Hi
To my understanding, EXPORT_SYMBOL() is used to export a symbol in
kernel/modules. The the address of the all sysbols is in /proc/kallsyms.
Only symbols exported by EXPORT_SYMBOL() is listed its CRC information
in Module.symvers. So I think the CRC is the key to export a symbol.
I do an
On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 11:19 AM, Navy nav...@126.com wrote:
Hi
To my understanding, EXPORT_SYMBOL() is used to export a symbol in
kernel/modules. The the address of the all sysbols is in /proc/kallsyms.
Only symbols exported by EXPORT_SYMBOL() is listed its CRC information
in Module.symvers.
On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 01:48:57PM +0530, Pranay Srivastava wrote:
On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 11:19 AM, Navy nav...@126.com wrote:
Hi
To my understanding, EXPORT_SYMBOL() is used to export a symbol in
Why this bug is not be fixed?
It's a long way from 2.6 now. can you send something about
On Fri, Jul 24, 2015 at 01:49:42PM +0800, Navy wrote:
Hi
To my understanding, EXPORT_SYMBOL() is used to export a symbol in
kernel/modules. The the address of the all sysbols is in /proc/kallsyms.
Only symbols exported by EXPORT_SYMBOL() is listed its CRC information
in Module.symvers. So
Hi,
This is the place where modprobe comes into play .If you have dependent
module the on your module then it is recommended to use modprobe .
After compiling your module run :
1. depmod -a
2. modprobe mod1
3. modprobe mod2
And as far as i know CONFIG_MODVERSION is basically for the module
With in-tree modules, the compilation process can determine
dependencies and that's why modprobe works with them (insmod doesn't).
How do you want the kernel to know where the symbol comes from? Why
load your mod1 and not my mod3 that also defines myfunc()? Who's going
to call init_module on your