devfs —
device file system
The device file system, or devfs, provides
access to kernel's device namespace in the global file system namespace. The
conventional mount point is /dev.
The file system includes several directories, links, symbolic
links and devices, some of which can also be written. In a chroot'ed
environment,
devfs(8) can be used to create a new
/dev mount point.
The
mknod(8) tool can be used to recover deleted device entries
under devfs.
The
fdescfs(4) filesystem is an alternate means for populating
/dev/fd. The character devices that both
devfs and
fdescfs(4) present in /dev/fd
correspond to the open file descriptors of the process accessing the
directory. devfs only creates files for the standard
file descriptors 0, 1 and
2.
fdescfs(4) creates files for all open descriptors.
The options are as follows:
-o
options
- Use the specified mount options, as described in
mount(8). The following devfs file system-specific options
are available:
ruleset=ruleset
- Set ruleset number ruleset as the current
ruleset for the mount-point and apply all its rules. If the ruleset
number ruleset does not exist, an empty ruleset
with the number ruleset is created. See
devfs(8) for more information on working with devfs
rulesets.
- /dev
- The normal
devfs mount point.
To mount a devfs volume located on
/mychroot/dev:
mount -t devfs devfs
/mychroot/dev
The devfs file system first appeared in
FreeBSD 2.0. It became the preferred method for
accessing devices in FreeBSD 5.0 and the only method
in FreeBSD 6.0. The devfs
manual page first appeared in FreeBSD 2.2.