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.TH UDEV 8 "October 2003" "" "Linux Administrator's Manual"
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.SH NAME
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udev \- Linux configurable dynamic device naming support
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.BI udev
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.SH "DESCRIPTION"
.B udev
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provides a dynamic device directory containing only the files for actually
present devices. It creates or removes device node files usually located in
the /dev directory, or it renames network interfaces.
.br
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.P
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As part of the
.B hotplug
subsystem,
.B udev
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is executed if a kernel device is added or removed from the system.
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On device creation,
.B udev
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reads the sysfs directory of the given device to collect device attributes
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like label, serial number or bus device number.
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These attributes may be used as keys to determine a
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unique name for the device.
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.B udev
maintains a database for devices present on the system.
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.br
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On device removal,
.B udev
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queries its database for the name of the device file to be deleted.
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.SH "CONFIGURATION"
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All
.B udev
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configuration files consist of a set of lines of text. All empty
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lines or lines beginning with '#' will be ignored.
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.P
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.B udev
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expects its main configuration file at
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.IR /etc/udev/udev.conf .
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The file consists of a set of variables and values allowing the user to
override default udev values. The following variables can be overridden
in this file:
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.TP
.B udev_root
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Indicates where to place the device nodes in the filesystem. The default
value is
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.IR @udevdir@/ .
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.TP
.B udev_db
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The name and location of the udev database. The default value is
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.IR @udevdir@/.udevdb .
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.TP
.B udev_rules
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The name of the udev rules file or directory to look for files with the suffix
.IR .rules .
All rule files are read in lexical order. The default value is
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.IR /etc/udev/rules.d/ .
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.TP
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.B udev_log
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The logging priority which can be set to
.IR "err " , "info "
or the corresponding numerical
.BR syslog (3)
value.
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The default value is
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.IR err .
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.P
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.RI "A sample " udev.conf " file might look like this:
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.sp
.nf
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# Where in the filesystem to place the device nodes
udev_root="@udevdir@"
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# The name and location of the udev database.
udev_db="@udevdir@/.udevdb"
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# The name and location of the udev rules file(s).
udev_rules="@configdir@/rules.d"
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# The syslog(3) priority: "err", "info", or the numerical value.
udev_log="err"
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.fi
.P
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The rules for device naming are read from the files located in the
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.I /etc/udev/rules.d/
directory, or at the location specified by the
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.I udev_rules
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value in the
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.I /etc/udev/udev.conf
file.
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.br
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Every line in the rules file defines the mapping between device attributes
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and the device name. One or more keys are specified to match a rule with
the current device. If all keys are matching, the rule will be applied and
the name is used to name the device file or the network interface.
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.br
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If no matching rule is found, the default kernel device name is used.
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.P
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Every rule consists of a list of comma separated key value fields:
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.sp
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.IR "key " ,[ "key " ,...]
.P
The following key names can be used to match against device properties:
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.TP
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.B BUS
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Match the bus type of the device.
(The sysfs device bus must be able to be determined by a "device" symlink.)
.TP
.B KERNEL
Match the kernel device name.
.TP
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.B SUBSYSTEM
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Match the kernel subsystem name.
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.TP
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.B DRIVER
Match the kernel driver name.
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.TP
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.B ID
Match the device number on the bus, like PCI bus id.
.TP
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.BI SYSFS{ filename }
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Match sysfs device attribute like vendor and product id's, USB serial number
or the SCSI disk model number. Up to 5 different sysfs files can be checked,
with all of the values being required to match the rule.
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.br
Trailing whitespace characters in the sysfs attribute value are ignored, if
the key doesn't have any trailing whitespace characters by itself.
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.TP
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.BI ENV{ variable }
Match an environment variable. Up to 5 different environment variables can be
checked, with all of the values being required to match the rule.
.TP
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.B PROGRAM
Call external program. This key is valid if the program returns successful.
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The environment variables of
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.B udev
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are also available to the program.
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.br
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The string returned by the program may be additionally matched with the
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.B RESULT
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key in the same or any later rule.
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.TP
.B RESULT
Match the returned string of the last
.B PROGRAM
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call. This key can be used in the same or in any later rule after a
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.B PROGRAM
call.
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.P
The following keys can get values assigned:
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.TP
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.B NAME
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The name of the node to be created, or the name, the network interface
should be renamed to.
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.TP
.B SYMLINK
The name of a symlink targeting the node. Multiple symlinks may be
specified by separating the names by the space character.
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.br
If both the name and the symlink fields are omitted or its
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values are empty, the device will be ignored and no node will be created.
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.br
If only the symlink field is given and the name field is omitted,
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the rule will not be applied immediately, but the symlink field is added
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to the symlink list of the rule which will create the node.
This makes it possible to specify additional symlinks in a possibly
separate rules file, while the device nodes are maintained by the
distribution provided rules file.
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.TP
.B OWNER, GROUP, MODE
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The permissions for the device node. Every specified value overwrites the
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compiled-in default value.
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.TP
.B OPTIONS
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.B last_rule
will be the last rule applied. No later rules will have any effect.
.sp
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.B ignore_device
will ignore this device. No node will be created.
.sp
.B ignore_remove
will ignore any later remove event for this device.
This may be useful as a workaround for broken device drivers.
.sp
.B all_partitions
will create device nodes for all available partitions of a blockdevice.
This may be useful for removable media devices which do not detect a media
change.
.sp
Multiple attributes may be separated by comma.
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.P
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.RB "The " NAME ", " SYMLINK ", " PROGRAM ", " OWNER " and " GROUP
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fields support simple printf-like string substitutions:
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.TP
.B %n
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The "kernel number" of the device.
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For example, 'sda3' has a "kernel number" of '3'.
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.TP
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.B %k
The "kernel name" for the device.
.TP
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.B %p
The devpath for the device.
.TP
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.B %M
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The kernel major number for the device.
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.TP
.B %m
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The kernel minor number for the device.
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.TP
.B %b
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The bus id for the device.
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.TP
.B %c
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The string returned by the external program, specified in
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.B PROGRAM
(This does not work within the
.B PROGRAM
field for the obvious reason.)
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.br
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A single part of the string, separated by a space character
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may be selected by specifying the part number as an attribute:
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.BI %c{ N }
If the number is followed by the + char this part plus
all remaining parts of the result string are substituted:
.BI %c{ N+ }
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.TP
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.B %N
The name of a created temporary device node to provide access to the
device from a external program.
.TP
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.B %P
The node name of the parent device.
.TP
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.BI %s{ filename }
The content of a sysfs attribute.
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.TP
[PATCH] compatibility symlinks for udev
On Mon, 2004-09-06 at 17:45 +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> On Mon, 2004-09-06 at 16:46 +0200, David Zeuthen wrote:
>
> Nice, I like it. It's a easy way to group device nodes of the same type,
> but coming from different kernel subsystems.
>
That's a good way of putting it, yeah.
> > Here's a patch against udev-030 that can help create compatibility
> > symlinks like /dev/cdrom, /dev/cdrom1 etc. The patch introduces a new
> > substitution type %C (for Compatibility) that can be used as follows
>
> I suggest using %e for enumeration here, cause "compatibility" can
> easily be misunderstood.
>
Good point, I've changed that.
> And we need a few lines added to the man page at udev.8.in :)
>
Done. I've also added an example.
Also, Kay pointed out offlist that the rules can be written to not
require a shell script; this actually works
KERNEL="sr*", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="cdrom%e"
KERNEL="scd*", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="cdrom%e"
KERNEL="pcd*", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="cdrom%e"
KERNEL="hd[a-z]", PROGRAM="/bin/cat /proc/ide/%k/media", RESULT="cdrom", NAME="\%k", SYMLINK="cdrom%e"
KERNEL="fd[0-9]", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="floppy%e"
KERNEL="hd[a-z]", PROGRAM="/bin/cat /proc/ide/%k/media", RESULT="floppy", NAME=\"%k", SYMLINK="floppy%e"
New patch is attached.
David
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.B %e
If a device node already exists with the name, the smallest positive
decimal integer N is substituted such that the resulting name doesn't
match an existing device node. Otherwise nothing is substituted. This
can be used to create compatibility symlinks and enumerate devices of
the same type originating from different kernel subsystems.
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.sp
Note: The use of the enumeration facility is unreliable outside of
udevstart where the node creation is serialized and predictable.
The returned numbers rely on the order devices are probed on the
system. If more than one device requests an enumeration for the same
name at the same time, it may be possible that both requests receive the
same name back from the database. The use of enumerations in todays setups
where device can come and go at any time is not recomended.
[PATCH] compatibility symlinks for udev
On Mon, 2004-09-06 at 17:45 +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> On Mon, 2004-09-06 at 16:46 +0200, David Zeuthen wrote:
>
> Nice, I like it. It's a easy way to group device nodes of the same type,
> but coming from different kernel subsystems.
>
That's a good way of putting it, yeah.
> > Here's a patch against udev-030 that can help create compatibility
> > symlinks like /dev/cdrom, /dev/cdrom1 etc. The patch introduces a new
> > substitution type %C (for Compatibility) that can be used as follows
>
> I suggest using %e for enumeration here, cause "compatibility" can
> easily be misunderstood.
>
Good point, I've changed that.
> And we need a few lines added to the man page at udev.8.in :)
>
Done. I've also added an example.
Also, Kay pointed out offlist that the rules can be written to not
require a shell script; this actually works
KERNEL="sr*", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="cdrom%e"
KERNEL="scd*", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="cdrom%e"
KERNEL="pcd*", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="cdrom%e"
KERNEL="hd[a-z]", PROGRAM="/bin/cat /proc/ide/%k/media", RESULT="cdrom", NAME="\%k", SYMLINK="cdrom%e"
KERNEL="fd[0-9]", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="floppy%e"
KERNEL="hd[a-z]", PROGRAM="/bin/cat /proc/ide/%k/media", RESULT="floppy", NAME=\"%k", SYMLINK="floppy%e"
New patch is attached.
David
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.TP
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.B %%
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The '%' character itself.
.P
The count of charcters to insert may be limited by specifying
the format length value. For example, '%3s{file}' will only insert
the first three characters of the sysfs attribute.
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.P
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.RI "A sample " udev.rules " file might look like this:"
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.sp
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.nf
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# if /sbin/scsi_id returns "OEM 0815", the device will be called disk1
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BUS=="scsi", PROGRAM=="/sbin/scsi_id", RESULT=="OEM 0815", NAME="disk1"
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# USB printer to be called lp_color
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BUS=="usb", SYSFS{serial}=="W09090207101241330", NAME="lp_color"
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# SCSI disk with a specific vendor and model number will be called boot
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BUS=="scsi", SYSFS{vendor}=="IBM", SYSFS{model}=="ST336", NAME="boot%n"
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# sound card with PCI bus id 00:0b.0 to be called dsp
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BUS=="pci", ID=="00:0b.0", NAME="dsp"
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# USB mouse at third port of the second hub to be called mouse1
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BUS=="usb", ID=="2.3", NAME="mouse1"
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# ttyUSB1 should always be called pda with two additional symlinks
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KERNEL=="ttyUSB1", NAME="pda", SYMLINK="palmtop handheld"
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# multiple USB webcams with symlinks to be called webcam0, webcam1, ...
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BUS=="usb", SYSFS{model}=="XV3", NAME=="video%n", SYMLINK="webcam%n"
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.fi
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.P
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A number of different fields in the above configuration files support a simple
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form of shell style pattern matching. It supports the following pattern characters:
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.TP
.B *
Matches zero, one, or more characters.
.TP
.B ?
Matches any single character, but does not match zero characters.
.TP
.B [ ]
Matches any single character specified within the brackets. For example, the
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pattern string "tty[SR]" would match either "ttyS" or "ttyR". Ranges are also
supported within this match with the '\- ' character. For example, to match on
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the range of all digits, the pattern [0\- 9] would be used. If the first character
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following the '[' is a '!', any characters not enclosed are matched.
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.P
After device node creation, removal, or network device renaming,
.B udev
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executes the programs located in the directory tree under
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.IR /etc/dev.d/ .
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The name of a program must have the suffix
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.I .dev
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to be recognized.
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.br
In addition to the hotplug environment variables,
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.B UDEV_LOG
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is set and contains the numerical priority value, if udev is configured to use
.BR syslog (3).
Executed programs may want to follow that setting.
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.B DEVNAME
is exported to make the name of the created node, or the name the network
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device is renamed to, available to the executed program. The programs in every
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directory are sorted in lexical order, while the directories are searched in
the following order:
.sp
.nf
/etc/dev.d/$(DEVNAME)/*.dev
/etc/dev.d/$(SUBSYSTEM)/*.dev
/etc/dev.d/default/*.dev
.fi
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.SH "ENVIRONMENT"
.P
The following variables are read from the environment:
.TP
.B ACTION
.IR add " or " remove
signifies the addition or the removal of a device.
.TP
.B DEVPATH
The sysfs devpath of the device without the mountpoint but a leading slash.
.TP
.B SUBSYSTEM
The subsystem the device belongs to. Alternatively the subsystem may
be passed as the first argument.
.TP
.B UDEV_CONFIG_FILE
Overrides the default location of the
.B udev
config file.
.TP
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.B UDEV_LOG
Overrides the log priority specified in the config file.
.TP
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.B UDEV_NO_DEVD
The default behavior of
.B udev
is to execute programs in the
.I /etc/dev.d/
directory after device handling. If set,
.B udev
will skip this step.
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.SH "FILES"
.nf
/sbin/udev udev program
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/etc/udev/* udev config files
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/etc/hotplug.d/default/udev.hotplug hotplug symlink to udev program
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/etc/dev.d/* programs invoked by udev
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.fi
.SH "SEE ALSO"
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.BR udevinfo (8),
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.BR udevd (8),
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.BR hotplug (8)
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.PP
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.B Web resources:
.nf
.I http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/hotplug/udev.html
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.I http://linux\-hotplug.sourceforge.net/
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.fi
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.SH AUTHORS
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.B udev
was developed by Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com> with much help from
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Dan Stekloff <dsteklof@us.ibm.com>, Kay Sievers <kay.sievers@vrfy.org>, and
many others.