Device drivers must be dynamically loadable. Drivers should also be unloadable to help conserve memory resources. Drivers that can be unloaded are also easier to test, debug, and patch.
Each device driver is required to implement _init(9E), _fini(9E), and _info(9E) entry points to support driver loading and unloading. The following example shows a typical implementation of loadable driver interfaces.
Example 8 Loadable Interface Sectionstatic void *statep; /* for soft state routines */ static struct cb_ops xx_cb_ops; /* forward reference */ static struct dev_ops xx_ops = { DEVO_REV, 0, xxgetinfo, nulldev, xxprobe, xxattach, xxdetach, xxreset, nodev, &xx_cb_ops, NULL, xxpower, ddi_quiesce_not_needed, }; static struct modldrv modldrv = { &mod_driverops, "xx driver v1.0", &xx_ops }; static struct modlinkage modlinkage = { MODREV_1, &modldrv, NULL }; int _init(void) { int error; ddi_soft_state_init(&statep, sizeof (struct xxstate), estimated_number_of_instances); /* further per-module initialization if necessary */ error = mod_install(&modlinkage); if (error != 0) { /* undo any per-module initialization done earlier */ ddi_soft_state_fini(&statep); } return (error); } int _fini(void) { int error; error = mod_remove(&modlinkage); if (error == 0) { /* release per-module resources if any were allocated */ ddi_soft_state_fini(&statep); } return (error); } int _info(struct modinfo *modinfop) { return (mod_info(&modlinkage, modinfop)); }
The following example shows a typical _init(9E) interface.
Example 9 _init() Functionstatic void *xxstatep; int _init(void) { int error; const int max_instance = 20; /* estimated max device instances */ ddi_soft_state_init(&xxstatep, sizeof (struct xxstate), max_instance); error = mod_install(&xxmodlinkage); if (error != 0) { /* * Cleanup after a failure */ ddi_soft_state_fini(&xxstatep); } return (error); }
The driver should perform any one-time resource allocation or data initialization during driver loading in _init(). For example, the driver should initialize any mutexes global to the driver in this routine. The driver should not, however, use _init(9E) to allocate or initialize anything that has to do with a particular instance of the device. Per-instance initialization must be done in attach(9E). For example, if a driver for a printer can handle more than one printer at the same time, that driver should allocate resources specific to each printer instance in attach().
The following example demonstrates the _fini() routine.
int _fini(void) { int error; error = mod_remove(&modlinkage); if (error != 0) { return (error); } /* * Cleanup resources allocated in _init() */ ddi_soft_state_fini(&xxstatep); return (0); }
Similarly, in _fini(), the driver should release any resources that were allocated in _init(). The driver must remove itself from the system module list.
The following example demonstrates the _info(9E) routine.
int _info(struct modinfo *modinfop) { return (mod_info(&xxmodlinkage, modinfop)); }
The driver is called to return module information. The entry point should be implemented as shown above.