28 Selecting a Device Manager
The Yocto Project provides multiple ways to manage the device manager
(/dev
):
Persistent and Pre-Populated
/dev
: For this case, the/dev
directory is persistent and the required device nodes are created during the build.Use
devtmpfs
with a Device Manager: For this case, the/dev
directory is provided by the kernel as an in-memory file system and is automatically populated by the kernel at runtime. Additional configuration of device nodes is done in user space by a device manager likeudev
orbusybox-mdev
.
28.1 Using Persistent and Pre-Populated /dev
To use the static method for device population, you need to set the USE_DEVFS variable to “0” as follows:
USE_DEVFS = "0"
The content of the resulting /dev
directory is defined in a Device
Table file. The
IMAGE_DEVICE_TABLES
variable defines the Device Table to use and should be set in the
machine or distro configuration file. Alternatively, you can set this
variable in your local.conf
configuration file.
If you do not define the IMAGE_DEVICE_TABLES variable, the default
device_table-minimal.txt
is used:
IMAGE_DEVICE_TABLES = "device_table-mymachine.txt"
The population is handled by the makedevs
utility during image
creation:
28.2 Using devtmpfs
and a Device Manager
To use the dynamic method for device population, you need to use (or be sure to set) the USE_DEVFS variable to “1”, which is the default:
USE_DEVFS = "1"
With this
setting, the resulting /dev
directory is populated by the kernel
using devtmpfs
. Make sure the corresponding kernel configuration
variable CONFIG_DEVTMPFS
is set when building you build a Linux
kernel.
All devices created by devtmpfs
will be owned by root
and have
permissions 0600
.
To have more control over the device nodes, you can use a device manager
like udev
or busybox-mdev
. You choose the device manager by
defining the VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_dev_manager
variable in your machine or
distro configuration file. Alternatively, you can set this variable in
your local.conf
configuration file:
VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_dev_manager = "udev"
# Some alternative values
# VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_dev_manager = "busybox-mdev"
# VIRTUAL-RUNTIME_dev_manager = "systemd"