-udev - userspace device management
-
-For more information see the files in the docs/ directory.
-
-Important Note:
- Integrating udev in the system is a whole lot of work, has complex dependencies
- and differs a lot from distro to distro. All reasonable distros depend on udev
- these days and the system will not work without it.
-
- The upstream udev project does not support or recomend to replace a distro's udev
- installation with the upstream version. The installation of a unmodified upstream
- version may render your system unusable! There is no "default" setup or a set
- of "default" rules provided by the upstream udev version.
-
-Requirements:
- - 2.6 version of the Linux kernel.
-
- - The kernel must have sysfs, netlink, and hotplug enabled.
-
- - The proc filesystem must be mounted on /proc.
-
- - The sysfs filesystem must be mounted at /sys. No other location
- is supported.
-
-
-Operation:
- - Udev creates and removes device nodes in /dev based on events
- the kernel sends out on device discovery or removal
-
- - Directly after mounting the root filesystem, the udevd daemon must be
- started by an init script.
-
- - From kernel version 2.6.15 on, the hotplug helper /sbin/hotplug should
- be disabled with an init script before kernel modules are loaded.
-
- - During bootup, /dev usually gets a tmpfs filesystem mounted which is
- populated from scratch by udev (created nodes don't survive a reboot,
- the /lib/udev/devices directory should be used for "static nodes").
-
- - Udev replaces the hotplug event management invoked from /sbin/hotplug
- by the udevd daemon, which receives the kernel events over netlink.
-
- - All kernel events are matched against a set of specified rules which
- make it possible to hook into the event processing.
-
- - Copies of the rules files for all major distros are in the etc/udev
- directory (you may look there how others distros are doing it).
-
-Compile Options:
- prefix
- Set this to the default root that you want to use only override
- this if you really know what you are doing even then, you probably
- don't do the right thing.
- DESTDIR
- Prefix for install target, used for package building.
- USE_LOG
- if set to 'true', udev is able to pass errors or debug information
- to syslog. This is very useful to see what udev is doing or not doing,
- it is enabled by default.
- DEBUG
- If set to 'true', very verbose debugging messages will be compiled
- into the udev binaries. The actual level of debugging is specified
- in the udev config file.
- STRIPCMD
- If udev is compiled for packaging an empty string can be passed
- to disable the stripping of the binaries.
- USE_SELINUX
- If set to 'true', udev will be built with SELinux support
- enabled. This is disabled by default.
- USE_KLIBC
- If set to 'true', udev is built and linked against klibc.
- Default value is 'false'. KLCC specifies the klibc compiler
- wrapper, usually located at /usr/bin/klcc.
- EXTRAS
- If set, will build the "extra" helper programs as specified
- as listed (see below for an example).
-
-If you want to build the udev helper program cdrom_id and scsi_id:
- make EXTRAS="extras/cdrom_id extras/scsi_id"
-
-Installation:
- - The install target intall the udev binaries in the default locations,
- all at boot time reqired binaries will be installed in /sbin.
-
- - The default location for scripts and binaries that are called from
- rules is /lib/udev.
-
- - It is recommended to use the /lib/udev/devices directory to place
- device nodes and symlinks in, which are copied to /dev at every boot.
- That way, nodes for broken subsystems or devices which can't be
- detected automatically by the kernel will always be available.
-
-Please direct any comment/question/concern to the linux-hotplug-devel mailing list at:
- linux-hotplug-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
-
+systemd System and Service Manager
+
+DETAILS:
+ http://0pointer.de/blog/projects/systemd.html
+
+WEB SITE:
+ http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd
+
+GIT:
+ git://anongit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd
+ ssh://git.freedesktop.org/git/systemd/systemd
+
+GITWEB:
+ http://cgit.freedesktop.org/systemd/systemd
+
+MAILING LIST:
+ http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
+ http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-commits
+
+IRC:
+ #systemd on irc.freenode.org
+
+BUG REPORTS:
+ https://bugs.freedesktop.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=systemd
+
+AUTHOR:
+ Lennart Poettering
+ Kay Sievers
+ ...and many others
+
+LICENSE:
+ LGPLv2.1+ for all code
+ - except sd-daemon.[ch] and sd-readahead.[ch] which are MIT
+ - except src/udev/ which is (currently still) GPLv2+
+
+REQUIREMENTS:
+ Linux kernel >= 2.6.39
+ CONFIG_DEVTMPFS
+ CONFIG_CGROUPS (it's OK to disable all controllers)
+ CONFIG_INOTIFY_USER
+ CONFIG_SIGNALFD
+ CONFIG_TIMERFD
+ CONFIG_EPOLL
+ CONFIG_NET
+ CONFIG_SYSFS
+
+ Linux kernel >= 3.8 for Smack support
+
+ Udev will fail to work with the legacy layout:
+ CONFIG_SYSFS_DEPRECATED=n
+
+ Legacy hotplug slows down the system and confuses udev:
+ CONFIG_UEVENT_HELPER_PATH=""
+
+ Userspace firmware loading is deprecated, will go away, and
+ sometimes causes problems:
+ CONFIG_FW_LOADER_USER_HELPER=n
+
+ Some udev rules and virtualization detection relies on it:
+ CONFIG_DMIID
+
+ Mount and bind mount handling might require it:
+ CONFIG_FHANDLE
+
+ Optional but strongly recommended:
+ CONFIG_IPV6
+ CONFIG_AUTOFS4_FS
+ CONFIG_TMPFS_POSIX_ACL
+ CONFIG_TMPFS_XATTR
+ CONFIG_SECCOMP
+
+ For systemd-bootchart a kernel with procfs support and several
+ proc output options enabled is required:
+ CONFIG_PROC_FS
+ CONFIG_SCHEDSTATS
+ CONFIG_SCHED_DEBUG
+
+ For UEFI systems:
+ CONFIG_EFI_VARS
+ CONFIG_EFI_PARTITION
+
+ dbus >= 1.4.0
+ libcap
+ libblkid >= 2.20 (from util-linux) (optional)
+ libkmod >= 5 (optional)
+ PAM >= 1.1.2 (optional)
+ libcryptsetup (optional)
+ libaudit (optional)
+ libacl (optional)
+ libattr (optional)
+ libselinux (optional)
+ liblzma (optional)
+ tcpwrappers (optional)
+ libgcrypt (optional)
+ libqrencode (optional)
+ libmicrohttpd (optional)
+ libpython (optional)
+ make, gcc, and similar tools
+
+ During runtime you need the following additional dependencies:
+
+ util-linux >= v2.19 (requires fsck -l, agetty -s)
+ sulogin (from util-linux >= 2.22 or sysvinit-tools, optional but recommended)
+ dracut (optional)
+ PolicyKit (optional)
+
+ When building from git you need the following additional dependencies:
+
+ docbook-xsl
+ xsltproc
+ automake
+ autoconf
+ libtool
+ intltool
+ gperf
+ gtkdocize (optional)
+ python (optional)
+ sphinx (optional)
+ python-lxml (entirely optional)
+
+ When systemd-hostnamed is used it is strongly recommended to
+ install nss-myhostname to ensure that in a world of
+ dynamically changing hostnames the hostname stays resolvable
+ under all circumstances. In fact, systemd-hostnamed will warn
+ if nss-myhostname is not installed.
+
+ Note that D-Bus can link against libsystemd-login.so, which
+ results in a cyclic build dependency. To accommodate for this
+ please build D-Bus without systemd first, then build systemd,
+ then rebuild D-Bus with systemd support.
+
+ To build HTML documentation for python-systemd using sphinx,
+ please first install systemd (using 'make install'), and then
+ invoke sphinx-build with 'make sphinx-<target>', with <target>
+ being 'html' or 'latexpdf'. If using DESTDIR for installation,
+ pass the same DESTDIR to 'make sphinx-html' invocation.
+
+USERS AND GROUPS:
+ Default udev rules use the following standard system group
+ names, which need to be resolvable by getgrnam() at any time,
+ even in the very early boot stages, where no other databases
+ and network are available:
+
+ tty, dialout, kmem, video, audio, lp, floppy, cdrom, tape, disk
+
+ During runtime the journal daemon requires the
+ "systemd-journal" system group to exist. New journal files will
+ be readable by this group (but not writable) which may be used
+ to grant specific users read access.
+
+ It is also recommended to grant read access to all journal
+ files to the system groups "wheel" and "adm" with a command
+ like the following in the post installation script of the
+ package:
+
+ # setfacl -nm g:wheel:rx,d:g:wheel:rx,g:adm:rx,d:g:adm:rx /var/log/journal/
+
+ The journal gateway daemon requires the
+ "systemd-journal-gateway" system user and group to
+ exist. During execution this network facing service will drop
+ privileges and assume this uid/gid for security reasons.
+
+WARNINGS:
+ systemd will warn you during boot if /etc/mtab is not a
+ symlink to /proc/mounts. Please ensure that /etc/mtab is a
+ proper symlink.
+
+ systemd will warn you during boot if /usr is on a different
+ file system than /. While in systemd itself very little will
+ break if /usr is on a separate partition many of its
+ dependencies very likely will break sooner or later in one
+ form or another. For example udev rules tend to refer to
+ binaries in /usr, binaries that link to libraries in /usr or
+ binaries that refer to data files in /usr. Since these
+ breakages are not always directly visible systemd will warn
+ about this, since this kind of file system setup is not really
+ supported anymore by the basic set of Linux OS components.
+
+ For more information on this issue consult
+ http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/separate-usr-is-broken
+
+ To run systemd under valgrind, compile with VALGRIND defined
+ (e.g. ./configure CPPFLAGS='... -DVALGRIND=1'). Otherwise,
+ false positives will be triggered by code which violates
+ some rules but is actually safe.