From 7fb945133d9e9ebb6afa1322986e55093ac9c6a1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Scott Ullrich Date: Sun, 16 Oct 2005 17:39:03 +0000 Subject: MFC 6884 We do not use rc.d so basically call dhclient directly --- etc/devd.conf | 188 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 188 insertions(+) create mode 100644 etc/devd.conf (limited to 'etc/devd.conf') diff --git a/etc/devd.conf b/etc/devd.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b61387a --- /dev/null +++ b/etc/devd.conf @@ -0,0 +1,188 @@ +# $FreeBSD: src/etc/devd.conf,v 1.26.2.1 2005/09/03 22:49:22 sam Exp $ +# +# Refer to devd.conf(5) and devd(8) man pages for the details on how to +# run and configure devd. +# + +# NB: All regular expressions have an implicit ^$ around them. +# NB: device-name is shorthand for 'match device-name' + +options { + # Each directory directive adds a directory the list of directories + # that we scan for files. Files are read-in in the order that they + # are returned from readdir(3). The rule-sets are combined to + # create a DFA that's used to match events to actions. + directory "/etc/devd"; + directory "/usr/local/etc/devd"; + pid-file "/var/run/devd.pid"; + + # Setup some shorthand for regex that we use later in the file. + #XXX Yes, these are gross -- imp + set scsi-controller-regex + "(aac|adv|adw|aha|ahb|ahc|ahd|aic|amd|amr|asr|bt|ciss|ct|dpt|\ + esp|ida|iir|ips|isp|mlx|mly|mpt|ncr|ncv|nsp|stg|sym|trm|wds)\ + [0-9]+"; +}; + +# Note that the attach/detach with the highest value wins, so that one can +# override these general rules. + +# +# For ethernet like devices start configuring the interface. Due to +# a historical accident, this script is called pccard_ether. +# +attach 0 { + media-type "ethernet"; + action "/etc/pccard_ether $device-name start"; +}; + +detach 0 { + media-type "ethernet"; + action "/etc/pccard_ether $device-name stop"; +}; + +# +# Try to start dhclient on Ethernet like interfaces when the link comes +# up. Only devices that are configured to support DHCP will actually +# run it. No link down rule exists because dhclient automaticly exits +# when the link goes down. +# +notify 0 { + match "system" "IFNET"; + match "type" "LINK_UP"; + media-type "ethernet"; + action "/sbin/dhclient $subsystem"; +}; + +# +# Like Ethernet devices, but separate because +# they have a different media type. We may want +# to exploit this later. +# +detach 0 { + media-type "802.11"; + action "/etc/pccard_ether $device-name stop"; +}; +attach 0 { + media-type "802.11"; + action "/etc/pccard_ether $device-name start"; +}; +notify 0 { + match "system" "IFNET"; + match "type" "LINK_UP"; + media-type "802.11"; + action "/sbin/dhclient $subsystem"; +}; + +# An entry like this might be in a different file, but is included here +# as an example of how to override things. Normally 'ed50' would match +# the above attach/detach stuff, but the value of 100 makes it +# hard wired to 1.2.3.4. +attach 100 { + device-name "ed50"; + action "ifconfig $device-name inet 1.2.3.4 netmask 0xffff0000"; +}; +detach 100 { + device-name "ed50"; +}; + +# When a USB keyboard arrives, attach it as the console keyboard. +attach 100 { + device-name "ukbd0"; + action "kbdcontrol -k /dev/ukbd0 < /dev/console && /etc/rc.d/syscons restart"; +}; +detach 100 { + device-name "ukbd0"; + action "kbdcontrol -k /dev/kbd0 < /dev/console"; +}; + +# The entry below starts moused when a mouse is plugged in. Moused +# stops automatically (actually it bombs :) when the device disappears. +attach 100 { + device-name "ums[0-9]+"; + action "/etc/rc.d/moused start $device-name"; +}; + +# +# Rescan scsi device-names on attach, but not detach. However, it is +# disabled by default due to reports of problems. +# +attach 0 { + device-name "$scsi-controller-regex"; +// action "camcontrol rescan all"; +}; + +# Don't even try to second guess what to do about drivers that don't +# match here. Instead, pass it off to syslog. Commented out for the +# moment, as pnpinfo isn't set in devd yet. +nomatch 0 { +# action "logger Unknown device: $pnpinfo $location $bus"; +}; + +# Switch power profiles when the AC line state changes. +notify 10 { + match "system" "ACPI"; + match "subsystem" "ACAD"; + action "/etc/rc.d/power_profile $notify"; +}; + +# Notify all users before beginning emergency shutdown when we get +# a _CRT or _HOT thermal event and we're going to power down the system +# very soon. +notify 10 { + match "system" "ACPI"; + match "subsystem" "Thermal"; + match "notify" "0xcc"; + action "logger -p kern.emerg 'WARNING: system temperature too high, shutting down soon!'"; +}; + +/* EXAMPLES TO END OF FILE + +# The following might be an example of something that a vendor might +# install if you were to add their device. This might reside in +# /usr/local/etc/devd/deqna.conf. A deqna is, in this hypothetical +# example, a pccard ethernet-like device. Students of history may +# know other devices by this name, and will get the in-jokes in this +# entry. +nomatch 10 { + match "bus" "pccard[0-9]+"; + match "manufacturer" "0x1234"; + match "product" "0x2323"; + action "kldload if_deqna"; +}; +attach 10 { + device-name "deqna[0-9]+"; + action "/etc/pccard_ether $device-name start"; +}; +detach 10 { + device-name "deqna[0-9]+"; + action "/etc/pccard_ether $device-name stop"; +}; + +# Examples of notify hooks. A notify is a generic way for a kernel +# subsystem to send event notification to userland. +# +# Here are some examples of ACPI notify handlers. ACPI subsystems that +# generate notifies include the AC adapter, power/sleep buttons, +# control method batteries, lid switch, and thermal zones. +# +# Information returned is not always the same as the ACPI notify +# events. See the ACPI specification for more information about +# notifies. Here is the information returned for each subsystem: +# +# ACAD: AC line state (0 is offline, 1 is online) +# Button: Button pressed (0 for power, 1 for sleep) +# CMBAT: ACPI battery events +# Lid: Lid state (0 is closed, 1 is open) +# Thermal: ACPI thermal zone events +# +# This example calls a script when the AC state changes, passing the +# notify value as the first argument. If the state is 0x00, it might +# call some sysctls to implement economy mode. If 0x01, it might set +# the mode to performance. +notify 10 { + match "system" "ACPI"; + match "subsystem" "ACAD"; + action "/etc/acpi_ac $notify"; +}; +*/ -- cgit v1.1