Device node - How does kernel know about it

Siva Prasad sprasad at bivio.net
Thu Dec 27 12:31:22 EST 2007


Hi,

I am really interested in finding out how kernel knows about device
nodes and how the whole thing work. This is as part of my debugging
effort on 8641D based PowerPC board.

* It all started with the problem of "not printing" any thing that comes
from ramdisk (echo and printf statements), while kernel printk's work
perfectly fine.
* Ramdisk is also executing fine, just that prints are not coming out of
serial. I can see the execution of various user programs with a printk
in sys_execve() routine. Ramdisk has all the required files like
/dev/console, /dev/ttyS0, etc.
* Looking further into tty driver, I noticed that call to tty_write() or
do_tty_write() is not happening at all. So, somewhere the interface
between kernel and user program is lost.
* Just to check it out, I tried to write a small kernel module and a
test program.
  - Attached memtest.c module (not really testing memory there. :-))
  - Attached testmemtest.c user program, that just open's it and reads
the information
  - Created a device node using "mknod /dev/memtest c 168 0"
  - When I do "insmod memtest.ko" inside the ramdisk bootup scripts, I
could see all the printk's on the console
  - When I execute "testmemtest" next in the same script, it does not
display the printk inside of memtest.c module. This only indicates that
read call did not really go to the kernel side.
  - Just to check my program's validity, I checked on a similar machine
and all the code works fine. 
  - "uname -r" also matches with what I built. So, chances of exiting
from open call because of mismatch is remote. Since userland cannot
print, I have no idea what exactly is happening there.

Now going back to the original question...
How does a kernel know about device nodes and how to link with it.
Basically I believe interface between user programs and kernel is lost
at device nodes.

Appreciate any help in continuing my debugging efforts.

Thanks
Siva

-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: memtest.c
Type: application/octet-stream
Size: 4715 bytes
Desc: memtest.c
URL: <http://lists.ozlabs.org/pipermail/linuxppc-dev/attachments/20071226/fe23d1f8/attachment.obj>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: testmemtest.c
Type: application/octet-stream
Size: 574 bytes
Desc: testmemtest.c
URL: <http://lists.ozlabs.org/pipermail/linuxppc-dev/attachments/20071226/fe23d1f8/attachment-0001.obj>


More information about the Linuxppc-dev mailing list