| DEVICE.HINTS(5) | File Formats Manual | DEVICE.HINTS(5) |
device.hints —
device resource hints
The device.hints file is read in by the
boot loader(8) when the system is about to start, and its
contents are passed to the kernel. It contains various variables to control
the boot behavior of the kernel. These variables are typically
“device hints”, but can include any kernel tunable values.
The file contains one variable per line. Lines starting with the
‘#’ character are comments and are
ignored by the boot loader.
After the file is read by the boot loader, you may examine the
variables with the show command, and may add a new
variable, modify an existing one, or delete a variable with the
set and unset commands of
the boot loader (see loader(8)).
After the system has started, you can dump these variables with the kenv(1) command.
Device hint variables are used by device drivers to set up the device. They are most often used by ISA device drivers to specify where the driver will probe for the relevant devices, and what resources it will attempt to use.
A device hint line looks like:
hint.driver.unit.keyword="value"where driver is the name of a device driver, unit is the unit number, and keyword is the keyword of the hint. The keyword may be:
atportportsizeirqdrqmaddrmsizeflagsdisabledA device driver may require one or more hint lines with these keywords, and may accept other keywords not listed here, through resource_int_value(9). Consult individual device drivers' manual pages for available keywords and their possible values.
The following example sets up resources for the uart(4) driver on the ISA bus:
hint.uart.0.at="isa" hint.uart.0.port="0x3F8" hint.uart.0.flags="0x10" hint.uart.0.irq="4"
The following example disables the ACPI driver:
hint.acpi.0.disabled="1"
Setting a tunable variable:
vm.pmap.pg_ps_enabled=1
The device.hints file first appeared in
FreeBSD 5.0.
| November 19, 2019 | FreeBSD 15.0 |