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Here is the next round of udevd/udevsend:
udevsend - If the IPC message we send is not catched by a receiver we fork
the udevd daemon to process this and the following events
udevd - We reorder the events we receive and execute our current udev for
every event. If one or more events are missing, we wait
10 seconds and then go ahead in the queue.
If the queue is empty and we don't receive any event for the next
30 seconds, the daemon exits.
The next incoming event will fork the daemon again.
config - The path's to the executable are specified in udevd.h
Now they are pointing to the current directory only.
I don't like daemons hiding secrets (and mem leaks :)) inside,
so I want to try this model. It should be enough logic to get all possible
hotplug events executed in the right order.
If no event, then no daemon! So everybody should be happy :)
Here we see:
1. the daemon fork,
2. the udev work,
3. the 10 sec timeout and the skipped events,
4. the udev work,
...,
5. and the 30 sec timeout and exit.
EVENTS:
pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# test/udevd_test.sh
pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=15 ./udevsend block
pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=16 ./udevsend block
pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=17 ./udevsend block
pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=18 ./udevsend block
pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=20 ./udevsend block
pim:/home/kay/src/udev.kay# SEQNUM=21 ./udevsend block
LOG:
Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11795]: message is still in the ipc queue, starting daemon...
Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11799]: configured rule in '/etc/udev/udev.rules' at line 19 applied, 'sda' becomes '%k-flash'
Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11799]: creating device node '/udev/sda-flash'
Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11800]: creating device node '/udev/sdb'
Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11804]: creating device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11805]: removing device node '/udev/sda-flash'
Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11808]: removing device node '/udev/sdb'
Jan 23 15:35:35 pim udev[11809]: removing device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:35:45 pim udev[11797]: timeout reached, skip events 7 - 7
Jan 23 15:35:45 pim udev[11811]: creating device node '/udev/sdb'
Jan 23 15:35:45 pim udev[11812]: creating device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:36:01 pim udev[11797]: timeout reached, skip events 10 - 14
Jan 23 15:36:01 pim udev[11814]: creating device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:36:04 pim udev[11816]: creating device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:36:12 pim udev[11818]: creating device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:36:16 pim udev[11820]: creating device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:36:38 pim udev[11797]: timeout reached, skip events 19 - 19
Jan 23 15:36:38 pim udev[11823]: creating device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:36:38 pim udev[11824]: creating device node '/udev/sdc'
Jan 23 15:37:08 pim udev[11797]: we have nothing to do, so daemon exits...
udevinfo is now capable to print "all" attributes along the device chain
of a sysfs device. Just like udev itself it walks the chain upwards and
prints all usable attributes in the udev key format.
So it should be easy to find unique attributes to compose a rule.
All multiline attribute values and values containing non printable
characters are skipped now. I hope nothing useful gets lost with this :)
NOTE:
The BUS value corresponding with the attributes is printed for every
device. Don't specify BUS= in a rule and mix SYSFS_attributes from
different busses, the rule can't match.
./udevinfo /sys/block/sda/sda1
device '/sys/block/sda/sda1' has major:minor 8:1
looking at class device '/sys/block/sda/sda1':
SYSFS_dev="8:1"
SYSFS_start="32"
SYSFS_size="160"
SYSFS_stat=" 0 0 0 0"
follow the class device's "device"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb1/1-1/1-1.3/1-1.3:1.0/host32/32:0:0:0':
BUS="scsi"
ID="32:0:0:0"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
SYSFS_type="0"
SYSFS_model="USB 2 HS-CF"
SYSFS_vendor="SMSC "
SYSFS_max_sectors="240"
SYSFS_device_blocked="0"
SYSFS_queue_depth="1"
SYSFS_scsi_level="3"
SYSFS_rev="1.25"
SYSFS_online="1"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb1/1-1/1-1.3/1-1.3:1.0/host32':
BUS=""
ID="host32"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb1/1-1/1-1.3/1-1.3:1.0':
BUS="usb"
ID="1-1.3:1.0"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
SYSFS_bInterfaceNumber="00"
SYSFS_bAlternateSetting=" 0"
SYSFS_bNumEndpoints="02"
SYSFS_bInterfaceClass="08"
SYSFS_bInterfaceSubClass="06"
SYSFS_bInterfaceProtocol="50"
SYSFS_iInterface="00"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb1/1-1/1-1.3':
BUS="usb"
ID="1-1.3"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
SYSFS_bNumConfigurations="1"
SYSFS_bNumInterfaces=" 1"
SYSFS_bConfigurationValue="1"
SYSFS_bmAttributes="80"
SYSFS_bMaxPower=" 96mA"
SYSFS_idVendor="0424"
SYSFS_idProduct="20fc"
SYSFS_bcdDevice="0125"
SYSFS_bDeviceClass="00"
SYSFS_bDeviceSubClass="00"
SYSFS_bDeviceProtocol="00"
SYSFS_speed="12"
SYSFS_manufacturer="SMSC"
SYSFS_product="USB 2 Flash Media Device"
SYSFS_serial="0305037000C2"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb1/1-1':
BUS="usb"
ID="1-1"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
SYSFS_bNumConfigurations="1"
SYSFS_bNumInterfaces=" 1"
SYSFS_bConfigurationValue="1"
SYSFS_bmAttributes="e0"
SYSFS_bMaxPower=" 64mA"
SYSFS_idVendor="03eb"
SYSFS_idProduct="3301"
SYSFS_bcdDevice="0300"
SYSFS_bDeviceClass="09"
SYSFS_bDeviceSubClass="00"
SYSFS_bDeviceProtocol="00"
SYSFS_speed="12"
SYSFS_product="Standard USB Hub"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb1':
BUS="usb"
ID="usb1"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
SYSFS_bNumConfigurations="1"
SYSFS_bNumInterfaces=" 1"
SYSFS_bConfigurationValue="1"
SYSFS_bmAttributes="40"
SYSFS_bMaxPower=" 0mA"
SYSFS_idVendor="0000"
SYSFS_idProduct="0000"
SYSFS_bcdDevice="0206"
SYSFS_bDeviceClass="09"
SYSFS_bDeviceSubClass="00"
SYSFS_bDeviceProtocol="00"
SYSFS_speed="12"
SYSFS_manufacturer="Linux 2.6.2-rc1-p4 uhci_hcd"
SYSFS_product="UHCI Host Controller"
SYSFS_serial="0000:00:1d.0"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0':
BUS="pci"
ID="0000:00:1d.0"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
SYSFS_vendor="0x8086"
SYSFS_device="0x2482"
SYSFS_subsystem_vendor="0x1014"
SYSFS_subsystem_device="0x0220"
SYSFS_class="0x0c0300"
SYSFS_irq="9"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00':
BUS=""
ID="pci0000:00"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
On Thu, Jan 22, 2004 at 01:27:45AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 02:38:25PM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote:
> > On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 01:45:10PM -0800, Greg KH wrote:
> > > On Thu, Jan 15, 2004 at 10:36:25PM +0800, Ling, Xiaofeng wrote:
> > > > Hi, Greg
> > > > I wrote a simple implementation for the two pieces
> > > > of send and receive hotplug event,
> > > > use a message queue and a list for the out of order
> > > > hotplug event. It also has a timeout timer of 3 seconds.
> > > > They are now separate program. the file nseq is the test script.
> > > > Could you have a look to see wether it is feasible?
> > > > If so, I'll continue to merge with udev.
> > >
> > > Yes, very nice start. Please continue on.
> > >
> > > One minor comment, please stick with the kernel coding style when you
> > > are writing new code for udev.
> >
> > I took the code from Xiaofeng, cleaned the whitespace, renamed some bits,
> > tweaked the debugging, added the udev exec and created a patch for the current tree.
> >
> > It seems functional now, by simply executing our current udev (dirty hack).
> > It reorders the incoming events and if one is missing it delays the
> > execution of the following ones up to a maximum of 10 seconds.
> >
> > Test script is included, but you can't mix hotplug sequence numbers and
> > test script numbers, it will result in waiting for the missing numbers :)
>
> Hey, nobody want's to play with me?
> So here I'm chatting with myself :)
>
> This is the next version with signal handling for resetting the expected
> signal number. I changed the behaviour of the timeout to skip all
> missing events at once and to proceed with the next event in the queue.
>
> So it's now possible to use the test script at any time, cause it resets
> the daemon, if real hotplug event coming in later all missing nimbers will
> be skipped after a timeout of 10 seconds and the queued events are applied.
Here is the next updated updated version to apply to the lastet udev.
I've added infrastructure for getting the state of the IPC queue in the
sender and set the program to exec by the daemon. Also the magic key id
is replaced by the usual key generation by path/nr.
It looks promising, I use it on my machine and my 4in1 USB-flash-reader
connect/disconnect emits the events "randomly" but udevd is able to
reorder it and calls our normal udev in the right order.
On Sun, Jan 18, 2004 at 07:30:50AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote:
> Hi,
> here is a small program to query all attributes of a device and
> print these in the udev key format. It may help to get the keys to
> define a rule.
Fixed a typo - the sysfs_device is right now.
USB FLash Reader:
kay@pim:~/src/udev.kay$ extras/udevinfo/udevinfo /sys/block/sda/sda1
device '/sys/block/sda/sda1' has major:minor 8:1
looking at class device '/sys/block/sda/sda1':
SYSFS_dev="8:1"
SYSFS_start="32"
SYSFS_size="160"
SYSFS_stat=" 0 0 0 0"
follow class device's "device" link '/sys/block/sda':
BUS="scsi"
ID="57:0:0:0"
SYSFS_detach_state="0"
SYSFS_type="0"
SYSFS_device_blocked="0"
SYSFS_queue_depth="1"
SYSFS_scsi_level="3"
SYSFS_vendor="SMSC "
SYSFS_model="USB 2 HS-CF"
SYSFS_rev="1.25"
SYSFS_online="1"
I've edited the man page today, so this is alreay included :)
Also a few more trivials:
o added the defaults to udev.conf.in
o removed class_dev from get_default_mode(), to match with Hanna's
o changed size of mode_str to MODE_SIZE
o changed a few char compares from from 0x00 to '\0'
This patch fixes a bug where the udev database stored empty strings
for Owner and Group if they were default. This patch stores the default
value into the database if not set otherwise. See example output:
crw------- 1 root root 4, 65 Jan 16 11:13 ttyS1
P: /class/tty/ttyS1
N: ttyS1
S:
O: root
G: root
This is a bit of a hack. However, until udev supports setting the
o/g values they will be root/root anyway so the database might as
well reflect the truth instead of empty strings.
Here we get the ability to query with the name of the node instead of
the device path. It uses a linear search over the whole database.
kay@pim:~/src/udev.kay$ ./udev -q path -n video/webcam0
/class/video4linux/video0
New version, with better function return codes for error handling.
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
I've attached a patch that adds a few rules to udev.rules.devfs, making it
look a little more like devfs on my system. (I have the sysfs patches from
2.6.1-rc1-mm2) I added rules for oss, misc, floppy, and input devices. The
oss rules look like trouble with a wildcard at the end of each name, but I'm
not sure how I can make it any better.
Devfs has a bunch of other devices in the floppy directory for floppies
formatted in unusual ways, but I don't see them in udev. Not that I ever used
them, since they're usually automatically detected.
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 :)
Optimize the scripts reflecting the now more powerful rule logic,
cause we can combine all known fields now in any order:
The ide-devfs.sh is only executed if the kernel name matches with 'hd*':
BUS="ide", KERNEL="hd*", PROGRAM="/etc/udev/ide-devfs.sh %k %b %n", NAME="%k", SYMLINK="%1c %2c"
The name_cdrom.pl is only executed for ide and scsi devices, but not for a partition.
It exits with nonzero to skip the rule if the CD is not found:
KERNEL="[hs]d[a-z]", PROGRAM="name_cdrom.pl %M %m", NAME="%1c", SYMLINK="cdrom"
This patch adds a '%' to the format char list, so that a external
program may called with a non expanded '%' like:
PROGRAM="/bin/date +%%s"
Olaf Hering asked for the feature.
A tricky test is also added :)