table of contents
| MAKE_DEV(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | MAKE_DEV(9) | 
NAME¶
make_dev,
    make_dev_cred,
    make_dev_credf, make_dev_p,
    make_dev_s, make_dev_alias,
    make_dev_alias_p,
    destroy_dev,
    destroy_dev_sched,
    destroy_dev_sched_cb,
    destroy_dev_drain,
    dev_depends — manage
    cdev's and DEVFS registration for devices
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
    <sys/param.h>
  
  #include <sys/conf.h>
void
  
  make_dev_args_init(struct
    make_dev_args *args);
int
  
  make_dev_s(struct
    make_dev_args *args,
    struct cdev **cdev,
    const char *fmt,
    ...);
int
  
  make_dev_alias_p(int
    flags, struct cdev
    **cdev, struct cdev
    *pdev, const char
    *fmt, ...);
void
  
  destroy_dev(struct
    cdev *dev);
void
  
  destroy_dev_sched(struct
    cdev *dev);
void
  
  destroy_dev_sched_cb(struct
    cdev *dev, void
    (*cb)(void *), void
    *arg);
void
  
  destroy_dev_drain(struct
    cdevsw *csw);
void
  
  dev_depends(struct
    cdev *pdev, struct cdev
    *cdev);
LEGACY INTERFACES
  
  struct cdev *
  
  make_dev(struct
    cdevsw *cdevsw, int
    unit, uid_t uid,
    gid_t gid,
    int perms,
    const char *fmt,
    ...);
struct cdev *
  
  make_dev_cred(struct
    cdevsw *cdevsw, int
    unit, struct ucred
    *cr, uid_t uid,
    gid_t gid,
    int perms,
    const char *fmt,
    ...);
struct cdev *
  
  make_dev_credf(int
    flags, struct cdevsw
    *cdevsw, int unit,
    struct ucred *cr,
    uid_t uid,
    gid_t gid,
    int perms,
    const char *fmt,
    ...);
int
  
  make_dev_p(int
    flags, struct cdev
    **cdev, struct cdevsw
    *devsw, struct ucred
    *cr, uid_t uid,
    gid_t gid,
    int mode,
    const char *fmt,
    ...);
struct cdev *
  
  make_dev_alias(struct
    cdev *pdev, const char
    *fmt, ...);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
    make_dev_s()
    function creates a cdev structure for a new device,
    which is returned into the cdev argument. It also
    notifies devfs(5) of the presence of the new device, that
    causes corresponding nodes to be created. Besides this, a
    devctl(4) notification is sent. The function takes the
    structure struct make_dev_args args, which specifies
    the parameters for the device creation:
struct make_dev_args {
	size_t		 mda_size;
	int		 mda_flags;
	struct cdevsw	*mda_devsw;
	struct ucred	*mda_cr;
	uid_t		 mda_uid;
	gid_t		 mda_gid;
	int		 mda_mode;
	int		 mda_unit;
	void		*mda_si_drv1;
	void		*mda_si_drv2;
};
make_dev_args_init()
  function, which ensures that future kernel interface expansion does not affect
  driver source code or binary interface.
The created device will be owned by
    args.mda_uid, with the group ownership as
    args.mda_gid. The name is the expansion of
    fmt and following arguments as
    printf(9) would print it. The name determines its path
    under /dev or other devfs(5) mount
    point and may contain slash ‘/’
    characters to denote subdirectories. The permissions of the file specified
    in args.mda_mode are defined in
    <sys/stat.h>:
#define S_IRWXU 0000700 /* RWX mask for owner */ #define S_IRUSR 0000400 /* R for owner */ #define S_IWUSR 0000200 /* W for owner */ #define S_IXUSR 0000100 /* X for owner */ #define S_IRWXG 0000070 /* RWX mask for group */ #define S_IRGRP 0000040 /* R for group */ #define S_IWGRP 0000020 /* W for group */ #define S_IXGRP 0000010 /* X for group */ #define S_IRWXO 0000007 /* RWX mask for other */ #define S_IROTH 0000004 /* R for other */ #define S_IWOTH 0000002 /* W for other */ #define S_IXOTH 0000001 /* X for other */ #define S_ISUID 0004000 /* set user id on execution */ #define S_ISGID 0002000 /* set group id on execution */ #define S_ISVTX 0001000 /* sticky bit */ #ifndef _POSIX_SOURCE #define S_ISTXT 0001000 #endif
The args.mda_cr argument specifies credentials that will be stored in the si_cred member of the initialized struct cdev.
The args.mda_flags argument
    alters the operation of
    make_dev_s.()
    The following values are currently accepted:
- MAKEDEV_REF
- reference the created device
- MAKEDEV_NOWAIT
- do not sleep, the call may fail
- MAKEDEV_WAITOK
- allow the function to sleep to satisfy malloc
- MAKEDEV_ETERNAL
- created device will be never destroyed
- MAKEDEV_CHECKNAME
- return an error if the device name is invalid or already exists
Only MAKEDEV_NOWAIT,
    MAKEDEV_WAITOK and
    MAKEDEV_CHECKNAME values are accepted for the
    make_dev_alias_p()
    function.
The MAKEDEV_WAITOK flag is assumed if none
    of MAKEDEV_WAITOK,
    MAKEDEV_NOWAIT is specified.
The dev_clone(9) event handler shall specify
    MAKEDEV_REF flag when creating a device in response
    to lookup, to avoid race where the device created is destroyed immediately
    after devfs_lookup(9) drops his reference to cdev.
The MAKEDEV_ETERNAL flag
    allows the kernel to not acquire some locks when translating system calls
    into the cdevsw methods calls. It is responsibility of the driver author to
    make sure that
    destroy_dev()
    is never called on the returned cdev. For the convenience, use the
    MAKEDEV_ETERNAL_KLD flag for the code that can be
    compiled into kernel or loaded (and unloaded) as loadable module.
A panic will occur if the
    MAKEDEV_CHECKNAME flag is not specified and the
    device name is invalid or already exists.
The
    make_dev_p()
    use of the form
struct cdev *dev; int res; res = make_dev_p(flags, &dev, cdevsw, cred, uid, gid, perms, name);
struct cdev *dev; struct make_dev_args args; int res; make_dev_args_init(&args); args.mda_flags = flags; args.mda_devsw = cdevsw; args.mda_cred = cred; args.mda_uid = uid; args.mda_gid = gid; args.mda_mode = perms; res = make_dev_s(&args, &dev, name);
Similarly, the
    make_dev_credf()
    function call is equivalent to
(void) make_dev_s(&args, &dev, name);
make_dev_credf() does not allow the
  caller to obtain the return value, and in kernels compiled with the
  INVARIANTS options, the function asserts that the device
  creation succeeded.
The
    make_dev_cred()
    function is equivalent to the call
make_dev_credf(0, cdevsw, unit, cr, uid, gid, perms, fmt, ...);
The
    make_dev()
    function call is the same as
make_dev_credf(0, cdevsw, unit, NULL, uid, gid, perms, fmt, ...);
The
    make_dev_alias_p()
    function takes the returned cdev from
    make_dev() and makes another (aliased) name for this
    device. It is an error to call make_dev_alias_p()
    prior to calling make_dev().
The
    make_dev_alias()
    function is similar to make_dev_alias() but it
    returns the resulting aliasing *cdev and may not
    return an error.
The cdev returned by
    make_dev_s()
    and make_dev_alias_p() has two fields,
    si_drv1 and si_drv2, that are
    available to store state. Both fields are of type void
    *, and can be initialized simultaneously with the
    cdev allocation by filling
    args.mda_si_drv1 and
    args.mda_si_drv2 members of the
    make_dev_s() argument structure, or filled after the
    cdev is allocated, if using legacy interfaces. In the
    latter case, the driver should handle the race of accessing uninitialized
    si_drv1 and si_drv2 itself.
    These are designed to replace the unit argument to
    make_dev(), which can be obtained with
    dev2unit().
The
    destroy_dev()
    function takes the returned cdev from
    make_dev() and destroys the registration for that
    device. The notification is sent to devctl(4) about the
    destruction event. Do not call destroy_dev() on
    devices that were created with make_dev_alias().
The
    dev_depends()
    function establishes a parent-child relationship between two devices. The
    net effect is that a destroy_dev() of the parent
    device will also result in the destruction of the child device(s), if any
    exist. A device may simultaneously be a parent and a child, so it is
    possible to build a complete hierarchy.
The
    destroy_dev_sched_cb()
    function schedules execution of the destroy_dev()
    for the specified cdev in the safe context. After
    destroy_dev() is finished, and if the supplied
    cb is not NULL, the callback
    cb is called, with argument arg.
    The destroy_dev_sched() function is the same as
destroy_dev_sched_cb(cdev, NULL, NULL);
The
    d_close()
    driver method cannot call destroy_dev() directly.
    Doing so causes deadlock when destroy_dev() waits
    for all threads to leave the driver methods. Also, because
    destroy_dev() sleeps, no non-sleepable locks may be
    held over the call. The destroy_dev_sched() family
    of functions overcome these issues.
The device driver may call the
    destroy_dev_drain()
    function to wait until all devices that have supplied
    csw as cdevsw, are destroyed. This is useful when
    driver knows that
    destroy_dev_sched()
    is called for all instantiated devices, but need to postpone module unload
    until destroy_dev() is actually finished for all of
    them.
RETURN VALUES¶
If successful, make_dev_s() and
    make_dev_p() will return 0, otherwise they will
    return an error. If successful, make_dev_credf()
    will return a valid cdev pointer, otherwise it will
    return NULL.
ERRORS¶
The make_dev_s(),
    make_dev_p() and
    make_dev_alias_p() calls will fail and the device
    will be not registered if:
- [ENOMEM]
- The MAKEDEV_NOWAITflag was specified and a memory allocation request could not be satisfied.
- [ENAMETOOLONG]
- The MAKEDEV_CHECKNAMEflag was specified and the provided device name is longer thanSPECNAMELEN.
- [EINVAL]
- The MAKEDEV_CHECKNAMEflag was specified and the provided device name is empty, contains a "." or ".." path component or ends with ‘/’.
- [EINVAL]
- The MAKEDEV_CHECKNAMEflag was specified and the provided device name contains invalid characters.
- [EEXIST]
- The MAKEDEV_CHECKNAMEflag was specified and the provided device name already exists.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The make_dev() and
    destroy_dev() functions first appeared in
    FreeBSD 4.0. The function
    make_dev_alias() first appeared in
    FreeBSD 4.1. The function
    dev_depends() first appeared in
    FreeBSD 5.0. The functions
    make_dev_credf(),
    destroy_dev_sched(),
    destroy_dev_sched_cb() first appeared in
    FreeBSD 7.0. The function
    make_dev_p() first appeared in
    FreeBSD 8.2. The function
    make_dev_s() first appeared in
    FreeBSD 11.0.
| March 2, 2016 | Debian |