__  __    __   __  _____      _            _          _____ _          _ _ 
 |  \/  |   \ \ / / |  __ \    (_)          | |        / ____| |        | | |
 | \  / |_ __\ V /  | |__) | __ ___   ____ _| |_ ___  | (___ | |__   ___| | |
 | |\/| | '__|> <   |  ___/ '__| \ \ / / _` | __/ _ \  \___ \| '_ \ / _ \ | |
 | |  | | |_ / . \  | |   | |  | |\ V / (_| | ||  __/  ____) | | | |  __/ | |
 |_|  |_|_(_)_/ \_\ |_|   |_|  |_| \_/ \__,_|\__\___| |_____/|_| |_|\___V 2.1
 if you need WebShell for Seo everyday contact me on Telegram
 Telegram Address : @jackleet
        
        
For_More_Tools: Telegram: @jackleet | Bulk Smtp support mail sender | Business Mail Collector | Mail Bouncer All Mail | Bulk Office Mail Validator | Html Letter private



Upload:

Command:

[email protected]: ~ $
# Copyright (C) 2009 Red Hat, Inc. All rights reserved.
#
# This file is part of LVM2.

# Udev rules for device-mapper devices.
#
# These rules create a DM control node in /dev/mapper directory.
# The rules also create nodes named dm-x (x is a number) in /dev
# directory and symlinks to these nodes with names given by
# the actual DM names. Some udev environment variables are set
# for use in later rules:
#   DM_NAME - actual DM device's name
#   DM_UUID - UUID set for DM device (blank if not specified)
#   DM_UDEV_RULES_VSN - DM udev rules version
#   DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG - a flag that indicates that
#      stacked layers shouldn't attempt to probe the device, and
#      should try to import relevant properties from the udev db.
#
# These rules cover only basic device-mapper functionality in udev.
#
# Various DM subsystems may contain further subsystem-specific rules
# in 11-dm-<subsystem_name>.rules which should be installed together
# with the DM subsystem and which extend these basic rules.
# For example:
#   11-dm-lvm.rules for LVM subsystem
#   11-dm-mpath.rules for multipath subsystem (since version 0.6.0, recommended!)
#
# 11-dm<subsystem_name>.rules may use other DM related properties besides
# those listed above, like .DM_SUSPENDED. These properties are considered
# internal to device mapper, and subject to change without notice.
# Rules that are executed after 13-dm-disk.rules shouldn't use them.
#
# Even more specific rules may be required by subsystems so always
# check subsystem's upstream repository for recent set of rules.
# Also, keep in mind that recent rules may also require recent
# subsystem-specific binaries.

SUBSYSTEM!="block", GOTO="dm_end"
KERNEL!="dm-[0-9]*", GOTO="dm_end"


# Device created, major and minor number assigned - "add" event generated.
# Table loaded - no event generated.
# Device resumed (or renamed) - "change" event generated.
# Device removed - "remove" event generated.
#
# The dm-X nodes are always created, even on "add" event, we can't suppress
# that (the node is created even earlier with devtmpfs). All the symlinks
# (e.g. /dev/mapper) are created in right time after a device has its table
# loaded and is properly resumed. For this reason, direct use of dm-X nodes
# is not recommended.
ACTION=="remove", GOTO="dm_end"

# Persist device state on transition from the initrd. This means all udev device
# properties are kept in the udev database even when it is cleaned up on
# switch-root.
OPTIONS+="db_persist"

# Decode udev control flags and set environment variables appropriately.
# These flags are encoded in DM_COOKIE variable that was introduced in
# kernel version 2.6.31. Therefore, we can use this feature with
# kernels >= 2.6.31 only. Cookie is not decoded for remove event.
ENV{DM_COOKIE}!="?*", GOTO="dm_no_cookie"
IMPORT{program}="/usr/sbin/dmsetup udevflags $env{DM_COOKIE}"

# Store the original flag from the cookie as DM_COOKIE_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG
# in the udev db. DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG will be or'd with other
# conditions for use by upper, non-dm layers.
ENV{DM_COOKIE_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG}="$env{DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG}"
LABEL="dm_no_cookie"

# There is no cookie set nor any flags encoded in events not originating
# in libdevmapper so we need to detect this and try to behave correctly.
# For such spurious events, regenerate all flags from current udev database content
# (this information would normally be inaccessible for spurious ADD and CHANGE events).
ENV{DM_UDEV_PRIMARY_SOURCE_FLAG}=="1", ENV{DM_ACTIVATION}="1", GOTO="dm_flags_done"
IMPORT{db}="DM_UDEV_DISABLE_DM_RULES_FLAG"
IMPORT{db}="DM_UDEV_DISABLE_SUBSYSTEM_RULES_FLAG"
IMPORT{db}="DM_UDEV_DISABLE_DISK_RULES_FLAG"
IMPORT{db}="DM_COOKIE_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG"
IMPORT{db}="DM_UDEV_LOW_PRIORITY_FLAG"
IMPORT{db}="DM_UDEV_DISABLE_LIBRARY_FALLBACK_FLAG"
IMPORT{db}="DM_UDEV_PRIMARY_SOURCE_FLAG"
IMPORT{db}="DM_UDEV_FLAG7"
IMPORT{db}="DM_UDEV_RULES_VSN"
ENV{DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG}="$env{DM_COOKIE_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG}"
LABEL="dm_flags_done"

# If DISK_RO is set, it's an uevent that changes the ro attribute of the device.
# The event should be ignored as far as dm is concerned.
ENV{DISK_RO}=="0|1", GOTO="dm_disable"

# Normally, we operate on "change" events. But when coldplugging, there's an
# "add" event present. We have to recognize this and do our actions in this
# particular situation, too. Also, we don't want the nodes to be created
# prematurely on "add" events while not coldplugging. We check
# DM_UDEV_PRIMARY_SOURCE_FLAG to see if the device was activated correctly
# before and if not, we ignore the "add" event totally. This way we can support
# udev triggers generating "add" events (e.g. "udevadm trigger --action=add" or
# "echo add > /sys/block/<dm_device>/uevent"). The trigger with "add" event is
# also used at boot to reevaluate udev rules for all existing devices activated
# before (e.g. in initrd). If udev is used in initrd, we require the udev init
# script to not remove the existing udev database so we can reuse the information
# stored at the time of device activation in the initrd.
ACTION!="add", GOTO="dm_no_coldplug"
ENV{DM_UDEV_RULES_VSN}!="1", ENV{DM_UDEV_PRIMARY_SOURCE_FLAG}!="1", GOTO="dm_disable"
ENV{DM_ACTIVATION}="1"
LABEL="dm_no_coldplug"

# Putting it together, following table is used to recognize genuine and spurious events.
# N.B. Spurious events are generated based on use of the WATCH udev
# rule or by triggering an event manually by "udevadm trigger" call
# or by "echo <event_name> > /sys/block/dm-X/uevent".
#
#        EVENT              DM_UDEV_PRIMARY_SOURCE_FLAG   DM_ACTIVATION
# ======================================================================
# add event (genuine)                  0                        0
# change event (genuine)               1                        1
# add event (spurious)
#   |_ dev still not active            0                        0
#   \_ dev already active              1                        1
# change event (spurious)
#   |_ dev still not active            0                        0
#   \_ dev already active              1                        0

# "dm" sysfs subdirectory is available in newer versions of DM
# only (kernels >= 2.6.29). We have to check for its existence
# and use dmsetup tool instead to get the DM name, uuid and 
# suspended state if the "dm" subdirectory is not present.
# The "suspended" item was added even later (kernels >= 2.6.31),
# so we also have to call dmsetup if the kernel version used
# is in between these releases.
TEST=="dm", ENV{DM_NAME}="$attr{dm/name}", ENV{DM_UUID}="$attr{dm/uuid}", ENV{.DM_SUSPENDED}="$attr{dm/suspended}"
TEST!="dm", IMPORT{program}="/usr/sbin/dmsetup info -j %M -m %m -c --nameprefixes --noheadings --rows -o name,uuid,suspended"

ENV{.DM_SUSPENDED}=="?*", GOTO="dm_suspended_set"
TEST=="dm", IMPORT{program}="/usr/sbin/dmsetup info -j %M -m %m -c --nameprefixes --noheadings --rows -o suspended"
# dmsetup tool provides suspended state information in textual
# form with values "Suspended"/"Active". We translate it to
# 0/1 respectively to be consistent with sysfs values.
ENV{DM_SUSPENDED}=="Active", ENV{.DM_SUSPENDED}="0"
ENV{DM_SUSPENDED}=="Suspended", ENV{.DM_SUSPENDED}="1"
ENV{DM_SUSPENDED}=""
LABEL="dm_suspended_set"

# This variable provides a reliable way to check that device-mapper
# rules were installed. It means that all needed variables are set
# by these rules directly so there's no need to acquire them again
# later. Other rules can alternate the functionality based on this
# fact (e.g. fallback to rules that behave correctly even without
# these rules installed). It also provides versioning for any
# possible future changes.
# VSN 1 - original rules
# VSN 2 - add support for synthesized events
# VSN 3 - use DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG as the only "API"
#         to be consumed by non-dm rules.
ENV{DM_UDEV_RULES_VSN}="3"

ENV{DM_UDEV_DISABLE_DM_RULES_FLAG}!="1", ENV{DM_NAME}=="?*", SYMLINK+="mapper/$env{DM_NAME}"

# Avoid processing and scanning a DM device in the other (foreign)
# rules if it is in suspended state. However, we still keep 'disk'
# and 'DM subsystem' related rules enabled in this case.
ENV{.DM_SUSPENDED}=="1", ENV{DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG}="1"

GOTO="dm_end"

LABEL="dm_disable"
ENV{DM_UDEV_DISABLE_SUBSYSTEM_RULES_FLAG}="1"
ENV{DM_UDEV_DISABLE_DISK_RULES_FLAG}="1"
ENV{DM_UDEV_DISABLE_OTHER_RULES_FLAG}="1"
OPTIONS:="nowatch"

LABEL="dm_end"

Filemanager

Name Type Size Permission Actions
39-usbmuxd.rules File 991 B 0644
40-usb-media-players.rules File 998 B 0644
40-usb_modeswitch.rules File 41.86 KB 0644
40-vm-hotadd.rules File 655 B 0644
50-apport.rules File 165 B 0644
50-firmware.rules File 210 B 0644
50-kdump-tools.rules File 404 B 0644
50-udev-default.rules File 5.09 KB 0644
55-dm.rules File 8.32 KB 0644
56-hpmud.rules File 921 B 0644
60-autosuspend.rules File 704 B 0644
60-block.rules File 721 B 0644
60-cdrom_id.rules File 1.05 KB 0644
60-dmi-id.rules File 637 B 0644
60-drm.rules File 834 B 0644
60-evdev.rules File 1.07 KB 0644
60-fido-id.rules File 491 B 0644
60-infiniband.rules File 379 B 0644
60-input-id.rules File 282 B 0644
60-inputattach.rules File 329 B 0644
60-libgphoto2-6t64.rules File 7.41 KB 0644
60-libsane1.rules File 3.61 KB 0644
60-pcmcia.rules File 912 B 0644
60-persistent-alsa.rules File 727 B 0644
60-persistent-input.rules File 3.19 KB 0644
60-persistent-storage-dm.rules File 2.2 KB 0644
60-persistent-storage-mtd.rules File 411 B 0644
60-persistent-storage-tape.rules File 2.54 KB 0644
60-persistent-storage.rules File 10.22 KB 0644
60-persistent-v4l.rules File 1.06 KB 0644
60-sensor.rules File 1.58 KB 0644
60-serial.rules File 1.39 KB 0644
60-tpm-udev.rules File 243 B 0644
60-upower-battery.rules File 237 B 0644
61-gdm.rules File 3.49 KB 0644
61-gnome-settings-daemon-rfkill.rules File 292 B 0644
61-mutter.rules File 14.43 KB 0644
61-persistent-storage-android.rules File 455 B 0644
64-btrfs-dm.rules File 387 B 0644
64-btrfs-zoned.rules File 346 B 0644
64-btrfs.rules File 616 B 0644
64-ext4.rules File 654 B 0644
64-xorg-xkb.rules File 257 B 0644
65-libwacom.rules File 1.19 KB 0644
66-azure-ephemeral.rules File 1.91 KB 0644
66-snapd-autoimport.rules File 190 B 0644
69-cd-sensors.rules File 4.96 KB 0644
69-libmtp.rules File 1.74 KB 0644
69-wacom.rules File 1.11 KB 0644
70-camera.rules File 280 B 0644
70-insecure-fs.rules File 759 B 0644
70-joystick.rules File 432 B 0644
70-libfprint-2.rules File 633 B 0644
70-memory.rules File 184 B 0644
70-mouse.rules File 734 B 0644
70-power-switch.rules File 576 B 0644
70-printers.rules File 845 B 0644
70-spice-vdagentd.rules File 140 B 0644
70-touchpad.rules File 473 B 0644
70-uaccess.rules File 3.89 KB 0644
71-ipp-usb.rules File 629 B 0644
71-power-switch-proliant.rules File 461 B 0644
71-seat.rules File 3.78 KB 0644
71-u-d-c-gpu-detection.rules File 1.38 KB 0644
73-seat-late.rules File 643 B 0644
73-special-net-names.rules File 969 B 0644
75-net-description.rules File 512 B 0644
75-probe_mtd.rules File 174 B 0644
77-mm-broadmobi-port-types.rules File 936 B 0644
77-mm-cinterion-port-types.rules File 4.29 KB 0644
77-mm-dell-port-types.rules File 1.73 KB 0644
77-mm-dlink-port-types.rules File 866 B 0644
77-mm-ericsson-mbm.rules File 7.89 KB 0644
77-mm-fibocom-port-types.rules File 6.53 KB 0644
77-mm-foxconn-port-types.rules File 1.57 KB 0644
77-mm-gosuncn-port-types.rules File 907 B 0644
77-mm-haier-port-types.rules File 525 B 0644
77-mm-huawei-net-port-types.rules File 2.54 KB 0644
77-mm-linktop-port-types.rules File 697 B 0644
77-mm-longcheer-port-types.rules File 14.1 KB 0644
77-mm-mtk-legacy-port-types.rules File 3.54 KB 0644
77-mm-mtk-port-types.rules File 584 B 0644
77-mm-nokia-port-types.rules File 2.13 KB 0644
77-mm-qcom-soc.rules File 1.58 KB 0644
77-mm-qdl-device-blacklist.rules File 3.08 KB 0644
77-mm-quectel-port-types.rules File 9.51 KB 0644
77-mm-sierra.rules File 3.18 KB 0644
77-mm-simtech-port-types.rules File 4.13 KB 0644
77-mm-telit-port-types.rules File 11.97 KB 0644
77-mm-tplink-port-types.rules File 739 B 0644
77-mm-ublox-port-types.rules File 4.94 KB 0644
77-mm-x22x-port-types.rules File 4.49 KB 0644
77-mm-zte-port-types.rules File 16.78 KB 0644
78-graphics-card.rules File 965 B 0644
78-sound-card.rules File 4.7 KB 0644
80-debian-compat.rules File 594 B 0644
80-drivers.rules File 600 B 0644
80-iio-sensor-proxy.rules File 1.71 KB 0644
80-libinput-device-groups.rules File 207 B 0644
80-mm-candidate.rules File 1.58 KB 0644
80-net-setup-link.rules File 295 B 0644
80-udisks2.rules File 10.32 KB 0644
81-net-dhcp.rules File 528 B 0644
84-nm-drivers.rules File 533 B 0644
85-brltty.rules File 21.79 KB 0644
85-hdparm.rules File 86 B 0644
85-hplj10xx.rules File 1.83 KB 0644
85-nm-unmanaged.rules File 1.97 KB 0644
90-alsa-restore.rules File 1.49 KB 0644
90-bolt.rules File 359 B 0644
90-console-setup.rules File 265 B 0644
90-iocost.rules File 769 B 0644
90-libgpod.rules File 1.82 KB 0644
90-libinput-fuzz-override.rules File 1.07 KB 0644
90-nm-thunderbolt.rules File 588 B 0644
90-pipewire-alsa.rules File 13.06 KB 0644
95-cd-devices.rules File 847 B 0644
95-dm-notify.rules File 483 B 0644
95-upower-hid.rules File 207 B 0644
95-upower-wup.rules File 354 B 0644
96-e2scrub.rules File 171 B 0644
97-hid2hci.rules File 1.49 KB 0644
99-libsane1.rules File 98 B 0644
99-systemd.rules File 5.32 KB 0644
Filemanager