driver (9)
Leading comments
Copyright (c) 1998 Doug Rabson All rights reserved. This program is free software. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in...
NAME
driver - structure describing a device driverSYNOPSIS
#include <sys/param.h> #include <sys/kernel.h> #include <sys/bus.h> #include <sys/module.h> static int foo_probe(device_t); static int foo_attach(device_t); static int foo_detach(device_t); static int foo_frob(device_t, int, int); static int foo_twiddle(device_t, char *); static device_method_t foo_methods[] = { /* Methods from the device interface */ DEVMETHOD(device_probe, foo_probe), DEVMETHOD(device_attach, foo_attach), DEVMETHOD(device_detach, foo_detach), /* Methods from the bogo interface */ DEVMETHOD(bogo_frob, foo_frob), DEVMETHOD(bogo_twiddle, foo_twiddle), /* Terminate method list */ DEVMETHOD_END }; static driver_t foo_driver = { "foo", foo_methods, sizeof(struct foo_softc) }; static devclass_t foo_devclass; DRIVER_MODULE(foo, bogo, foo_driver, foo_devclass, NULL, NULL);
DESCRIPTION
Each driver in the kernel is described by a driver_t structure. The structure contains the name of the device, a pointer to a list of methods, an indication of the kind of device which the driver implements and the size of the private data which the driver needs to associate with a device instance. Each driver will implement one or more sets of methods (called interfaces). The example driver implements the standard "driver" interface and the fictitious "bogo" interface.When a driver is registered with the system (by the DRIVER_MODULE macro, see DRIVER_MODULE9), it is added to the list of drivers contained in the devclass of its parent bus type. For instance all PCI drivers would be contained in the devclass named "pci" and all ISA drivers would be in the devclass named "isa". The reason the drivers are not held in the device object of the parent bus is to handle multiple instances of a given type of bus. The DRIVER_MODULE macro will also create the devclass with the name of the driver and can optionally call extra initialisation code in the driver by specifying an extra module event handler and argument as the last two arguments.