System Administration Commands mkdevalloc(1M)
NAME
mkdevalloc - Make device_allocate entries
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/mkdevalloc
DESCRIPTION
The mkdevalloc command writes to standard out a set of
device_allocate(4) entries describing the system's frame
buffer, audio and removable media devices.The mkdevalloc command is used by the init.d(4) scripts to
create or update the /etc/security/device_allocate file.
Entries are generated based on the device special files found in /dev. For the different categories of devices, themkdevalloc command checks for the following files under
/dev: audio /dev/audio, /dev/audioctl, /dev/sound/... tape /dev/rst*, /dev/nrst*, /dev/rmt/... floppy /dev/diskette, /dev/fd*, /dev/rdiskette, /dev/rfd* removable disk /dev/sr*, /dev/nsr*, /dev/dsk/c0t?d0s?, /dev/rdsk/c0t?d0s? frame buffer /dev/fbAll entries set the device-minimum and device-maximum fields
to the hex representations of ADMIN_LOW and ADMIN_HIGH,
respectively. The device-authorization field is set to
solaris.device.allocate, except for the framebuffer entry,where it is set to *. The device-name, device-type and
device-clean fields are set to the following values:
device-name device-type device-clean
audio audio audio audio_clean_wrapper
tape mag_tape_0,1,... st st_clean
floppy floppy_0,1,... fd disk_clean
removable disk cdrom_0,1,... sr disk_clean
frame buffer framebuffer fb /bin/trueATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attri-
butes:SunOS 5.11 Last change: 8 Oct 2003 1
System Administration Commands mkdevalloc(1M)
____________________________________________________________
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
|_____________________________|_____________________________|
| Availability | SUNWcs ||_____________________________|_____________________________|
| Interface Stability | Obsolete ||_____________________________|_____________________________|
SEE ALSO
allocate(1), attributes(5) NOTESmkdevalloc might not be supported in a future release of the
Solaris operating system.SunOS 5.11 Last change: 8 Oct 2003 2