150 Part II . Running the (Web hosting domain names) Show #
150 Part II . Running the Show # lsmod Module Size Used by snd_seq_oss 38912 0 snd_seq_midi_event 9344 1 snd_seq_oss snd_seq 67728 4 snd_seq_oss,snd_seq_midi_event snd_seq_device 8328 2 snd_seq_oss,snd_seq … autofs 16512 0 ne2k_pci 9056 0 8390 13568 1 ne2k_pci ohci1394 41860 0 ieee1394 284464 1 ohci1394 floppy 65712 0 sg 36120 0 scsi_mod 124600 1 sg parport_pc 39724 0 parport 47336 1 parport_pc ext3 128424 2 jbd 86040 1 ext3 This output shows a variety of modules that have been loaded on a Linux system, including several to support the ALSA sound system, some of which provide OSS compatibility (snd_seq_oss). To find information about any of the loaded modules, use the modinfo command. For example, you could type the following: # modinfo -d snd-seq-oss OSS-compatible sequencer module Not all modules have descriptions available. In this case, however, the snd-seq-oss module is described as an OSS-compatible sequencer module. You can also use the -a option to see the author of the module, or -n to see the object file representing the module. The author information often has the e-mail address of the driver s creator, so you can contact the author if you have problems or questions about it. Loading Modules You can load any module that has been compiled and installed (to the /lib/modules directory) into your running kernel using the modprobe command. A common reason for loading a module is to use a feature temporarily (such as loading a module to support a special file system on a floppy you want to access). Another reason is to identify a module that will be used by a particular piece of hardware that could not be autodetected.
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