On Thu, Oct 18, 2007 at 04:23:27PM +0200, David Baron wrote: > Why? I have been running without udev without problems and for the few things > that need a directory to place a udev rule, I simply create the directory
I do not use udev and I am happy with all the systems I have used without it. If for some strange reason on one (obviously debian) machine I want (i.e. I am almost forced) to install udev (and immediately disable it), I follow the documentation: Disabling udev ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You may configure in /etc/udev/udev.conf a directory other than /dev. And so I do the following: before installing udev, I do #!/bin/sh mkdir /dev/udev mkdir /etc/udev cat<<EOF>/etc/udev/udev.conf # udev.conf # The initial syslog(3) priority: "err", "info", "debug" or its # numerical equivalent. For runtime debugging, the daemons internal # state can be changed with: "udevcontrol log_priority=<value>". udev_log="err" # maximum size of the /dev tmpfs tmpfs_size="10M" ###### see /usr/share/doc/udev/READEME.Debian.gz udev_root="/dev/udev" ###### EOF Then I install udev, and I say "N" when it offers to overwrite /etc/udev/udev.conf But unfortunately at installation time (and only then) udev (on etch at least) for some reason mounts /dev and not even /etc/init.d/udev stop umounts it. Fortunately, umouunt has a -l switch. So /etc/init.d/udev stop umount -f -l /dev/ If one then restarts udev it correctly handles /dev/udev/ instead of /dev/ Finally I disable the automatic starting of udev at boot. Pick your preferred method to do it. You can still manually start udev when you want to se what modules to load for new hardware, and use whatever other method you prefer to load the modules, such as /etc/modules -- Chi usa software non libero avvelena anche te. Digli di smettere. Informatica=arsenico: minime dosi in rari casi patologici, altrimenti letale. Informatica=bomba: intelligente solo per gli stupidi che ci credono. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

