README revision 1.10 1 1.10 kamil $NetBSD: README,v 1.10 2020/02/05 13:23:42 kamil Exp $
2 1.1 pgoyette
3 1.1 pgoyette Kernel Developer's Manual
4 1.1 pgoyette
5 1.1 pgoyette DESCRIPTION
6 1.1 pgoyette The kernel example dynamic modules.
7 1.1 pgoyette
8 1.6 kamil This directory contains the following example modules:
9 1.6 kamil * executor - basic implementation of callout and RUN_ONCE
10 1.1 pgoyette * hello - the simplest `hello world' module
11 1.6 kamil * luahello - the simplest `hello world' Lua module
12 1.6 kamil * luareadhappy - demonstrates calling Lua code from C
13 1.9 kamil * mapper - basic implementation of mmap
14 1.8 kamil * panic_string - shows how panic is being called through a device
15 1.8 kamil * ping - basic ioctl(9)
16 1.1 pgoyette * properties - handle incoming properties during the module load
17 1.1 pgoyette * readhappy - basic implementation of read(9) with happy numbers
18 1.7 kamil * readhappy_mpsafe- demonstrates how to make a module MPSAFE
19 1.5 kamil * sysctl - demonstrates adding a sysctl handle dynamically
20 1.1 pgoyette
21 1.1 pgoyette To build the examples you need a local copy of NetBSD sources. You also
22 1.1 pgoyette need the comp set with toolchain. To build the module just enter a
23 1.1 pgoyette directory with example modules and use make(1):
24 1.1 pgoyette
25 1.1 pgoyette # make
26 1.1 pgoyette
27 1.1 pgoyette To load, unload, and stat the module use modload(8), modunload(8) and
28 1.1 pgoyette modstat(8).
29 1.1 pgoyette
30 1.1 pgoyette The S parameter in the Makefile files points to src/sys and it can be
31 1.1 pgoyette overloaded in this way:
32 1.1 pgoyette
33 1.1 pgoyette # make S=/data/netbsd/src/sys
34 1.1 pgoyette
35 1.1 pgoyette The code of a module does not need to be in src/sys unless you use
36 1.1 pgoyette the autoconf(9) framework.
37 1.1 pgoyette
38 1.1 pgoyette A cross-built of a module for a target platform is possible with the
39 1.1 pgoyette build.sh framework. You need to generate the toolchain and set
40 1.1 pgoyette appropriately PATH to point bin/ in the TOOLDIR path. An example command
41 1.1 pgoyette to cross-build a module with the amd64 toolchain is as follows:
42 1.1 pgoyette
43 1.1 pgoyette # nbmake-amd64 S=/data/netbsd/src/sys
44 1.1 pgoyette
45 1.1 pgoyette
46 1.1 pgoyette The example modules should not be used on a production machine.
47 1.1 pgoyette
48 1.1 pgoyette All modules that create a cdevsw should be verified that the major number
49 1.1 pgoyette should not conflict with a real device.
50 1.1 pgoyette
51 1.1 pgoyette SEE ALSO
52 1.3 pgoyette modctl(2), module(7), modload(8), modstat(8), modunload(8), module(9),
53 1.3 pgoyette intro(9lua)
54 1.1 pgoyette
55 1.1 pgoyette HISTORY
56 1.1 pgoyette An example of handling incoming properties first appeared in NetBSD 5.0
57 1.1 pgoyette and was written by Julio Merino with further modifications by Martin
58 1.1 pgoyette Husemann, Adam Hamsik, John Nemeth and Mindaugas Rasiukevicius.
59 1.1 pgoyette
60 1.1 pgoyette This document and additional modules (hello, readhappy, properties,
61 1.4 sevan ping, luahello and luareadhappy) first appeared in NetBSD 8.0; they were
62 1.4 sevan written by Kamil Rytarowski.
63 1.1 pgoyette
64 1.7 kamil The readhappy_mpsafe, executor and sysctls modules first appeared in NetBSD
65 1.7 kamil 9.0 and were authored by Siddharth Muralee.
66 1.5 kamil
67 1.8 kamil The panic_string module first appeared in NetBSD 9.0 and was authored by
68 1.8 kamil Harry Pantazis.
69 1.8 kamil
70 1.9 kamil The mapper module first appeared in NetBSD 9.0 and was authored by
71 1.9 kamil Akul Pillai.
72 1.10 kamil
73 1.10 kamil The ping_block module first appeared in NetBSD 10.0 and was authored by
74 1.10 kamil Nisarg Joshi.
75 1.9 kamil
76 1.1 pgoyette AUTHORS
77 1.1 pgoyette This document was written by Kamil Rytarowski.
78