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Linux Installation and Administration – Lesson 5

Linux Installation and Administration – Lesson 5. Tutor: George Papamarkos Topic: Devices in Linux. Lesson Outline. Managing Filesystems Mounting Disks Managing Devices Device Files Loading Device Drivers Loading Modules Automatically. Managing Devices – Device Files.

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Linux Installation and Administration – Lesson 5

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  1. Linux Installation and Administration – Lesson 5 Tutor: George Papamarkos Topic: Devices in Linux

  2. Lesson Outline • Managing Filesystems • Mounting Disks • Managing Devices • Device Files • Loading Device Drivers • Loading Modules Automatically

  3. Managing Devices – Device Files • Device Files allow user programs access hw devices on the system through Linux kernel • Device Drives in Linux/Unix are part of the monolithic kernel • Devices are located under the /dev dir • E.g. /dev/ttyS0 for the 1st serial port • /dev/hda2 for the 2nd partition of the 1st IDE HDD drive

  4. Managing Devices – Device Files • Some device files do not correspond to actual devices • E.g. /dev/null acts as a byte sink.Write on this device succeeds always but what is written is ignored • Devices are divided to: • Block Devices: Data are read and written in “blocks” • E.g. the IDE hard drives • Character Devices: Data are read and written sequentially • E.g. serial port

  5. Managing Devices – Device Files • In ls –l command in /dev dir, the size of the files has been replaced by two numbers separated by a comma. • brw-rw---- 1 root disk 3, 0 November 2 2004 /dev/hda • The 1st value is called major number and the second is called minor number • Major Num: Specifies a particular driver within the kernel • Minor Num: Specifies a particular devices handled by the driver • E.g. All USB devices are handled by the same driver with one major num although for each of them there is a minor num

  6. Working with Device Files • Create a device file: mknod -m permissions name type major minor where: • name is the full pathname of the device to create, such as /dev/rft0 • type is either c for a character device or b for a block device • major is the major number of the device • minor is the minor number of the device • -m permissions is an optional argument that sets the permission bits of the newdevice file to permissions • E.g. mknod /dev/test b 42 0 • Remove a device file: rm /dev/test • You can of course create links between devices using ln command

  7. Loading Device Drivers • Drivers are cooperating with kernel and they are: • Compiled within the kernel, or • Loaded like external modules to the kernel (like .dll files in Windows) at runtime • A module is simply a single object file containing all the code for the driver. • E.g. usbcore.o the module for usb devices 

  8. Loading Device Drivers • The modules are stored (in most of the systems) in /lib/modules/kernel-versionwhere different dirs per module category exist

  9. Load a Module • Command: insmod <module_name> • insmod usbcore.o • The module may fail to load due to dependencies from other modules • You have to find by your own and resolve this • To avoid this, create a module database with the command: depmod –a, to store all the info about the module • After that you can replace insmod with modprobe command, which checks the create database and resolves the module dependencies automatically

  10. Working with modules • List the already loaded drivers with: • lsmod • Remove a loaded driver with: • Rmmod <module_name> • E.g. rmmod usbcore

  11. Mounting Filesystems on Devices • Filesystem is the way the data are organised and stored (in physical level) on disks • Common Filesystems in Linux • Ext2/ext3 • ReiserFS • Swap • NFS • Vfat • /proc filesystem

  12. Mounting filesystems • In order to access any filesystem under Linux, you must mount it on a certain directory. • The mount command is used to do this and usually must be executed as root. • The format ofthis command is: mount -t type device mount-point where typeis the type name of the filesystem,deviceis the physicaldevice where the filesystem resides (the device file in /dev), and mount-pointis thedirectory on which to mount the filesystem. • You have to create the directory before issuingmount.

  13. Mounting Filesystems • E.g. • mount -t vfat /dev/hda2/mnt/windows To mount the windows hda2 FAT32 partition • There are many options to the mount command, which can be specified with the -o switch. • One common option to mount is -o ro, which mounts the filesystem as read-only. E.g. CDROMs mount -t iso9660 -r /dev/cdrom/mnt/cdrom

  14. Unmounting Filesystems • The inverse of mounting a filesystem is, naturally, unmounting it. • Unmounting a filesystemhas two effects: • synchronizes the system's buffers with the actual contents of the filesystemon disk • it makes the filesystem no longer available from its mount point. • Unmounting is done with the umount command • umount <mount_dir>, e.g. umount mnt/windows

  15. /etc/fstab • You can find out what devices are mounted, and where, using the mount command with no arguments • The system automatically mounts several filesystems when the system boots. • This is handledby the file /etc/fstab • Each line in this file is of the format: device mount-point type options e.g. /dev/hda2 /mnt/windowsvfat defaults

  16. /etc/fstab • The option defaults should be used for most filesystems; it enables a number of otheroptions, such as rw (read-write access), async (buffer I/O to the filesystem in memoryasynchronously), and so forth. • Another potentially useful option is umask, which lets you set the default mask forthe permission bits, something that is especially useful with some foreign filesystems.

  17. /etc/fstab • At boot time mount –a command is called that mounts everything listed in /etc/fstab • A filesystem does not need to be listed in /etc/fstabin order to be mounted, but it does need tobe listed there in order to be mounted "automatically" by mount -a

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