have devfs support will not
853automagically appear in devfs. The simplest way to create device nodes
854for these drivers is to unpack a tarfile containing the required
855device nodes. You can do this in your boot scripts. All your drivers
856will now work as before.
857
858Hopefully for most people devfs will have enough support so that they
859can mount devfs directly over /dev without losing most functionality
860(i.e. losing access to various devices). As of 22-JAN-1998 (devfs
861patch version 10) I am now running this way. All the devices I have
862are available in devfs, so I don't lose anything.
863
864WARNING: if your configuration requires the old-style device names
865(i.e. /dev/hda1 or /dev/sda1), you must install devfsd and configure
866it to maintain compatibility entries. It is almost certain that you
867will require this. Note that the kernel creates a compatibility entry
868for the root device, so you don't need initrd.
869
870Note that you no longer need to mount devpts if you use Unix98 PTYs,
871as devfs can manage /dev/pts itself. This saves you some RAM, as you
872don't need to compile and install devpts. Note that some versions of
873glibc have a bug with Unix98 pty handling on devfs systems. Contact
874the glibc maintainers for a fix. Glibc 2.1.3 has the fix.
875
876Note also that apart from editing /etc/fstab, other things will need
877to be changed if you *don't* install devfsd. Some software (like the X
878server) hard-wire device names in their source. It really is much
879easier to install devfsd so that compatibility entries are created.
880You can then slowly migrate your system to using the new device names
881(for example, by starting with /etc/fstab), and then limiting the
882compatibility entries that devfsd creates.
883
884IF YOU CONFIGURE TO MOUNT DEVFS AT BOOT, MAKE SURE YOU INSTALL DEVFSD
885BEFORE YOU BOOT A DEVFS-ENABLED KERNEL!
886
887Now that devfs has gone into the 2.3.46 kernel, I'm getting a lot of
888reports back. Many of these are because people are trying to run
889without devfsd, and hence some things break. Please just run devfsd if
890things break. I want to concentrate on real bugs rather than
891misconfiguration problems at the moment. If people are willing to fix
892bugs/false assumptions in other code (i.e. glibc, X server) and submit
893that to the respective maintainers, that would be great.
894
895
896All the way with Devfs
897
898The devfs kernel patch creates a rationalised device tree. As stated
899above, if you want to keep using the old /dev naming scheme,
900you just need to configure devfsd appopriately (see the man
901page). People who prefer the old names can ignore this section. For
902those of us who like the rationalised names and an uncluttered
903/dev, read on.
904
905If you don't run devfsd, or don't enable compatibility entry
906management, then you will have to configure your system to use the new
907names. For example, you will then need to edit your
908/etc/fstab to use the new disc naming scheme. If you want to
909be able to boot non-devfs kernels, you will need compatibility
910symlinks in the underlying disc-based /dev pointing back to
911the old-style names for when you boot a kernel without devfs.
912
913You can selectively decide which devices you want compatibility
914entries for. For example, you may only want compatibility entries for
915BSD pseudo-terminal devices (otherwise you'll have to patch you C
916library or use Unix98 ptys instead). It's just a matter of putting in
917the correct regular expression into /dev/devfsd.conf.
918
919There are other choices of naming schemes that you may prefer. For
920example, I don't use the kernel-supplied
921names, because they are too verbose. A common misconception is
922that the kernel-supplied names are meant to be used directly in
923configuration files. This is not the case. They are designed to
924reflect the layout of the devices attached and to provide easy
925classification.
926
927If you like the kernel-supplied names, that's fine. If you don't then
928you should be using devfsd to construct a namespace more to your
929liking. Devfsd has built-in code to construct a
930namespace that is both logical and easy to
931manage. In essence, it creates a convenient abbreviation of the
932kernel-supplied namespace.
933
934You are of course free to build your own namespace. Devfsd has all the
935infrastructure required to make this easy for you. All you need do is
936write a script. You can even write some C code and devfsd can load the
937shared object as a callable extension.
938
939
940Other Issues
941
942The init programme
943Another thing to take note of is whether your init programme
944creates a Unix socket /dev/telinit. Some versions of init
945create /dev/telinit so that the telinit programme can
946communicate with the init process. If you have such a system you need
947to make sure that devfs is mounted over /dev *before* init
948starts. In other words, you can't leave the mounting of devfs to
949/etc/rc, since this is executed after init. Other
950versions of init require a named pipe /dev/initctl
951which must exist *before* init starts. Once again, you need to
952mount devfs and then create the named pipe *before* init
953starts.
954
955The default behaviour now is not to mount devfs onto /dev at
956boot time for 2.3.x and later kernels. You can correct this with the
957"devfs=mount" boot option. This solves any problems with init,
958and also prevents the dreaded:
959
960Cannot open initial console
961
962message. For 2.2.x kernels where you need to apply the devfs patch,
963the default is to mount.
964
965If you have automatic mounting of devfs onto /dev then you
966may need to create /dev/initctl in your boot scripts. The
967following lines should suffice:
968
969mknod /dev/initctl p
970kill -SIGUSR1 1 # tell init that /dev/initctl now exists
971
972Alternatively, if you don't want the kernel to mount devfs onto
973/dev then you could use the following procedure is a
974guideline for how to get around /dev/initctl problems:
975
976# cd /sbin
977# mv init init.real
978# cat > init
979#! /bin/sh
980mount -n -t devfs none /dev
981mknod /dev/initctl p
982exec /sbin/init.real $*
983[control-D]
984# chmod a+x init
985
986Note that newer versions of init create /dev/initctl
987automatically, so you don't have to worry about this.
988
989Module autoloading
990You will need to configure devfsd to enable module
991autoloading. The following lines should be placed in your
992/etc/devfsd.conf file:
993
994LOOKUP .* MODLOAD
995
996
997As of devfsd-v1.3.10, a generic /etc/modules.devfs
998configuration file is installed, which is used by the MODLOAD
999action. This should be sufficient for most configurations. If you
1000require further configuration, edit your /etc/modules.conf
1001file. The way module autoloading work with devfs is:
1002
1003
1004a process attempts to lookup a device node (e.g. /dev/fred)
1005
1006
1007if that device node does not exist, the full pathname is passed to
1008devfsd as a string
1009
1010
1011devfsd will pass the string to the modprobe programme (provided the
1012configuration line shown above is present), and specifies that
1013/etc/modules.devfs is the configuration file
1014
1015
1016/etc/modules.devfs includes /etc/modules.conf to
1017access local configurations
1018
1019modprobe will search it's configuration files, looking for an alias
1020that translates the pathname into a module name
1021
1022
1023the translated pathname is then used to load the module.
1024
1025
1026If you wanted a lookup of /dev/fred to load the
1027mymod module, you would require the following configuration
1028line in /etc/modules.conf:
1029
1030alias /dev/fred mymod
1031
1032The /etc/modules.devfs configuration file provides many such
1033aliases for standard device names. If you look closely at this file,
1034you will note that some modules require multiple alias configuration
1035lines. This is required to support module autoloading for old and new
1036device names.
1037
1038Mounting root off a devfs device
1039If you wish to mount root off a devfs device when you pass the
1040"devfs=only" boot option, then you need to pass in the
1041"root=<device>" option to the kernel when booting. If you use
1042LILO, then you must have this in lilo.conf:
1043
1044append = "root=<device>"
1045
1046Surprised? Yep, so was I. It turns out if you have (as most people
1047do):
1048
1049root = <device>
1050
1051
1052then LILO will determine the device number of <device> and will
1053write that device number into a special place in the kernel image
1054before starting the kernel, and the kernel will use that device number
1055to mount the root filesystem. So, using the "append" variety ensures
1056that LILO passes the root filesystem device as a string, which devfs
1057can then use.
1058
1059Note that this isn't an issue if you don't pass "devfs=only".
1060
1061TTY issues
1062The ttyname(3) function in some versions of the C library makes
1063false assumptions about device entries which are symbolic links. The
1064tty(1) programme is one that depends on this function. I've
1065written a patch to libc 5.4.43 which fixes this. This has been
1066included in libc 5.4.44 and a similar fix is in glibc 2.1.3.
1067
1068
1069Kernel Naming Scheme
1070
1071The kernel provides a default naming scheme. This scheme is designed
1072to make it easy to search for specific devices or device types, and to
1073view the available devices. Some device types (such as hard discs),
1074have a directory of entries, making it easy to see what devices of
1075that class are available. Often, the entries are symbolic links into a
1076directory tree that reflects the topology of available devices. The
1077topological tree is useful for finding how your devices are arranged.
1078
1079Below is a list of the naming schemes for the most common drivers. A
1080list of reserved device names is
1081available for reference. Please send email to
1082rgooch@atnf.csiro.au to obtain an allocation. Please be
1083patient (the maintainer is busy). An alternative name may be allocated
1084instead of the requested name, at the discretion of the maintainer.
1085
1086Disc Devices
1087
1088All discs, whether SCSI, IDE or whatever, are placed under the
1089/dev/discs hierarchy:
1090
1091 /dev/discs/disc0 first disc
1092 /dev/discs/disc1 second disc
1093
1094
1095Each of these entries is a symbolic link to the directory for that
1096device. The device directory contains:
1097
1098 disc for the whole disc
1099 part* for individual partitions
1100
1101
1102CD-ROM Devices
1103
1104All CD-ROMs, whether SCSI, IDE or whatever, are placed under the
1105/dev/cdroms hierarchy:
1106
1107 /dev/cdroms/cdrom0 first CD-ROM
1108 /dev/cdroms/cdrom1 second CD-ROM
1109
1110
1111Each of these entries is a symbolic link to the real device entry for
1112that device.
1113
1114Tape Devices
1115
1116All tapes, whether SCSI, IDE or whatever, are placed under the
1117/dev/tapes hierarchy:
1118
1119 /dev/tapes/tape0 first tape
1120 /dev/tapes/tape1 second tape
1121
1122
1123Each of these entries is a symbolic link to the directory for that
1124device. The device directory contains:
1125
1126 mt for mode 0
1127 mtl for mode 1
1128 mtm for mode 2
1129 mta for mode 3
1130 mtn for mode 0, no rewind
1131 mtln for mode 1, no rewind
1132 mtmn for mode 2, no rewind
1133 mtan for mode 3, no rewind
1134
1135
1136SCSI Devices
1137
1138To uniquely identify any SCSI device requires the following
1139information:
1140
1141 controller (host adapter)
1142 bus (SCSI channel)
1143 target (SCSI ID)
1144 unit (Logical Unit Number)
1145
1146
1147All SCSI devices are placed under /dev/scsi (assuming devfs
1148is mounted on /dev). Hence, a SCSI device with the following
1149parameters: c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear as:
1150
1151 /dev/scsi/host1/bus2/target3/lun4 device directory
1152
1153
1154Inside this directory, a number of device entries may be created,
1155depending on which SCSI device-type drivers were installed.
1156
1157See the section on the disc naming scheme to see what entries the SCSI
1158disc driver creates.
1159
1160See the section on the tape naming scheme to see what entries the SCSI
1161tape driver creates.
1162
1163The SCSI CD-ROM driver creates:
1164
1165 cd
1166
1167
1168The SCSI generic driver creates:
1169
1170 generic
1171
1172
1173IDE Devices
1174
1175To uniquely identify any IDE device requires the following
1176information:
1177
1178 controller
1179 bus (aka. primary/secondary)
1180 target (aka. master/slave)
1181 unit
1182
1183
1184All IDE devices are placed under /dev/ide, and uses a similar
1185naming scheme to the SCSI subsystem.
1186
1187XT Hard Discs
1188
1189All XT discs are placed under /dev/xd. The first XT disc has
1190the directory /dev/xd/disc0.
1191
1192TTY devices
1193
1194The tty devices now appear as:
1195
1196 New name Old-name Device Type
1197 -------- -------- -----------
1198 /dev/tts/{0,1,...} /dev/ttyS{0,1,...} Serial ports
1199 /dev/cua/{0,1,...} /dev/cua{0,1,...} Call out devices
1200 /dev/vc/0 /dev/tty Current virtual console
1201 /dev/vc/{1,2,...} /dev/tty{1...63} Virtual consoles
1202 /dev/vcc/{0,1,...} /dev/vcs{1...63} Virtual consoles
1203 /dev/pty/m{0,1,...} /dev/ptyp?? PTY masters
1204 /dev/pty/s{0,1,...} /dev/ttyp?? PTY slaves
1205
1206
1207RAMDISCS
1208
1209The RAMDISCS are placed in their own directory, and are named thus:
1210
1211 /dev/rd/{0,1,2,...}
1212
1213
1214Meta Devices
1215
1216The meta devices are placed in their own directory, and are named
1217thus:
1218
1219 /dev/md/{0,1,2,...}
1220
1221
1222Floppy discs
1223
1224Floppy discs are placed in the /dev/floppy directory.
1225
1226Loop devices
1227
1228Loop devices are placed in the /dev/loop directory.
1229
1230Sound devices
1231
1232Sound devices are placed in the /dev/sound directory
1233(audio, sequencer, ...).
1234
1235
1236Devfsd Naming Scheme
1237
1238Devfsd provides a naming scheme which is a convenient abbreviation of
1239the kernel-supplied namespace. In some
1240cases, the kernel-supplied naming scheme is quite convenient, so
1241devfsd does not provide another naming scheme. The convenience names
1242that devfsd creates are in fact the same names as the original devfs
1243kernel patch created (before Linus mandated the Big Name
1244Change). These are referred to as "new compatibility entries".
1245
1246In order to configure devfsd to create these convenience names, the
1247following lines should be placed in your /etc/devfsd.conf:
1248
1249REGISTER .* MKNEWCOMPAT
1250UNREGISTER .* RMNEWCOMPAT
1251
1252This will cause devfsd to create (and destroy) symbolic links which
1253point to the kernel-supplied names.
1254
1255SCSI Hard Discs
1256
1257All SCSI discs are placed under /dev/sd (assuming devfs is
1258mounted on /dev). Hence, a SCSI disc with the following
1259parameters: c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear as:
1260
1261 /dev/sd/c1b2t3u4 for the whole disc
1262 /dev/sd/c1b2t3u4p5 for the 5th partition
1263 /dev/sd/c1b2t3u4p5s6 for the 6th slice in the 5th partition
1264
1265
1266SCSI Tapes
1267
1268All SCSI tapes are placed under /dev/st. A similar naming
1269scheme is used as for SCSI discs. A SCSI tape with the
1270parameters:c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear as:
1271
1272 /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m0 for mode 0
1273 /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m1 for mode 1
1274 /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m2 for mode 2
1275 /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m3 for mode 3
1276 /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m0n for mode 0, no rewind
1277 /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m1n for mode 1, no rewind
1278 /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m2n for mode 2, no rewind
1279 /dev/st/c1b2t3u4m3n for mode 3, no rewind
1280
1281
1282SCSI CD-ROMs
1283
1284All SCSI CD-ROMs are placed under /dev/sr. A similar naming
1285scheme is used as for SCSI discs. A SCSI CD-ROM with the
1286parameters:c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear as:
1287
1288 /dev/sr/c1b2t3u4
1289
1290
1291SCSI Generic Devices
1292
1293The generic (aka. raw) interface for all SCSI devices are placed under
1294/dev/sg. A similar naming scheme is used as for SCSI discs. A
1295SCSI generic device with the parameters:c=1,b=2,t=3,u=4 would appear
1296as:
1297
1298 /dev/sg/c1b2t3u4
1299
1300
1301IDE Hard Discs
1302
1303All IDE discs are placed under /dev/ide/hd, using a similar
1304convention to SCSI discs. The following mappings exist between the new
1305and the old names:
1306
1307 /dev/hda /dev/ide/hd/c0b0t0u0
1308 /dev/hdb /dev/ide/hd/c0b0t1u0
1309 /dev/hdc /dev/ide/hd/c0b1t0u0
1310 /dev/hdd /dev/ide/hd/c0b1t1u0
1311
1312
1313IDE Tapes
1314
1315A similar naming scheme is used as for IDE discs. The entries will
1316appear in the /dev/ide/mt directory.
1317
1318IDE CD-ROM
1319
1320A similar naming scheme is used as for IDE discs. The entries will
1321appear in the /dev/ide/cd directory.
1322
1323IDE Floppies
1324
1325A similar naming scheme is used as for IDE discs. The entries will
1326appear in the /dev/ide/fd directory.
1327
1328XT Hard Discs
1329
1330All XT discs are placed under /dev/xd. The first XT disc
1331would appear as /dev/xd/c0t0.
1332
1333
1334Old Compatibility Names
1335
1336The old compatibility names are the legacy device names, such as
1337/dev/hda, /dev/sda, /dev/rtc and so on.
1338Devfsd can be configured to create compatibility symlinks so that you
1339may continue to use the old names in your configuration files and so
1340that old applications will continue to function correctly.
1341
1342In order to configure devfsd to create these legacy names, the
1343following lines should be placed in your /etc/devfsd.conf:
1344
1345REGISTER .* MKOLDCOMPAT
1346UNREGISTER .* RMOLDCOMPAT
1347
1348This will cause devfsd to create (and destroy) symbolic links which
1349point to the kernel-supplied names.
1350
1351
1352-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1353
1354
1355Device drivers currently ported
1356
1357- All miscellaneous character devices support devfs (this is done
1358 transparently through misc_register())
1359
1360- SCSI discs and generic hard discs
1361
1362- Character memory devices (null, zero, full and so on)
1363 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
1364
1365- Loop devices (/dev/loop?)
1366
1367- TTY devices (console, serial ports, terminals and pseudo-terminals)
1368 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
1369
1370- SCSI tapes (/dev/scsi and /dev/tapes)
1371
1372- SCSI CD-ROMs (/dev/scsi and /dev/cdroms)
1373
1374- SCSI generic devices (/dev/scsi)
1375
1376- RAMDISCS (/dev/ram?)
1377
1378- Meta Devices (/dev/md*)
1379
1380- Floppy discs (/dev/floppy)
1381
1382- Parallel port printers (/dev/printers)
1383
1384- Sound devices (/dev/sound)
1385 Thanks to Eric Dumas <dumas@linux.eu.org> and
1386 C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
1387
1388- Joysticks (/dev/joysticks)
1389
1390- Sparc keyboard (/dev/kbd)
1391
1392- DSP56001 digital signal processor (/dev/dsp56k)
1393
1394- Apple Desktop Bus (/dev/adb)
1395
1396- Coda network file system (/dev/cfs*)
1397
1398- Virtual console capture devices (/dev/vcc)
1399 Thanks to Dennis Hou <smilax@mindmeld.yi.org>
1400
1401- Frame buffer devices (/dev/fb)
1402
1403- Video capture devices (/dev/v4l)
1404
1405
1406-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1407
1408
1409Allocation of Device Numbers
1410
1411Devfs allows you to write a driver which doesn't need to allocate a
1412device number (major&minor numbers) for the internal operation of the
1413kernel. However, there are a number of userspace programmes that use
1414the device number as a unique handle for a device. An example is the
1415find programme, which uses device numbers to determine whether
1416an inode is on a different filesystem than another inode. The device
1417number used is the one for the block device which a filesystem is
1418using. To preserve compatibility with userspace programmes, block
1419devices using devfs need to have unique device numbers allocated to
1420them. Furthermore, POSIX specifies device numbers, so some kind of
1421device number needs to be presented to userspace.
1422
1423The simplest option (especially when porting drivers to devfs) is to
1424keep using the old major and minor numbers. Devfs will take whatever
1425values are given for major&minor and pass them onto userspace.
1426
1427This device number is a 16 bit number, so this leaves plenty of space
1428for large numbers of discs and partitions. This scheme can also be
1429used for character devices, in particular the tty devices, which are
1430currently limited to 256 pseudo-ttys (this limits the total number of
1431simultaneous xterms and remote logins). Note that the device number
1432is limited to the range 36864-61439 (majors 144-239), in order to
1433avoid any possible conflicts with existing official allocations.
1434
1435Please note that using dynamically allocated block device numbers may
1436break the NFS daemons (both user and kernel mode), which expect dev_t
1437for a given device to be constant over the lifetime of remote mounts.
1438
1439A final note on this scheme: since it doesn't increase the size of
1440device numbers, there are no compatibility issues with userspace.
1441
1442-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1443
1444
1445Questions and Answers
1446
1447
1448Making things work
1449Alternatives to devfs
1450What I don't like about devfs
1451How to report bugs
1452Strange kernel messages
1453Compilation problems with devfsd
1454
1455
1456
1457Making things work
1458
1459Here are some common questions and answers.
1460
1461
1462
1463Devfsd doesn't start
1464
1465Make sure you have compiled and installed devfsd
1466Make sure devfsd is being started from your boot
1467scripts
1468Make sure you have configured your kernel to enable devfs (see
1469below)
1470Make sure devfs is mounted (see below)
1471
1472
1473Devfsd is not managing all my permissions
1474
1475Make sure you are capturing the appropriate events. For example,
1476device entries created by the kernel generate REGISTER events,
1477but those created by devfsd generate CREATE events.
1478
1479
1480Devfsd is not capturing all REGISTER events
1481
1482See the previous entry: you may need to capture CREATE events.
1483
1484
1485X will not start
1486
1487Make sure you followed the steps
1488outlined above.
1489
1490
1491Why don't my network devices appear in devfs?
1492
1493This is not a bug. Network devices have their own, completely separate
1494namespace. They are accessed via socket(2) and
1495setsockopt(2) calls, and thus require no device nodes. I have
1496raised the possibilty of moving network devices into the device
1497namespace, but have had no response.
1498
1499
1500How can I test if I have devfs compiled into my kernel?
1501
1502All filesystems built-in or currently loaded are listed in
1503/proc/filesystems. If you see a devfs entry, then
1504you know that devfs was compiled into your kernel. If you have
1505correctly configured and rebuilt your kernel, then devfs will be
1506built-in. If you think you've configured it in, but
1507/proc/filesystems doesn't show it, you've made a mistake.
1508Common mistakes include:
1509
1510Using a 2.2.x kernel without applying the devfs patch (if you
1511don't know how to patch your kernel, use 2.4.x instead, don't bother
1512asking me how to patch)
1513Forgetting to set CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL=y
1514Forgetting to set CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y
1515Forgetting to set CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT=y (if you want devfs
1516to be automatically mounted at boot)
1517Editing your .config manually, instead of using make
1518config or make xconfig
1519Forgetting to run make dep; make clean after changing the
1520configuration and before compiling
1521Forgetting to compile your kernel and modules
1522Forgetting to install your kernel
1523Forgetting to install your modules
1524
1525Please check twice that you've done all these steps before sending in
1526a bug report.
1527
1528
1529
1530How can I test if devfs is mounted on /dev?
1531
1532The device filesystem will always create an entry called
1533".devfsd", which is used to communicate with the daemon. Even
1534if the daemon is not running, this entry will exist. Testing for the
1535existence of this entry is the approved method of determining if devfs
1536is mounted or not. Note that the type of entry (i.e. regular file,
1537character device, named pipe, etc.) may change without notice. Only
1538the existence of the entry should be relied upon.
1539
1540
1541When I start devfsd, I see the error:
1542Error opening file: ".devfsd" No such file or directory?
1543
1544This means that devfs is not mounted. Make sure you have devfs mounted.
1545
1546
1547How do I mount devfs?
1548
1549First make sure you have devfs compiled into your kernel (see
1550above). Then you will either need to:
1551
1552set CONFIG_DEVFS_MOUNT=y in your kernel config
1553pass devfs=mount to your boot loader
1554mount devfs manually in your boot scripts with:
1555mount -t none devfs /dev
1556
1557
1558
1559Mount by volume LABEL=<label> doesn't work with
1560devfs
1561
1562Most probably you are not mounting devfs onto /dev. What
1563happens is that if your kernel config has CONFIG_DEVFS_FS=y
1564then the contents of /proc/partitions will have the devfs
1565names (such as scsi/host0/bus0/target0/lun0/part1). The
1566contents of /proc/partitions are used by mount(8) when
1567mounting by volume label. If devfs is not mounted on /dev,
1568then mount(8) will fail to find devices. The solution is to
1569make sure that devfs is mounted on /dev. See above for how to
1570do that.
1571
1572
1573I have extra or incorrect entries in /dev
1574
1575You may have stale entries in your dev-state area. Check for a
1576RESTORE configuration line in your devfsd configuration
1577(typically /etc/devfsd.conf). If you have this line, check
1578the contents of the specified directory for stale entries. Remove
1579any entries which are incorrect, then reboot.
1580
1581
1582I get "Unable to open initial console" messages at boot
1583
1584This usually happens when you don't have devfs automounted onto
1585/dev at boot time, and there is no valid
1586/dev/console entry on your root file-system. Create a valid
1587/dev/console device node.
1588
1589
1590
1591
1592
1593Alternatives to devfs
1594
1595I've attempted to collate all the anti-devfs proposals and explain
1596their limitations. Under construction.
1597
1598
1599Why not just pass device create/remove events to a daemon?
1600
1601Here the suggestion is to develop an API in the kernel so that devices
1602can register create and remove events, and a daemon listens for those
1603events. The daemon would then populate/depopulate /dev (which
1604resides on disc).
1605
1606This has several limitations:
1607
1608
1609it only works for modules loaded and unloaded (or devices inserted
1610and removed) after the kernel has finished booting. Without a database
1611of events, there is no way the daemon could fully populate
1612/dev
1613
1614
1615if you add a database to this scheme, the question is then how to
1616present that database to user-space. If you make it a list of strings
1617with embedded event codes which are passed through a pipe to the
1618daemon, then this is only of use to the daemon. I would argue that the
1619natural way to present this data is via a filesystem (since many of
1620the events will be of a hierarchical nature), such as devfs.
1621Presenting the data as a filesystem makes it easy for the user to see
1622what is available and also makes it easy to write scripts to scan the
1623"database"
1624
1625
1626the tight binding between device nodes and drivers is no longer
1627possible (requiring the otherwise perfectly avoidable
1628table lookups)
1629
1630
1631you cannot catch inode lookup events on /dev which means
1632that module autoloading requires device nodes to be created. This is a
1633problem, particularly for drivers where only a few inodes are created
1634from a potentially large set
1635
1636
1637this technique can't be used when the root FS is mounted
1638read-only
1639
1640
1641
1642
1643Just implement a better scsidev
1644
1645This suggestion involves taking the scsidev programme and
1646extending it to scan for all devices, not just SCSI devices. The
1647scsidev programme works by scanning /proc/scsi
1648
1649Problems:
1650
1651
1652the kernel does not currently provide a list of all devices
1653available. Not all drivers register entries in /proc or
1654generate kernel messages
1655
1656
1657there is no uniform mechanism to register devices other than the
1658devfs API
1659
1660
1661implementing such an API is then the same as the
1662proposal above
1663
1664
1665
1666
1667Put /dev on a ramdisc
1668
1669This suggestion involves creating a ramdisc and populating it with
1670device nodes and then mounting it over /dev.
1671
1672Problems:
1673
1674
1675
1676this doesn't help when mounting the root filesystem, since you
1677still need a device node to do that
1678
1679
1680if you want to use this technique for the root device node as
1681well, you need to use initrd. This complicates the booting sequence
1682and makes it significantly harder to administer and configure. The
1683initrd is essentially opaque, robbing the system administrator of easy
1684configuration
1685
1686
1687insufficient information is available to correctly populate the
1688ramdisc. So we come back to the
1689proposal above to "solve" this
1690
1691
1692a ramdisc-based solution would take more kernel memory, since the
1693backing store would be (at best) normal VFS inodes and dentries, which
1694take 284 bytes and 112 bytes, respectively, for each entry. Compare
1695that to 72 bytes for devfs
1696
1697
1698
1699
1700Do nothing: there's no problem
1701
1702Sometimes people can be heard to claim that the existing scheme is
1703fine. This is what they're ignoring:
1704
1705
1706device number size (8 bits each for major and minor) is a real
1707limitation, and must be fixed somehow. Systems with large numbers of
1708SCSI devices, for example, will continue to consume the remaining
1709unallocated major numbers. USB will also need to push beyond the 8 bit
1710minor limitation
1711
1712
1713simply increasing the device number size is insufficient. Apart
1714from causing a lot of pain, it doesn't solve the management issues
1715of a /dev with thousands or more device nodes
1716
1717
1718ignoring the problem of a huge /dev will not make it go
1719away, and dismisses the legitimacy of a large number of people who
1720want a dynamic /dev
1721
1722
1723the standard response then becomes: "write a device management
1724daemon", which brings us back to the
1725proposal above
1726
1727
1728
1729
1730What I don't like about devfs
1731
1732Here are some common complaints about devfs, and some suggestions and
1733solutions that may make it more palatable for you. I can't please
1734everybody, but I do try :-)
1735
1736I hate the naming scheme
1737
1738First, remember that no naming scheme will please everybody. You hate
1739the scheme, others love it. Who's to say who's right and who's wrong?
1740Ultimately, the person who writes the code gets to choose, and what
1741exists now is a combination of the choices made by the
1742devfs author and the
1743kernel maintainer (Linus).
1744
1745However, not all is lost. If you want to create your own naming
1746scheme, it is a simple matter to write a standalone script, hack
1747devfsd, or write a script called by devfsd. You can create whatever
1748naming scheme you like.
1749
1750Further, if you want to remove all traces of the devfs naming scheme
1751from /dev, you can mount devfs elsewhere (say
1752/devfs) and populate /dev with links into
1753/devfs. This population can be automated using devfsd if you
1754wish.
1755
1756You can even use the VFS binding facility to make the links, rather
1757than using symbolic links. This way, you don't even have to see the
1758"destination" of these symbolic links.
1759
1760Devfs puts policy into the kernel
1761
1762There's already policy in the kernel. Device numbers are in fact
1763policy (why should the kernel dictate what device numbers I use?).
1764Face it, some policy has to be in the kernel. The real difference
1765between device names as policy and device numbers as policy is that
1766no one will use device numbers directly, because device
1767numbers are devoid of meaning to humans and are ugly. At least with
1768the devfs device names, (even though you can add your own naming
1769scheme) some people will use the devfs-supplied names directly. This
1770offends some people :-)
1771
1772Devfs is bloatware
1773
1774This is not even remotely true. As shown above,
1775both code and data size are quite modest.
1776
1777
1778How to report bugs
1779
1780If you have (or think you have) a bug with devfs, please follow the
1781steps below:
1782
1783
1784
1785make sure you have enabled debugging output when configuring your
1786kernel. You will need to set (at least) the following config options:
1787
1788CONFIG_DEVFS_DEBUG=y
1789CONFIG_DEBUG_KERNEL=y
1790CONFIG_DEBUG_SLAB=y
1791
1792
1793
1794please make sure you have the latest devfs patches applied. The
1795latest kernel version might not have the latest devfs patches applied
1796yet (Linus is very busy)
1797
1798
1799save a copy of your complete kernel logs (preferably by
1800using the dmesg programme) for later inclusion in your bug
1801report. You may need to use the -s switch to increase the
1802internal buffer size so you can capture all the boot messages.
1803Don't edit or trim the dmesg output
1804
1805
1806
1807
1808try booting with devfs=dall passed to the kernel boot
1809command line (read the documentation on your bootloader on how to do
1810this), and save the result to a file. This may be quite verbose, and
1811it may overflow the messages buffer, but try to get as much of it as
1812you can
1813
1814
1815send a copy of your devfsd configuration file(s)
1816
1817send the bug report to me first.
1818Don't expect that I will see it if you post it to the linux-kernel
1819mailing list. Include all the information listed above, plus
1820anything else that you think might be relevant. Put the string
1821devfs somewhere in the subject line, so my mail filters mark
1822it as urgent
1823
1824
1825
1826
1827Here is a general guide on how to ask questions in a way that greatly
1828improves your chances of getting a reply:
1829
1830http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html. If you have
1831a bug to report, you should also read
1832
1833http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html.
1834
1835
1836Strange kernel messages
1837
1838You may see devfs-related messages in your kernel logs. Below are some
1839messages and what they mean (and what you should do about them, if
1840anything).
1841
1842
1843
1844devfs_register(fred): could not append to parent, err: -17
1845
1846You need to check what the error code means, but usually 17 means
1847EEXIST. This means that a driver attempted to create an entry
1848fred in a directory, but there already was an entry with that
1849name. This is often caused by flawed boot scripts which untar a bunch
1850of inodes into /dev, as a way to restore permissions. This
1851message is harmless, as the device nodes will still
1852provide access to the driver (unless you use the devfs=only
1853boot option, which is only for dedicated souls:-). If you want to get
1854rid of these annoying messages, upgrade to devfsd-v1.3.20 and use the
1855recommended RESTORE directive to restore permissions.
1856
1857
1858devfs_mk_dir(bill): using old entry in dir: c1808724 ""
1859
1860This is similar to the message above, except that a driver attempted
1861to create a directory named bill, and the parent directory
1862has an entry with the same name. In this case, to ensure that drivers
1863continue to work properly, the old entry is re-used and given to the
1864driver. In 2.5 kernels, the driver is given a NULL entry, and thus,
1865under rare circumstances, may not create the require device nodes.
1866The solution is the same as above.
1867
1868
1869
1870
1871
1872Compilation problems with devfsd
1873
1874Usually, you can compile devfsd just by typing in
1875make in the source directory, followed by a make
1876install (as root). Sometimes, you may have problems, particularly
1877on broken configurations.
1878
1879
1880
1881error messages relating to DEVFSD_NOTIFY_DELETE
1882
1883This happened because you have an ancient set of kernel headers
1884installed in /usr/include/linux or /usr/src/linux.
1885Install kernel 2.4.10 or later. You may need to pass the
1886KERNEL_DIR variable to make (if you did not install
1887the new kernel sources as /usr/src/linux), or you may copy
1888the devfs_fs.h file in the kernel source tree into
1889/usr/include/linux.
1890
1891
1892
1893
1894-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1895
1896
1897Other resources
1898
1899
1900
1901Douglas Gilbert has written a useful document at
1902
1903http://www.torque.net/sg/devfs_scsi.html which
1904explores the SCSI subsystem and how it interacts with devfs
1905
1906
1907Douglas Gilbert has written another useful document at
1908
1909http://www.torque.net/scsi/SCSI-2.4-HOWTO/ which
1910discusses the Linux SCSI subsystem in 2.4.
1911
1912
1913Johannes Erdfelt has started a discussion paper on Linux and
1914hot-swap devices, describing what the requirements are for a scalable
1915solution and how and why he's used devfs+devfsd. Note that this is an
1916early draft only, available in plain text form at:
1917
1918http://johannes.erdfelt.com/hotswap.txt.
1919Johannes has promised a HTML version will follow.
1920
1921
1922I presented an invited
1923paper
1924at the
1925
19262nd Annual Storage Management Workshop held in Miamia, Florida,
1927U.S.A. in October 2000.
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1933
1934
1935Translations of this document
1936
1937This document has been translated into other languages.
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942The document master (in English) by rgooch@atnf.csiro.au is
1943available at
1944
1945http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~rgooch/linux/docs/devfs.html
1946
1947
1948
1949A Korean translation by viatoris@nownuri.net is available at
1950
1951http://your.destiny.pe.kr/devfs/devfs.html
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1957Most flags courtesy of ITA's
1958Flags of All Countries
1959used with permission.
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/ToDo b/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/ToDo
deleted file mode 100644
index afd5a8f2c19b..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/ToDo
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
1 Device File System (devfs) ToDo List
2
3 Richard Gooch <rgooch@atnf.csiro.au>
4
5 3-JUL-2000
6
7This is a list of things to be done for better devfs support in the
8Linux kernel. If you'd like to contribute to the devfs, please have a
9look at this list for anything that is unallocated. Also, if there are
10items missing (surely), please contact me so I can add them to the
11list (preferably with your name attached to them:-).
12
13
14- >256 ptys
15 Thanks to C. Scott Ananian <cananian@alumni.princeton.edu>
16
17- Amiga floppy driver (drivers/block/amiflop.c)
18
19- Atari floppy driver (drivers/block/ataflop.c)
20
21- SWIM3 (Super Woz Integrated Machine 3) floppy driver (drivers/block/swim3.c)
22
23- Amiga ZorroII ramdisc driver (drivers/block/z2ram.c)
24
25- Parallel port ATAPI CD-ROM (drivers/block/paride/pcd.c)
26
27- Parallel port ATAPI floppy (drivers/block/paride/pf.c)
28
29- AP1000 block driver (drivers/ap1000/ap.c, drivers/ap1000/ddv.c)
30
31- Archimedes floppy (drivers/acorn/block/fd1772.c)
32
33- MFM hard drive (drivers/acorn/block/mfmhd.c)
34
35- I2O block device (drivers/message/i2o/i2o_block.c)
36
37- ST-RAM device (arch/m68k/atari/stram.c)
38
39- Raw devices
40
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/boot-options b/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/boot-options
deleted file mode 100644
index df3d33b03e0a..000000000000
--- a/Documentation/filesystems/devfs/boot-options
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,65 +0,0 @@
1/* -*- auto-fill -*- */
2
3 Device File System (devfs) Boot Options
4
5 Richard Gooch <rgooch@atnf.csiro.au>
6
7 18-AUG-2001
8
9
10When CONFIG_DEVFS_DEBUG is enabled, you can pass several boot options
11to the kernel to debug devfs. The boot options are prefixed by
12"devfs=", and are separated by commas. Spaces are not allowed. The
13syntax looks like this:
14
15devfs=<option1>,<option2>,<option3>
16
17and so on. For example, if you wanted to turn on debugging for module
18load requests and device registration, you would do:
19
20devfs=dmod,dreg
21
22You may prefix "no" to any option. This will invert the option.
23
24
25Debugging Options
26=================
27
28These requires CONFIG_DEVFS_DEBUG to be enabled.
29Note that all debugging options have 'd' as the first character. By
30default all options are off. All debugging output is sent to the
31kernel logs. The debugging options do not take effect until the devfs
32version message appears (just prior to the root filesystem being
33mounted).
34
35These are the options:
36
37dmod print module load requests to <request_module>
38
39dreg print device register requests to <devfs_register>
40
41dunreg print device unregister requests to <devfs_unregister>
42
43dchange print device change requests to <devfs_set_flags>
44
45dilookup print inode lookup requests
46
47diget print VFS inode allocations
48
49diunlink print inode unlinks
50
51dichange print inode changes
52
53dimknod print calls to mknod(2)
54
55dall some debugging turned on
56
57
58Other Options
59=============
60
61These control the default behaviour of devfs. The options are:
62
63mount mount devfs onto /dev at boot time
64
65only disable non-devfs device nodes for devfs-capable drivers