Just in case anyone is still wondering about this question, the easiest way to get udev to look at the bus again is udevtrigger. And its fine to do it on a running machine. I'm testing udev rules and it works well for that. Saves a lot of time over rebooting. man udevtrigger is your friend. :) On Fri, 2006-06-09 at 21:11 -0400, Tony Nelson wrote: > At 4:18 PM -0400 6/9/06, Steven W. Orr wrote: > >On Friday, Jun 9th 2006 at 13:04 -0400, quoth Dan: > > > >=>Steven W. Orr wrote: > >=>> I found /sbin/udevstart but there is no udevstop. Can I kill -1 the > >running > >=>> udevd, or do I kill -9 the udevd followed by a udevstart, or do I have to > >=>> reboot? > >=>> > >=>> TIA > >=>> > >=>Not certain on this but my gut tells me it'd be bad to kill udev on a > >running > >=>system. > >=>-Dan > > > >Umm, thanks, but no. udevd is just another userspace process AFAICT. If it > >weren't running then the worst that could happen is that some dynamic > >device creation would not happen. > > > >Anyone else on how to restart? > > Run /sbin/start_udev? It seems to kill udevd before starting udevd. It's > run by /etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit, which is run by /etc/inittab for si. > ____________________________________________________________________ > TonyN.:' <mailto:tonynelson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > ' <http://www.georgeanelson.com/> > -- Kim Lux, Diesel Research Inc.