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Differences between current version and revision by previous author of DevFs.

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Newer page: version 4 Last edited on Monday, June 25, 2007 12:47:49 pm by LawrenceDoliveiro
Older page: version 2 Last edited on Friday, September 23, 2005 4:07:18 pm by IanMcDonald Revert
@@ -1,5 +1,9 @@
-DevFs is the Device FileSystem. It's optional starting with LinuxKernel 2.4 and not recommended with LinuxKernel 2.6 as it has been deprecated in favour of [UDev]. 
+__devfs__ is the Device FileSystem. It's optional starting with LinuxKernel 2.4 and not recommended with LinuxKernel 2.6 as it has been deprecated in favour of SysFs and [UDev]. 
  
-It is designed so that instead of having to have a central body allocate major and minor numbers (unique identifiers) to devices, you can access them more like a namespace. For example, your serial port /dev/ttyS2 will become /dev/tts/2; console /dev/tty3 will become /dev/vc/3. You can still have support for the old names for software that would otherwise be confused by these changes. 
+It was designed so that instead of having to have a central body allocate major and minor numbers (unique identifiers) to devices, you could access them more like a namespace. For example, your serial port /dev/ttyS2 would become /dev/tts/2; console /dev/tty3 would become /dev/vc/3. You could still have support for the old names for software that would otherwise be confused by these changes. 
  
-You can find a detailed description of devfs at http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~ rgooch/linux/docs/devfs.html 
+You can find a detailed description of <tt> devfs</tt> at http://www.atnf.csiro.au/people/ rgooch/linux/docs/devfs.html.  
+  
+<tt>devfs</tt> was abandoned for a number of reasons: there were problems with its implementation in the kernel which nobody was prepared to fix, and it enforced a particular device-naming policy, which many people felt was not something that the kernel should be doing.  
+  
+<tt>udev</tt> by contrast, runs in userspace and can be extensively controlled by the user through its configuration files. Management of device special files is kept separate from information about the hardware; the latter is made available by the kernel through <tt>sysfs</tt>.