Fwd: [ANNOUNCE] hotplug-ng 001 release
Jaime Buffery
nestu at espresso.foo-projects.org
Fri Feb 11 15:47:40 UTC 2005
Subject: [ANNOUNCE] hotplug-ng 001 release
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2005 16:40:33 -0800
From: Greg KH <gregkh at suse.de>
To: linux-hotplug-devel at lists.sourceforge.net, linux-kernel at vger.kernel.org
I'd like to announce, yet-another-hotplug based userspace project:
linux-ng. This collection of code replaces the existing linux-hotplug
package with very tiny, compiled executable programs, instead of the
existing bash scripts.
It currently provides the following:
- a /sbin/hotplug multiplexer. Works identical to the existing
bash /sbin/hotplug.
- autoload programs for usb, scsi, and pci modules. These
programs determine what module needs to be loaded when the
kernel emits a hotplug event for these types of devices. This
works just like the existing linux-hotplug scripts, with a few
exceptions.
But why redo this all in .c code? What's wrong with shell scripts?
Nothing is wrong with shell scripts, unless you don't want to have an
interpreter in your initramfs/initrd and you want to provide
/sbin/hotplug and autoload module functionality. Or if you have a huge
box that spawns a zillion hotplug events all at once, and you need to be
able to handle all of that with the minimum amount of processing time
and memory.
So, how small are these programs? Take a look:
text data bss dec hex filename
4669 32 124 4825 12d9 hotplug
5077 8 348 5433 1539 module_pci
4925 8 412 5345 14e1 module_scsi
5349 8 348 5705 1649 module_usb
Those are all static binaries, linked with klibc (which is included in
the hotplug-ng package, just like udev.)
This compares to the following bash scripts:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 4412 Feb 10 15:28 /sbin/hotplug
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 702 Sep 24 08:04 /etc/hotplug/blacklist
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 5293 Sep 24 08:04 /etc/hotplug/hotplug.functions
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 3739 Sep 24 08:04 /etc/hotplug/pci.agent
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 1459 Sep 24 08:04 /etc/hotplug/scsi.agent
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 13466 Sep 24 08:04 /etc/hotplug/usb.agent
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 39306 Sep 24 08:04 /etc/hotplug/usb.distmap
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4364 Sep 24 08:04 /etc/hotplug/usb.handmap
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 189 Sep 24 08:04 /etc/hotplug/usb.usermap
All of which are loaded into memory for each hotplug event (for specific
hotplug events, only that bus type of file is loaded.)
But what about speed? With a completely unscientific measurement on my
old, slow laptop, it takes about 2 seconds from the time I plug a usb
device into the machine, for the proper module to be loaded. With the
hotplug-ng program, it takes less than a second.
And for those of you who might remember the old dietHotplug program that
also did the same thing in a tiny amount of space, this project
obsoletes that one. dietHotplug had to be rebuilt for every kernel that
was used on the system, hotplug-ng uses the ability for modprobe to
determine the module that needs to be loaded based on the module
aliases[1].
The code can be found at:
kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/kernel/hotplug/hotplug-ng-001.tar.gz
for those who wish to poke around in it.
I still have a few more programs to write to get it up to the same
functionality as the existing hotplug scripts (firmware, ieee1392, etc.)
but those will be done soon. I'd like to get people's comments on the
idea, and welcome suggestions and even patches :)
hotplug-ng development is done in a BitKeeper repository located at:
bk://linuxusb.bkbits.net/hotplug-ng
If anyone ever wants a tarball of the current bk tree, just email me.
thanks,
greg k-h
[1] modprobe as it currently works stops loading modules when it finds
an alias that matches. This does not work for drivers that claim to
support "all devices" and then later on fail on devices that they really
don't support. For that, all matching drivers need to be loaded for the
system to work properly. The linux-hotplug scripts handle this
correctly, so if you rely on this functionality, please stick with that
package for now. I'll be modifying modprobe to add this feature in the
near future.
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