"Michael B. Trausch" wrote:
[...]
> DevFSd provides symlinks as follows:
> 
>         /dev/ttyS0 = /dev/tts/0
>         /dev/tty0 = /dev/vc/0
>         /dev/pty* = /dev/pty/*
> 
> Until programs use the new names (e.g., init should tell getty to use
> /dev/vc/0 instead of /dev/tty0), and everything on the system doesn't need
> support for the old-style names, you need to use devfsd and
> such.

You don't have to wait for every program to use the new names, if devfs
is
the way you want to go.  Do a "rgrep /dev /etc/*" and you'll find
that many device-using programs have their device names stored in
configuration files.  Fixing these files is simple, just replace 
/dev/device with whatever the symlink points to.  [This leaves a few
files like /etc/securetty that use relative pathnames.  These are
of course fixable too, they just don't have the /dev to search for.]

This lets you get rid of a lot of symlinks.  I still need symlinks for
/dev/tty* (hardcoded in X), isdn stuff and sound stuff.  Everything else
is gone from dev, sitting comfortably in subdirectories only.
Getting rid of all "possible" disks helped in particular, "ls /dev"
fits in a standard 80x25 screen now. :-)

Helge Hafting
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