These rules tell udev what device nodes to create for aoe support.
They may be installed along the following lines. Check the section
8 udev manpage to see whether your udev supports SUBSYSTEM, and
whether it uses one or two equal signs for SUBSYSTEM and KERNEL.
ecashin@makki ~$ su
Password:
bash# find /etc -type f -name udev.conf
/etc/udev/udev.conf
bash# grep udev_rules= /etc/udev/udev.conf
udev_rules=”/etc/udev/rules.d/“
bash# ls /etc/udev/rules.d/
10-wacom.rules 50-udev.rules
bash# cp /path/to/linux-2.6.xx/Documentation/aoe/udev.txt \
/etc/udev/rules.d/60-aoe.rules
aoe char devices
SUBSYSTEM==”aoe”, KERNEL==”discover”, NAME=”etherd/%k”, GROUP=”disk”, MODE=”0220”
SUBSYSTEM==”aoe”, KERNEL==”err”, NAME=”etherd/%k”, GROUP=”disk”, MODE=”0440”
SUBSYSTEM==”aoe”, KERNEL==”interfaces”, NAME=”etherd/%k”, GROUP=”disk”, MODE=”0220”
SUBSYSTEM==”aoe”, KERNEL==”revalidate”, NAME=”etherd/%k”, GROUP=”disk”, MODE=”0220”
SUBSYSTEM==”aoe”, KERNEL==”flush”, NAME=”etherd/%k”, GROUP=”disk”, MODE=”0220”
aoe block devices
KERNEL==”etherd*”, GROUP=”disk”