The recent version of klibc switched to -mregparm=3. This broke the
signal handlers parameter, cause it is called directly from the kernel
with the parameter on the stack not in a register.
arnd@arndb.de [Fri, 21 May 2004 02:14:09 +0000 (19:14 -0700)]
[PATCH] udev rpm fix
Some file locations have changed since the spec file was last updated.
Also a failed build might leave behind a stale buildroot directory.
This patch should fix both problems.
[PATCH] evaluate getenv() return value for udev_config.c
Small patch to fix the evaluation logic for the return value of getenv()
in udev_config.c file. Basically, the actual values for the environment
variables "UDEV_NO_SLEEP" and "UDEV_NO_DEVD" were not being checked.
For example UDEV_NO_SLEEP could have been set to false but the line:
if (getenv("UDEV_NO_SLEEP") != NULL)
in this case would always evaluate to true, since getenv() returns
char*, thus the "udev_sleep" variable would be set incorrectly. The
patch makes sure to check the value returned by getenv() not just if
getenv() returned a value. Hope this made sense. Thanks,
On Tue, May 11, 2004 at 04:54:44PM -0700, Greg KH wrote:
> On Tue, May 11, 2004 at 01:16:41PM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> > Hi,
> > the execution of udev depends on the proper fuction of udevd, the
> > serializing daemon. If we can't connect to udevd within a 20 second we
> > give up and the request to create a node is lost. Hope this never happens,
> > but a broken udevd may prevent udev from working.
> >
> > What do you think? Should we call the udev binary directly from udevsend
> > instead of discarding the event? This way we would create the node, regardless
> > of the state of udevd. It would be 20 seconds later and maybe not in the right
> > sequence order - but the node will propably be there.
> >
> > Does it sound sane? What do you think?
>
> That sounds like a good "failsafe" thing to do.
Here we go:
Add a fallback udev call to udevsend. If udevsend is unable to send the
event to udevd, we call the udev binary instead of doing nothing and exiting.
o The device is now specified by the DEVPATH in the environment,
it's no longer needed to pass the major/minor to the callout.
o leading spaces and slashes are now removed from the returned string
and spaces are replaced by underscore, to not to confuse udev.
o Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> provided the code to recognize s390
dasd disk labels. The -d switch tries to read the main block device
instead of the partition.
[PATCH] udev callout for reading filesystem labels
On Fri, Apr 30, 2004 at 03:29:54PM -0700, Greg KH wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 29, 2004 at 11:04:46PM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> > Hi,
> > here is a small udev toy, which enables udev to name partitions by
> > its filesystem label or uuid's.
> >
> > The following udev rule:
> >
> > KERNEL="sd*", PROGRAM="/sbin/udev_volume_id -M%M -m%m -u", SYMLINK="%c"
> >
> > creates a symlink with the uuid read from the filesystem. If no label or
> > uuid is found the program exits with nonzero and the rule will fail.
> >
> > ext2, ext3, reiserfs, xfs, jfs, vfat, msdos volume labels are supported,
> > ntfs and swap partitions can be recognized.
> >
> > It's possible to compile with klibc and the static binary takes 13kb.
>
> Very nice, I was wondering who was going to use that library to make
> such a tool. This is even better as we can use klibc for it.
Here is a update, which supports iso9660 and udf labels.
Not very useful in the udev case, but I've added it for hal,
so we just catch up with the latest version.
Here we catch up, after the default config changes.
o the man page is updated to reflect the new default config
o /etc/udev/rules.d/ + permissions.d/ dirs are created now
o udev.rules is installed in /etc/udev/rules.d/50-udev.rules
so the user can easily order the files by prepending a number.
(RedHat has the same name in the last rpm.)
o defined directory names in the Makefile are all without slashes now,
not the first half with and the remaining without.
o all binaries are uninstalled now
o leading slashes in config values are now removed or prepended while the
config is parsed, so we are more robust if the usere changes something.
o replaced the macros from udev_config.c with real code, cause we can
skip if the value matches and not useless iterate over the remaining
fields.
o config parsing errors are logged with info() now, fixes the bug where
we report a error with debug_parse(), even when there isn't one
Sorry for the late email regarding the gcov code coverage information
for udev. For those of you who have not yet noticed, udev can now be
compiled with gcov support and provide code coverage analysis. All
pertinent scripts and information can be found in the udev tree. Please
refer to "README-gcov_for_udev" for detailed information on compiling
gcov into udev and obtaining code coverage analysis. I've enclosed a
patch that updates the README-gcov_for_udev. Also, "udev-test.pl" in
udev/test/ was expanded to test symlinks, permissions, and some lack of
node creation a little more thoroughly. All comments and feedback would
be greatly welcomed. Also, any extra testing would be appreciated.
Thanks,
On Sat, Apr 17, 2004 at 03:30:29AM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 17, 2004 at 02:04:55AM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> > On Fri, Apr 16, 2004 at 04:04:42PM -0700, Greg KH wrote:
> > > Oh, and if you run the latest udev_test.pl, we have a bunch more tests,
> > > including a few that fail, if you were looking for something to do :)
> >
> > Will do it. We need to change apply_format(). I tries to expand the '%%'
> > with the next iteration over the string and removes the '%'.
The tests are all successful now.
If this patch breaks something else, we simply have too few tests :)
Here is the fix for extras/seliux/*
o install the binary in /sbin/
o add symlink to /etc/dev.d/ with suffix .dev
o removed the undefined udev_log variable
o fixed compiler warnings
Here's an update for the writing udev rules document.
- Minor corrections/clarifications
- Added info about using NAME{all_partitions}
- Added more info about udevinfo, simplifying the rule-writing process
You can ignore the diff I sent you yesterday - according to the 20040415 bk
snapshot on codemonkey.org, you haven't applied it yet. This patch
incorporates that update, and some other changes I just made.
Thanks to Yin, Hu <hu.yin@intel.com>, who made a nice perl script to test the
expected behavior of the udevd sequence number handling. The test sends
different SEQNUM sequences to udevd, while analyzing the reordering and timeout
handling of udevd.
On Sun, Apr 11, 2004 at 03:51:07AM +0200, Kay Sievers wrote:
> Here we change extras/dbus/* to
> o install the binary in /etc/dev.d
> o append .dev to the binary
> o add David's copyright
> o add the listener script to watch the sent dbus messages
> o removed the undefined udev_log variable
> o switch printf() to dbg()
Here we install the binary in /usr/sbin/ and symlink it to
/etc/dev.d/ with the .dev suffix.
Based on a patch from Olaf Hering we remove the node now only if the
requested dev_t is different from the already existing node, so any
run of udevstart should preserve the inode number of the node file.
syslog while the right node is already there:
creating device node '/udev/hda'
make_node: preserve file '/udev/hda', cause it has correct dev_t
make_node: chmod(/udev/hda, 060600)
Here we change the DEVPATH for netdev's in the environment of the dev.d/
scripts to the name the device is renamed to. The original name doesn't
exist in the kernel after rename.
Here is a patch to change the netdev handling in the database and for
the dev.d/ calls. I applies on top of the udevd.patch, cause klibc has
no sysinfo().
o netdev's are also put into our database now. I want this for the
udevruler gui to get a list of all handled devices.
All devices in the db are stamped with the system uptime value at
the creation time. 'udevinfo -d' prints it.
o the DEVPATH value is the key for udevdb, but if we rename
a netdev, the name is replaced in the kernel, so we add
the changed name to the db to match with the remove event.
NOTE: The dev.d/ scripts still get the original name from the
hotplug call. Should we replace DEVPATH with the new name too?
o We now only add a device to the db, if we have successfully created
the main node or successfully renamed a netdev. This is the main part
of the patch, cause I needed to clean the retval passing trough all
the functions used for node creation.
o DEVNODE sounds a bit ugly for netdev's so I exported DEVNAME too.
Can we change the name?
o I've added a UDEV_NO_DEVD to possibly skip the script execution
and used it in udev-test.pl.
udevstart is the same horror now, if you have scripts with logging
statements in dev.d/ it takes minutes to finish, can we skip the
scripts here too?
o The get_device_type() function is changed to be more strict, cause
'udevinfo -a -p /block/' gets a class device for it and tries to
print the major/minor values.
o bugfix, the RESULT value has now a working newline removal and a test
for this case.
[PATCH] udevd race conditions and performance, assorted cleanups - take 2
here is a patch on top of your nice improvements.
I fixed the whitespace and it hopefully fixes the stupid timestamp bug in
udevd. Some stupid OS sets the hwclock to localtime and linux changes it
to UTC while starting. If any events are pending they may be delayed by
the users time distance from UTC :) So we use the uptime seconds now.
[PATCH] udevd race conditions and performance, assorted cleanups
This patch covers a number of areas:
1) sysfs.h is fixed up to use the common dbg() macro. This fixes the
case where DEBUG is defined but USE_LOG isn't.
2) udevstart.c is modified to include the proper headers, rather than
getting them indirectly which can break depending on Makefile flags
3) udevd.c gets some major changes:
a) I added a pipe from the signal handler. This fixes the race
conditions that I mentioned earlier. Basically, the point of the pipe
is to force the select() call to return immediately if a signal handler
fired before we actually started the select() call. This then lets us
run the appropriate code based on flags set in the signal handler proper.
b) I added a number of flags to coalesce calls to common routines. This
should make things slightly more efficient.
c) since most calls will tend to come in with a sequence number larger
than what has been received, I switched msg_queue_insert() to scan the
msg_list backwards to improve performance.
On Fri, Mar 26, 2004 at 06:36:32PM +0500, Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 26, 2004 at 11:24:39AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote:
> > On Fri, Mar 26, 2004 at 11:21:29AM +0500, Ananth N Mavinakayanahalli wrote:
> > > On Fri, Mar 26, 2004 at 04:47:35AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote:
> > > > On Fri, Mar 26, 2004 at 01:26:46AM +0100, Carl-Daniel Hailfinger wrote:
> > > > > Greg KH wrote:
> > > > > > On Tue, Mar 23, 2004 at 01:51:01PM -0800, Daniel Stekloff wrote:
> > > >
> > > > No, it breaks the net device handling. I think we should change
> > > > libsysfs instead, not to return a class device for '/block', if
> > > > we want to fix it.
> > >
> > > /sys/block is considered a sysfs "class" and not a class_device. So,
> > > going by udevinfo's help, -p expects path to a class_device and _not_
> > > a class itself and hence option /sys/block with -p is not a valid query.
> > >
> > > Kay?
> >
> > Yes, it's invalid, but we shouldn't print major minor for a invalid
> > path. sysfs_open_class_device_path("/block") returns a device. If this is
> > the right behavior for libsysfs, I will change the get_device_type("/block")
> > not to return a 'b'-type.
>
> Libsysfs validates the path given to it for opening a class_device to be
> a valid directory; it does not however validate if the path is a valid
> class_device path. So, in the case of udevinfo, a 'b' type should not
> be returned if the path is just /sys/block or /sys/block/
On Thu, Mar 25, 2004 at 02:52:13AM +0100, Kay Sievers wrote:
> Please have look if it still works for you, I only did a very quick
> test.
Here is a unified version, with all the functions moved to udev_lib.c.
We have a generic function now, to call a given fnct(char *) for every
file ending with a specific suffix, sorted in lexical order. We use it
to execute the dev.d/ files and read our rules.d/ files. The binary
should be a bit smaller now.
I've also changed it, to not do the dev.d/ exec for net devices.
Hmm, Arndt Bergmann sent a patch like this one a few weeks ago and
I want to bring the question back, if we want to handle net device
naming with udev.
With this patch it is actually possible to specify something like this
in udev.rules:
[root@pim udev.kay]# ./udevinfo -a -p /sys/class/net/private
looking at class device '/sys/class/net/private':
SYSFS{addr_len}="6"
SYSFS{address}="00:0d:60:77:30:91"
SYSFS{broadcast}="ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff"
SYSFS{features}="0x3a9"
SYSFS{flags}="0x1003"
SYSFS{ifindex}="2"
SYSFS{iflink}="2"
SYSFS{mtu}="1500"
SYSFS{tx_queue_len}="1000"
SYSFS{type}="1"
follow the class device's "device"
looking at the device chain at '/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1e.0/0000:02:01.0':
BUS="pci"
ID="0000:02:01.0"
SYSFS{class}="0x020000"
SYSFS{detach_state}="0"
SYSFS{device}="0x101e"
SYSFS{irq}="11"
SYSFS{subsystem_device}="0x0549"
SYSFS{subsystem_vendor}="0x1014"
SYSFS{vendor}="0x8086"
The matching device will be renamed to the given name. The device name
will not be put into the udev database, cause the kernel renames the
device and the sysfs name disappears.
I like it, cause it plugs in nicely. We have all the naming features
and sysfs queries and walks inside of udev. The sysfs timing races
are already solved and the management tools are working for net devices
too. nameif can only match the MAC address now. udev can match any sysfs
value of the device tree the net device is connected to.
But right, net devices do not have device nodes :)