Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Sysfs

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sysfs is a pseudo file system provided by the Linux kernel that exports information about various kernel subsystems, hardware devices, and associated device drivers from the kernel's device model to user space through virtual files. In addition to providing information about various devices and kernel subsystems, exported virtual files are also used for their configuring.

Contents

sysfs provides functionality similar to the sysctl mechanism found in BSD operating systems, with the difference that sysfs is implemented as a virtual file system instead of being a purpose-built kernel mechanism, and that, in Linux, sysctl configuration parameters are made available at /proc/sys/ as part of procfs, not sysfs which is mounted at /sys/.

History

During the 2.5 development cycle, the Linux driver model was introduced to fix several shortcomings of version 2.4:

  • No unified method of representing driver-device relationships existed.
  • There was no generic hotplug mechanism.
  • procfs was cluttered with lots of non-process information.
  • Sysfs is designed to export the information present in the device tree which would then no longer clutter up procfs. It was written by Patrick Mochel. Maneesh Soni later wrote the sysfs backing store patch to reduce memory usage on large systems.

    During the next year of 2.5 development, the infrastructural capabilities of the driver model and driverfs, formerly called ddfs, began to prove useful to other subsystems. kobjects were developed to provide a central object management mechanism and driverfs was renamed to sysfs to represent its subsystem agnosticism.

    Sysfs is mounted under the /sys mount point. If it is not mounted during initialization, you can always mount using the command: "mount -t sysfs sysfs /sys"

    Supported buses

    PCI
    Exports information about PCI devices.
    USB
    Contains both USB devices and USB hosts.
    S/390 buses
    As the S/390 architecture contains devices not found elsewhere, special buses have been created:
  • css: Contains subchannels (currently the only driver provided is for I/O subchannels).
  • ccw: Contains channel attached devices (driven by CCWs).
  • ccwgroup: Artificial devices, created by the user and consisting of ccw devices. Replaces some of the 2.4 chandev functionality.
  • iucv: Artificial devices like netiucv devices which use VM's IUCV interface.
  • Sysfs and userspace

    Sysfs is used by several utilities to access information about hardware and its driver (kernel modules) such as udev or HAL. Scripts have been written to access information previously obtained via procfs, and some scripts configure device drivers and devices via their attributes.

    References

    Sysfs Wikipedia