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On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 05:14:16AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 14, 2004 at 01:10:43PM -0800, Greg KH wrote:
> > On Wed, Jan 14, 2004 at 02:34:26PM -0600, Clay Haapala wrote:
> > > On Wed, 14 Jan 2004, Chris Friesen spake thusly:
> > > >
> > > > Maybe for ones with a matching rule, you could print something like:
> > > >
> > > >
> > > Is the act of printing/syslogging a rule in an of itself?
> >
> > No, as currently the only way stuff ends up in the syslog is if
> > DEBUG=true is used on the build line.
> >
> > But it's sounding like we might want to change that... :)
>
> How about this in the syslog after connect/disconnect?
>
> Jan 15 05:07:45 pim udev[28007]: configured rule in '/etc/udev/udev.rules' at line 17 applied, 'video*' becomes 'video/webcam%n'
> Jan 15 05:07:45 pim udev[28007]: creating device node '/udev/video/webcam0'
> Jan 15 05:07:47 pim udev[28015]: removing device node '/udev/video/webcam0'
Here is a slightly better version. I've created a logging.h file and
moved the debug macros from udev.h in there.
If you type:
'make' - you will get a binary that prints one or two lines to syslog
if a device node is created or deleted
'make LOG=false' - you get a binary that prints asolutely nothing
'make DEBUG=true' - the same as today, it will print all debug lines
On Mon, Jan 12, 2004 at 05:04:45PM -0800, Greg KH wrote:
> Very nice, applied. But I did have to make one small change to get the
> code to build properly with klibc:
>
> > +static void print_record(char *path, struct udevice *dev)
> > +{
> > + printf("P: %s\n", path);
> > + printf("N: %s\n", dev->name);
> > + printf("S: %s\n", dev->symlink);
> > + printf("O: %s\n", dev->owner);
> > + printf("G: %s\n", dev->group);
> > + printf("\n");
> > +}
>
> Turns out that gcc likes to convert single character printf() calls to
> putchar() which is only defined in klibc as a macro :(
Just for information. This seems to fix the gcc with klibc :)
I get the following error on install:
pim:/home/kay/src/udev.test# make install
sed -e "s:@udevdir@:/udev:" < etc/udev/udev.conf.in > etc/udev/udev.conf
/usr/bin/install -c -d /etc/udev/
/usr/bin/install -c -d /udev
/usr/bin/install -c -d /etc/hotplug.d/default
/usr/bin/install -c -D udev /sbin/udev
/bin/sh: -c: line 2: syntax error: unexpected end of file
make: *** [install] Error 2
I had too much time during the holidays, so I played a bit with udev. The
changes are like last time mostly on the init stuff. I'm sending you this as
a great diff which is just for comments.
What it does:
-fix a typo in Makefile
-use only one "grep -v" instead of many
-don't include BK-Files into release (shrinks the stuff to 30%!)
-add a new init script which is LSB compliant
-add some flags to choose which one to use
-use /etc/udev/udev.conf in Redhat init script as the source for the udev
directory. If this is not done then the init script may create a directory
which udev itself isn't using (I changed /udev to /Udev to avoid collisions
with /usr and ran into this)
-first check for sysfs_dir before creating udev_root (maybe someone else has
already fixed this, I saw this discussion on lkml)
KLIBC is used as an internal makefile variable, it expands to either
true or false right now. udev should use something else than KLIBC to
allow build against the latest and greatest klibc version.
Attached patch installs the initscript via 'make install' and adds it to
the RPM package. The RPM script then runs chkconfig(8) to setup the
initscript to run at the appropriate runlevels.
Attached is a patch against udev-008 to send out a D-BUS message when a
device node is added or removed.
Using D-BUS lingo, udev acquires the org.kernel.udev service and sends
out a NodeCreated or NodeDeleted signal on the
org.kernel.udev.NodeMonitor interface. Each signal carries two
parameters: the node in question and the corresponding sysfs path.
[Note: the D-BUS concepts of service, interface, object can be a bit
confusing at first glance]
An example program listening for these messages looks like this
#!/usr/bin/python
import dbus
import gtk
def udev_signal_received(dbus_iface, member, service, object_path, message):
[filename, sysfs_path] = message.get_args_list()
if member=='NodeCreated':
print 'Node %s created for %s'%(filename, sysfs_path)
elif member=='NodeDeleted':
print 'Node %s deleted for %s'%(filename, sysfs_path)
def main():
bus = dbus.Bus(dbus.Bus.TYPE_SYSTEM)
bus.add_signal_receiver(udev_signal_received,
'org.kernel.udev.NodeMonitor', # interface
'org.kernel.udev', # service
'/org/kernel/udev/NodeMonitor') # object
gtk.mainloop()
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
and this is the output when hot-plugging some usb-storage.
[david@laptop udev-008]$ ~/node_monitor.py
Node /udev/sda created for /block/sda
Node /udev/sda1 created for /block/sda/sda1
Node /udev/sda1 deleted for /block/sda/sda1
Node /udev/sda deleted for /block/sda
The patch requires D-BUS 0.20 or later while the python example program
requires D-BUS from CVS as I only recently applied a patch against the
python bindings.
Here is an improved version of the patch that enables builds of the extras
progams for the targets all, clean, install, and uninstall, and passes
down the "prefix" for use by install and uninstall.
This patch enables building of the "extras" programs using the same build
environment as udev (i.e. build with udev's versions of klibc and
sysfsutils).
For example, build scsi_id and udev via:
make EXTRAS=extras/scsi_id
Build scsi_id and udev with klibc via:
make KLIBC=true EXTRAS=extras/scsi_id
the older udev.config file is now called udev.rules.
This allows us to better control configuration values, and move away from
the environment variables.
This patch adds -nodefaultlibs to LDFLAGS when compiling udev against
klibc. This fixes the warning that I was getting when using $(LD)=gcc
in the versions after Makefile.klibc disappeared. The problem was that
it was still including a "-lc" in the call to the linker.
On Wed, Nov 19, Greg KH wrote:
> > I did 'make KLIBC=true' in the current bk tree.
>
> try 'make -f Makefile.klibc' in the current tree. For some reason I
> couldn't figure out how to have Makefile work for both KLIBC=true and
> KLIBC=false. But I didn't try too hard :)
I dont understand that.
please do rm -f Makefile.klibc; apply this patch and tell me what fails.
works for me.