Loading include/linux/kobject.h +17 −16 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -117,22 +117,23 @@ struct kset_uevent_ops { struct kobj_uevent_env *env); }; /* * struct kset - a set of kobjects of a specific type, belonging * to a specific subsystem. * * All kobjects of a kset should be embedded in an identical * type. This type may have a descriptor, which the kset points * to. This allows there to exist sets of objects of the same * type in different subsystems. /** * struct kset - a set of kobjects of a specific type, belonging to a specific subsystem. * * A subsystem does not have to be a list of only one type * of object; multiple ksets can belong to one subsystem. All * ksets of a subsystem share the subsystem's lock. * A kset defines a group of kobjects. They can be individually * different "types" but overall these kobjects all want to be grouped * together and operated on in the same manner. ksets are used to * define the attribute callbacks and other common events that happen to * a kobject. * * Each kset can support specific event variables; it can * supress the event generation or add subsystem specific * variables carried with the event. * @ktype: the struct kobj_type for this specific kset * @list: the list of all kobjects for this kset * @list_lock: a lock for iterating over the kobjects * @kobj: the embedded kobject for this kset (recursion, isn't it fun...) * @uevent_ops: the set of uevent operations for this kset. These are * called whenever a kobject has something happen to it so that the kset * can add new environment variables, or filter out the uevents if so * desired. */ struct kset { struct kobj_type *ktype; Loading Loading
include/linux/kobject.h +17 −16 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -117,22 +117,23 @@ struct kset_uevent_ops { struct kobj_uevent_env *env); }; /* * struct kset - a set of kobjects of a specific type, belonging * to a specific subsystem. * * All kobjects of a kset should be embedded in an identical * type. This type may have a descriptor, which the kset points * to. This allows there to exist sets of objects of the same * type in different subsystems. /** * struct kset - a set of kobjects of a specific type, belonging to a specific subsystem. * * A subsystem does not have to be a list of only one type * of object; multiple ksets can belong to one subsystem. All * ksets of a subsystem share the subsystem's lock. * A kset defines a group of kobjects. They can be individually * different "types" but overall these kobjects all want to be grouped * together and operated on in the same manner. ksets are used to * define the attribute callbacks and other common events that happen to * a kobject. * * Each kset can support specific event variables; it can * supress the event generation or add subsystem specific * variables carried with the event. * @ktype: the struct kobj_type for this specific kset * @list: the list of all kobjects for this kset * @list_lock: a lock for iterating over the kobjects * @kobj: the embedded kobject for this kset (recursion, isn't it fun...) * @uevent_ops: the set of uevent operations for this kset. These are * called whenever a kobject has something happen to it so that the kset * can add new environment variables, or filter out the uevents if so * desired. */ struct kset { struct kobj_type *ktype; Loading