diff options
author | greg@kroah.com <greg@kroah.com> | 2003-12-10 00:37:02 -0800 |
---|---|---|
committer | Greg KH <gregkh@suse.de> | 2005-04-26 21:13:07 -0700 |
commit | 10a479f5e6df7010a47f1edfab8173de85a34d0d (patch) | |
tree | fa761cf0f1fbc0e78615d508e75c65b4f5b339c3 | |
parent | c6c13c31814e9fc7557ca303c331d0cf13664372 (diff) |
[PATCH] update the FAQ due to the latest devfs mess on lkml and also due to symlinks now working.
-rw-r--r-- | FAQ | 23 |
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 5 deletions
@@ -31,12 +31,25 @@ Q: But udev will not automatically load a driver if a /dev node is opened A: If you really require this functionality, then use devfs. It is still present in the kernel. -Q: But I really like the devfs naming scheme, will udev do that? +Q: But wait, I really want udev to automatically load drivers when they + are not present but the device node is opened. It's the only reason I + like using devfs. Please make udev do this. +A: No. udev is for managing /dev, not loading kernel drivers. + +Q: Oh come on, pretty please. It can't be that hard to do. +A: Such a functionality isn't needed on a properly configured system. All + devices present on the system should generate hotplug events, loading + the appropriate driver, and udev will notice and create the + appropriate device node. If you don't want to keep all drivers for your + hardware in memory, then use something else to manage your modules + (scripts, modules.conf, etc.) This is not a task for udev. + +Q: I really like the devfs naming scheme, will udev do that? A: Yes, udev can create /dev nodes using the devfs naming policy. A configuration file needs to be created to map the kernel default names - to the devfs names. Such a configuration file would be gladly added to - the udev package if it is provided by anyone who can create such a - mapping. + to the devfs names. See the initial udev.conf.devfs file in the udev + release. It is the start of such a configuration file. If there are + any things missing, please let the udev authors know. Q: What kinds of devices does udev create nodes for? A: All devices that are shown in sysfs will work with udev. If more @@ -51,7 +64,7 @@ A: udev is entirely in userspace. If the kernel supports a greater number of anonymous devices, udev will support it. Q: Will udev support symlinks? -A: Yes, patches are gladly accepted to add this functionality. +A: Yes, It now does. Multiple symlinks per device node too. Q: How will udev support changes to device permissions? A: On shutdown, udev will save the state of existing device permissions to |