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I've done system update and run lsmod to look what modules are loaded. I wondering why so many modules loaded - 60?
[root@arch archer]# lsmod
Module Size Used by
des_generic 16203 0
ecb 2105 0
md4 3529 0
sha256_generic 10197 1
md5 2345 2
hmac 2953 2
nls_utf8 1352 2
cifs 340876 3
fscache 44984 1 cifs
snd_hda_codec_hdmi 27848 4
snd_hda_codec_realtek 62745 1
snd_hda_intel 34194 4
snd_hda_codec 102453 3 snd_hda_codec_realtek,snd_hda_codec_hdmi,snd_hda_intel
nvidia 9122517 38
snd_hwdep 6428 1 snd_hda_codec
i2c_i801 11077 0
snd_pcm 78146 3 snd_hda_codec_hdmi,snd_hda_codec,snd_hda_intel
acpi_cpufreq 10630 1
mperf 1267 1 acpi_cpufreq
coretemp 6198 0
kvm 392222 0
crc32c_intel 14313 0
ghash_clmulni_intel 4597 0
r8169 57619 0
iTCO_wdt 5447 0
pcspkr 1995 0
iTCO_vendor_support 1929 1 iTCO_wdt
processor 27431 1 acpi_cpufreq
shpchp 25905 0
snd_page_alloc 7426 2 snd_pcm,snd_hda_intel
cryptd 8741 1 ghash_clmulni_intel
gpio_ich 4608 0
pci_hotplug 23116 1 shpchp
evdev 10136 6
mei 59991 0
i2c_core 23171 2 i2c_i801,nvidia
lpc_ich 11601 0
mii 4091 1 r8169
snd_timer 18934 1 snd_pcm
snd 60156 15 snd_hda_codec_realtek,snd_hwdep,snd_timer,snd_hda_codec_hdmi,snd_pcm,snd_hda_codec,snd_hda_intel
button 4701 0
soundcore 5442 1 snd
microcode 14465 0
ext4 478338 1
crc16 1359 1 ext4
jbd2 78013 1 ext4
mbcache 6026 1 ext4
hid_a4tech 2212 0
usbhid 41357 0
hid 87118 2 hid_a4tech,usbhid
sd_mod 31258 2
ahci 22160 1
libahci 20906 1 ahci
libata 168683 2 ahci,libahci
ehci_pci 4120 0
xhci_hcd 89405 0
scsi_mod 130797 2 libata,sd_mod
ehci_hcd 47467 1 ehci_pci
usbcore 175029 4 ehci_hcd,ehci_pci,usbhid,xhci_hcd
usb_common 954 1 usbcoreFor comparison my Gentoo (running without initramfs) loading 15 modules only. Is it because of using initramfs on Arch or something else? Or may be it is default configuration that could be reduced? If yes, what is the best way to do it: just add unneccessary modules to blacklist or reconfigure and rebuild kernel?
Any suggestions?
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just add unnecessary modules to blacklist or reconfigure and rebuild kernel?
Yes.
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just add unnecessary modules to blacklist or reconfigure and rebuild kernel?
Yes.
which one?
blacklist or rebuild?
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Find the modules that your PC will need and compile the kernel with only those modules. This thread helped me.
https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=142666
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thanks for link.
If I will rebuild kernel, could I use my gentoo's kernel config that was built without initramfs? Do not want to configure once more.
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I hope so. I never tried gentoo though.
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On Gentoo, you compile your own kernel and often target it at your machine. You build in the modules that are critical to the operation of the system, and only make loadable modules of the ones you might not want at start up; for example, all of the USB things you might want sometimes, but not at every boot.
On distributions such as Arch, there is the need to have a kernel that is compatible with countless permutations of processors, video cards, network cards, bridges, USB hubs, disk controllers, LPC buses, etc,,, The kernel needs to be able to pick the parts it needs dynamically.
Nothing is too wonderful to be true, if it be consistent with the laws of nature -- Michael Faraday
The shortest way to ruin a country is to give power to demagogues.— Dionysius of Halicarnassus
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Thanks for explanation. I followed the link above and I think localmodconfig should be a good start point. Going to try it.
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What are your concerns about the number of loaded modules?
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What are your concerns about the number of loaded modules?
The first reason: I am minimalist and I dislike to have things, that I do not need. Otherwise I would have used some bloated distro like OpenSUSE or Fedora.
The second reason: I want to shred my kernel. Just for fun. ![]()
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I am minimalist and I dislike to have things, that I do not need.
But you do need that stuff. That's why it got loaded. If you compile your own kernel, it'll still be loaded. It'll just be part of the kernel itself, instead of a module. "Out of sight, out of mind" is a powerful thing, innit? ![]()
Your second reason is much more valid - nothing wrong with hacking for the sake of hacking. There are weirder hobbies out there
.
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I've built new kernel right now and booted into the CLI. CLI seems as working good. But I can't access my kde. Tried to run startkde but got an error: '$DISPLAY is not set or cannot connect to X server'. Should I rebuild nvidia? If yes, will the old kernel be able to work with rebuilt nvidia driver?
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You can have multiple nvidia packages (just give them unique names), one for each kernel iirc.
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Hmm, when I building a kernel, I can give him a name in config, but how can I rename nvidia driver?
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You make a PKGBUILD for the new nvidia driver. Check out the numerous nvidia- packages in AUR to see what I mean.
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OK, thanks, I've read PKGBUILD from AUR nvidia-all. I assuming makepkg should detect all the kernels and build separate driver for every found kernel.
So I going to ruin my system ![]()
P.S.
Failed.
==> Making package: nvidia-all 313.26-2
==> Checking runtime dependencies...
==> Installing missing dependencies...
error: target not found: nvidia-utils=313.26
==> ERROR: 'pacman' failed to install missing dependencies.when trying to install nvidia-utils=313.26 pacman says that 313.30 already installed and asks for reinstall. Should I allow to reinstall/downgrade nvidia-utils?
Added:
I didn't did downgrade nvidia, just edited PKGBUILD: changed version to current release version number and built it by 'makepkg -si'. Not errors was reported. But can't start kde anyway. 'modprobe nvidia' says: FATAL: module nvidia not found. Where this module was installed?
Last edited by chord (2013-04-05 18:07:06)
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What error your xorg.o.log say?
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No problem with xorg. Something wrong in custom kernel modules tree or aub/abs PKGBUILD. May be both are wrong. Not sure.
After aur I tried abs - way with the same problem. NVidia module not found. But module was built, I can found them and load with insmod /full/path/to/module. I realized that nodprobe looking for module in a wrong directory. Did some research and saw that default kernel has a bit different modules directories structure than custom kernel. I tried to organize custom kernel's modules tree like a default kernel tree, but this doesnt helped.
So I removed all the aur/abs crap and installed nvidia module in old good nvidia way:
sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-313.30-no-compat32.runNow module placed into appropriate directory and I can boot into KDE.
Here the difference:
[archer@arch ~]$ ls -l /usr/lib/modules/3.8.5-1-ARCH/kernel/drivers/video/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 мар 29 22:21 backlight
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1518 мар 29 22:21 fb_sys_fops.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2186 мар 29 22:21 output.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 9027 мар 29 22:21 sstfb.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2955 мар 29 22:21 syscopyarea.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2973 мар 29 22:21 sysfillrect.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2186 мар 29 22:21 sysimgblt.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 13435 мар 29 22:21 udlfb.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 14557 мар 29 22:21 uvesafb.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4067 мар 29 22:21 vfb.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 8929 мар 29 22:21 vga16fb.ko.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 5042 мар 29 22:21 vgastate.ko.gz
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 мар 29 22:21 via
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 6350 мар 29 22:21 xen-fbfront.ko.gz[archer@arch ~]$ ls -l /usr/lib/modules/3.8.5-ARCH-CK0/kernel/drivers/video/
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 12530768 апр 6 03:16 nvidia.koDefault kernel's module located in /usr/lib/modules/extramodule-3.8-ARCH directory.
AUR/ABS PKGBUILD builds module and puts him into /usr/lib/modules/extramodule-3.8.5-ARCH-CK0 directory. It is a wrong place. Should be /usr/lib/modules/3.8.5-ARCH-CK0/kernel/drivers/video/
So this problem fixed.
Returning to the number of modules.
I started my customization from make localmodconfig point. It gave me .config file that was noticeable smaller than default .config (88Kb instead of 144Kb). Kernel and initramfs was reduced also. But loaded modules count wasn't reduced. Moreover I got 63 modules loaded (default kernel loads 60). I ran make menuconfig and shreded .config again. A bunch of options was banned. Now I have 51 modules loaded. It is too much.
I'm pretty sure I no need a bunch of loaded modules (des_generic, ecb, md4, hmac, sha256_generic and so on). I not blacklisted them yet, trying to remove them by kernel configuration. I want to build kernel without initramfs (since I have only root partition, no separate /usr or /home or /boot), may be it helps.
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As a aside, one of the niceties of a custom kernel is that you can bake in all of the modules you need to boot. You can set it up such that you do not need an initramfs at all.
You might browse over to http://kernel-seeds.org/. The guy who runs this is active is famous on the Gentoo forums as pappy_mcfae. He is their expert on how to configure a kernel.
Also, see this Gentoo forum thread
Last edited by ewaller (2013-04-06 15:51:28)
Nothing is too wonderful to be true, if it be consistent with the laws of nature -- Michael Faraday
The shortest way to ruin a country is to give power to demagogues.— Dionysius of Halicarnassus
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The worst thing about the custom kernel is every week there is a kernel update and I have to compile it again. But compiling is fun only if you have the fastest computer.
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The worst thing about the custom kernel is every week there is a kernel update and I have to compile it again. But compiling is fun only if you have the fastest computer.
<ewaller wipes a tear from his eye reminiscing about his carefree days on Gentoo.>
Nothing is too wonderful to be true, if it be consistent with the laws of nature -- Michael Faraday
The shortest way to ruin a country is to give power to demagogues.— Dionysius of Halicarnassus
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How to Ask Questions the Smart Way
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@ ewaller :
yes, I know about kernel-seeds, but I'm not sure it is applicable to arch kernel, at least right now. Currently I thinking about kernel without initramfs.
@ hadrons123 :
I'm not a fan of every-week updates, so I'm not care about compile time.
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