About
udev
allows Linux users to have a dynamic
/dev directory
and it provides the ability to have persistent device names.
Documentation
udev comes with a lot of documentation and full manpages included
in the source tarball. If, for some reason, that is not enough, here is a
list of some online references about the program, and how to configure it
properly:
Requirements
It requires a 2.6 Linux kernel.
Getting
The latest version of udev is available on
kernel.org.
Using
udev
is included in almost every 2.6 kernel based Linux distribution that is
shipping, so please use the packages provided by your distro instead of
trying to install from the source tree. But if you insist, please read the
README files in the source tarball for how to set it up initially.
Questions
Any questions about udev should be addressed to the email address
located in the README file within the source tarball.
Thanks
udev was originally developed by Greg Kroah-Hartman with much help
from Dan Stekloff, Kay Sievers and many others. Thanks also to Kay for the
graphic on this page.