table of contents
DEVD.CONF(5) | File Formats Manual | DEVD.CONF(5) |
NAME¶
devd.conf
—
configuration file for devd(8)
DESCRIPTION¶
General Syntax¶
A devd(8) configuration consists of two general features, statements and comments. All statements end with a semicolon. Many statements can contain substatements, which are also terminated with a semicolon.
The following statements are supported:
attach
- Specifies various matching criteria and actions to perform when a newly attached device matches said criteria.
detach
- Specifies various matching criteria and actions to perform when a newly detached device matches said criteria.
nomatch
- Specifies various matching criteria and actions to perform when no device driver currently loaded in the kernel claims a (new) device.
notify
- Specifies various matching criteria and actions to perform when the kernel sends an event notification to userland.
options
- Specifies various options and parameters for the operation of devd(8).
Statements may occur in any order in the configuration file, and may be repeated as often as required. Further details on the syntax and meaning of each statement and their substatements are explained below.
Each statement, except options
has a
priority (an arbitrary number) associated with it, where
‘0
’ is defined as the lowest priority.
If two statements match the same event, only the action of the statement
with highest priority will be executed. In this way generic statements can
be overridden for devices or notifications that require special
attention.
The general syntax of a statement is:
statement priority { substatement "value"; ... substatement "value"; };
Sub-statements¶
The following sub-statements are supported within the
options
statement.
directory
"/some/path";- Adds the given directory to the list of directories from which
devd(8) will read all files named "*.conf" as
further configuration files. Any number of
directory
statements can be used. pid-file
"/var/run/devd.pid";- Specifies PID file.
set
regexp-name "(some|regexp)";- Creates a regular expression and assigns it to the variable
regexp-name. The variable is available throughout
the rest of the configuration file. If the string begins with
‘
!
’, it matches if the regular expression formed by the rest of the string does not match. All regular expressions have an implicit ‘^$
’ around them.
The following sub-statements are supported within the
attach
and detach
statements.
action
"command";- Command to execute upon a successful match. Example
“
/etc/pccard_ether $device-name start
”. class
"string";- This is shorthand for “
match
"class
" "string"”. device-name
"string";- This is shorthand for “
match
"device-name
" "string"”. This matches a device named string, which is allowed to be a regular expression or a variable previously created containing a regular expression. The “device-name
” variable is available for later use with theaction
statement. match
"variable" "value";- Matches the content of value against
variable; the content of value
may be a regular expression. Not required during
attach
nordetach
events since thedevice-name
statement takes care of all device matching. For a partial list of variables, see below. media-type
"string";- For network devices,
media-type
will match devices that have the given media type. Valid media types are: “Ethernet
”, “Tokenring
”, “FDDI
”, “802.11
”, and “ATM
”. subdevice
"string";- This is shorthand for “
match
"subdevice
" "string"”.
The following sub-statements are supported within the
nomatch
statement.
action
"command";- Same as above.
match
"variable" "value";- Matches the content of value against variable; the content of value may be a regular expression. For a partial list of variables, see below.
The following sub-statements are supported within the
notify
statement. The
“notify
” variable is available inside
this statement and contains, a value, depending on which system and
subsystem that delivered the event.
action
"command";- Command to execute upon a successful match. Example
“
/etc/rc.d/power_profile $notify
”. match
"system | subsystem | type | notify" "value";- Any number of
match
statements can exist within anotify
statement; value can be either a fixed string or a regular expression. Below is a list of available systems, subsystems, and types. media-type
"string";- See above.
Variables that can be used with the match statement¶
A partial list of variables and their possible values that can be
used together with the match
statement.
Variable
Description
bus
- Device name of parent bus.
cdev
- Device node path if one is created by the devfs(5) filesystem.
cisproduct
- CIS-product.
cisvendor
- CIS-vendor.
class
- Device class.
device
- Device ID.
devclass
- Device Class (USB)
devsubclass
- Device Sub-class (USB)
device-name
- Name of attached/detached device.
endpoints
- Endpoint count (USB)
function
- Card functions.
interface
- Interface ID (USB)
intclass
- Interface Class (USB)
intprotocol
- Interface Protocol (USB)
intsubclass
- Interface Sub-class (USB)
jail
- Jail name for the process triggering the rule (RCTL)
manufacturer
- Manufacturer ID (pccard).
mode
- Peripheral mode (USB)
notify
- Match the value of the “
notify
” variable. parent
- Parent device
pid
- PID of the process triggering the rule (RCTL)
port
- Hub port number (USB)
product
- Product ID (pccard/USB).
release
- Hardware revision (USB)
ruid
- Real UID of the process triggering the rule (RCTL)
rule
- Rule (RCTL)
sernum
- Serial Number (USB).
slot
- Card slot.
subvendor
- Sub-vendor ID.
subdevice
- Sub-device ID.
subsystem
- Matches a subsystem of a system, see below.
system
- Matches a system type, see below.
type
- Type of notification, see below.
vendor
- Vendor ID.
Notify matching¶
A partial list of systems, subsystems, and types used within the
notify
mechanism.
- System
ACPI
- Events related to the ACPI subsystem.
- Subsystem
ACAD
- AC line state ($notify=0x00 is offline, 0x01 is online).
Button
- Button state ($notify=0x00 is power, 0x01 is sleep).
CMBAT
- Battery events.
Lid
- Lid state ($notify=0x00 is closed, 0x01 is open).
PROCESSOR
- Processor state/configuration ($notify=0x81 is a change in available Cx states).
Resume
- Resume notification.
Suspend
- Suspend notification.
Thermal
- Thermal zone events.
CARP
- Events related to the carp(8) protocol.
IFNET
- Events related to the network subsystem.
- Subsystem
- interface
- The “subsystem” is the actual name of the network interface on which the event took place.
DEVFS
- Events related to the devfs(5) filesystem.
GEOM
- Events related to the geom(4) framework. The difference
compared to
DEVFS
is thatGEOM
only includes disk-like devices. RCTL
- Events related to the rctl(8) framework.
USB
- Events related to the USB subsystem.
coretemp
- Events related to the coretemp(4) device.
kern
- Events related to the kernel.
A link state change to UP on the interface
“fxp0
” would result in the following
notify event:
system=IFNET, subsystem=fxp0, type=LINK_UP
An AC line state change to “offline” would result in the following event:
system=ACPI, subsystem=ACAD, notify=0x00
Comments¶
Comments may appear anywhere that whitespace may appear in a configuration file. To appeal to programmers of all kinds, they can be written in C, C++, or shell/Perl constructs.
C-style comments start with the two characters
‘/*
’ (slash, star) and end with
‘*/
’ (star, slash). Because they are
completely delimited with these characters, they can be used to comment only
a portion of a line or to span multiple lines.
C-style comments cannot be nested. For example, the following is
not valid because the entire comment ends with the first
‘*/
’:
/* This is the start of a comment. This is still part of the comment. /* This is an incorrect attempt at nesting a comment. */ This is no longer in any comment. */
C++-style comments start with the two characters
‘//
’ (slash, slash) and continue to
the end of the physical line. They cannot be continued across multiple
physical lines; to have one logical comment span multiple lines, each line
must use the ‘//
’ pair. For
example:
// This is the start of a comment. The next line // is a new comment, even though it is logically // part of the previous comment.
FILES¶
- /etc/devd.conf
- The devd(8) configuration file.
EXAMPLES¶
# # This will catch link down events on the interfaces fxp0 and ath0 # notify 0 { match "system" "IFNET"; match "subsystem" "(fxp0|ath0)"; match "type" "LINK_DOWN"; action "logger $subsystem is DOWN"; }; # # Match lid open/close events # These can be combined to a single event, by passing the # value of $notify to the external script. # notify 0 { match "system" "ACPI"; match "subsystem" "Lid"; match "notify" "0x00"; action "logger Lid closed, we can sleep now!"; }; notify 0 { match "system" "ACPI"; match "subsystem" "Lid"; match "notify" "0x01"; action "logger Lid opened, the sleeper must awaken!"; }; # # Match a USB device type # notify 0 { match "system" "USB"; match "subsystem" "INTERFACE"; match "type" "ATTACH"; match "intclass" "0x0e"; action "logger USB video device attached"; }; # # Try to configure ath and wi devices with pccard_ether # as they are attached. # attach 0 { device-name "(ath|wi)[0-9]+"; action "/etc/pccard_ether $device-name start"; }; # # Stop ath and wi devices as they are detached from # the system. # detach 0 { device-name "(ath|wi)[0-9]+"; action "/etc/pccard_ether $device-name stop"; };
The installed /etc/devd.conf has many additional examples.
SEE ALSO¶
July 11, 2015 | Debian |