17.0 Dynamic Kernel Device Management with udev
The kernel can add or remove almost any device in the running system.
Changes in device state (whether a device is plugged in or removed) need
to be propagated to userspace. Devices need to be configured as soon as
they are plugged in and discovered. Users of a certain device need to be
informed about any state changes of this device. udev provides the needed
infrastructure to dynamically maintain the device node files and symbolic
links in the /dev directory. udev rules provide a way
to plug external tools into the kernel device event processing. This
enables you to customize udev device handling, for example, by adding
certain scripts to execute as part of kernel device handling, or request
and import additional data to evaluate during device handling.