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UDEVADM(8)			    udevadm			    UDEVADM(8)

NAME
       udevadm - udev management tool

SYNOPSIS
       udevadm [--debug] [--version] [--help]

       udevadm info [options...] [devpath|syspath|id|unit...]

       udevadm trigger [options...] [devpath|syspath|id|unit...]

       udevadm settle [options...]

       udevadm control options...

       udevadm monitor [options...]

       udevadm test [options...] devpath|syspath|id|unit

       udevadm test-builtin [options...] command devpath|syspath|id|unit

       udevadm verify [options...] [files...]

       udevadm cat [options...] [files...]

       udevadm wait [options...] devpath|syspath...

       udevadm lock [options...] command...

DESCRIPTION
       udevadm expects a command and command specific options. It controls the
       runtime behavior of systemd-udevd, requests kernel events, manages the
       event queue, and provides simple debugging mechanisms.

OPTIONS
       -d, --debug
	   Print debug messages to standard error. This option is implied in
	   udevadm test and udevadm test-builtin commands.

       -V, --version
	   Print a short version string and exit.

       -h, --help
	   Print a short help text and exit.

   udevadm info [options...] [devpath|syspath|id|unit...]
       Query the udev database for device information.

       Positional arguments should be used to specify one or more devices.
       Each one may be a device name (in which case it must start with /dev/),
       a sys path (in which case it must start with /sys/), a device ID (such
       as "n1", "c5:1", or "b259:1", see sd_device_get_device_id(3)). or a
       systemd device unit name (in which case it must end with ".device", see
       systemd.device(5)).

       -q, --query=TYPE
	   Query the database for the specified type of device data. Valid
	   TYPEs are: name, symlink, path, property, all.

       --property=NAME
	   When showing device properties using the --query=property option,
	   limit display to properties specified in the argument. The argument
	   should be a comma-separated list of property names. If not
	   specified, all known properties are shown.

	   Added in version 250.

       --value
	   When showing device properties using the --query=property option,
	   print only their values, and skip the property name and "=".

	   Cannot be used together with -x/--export or -P/--export-prefix.

	   Added in version 250.

       -p, --path=DEVPATH
	   The /sys/ path of the device to query, e.g.
	   [/sys/]/class/block/sda. This option is an alternative to the
	   positional argument with a /sys/ prefix.  udevadm info
	   --path=/class/block/sda is equivalent to udevadm info
	   /sys/class/block/sda.

       -n, --name=FILE
	   The name of the device node or a symlink to query, e.g.
	   [/dev/]/sda. This option is an alternative to the positional
	   argument with a /dev/ prefix.  udevadm info --name=sda is
	   equivalent to udevadm info /dev/sda.

       -r, --root
	   Print absolute paths in name or symlink query.

       -a, --attribute-walk
	   Print all sysfs properties of the specified device that can be used
	   in udev rules to match the specified device. It prints all devices
	   along the chain, up to the root of sysfs that can be used in udev
	   rules.

	   This switch supports JSON output mode (see --json= below). Note
	   that because this switch generates multiple JSON objects, JSON-SEQ
	   mode is automatically enabled (RFC7464). (Note: tools such as jq[1]
	   natively support JSON-SEQ via the --seq switch.)

       -t, --tree
	   Display a sysfs tree. This recursively iterates through the sysfs
	   hierarchy and displays it in a tree structure. If a path is
	   specified only the subtree below and its parent directories are
	   shown. This will show both device and subsystem items.

	   Added in version 251.

       -x, --export
	   Print output as key/value pairs. Values are enclosed in single
	   quotes. This takes effects only when --query=property or
	   --device-id-of-file=FILE is specified.

       -P, --export-prefix=NAME
	   Add a prefix to the key name of exported values. This implies
	   --export.

       -d, --device-id-of-file=FILE
	   Print major/minor numbers of the underlying device, where the file
	   lives on. If this is specified, all positional arguments are
	   ignored.

       -e, --export-db
	   Export the content of the udev database.

       -c, --cleanup-db
	   Cleanup the udev database.

       -w[SECONDS], --wait-for-initialization[=SECONDS]
	   Wait for device to be initialized. If argument SECONDS is not
	   specified, the default is to wait forever.

	   Added in version 243.

       --subsystem-match[=SUBSYSTEM], --subsystem-nomatch[=SUBSYSTEM]
	   When used with --export-db, only show devices of or not of the
	   given subsystem respectively.

	   Added in version 255.

       --attr-match[=FILE[=VALUE]], --attr-nomatch[=FILE[=VALUE]]
	   When used with --export-db, only show devices matching or not
	   matching the given attribute respectively.

	   Added in version 255.

       --property-match[=KEY=VALUE]
	   When used with --export-db, only show devices matching the given
	   property and value.

	   Added in version 255.

       --tag-match[=TAG]
	   When used with --export-db, only show devices with the given tag.

	   Added in version 255.

       --sysname-match[=NAME]
	   When used with --export-db, only show devices with the given "/sys"
	   path.

	   Added in version 255.

       --name-match[=NAME]
	   When used with --export-db, only show devices with the given name
	   in "/dev".

	   Added in version 255.

       --parent-match[=NAME]
	   When used with --export-db, only show devices with the given parent
	   device.

	   Added in version 255.

       --initialized-match, --initialized-nomatch
	   When used with --export-db, only show devices that are initialized
	   or not initialized respectively.

	   Added in version 255.

       --json=MODE
	   Shows output formatted as JSON. Expects one of "short" (for the
	   shortest possible output without any redundant whitespace or line
	   breaks), "pretty" (for a pretty version of the same, with
	   indentation and line breaks) or "off" (to turn off JSON output, the
	   default).

       --no-pager
	   Do not pipe output into a pager.

       The generated output shows the current device database entry in a terse
       format. Each line shown is prefixed with one of the following
       characters:

       Table 1. udevadm info output prefixes

       ┌───────┬────────────────────────────┐
       │Prefix │ Meaning		    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"P:"   │ Device path in /sys/	    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"M:"   │ Device name in /sys/ (i.e. │
       │       │ the last component of	    │
       │       │ "P:")			    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"R:"   │ Device number in /sys/	    │
       │       │ (i.e. the numeric suffix   │
       │       │ of the last component of   │
       │       │ "P:")			    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"J:"   │ Device ID		    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"U:"   │ Kernel subsystem	    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"B:"   │ Driver subsystem	    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"T:"   │ Kernel device type within  │
       │       │ subsystem		    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"D:"   │ Kernel device node	    │
       │       │ major/minor		    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"I:"   │ Network interface index    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"N:"   │ Kernel device node name    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"L:"   │ Device node symlink	    │
       │       │ priority		    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"S:"   │ Device node symlink	    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"Q:"   │ Block device sequence	    │
       │       │ number (DISKSEQ)	    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"V:"   │ Attached driver	    │
       ├───────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │"E:"   │ Device property	    │
       └───────┴────────────────────────────┘

   udevadm trigger [options...] [devpath|syspath|id|unit...]
       Request device events from the kernel. Primarily used to replay events
       at system coldplug time.

       Takes device specifications as positional arguments. See the
       description of udevadm info above.

       -v, --verbose
	   Print the list of devices which will be triggered.

       -n, --dry-run
	   Do not actually trigger the event.

       -q, --quiet
	   Suppress error logging in triggering events.

	   Added in version 248.

       -t, --type=TYPE
	   Trigger a specific type of devices. Valid types are "all",
	   "devices", and "subsystems". The default value is "devices".

       -c, --action=ACTION
	   Type of event to be triggered. Possible actions are "add",
	   "remove", "change", "move", "online", "offline", "bind", and
	   "unbind". Also, the special value "help" can be used to list the
	   possible actions. The default value is "change".

       --prioritized-subsystem=SUBSYSTEM[,SUBSYSTEM...]
	   Takes a comma separated list of subsystems. When triggering events
	   for devices, the devices from the specified subsystems and their
	   parents are triggered first. For example, if
	   --prioritized-subsystem=block,net, then firstly all block devices
	   and their parents are triggered, in the next all network devices
	   and their parents are triggered, and lastly the other devices are
	   triggered. This option can be specified multiple times, and in that
	   case the lists of the subsystems will be merged. That is,
	   --prioritized-subsystem=block --prioritized-subsystem=net is
	   equivalent to --prioritized-subsystem=block,net.

	   Added in version 251.

       -s, --subsystem-match=SUBSYSTEM
	   Trigger events for devices which belong to a matching subsystem.
	   This option supports shell style pattern matching. When this option
	   is specified more than once, then each matching result is ORed,
	   that is, all the devices in each subsystem are triggered.

       -S, --subsystem-nomatch=SUBSYSTEM
	   Do not trigger events for devices which belong to a matching
	   subsystem. This option supports shell style pattern matching. When
	   this option is specified more than once, then each matching result
	   is ANDed, that is, devices which do not match all specified
	   subsystems are triggered.

       -a, --attr-match=ATTRIBUTE=VALUE
	   Trigger events for devices with a matching sysfs attribute. If a
	   value is specified along with the attribute name, the content of
	   the attribute is matched against the given value using shell style
	   pattern matching. If no value is specified, the existence of the
	   sysfs attribute is checked. When this option is specified multiple
	   times, then each matching result is ANDed, that is, only devices
	   which have all specified attributes are triggered.

       -A, --attr-nomatch=ATTRIBUTE=VALUE
	   Do not trigger events for devices with a matching sysfs attribute.
	   If a value is specified along with the attribute name, the content
	   of the attribute is matched against the given value using shell
	   style pattern matching. If no value is specified, the existence of
	   the sysfs attribute is checked. When this option is specified
	   multiple times, then each matching result is ANDed, that is, only
	   devices which have none of the specified attributes are triggered.

       -p, --property-match=PROPERTY=VALUE
	   Trigger events for devices with a matching property value. This
	   option supports shell style pattern matching. When this option is
	   specified more than once, then each matching result is ORed, that
	   is, devices which have one of the specified properties are
	   triggered.

       -g, --tag-match=TAG
	   Trigger events for devices with a matching tag. When this option is
	   specified multiple times, then each matching result is ANDed, that
	   is, devices which have all specified tags are triggered.

       -y, --sysname-match=NAME
	   Trigger events for devices for which the last component (i.e. the
	   filename) of the /sys/ path matches the specified PATH. This option
	   supports shell style pattern matching. When this option is
	   specified more than once, then each matching result is ORed, that
	   is, all devices which have any of the specified NAME are triggered.

       --name-match=NAME
	   Trigger events for devices with a matching device path. When this
	   option is specified more than once, then each matching result is
	   ORed, that is, all specified devices are triggered.

	   Added in version 218.

       -b, --parent-match=SYSPATH
	   Trigger events for all children of a given device. When this option
	   is specified more than once, then each matching result is ORed,
	   that is, all children of each specified device are triggered.

       --initialized-match, --initialized-nomatch
	   When --initialized-match is specified, trigger events for devices
	   that are already initialized by systemd-udevd, and skip devices
	   that are not initialized yet.

	   When --initialized-nomatch is specified, trigger events for devices
	   that are not initialized by systemd-udevd yet, and skip devices
	   that are already initialized.

	   Typically, it is essential that applications which intend to use
	   such a match, make sure a suitable udev rule is installed that sets
	   at least one property on devices that shall be matched. See also
	   Initialized Devices section below for more details.

	       Warning
	       --initialized-nomatch can potentially save a significant amount
	       of time compared to re-triggering all devices in the system and
	       e.g. can be used to optimize boot time. However, this is not
	       safe to be used in a boot sequence in general. Especially, when
	       udev rules for a device depend on its parent devices (e.g.
	       "ATTRS" or "IMPORT{parent}" keys, see udev(7) for more
	       details), the final state of the device becomes easily unstable
	       with this option.
	   Added in version 251.

       --include-parents
	   Trigger parent devices of found devices even if the parents will
	   not match the filter condition. This is useful if we are interested
	   to limit the coldplug activities to some devices or subsystems.

	   Added in version 258.

       -w, --settle
	   Apart from triggering events, also waits for those events to
	   finish. Note that this is different from calling udevadm settle.
	   udevadm settle waits for all events to finish. This option only
	   waits for events triggered by the same command to finish.

	   Added in version 238.

       --uuid
	   Trigger the synthetic device events, and associate a randomized
	   UUID with each. These UUIDs are printed to standard output, one
	   line for each event. These UUIDs are included in the uevent
	   environment block (in the "SYNTH_UUID=" property) and may be used
	   to track delivery of the generated events.

	   Added in version 249.

       --wait-daemon[=SECONDS]
	   Before triggering uevents, wait for systemd-udevd daemon to be
	   initialized. Optionally takes timeout value. Default timeout is 5
	   seconds. This is equivalent to invoking udevadm control --ping
	   before udevadm trigger.

	   Added in version 241.

       In addition, optional positional arguments can be used to specify
       device names or sys paths. They must start with /dev/ or /sys/
       respectively.

   udevadm settle [options...]
       Watches the udev event queue, and exits if all current events are
       handled.

       -t, --timeout=SECONDS
	   Maximum number of seconds to wait for the event queue to become
	   empty. The default value is 120 seconds. A value of 0 will check if
	   the queue is empty and always return immediately. A non-zero value
	   will return an exit code of 0 if queue became empty before timeout
	   was reached, non-zero otherwise.

       -E, --exit-if-exists=FILE
	   Stop waiting if file exists.

       See systemd-udev-settle.service(8) for more information.

   udevadm control options...
       Modify the internal state of the running udev daemon.

       -e, --exit
	   Signal and wait for systemd-udevd to exit. No option except for
	   --timeout can be specified after this option. Note that
	   systemd-udevd.service contains Restart=always and so as a result,
	   this option restarts systemd-udevd. If you want to stop
	   systemd-udevd.service, please use the following:

	       systemctl stop systemd-udevd-control.socket systemd-udevd-kernel.socket systemd-udevd-varlink.socket systemd-udevd.service


       -l, --log-level=value
	   Set the internal log level of systemd-udevd. Valid values are the
	   numerical syslog priorities or their textual representations:
	   emerg, alert, crit, err, warning, notice, info, and debug.

       -s, --stop-exec-queue
	   Signal systemd-udevd to stop executing new events. Incoming events
	   will be queued.

       -S, --start-exec-queue
	   Signal systemd-udevd to enable the execution of events.

       -R, --reload
	   Signal systemd-udevd to reload the rules files and other databases
	   like the kernel module index. Reloading rules and databases does
	   not apply any changes to already existing devices; the new
	   configuration will only be applied to new events.

       -p, --property=KEY=value
	   Set a global property for all events.

       -m, --children-max=value
	   Set the maximum number of events, systemd-udevd will handle at the
	   same time. When 0 is specified, then the maximum is determined
	   based on the system resources.

       --ping
	   Send a ping message to systemd-udevd and wait for the reply. This
	   may be useful to check that systemd-udevd daemon is running.

	   Added in version 241.

       --trace=BOOL
	   Enable/disable trace logging in systemd-udevd.

	   Added in version 258.

       --revert
	   Revert settings previously set with udevadm control command. When
	   specified, settings set with -l/--log-level=, --trace,
	   -m/--children-max=, and -p/--property= will be cleared.

	   Added in version 258.

       -t, --timeout=seconds
	   The maximum number of seconds to wait for a reply from
	   systemd-udevd.

       --load-credentials
	   When specified, the following credentials are used when passed in:

	   udev.conf.*
	       These credentials should contain valid udev.conf(5)
	       configuration data. From each matching credential a separate
	       file is created. Example: a passed credential
	       udev.conf.50-foobar will be copied into a configuration file
	       /run/udev/udev.conf.d/50-foobar.conf.

	       Added in version 256.

	   udev.rules.*
	       These credentials should contain valid udev(7) rules. From each
	       matching credential a separate file is created. Example: a
	       passed credential udev.rules.50-foobar will be copied into a
	       configuration file /run/udev/rules.d/50-foobar.rules.

	       Added in version 256.

	   Note, this does not imply --reload option. So, if systemd-udevd is
	   already running, please consider to also specify -reload to make
	   the copied udev rules files used by systemd-udevd.

	   Added in version 256.

   udevadm monitor [options...]
       Listens to the kernel uevents and events sent out by a udev rule and
       prints the devpath of the event to the console. It can be used to
       analyze the event timing, by comparing the timestamps of the kernel
       uevent and the udev event.

       -k, --kernel
	   Print the kernel uevents.

       -u, --udev
	   Print the udev event after the rule processing.

       -p, --property
	   Also print the properties of the event.

       -s, --subsystem-match=string[/string]
	   Filter kernel uevents and udev events by subsystem[/devtype]. Only
	   events with a matching subsystem value will pass. When this option
	   is specified more than once, then each matching result is ORed,
	   that is, all devices in the specified subsystems are monitored.

       -t, --tag-match=string
	   Filter udev events by tag. Only udev events with a given tag
	   attached will pass. When this option is specified more than once,
	   then each matching result is ORed, that is, devices which have one
	   of the specified tags are monitored.

   udevadm test [options...] devpath|syspath|id|unit
       Simulate a udev event run for the given device, and print debug output.
       The option --json= may be useful for parsing the final result. See also
       Example section.

       -a, --action=ACTION
	   Type of event to be simulated. Possible actions are "add",
	   "remove", "change", "move", "online", "offline", "bind", and
	   "unbind". Also, the special value "help" can be used to list the
	   possible actions. The default value is "add".

       -N, --resolve-names=early|late|never
	   Specify when udevadm should resolve names of users and groups
	   specified in udev rules. When set to early (the default), names
	   will be resolved when the rules are parsed. When set to late, names
	   will be resolved during the event being processed. When set to
	   never, names will never be resolved and relevant udev rules will be
	   ignored.

	   Added in version 209.

       -D DIR, --extra-rules-dir=DIR
	   Also load udev rules files from the specified directory. This
	   option can be specified multiple times. It may be useful for
	   debugging udev rules by copying some udev rules files to a
	   temporary directory, editing them, and specifying the directory
	   with this option. Files found in the specified directories have a
	   higher priority than rules files in the default udev/rules.d
	   directories used by systemd-udevd. See udev(7) for more details
	   about the search paths.

	   Added in version 258.

       -v, --verbose
	   Shows verbose logs in processing udev rules.

	   Added in version 258.

       --json=MODE
	   Shows output formatted as JSON. Expects one of "short" (for the
	   shortest possible output without any redundant whitespace or line
	   breaks), "pretty" (for a pretty version of the same, with
	   indentation and line breaks) or "off" (to turn off JSON output, the
	   default).

   udevadm test-builtin [options...] command devpath|file|unit
       Run a built-in command COMMAND for device DEVPATH, and print debug
       output.

       -a, --action=ACTION
	   Type of event to be simulated. Possible actions are "add",
	   "remove", "change", "move", "online", "offline", "bind", and
	   "unbind". Also, the special value "help" can be used to list the
	   possible actions. The default value is "add".

	   Added in version 250.

   udevadm verify [options...] [files...]
       Verify syntactic, semantic, and stylistic correctness of udev rules
       files.

       Positional arguments can be used to specify one or more files to check.
       Each argument must be an absolute path to a udev rules file or a
       directory that contains rules files, or a file name of udev rules file
       (e.g.  99-systemd.rules). If a file name is specified, the file will be
       searched in the udev/rules.d directories that are processed by
       systemd-udevd, and searched in the current working directory if not
       found. If no files are specified, the udev rules are read from the
       files located in the same udev/rules.d directories that are processed
       by systemd-udevd. See udev(7) for more details about the search paths.

       The exit status is 0 if all specified udev rules files are
       syntactically, semantically, and stylistically correct, and a non-zero
       error code otherwise.

       -N, --resolve-names=early|late|never
	   Specify when udevadm should resolve names of users and groups
	   specified in udev rules. When set to early (the default), names
	   will be resolved when the rules are parsed. When set to late, names
	   will not be verified, as systemd-udevd resolves names during each
	   event being processed. When set to never, names will never be
	   resolved and relevant rules will be ignored.

	   Added in version 254.

       --root=PATH
	   When looking for udev rules files located in the udev/rules.d
	   directories, operate on files underneath the specified root path
	   PATH. When a file name is specified, and it is not found in the
	   udev/rules.d directories, the file will be searched in the
	   specified root path PATH, rather than the current working
	   directory.

	   Added in version 254.

       --no-summary
	   Do not show summary.

	   Added in version 254.

       --no-style
	   Ignore style issues. When specified, even if style issues are found
	   in udev rules files, the exit status is 0 if no syntactic or
	   semantic errors are found.

	   Added in version 254.

   udevadm cat [options...] [file...]
       Show udev rules files or udev.conf.

       Positional arguments can be used to specify one or more files to show.
       Each argument must be an absolute path to a udev rules file or a
       directory that contains rules files, or a file name of udev rules file
       (e.g.  99-systemd.rules). If a file name is specified, the file will be
       searched in the udev/rules.d directories that are processed by
       systemd-udevd, and searched in the current working directory if not
       found. If no files are specified, the udev rules are read from the
       files located in the same udev/rules.d directories that are processed
       by systemd-udevd. See udev(7) for more details about the search paths.

       --root=PATH
	   When looking for udev rules files located in the udev/rules.d
	   directories, operate on files underneath the specified root path
	   PATH. When a file name is specified, and it is not found in the
	   udev/rules.d directories, the file will be searched in the
	   specified root path PATH, rather than the current working
	   directory.

	   Added in version 258.

       --tldr
	   Only print the "interesting" parts of the configuration files,
	   skipping comments and empty lines and section headers followed only
	   by comments and empty lines.

	   Added in version 258.

       --config
	   Shows udev.conf(5) files, rather than udev rules files. When
	   specified, no udev rules file cannot be specified.

	   Added in version 258.

   udevadm wait [options...] devpath|syspath...
       Wait for devices or device symlinks being created and initialized by
       systemd-udevd. Each device path must start with "/dev/" or "/sys/",
       e.g.  "/dev/sda", "/dev/disk/by-path/pci-0000:3c:00.0-nvme-1-part1",
       "/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.6/net/eth0", or
       "/sys/class/net/eth0". This can take multiple devices. This may be
       useful for waiting for devices being processed by systemd-udevd after
       e.g. partitioning or formatting the devices.

       -t, --timeout=SECONDS
	   Maximum number of seconds to wait for the specified devices or
	   device symlinks being created, initialized, or removed. The default
	   value is "infinity".

	   Added in version 251.

       --initialized=BOOL
	   Check if systemd-udevd initialized devices. Defaults to true. When
	   false, the command only checks if the specified devices exist. Set
	   false to this setting if there is no udev rules for the specified
	   devices, as the devices will never be considered as initialized in
	   that case. See Initialized Devices section below for more details.

	   Added in version 251.

       --removed
	   When specified, the command wait for devices being removed instead
	   of created or initialized. If this is specified, --initialized=
	   will be ignored.

	   Added in version 251.

       --settle
	   When specified, also watches the udev event queue, and wait for all
	   queued events being processed by systemd-udevd.

	   Added in version 251.

   udevadm lock [options...] command...
       udevadm lock takes an (advisory) exclusive lock on a block device (or
       all specified devices), as per Locking Block Device Access[2] and
       invokes a program with the locks taken. When the invoked program exits
       the locks are automatically released and its return value is propagated
       as exit code of udevadm lock.

       This tool is in particular useful to ensure that systemd-
       udevd.service(8) does not probe a block device while changes are made
       to it, for example partitions created or file systems formatted. Note
       that many tools that interface with block devices natively support
       taking relevant locks, see for example sfdisk(8)'s --lock switch.

       The command expects at least one block device specified via --device=
       or --backing=, and a command line to execute as arguments.

       --device=DEVICE, -d DEVICE
	   Takes a path to a device node of the device to lock. This switch
	   may be used multiple times (and in combination with --backing=) in
	   order to lock multiple devices. If a partition block device node is
	   specified the containing "whole" block device is automatically
	   determined and used for the lock, as per the specification. If
	   multiple devices are specified, they are deduplicated, sorted by
	   the major/minor of their device nodes and then locked in order.

	   This switch must be used at least once, to specify at least one
	   device to lock. (Alternatively, use --backing=, see below.)

	   Added in version 251.

       --backing=PATH, -b PATH
	   If a path to a device node is specified, identical to --device=.
	   However, this switch alternatively accepts a path to a regular file
	   or directory, in which case the block device of the file system the
	   file/directory resides on is automatically determined and used as
	   if it was specified with --device=.

	   Added in version 251.

       --timeout=SECS, -t SECS
	   Specifies how long to wait at most until all locks can be taken.
	   Takes a value in seconds, or in the usual supported time units, see
	   systemd.time(7). If specified as zero the lock is attempted and if
	   not successful the invocation will immediately fail. If passed as
	   "infinity" (the default) the invocation will wait indefinitely
	   until the lock can be acquired. If the lock cannot be taken in the
	   specified time the specified command will not be executed and the
	   invocation will fail.

	   Added in version 251.

       --print, -p
	   Instead of locking the specified devices and executing a command,
	   just print the device paths that would be locked, and execute no
	   command. This command is useful to determine the "whole" block
	   device in case a partition block device is specified. The devices
	   will be sorted by their device node major number as primary
	   ordering key and the minor number as secondary ordering key (i.e.
	   they are shown in the order they'd be locked). Note that the number
	   of lines printed here can be less than the number of --device= and
	   --backing= switches specified in case these resolve to the same
	   "whole" devices.

	   Added in version 251.

INITIALIZED DEVICES
       Initialized devices are those for which at least one udev rule already
       completed execution – for any action but "remove" — that set a property
       or other device setting (and thus has an entry in the udev device
       database). Devices are no longer considered initialized if a "remove"
       action is seen for them (which removes their entry in the udev device
       database). Note that devices that have no udev rules are never
       considered initialized, but might still be announced via the sd-device
       API (or similar).

EXAMPLE
       Example 1. Format a File System

       Take a lock on the backing block device while creating a file system,
       to ensure that systemd-udevd does not probe or announce the new
       superblock before it is comprehensively written:

	   # udevadm lock --device=/dev/sda1 mkfs.ext4 /dev/sda1

       Example 2. Format a RAID File System

       Similar, but take locks on multiple devices at once:

	   # udevadm lock --device=/dev/sda1 --device=/dev/sdb1 mkfs.btrfs /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1

       Example 3. Copy in a File System

       Take a lock on the backing block device while copying in a prepared
       file system image, to ensure that systemd-udevd does not probe or
       announce the new superblock before it is fully written:

	   # udevadm lock -d /dev/sda1 dd if=fs.raw of=/dev/sda1

       Example 4. Predict Network Interface Renaming

       To predict a network interface name, udevadm test can be used:

	   $ udevadm test /sys/class/net/wlan0 --json=pretty 2>/dev/null | jq .networkInterface.name
	   "wlp59s0"

       Example 5. Predict Symbolic links of a Device Node

       To predict symbolic links to a device node, udevadm test can be used:

	   $ udevadm test /dev/nvme0n1p1 --json=pretty 2>/dev/null | jq .node.symlinks
	   [
	     "/dev/disk/by-diskseq/1-part1",
	     "/dev/disk/by-id/nvme-WDC_PC_SN720_SDAQNTW-512G-1001_192290802247-part1",
	     "/dev/disk/by-id/nvme-WDC_PC_SN720_SDAQNTW-512G-1001_192290802247_1-part1",
	     "/dev/disk/by-id/nvme-eui.1922908022470001001b448b44ccb9d6-part1",
	     "/dev/disk/by-path/pci-0000:3c:00.0-nvme-1-part/by-partnum/1",
	     "/dev/disk/by-path/pci-0000:3c:00.0-nvme-1-part1"
	   ]
	   $ udevadm test /dev/input/event3 --json=pretty 2>/dev/null | jq .node.symlinks
	   [
	     "/dev/input/by-path/platform-i8042-serio-0-event-kbd"
	   ]

SEE ALSO
       udev(7), systemd-udevd.service(8), udev.conf(5)

NOTES
	1. jq
	   https://jqlang.github.io/jq/manual/

	2. Locking Block Device Access
	   https://systemd.io/BLOCK_DEVICE_LOCKING

systemd 258							    UDEVADM(8)

udevadm(8)

udevadm \- udev management tool

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System Information

systemd 258 1.0.0
Updated
Maintained by Unknown

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