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DEVICE_ADD_CHILD(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | DEVICE_ADD_CHILD(9) |
NAME¶
device_add_child
,
device_add_child_ordered
—
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/bus.h>
device_t
device_add_child
(device_t
dev, const char
*name, int
unit);
device_t
device_add_child_ordered
(device_t
dev, int order,
const char *name,
int unit);
DESCRIPTION¶
Create a new child device of dev. The name and unit arguments specify the name and unit number of the device. If the name is unknown then the caller should passNULL
. If the unit is unknown then the
caller should pass -1
and the system will choose the
next available unit number.
The name of the device is used to determine which drivers might be appropriate for the device. If a name is specified then only drivers of that name are probed. If no name is given then all drivers for the owning bus are probed. In any event, only the name of the device is stored so that one may safely unload/load a driver bound to that name.
This allows buses which can uniquely identify device instances (such as PCI) to allow each driver to check each device instance for a match. For buses which rely on supplied probe hints where only one driver can have a chance of probing the device, the driver name should be specified as the device name.
Normally unit numbers will be chosen automatically by the system
and a unit number of -1
should be given. When a
specific unit number is desired (e.g., for wiring a particular piece of
hardware to a pre-configured unit number), that unit should be passed. If
the specified unit number is already allocated, a new unit will be allocated
and a diagnostic message printed.
If the devices attached to a bus must be probed in a specific
order (e.g., for the ISA bus some devices are sensitive to failed probe
attempts of unrelated drivers and therefore must be probed first), the
order argument of
device_add_child_ordered
() should be used to specify
a partial ordering. The new device will be added before any existing device
with a greater order. If device_add_child
() is used,
then the new child will be added as if its order was zero.
When adding a device in the context of DEVICE_IDENTIFY(9) routine, the device_find_child(9) routine should be used to ensure that the device has not already been added to the tree. Because the device name and devclass_t are associated at probe time (not child addition time), previous instances of the driver (say in a module that was later unloaded) may have already added the instance. Authors of bus drivers must likewise be careful when adding children when they are loaded and unloaded to avoid duplication of children devices.
When adding a child to another device node, such as in an identify
routine, use BUS_ADD_CHILD(9) instead of
device_add_child(9). BUS_ADD_CHILD(9)
will call device_add_child(9) and add the proper
bus-specific data to the new child.
device_add_child
() does not call
BUS_ADD_CHILD(9).
RETURN VALUES¶
The new device if successful, NULL otherwise.SEE ALSO¶
BUS_ADD_CHILD(9), device(9), device_delete_child(9), device_find_child(9), DEVICE_IDENTIFY(9)AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Doug Rabson.February 11, 2018 | Linux 4.19.0-10-amd64 |