As explained in Section 7.5,
“Device and Module Handling on an LFS System”, the
order in which devices with the same function appear in
/dev
is essentially random. E.g., if
you have a USB web camera and a TV tuner, sometimes /dev/video0
refers to the camera and /dev/video1
refers to the tuner, and sometimes
after a reboot the order changes to the opposite one. For all
classes of hardware except sound cards and network cards, this is
fixable by creating udev rules for custom persistent symlinks. The
case of network cards is covered separately in Section 7.3,
“General Network Configuration”, and sound card
configuration can be found in
BLFS.
For each of your devices that is likely to have this problem (even
if the problem doesn't exist in your current Linux distribution),
find the corresponding directory under /sys/class
or /sys/block
. For video devices, this may be
/sys/class/video4linux/video
. Figure out the attributes
that identify the device uniquely (usually, vendor and product IDs
and/or serial numbers work):
X
udevadm info -a -p /sys/class/video4linux/video0
Then write rules that create the symlinks, e.g.:
cat > /etc/udev/rules.d/83-duplicate_devs.rules << "EOF"
# Persistent symlinks for webcam and tuner
KERNEL=="video*", ATTRS{idProduct}=="1910", ATTRS{idVendor}=="0d81", \
SYMLINK+="webcam"
KERNEL=="video*", ATTRS{device}=="0x036f", ATTRS{vendor}=="0x109e", \
SYMLINK+="tvtuner"
EOF
The result is that /dev/video0
and
/dev/video1
devices still refer
randomly to the tuner and the web camera (and thus should never be
used directly), but there are symlinks /dev/tvtuner
and /dev/webcam
that always point to the correct
device.