Revision 066069e14f6b4651293ae0865c121bcb2b360666 authored by Paul Mundt on 13 April 2009, 21:32:08 UTC, committed by Paul Mundt on 13 April 2009, 21:32:08 UTC
Fill in missing entries for drivers/sh/ and Documentation/sh/. Signed-off-by: Paul Mundt <lethal@linux-sh.org>
1 parent f499cae
debugging-modules.txt
Debugging Modules after 2.6.3
-----------------------------
In almost all distributions, the kernel asks for modules which don't
exist, such as "net-pf-10" or whatever. Changing "modprobe -q" to
"succeed" in this case is hacky and breaks some setups, and also we
want to know if it failed for the fallback code for old aliases in
fs/char_dev.c, for example.
In the past a debugging message which would fill people's logs was
emitted. This debugging message has been removed. The correct way
of debugging module problems is something like this:
echo '#! /bin/sh' > /tmp/modprobe
echo 'echo "$@" >> /tmp/modprobe.log' >> /tmp/modprobe
echo 'exec /sbin/modprobe "$@"' >> /tmp/modprobe
chmod a+x /tmp/modprobe
echo /tmp/modprobe > /proc/sys/kernel/modprobe
Note that the above applies only when the *kernel* is requesting
that the module be loaded -- it won't have any effect if that module
is being loaded explicitly using "modprobe" from userspace.
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