devfsadm man page on SunOS

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devfsadm(1M)		System Administration Commands		  devfsadm(1M)

NAME
       devfsadm, devfsadmd - administration command for /dev

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/sbin/devfsadm [-C] [-c device_class] [-i driver_name]
	   [ -n] [-r root_dir] [-s] [-t table_file] [-v]

       /usr/lib/devfsadm/devfsadmd

DESCRIPTION
       devfsadm(1M)  maintains	the  /dev  namespace. It replaces the previous
       suite of devfs administration tools including drvconfig(1M), disks(1M),
       tapes(1M), ports(1M), audlinks(1M), and devlinks(1M).

       The  default operation is to attempt to load every driver in the system
       and attach to all possible device  instances.  Next,  devfsadm  creates
       logical links to device nodes in /dev and /devices and loads the device
       policy.

       devfsadmd(1M) is the daemon version  of	devfsadm(1M).  The  daemon  is
       started	during	system	startup	 and  is responsible for handling both
       reconfiguration boot processing	and  updating  /dev  and  /devices  in
       response	 to  dynamic reconfiguration event notifications from the ker‐
       nel.

       For  compatibility  purposes,  drvconfig(1M),   disks(1M),   tapes(1M),
       ports(1M),  audlinks(1M),  and devlinks(1M) are implemented as links to
       devfsadm.

       In  addition  to	  managing   /dev,   devfsadm	also   maintains   the
       path_to_inst(4) database.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -C		  Cleanup  mode.  Prompt  devfsadm to cleanup dangling
			  /dev links that are not normally removed. If the  -c
			  option is also used, devfsadm only cleans up for the
			  listed devices' classes.

       -c device_class	  Restrict   operations	  to	devices	   of	 class
			  device_class.	 Solaris  defines the following values
			  for  device_class:  disk,  tape,  port,  audio,  and
			  pseudo.   This  option  might be specified more than
			  once to specify multiple device classes.

       -i driver_name	  Configure only the devices  for  the	named  driver,
			  driver_name.

       -n		  Do  not  attempt to load drivers or add new nodes to
			  the kernel device tree.

       -s		  Suppress any changes to /dev. This  is  useful  with
			  the -v option for debugging.

       -t table_file	  Read	an  alternate  devlink.tab file. devfsadm nor‐
			  mally reads /etc/devlink.tab.

       -r root_dir	  Presume that the  /dev  directory  trees  are	 found
			  under	 root_dir,  not	 directly  under  root (/). No
			  other use or assumptions are made about root_dir.

       -v		  Print changes to /dev in verbose mode.

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0    Successful completion.

       1    An error occurred.

FILES
       /devices

	   device nodes directory

       /dev

	   logical symbolic links to /devices

       /usr/lib/devfsadm/devfsadmd

	   devfsadm daemon

       /dev/.devfsadm_dev.lock

	   update lock file

       /dev/.devfsadm_daemon.lock

	   daemon lock file

       /etc/security/device_policy

	   device policy file

       /etc/security/extra_privs

	   additional device privileges

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWcsu			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       svcs(1),	  add_drv(1M),	 modinfo(1M),	modload(1M),	modunload(1M),
       rem_drv(1M),  svcadm(1M),  tapes(1M),  path_to_inst(4),	attributes(5),
       privileges(5), smf(5), devfs(7FS)

NOTES
       This document does not constitute an API. The /devices directory	 might
       not  exist  or  might  have  different contents or interpretations in a
       future release. The existence of this notice does not  imply  that  any
       other documentation that lacks this notice constitutes an API.

       devfsadm no longer manages the /devices name space. See devfs(7FS).

       The  device  configuration service is managed by the service management
       facility, smf(5), under the service identifier,	and  can  be  used  to
       start devfsadm during reconfiguration boot by:

	 svc:/system/device/local:default

       Otherwise, devfsadm is started by:

	 svc:/system/sysevent:default

       Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or
       requesting restart, can be performed using  svcadm(1M).	The  service's
       status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.

SunOS 5.10			  23 Jun 2008			  devfsadm(1M)
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