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DEPMOD.D(5) depmod.d DEPMOD.D(5)
depmod.d - Configuration directory for depmod
/lib/depmod.d/*.conf /usr/lib/depmod.d/*.conf /usr/local/lib/depmod.d/*.conf /run/depmod.d/*.conf /etc/depmod.d/*.conf
The order in which modules are processed by the depmod command can be altered on a global or per-module basis. This is typically useful in cases where built-in kernel modules are complemented by custom built versions of the same and the user wishes to affect the priority of processing in order to override the module version supplied by the kernel. The format of files under depmod.d is simple: one command per line, with blank lines and lines starting with '#' ignored (useful for adding comments). A '\' at the end of a line causes it to continue on the next line, which makes the files a bit neater.
search subdirectory... This allows you to specify the order in which /lib/modules (or other configured module location) subdirectories will be processed by depmod. Directories are listed in order, with the highest priority given to the first listed directory and the lowest priority given to the last directory listed. The special keyword built-in refers to the standard module directories installed by the kernel. Another special keyword external refers to the list of external directories, defined by the external command. By default, depmod will give a higher priority to a directory with the name updates using this built-in search string: "updates built-in" but more complex arrangements are possible and are used in several popular distributions. override modulename kernelversion modulesubdirectory This command allows you to override which version of a specific module will be used when more than one module sharing the same name is processed by the depmod command. It is possible to specify one kernel or all kernels using the * wildcard. modulesubdirectory is the name of the subdirectory under /lib/modules (or other module location) where the target module is installed. For example, it is possible to override the priority of an updated test module called kmod by specifying the following command: "override kmod * extra". This will ensure that any matching module name installed under the extra subdirectory within /lib/modules (or other module location) will take priority over any likenamed module already provided by the kernel. external kernelversion absolutemodulesdirectory... This specifies a list of directories, which will be checked according to the priorities in the search command. The order matters also, the first directory has the higher priority. The kernelversion is a POSIX regular expression or * wildcard, like in the override. exclude excludedir This specifies the trailing directories that will be excluded during the search for kernel modules. The excludedir is the trailing directory to exclude
This manual page Copyright 2006-2010, Jon Masters, Red Hat, Inc.
depmod(8)
Jon Masters <[email protected]> Developer Robby Workman <[email protected]> Developer Lucas De Marchi <[email protected]> Developer
This page is part of the kmod (userspace tools for managing
kernel modules) project. Information about the project can be
found at [unknown -- if you know, please contact man-
[email protected]] If you have a bug report for this manual page,
send it to [email protected]. This page was obtained
from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/utils/kernel/kmod/kmod.git⟩ on
2024-06-14. (At that time, the date of the most recent commit
that was found in the repository was 2024-06-11.) If you
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kmod 06/14/2024 DEPMOD.D(5)
Pages that refer to this page: depmod(8)