IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO GET AN ACCOUNT, please write an
email to Administrator. User accounts are meant only to access repo
and report issues and/or generate pull requests.
This is a purpose-specific Git hosting for
BaseALT
projects. Thank you for your understanding!
Только зарегистрированные пользователи имеют доступ к сервису!
Для получения аккаунта, обратитесь к администратору.
The newer firewire-core driver exposes per-device character device files,
called /dev/fw[0-9]*, in contrast to the older raw1394, video1394, dv1394
drivers which created one global file or per-controller files.
This allows to set ownership, permissions, or/ and access control lists
for each device file based on device type markers obtained from sysfs.
The "units" attribute which is used for this purpose has become available
in Linux 2.6.31(-rc1) by commit 0210b66dd88a2a1e451901b00378a2068b6ccb35.
The added rules match identifiers of
- IIDC devices:
industrial cameras and some webcams,
- AV/C devices:
camcorders, set-top boxes, TV sets, audio devices, and similar
devices.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Richter <stefanr@s5r6.in-berlin.de>
We need to call ata_id as the default for libata sd* devices. We
want ID_BUS=ata, and the ATA device proeprties, and be independent
of the SCSI emulation with the truncated values. The links
in /dev/disk/by-id/{ata-*,scsi-*} are still the same.
On Fri, May 22, 2009 at 16:15, Alan Jenkins <alan-jenkins@tuffmail.co.uk> wrote:
> I've been looking at what is responsible for all the path lookup activity in
> coldplug. On my debian stable system, it looks like every device gets its
> parent looked up in sysfs. I think this is due to SUBSYSTEMS matches.
>
> I see the udev default rules are different, but it looks like they still
> test for SUBSYSTEMS on every single device. Should we add SUBSYSTEM="scsi_generic"
> to these three rules?
UDev follows the kernel given name, and re-uses the kernel created
device node. If the kernel and spcecified udev rules disagree, the
udev specified node node is created and the kernel-created on is
deleted.
I don't see any security implications, to be actually useful,
/dev/cpu/<n>/cpuid should be world readable. The cpuid instruction
can be called from userspace anyway, so there is nothing to hide.
The device does not support any write operation, so 0444 should
suffice.
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@amd.com>
Instead of of our own private monitor socket, we send the
processed event back to our netlink socket, to the multicast
group 2 -- so any number of users can listen to udev events,
just like they can listen to kernel emitted events on group 1.
$env{ID_PATH} includes the "-nst" suffix anyway, so we shouldn't append
it a second time as part of the rule creating the device file symlink.
Signed-off-by: Lennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>