Path to this page:
./
sysutils/hal,
FreeDesktop hardware abstraction layer
Branch: pkgsrc-2010Q3,
Version: 0.5.11nb27,
Package name: hal-0.5.11nb27,
Maintainer: netbsd-desktopWhat is the point of HAL?
To merge information from various sources such that desktop applications can
locate and use hardware devices. The point is that the exact set of
information to merge varies by device and bus type. In order to do this, we
need to define a format for the information, hence the HAL specification.
We may read some stuff from the hardware itself, then add some info provided
by the kernel, then add some metadata from some systemwide files, then add
some data that has been obtained by the desktop and stored per-user, then
look at some blacklist, and finally we have a complete picture of everything
known about that particular device.
An extra value is that we can do this in an operating system independent way.
Stuff like this is important to the major desktop environments.
MESSAGE.NetBSD [+/-]===========================================================================
$NetBSD: MESSAGE.NetBSD,v 1.2 2008/12/24 13:55:24 wiz Exp $
For the NetBSD 5.0+ HAL backend to function properly, your kernel needs
to include /dev/drvctl support. If the /dev/drvctl device node does not
exist, run the following command:
# cd /dev
# sh MAKEDEV drvctl
For proper kernel support, the following directive must be in your kernel
config:
pseudo-device drvctl
===========================================================================
Required to run:[
security/policykit] [
sysutils/hal-info] [
sysutils/dbus-glib] [
sysutils/dbus]
Master sites:
SHA1: 1ddb7895d2ddc2464b553ad11f7ba38860478ae9
RMD160: 741cfe82f0bc2d67106b24cfe526a754ab36e45f
Filesize: 1251.222 KB
Version history: (Expand)
- (2010-10-17) Package added to pkgsrc.se, version hal-0.5.11nb27 (created)