The Linux kernel has a modular design. At boot time, only a minimal resident kernel is loaded into memory. Thereafter, whenever a user requests a feature that is not present in the resident kernel, a kernel module is dynamically loaded into memory. After a specified period of inactivity, the module may be removed from memory.
When you install Red Hat Linux, the hardware on your system is probed and you provide information about how the system will be typically used and which programs should be loaded. Based on this probing and the information you provide, the installation program decides which modules need to be loaded at boot time. The installation program sets up the dynamic loading mechanism to work transparently. If you build your own custom kernel, you can make all of these decisions for yourself.
If you add new hardware after installation and the hardware requires a kernel module, you need to set up the dynamic loading mechanism. Kudzu runs when the system boots and usually detects new hardware. You can also add the new driver by editing the module configuration file, /etc/modules.conf.
For example, if your system included a model SMC EtherPower 10 PCI network adapter at the time of installation, the module configuration file will contain the following line:
alias eth0 tulip |
After installation, if you install a second identical network adapter to your system, add the following line to /etc/modules.conf:
alias eth1 tulip |
See the Official Red Hat Linux Reference Guide for an alphabetical list of kernel modules and the hardware supported by the modules.
You can also use a group of commands to list, load, or unload kernel modules. These commands are useful if you want to try different modules or see if a module has been loaded successfully.
The command /sbin/lsmod displays a list of currently loaded modules.
Example 30-1. Example lsmod output
Module Size Used by sr_mod 15264 0 (autoclean) mga 95984 1 agpgart 23392 3 nfs 79008 1 (autoclean) lockd 52464 1 (autoclean) [nfs] sunrpc 61328 1 (autoclean) [nfs lockd] autofs 11264 4 (autoclean) 3c59x 25344 1 (autoclean) ipchains 38976 0 (unused) ide-scsi 8352 0 scsi_mod 95104 2 [sr_mod ide-scsi] ide-cd 26848 0 cdrom 27232 0 [sr_mod ide-cd] usb-uhci 20720 0 (unused) usbcore 49664 1 [usb-uhci] |
As you can see in Example 30-1, lsmod displays the size, use count, and referring modules for each module currently loaded.
To load a kernel module, you can use the command /sbin/insmod followed by the kernel module name. By default, insmod tries to load the module from the /lib/modules/<kernel-version>/kernel/drivers subdirectories. There is a subdirectory for each type of module, such as the net subdirectory for network interface drivers. Some kernel modules have module dependencies — other modules must be loaded first for it to load. To resolve these dependencies, you can either load the module dependencies and then load the module you want, or you can use the command /sbin/modprobe followed by the module name to load the module along with its dependencies.
For example, the command
/sbin/modprobe tulip |
loads the tulip network interface module.
To unload kernel modules, use the command /sbin/rmmod followed by the module name. The rmmod utility will only unload modules that are not in use and that are not a dependency of other modules in use.
For example, the command
/sbin/rmmod tulip |
unloads the tulip network interface module.
Another useful kernel module utility is modinfo. You can use the command /sbin/modinfo to display information about a kernel module. The general syntax is:
/sbin/modinfo [options] <module> |
Options include -d that displays a brief description of the module and -p that lists the parameters the module supports. For a complete list of options, refer to the modinfo man page (man modinfo).