1$FreeBSD$ 2 3Author: Julian Elischer 4 5The files in this directory are shell scripts. 6 7They will, when run, create an example skeleton driver 8for you. You can use this driver as a starting point for 9writing drivers for your own devices. They have all the hooks needed 10for initialization, probing, attaching, as well as DEVFS 11node creation. They also create sample ioctl commands and a sample 12ioctl definition .h file in /sys/sys. In other words they are fully 13functional in a 'skeleton' sort of a way. They support multiple devices 14so that you may have several of your 'foobar' devices probed and attached 15at once. 16 17I expect that these scripts will improve with time. 18 19At present these scripts also link the newly created driver into 20the kernel sources in /sys. Possibly a better way would be 21to make them interactive. (and ask what kernel tree to use as well as 22a name for the driver.). 23 24There are presently two scripts. 25One for making a real device driver for ISA devices, and 26one for making a device driver for pseudo devices (e.g. /dev/null). 27Hopefully they will be joined by similar scripts for creating 28skeletons for PCI devices as well. 29 30Give them a single argument: the name of the driver. 31They will use this given name in many places within the driver, 32both in lower and upper case form. (conforming to normal usage). 33 34The skeleton driver should already link with the kernel 35and in fact the shell script will compile a kernel with the new 36drive linked in.. The new kernel should still be 37runnable and the new driver should be 38fully callable (once you get your device to probe). 39You should simply edit the driver and continue to use 40'make' (as done in the script) until your driver does what you want. 41 42The driver will end up in /sys/i386/isa for the device driver script, 43and in /sys/dev for the pseudo driver script. 44