In Linux you have various special files in
/dev. These files are called device files. In
the Unix world accessing hardware is different.  There you have a
special file which actually runs a driver which in turn accesses the
hardware. The device file is an interface to the actual system
component. Files under /dev also behave
differently than ordinary files. Below are the most important device
files listed.
| fd0 | First Floppy Drive | 
| fd1 | Second Floppy Drive | 
| hda | IDE Hard disk / CD-ROM on the first IDE port (Master) | 
| hdb | IDE Hard disk / CD-ROM on the first IDE port (Slave) | 
| hdc | IDE Hard disk / CD-ROM on the second IDE port (Master) | 
| hdd | IDE Hard disk / CD-ROM on the second IDE port (Slave) | 
| hda1 | First partition of the first IDE hard disk | 
| hdd15 | Fifteenth partition of the fourth IDE hard disk | 
| sda | SCSI Hard disk with lowest SCSI ID (e.g. 0) | 
| sdb | SCSI Hard disk with next higher SCSI ID (e.g. 1) | 
| sdc | SCSI Hard disk with next higher SCSI ID (e.g. 2) | 
| sda1 | First partition of the first SCSI hard disk | 
| sdd10 | Tenth partition of the fourth SCSI hard disk | 
| sr0 | SCSI CD-ROM with the lowest SCSI ID | 
| sr1 | SCSI CD-ROM with the next higher SCSI ID | 
| ttyS0 | Serial port 0, COM1 under MS-DOS | 
| ttyS1 | Serial port 1, COM2 under MS-DOS | 
| psaux | PS/2 mouse device | 
| gpmdata | Pseudo device, repeater data from GPM (mouse) daemon | 
| cdrom | Symbolic link to the CD-ROM drive | 
| mouse | Symbolic link to the mouse device file | 
| null | Everything pointed to this device will disappear | 
| zero | One can endlessly read zeros out of this device | 
The mouse can be used in both the Linux console (with gpm) and the X window environment. The two uses can be made compatible if the gpm repeater is used to allow the signal to flow to the X server as shown:
mouse => /dev/psaux  => gpm => /dev/gpmdata -> /dev/mouse => X
         /dev/ttyS0             (repeater)        (symlink)
         /dev/ttyS1
Set the repeater protocol to be raw (in /etc/gpm.conf) while
setting X to the original mouse protocol in /etc/X11/XF86Config
or /etc/X11/XF86Config-4.
This approach to use gpm even in X has advantages when the mouse is unplugged inadvertently. Simply restarting gpm with
# /etc/init.d/gpm restart
will re-connect the mouse in software without restarting X.
If gpm is disabled or not installed with some reason, make sure to set X to
read directly from the mouse device such as /dev/psaux. For details, refer
to the 3-Button Mouse mini-Howto at
/usr/share/doc/HOWTO/en-txt/mini/3-Button-Mouse.gz,
man gpm,
/usr/share/doc/gpm/FAQ.gz, and
README.mouse.