Thursday, February 14, 2019

Adding entries to the udev hwdb

In this blog post, I'll explain how to update systemd's hwdb for a new device-specific entry. I'll focus on input devices, as usual.

What is the hwdb and why do I need to update it?

The hwdb is a binary database sitting at /etc/udev/hwdb.bin and /usr/lib/udev/hwdb.d. It is usually used to apply udev properties to specific devices, those properties are then picked up by other processes (udev builtins, libinput, ...) to apply device-specific behaviours. So you'll need to update the hwdb if you need a specific behaviour from the device.

One of the use-cases I commonly deal with is that some touchpad announces wrong axis ranges or resolutions. With the correct hwdb entry (see the example later) udev can correct these at device initialisation time and every process sees the right axis ranges.

The database is compiled from the various .hwdb files you have sitting on your system, usually in /etc/udev/hwdb.d and /usr/lib/hwdb.d. The terser format of the hwdb files makes them easier to update than, say, writing a udev rule to set those properties.

The full process goes something like this:

  • The various .hwdb files are installed or modified
  • The hwdb.bin file is generated from the .hwdb files
  • A udev rule triggers the udev hwdb builtin. If a match occurs, the builtin prints the to-be properties, and udev captures the output and applies it as udev properties to the device
  • Some other process (often a different udev builtin) reads the udev property value and does something.
On its own, the hwdb is merely a lookup tool though, it does not modify devices. Think of it as a virtual filing cabinet, something will need to look at it, otherwise it's just dead weight.

An example for such a udev rule from 60-evdev.rules contains:

IMPORT{builtin}="hwdb --subsystem=input --lookup-prefix=evdev:", \
  RUN{builtin}+="keyboard", GOTO="evdev_end"
The IMPORT statement translates as "look up the hwdb, import the properties". The RUN statement runs the "keyboard" builtin which may change the device based on the various udev properties now set. The GOTO statement goes to skip the rest of the file.

So again, on its own the hwdb doesn't do anything, it merely prints to-be udev properties to stdout, udev captures those and applies them to the device. And then those properties need to be processed by some other process to actually apply changes.

hwdb file format

The basic format of each hwdb file contains two types of entries, match lines and property assignments (indented by one space). The match line defines which device it is applied to.

For example, take this entry from 60-evdev.hwdb:

# Lenovo X230 series
evdev:name:SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad:dmi:*svnLENOVO*:pn*ThinkPad*X230*
 EVDEV_ABS_01=::100
 EVDEV_ABS_36=::100
The match line is the one starting with "evdev", the other two lines are property assignments. Property values are strings, any interpretation to numeric values or others is to be done in the process that requires those properties. Noteworthy here: the hwdb can overwrite previously set properties, but it cannot unset them.

The match line is not specified by the hwdb beyond "it's a glob". The format to use is defined by the udev rule that invokes the hwdb builtin. Usually the format is:

someprefix:search criteria:
For example, the udev rule that applies for the match above is this one in 60-evdev.rules:
KERNELS=="input*", \
  IMPORT{builtin}="hwdb 'evdev:name:$attr{name}:$attr{[dmi/id]modalias}'", \
  RUN{builtin}+="keyboard", GOTO="evdev_end"
What does this rule do? $attr entries get filled in by udev with the sysfs attributes. So on your local device, the actual lookup key will end up looking roughly like this:
evdev:name:Some Device Name:dmi:bvnWhatever:bvR112355:bd02/01/2018:...
If that string matches the glob from the hwdb, you have a match.

Attentive readers will have noticed that the two entries from 60-evdev.rules I posted here differ. You can have multiple match formats in the same hwdb file. The hwdb doesn't care, it's just a matching system.

We keep the hwdb files matching the udev rules names for ease of maintenance so 60-evdev.rules keeps the hwdb files in 60-evdev.hwdb and so on. But this is just for us puny humans, the hwdb will parse all files it finds into one database. If you have a hwdb entry in my-local-overrides.hwdb it will be matched. The file-specific prefixes are just there to not accidentally match against an unrelated entry.

Applying hwdb updates

The hwdb is a compiled format, so the first thing to do after any changes is to run

$ systemd-hwdb update
This command compiles the files down to the binary hwdb that is actually used by udev. Without that update, none of your changes will take effect.

The second thing is: you need to trigger the udev rules for the device you want to modify. Either you do this by physically unplugging and re-plugging the device or by running

$ udevadm trigger
or, better, trigger only the device you care about to avoid accidental side-effects:
$ udevadm trigger /sys/class/input/eventXYZ
In case you also modified the udev rules you should re-load those too. So the full quartet of commands after a hwdb update is:
$ systemd-hwdb update
$ udevadm control --reload-rules
$ udevadm trigger
$ udevadm info /sys/class/input/eventXYZ
That udevadm info command lists all assigned properties, these should now include the modified entries.

Adding new entries

Now let's get down to what you actually want to do, adding a new entry to the hwdb. And this is where it also get's tricky to have a generic guide because every hwdb file has its own custom match rules.

The best approach is to open the .hwdb files and the matching .rules file and figure out what the match formats are and which one is best. For USB devices there's usually a match format that uses the vendor and product ID. For built-in devices like touchpads and keyboards there's usually a dmi-based match format (see /sys/class/dmi/id/modalias). In most cases, you can just take an existing entry and copy and modify it.

My recommendation is: add an extra property that makes it easy to verify the new entry is applied. For example do this:

# Lenovo X230 series
evdev:name:SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad:dmi:*svnLENOVO*:pn*ThinkPad*X230*
 EVDEV_ABS_01=::100
 EVDEV_ABS_36=::100
 FOO=1
Now run the update commands from above. If FOO=1 doesn't show up, then you know it's the hwdb entry that's not yet correct. If FOO=1 does show up in the udevadm info output, then you know the hwdb matches correctly and any issues will be in the next layer.

Increase the value with every change so you can tell whether the most recent change is applied. And before your submit a pull request, remove the FOO entry.

Oh, and once it applies correctly, I recommend restarting the system to make sure everything is in order on a freshly booted system.

Troubleshooting

The reason for adding hwdb entries is always because we want the system to handle a device in a custom way. But it's hard to figure out what's wrong when something doesn't work (though 90% of the time it's a typo in the hwdb match).

In almost all cases, the debugging sequence is the following:

  • does the FOO property show up?
  • did you run systemd-hwdb update?
  • did you run udevadm trigger?
  • did you restart the process that requires the new udev property?
  • is that process new enough to have support for that property?
If the answer to all these is "yes" and it still doesn't work, you may have found a bug. But 99% of the time, at least one of those is a sound "no. oops.".

Your hwdb match may run into issues with some 'special' characters. If your device has e.g. an ® in its device name (some Microsoft devices have this), a bug in systemd caused the match to fail. That bug is fixed now but until it's available in your distribution, replace with an asterisk ('*') in your match line.

Greybeards who have been around since before 2014 (systemd v219) may remember a different tool to update the hwdb: udevadm hwdb --update. This tool still exists, but it does not have the exact same behaviour as systemd-hwdb update. I won't go into details but the hwdb generated by the udevadm tool can provide unexpected matches if you have multiple matches with globs for the same device. A more generic glob can take precedence over a specific glob and so on. It's a rare and niche case and fixed since systemd v233 but the udevadm behaviour remained the same for backwards-compatibility.

Happy updating and don't forget to add Database Administrator to your CV when your PR gets merged.