-d
, --debug
Print debug messages to standard error. This option is
implied in udevadm test
and udevadm test-builtin
commands.
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
udevadm info [
options] [devpath|file|unit...]
Query the udev database for device information.
Positional arguments should be used to specify one or more
devices. Each one may be a device name (in which case it must
start with /dev/), a sys path (in which case it must start with
/sys/), or a systemd device unit name (in which case it must end
with ".device", see systemd.device(5)).
-q
, --query=
TYPE
Query the database for the specified type of device data.
Valid TYPEs are: name
, symlink
, path
, property
, all
.
-p
, --path=
DEVPATH
The /sys/ path of the device to query, e.g.
[/sys/]/class/block/sda. This option is an alternative to the
positional argument with a /sys/ prefix. udevadm info
--path=/class/block/sda
is equivalent to udevadm info
/sys/class/block/sda
.
-n
, --name=
FILE
The name of the device node or a symlink to query, e.g.
[/dev/]/sda. This option is an alternative to the positional
argument with a /dev/ prefix. udevadm info --name=sda
is
equivalent to udevadm info /dev/sda
.
-r
, --root
Print absolute paths in name
or symlink
query.
-a
, --attribute-walk
Print all sysfs properties of the specified device that can
be used in udev rules to match the specified device. It
prints all devices along the chain, up to the root of sysfs
that can be used in udev rules.
-x
, --export
Print output as key/value pairs. Values are enclosed in
single quotes. This takes effects only when --query=property
or --device-id-of-file=
FILE is specified.
-P
, --export-prefix=
NAME
Add a prefix to the key name of exported values. This implies
--export
.
-d
, --device-id-of-file=
FILE
Print major/minor numbers of the underlying device, where the
file lives on. If this is specified, all positional arguments
are ignored.
-e
, --export-db
Export the content of the udev database.
-c
, --cleanup-db
Cleanup the udev database.
-w[SECONDS]
, --wait-for-initialization[=SECONDS]
Wait for device to be initialized. If argument SECONDS is not
specified, the default is to wait forever.
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
The generated output shows the current device database entry in a
terse format. Each line shown is prefixed with one of the
following characters:
Table 1. udevadm info output prefixes
┌───────┬─────────────────────────┐
│Prefix
│ Meaning
│
├───────┼─────────────────────────┤
│"P:" │ Device path in /sys/ │
├───────┼─────────────────────────┤
│"N:" │ Kernel device node name │
├───────┼─────────────────────────┤
│"L:" │ Device node symlink │
│ │ priority │
├───────┼─────────────────────────┤
│"S:" │ Device node symlink │
├───────┼─────────────────────────┤
│"E:" │ Device property │
└───────┴─────────────────────────┘
udevadm trigger [
options] [devpath|file|unit]
Request device events from the kernel. Primarily used to replay
events at system coldplug time.
Takes device specifications as positional arguments. See the
description of info
above.
-v
, --verbose
Print the list of devices which will be triggered.
-n
, --dry-run
Do not actually trigger the event.
-q
, --quiet
Suppress error logging in triggering events.
-t
, --type=
TYPE
Trigger a specific type of devices. Valid types are: devices
,
subsystems
. The default value is devices
.
-c
, --action=
ACTION
Type of event to be triggered. Possible actions are "add",
"remove", "change", "move", "online", "offline", "bind", and
"unbind". Also, the special value "help" can be used to list
the possible actions. The default value is "change".
-s
, --subsystem-match=
SUBSYSTEM
Trigger events for devices which belong to a matching
subsystem. This option supports shell style pattern matching.
When this option is specified more than once, then each
matching result is ORed, that is, all the devices in each
subsystem are triggered.
-S
, --subsystem-nomatch=
SUBSYSTEM
Do not trigger events for devices which belong to a matching
subsystem. This option supports shell style pattern matching.
When this option is specified more than once, then each
matching result is ANDed, that is, devices which do not match
all specified subsystems are triggered.
-a
, --attr-match=
ATTRIBUTE=
VALUE
Trigger events for devices with a matching sysfs attribute.
If a value is specified along with the attribute name, the
content of the attribute is matched against the given value
using shell style pattern matching. If no value is specified,
the existence of the sysfs attribute is checked. When this
option is specified multiple times, then each matching result
is ANDed, that is, only devices which have all specified
attributes are triggered.
-A
, --attr-nomatch=
ATTRIBUTE=
VALUE
Do not trigger events for devices with a matching sysfs
attribute. If a value is specified along with the attribute
name, the content of the attribute is matched against the
given value using shell style pattern matching. If no value
is specified, the existence of the sysfs attribute is
checked. When this option is specified multiple times, then
each matching result is ANDed, that is, only devices which
have none of the specified attributes are triggered.
-p
, --property-match=
PROPERTY=
VALUE
Trigger events for devices with a matching property value.
This option supports shell style pattern matching. When this
option is specified more than once, then each matching result
is ORed, that is, devices which have one of the specified
properties are triggered.
-g
, --tag-match=
TAG
Trigger events for devices with a matching tag. When this
option is specified multiple times, then each matching result
is ANDed, that is, devices which have all specified tags are
triggered.
-y
, --sysname-match=
NAME
Trigger events for devices for which the last component (i.e.
the filename) of the /sys/ path matches the specified PATH.
This option supports shell style pattern matching. When this
option is specified more than once, then each matching result
is ORed, that is, all devices which have any of the specified
NAME are triggered.
--name-match=
NAME
Trigger events for devices with a matching device path. When
this option is specified more than once, then each matching
result is ORed, that is, all specified devices are triggered.
-b
, --parent-match=
SYSPATH
Trigger events for all children of a given device. When this
option is specified more than once, then each matching result
is ORed, that is, all children of each specified device are
triggered.
-w
, --settle
Apart from triggering events, also waits for those events to
finish. Note that this is different from calling udevadm
settle
. udevadm settle
waits for all events to finish. This
option only waits for events triggered by the same command to
finish.
--uuid
Trigger the synthetic device events, and associate a
randomized UUID with each. These UUIDs are printed to
standard output, one line for each event. These UUIDs are
included in the uevent environment block (in the
"SYNTH_UUID=" property) and may be used to track delivery of
the generated events.
--wait-daemon[=
SECONDS]
Before triggering uevents, wait for systemd-udevd daemon to
be initialized. Optionally takes timeout value. Default
timeout is 5 seconds. This is equivalent to invoke invoking
udevadm control --ping
before udevadm trigger
.
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
In addition, optional positional arguments can be used to specify
device names or sys paths. They must start with /dev/ or /sys/
respectively.
udevadm settle [
options]
Watches the udev event queue, and exits if all current events are
handled.
-t
, --timeout=
SECONDS
Maximum number of seconds to wait for the event queue to
become empty. The default value is 120 seconds. A value of 0
will check if the queue is empty and always return
immediately. A non-zero value will return an exit code of 0
if queue became empty before timeout was reached, non-zero
otherwise.
-E
, --exit-if-exists=
FILE
Stop waiting if file exists.
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
See systemd-udev-settle.service(8) for more information.
udevadm control
option
Modify the internal state of the running udev daemon.
-e
, --exit
Signal and wait for systemd-udevd to exit. No option except
for --timeout
can be specified after this option. Note that
systemd-udevd.service contains Restart=always
and so as a
result, this option restarts systemd-udevd. If you want to
stop systemd-udevd.service, please use the following:
systemctl stop systemd-udevd-control.socket systemd-udevd-kernel.socket systemd-udevd.service
-l
, --log-level=
value
Set the internal log level of systemd-udevd. Valid values are
the numerical syslog priorities or their textual
representations: emerg
, alert
, crit
, err
, warning
, notice
,
info
, and debug
.
-s
, --stop-exec-queue
Signal systemd-udevd to stop executing new events. Incoming
events will be queued.
-S
, --start-exec-queue
Signal systemd-udevd to enable the execution of events.
-R
, --reload
Signal systemd-udevd to reload the rules files and other
databases like the kernel module index. Reloading rules and
databases does not apply any changes to already existing
devices; the new configuration will only be applied to new
events.
-p
, --property=
KEY=
value
Set a global property for all events.
-m
, --children-max=
value
Set the maximum number of events, systemd-udevd will handle
at the same time.
--ping
Send a ping message to systemd-udevd and wait for the reply.
This may be useful to check that systemd-udevd daemon is
running.
-t
, --timeout=
seconds
The maximum number of seconds to wait for a reply from
systemd-udevd.
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
udevadm monitor [
options]
Listens to the kernel uevents and events sent out by a udev rule
and prints the devpath of the event to the console. It can be
used to analyze the event timing, by comparing the timestamps of
the kernel uevent and the udev event.
-k
, --kernel
Print the kernel uevents.
-u
, --udev
Print the udev event after the rule processing.
-p
, --property
Also print the properties of the event.
-s
, --subsystem-match=
string[/string]
Filter kernel uevents and udev events by subsystem[/devtype].
Only events with a matching subsystem value will pass. When
this option is specified more than once, then each matching
result is ORed, that is, all devices in the specified
subsystems are monitored.
-t
, --tag-match=
string
Filter udev events by tag. Only udev events with a given tag
attached will pass. When this option is specified more than
once, then each matching result is ORed, that is, devices
which have one of the specified tags are monitored.
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
udevadm test [
options] [devpath]
Simulate a udev event run for the given device, and print debug
output.
-a
, --action=
ACTION
Type of event to be simulated. Possible actions are "add",
"remove", "change", "move", "online", "offline", "bind", and
"unbind". Also, the special value "help" can be used to list
the possible actions. The default value is "add".
-N
, --resolve-names=early|late|never
Specify when udevadm should resolve names of users and
groups. When set to early
(the default), names will be
resolved when the rules are parsed. When set to late
, names
will be resolved for every event. When set to never
, names
will never be resolved and all devices will be owned by root.
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
udevadm test-builtin [
options] [command] [devpath]
Run a built-in command COMMAND for device DEVPATH, and print
debug output.
-a
, --action=
ACTION
Type of event to be simulated. Possible actions are "add",
"remove", "change", "move", "online", "offline", "bind", and
"unbind". Also, the special value "help" can be used to list
the possible actions. The default value is "add".
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.