modprobe


MODPROBE(8)                                                        MODPROBE(8)




NAME

       modprobe - program to add and remove modules from the Linux Kernel


SYNOPSIS

       modprobe  [  -v  ]  [ -V ] [ -C config-file ] [ -n ] [ -i ] [ -q ] [ -o
       modulename ] [ modulename ] [ module parameters ... ]


       modprobe [ -r ] [ -v ] [ -n ] [ -i ] [ modulename ... ]


       modprobe [ -l ] [ -t dirname ] [ wildcard ]


       modprobe [ -c ]



DESCRIPTION

       modprobe intelligently adds or removes a module from the Linux  kernel:
       note  that  for  convenience, there is no difference between _ and - in
       module  names.   modprobe  looks  in  the  module  directory  /lib/mod-
       ules/���uname  -r���  for  all  the modules and other files, except for the
       optional  /etc/modprobe.conf  configuration  file  and  /etc/modprobe.d
       directory (see modprobe.conf(5)).

       Note  that  this version of modprobe does not do anything to the module
       itself: the work of resolving symbols and understanding  parameters  is
       done  inside the kernel.  So module failure is sometimes accompanied by
       a kernel message: see dmesg(8).

       modprobe expects an up-to-date modules.dep file, as generated by depmod
       (see  depmod(8)).  This file lists what other modules each module needs
       (if any), and modprobe uses this to add or  remove  these  dependencies
       automatically.  See modules.dep(5)).

       If any arguments are given after the modulename, they are passed to the
       kernel (in addition to any options listed in the configuration file).


OPTIONS

       -v --verbose
              Print messages about what the program is  doing.   Usually  mod-
              probe only prints messages if something goes wrong.

              This  option  is  passed  through  install or remove commands to
              other modprobe  commands  in  the  MODPROBE_OPTIONS  environment
              variable.

       -C --config
              This  option overrides the default configuration file (/etc/mod-
              probe.conf or /etc/modprobe.d/ if that isn't found).

              This option is passed through  install  or  remove  commands  to
              other  modprobe  commands  in  the  MODPROBE_OPTIONS environment
              variable.

       -c --showconfig
              Dump out the configuration file and exit.

       -n --dry-run
              This option does everything but actually insert  or  delete  the
              modules  (or run the install or remove commands).  Combined with
              -v, it is useful for debugging problems.

       -i --ignore-install --ignore-remove
              This option causes modprobe to ignore install  and  remove  com-
              mands  in the configuration file (if any), for the module on the
              command line (any dependent modules are still  subject  to  com-
              mands  set  for  them  in  the  configuration  file).   See mod-
              probe.conf(5).

       -q --quiet
              Normally modprobe will report an error if you try to  remove  or
              insert   a   module  it  can't  find  (and  isn't  an  alias  or
              install/remove command).  With this flag, modprobe  will  simply
              ignore  any  bogus  names (the kernel uses this to opportunisti-
              cally probe for modules which might exist).

       -r --remove
              This option causes modprobe to remove, rather than insert a mod-
              ule.   If  the  modules  it depends on are also unused, modprobe
              will try to remove them, too.  Unlike insertion, more  than  one
              module  can  be  specified on the command line (it does not make
              sense to specify module parameters when removing modules).

              There is usually no reason to remove  modules,  but  some  buggy
              modules require it.  Your kernel may not support removal of mod-
              ules.

       -V --version
              Show version of program, and exit.  See below for  caveats  when
              run on older kernels.

       -f --force
              Try  to  strip any versioning information from the module, which
              might otherwise stop it from loading: this is the same as  using
              both  --force-vermagic and --force-modversion.  Naturally, these
              checks are there for your protection, so using  this  option  is
              dangerous.

              This applies any modules inserted: both the module (or alias) on
              the command line, and any modules it depends on.

       --force-vermagic
              Every module contains a small string containing important infor-
              mation,  such  as the kernel and compiler versions.  If a module
              fails to load and the kernel complains that the "version  magic"
              doesn't match, you can use this option to remove it.  Naturally,
              this check is there for your protection, so this using option is
              dangerous.

              This applies any modules inserted: both the module (or alias) on
              the command line, and any modules it depends on.

       --force-modversion
              When modules are compiled with CONFIG_MODVERSIONS set, a section
              is created detailing the versions of every interface used by (or
              supplied by) the module.  If a module fails to load and the ker-
              nel  complains that the module disagrees about a version of some
              interface, you can use "--force-modversion" to remove  the  ver-
              sion information altogether.  Naturally, this check is there for
              your protection, so using this option is dangerous.

              This applies any modules inserted: both the module (or alias) on
              the command line, and any modules it depends on.

       -l --list
              List all modules matching the given wildcard (or "*" if no wild-
              card  is  given).   This  option  is  provided   for   backwards
              compatibility:  see  find(1) and basename(1) for a more flexible
              alternative.

       -a --all
              Insert all modules matching the given wildcard.  This option  is
              provided  for  backwards  compatibility:  see  find(1) and base-
              name(1) for a more flexible alternative.

       -t --type
              Restrict -l to  modules  in  directories  matching  the  dirname
              given.  This option is provided for backwards compatibility: see
              find(1) and basename(1) or a more flexible alternative.

       -s --syslog
              This option causes any error messages to go through  the  syslog
              mechanism  (as  LOG_DAEMON with level LOG_NOTICE) rather than to
              standard error.  This is also automatically enabled when  stderr
              is unavailable.

              This  option  is  passed  through  install or remove commands to
              other modprobe  commands  in  the  MODPROBE_OPTIONS  environment
              variable.

       --set-version
              Set  the kernel version, rather than using uname(2) to decide on
              the kernel version (which dictates where to find  the  modules).
              This  also  disables  backwards  compatibility  checks  (so mod-
              probe.old(8) will never be run).

       --show-depends
              List the dependencies of a module (or alias), including the mod-
              ule  itself.   This  produces  a  (possibly empty) set of module
              filenames, one per line, each starting with  "insmod".   Install
              commands  which  apply are shown prefixed by "install".  It does
              not run any of the install commands.  Note that  modinfo(8)  can
              be  used  to  extract  dependencies  of a module from the module
              itself, but knows nothing of aliases or install commands.

       -o --name
              This option tries to rename the module which is  being  inserted
              into  the kernel.  Some testing modules can usefully be inserted
              multiple times, but the kernel refuses to have  two  modules  of
              the  same  name.   Normally, modules should not require multiple
              insertions, as that would make them useless  if  there  were  no
              module support.

       --first-time
              Normally,  modprobe  will  succeed  (and  do nothing) if told to
              insert a module which is already present,  or  remove  a  module
              which  isn't  present.   This  is  backwards compatible with the
              modutils, and ideal for simple scripts.  However,  more  compli-
              cated  scripts  often  want  to know whether modprobe really did
              something: this option makes modprobe fail for that case.


BACKWARDS COMPATIBILITY

       This version of modprobe is  for  kernels  2.5.48  and  above.   If  it
       detects  a kernel with support for old-style modules (for which much of
       the work was done in userspace), it will attempt to run modprobe.old in
       its place, so it is completely transparent to the user.


ENVIRONMENT

       The  MODPROBE_OPTIONS  environment  variable  can  also be used to pass
       arguments to modprobe.


COPYRIGHT

       This manual page Copyright 2002, Rusty Russell, IBM Corporation.


SEE ALSO

       modprobe.conf(5), lsmod(8), modprobe.old(8)



                               12 November 2004                    MODPROBE(8)