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Jonathan Corbet7358bb22016-10-26 16:14:52 -06001Rules on how to access information in sysfs
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Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -07003
Randy Dunlap30b1b282007-07-23 21:05:02 -07004The kernel-exported sysfs exports internal kernel implementation details
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -07005and depends on internal kernel structures and layout. It is agreed upon
6by the kernel developers that the Linux kernel does not provide a stable
Nathan Lynch83c79b52008-07-02 10:21:30 -07007internal API. Therefore, there are aspects of the sysfs interface that
8may not be stable across kernel releases.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -07009
10To minimize the risk of breaking users of sysfs, which are in most cases
11low-level userspace applications, with a new kernel release, the users
Randy Dunlap30b1b282007-07-23 21:05:02 -070012of sysfs must follow some rules to use an as-abstract-as-possible way to
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070013access this filesystem. The current udev and HAL programs already
14implement this and users are encouraged to plug, if possible, into the
Randy Dunlap30b1b282007-07-23 21:05:02 -070015abstractions these programs provide instead of accessing sysfs directly.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070016
17But if you really do want or need to access sysfs directly, please follow
18the following rules and then your programs should work with future
19versions of the sysfs interface.
20
21- Do not use libsysfs
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030022 It makes assumptions about sysfs which are not true. Its API does not
23 offer any abstraction, it exposes all the kernel driver-core
24 implementation details in its own API. Therefore it is not better than
25 reading directories and opening the files yourself.
26 Also, it is not actively maintained, in the sense of reflecting the
27 current kernel development. The goal of providing a stable interface
28 to sysfs has failed; it causes more problems than it solves. It
29 violates many of the rules in this document.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070030
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030031- sysfs is always at ``/sys``
32 Parsing ``/proc/mounts`` is a waste of time. Other mount points are a
33 system configuration bug you should not try to solve. For test cases,
34 possibly support a ``SYSFS_PATH`` environment variable to overwrite the
35 application's behavior, but never try to search for sysfs. Never try
36 to mount it, if you are not an early boot script.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070037
38- devices are only "devices"
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030039 There is no such thing like class-, bus-, physical devices,
40 interfaces, and such that you can rely on in userspace. Everything is
41 just simply a "device". Class-, bus-, physical, ... types are just
42 kernel implementation details which should not be expected by
43 applications that look for devices in sysfs.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070044
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030045 The properties of a device are:
46
47 - devpath (``/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.1/usb2/2-2/2-2:1.0``)
48
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070049 - identical to the DEVPATH value in the event sent from the kernel
50 at device creation and removal
51 - the unique key to the device at that point in time
Randy Dunlap30b1b282007-07-23 21:05:02 -070052 - the kernel's path to the device directory without the leading
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030053 ``/sys``, and always starting with a slash
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070054 - all elements of a devpath must be real directories. Symlinks
55 pointing to /sys/devices must always be resolved to their real
Randy Dunlap30b1b282007-07-23 21:05:02 -070056 target and the target path must be used to access the device.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070057 That way the devpath to the device matches the devpath of the
58 kernel used at event time.
59 - using or exposing symlink values as elements in a devpath string
60 is a bug in the application
61
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030062 - kernel name (``sda``, ``tty``, ``0000:00:1f.2``, ...)
63
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070064 - a directory name, identical to the last element of the devpath
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030065 - applications need to handle spaces and characters like ``!`` in
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070066 the name
67
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030068 - subsystem (``block``, ``tty``, ``pci``, ...)
69
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070070 - simple string, never a path or a link
71 - retrieved by reading the "subsystem"-link and using only the
72 last element of the target path
73
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030074 - driver (``tg3``, ``ata_piix``, ``uhci_hcd``)
75
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070076 - a simple string, which may contain spaces, never a path or a
77 link
78 - it is retrieved by reading the "driver"-link and using only the
79 last element of the target path
Randy Dunlap30b1b282007-07-23 21:05:02 -070080 - devices which do not have "driver"-link just do not have a
81 driver; copying the driver value in a child device context is a
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070082 bug in the application
83
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030084 - attributes
85
Randy Dunlap30b1b282007-07-23 21:05:02 -070086 - the files in the device directory or files below subdirectories
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070087 of the same device directory
88 - accessing attributes reached by a symlink pointing to another device,
89 like the "device"-link, is a bug in the application
90
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030091 Everything else is just a kernel driver-core implementation detail
92 that should not be assumed to be stable across kernel releases.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -070093
94- Properties of parent devices never belong into a child device.
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -030095 Always look at the parent devices themselves for determining device
96 context properties. If the device ``eth0`` or ``sda`` does not have a
97 "driver"-link, then this device does not have a driver. Its value is empty.
98 Never copy any property of the parent-device into a child-device. Parent
99 device properties may change dynamically without any notice to the
100 child device.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700101
Randy Dunlap30b1b282007-07-23 21:05:02 -0700102- Hierarchy in a single device tree
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300103 There is only one valid place in sysfs where hierarchy can be examined
104 and this is below: ``/sys/devices.``
105 It is planned that all device directories will end up in the tree
106 below this directory.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700107
108- Classification by subsystem
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300109 There are currently three places for classification of devices:
110 ``/sys/block,`` ``/sys/class`` and ``/sys/bus.`` It is planned that these will
111 not contain any device directories themselves, but only flat lists of
112 symlinks pointing to the unified ``/sys/devices`` tree.
113 All three places have completely different rules on how to access
114 device information. It is planned to merge all three
115 classification directories into one place at ``/sys/subsystem``,
116 following the layout of the bus directories. All buses and
117 classes, including the converted block subsystem, will show up
118 there.
119 The devices belonging to a subsystem will create a symlink in the
120 "devices" directory at ``/sys/subsystem/<name>/devices``,
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700121
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300122 If ``/sys/subsystem`` exists, ``/sys/bus``, ``/sys/class`` and ``/sys/block``
123 can be ignored. If it does not exist, you always have to scan all three
124 places, as the kernel is free to move a subsystem from one place to
125 the other, as long as the devices are still reachable by the same
126 subsystem name.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700127
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300128 Assuming ``/sys/class/<subsystem>`` and ``/sys/bus/<subsystem>``, or
129 ``/sys/block`` and ``/sys/class/block`` are not interchangeable is a bug in
130 the application.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700131
132- Block
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300133 The converted block subsystem at ``/sys/class/block`` or
134 ``/sys/subsystem/block`` will contain the links for disks and partitions
135 at the same level, never in a hierarchy. Assuming the block subsystem to
136 contain only disks and not partition devices in the same flat list is
137 a bug in the application.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700138
139- "device"-link and <subsystem>:<kernel name>-links
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300140 Never depend on the "device"-link. The "device"-link is a workaround
141 for the old layout, where class devices are not created in
142 ``/sys/devices/`` like the bus devices. If the link-resolving of a
143 device directory does not end in ``/sys/devices/``, you can use the
144 "device"-link to find the parent devices in ``/sys/devices/``, That is the
145 single valid use of the "device"-link; it must never appear in any
146 path as an element. Assuming the existence of the "device"-link for
147 a device in ``/sys/devices/`` is a bug in the application.
148 Accessing ``/sys/class/net/eth0/device`` is a bug in the application.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700149
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300150 Never depend on the class-specific links back to the ``/sys/class``
151 directory. These links are also a workaround for the design mistake
152 that class devices are not created in ``/sys/devices.`` If a device
153 directory does not contain directories for child devices, these links
154 may be used to find the child devices in ``/sys/class.`` That is the single
155 valid use of these links; they must never appear in any path as an
156 element. Assuming the existence of these links for devices which are
157 real child device directories in the ``/sys/devices`` tree is a bug in
158 the application.
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700159
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300160 It is planned to remove all these links when all class device
161 directories live in ``/sys/devices.``
Kay Sievers46336002007-06-08 13:36:37 -0700162
163- Position of devices along device chain can change.
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300164 Never depend on a specific parent device position in the devpath,
165 or the chain of parent devices. The kernel is free to insert devices into
166 the chain. You must always request the parent device you are looking for
167 by its subsystem value. You need to walk up the chain until you find
168 the device that matches the expected subsystem. Depending on a specific
169 position of a parent device or exposing relative paths using ``../`` to
170 access the chain of parents is a bug in the application.
Darren Hart00e262f2014-09-16 14:56:37 -0700171
172- When reading and writing sysfs device attribute files, avoid dependency
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300173 on specific error codes wherever possible. This minimizes coupling to
174 the error handling implementation within the kernel.
Darren Hart00e262f2014-09-16 14:56:37 -0700175
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300176 In general, failures to read or write sysfs device attributes shall
177 propagate errors wherever possible. Common errors include, but are not
178 limited to:
Darren Hart00e262f2014-09-16 14:56:37 -0700179
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300180 ``-EIO``: The read or store operation is not supported, typically
181 returned by the sysfs system itself if the read or store pointer
182 is ``NULL``.
Darren Hart00e262f2014-09-16 14:56:37 -0700183
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300184 ``-ENXIO``: The read or store operation failed
Darren Hart00e262f2014-09-16 14:56:37 -0700185
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300186 Error codes will not be changed without good reason, and should a change
187 to error codes result in user-space breakage, it will be fixed, or the
188 the offending change will be reverted.
Darren Hart00e262f2014-09-16 14:56:37 -0700189
Mauro Carvalho Chehab3177ae42016-09-23 15:44:01 -0300190 Userspace applications can, however, expect the format and contents of
191 the attribute files to remain consistent in the absence of a version
192 attribute change in the context of a given attribute.