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UDEV(8)                  Linux Administrator's Manual                  UDEV(8)



NAME

       udev - Linux configurable dynamic device naming support

SYNOPSIS

       udev hotplug-subsystem

       The environment must provide the following variables:

       ACTION add  or  remove  signifies  the connection or disconnection of a
              device.

       DEVPATH
              The sysfs devpath of the device without  the  mountpoint  but  a
              leading slash.

       Additional optional environment variables:

       UDEV_CONFIG_FILE
              Overrides the default location of the udev config file.

       UDEV_NO_DEVD
              The  default  behavior  of  udev  is  to execute programs in the
              /etc/dev.d/ directory after device handling. If set,  udev  will
              skip this step.

DESCRIPTION

       udev  provides a dynamic device directory containing only the files for
       actually present devices. It creates or removes device node files  usu-
       ally located in the /dev directory, or it renames network interfaces.


       As  part  of the hotplug subsystem, udev is executed if a kernel device
       is added or removed from the system.  On device  creation,  udev  reads
       the  sysfs  directory  of the given device to collect device attributes
       like label, serial number or bus device number.  These  attributes  may
       be  used as keys to determine a unique name for the device.  udev main-
       tains a database for devices present on the system.
       On device removal, udev queries its database for the name of the device
       file to be deleted.

CONFIGURATION

       All  udev  configuration  files consist of a set of lines of text.  All
       empty lines and lines beginning with a '#' will be ignored.


       udev expects its main configuration file at  /etc/udev/udev.conf.   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:

       udev_root
              Indicates where to place the device nodes in the filesystem. The
              default value is /dev/.

       udev_db
              The name and location of the udev database. The default value is
              /dev/.udev.tdb.

       udev_rules
              The  name  of the udev rules file or directory to look for files
              with the suffix .rules.  All rule  files  are  read  in  lexical
              order. The default value is /etc/udev/rules.d/.

       udev_permissions
              The  name  of  the udev permission file or directory to look for
              files with the suffix .permissions.  All  permission  files  are
              read  in  lexical  order. The default value is /etc/udev/permis-
              sions.d/.

       udev_log
              The switch, if udev logs some information for every device  han-
              dled.  The default value is yes.

       default_mode
              The  default  mode for all nodes not explicitely matching in the
              permissions file. The default value is 0666.

       default_owner
              The default owner for all nodes not explicitely matching in  the
              permissions file. The default value is root.

       default_group
              The  default group for all nodes not explicitely matching in the
              permissions file. The default value is root.

       A sample udev.conf might look like this:

       # udev_root - where to place the device nodes in the filesystem
       udev_root="/udev"

       # udev_db - The name and location of the udev database
       udev_db="/udev/.udev.tdb"

       # udev_rules - The name of the udev rules file or directory to look
                      for files with the suffix .rules
       udev_rules="/etc/udev/rules.d/"

       # udev_permissions - The name of the udev permission file or directory
                            to look for files with the suffix .permissions
       udev_permissions="/etc/udev/udev.permissions"

       # udev_log - set to "yes" if you want logging, else "no"
       udev_log="yes"

       # default_mode - set the default mode for all nodes not
       #                explicitely matching in the permissions file
       default_mode="0666"

       # default_owner - set the default owner for all nodes not
       #                 explicitely matching in the permissions file
       default_owner="root"

       # default_group - set the default group for all nodes not
       #                 explicitely matching in the permissions file
       default_group="root"

       The rules for device naming, are read from the  files  located  in  the
       /etc/udev/rules.d/  directory,  or  at  the  location  specified by the
       udev_rules value in the /etc/udev/udev.conf file.
       Every line in  the  rules  file  defines  the  mapping  between  device
       attributes 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.
       If no matching rule is found, the default kernel device name is used.

       Every rule consists of a list of comma separated fields:

       key ,[key ,...] name [, symlink]

       where fields are:

       BUS    Match the bus type of the device.  (The sysfs device bus must be
              able to be determined by a "device" symlink.)

       KERNEL Match the kernel device name.

       ID     Match the device number on the bus, like PCI bus id.

       PLACE  Match the topological position on bus, like physical port of USB
              device

       SYSFS{filename}
              Match sysfs device attribute like label, vendor, USB serial num-
              ber,  SCSI  UUID  or file system label.  Up to 5 different sysfs
              files can be checked, with all of the values being  required  to
              match the rule.
              Trailing  whitespace characters in the sysfs attribute value are
              ignored, if the key doesn't have any trailing whitespace charac-
              ters by itself.

       PROGRAM
              Call  external program. This key is valid if the program returns
              successful.  The environment variables of udev are  also  avail-
              able for the program.
              The  string  returned by the program may be additionally matched
              with the RESULT key.

       RESULT Match the returned string of the last PROGRAM call. This key may
              be used in any following rule after a PROGRAM call.

       NAME   The  name  of  the  node to be created, or the name, the network
              interface should be renamed to.
              If given with the attribute NAME{all_partitions} it will  create
              all  15  partitions  of  a  blockdevice.  This may be useful for
              removable media devices.

       SYMLINK
              The name of a symlink targeting the node. Multiple symlinks  may
              be specified by separating the names by the space character.
              If  both the name and the symlink fields are omitted or its val-
              ues empty, the device will be ignored and no node will  be  cre-
              ated.
              If  only  the symlink field is given and the name field is omit-
              ted, the rule will not be applied immediatly,  but  the  symlink
              field is added 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.

       OWNER, GROUP, MODE
              The permissions for this device.  Every  specified  value  over-
              writes the value given in the permissions file.

       The  NAME ,SYMLINK and PROGRAM fields support simple printf-like string
       substitution:

       %n     The "kernel number" of the device.  For example,  'sda3'  has  a
              "kernel number" of '3'.

       %k     The "kernel name" for the device.

       %M     The kernel major number for the device.

       %m     The kernel minor number for the device.

       %b     The bus id for the device.

       %c     The string returned from the execution of PROGRAM (This does not
              work within the PROGRAM field for the obvious reason.)
              A single part of the string, separated by a space character  may
              be selected by specifying the part number as an attribute: %c{N}
              If the number is followed by the  +  char  this  part  plus  all
              remaining parts of the result string are substituted: %c{N+}

       %s{filename}
              The content of a sysfs attribute.

       %e     If a device node already exists with the name, the smallest pos-
              itive 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 differ-
              ent kernel subsystems.

       %%     The '%' character itself.

       The count of charcters to insert may be limited by specifying the  for-
       mat  length  value. For example, '%3s{file}' will only insert the first
       three characters of the sysfs attribute.

       A sample udev.rules might look like this:

       # if /sbin/scsi_id returns "OEM 0815" device will be called disk1
       BUS="scsi", PROGRAM="/sbin/scsi_id", RESULT="OEM 0815", NAME="disk1"

       # USB printer to be called lp_color
       BUS="usb", SYSFS{serial}="W09090207101241330", NAME="lp_color"

       # SCSI disk with a specific vendor and model number will be called boot
       BUS="scsi", SYSFS{vendor}="IBM", SYSFS{model}="ST336", NAME="boot%n"

       # sound card with PCI bus id 00:0b.0 to be called dsp
       BUS="pci", ID="00:0b.0", NAME="dsp"

       # USB mouse at third port of the second hub to be called mouse1
       BUS="usb", PLACE="2.3", NAME="mouse1"

       # ttyUSB1 should always be called pda with two additional symlinks
       KERNEL="ttyUSB1", NAME="pda", SYMLINK="palmtop handheld"

       # multiple USB webcams with symlinks to be called webcam0, webcam1, ...
       BUS="usb", SYSFS{model}="XV3", NAME="video%n", SYMLINK="webcam%n"

       # grouping of optical drives from multiple kernel subsystems
       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"


       The permissions and ownership of the created device file is  read  from
       the  files located in the /etc/udev/permissions.d/ directory, or at the
       location   specified   by   the   udev_permission    value    in    the
       /etc/udev/udev.conf file.
       Every  line lists a device name followed by owner, group and permission
       mode. All values are separated by colons. The name field may contain  a
       pattern to apply the values to a whole class of devices.

       A sample udev.permissions might look like this:

       #name:user:group:mode
       input/*:root:root:644
       ttyUSB1:0:8:0660
       video*:root:video:0660
       dsp1:::0666

       A number of different fields in the above configuration files support a
       simple form of shell style pattern matching. It supports the  following
       pattern characters:

       *      Matches zero, one, or more characters.

       ?      Matches  any  single  character, but does not match zero charac-
              ters.

       [ ]    Matches any single character specified within the brackets.  For
              example,  the 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 the range of all dig-
              its, the pattern [0-9] would be used.  If  the  first  character
              following  the  '['  is  a  '!',  any  character not enclosed is
              matched.

       After device node creation, removal, or network device  renaming,  udev
       executes  the  programs  in  the directory tree under /etc/dev.d/.  The
       name of a program must end with .dev suffix, to be recognized.
       In addition to the hotplug environment variables, DEVNAME  is  exported
       to make the name of the created node, or the name the network device is
       renamed to, available to the executed program. The  programs  in  every
       directory  are  sorted  in  lexical  order,  while  the directories are
       searched in the following order:

       /etc/dev.d/$(DEVNAME)/*.dev
       /etc/dev.d/$(SUBSYSTEM)/*.dev
       /etc/dev.d/default/*.dev

FILES

       /sbin/udev                           udev program
       /etc/udev/*                          udev config files
       /etc/hotplug.d/default/udev.hotplug  hotplug symlink to udev program
       /etc/dev.d/*                         programs invoked by udev


SEE ALSO

       udevinfo(8), udevd(8), hotplug(8)

       The http://linux-hotplug.sourceforge.net/ web site.

AUTHORS

       udev was developed by Greg  Kroah-Hartman  <greg [AT] kroah.com>  with  much
       help  from  Dan  Stekloff <dsteklof [AT] us.com>, Kay Sievers <kay.siev-
       ers [AT] vrfy.org>, and many others.



                                 October 2003                          UDEV(8)

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