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*** 17,30 **** The system associates a driver with its configuration file by name. For example, a driver in /usr/kernel/drv called wombat has the driver configuration file wombat.conf, also stored in /usr/kernel/drv, ! associated with it. On systems capable of support 64-bit drivers, the ! driver configuration file should be placed in the directory in which ! the 32-bit driver is (or would be) located, even if only a 64-bit ! version is provided. For example, a 64-bit driver stored in /usr/kernel/drv/sparcv9 stores its driver configuration file in /usr/kernel/drv. The value of the name property is the node name. In a driver.conf file, --- 17,30 ---- The system associates a driver with its configuration file by name. For example, a driver in /usr/kernel/drv called wombat has the driver configuration file wombat.conf, also stored in /usr/kernel/drv, ! associated with it. On systems that support 64-bit drivers, the driver ! configuration file should be placed in the directory in which the ! 32-bit driver is (or would be) located, even if only a 64-bit version ! is provided. For example, a 64-bit driver stored in /usr/kernel/drv/sparcv9 stores its driver configuration file in /usr/kernel/drv. The value of the name property is the node name. In a driver.conf file,
*** 192,203 **** with a vendor-unique string. A reasonably compact and unique choice is the vendor over-the-counter stock symbol. NOTES The update_drv(1M) command should be used to prompt the kernel to ! reread driver.conf files. Using modunload(1M) to update driver.conf ! continues to work in release 9 of the Solaris operating environment, ! but the behavior will change in a future release. ! January 5, 2007 DRIVER.CONF(4) --- 192,201 ---- with a vendor-unique string. A reasonably compact and unique choice is the vendor over-the-counter stock symbol. NOTES The update_drv(1M) command should be used to prompt the kernel to ! reread driver.conf files. ! September 16, 2018 DRIVER.CONF(4)