sysfs — a filesystem for exporting kernel objects
The sysfs
filesystem is a pseudo-filesystem which provides an interface
to kernel data structures. (More precisely, the files and
directories in sysfs
provide a view of the
kobject
structures
defined internally within the kernel.) The files under
sysfs
provide
information about devices, kernel modules, filesystems, and
other kernel components.
The sysfs
filesystem is commonly mounted at /sys
. Typically, it is mounted
automatically by the system, but it can also be mounted
manually using a command such as:
mount −t sysfs sysfs /sys
Many of the files in the sysfs
filesystem are
read-only, but some files are writable, allowing kernel
variables to be changed. To avoid redundancy, symbolic links
are heavily used to connect entries across the filesystem
tree.
The following list describes some of the files and
directories under the /sys
hierarchy.
/sys/block
This subdirectory contains one symbolic link for
each block device that has been discovered on the
system. The symbolic links point to corresponding
directories under /sys/devices
.
/sys/bus
This directory contains one subdirectory for each of the bus types in the kernel. Inside each of these directories are two subdirectories:
devices
This subdirectory contains symbolic links to entries in
/sys/devices
that correspond to the devices discovered on this bus.drivers
This subdirectory contains one subdirectory for each device driver that is loaded on this bus.
/sys/class
This subdirectory contains a single layer of
further subdirectories for each of the device classes
that have been registered on the system (e.g.,
terminals, network devices, block devices, graphics
devices, sound devices, and so on). Inside each of
these subdirectories are symbolic links for each of
the devices in this class. These symbolic links refer
to entries in the /sys/devices
directory.
/sys/class/net
Each of the entries in this directory is a
symbolic link representing one of the real or virtual
networking devices that are visible in the network
namespace of the process that is accessing the
directory. Each of these symbolic links refers to
entries in the /sys/devices
directory.
/sys/dev
This directory contains two subdirectories
block
/ and
char/
,
corresponding, respectively, to the block and
character devices on the system. Inside each of these
subdirectories are symbolic links with names of the
form major-ID
:minor-ID
, where the
ID values correspond to the major and minor ID of a
specific device. Each symbolic link points to the
sysfs
directory for a device. The symbolic links inside
/sys/dev
thus provide
an easy way to look up the sysfs
interface using
the device IDs returned by a call to stat(2) (or
similar).
The following shell session shows an example from
/sys/dev
:
$ stat −c "%t %T" /dev/null 1 3 $ readlink /sys/dev/char/1\:3 ../../devices/virtual/mem/null $ ls −Fd /sys/devices/virtual/mem/null /sys/devices/virtual/mem/null/ $ ls −d1 /sys/devices/virtual/mem/null/* /sys/devices/virtual/mem/null/dev /sys/devices/virtual/mem/null/power/ /sys/devices/virtual/mem/null/subsystem@ /sys/devices/virtual/mem/null/uevent
/sys/devices
This is a directory that contains a filesystem
representation of the kernel device tree, which is a
hierarchy of device
structures
within the kernel.
/sys/firmware
This subdirectory contains interfaces for viewing and manipulating firmware-specific objects and attributes.
/sys/fs
This directory contains subdirectories for some filesystems. A filesystem will have a subdirectory here only if it chose to explicitly create the subdirectory.
/sys/fs/cgroup
This directory conventionally is used as a mount point for a tmpfs(5) filesystem containing mount points for cgroups(7) filesystems.
/sys/fs/smackfs
The directory contains configuration files for the
SMACK LSM. See the kernel source file Documentation/admin−guide/LSM/Smack.rst
.
/sys/hypervisor
[To be documented]
/sys/kernel
This subdirectory contains various files and subdirectories that provide information about the running kernel.
/sys/kernel/cgroup/
For information about the files in this directory, see cgroups(7).
/sys/kernel/debug/tracing
Mount point for the tracefs
filesystem
used by the kernel's ftrace
facility. (For
information on ftrace
, see the
kernel source file Documentation/trace/ftrace.txt
.)
/sys/kernel/mm
This subdirectory contains various files and subdirectories that provide information about the kernel's memory management subsystem.
/sys/kernel/mm/hugepages
This subdirectory contains one subdirectory for
each of the huge page sizes that the system supports.
The subdirectory name indicates the huge page size
(e.g., hugepages−2048kB
).
Within each of these subdirectories is a set of files
that can be used to view and (in some cases) change
settings associated with that huge page size. For
further information, see the kernel source file
Documentation/admin−guide/mm/hugetlbpage.rst
.
/sys/module
This subdirectory contains one subdirectory for each module that is loaded into the kernel. The name of each directory is the name of the module. In each of the subdirectories, there may be following files:
coresize
[to be documented]
initsize
[to be documented]
initstate
[to be documented]
refcnt
[to be documented]
srcversion
[to be documented]
taint
[to be documented]
uevent
[to be documented]
version
[to be documented]
In each of the subdirectories, there may be following subdirectories:
drivers
[To be documented]
holders
[To be documented]
notes
[To be documented]
parameters
This directory contains one file for each module parameter, with each file containing the value of the corresponding parameter. Some of these files are writable, allowing the
sections
This subdirectories contains files with information about module sections. This information is mainly used for debugging.
- [To be documented]
/sys/power
[To be documented]
This manual page is incomplete, possibly inaccurate, and is the kind of thing that needs to be updated very often.
proc(5), udev(7)
P. Mochel. (2005). The sysfs filesystem. Proceedings of the 2005 Ottawa Linux Symposium.
The kernel source file Documentation/filesystems/sysfs.txt
and
various other files in Documentation/ABI
and Documentation/*/sysfs.txt
This page is part of release 5.11 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
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