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authorStephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>2018-01-09 12:57:28 -0800
committerGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>2018-01-10 17:40:53 +0100
commit44625605a27f1bd9e9b40dc339a95ff638706bdb (patch)
tree86686d8a2a877260912ab24a920630edfa550e4f
parentf0fa297404c3f8ab90f1d89405a72edaff988825 (diff)
doc: fix documentation about uio_hv_generic
The vmbus sysfs file names changed in commit f6b2db084b65 ("vmbus: make sysfs names consistent with PCI") and the uio documenatation does not match the current names. Signed-off-by: Stephen Hemminger <sthemmin@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
-rw-r--r--Documentation/driver-api/uio-howto.rst15
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/driver-api/uio-howto.rst b/Documentation/driver-api/uio-howto.rst
index f73d660b2956..3a0d3f5f5c53 100644
--- a/Documentation/driver-api/uio-howto.rst
+++ b/Documentation/driver-api/uio-howto.rst
@@ -667,27 +667,28 @@ Making the driver recognize the device
Since the driver does not declare any device GUID's, it will not get
loaded automatically and will not automatically bind to any devices, you
must load it and allocate id to the driver yourself. For example, to use
-the network device GUID::
+the network device class GUID::
modprobe uio_hv_generic
echo "f8615163-df3e-46c5-913f-f2d2f965ed0e" > /sys/bus/vmbus/drivers/uio_hv_generic/new_id
If there already is a hardware specific kernel driver for the device,
the generic driver still won't bind to it, in this case if you want to
-use the generic driver (why would you?) you'll have to manually unbind
-the hardware specific driver and bind the generic driver, like this::
+use the generic driver for a userspace library you'll have to manually unbind
+the hardware specific driver and bind the generic driver, using the device specific GUID
+like this::
- echo -n vmbus-ed963694-e847-4b2a-85af-bc9cfc11d6f3 > /sys/bus/vmbus/drivers/hv_netvsc/unbind
- echo -n vmbus-ed963694-e847-4b2a-85af-bc9cfc11d6f3 > /sys/bus/vmbus/drivers/uio_hv_generic/bind
+ echo -n ed963694-e847-4b2a-85af-bc9cfc11d6f3 > /sys/bus/vmbus/drivers/hv_netvsc/unbind
+ echo -n ed963694-e847-4b2a-85af-bc9cfc11d6f3 > /sys/bus/vmbus/drivers/uio_hv_generic/bind
You can verify that the device has been bound to the driver by looking
for it in sysfs, for example like the following::
- ls -l /sys/bus/vmbus/devices/vmbus-ed963694-e847-4b2a-85af-bc9cfc11d6f3/driver
+ ls -l /sys/bus/vmbus/devices/ed963694-e847-4b2a-85af-bc9cfc11d6f3/driver
Which if successful should print::
- .../vmbus-ed963694-e847-4b2a-85af-bc9cfc11d6f3/driver -> ../../../bus/vmbus/drivers/uio_hv_generic
+ .../ed963694-e847-4b2a-85af-bc9cfc11d6f3/driver -> ../../../bus/vmbus/drivers/uio_hv_generic
Things to know about uio_hv_generic
-----------------------------------