8.223. udev


Updated udev packages that fix several bugs and add one enhancement are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.
The udev packages implement a dynamic device-directory, providing only the devices present on the system. This dynamic directory runs in user space, dynamically creates and removes devices, provides consistent naming, and a user-space API. The udev packages replace the devfs package and provides better hot plug functionality.

Bug Fixes

BZ#833172, BZ#885978, BZ#918511
Previously, for machines with relatively big RAM sizes and lots of disks, a number of udevd workers were running in parallel, maximizing CPU and I/O. This could cause udev events to time out due to hardware bottlenecks. With this update, the number of udevd workers is limited by the CPU count and significantly lower on machines with a big RAM size. Now, fewer udev workers running concurrently do not bottleneck easily and cause less or no timeouts.
BZ#888647
Previously, the udev utility did not provide a symbolic link to SCM (Storage Class Memory) devices in the /dev/disk/by-path/ directory, which prevented SCM devices to be referenced by their paths. With this update, the path_id built-in command supports SCM devices and provides a symbolic link. Now, SCM devices can be referenced by their paths.
BZ#909792
Prior to this update, the libudev.h header file did not have any extern "C" declaration, so it could not be used as-is in a C++ programs or applications. An extern "C" declaration has been added to the header file, thus fixing the bug.
BZ#918511
Previously, the start_udev command called the "udevadm settle [options]" command and timed out after the default of 180 seconds. Nevertheless, some devices were not completely assembled and the boot process continued causing various failures. With this update, start_udev waits until udev has settled. As a result, all devices are assembled, and the boot process now continues without errors.
BZ#920961
If a SCSI device was in use at the time the udev scsi_id helper utility was invoked, scsi_id did not return any properties of the device. Consequently, the properties of the SCSI device could not be processed in udev rules. With this update, scsi_id retries to open the device for a certain time span before it gives up. As a result, the properties of a SCSI device can be processed in udev rules, even though the device is in use for a short time.
BZ#982902
For USB devices with InterfaceClass=0x08 and InterfaceSubClass=0x05, udev set the ID type as "floppy", which was not necessarily true. As a consequence, some tools could interpret the USB device as a floppy disk. Now, the ID type is set as "generic" for such USB devices, and tools interpret the USB devices correctly.
BZ#998237
Previously, the libudev utility was referencing memory, which had been reallocated with its old address into the dev_enumerate_get_list_entry() function. However, calling this function could lead to a segmentation fault. With this update, libudev references the reallocated memory with offsets in udev_enumerate_get_list_entry(), thus fixing the bug.

Enhancement

BZ#947067
Previously, the amount of debug output could not be controlled and often exceeded the available memory, if stored in the /dev/ temporary file. With this update, the start_udev command with udevlog now call the udevd daemon with the "-s" option, which redirects the output of udevd to the /dev/.udev/udev.log file but does not set udevd in the debug mode. In addition, udevd now understands the log priorities set in the rules file (OPTIONS+="log_priority=<level>"), so the user can set the numerical syslog priorities or their textual representations. There is also a new example rules file for logging: /lib/udev/rules.d/01-log-block.rules. To enable "info" logging for block devices, add "rd.log.block=info" to the kernel command line.
Users of udev are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which fix these bugs and add this enhancement.
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.