Based on kernel version 6.12.4
. Page generated on 2024-12-12 21:01 EST
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 | What: /sys/bus/vdpa/drivers_autoprobe Date: March 2020 Contact: virtualization@lists.linux.dev Description: This file determines whether new devices are immediately bound to a driver after the creation. It initially contains 1, which means the kernel automatically binds devices to a compatible driver immediately after they are created. Writing "0" to this file disable this feature, any other string enable it. What: /sys/bus/vdpa/driver_probe Date: March 2020 Contact: virtualization@lists.linux.dev Description: Writing a device name to this file will cause the kernel binds devices to a compatible driver. This can be useful when /sys/bus/vdpa/drivers_autoprobe is disabled. What: /sys/bus/vdpa/drivers/.../bind Date: March 2020 Contact: virtualization@lists.linux.dev Description: Writing a device name to this file will cause the driver to attempt to bind to the device. This is useful for overriding default bindings. What: /sys/bus/vdpa/drivers/.../unbind Date: March 2020 Contact: virtualization@lists.linux.dev Description: Writing a device name to this file will cause the driver to attempt to unbind from the device. This may be useful when overriding default bindings. What: /sys/bus/vdpa/devices/.../driver_override Date: November 2021 Contact: virtualization@lists.linux.dev Description: This file allows the driver for a device to be specified. When specified, only a driver with a name matching the value written to driver_override will have an opportunity to bind to the device. The override is specified by writing a string to the driver_override file (echo vhost-vdpa > driver_override) and may be cleared with an empty string (echo > driver_override). This returns the device to standard matching rules binding. Writing to driver_override does not automatically unbind the device from its current driver or make any attempt to automatically load the specified driver. If no driver with a matching name is currently loaded in the kernel, the device will not bind to any driver. This also allows devices to opt-out of driver binding using a driver_override name such as "none". Only a single driver may be specified in the override, there is no support for parsing delimiters. |