knowing a device special file major and minor numbers in linux

33,466

Solution 1

The list is called the LANANA Linux Device List, and it is administered by Alan Cox.

You can find the latest copy online (direct link), or in the Linux source. Its filename in the kernel tree is Documentation/devices.txt.

To see the major and minor numbers that created a node in /dev (or any device node for that matter), simply use ls with the -l option:

22:26 jsmith@undertow% ls -l /dev/xvd?
brw-rw---- 1 root disk    202,   0 Nov  1 20:31 /dev/xvda
brw-rw---- 1 root disk    202,  16 Nov  1 20:31 /dev/xvdb
brw-rw---- 1 root disk    202,  32 Nov  1 20:31 /dev/xvdc

In this example, 202 is the three devices' major number, and 0, 16, and 32 are minors. The b at left indicates that the node is a block device. The alternative is c, a character device:

crw-rw-rw- 1 root tty       5,   0 Nov 22 00:29 /dev/tty

Solution 2

$ ls -l /dev/fd0 /dev/null
brw-rw---- 1 root floppy 2, 0 Nov 22 19:48 /dev/fd0
crw-rw-rw- 1 root root   1, 3 Nov 22 19:48 /dev/null
$ stat -c '%n: %F, major %t minor %T' /dev/fd0 /dev/null
/dev/fd0: block special file, major 2 minor 0
/dev/null: character special file, major 1 minor 3

Most device numbers are fixed (i.e. /dev/null will always be character device 1:3) but on Linux, some are dynamically allocated.

$ cat /proc/devices
Character devices:
...
 10 misc
...

Block devices:
...
253 mdp
254 device-mapper
$ cat /proc/misc
...
 57 device-mapper
...

For example, on this system, it just so happens that /dev/mapper/control will be c:10:57 while the rest of /dev/mapper/* will be b:254:*, and this could differ from one boot cycle to another -- or even as modules are loaded/unloaded and devices are added/removed.

You can explore these device registrations further in /sys.

$ readlink /sys/dev/block/2:0
../../devices/platform/floppy.0/block/fd0
$ cat /sys/devices/platform/floppy.0/block/fd0/dev
2:0
$ readlink /sys/dev/char/1:3
../../devices/virtual/mem/null
$ cat /sys/devices/virtual/mem/null/dev
1:3

Solution 3

Especially for block devices:

$ lsblk
NAME    MAJ:MIN RM  SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
sda       8:0    0   90G  0 disk
├─sda1    8:1    0    4G  0 part [SWAP]
├─sda2    8:2    0    4G  0 part /

Solution 4

Alternative that doesn't depend on stat:

$ cat /sys/class/*/random/dev
1:8
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Manuel Araoz
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Manuel Araoz

I'm just trying to learn a bit of programming.

Updated on July 09, 2022

Comments

  • Manuel Araoz
    Manuel Araoz almost 2 years

    All files in /dev are special files... they represent devices of the computer. They were created with the mknod syscall. My question is: How can I know the minor and major numbers that were used to create this special file?

  • Manuel Araoz
    Manuel Araoz over 14 years
    hey thanks! but I was asking how to do this by commandline... :D
  • Jed Smith
    Jed Smith over 14 years
    Do what by command line? Your question doesn't say anything about the command line, except mknod.
  • Michael Burr
    Michael Burr about 12 years
    Looks like the lanana.org domain has expired ("lanana.org expired on 04/10/2012 and is pending renewal or deletion"). I hope that gets fixed - looks like it might be a bit of a recurring problem: wiki.linuxfoundation.org/en/Minutes_Apr_27_2011