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NAME

     MODULE_PNP_INFO — register plug and play information for device matching

SYNOPSIS

     #include <sys/module.h>

     MODULE_PNP_INFO(const char *descriptor_string, bus, module, void *table,
         size_t num_entries);

DESCRIPTION

     The MODULE_PNP_INFO() macro registers a table of device-identifying data for use by
     devmatch(8).  Since it is built off module marking macros, it must follow a DRIVER_MODULE(9)
     line.

     The macro takes a descriptor_string that describes the memory layout of table entries.  The
     string is a series of members separated by semi-colons.  Members are identified by a type
     and a name.  They are encoded in the descriptor string by concatenating the type with a
     colon, followed by the name.  (The special type W32 represents two members.  The first name
     is encoded like any other type.  The second name is encoded by appending a forward slash and
     the second name after the first.)

     Types are one of the following:

     “U8uint8_t element.

     “V8”
          Same as U8, except that the sentinel value 0xFF matches any.

     “G16uint16_t element; any value greater than or equal matches.

     “L16uint16_t element; any value less than or equal matches.

     “M16uint16_t element; mask of which of the following fields to use.

     “U16uint16_t element.

     “V16”
          Same as U16, except that the sentinel value 0xFFFF matches any.

     “U32uint32_t element.

     “V32”
          Same as U32, except that the sentinel value 0xFFFFFFFF matches any.

     “W32”
          Two uint16_t values; the first named member is in the least significant word and the
          second named member is in the most significant word.

     “Z”  A pointer to a string to match exactly.

     “D”  A pointer to a human readable description for the device.

     “P”  A pointer that should be ignored.

     “E”  EISA PNP Identifier.

     “T”  PNP info that is true for the whole table.  The driver code checks for these condition
          pragmatically before using this table to match devices.  This item must come last in
          the list.

     The pseudo-name “#” is reserved for fields that should be ignored.  Any member that does not
     match the parent device's pnpinfo output must be ignored.

     The bus parameter is an unquoted word naming the parent bus of the driver.  For example,
     “pci”.

     The module parameter is also an unquoted word.  It must be unique to the driver.  Usually
     the driver's name is used.

     The table parameter points to the device matching data with entries matching the
     descriptor_string.

     The num_entries parameter is the number of entries in the table, i.e., ‘nitems(table)’.
     Note that only valid entries should be included.  If the table contains trailing zero or
     bogus values, they should not be included in num_entries.

EXAMPLES

     Example 1: Using W32 for vendor/device pair

       The following example shows usage of W32 type when vendor/device values are combined into
       single uint32_t value:

       #include <sys/param.h>
       #include <sys/module.h>

       static struct my_pciids {
               uint32_t devid;
               const char *desc;
       } my_ids[] = {
               { 0x12345678, "Foo bar" },
               { 0x9abcdef0, "Baz fizz" },
       };

       MODULE_PNP_INFO("W32:vendor/device;D:#", pci, my_driver, my_ids,
           nitems(my_ids));

     Example 2: Using T for common vendor value

       The following example shows usage of T type when all entries in the table have the same
       vendor value:

       #include <sys/param.h>
       #include <sys/module.h>

       static struct my_pciids {
               uint16_t device;
               const char *desc;
       } my_ids[] = {
               { 0x9abc, "Foo bar" },
               { 0xdef0, "Baz fizz" },
       };

       MODULE_PNP_INFO("U16:device;D:#;T:vendor=0x1234", pci, my_driver,
           my_ids, nitems(my_ids));

SEE ALSO

     devmatch(8), DRIVER_MODULE(9), module(9)

HISTORY

     The macro MODULE_PNP_INFO appeared in FreeBSD 11.0.

AUTHORS

     The PNP framework and devmatch(8) utility were written by Warner Losh <imp@FreeBSD.org>.