DEVD(8) | MidnightBSD System Manager's Manual | DEVD(8) |
devd
— device
state change daemon
devd |
[-dnq ] [-f
file] [-l
num] |
The devd
daemon provides a way to have
userland programs run when certain kernel events happen.
The following options are accepted.
-d
-f
file-f
is specified more than once, the last file
specified is used.-l
num-n
-q
The devd
utility is a system daemon that
runs in the background all the time. Whenever a device is added to or
removed from the device tree, devd
will execute
actions specified in
devd.conf(5). For
example, devd
might execute
dhclient(8) when an
Ethernet adapter is added to the system, and kill the
dhclient(8) instance
when the same adapter is removed. Another example would be for
devd
to use a table to locate and load via
kldload(8) the proper
driver for an unrecognized device that is added to the system.
The devd
utility hooks into the
devctl(4) device driver.
This device driver has hooks into the device configuration system. When
nodes are added or deleted from the tree, this device will deliver
information about the event to devd
. Once
devd
has parsed the message, it will search its
action list for that kind of event and perform the action with the highest
matching value. For most mundane uses, the default handlers are adequate.
However, for more advanced users, the power is present to tweak every aspect
of what happens.
The devd
utility reads
/etc/devd.conf or the alternate configuration file
specified with a -f
option and uses that file to
drive the rest of the process. While the format of this file is described in
devd.conf(5), some
basics are covered here. In the options
section, one
can define multiple directories to search for config files. All files in
these directories whose names match the pattern
*.conf are parsed. These files are intended to be
installed by third party vendors that wish to hook into the
devd
system without modifying the user's other
config files.
Since devctl(4)
allows only one active reader, devd
multiplexes it,
forwarding all events to any number of connected clients. Clients connect by
opening the SOCK_SEQPACKET UNIX domain socket at
/var/run/devd.seqpacket.pipe.
devd
configuration file.devd
to communicate with its
clients.The devd
utility first appeared in
FreeBSD 5.0.
M. Warner Losh
October 5, 2016 | midnightbsd-3.1 |