+-------[ Poul-Henning Kamp ]----------------------
| In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Andrew Kenneth Milton
| writes:
| >+-------[ Greg Lehey ]----------------------
| >|
| >
| >[snip]
| >
| >| whether it's been fixed. Basically, devfs as supplied in CURRENT had
| >| a 16 character limit on device names, and it didn't understand
| >| subdirectories: it treated the / as a part of the device name.
| >
| >The subdir part bit me about a week ago, so I'd say it's still not fixed.
|
| This is absolutely news to me. I'm pretty sure that you will find
| that /dev/fd[012] exists on your system and that it was created using
| '/' in make_dev calls...
This I saw, but, I had no idea how this was done.. I've been in a flu induced
coma of late, so I didn't really search too hard to be completely honest..
|
| More details on this bug are most welcome.
The problem turns up most violently within the XFree86 DRI Module, since
it now uses make_dev, and not mknod as it used to.
The DRI Module first attempts to mkdir /dev/dri/, and then for each card
it supports attempts to use make_dev(9) on dri/card%d (0-whatever), I've
only got one card, so for me dri/card0.
Loading the DRI module causes an instant panic (which I think is actually
caused by DRI, not DEVFS, it's still quite inconvenient).
The same module works fine with a 'regular' /dev/
Assuming that the mkdirs were failing on /dev/ with DEVFS I made a symlink
in rc.devfs for /dev/dri -> /usr/dev/dri (that's how I found the bug with
directory targets of symlinks being treated as symlinks...). This still
caused the panic (which is sort of understandable since /usr/dev/ isn't in
/dev/).
I remove the mkdirs and simply use make_dev on dri_card0 instead of dri/card0,
everything works like a charm. Using mknod also used to work fine with the
symlink and DEVFS.
--
Totally Holistic Enterprises Internet| | Andrew Milton
The Internet (Aust) Pty Ltd | |
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