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36 lines
912 B
Markdown
36 lines
912 B
Markdown
# modprobe
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If you are feeling fancy, you can also insert modules with:
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modprobe dep2
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lsmod
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# dep and dep2
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This method also deals with module dependencies, which we almost don't use to make examples simpler:
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- <https://askubuntu.com/questions/20070/whats-the-difference-between-insmod-and-modprobe>
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- <https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22891705/whats-the-difference-between-insmod-and-modprobe>
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Removal also removes required modules that have zero usage count:
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modprobe -r dep2
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lsmod
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# Nothing.
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but it can't know if you actually insmodded them separately or not:
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modprobe dep
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modprobe dep2
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modprobe -r dep2
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# Nothing.
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so it is a bit risky.
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`modprobe` searches for modules under:
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ls /lib/modules/*/extra/
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Kernel modules built from the Linux mainline tree with `CONFIG_SOME_MOD=m`, are automatically available with `modprobe`, e.g.:
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modprobe dummy-irq
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