On Tue, 27 Jan 2015 18:38:36 +0100 Alexander Holler <holler@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Anyway, I like(d) Linux because it didn't had a splash screen and used > to spit out all types of information on the screen where it could be > easily seen or found (in contrast other OS which try to hide all > technical details from users). Yes, I like those days too, but as you say, times are changing, and we must adapt. > > Of course, times are changing, including the amount of stuff printed on > screen. But I still find it much much easier to grep on the output of > dmesg than to search through thousands files in sysfs. Even if that can > be done with grep too (kind of). But it's much more complicated because > grep doesn't connect the file name with the content, so you need more > complicated stuff to combine both in order to search for and find > something in sysfs. Come on, it's not that more complex. If you know the name of the file, just do: find /sys -print -name <name> -exec cat {} \; And you'll get the data you want. Basically, what you are saying is "printk is more convenient for me and I do not care about the other cases that make much more sense with sysfs". The kernel does not work that way. -- Steve -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-mmc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html