Provided by: sysfsutils_2.1.1-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       sysfs.conf, sysfs.d/*.conf - Linux sysfs attributes setting configuration files

DESCRIPTION

       These configuration files are used to set sysfs attribute values and modify their file
       mode or owner, during the system boot.

       Note that these configuration files are concerned with the /sys filesystem and should not
       be confused with the /etc/sysctl.conf configuration which is concerned with the /proc/sys
       filesystem instead.

FORMAT

       The syntax consists on a series of line based directives for sysfs attributes, those being
       pathnames within that filesystem, with the following format:

       attribute = value
           Set value for the sysfs attribute.

       mode attribute = mode
           Set the mode for the sysfs attribute.  Where mode is any mode accepted by chmod(1).

       owner attribute = owner[:group]
           Set the owner (and/or group) for the sysfs attribute.  Where owner (and/or group) are
           any specification accepted by chown(1).

       Leading and trailing whitespace (SPACE, TAB), and whitespace around the = character are
       ignored.

       Comments start with a # character until the end of line.  Empty or whitespace-only lines
       are also ignored.

       Any attribute that does not exist will be warned about, but will not cause the loading to
       fail.

FILES

       /etc/sysfs.conf
           The main configuration file.  It gets loaded first if readable.

       /etc/sysfs.d/*.conf
           The optional configuration fragment files.  These get loaded after the main
           configuration file, if readable, in glob order.

EXAMPLES

       Always use the powersave CPU frequency governor.

         devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_governor = powersave

       Use userspace CPU frequency governor and set initial speed.

         devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_governor = userspace
         devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_setspeed = 600000

       Set permissions of suspend control file.

         mode power/state = 0660
         owner power/state = root:power

SEE ALSO

       sysfs(5), <https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/sysfs.txt>,
       <https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/ABI/stable/>.