driver |
array of string |
|
A list of driver names to match. Each element is a shell wildcard pattern. When an element is prefixed with exclamation mark (!) the condition is inverted. A candidate driver name is considered matching when both these conditions are satisfied: (a) any of the elements not prefixed with '!' matches or there aren't such elements; (b) none of the elements prefixed with '!' match. |
interface-name |
array of string |
|
A list of interface names to match. Each element is a shell wildcard pattern. When an element is prefixed with exclamation mark (!) the condition is inverted. A candidate interface name is considered matching when both these conditions are satisfied: (a) any of the elements not prefixed with '!' matches or there aren't such elements; (b) none of the elements prefixed with '!' match. |
kernel-command-line |
array of string |
|
A list of kernel command line arguments to match. This may be used to check whether a specific kernel command line option is set (or if prefixed with the exclamation mark unset). The argument must either be a single word, or an assignment (i.e. two words, separated "="). In the former case the kernel command line is searched for the word appearing as is, or as left hand side of an assignment. In the latter case, the exact assignment is looked for with right and left hand side matching. |
path |
array of string |
|
A list of paths to match against the ID_PATH udev property of devices. ID_PATH represents the topological persistent path of a device. It typically contains a subsystem string (pci, usb, platform, etc.) and a subsystem-specific identifier. For PCI devices the path has the form "pci-$domain:$bus:$device.$function", where each variable is an hexadecimal value; for example "pci-0000:0a:00.0". The path of a device can be obtained with "udevadm info /sys/class/net/$dev | grep ID_PATH=" or by looking at the "path" property exported by NetworkManager ("nmcli -f general.path device show $dev"). Each element of the list is a shell wildcard pattern. When an element is prefixed with exclamation mark (!) the condition is inverted. A candidate path is considered matching when both these conditions are satisfied: (a) any of the elements not prefixed with '!' matches or there aren't such elements; (b) none of the elements prefixed with '!' match. |