drivers/char/xillybus/xillybus_pcie.c
Source file repositories/reference/linux-study-clean/drivers/char/xillybus/xillybus_pcie.c
File Facts
- System
- Linux kernel
- Corpus path
drivers/char/xillybus/xillybus_pcie.c- Extension
.c- Size
- 3200 bytes
- Lines
- 128
- Domain
- Driver Families
- Bucket
- drivers/char
- Inferred role
- Driver Families: operation-table or driver-model contract
- Status
- pattern implementation candidate
Why This File Exists
Repeatable hardware-adapter layer. Deep compatibility for every driver is out of scope; this atlas records patterns, probe lifecycles, bus glue, IRQ/DMA usage, and links back to core abstractions.
- Repeatable hardware-adapter layer. Deep compatibility for every driver is out of scope; this atlas records patterns, probe lifecycles, bus glue, IRQ/DMA usage, and links back to core abstractions.
- Defines an operation table; this is where Linux turns generic core objects into subsystem-specific behavior.
- Touches IRQ or DMA behavior; this matters for the representative real-device path.
- Defines or uses C structs; map object ownership, embedded links, reference counts, and lock ownership.
Dependency Surface
linux/module.hlinux/pci.hlinux/slab.hxillybus.h
Detected Declarations
function xilly_probefunction Somefunction xilly_remove
Annotated Snippet
static struct pci_driver xillybus_driver = {
.name = xillyname,
.id_table = xillyids,
.probe = xilly_probe,
.remove = xilly_remove,
};
module_pci_driver(xillybus_driver);
Annotation
- Immediate include surface: `linux/module.h`, `linux/pci.h`, `linux/slab.h`, `xillybus.h`.
- Detected declarations: `function xilly_probe`, `function Some`, `function xilly_remove`.
- Atlas domain: Driver Families / drivers/char.
- Implementation status: pattern implementation candidate.
- IRQ or DMA behavior appears here, which is relevant to the selected PCIe/NVMe device path.
Implementation Notes
- This generated page is the file-by-file coverage layer; curated subsystem chapters should link here when they synthesize a multi-file control flow.
- Core OS pages should be promoted from atlas-only to deep-reviewed when they explain data structures, invariants, locking, lifecycle, and C implementation snippets.
- Driver-family pages are intentionally pattern-oriented unless they are part of the selected PCIe/NVMe representative device path.