1 ============================= 2 The Linux Kernel Device Model 3 ============================= 4 5 Patrick Mochel <mochel@digitalimplant.org> 6 7 Drafted 26 August 2002 8 Updated 31 January 2006 9 10 11 Overview 12 ~~~~~~~~ 13 14 The Linux Kernel Driver Model is a unification 15 models that were previously used in the kernel 16 bus-specific drivers for bridges and devices b 17 and operations into globally accessible data s 18 19 Traditional driver models implemented some sor 20 (sometimes just a list) for the devices they c 21 uniformity across the different bus types. 22 23 The current driver model provides a common, un 24 a bus and the devices that can appear under th 25 model includes a set of common attributes whic 26 of common callbacks, such as device discovery 27 shutdown, bus power management, etc. 28 29 The common device and bridge interface reflect 30 computer: namely the ability to do seamless de 31 management, and hot plug. In particular, the m 32 Microsoft (namely ACPI) ensures that almost ev 33 on an x86-compatible system can work within th 34 not every bus is able to support all such oper 35 buses support most of those operations. 36 37 38 Downstream Access 39 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 40 41 Common data fields have been moved out of indi 42 data structure. These fields must still be acc 43 and sometimes by the device-specific drivers. 44 45 Other bus layers are encouraged to do what has 46 struct pci_dev now looks like this:: 47 48 struct pci_dev { 49 ... 50 51 struct device dev; /* Generic devi 52 ... 53 }; 54 55 Note first that the struct device dev within t 56 statically allocated. This means only one allo 57 58 Note also that that struct device dev is not n 59 front of the pci_dev structure. This is to ma 60 they're doing when switching between the bus d 61 and to discourage meaningless and incorrect ca 62 63 The PCI bus layer freely accesses the fields o 64 the structure of struct pci_dev, and it should 65 device. Individual PCI device drivers that hav 66 driver model generally do not and should not t 67 unless there is a compelling reason to do so. 68 69 The above abstraction prevents unnecessary pai 70 If it were not done this way, then when a fiel 71 downstream driver would break. On the other h 72 (and not the device layer) accesses the struct 73 layer that needs to change. 74 75 76 User Interface 77 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 78 79 By virtue of having a complete hierarchical vi 80 system, exporting a complete hierarchical view 81 easy. This has been accomplished by implementi 82 file system named sysfs. 83 84 Almost all mainstream Linux distros mount this 85 can see some variation of the following in the 86 87 $ mount 88 ... 89 none on /sys type sysfs (rw,noexec,nosuid,no 90 ... 91 $ 92 93 The auto-mounting of sysfs is typically accomp 94 the following in the /etc/fstab file:: 95 96 none /sys sysfs defaults 97 98 or something similar in the /lib/init/fstab fi 99 100 none /sys sysfs nodev,noexe 101 102 If sysfs is not automatically mounted, you can 103 104 # mount -t sysfs sysfs /sys 105 106 Whenever a device is inserted into the tree, a 107 This directory may be populated at each layer 108 the bus layer, or the device layer. 109 110 The global layer currently creates two files - 111 former only reports the name of the device. Th 112 current power state of the device. It will als 113 power state. 114 115 The bus layer may also create files for the de 116 bus. For example, the PCI layer currently crea 117 for each PCI device. 118 119 A device-specific driver may also export files 120 device-specific data or tunable interfaces. 121 122 More information about the sysfs directory lay 123 the other documents in this directory and in t 124 Documentation/filesystems/sysfs.rst.
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