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Mike Frysingerae302102007-02-14 13:20:29 +00001-------------
2 MDEV Primer
3-------------
4
5For those of us who know how to use mdev, a primer might seem lame. For
6everyone else, mdev is a weird black box that they hear is awesome, but can't
7seem to get their head around how it works. Thus, a primer.
8
9-----------
10 Basic Use
11-----------
12
13Mdev has two primary uses: initial population and dynamic updates. Both
14require sysfs support in the kernel and have it mounted at /sys. For dynamic
15updates, you also need to have hotplugging enabled in your kernel.
16
17Here's a typical code snippet from the init script:
Bernhard Reutner-Fischer9c3052a2008-05-16 11:36:32 +000018[0] mount -t proc proc /proc
Mike Frysingerae302102007-02-14 13:20:29 +000019[1] mount -t sysfs sysfs /sys
20[2] echo /bin/mdev > /proc/sys/kernel/hotplug
21[3] mdev -s
22
Bernhard Reutner-Fischer9c3052a2008-05-16 11:36:32 +000023Alternatively, without procfs the above becomes:
24[1] mount -t sysfs sysfs /sys
25[2] sysctl -w kernel.hotplug=/bin/mdev
26[3] mdev -s
27
28
Mike Frysingerae302102007-02-14 13:20:29 +000029Of course, a more "full" setup would entail executing this before the previous
30code snippet:
Bernhard Reutner-Fischer9c3052a2008-05-16 11:36:32 +000031[4] mount -t tmpfs -o size=64k,mode=0755 tmpfs /dev
Mike Frysingerae302102007-02-14 13:20:29 +000032[5] mkdir /dev/pts
33[6] mount -t devpts devpts /dev/pts
34
35The simple explanation here is that [1] you need to have /sys mounted before
36executing mdev. Then you [2] instruct the kernel to execute /bin/mdev whenever
37a device is added or removed so that the device node can be created or
38destroyed. Then you [3] seed /dev with all the device nodes that were created
39while the system was booting.
40
41For the "full" setup, you want to [4] make sure /dev is a tmpfs filesystem
42(assuming you're running out of flash). Then you want to [5] create the
43/dev/pts mount point and finally [6] mount the devpts filesystem on it.
44
45-------------
46 MDEV Config (/etc/mdev.conf)
47-------------
48
49Mdev has an optional config file for controlling ownership/permissions of
50device nodes if your system needs something more than the default root/root
51660 permissions.
52
53The file has the format:
54 <device regex> <uid>:<gid> <octal permissions>
55For example:
56 hd[a-z][0-9]* 0:3 660
57
58The config file parsing stops at the first matching line. If no line is
59matched, then the default of 0:0 660 is used. To set your own default, simply
60create your own total match like so:
61 .* 1:1 777
62
Mike Frysingerf0044c42008-02-01 06:53:50 +000063You can rename/relocate device nodes by using the next optional field.
64 <device regex> <uid>:<gid> <octal permissions> [>path]
65So if you want to place the device node into a subdirectory, make sure the path
66has a trailing /. If you want to rename the device node, just place the name.
67 hda 0:3 660 >drives/
68This will relocate "hda" into the drives/ subdirectory.
69 hdb 0:3 660 >cdrom
70This will rename "hdb" to "cdrom".
71
Mike Frysingerae302102007-02-14 13:20:29 +000072If you also enable support for executing your own commands, then the file has
73the format:
74 <device regex> <uid>:<gid> <octal permissions> [<@|$|*> <command>]
75The special characters have the meaning:
76 @ Run after creating the device.
77 $ Run before removing the device.
78 * Run both after creating and before removing the device.
79
80The command is executed via the system() function (which means you're giving a
Mike Frysingerc348e0b2008-02-01 01:41:57 +000081command to the shell), so make sure you have a shell installed at /bin/sh. You
82should also keep in mind that the kernel executes hotplug helpers with stdin,
83stdout, and stderr connected to /dev/null.
Mike Frysingerae302102007-02-14 13:20:29 +000084
85For your convenience, the shell env var $MDEV is set to the device name. So if
Mike Frysingerc348e0b2008-02-01 01:41:57 +000086the device "hdc" was matched, MDEV would be set to "hdc".
Mike Frysingerae7f7eb2007-06-28 17:13:51 +000087
88----------
89 FIRMWARE
90----------
91
92Some kernel device drivers need to request firmware at runtime in order to
93properly initialize a device. Place all such firmware files into the
94/lib/firmware/ directory. At runtime, the kernel will invoke mdev with the
95filename of the firmware which mdev will load out of /lib/firmware/ and into
96the kernel via the sysfs interface. The exact filename is hardcoded in the
Bernhard Reutner-Fischer9c3052a2008-05-16 11:36:32 +000097kernel, so look there if you need to know how to name the file in userspace.
Denis Vlasenko018bee62008-07-15 22:33:13 +000098
99------------
100 SEQUENCING
101------------
102
103Kernel does not serialize hotplug events. It increments SEQNUM environmental
104variable for each successive hotplug invocation. Normally, mdev doesn't care.
105This may reorder hotplug and hot-unplug events, with typical symptoms of
106device nodes sometimes not created as expected.
107
108However, if /dev/mdev.seq file is found, mdev will compare its
109contents with SEQNUM. It will retry up to two seconds, waiting for them
110to match. If they match exactly (not even trailing '\n' is allowed),
111or if two seconds pass, mdev runs as usual, then it rewrites /dev/mdev.seq
112with SEQNUM+1.
113
114IOW: this will serialize concurrent mdev invocations.
115
116If you want to activate this feature, execute "echo >/dev/mdev.seq" prior to
117setting mdev to be the hotplug handler. This writes single '\n' to the file.
118NB: mdev recognizes /dev/mdev.seq consisting of single '\n' characher
119as a special case. IOW: this will not make your first hotplug event
120to stall for two seconds.