Početak›Forumi›Linuks distribucije›Mandriva›Hardver›Digitalni foto aparat
- This topic has 21 odgovor, 9 glasova, and was last updated 18 years, 11 months ranije by Off-Topic.
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AutorČlanci
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12. maj 2005. u 6:30 am #27946sanel_nbg22Učesnik
A kako ja da dodjem do mog usb mp3 stick-a
nema ga u mnt a ne znam koji je /dev/ za njega. 🙁12. maj 2005. u 7:55 am #27947braleUčesnikAjde daj nam ispis ove komande
# ls /dev/sd*Kao sto rece popac
12. maj 2005. u 8:46 am #27948brainkillaUčesnik@nitro
Obrisao si MyComp ikonicu i morao si da reinstaliras sistem… ccc… Inace, myComp nije nista nego Konqijev kio_slave devices:/, odn. media:/ u kde3.4, u KControlu moras da odaberes model aparata, i pristupas mu opet preko kio_slavea camera:/… A moze i naravno iz konzole sa gphoto2 –auto-detect, pa –list-files, pa –get-files… Za troubleshooting koristite tail -f /var/log/messages, da vidite sta vam kernel kaze pri prikljucivanju aparata/usb diskova… man ne skodi, ljudi…29. maj 2005. u 1:27 pm #27949sanel_nbg22Učesnikls: /dev/sd* : No such file or directory
May 29 15:01:51 Laptop udev[2980]: creating device node ‘/dev/vcc/a7’
May 29 15:04:49 Laptop kernel: usb 3-1: new full speed USB device using uhci_hcd and address 2
May 29 15:04:49 Laptop kernel: scsi0 : SCSI emulation for USB Mass Storage devices
May 29 15:04:54 Laptop kernel: Vendor: MSI Model: MS-551X Rev: 0100
May 29 15:04:54 Laptop kernel: Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 04
May 29 15:08:30 Laptop kernel: cdrom: open failed.
May 29 15:08:44 Laptop last message repeated 3 times
May 29 15:09:16 Laptop last message repeated 2 timesMoze neka pomoc?
29. maj 2005. u 4:35 pm #27950DiabloUčesnikA moze i naravno iz konzole sa gphoto2 –auto-detect, pa –list-files, pa –get-files…
potpisujem!!
Sve ostalo je maltretiranje, nekad se prebacim na root od kamere i poskidam , pobrisem ono sto mi treba.
[code]gphoto2 –shell[/code]
29. maj 2005. u 5:43 pm #27951sanel_nbg22Učesnik/dev/hda6 on / type ext3 (rw)
proc on /proc type proc (rw)
sysfs on /sys type sysfs (rw)
/dev/hda7 on /home type ext3 (rw)
/dev/hda3 on /boot type ext3 (rw)
/dev/hda1 on /mnt/c type ntfs (ro,umask=0222,uid=1000,gid=100)
/dev/hda8 on /mnt/d type ntfs (ro,umask=0222,uid=1000,gid=100)
devpts on /dev/pts type devpts (rw,gid=5,mode=620)
usbfs on /proc/bus/usb type usbfs (rw)i kako da mu pristupim ?
Inace probao sam original 2.4.20 kernel slackow koji dolazi sa instalacijom i na njemu radi
ja imam 2.6.11.6 koji sam sam kompajlirao 😀 i verovatno nesto iskljucio 🙂
nemam uopste sd* u /dev-u a ukljucen je generic scsi i ostalo iz scsi odeljka29. maj 2005. u 7:36 pm #27952Off-TopicUčesnikVidi u /proc/bus/usb /scsi
Uchita li on usb-storage, mozda chak i usb-uhci, ne znam kako ti izgleda /etc/rc.d/rc.modules na 2.6.x, ako iskljucish hotplug onda sve morash ruchno, barem na 2.4. ali probaj da saznash shta je prisutno kroz lsmod.29. maj 2005. u 10:08 pm #27953sanel_nbg22Učesniksanel@laptop$ lsmod
Module Size Used by
snd_mixer_oss 18304 0
ohci_hcd 19592 0
ohci1394 32004 0
ieee1394 94644 1 ohci1394a evo ti ga i rc.modules
### Update module dependencies ###
RELEASE=`uname -r`
# If /usr is mounted and we have ‘find’, we can try to take a shortcut:
if [ -x /usr/bin/find -a -e /lib/modules/$RELEASE/modules.dep
-a /lib/modules/$RELEASE/modules.dep -nt /etc/modules.conf ]; then
NEWMODS=”`/usr/bin/find /lib/modules/$RELEASE -type f -newer /lib/modules/$RELEASE/modules.dep`”
# Only rebuild dependencies if new module(s) are found:
if [ ! “” = “$NEWMODS” ]; then
echo “Updating module dependencies for Linux $RELEASE:”
/sbin/depmod -a
else
echo “Module dependencies up to date (no new kernel modules found).”
fi
else # we don’t have find, or there is no existing modules.dep, or it is out of date.
echo “Updating module dependencies for Linux $RELEASE:”
/sbin/depmod -A
fi#### APM support ###
# APM is a BIOS specification for saving power using several different
# techniques. This is mostly useful for battery powered laptops.
/sbin/modprobe apm#### PC parallel port support ###
#if cat /proc/ksyms | grep “[parport_pc]” 1> /dev/null 2> /dev/null ; then
# echo “parport0 is built-in, not loading module” > /dev/null
#else
# if [ -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/parport/parport_pc.o
# -o -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/parport/parport_pc.o.gz
# -o -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/parport/parport_pc.ko ]; then
# # Generic setup example:
# /sbin/modprobe parport_pc
# # Hardware specific setup example (required for PLIP and better
# # performance in general):
# #/sbin/modprobe parport_pc io=0x378 irq=7
# fi
#fi#### Parallel printer support ###
#if cat /proc/ksyms | grep “[lp]” 1> /dev/null 2> /dev/null ; then
# echo “lp support built-in, not loading module” > /dev/null
#else
# if [ -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/char/lp.o
# -o -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/char/lp.o.gz
# -o -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/char/lp.ko ]; then
# /sbin/modprobe lp
# fi
#fi### Filesystem Quota support ###
if grep -q quota /etc/fstab ; then
# modprobe quota_v1
modprobe quota_v2
fi### Parallel port IP ###
#/sbin/modprobe plip### AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port) GART support ###
# This module takes care of programming the GART (part of your motherboard’s
# chipset that handles gathering data from memory and passing it to the
# card) and enables faster AGP transfers. The AGP GART module is required
# to use AGP features of your 3D rendering video card. You’ll need this to
# use XFree86’s direct rendering support, for example.
/sbin/modprobe agpgart### non-IDE CD-ROM drive support ###
# These modules add CD-ROM drive support. Most of these drivers will probe
# for the I/O address and IRQ of the drive automatically if the parameters
# to configure them are omitted. Typically the I/O address will be specified
# in hexadecimal, e.g.: cm206=0x300,11
#
# ***NONE*** of these drivers are for use with IDE/ATAPI CD-ROM drives. That
# support is already built into every pre-compiled Slackware Linux kernel.
# Also, note that all of the manufacturers listed below stopped making these
# types of wacky-interface drives years ago and all make IDE/ATAPI-interface
# CD-ROM drives now. So, just because your drive says “Mitsumi” on it is not
# reason enough to think you need the special Mitsumi module loaded, etc. If
# you got your drive within the last couple of years it’s probably IDE. Try
# tossing a disc in the drive and mounting it on the various IDE interfaces it
# could be using, like /dev/hdc.
#
#/sbin/modprobe aztcd aztcd=
#/sbin/modprobe cdu31a cdu31a_port= cdu31a_irq=
#/sbin/modprobe cm206 cm206=,
#/sbin/modprobe gscd gscd=
#/sbin/modprobe mcd mcd=,
#/sbin/modprobe mcdx mcdx=,
#/sbin/modprobe optcd optcd=
# Below, this last number is “1” for SoundBlaster Pro card, or “0” for a clone.
#/sbin/modprobe sbpcd sbpcd=,1
#/sbin/modprobe sonycd535 sonycd535=
#/sbin/modprobe sjcd sjcd=# CD-ROM drives on ISP16, MAD16 or Mozart sound card:
#/sbin/modprobe isp16=[[,[,]]][[,]]
# where the values are one of: port=0x340,0x320,0x330,0x360
# irq=0,3,5,7,9,10,11
# dma=0,3,5,6,7
# drive_type=noisp16,Sanyo,Panasonic,Sony,Mitsumi### Cyclades multiport serial card support ###
#/sbin/modprobe cyclades#### Serial line IP support (SLIP/CSLIP/PPP) ###
## This module is for SLIP/CSLIP support:
#/sbin/modprobe slip## Load PPP:
## Check kernel version to determine module names to use
#if [ “`uname -r | cut -f 1,2 -d .`” = “2.2” ]; then
# # This module is for PPP support:
# /sbin/modprobe ppp
#else # assume 2.4 or newer
# # This module is for PPP support:
# /sbin/modprobe ppp_generic
# # This PPP plugin supports PPP over serial lines:
# /sbin/modprobe ppp_async
# # Use this plugin instead for HDLC (used for high-speed leased lines like T1/E1)
# # /sbin/modprobe ppp_synctty
#fi
## This module provides compression for PPP (optional):
##/sbin/modprobe ppp_deflate### USB Host Controllers:
# Universal Host Controller Interface (Intel standard):
#/sbin/modprobe usb-uhci
# Universal Host Controller Interface (alternate JE):
#/sbin/modprobe uhci
# Open Host Controller Interface (Compaq/Microsoft/National standard):
#/sbin/modprobe usb-ohci### USB device support:
# (Note that once you’ve loaded USB hub support most USB devices will
# trigger the kernel to load their modules automatically)
# USB “Human Interface Device” driver; handles most USB mice, joysticks,
# gamepads, steering wheels, keyboards, trackballs and digitizers.
#/sbin/modprobe hid
# Simple HIDBP USB mouse driver, if hid doesn’t work:
#/sbin/modprobe usbmouse
# Simple HIDBP USB keyboard driver, if hid doesn’t work:
#/sbin/modprobe usbkbd
# Wacom Graphire and Intuos tablet driver:
#/sbin/modprobe wacom
# Logitech WingMan Force joystick:
#/sbin/modprobe wmforce
# USB audio:
#/sbin/modprobe audio
# USB modem support:
#/sbin/modprobe acm
# USB serial converter:
#/sbin/modprobe usbserial
# USB printer support:
#/sbin/modprobe printer
# IBM “C-It” USB video camera:
#/sbin/modprobe ibmcam framerate=1
# USB OV511 Camera support:
#/sbin/modprobe ov511
# USB ADMtek Pegasus-based ethernet device support:
#/sbin/modprobe pegasus
# Kawasaki USB ethernet controller support:
#/sbin/modprobe kaweth
# USB Kodak DC-2xx Camera support:
#/sbin/modprobe dc2xx
# USB Mustek MDC800 Digital Camera Support:
#/sbin/modprobe mdc800
# USB Mass Storage support:
#/sbin/modprobe usb-storage
# USS720 parallel-port driver:
#/sbin/modprobe uss720
# Prolific PL-2302 USB-to-USB network device:
#/sbin/modprobe plusb
# USB Diamond Rio500 support:
#/sbin/modprobe rio500
# D-Link DSB-R100 FM radio support:
#/sbin/modprobe dsbr100
# USB Bluetooth support:
#/sbin/modprobe bluetooth
# USB scanner support (requires patched SANE from http://fachschaft.cup.uni-muenchen.de/~neukum/scanner.html):
#/sbin/modprobe scanner### USB event drivers:
# Keyboard input:
#/sbin/modprobe keybdev
# Mouse input:
#/sbin/modprobe mousedev
# Joystick input:
#/sbin/modprobe joydev
# Generic event reporting device:
#/sbin/modprobe evdev### OSS Sound support ###
### (Old Sound System 😉
# Sound Blaster Pro/16 support:
#/sbin/modprobe sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=3 dma16=5 mpu_io=0x300
# Sound Blaster Live support:
#/sbin/modprobe emu10k1
# MAD16 support:
#/sbin/modprobe mad16 io=0x530 irq=7 dma=0 dma16=1
# AD1816(A) sound driver:
#/sbin/modprobe modprobe ad1816 io=0x530 irq=5 dma=1 dma2=3 ad1816_clockfreq=33000
# Crystal CS4232 based (PnP) cards:
#/sbin/modprobe cs4232
# ES1370 support, such as Sound Blaster 128PCI:
#/sbin/modprobe es1370
# ES1371 support, such as Sound Blaster 64V PCI:
#/sbin/modprobe es1371
# ESS Maestro, Maestro2, Maestro2E:
#/sbin/modprobe maestro
# ESS Maestro3/Allegro:
#/sbin/modprobe maestro3
# VIA VT82Cxxx Audio Controller
#/sbin/modprobe via82cxxx_audio
# (For information on configuring other sound cards with Linux,
# see the documentation in /usr/src/linux/Documentation/sound/,
# and /usr/src/linux/Documentation/Configure.help.### Joystick support ###
# The core joystick input support module, needed by all of the
# joystick devices below:
#/sbin/modprobe joydev
### Next, you must load a module for your gameport.
# Classic ISA/PnP gameports:
#/sbin/modprobe ns558
# Crystal SoundFusion gameports:
#/sbin/modprobe cs461x
# Aureal Vortex and Trident 4DWave gameports:
#/sbin/modprobe pcigame
# SoundBlaster Live! gameports:
#/sbin/modprobe emu10k1-gp
### Drivers
for various joystick devices ###
# Analog joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe analog
# Assassin 3D and MadCatz Panther devices:
#/sbin/modprobe a3d
# Logitech ADI digital joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe adi
# Creative Labs Blaster Cobra gamepad:
#/sbin/modprobe cobra
# Genius Flight2000 Digital joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe gf2k
# Gravis GrIP joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe grip
# InterAct digital joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe interact
# ThrustMaster DirectConnect joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe tmdc
# Microsoft SideWinder digital joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe sidewinder
### Serial port game controller support ###
# Both of these are needed for serial-port game controllers:
#/sbin/modprobe serio
#/sbin/modprobe serport
# Logitech WingMan Warrior joystick:
#/sbin/modprobe warrior
# LogiCad3d Magellan/SpaceMouse 6dof controller:
#/sbin/modprobe magellan
# SpaceTec SpaceOrb/Avenger 6dof controller:
#/sbin/modprobe spaceorb
# SpaceTec SpaceBall 4000 FLX 6dof controller:
#/sbin/modprobe spaceball
# Gravis Stinger gamepad:
#/sbin/modprobe stinger
# I-Force joysticks/wheels:
#/sbin/modprobe iforce
### Parallel port connected controllers ###
# Multisystem, Sega Genesis, Saturn joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe db9
# Multisystem, NES, SNES, N64, PSX joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe gamecon
# Multisystem joysticks via TurboGraFX device:
#/sbin/modprobe turbografx### Appletalk support ###
# This is needed if you want to run netatalk, a package which allows
# you to use you Linux box as a file and print server for Apple Macintosh
# computers on your local network.
#/sbin/modprobe appletalk### IPX networking support ###
#/sbin/modprobe ipx### IDE device support ###
# IDE CD-ROM drives:
#/sbin/modprobe ide-cd
# IDE hard drives:
#/sbin/modprobe ide-disk
# IDE floppy drives:
#/sbin/modprobe ide-floppy
# IDE tape drives:
#/sbin/modprobe ide-tape### Network device support ###
# Most of these drivers will probe automatically for the card if you don’t
# specify an I/O address and IRQ. But, the NE2000 driver needs at least the
# I/O. For complete information, see the net-modules.txt file that comes
# with the Linux 2.2.x source code. This file can also be found on the
# Slackware CD-ROM in the /docs/linux-2.2.x/ directory.
#
# First, if setup probing found a network card, there may be an ‘rc.netdevice’
# file that we should run to load the network module:
if [ -x /etc/rc.d/rc.netdevice ]; then
. /etc/rc.d/rc.netdevice
fi
### Ethernet cards based on the 8390 chip.
# 3com 3c503 support:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c503
# Ansel Communications EISA 3200 support:
#/sbin/modprobe ac3200
# Cabletron E21xx support:
#/sbin/modprobe e2100
# HP PCLAN+ (27247B and 27252A) support:
#/sbin/modprobe hp-plus
# HP PCLAN (27245 and other 27xxx series) support:
#/sbin/modprobe hp
# NE2000/NE1000 support (non PCI):
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x300 # NE2000 at 0x300
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x280 # NE2000 at 0x280
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x320 # NE2000 at 0x320
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x340 # NE2000 at 0x340
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x360 # NE2000 at 0x360
# PCI NE2000 clone support:
#/sbin/modprobe ne2k-pci
# SMC Ultra support:
#/sbin/modprobe smc-ultra
# SMC Ultra32 EISA support:
#/sbin/modprobe smc-ultra32
# Western Digital WD80*3 (and clones) support:
#/sbin/modprobe wd
#
# Other network hardware drivers:
#
# 3com 3c501 (consider buying a new card, since the 3c501 is slow,
# broken, and obsolete):
#/sbin/modprobe 3c501
# 3com 3c503:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c503
# 3com 3c505:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c505
# 3com 3c507:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c507
# 3com 3c509 and 3c579:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c509
# 3com 3c515:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c515
# This one works for all 3com 3c590/3c592/3c595/3c597 and the
# EtherLink XL 3c900 and 3c905 cards:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c59x
# Apricot Xen-II on board Ethernet:
#/sbin/modprobe apricot
# Generic ARCnet support:
#/sbin/modprobe arcnet
# AT1700/1720 support:
#/sbin/modprobe at1700
# AT-LAN-TEC/RealTek pocket adapter support:
#/sbin/modprobe atp
# BPQ Ethernet driver:
#/sbin/modprobe bpqether
# Generic DECchip & DIGITAL EtherWORKS PCI/EISA:
#/sbin/modprobe de4x5
# D-Link DE600 pocket adapter support:
#/sbin/modprobe de600
# D-Link DE620 pocket adapter support:
#/sbin/modprobe de620
# DEPCA support:
#/sbin/modprobe depca
# Digi International RightSwitch cards:
#/sbin/modprobe dgrs
# Intel EtherExpress Pro support:
#/sbin/modprobe eepro
# Intel EtherExpress PRO/100 PCI support:
#/sbin/modprobe eepro100
# Intel EtherExpress16 support:
#/sbin/modprobe eexpress
# SMC EtherPower II 9432 PCI support:
#/sbin/modprobe epic100
# ICL EtherTeam 16i/32 support:
#/sbin/modprobe eth16i
# DEC EtherWorks 3 support:
#/sbin/modprobe ewrk3
# Fujitsu FMV-181/182/183/184 support:
#/sbin/modprobe fmv18x
# HP 10/100VG PCLAN (ISA, EISA, PCI) support:
#/sbin/modprobe hp100
# IBM Tropic chipset based adapter support:
#/sbin/modprobe ibmtr
# AMD LANCE and PCnet (AT1500 and NE2100) support:
#/sbin/modprobe lance
# National Semiconductor DP8381x series PCI Ethernet support:
#/sbin/modprobe natsemi
# NI5210 support:
#/sbin/modprobe ni52
# NI6510 support:
#/sbin/modprobe ni65
# AMD PCnet32 (VLB and PCI) support:
#/sbin/modprobe pcnet32
# Red Creek Hardware Virtual Private Network (VPN) support:
#/sbin/modprobe rcpci
# RealTek 8129/8139 (not 8019/8029!) support:
#/sbin/modprobe 8139too
# RealTek 8139C+ enhanced support:
#/sbin/modprobe 8139cp
# Sangoma S502A FRAD support:
#/sbin/modprobe sdla
# SMC 9194 support:
#/sbin/modprobe smc9194
# TI ThunderLAN support:
#/sbin/modprobe tlan
# DECchip Tulip (dc21x4x) PCI support:
#/sbin/modprobe tulip
# VIA Rhine support:
#/sbin/modprobe via-rhine
# AT&T WaveLAN & DEC RoamAbout DS support:
#/sbin/modprobe wavelan
# Packet Engines Yellowfin Gigabit-NIC support:
#/sbin/modprobe yellowfin
# Davicom DM9xxx (9102/9132/9100/9802…)
#/sbin/modprobe dmfe
# SiS 900/7016 PCI Fast Ethernet
#/sbin/modprobe sis900### Serial line load balancing support ###
#/sbin/modprobe eql### “dummy” IP support ###
# A dummy IP driver. Essentially a loopback device. Can be useful —
# see the Network Administrator’s Guide from sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/docs/LDP
#/sbin/modprobe dummy### ISDN kernel support ###
#/sbin/modprobe isdn
# ISDN loop (provides a virtual ISDN card for testing):
#/sbin/modprobe isdnloop### ISDN interface support ###
# AVM-B1 with CAPI2.0 driver (requires additional firmware; see
# /usr/src/linux/Documentation/isdn/README.avmb1):
#/sbin/modprobe capidrv
# HiSax SiemensChipSet driver (supports AVM A1, Elsa ISDN cards,
# Teles S0-16.0, Teles S0-16.3, Teles S0-8, Teles/Creatix PnP,
# ITK micro ix1 and many compatibles):
#/sbin/modprobe hisax
# IBM Active 2000 ISDN card support (requires additional firmware; see
# /usr/src/linux/Documentation/isdn/README.act2000 for more information)
#/sbin/modprobe act2000
# ICN active ISDN card driver:
#/sbin/modprobe icn
# PCBIT-D driver (requires additional firmware; see
# /usr/src/linux/Documentation/isdn/README.pcbit for more information)
#/sbin/modprobe pcbit
# Spellcaster BRI ISDN driver:
#/sbin/modprobe sc### Binary format support ###
#/sbin/modprobe binfmt_aout
#/sbin/modprobe binfmt_elf
#/sbin/modprobe binfmt_java
#/sbin/modprobe binfmt_misc### Filesystem support ###
#/sbin/modprobe adfs
#/sbin/modprobe affs
#/sbin/modprobe coda
#/sbin/modprobe ext2
#/sbin/modprobe fat
#/sbin/modprobe hfs
#/sbin/modprobe hpfs
#/sbin/modprobe isofs
#/sbin/modprobe minix
#/sbin/modprobe msdos
#/sbin/modprobe ncpfs
#/sbin/modprobe nfs
#/sbin/modprobe ntfs
#/sbin/modprobe qnx4
#/sbin/modprobe romfs
#/sbin/modprobe smbfs
#/sbin/modprobe sysv
#/sbin/modprobe ufs
#/sbin/modprobe umsdos
#/sbin/modprobe vfat### RAID (Multiple Devices) support ###
#/sbin/modprobe linear
#/sbin/modprobe raid0
#/sbin/modprobe raid1
#/sbin/modprobe raid5# *** THIS IS STILL LOADED BY DEFAULT ***
# SCSI emulation support. This will provide SCSI host adapter emulation
# for IDE ATAPI devices, and will allow you to use a SCSI device driver
# instead of a native ATAPI driver. This is useful if you have an ATAPI
# device for which no native driver has been written (for example, an ATAPI
# PD-CD or CD-RW drive); you can then use this emulation together with an
# appropriate SCSI device driver. Note that this option does NOT allow you
# to attach SCSI devices to a box that doesn’t have a SCSI host adapter
# installed. Also, you’ll need to exclude your CD-RW from being grabbed by
# the normal ATAPI driver by passing a flag to the kernel at boot time.
# If you’re using LILO, add this: append=”hdc=ide-scsi”
# Replace “hdc” with the appropriate device name.
/sbin/modprobe ide-scsi# SCSI kernel support:
#/sbin/modprobe scsi_mod
#/sbin/modprobe scsi_syms
#/sbin/modprobe sd_mod
#/sbin/modprobe sg
#/sbin/modprobe sr_mod
#/sbin/modprobe st# SCSI controller support:
# NCR53c7,8xx SCSI support (note there is another driver for
# the 53c8xx family below):
#/sbin/modprobe 53c7,8xx
# AM53/79C974 PCI SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe AM53C974
#
BusLogic MultiMaster and FlashPoint SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe BusLogic
# NCR53c406a SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe NCR53c406a
# Initio INI-A100U2W SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe a100u2w
# AdvanSys SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe advansys
# Adaptec AHA152X/2825 support:
#/sbin/modprobe aha152x
# Adaptec AHA1542 support:
#/sbin/modprobe aha1542
# Adaptec AHA1740 support:
#/sbin/modprobe aha1740
# This is support for the various aic7xxx based Adaptec SCSI
# controllers. These include the 274x EISA cards; 284x VLB cards;
# 2902, 2910, 293x, 294x, 394x, 3985 and several other PCI and
# motherboard based SCSI controllers from Adaptec:
#/sbin/modprobe aic7xxx
# ACARD 870U/W SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe atp870u
# DTC 3180/3280 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe dtc
# EATA ISA/EISA/PCI (DPT and generic EATA/DMA-compliant boards) support:
#/sbin/modprobe eata
# EATA-DMA [Obsolete — use above driver] (DPT, NEC, AT&T, SNI, AST,
# Olivetti, Alphatronix) support:
#/sbin/modprobe eata_dma
# EATA-PIO (old DPT PM2001, PM2012A) support:
#/sbin/modprobe eata_pio
# Future Domain 16xx SCSI/AHA-2920A support:
#/sbin/modprobe fdomain
# Generic NCR5380/53c400 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe g_NCR5380
# GDT SCSI Disk Array Controller support:
#/sbin/modprobe gdth
# IOMEGA parallel port (imm – newer drives like ZipPlus):
#/sbin/modprobe imm
# Always IN2000 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe in2000
# Initio 91XXU(W) SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe initio
# AMI MegaRAID support:
#/sbin/modprobe megaraid
# NCR53C8XX SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe ncr53c8xx
# PAS16 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe pas16
# PCI2000 support:
#/sbin/modprobe pci2000
# PCI2220i support:
#/sbin/modprobe pci2220i
# IOMEGA parallel port (ppa – older parallel Zip drives):
#/sbin/modprobe ppa
# PSI240i support:
#/sbin/modprobe psi240i
# Qlogic FastSCSI! cards:
#/sbin/modprobe qlogicfas
# QLogic ISP2100 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe qlogicfc
# This driver works for all QLogic PCI SCSI host adapters (IQ-PCI,
# IQ-PCI-10, IQ_PCI-D) except for the PCI-basic card. (This latter
# card is supported by the “AM53/79C974 PCI SCSI” driver):
#/sbin/modprobe qlogicisp
# Seagate ST-02 and Future Domain TMC-8xx SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe seagate
# Symbios Logic sym53c416 support:
#/sbin/modprobe sym53c416
# Trantor T128/T128F/T228 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe t128
# Tekram DC390(T) and Am53/79C974 (PCscsi) SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe tmscsim
# UltraStor 14F and 34F support (also see driver below):
#/sbin/modprobe u14-34f
# UltraStor 14F, 24F, and 34F support:
#/sbin/modprobe ultrastor
# Western Digital 7000 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe wd7000### Mouse support:
# This is a rare type of busmouse that is connected to the back of an
# ATI video card:
#/sbin/modprobe atixlmouse
# Logitech mouse connected to a proprietary interface card. It’s
# generally a round connector with 9 pins. Note that the newer mice
# made by Logitech don’t use the Logitech protocol anymore; for those,
# you don’t need this option:
#/sbin/modprobe busmouse
# Microsoft busmouse support. These animals (also called Inport mice) are
# connected to an expansion board using a round connector with 9 pins. Be
# aware that several vendors talk about ‘Microsoft busmouse’ and actually
# mean PS/2 busmouse — so count the pins on the connector:
#/sbin/modprobe msbusmouse
# C&T 82C710 mouse port support (as on TI Travelmate):
#/sbin/modprobe qpmouse
# IBM PC110 palmtop digitizer pad:
#/sbin/modprobe pc110pad# Floppy drive support:
# (Most Linux kernels should already contain this)
#/sbin/modprobe floppy# Floppy tape support (such as Colorado Jumbo 250 or other QIC-80 drives):
#/sbin/modprobe ftape# IP masquerading modules:
# These modules are used with IP masquerading, a process which allows you to
# use a Linux box connected to the Internet (via PPP or SLIP, or some other
# means) as a gateway for other Linux, Windows, Macintosh boxes on your local
# network that don’t have real IP addresses on the Internet. The packets
# going through the Linux machine are “masqueraded”, or made to look as if
# they’re all coming from the one real IP address on the Internet.
#
# As a quick example (for a much more extensive treatment, see the IP-Masquerade
# mini-HOWTO) to allow Internet access to a local network 192.168.11.0 with a
# netmask of 255.255.255.0, you’d use these commands in /etc/rc.d/rc.local:
#
# # EXTERNAL -> external network interface
# # INTERNAL -> internal network interface
# EXTERNAL=eth0
# INTERNAL=eth1
# echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
# echo “Setting up NAT (Network Address Translation)…”
# # by default, nothing is forwarded.
# iptables -P FORWARD DROP
# # Allow all connections OUT and only related ones IN
# iptables -A FORWARD -i $EXTERNAL -o $INTERNAL -m state –state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT
# iptables -A FORWARD -i $INTERNAL -o $EXTERNAL -j ACCEPT
# # enable MASQUERADING
# iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o $EXTERNAL -j MASQUERADE
#
# Then you’d have to set the other boxes on your local network to use the
# Linux machine as their TCP/IP gateway. You’ll probably also need to plug
# in the IP address for your Internet service provider in each machine’s DNS
# setup.
#
# Now, on to the IP masquerading modules. The example above is good enough
# for most things that use TCP in a relatively simple fashion. It’ll work
# for telnet and http, for instance. But, the system breaks down when you
# get protocols that use ports in more complicated ways. Luckily the Linux
# kernel gurus have thought of this and have prepared some modules that
# support masquerading of trickier protocols. The ipchains command is mighty
# flexible as well, and a lot of things can be made to work just by setting
# that up correctly.
#
# Special modules for iptables. See also “man iptables” for information about
# that powerfull firewall tool.
#
#/sbin/modprobe ipt_conntrack
#/sbin/modprobe ip_conntrack
#/sbin/modprobe ip_conntrack_ftp
#/sbin/modprobe ip_conntrack_irc
#/sbin/modprobe ip_nat_ftp
#/sbin/modprobe ip_nat_irc
#/sbin/modprobe ip_nat_snmp_basic
#
# These modules below are for ipchains (kernel 2.2.x). You can install ipchains
# from /pasture. To use ipchains with newer kernels, you’ll need this:
# /sbin/modprobe ipchains
#
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_autofw
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_cuseeme
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_ftp
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_irc
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_mfw
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_portfw
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_quake
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_raudio
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_user
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_vdolive29. maj 2005. u 10:13 pm #27954sanel_nbg22Učesniksanel@laptop$ lsmod
Module Size Used by
snd_mixer_oss 18304 0
ohci_hcd 19592 0
ohci1394 32004 0
ieee1394 94644 1 ohci1394a evo ti ga i rc.modules
### Update module dependencies ###
RELEASE=`uname -r`
# If /usr is mounted and we have ‘find’, we can try to take a shortcut:
if [ -x /usr/bin/find -a -e /lib/modules/$RELEASE/modules.dep
-a /lib/modules/$RELEASE/modules.dep -nt /etc/modules.conf ]; then
NEWMODS=”`/usr/bin/find /lib/modules/$RELEASE -type f -newer /lib/modules/$RELEASE/modules.dep`”
# Only rebuild dependencies if new module(s) are found:
if [ ! “” = “$NEWMODS” ]; then
echo “Updating module dependencies for Linux $RELEASE:”
/sbin/depmod -a
else
echo “Module dependencies up to date (no new kernel modules found).”
fi
else # we don’t have find, or there is no existing modules.dep, or it is out of date.
echo “Updating module dependencies for Linux $RELEASE:”
/sbin/depmod -A
fi#### APM support ###
# APM is a BIOS specification for saving power using several different
# techniques. This is mostly useful for battery powered laptops.
/sbin/modprobe apm#### PC parallel port support ###
#if cat /proc/ksyms | grep “[parport_pc]” 1> /dev/null 2> /dev/null ; then
# echo “parport0 is built-in, not loading module” > /dev/null
#else
# if [ -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/parport/parport_pc.o
# -o -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/parport/parport_pc.o.gz
# -o -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/parport/parport_pc.ko ]; then
# # Generic setup example:
# /sbin/modprobe parport_pc
# # Hardware specific setup example (required for PLIP and better
# # performance in general):
# #/sbin/modprobe parport_pc io=0x378 irq=7
# fi
#fi#### Parallel printer support ###
#if cat /proc/ksyms | grep “[lp]” 1> /dev/null 2> /dev/null ; then
# echo “lp support built-in, not loading module” > /dev/null
#else
# if [ -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/char/lp.o
# -o -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/char/lp.o.gz
# -o -r /lib/modules/$RELEASE/kernel/drivers/char/lp.ko ]; then
# /sbin/modprobe lp
# fi
#fi### Filesystem Quota support ###
if grep -q quota /etc/fstab ; then
# modprobe quota_v1
modprobe quota_v2
fi### Parallel port IP ###
#/sbin/modprobe plip### AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port) GART support ###
# This module takes care of programming the GART (part of your motherboard’s
# chipset that handles gathering data from memory and passing it to the
# card) and enables faster AGP transfers. The AGP GART module is required
# to use AGP features of your 3D rendering video card. You’ll need this to
# use XFree86’s direct rendering support, for example.
/sbin/modprobe agpgart### non-IDE CD-ROM drive support ###
# These modules add CD-ROM drive support. Most of these drivers will probe
# for the I/O address and IRQ of the drive automatically if the parameters
# to configure them are omitted. Typically the I/O address will be specified
# in hexadecimal, e.g.: cm206=0x300,11
#
# ***NONE*** of these drivers are for use with IDE/ATAPI CD-ROM drives. That
# support is already built into every pre-compiled Slackware Linux kernel.
# Also, note that all of the manufacturers listed below stopped making these
# types of wacky-interface drives years ago and all make IDE/ATAPI-interface
# CD-ROM drives now. So, just because your drive says “Mitsumi” on it is not
# reason enough to think you need the special Mitsumi module loaded, etc. If
# you got your drive within the last couple of years it’s probably IDE. Try
# tossing a disc in the drive and mounting it on the various IDE interfaces it
# could be using, like /dev/hdc.
#
#/sbin/modprobe aztcd aztcd=
#/sbin/modprobe cdu31a cdu31a_port= cdu31a_irq=
#/sbin/modprobe cm206 cm206=,
#/sbin/modprobe gscd gscd=
#/sbin/modprobe mcd mcd=,
#/sbin/modprobe mcdx mcdx=,
#/sbin/modprobe optcd optcd=
# Below, this last number is “1” for SoundBlaster Pro card, or “0” for a clone.
#/sbin/modprobe sbpcd sbpcd=,1
#/sbin/modprobe sonycd535 sonycd535=
#/sbin/modprobe sjcd sjcd=# CD-ROM drives on ISP16, MAD16 or Mozart sound card:
#/sbin/modprobe isp16=[[,[,]]][[,]]
# where the values are one of: port=0x340,0x320,0x330,0x360
# irq=0,3,5,7,9,10,11
# dma=0,3,5,6,7
# drive_type=noisp16,Sanyo,Panasonic,Sony,Mitsumi### Cyclades multiport serial card support ###
#/sbin/modprobe cyclades#### Serial line IP support (SLIP/CSLIP/PPP) ###
## This module is for SLIP/CSLIP support:
#/sbin/modprobe slip## Load PPP:
## Check kernel version to determine module names to use
#if [ “`uname -r | cut -f 1,2 -d .`” = “2.2” ]; then
# # This module is for PPP support:
# /sbin/modprobe ppp
#else # assume 2.4 or newer
# # This module is for PPP support:
# /sbin/modprobe ppp_generic
# # This PPP plugin supports PPP over serial lines:
# /sbin/modprobe ppp_async
# # Use this plugin instead for HDLC (used for high-speed leased lines like T1/E1)
# # /sbin/modprobe ppp_synctty
#fi
## This module provides compression for PPP (optional):
##/sbin/modprobe ppp_deflate### USB Host Controllers:
# Universal Host Controller Interface (Intel standard):
#/sbin/modprobe usb-uhci
# Universal Host Controller Interface (alternate JE):
#/sbin/modprobe uhci
# Open Host Controller Interface (Compaq/Microsoft/National standard):
#/sbin/modprobe usb-ohci### USB device support:
# (Note that once you’ve loaded USB hub support most USB devices will
# trigger the kernel to load their modules automatically)
# USB “Human Interface Device” driver; handles most USB mice, joysticks,
# gamepads, steering wheels, keyboards, trackballs and digitizers.
#/sbin/modprobe hid
# Simple HIDBP USB mouse driver, if hid doesn’t work:
#/sbin/modprobe usbmouse
# Simple HIDBP USB keyboard driver, if hid doesn’t work:
#/sbin/modprobe usbkbd
# Wacom Graphire and Intuos tablet driver:
#/sbin/modprobe wacom
# Logitech WingMan Force joystick:
#/sbin/modprobe wmforce
# USB audio:
#/sbin/modprobe audio
# USB modem support:
#/sbin/modprobe acm
# USB serial converter:
#/sbin/modprobe usbserial
# USB printer support:
#/sbin/modprobe printer
# IBM “C-It” USB video camera:
#/sbin/modprobe ibmcam framerate=1
# USB OV511 Camera support:
#/sbin/modprobe ov511
# USB ADMtek Pegasus-based ethernet device support:
#/sbin/modprobe pegasus
# Kawasaki USB ethernet controller support:
#/sbin/modprobe kaweth
# USB Kodak DC-2xx Camera support:
#/sbin/modprobe dc2xx
# USB Mustek MDC800 Digital Camera Support:
#/sbin/modprobe mdc800
# USB Mass Storage support:
#/sbin/modprobe usb-storage
# USS720 parallel-port driver:
#/sbin/modprobe uss720
# Prolific PL-2302 USB-to-USB network device:
#/sbin/modprobe plusb
# USB Diamond Rio500 support:
#/sbin/modprobe rio500
# D-Link DSB-R100 FM radio support:
#/sbin/modprobe dsbr100
# USB Bluetooth support:
#/sbin/modprobe bluetooth
# USB scanner support (requires patched SANE from http://fachschaft.cup.uni-muenchen.de/~neukum/scanner.html):
#/sbin/modprobe scanner### USB event drivers:
# Keyboard input:
#/sbin/modprobe keybdev
# Mouse input:
#/sbin/modprobe mousedev
# Joystick input:
#/sbin/modprobe joydev
# Generic event reporting device:
#/sbin/modprobe evdev### OSS Sound support ###
### (Old Sound System 😉
# Sound Blaster Pro/16 support:
#/sbin/modprobe sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=3 dma16=5 mpu_io=0x300
# Sound Blaster Live support:
#/sbin/modprobe emu10k1
# MAD16 support:
#/sbin/modprobe mad16 io=0x530 irq=7 dma=0 dma16=1
# AD1816(A) sound driver:
#/sbin/modprobe modprobe ad1816 io=0x530 irq=5 dma=1 dma2=3 ad1816_clockfreq=33000
# Crystal CS4232 based (PnP) cards:
#/sbin/modprobe cs4232
# ES1370 support, such as Sound Blaster 128PCI:
#/sbin/modprobe es1370
# ES1371 support, such as Sound Blaster 64V PCI:
#/sbin/modprobe es1371
# ESS Maestro, Maestro2, Maestro2E:
#/sbin/modprobe maestro
# ESS Maestro3/Allegro:
#/sbin/modprobe maestro3
# VIA VT82Cxxx Audio Controller
#/sbin/modprobe via82cxxx_audio
# (For information on configuring other sound cards with Linux,
# see the documentation in /usr/src/linux/Documentation/sound/,
# and /usr/src/linux/Documentation/Configure.help.### Joystick support ###
# The core joystick input support module, needed by all of the
# joystick devices below:
#/sbin/modprobe joydev
### Next, you must load a module for your gameport.
# Classic ISA/PnP gameports:
#/sbin/modprobe ns558
# Crystal SoundFusion gameports:
#/sbin/modprobe cs461x
# Aureal Vortex and Trident 4DWave gameports:
#/sbin/modprobe pcigame
# SoundBlaster Live! gameports:
#/sbin/modprobe emu10k1-gp
### Drivers
for various joystick devices ###
# Analog joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe analog
# Assassin 3D and MadCatz Panther devices:
#/sbin/modprobe a3d
# Logitech ADI digital joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe adi
# Creative Labs Blaster Cobra gamepad:
#/sbin/modprobe cobra
# Genius Flight2000 Digital joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe gf2k
# Gravis GrIP joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe grip
# InterAct digital joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe interact
# ThrustMaster DirectConnect joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe tmdc
# Microsoft SideWinder digital joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe sidewinder
### Serial port game controller support ###
# Both of these are needed for serial-port game controllers:
#/sbin/modprobe serio
#/sbin/modprobe serport
# Logitech WingMan Warrior joystick:
#/sbin/modprobe warrior
# LogiCad3d Magellan/SpaceMouse 6dof controller:
#/sbin/modprobe magellan
# SpaceTec SpaceOrb/Avenger 6dof controller:
#/sbin/modprobe spaceorb
# SpaceTec SpaceBall 4000 FLX 6dof controller:
#/sbin/modprobe spaceball
# Gravis Stinger gamepad:
#/sbin/modprobe stinger
# I-Force joysticks/wheels:
#/sbin/modprobe iforce
### Parallel port connected controllers ###
# Multisystem, Sega Genesis, Saturn joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe db9
# Multisystem, NES, SNES, N64, PSX joysticks and gamepads:
#/sbin/modprobe gamecon
# Multisystem joysticks via TurboGraFX device:
#/sbin/modprobe turbografx### Appletalk support ###
# This is needed if you want to run netatalk, a package which allows
# you to use you Linux box as a file and print server for Apple Macintosh
# computers on your local network.
#/sbin/modprobe appletalk### IPX networking support ###
#/sbin/modprobe ipx### IDE device support ###
# IDE CD-ROM drives:
#/sbin/modprobe ide-cd
# IDE hard drives:
#/sbin/modprobe ide-disk
# IDE floppy drives:
#/sbin/modprobe ide-floppy
# IDE tape drives:
#/sbin/modprobe ide-tape### Network device support ###
# Most of these drivers will probe automatically for the card if you don’t
# specify an I/O address and IRQ. But, the NE2000 driver needs at least the
# I/O. For complete information, see the net-modules.txt file that comes
# with the Linux 2.2.x source code. This file can also be found on the
# Slackware CD-ROM in the /docs/linux-2.2.x/ directory.
#
# First, if setup probing found a network card, there may be an ‘rc.netdevice’
# file that we should run to load the network module:
if [ -x /etc/rc.d/rc.netdevice ]; then
. /etc/rc.d/rc.netdevice
fi
### Ethernet cards based on the 8390 chip.
# 3com 3c503 support:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c503
# Ansel Communications EISA 3200 support:
#/sbin/modprobe ac3200
# Cabletron E21xx support:
#/sbin/modprobe e2100
# HP PCLAN+ (27247B and 27252A) support:
#/sbin/modprobe hp-plus
# HP PCLAN (27245 and other 27xxx series) support:
#/sbin/modprobe hp
# NE2000/NE1000 support (non PCI):
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x300 # NE2000 at 0x300
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x280 # NE2000 at 0x280
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x320 # NE2000 at 0x320
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x340 # NE2000 at 0x340
#/sbin/modprobe ne io=0x360 # NE2000 at 0x360
# PCI NE2000 clone support:
#/sbin/modprobe ne2k-pci
# SMC Ultra support:
#/sbin/modprobe smc-ultra
# SMC Ultra32 EISA support:
#/sbin/modprobe smc-ultra32
# Western Digital WD80*3 (and clones) support:
#/sbin/modprobe wd
#
# Other network hardware drivers:
#
# 3com 3c501 (consider buying a new card, since the 3c501 is slow,
# broken, and obsolete):
#/sbin/modprobe 3c501
# 3com 3c503:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c503
# 3com 3c505:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c505
# 3com 3c507:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c507
# 3com 3c509 and 3c579:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c509
# 3com 3c515:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c515
# This one works for all 3com 3c590/3c592/3c595/3c597 and the
# EtherLink XL 3c900 and 3c905 cards:
#/sbin/modprobe 3c59x
# Apricot Xen-II on board Ethernet:
#/sbin/modprobe apricot
# Generic ARCnet support:
#/sbin/modprobe arcnet
# AT1700/1720 support:
#/sbin/modprobe at1700
# AT-LAN-TEC/RealTek pocket adapter support:
#/sbin/modprobe atp
# BPQ Ethernet driver:
#/sbin/modprobe bpqether
# Generic DECchip & DIGITAL EtherWORKS PCI/EISA:
#/sbin/modprobe de4x5
# D-Link DE600 pocket adapter support:
#/sbin/modprobe de600
# D-Link DE620 pocket adapter support:
#/sbin/modprobe de620
# DEPCA support:
#/sbin/modprobe depca
# Digi International RightSwitch cards:
#/sbin/modprobe dgrs
# Intel EtherExpress Pro support:
#/sbin/modprobe eepro
# Intel EtherExpress PRO/100 PCI support:
#/sbin/modprobe eepro100
# Intel EtherExpress16 support:
#/sbin/modprobe eexpress
# SMC EtherPower II 9432 PCI support:
#/sbin/modprobe epic100
# ICL EtherTeam 16i/32 support:
#/sbin/modprobe eth16i
# DEC EtherWorks 3 support:
#/sbin/modprobe ewrk3
# Fujitsu FMV-181/182/183/184 support:
#/sbin/modprobe fmv18x
# HP 10/100VG PCLAN (ISA, EISA, PCI) support:
#/sbin/modprobe hp100
# IBM Tropic chipset based adapter support:
#/sbin/modprobe ibmtr
# AMD LANCE and PCnet (AT1500 and NE2100) support:
#/sbin/modprobe lance
# National Semiconductor DP8381x series PCI Ethernet support:
#/sbin/modprobe natsemi
# NI5210 support:
#/sbin/modprobe ni52
# NI6510 support:
#/sbin/modprobe ni65
# AMD PCnet32 (VLB and PCI) support:
#/sbin/modprobe pcnet32
# Red Creek Hardware Virtual Private Network (VPN) support:
#/sbin/modprobe rcpci
# RealTek 8129/8139 (not 8019/8029!) support:
#/sbin/modprobe 8139too
# RealTek 8139C+ enhanced support:
#/sbin/modprobe 8139cp
# Sangoma S502A FRAD support:
#/sbin/modprobe sdla
# SMC 9194 support:
#/sbin/modprobe smc9194
# TI ThunderLAN support:
#/sbin/modprobe tlan
# DECchip Tulip (dc21x4x) PCI support:
#/sbin/modprobe tulip
# VIA Rhine support:
#/sbin/modprobe via-rhine
# AT&T WaveLAN & DEC RoamAbout DS support:
#/sbin/modprobe wavelan
# Packet Engines Yellowfin Gigabit-NIC support:
#/sbin/modprobe yellowfin
# Davicom DM9xxx (9102/9132/9100/9802…)
#/sbin/modprobe dmfe
# SiS 900/7016 PCI Fast Ethernet
#/sbin/modprobe sis900### Serial line load balancing support ###
#/sbin/modprobe eql### “dummy” IP support ###
# A dummy IP driver. Essentially a loopback device. Can be useful —
# see the Network Administrator’s Guide from sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/docs/LDP
#/sbin/modprobe dummy### ISDN kernel support ###
#/sbin/modprobe isdn
# ISDN loop (provides a virtual ISDN card for testing):
#/sbin/modprobe isdnloop### ISDN interface support ###
# AVM-B1 with CAPI2.0 driver (requires additional firmware; see
# /usr/src/linux/Documentation/isdn/README.avmb1):
#/sbin/modprobe capidrv
# HiSax SiemensChipSet driver (supports AVM A1, Elsa ISDN cards,
# Teles S0-16.0, Teles S0-16.3, Teles S0-8, Teles/Creatix PnP,
# ITK micro ix1 and many compatibles):
#/sbin/modprobe hisax
# IBM Active 2000 ISDN card support (requires additional firmware; see
# /usr/src/linux/Documentation/isdn/README.act2000 for more information)
#/sbin/modprobe act2000
# ICN active ISDN card driver:
#/sbin/modprobe icn
# PCBIT-D driver (requires additional firmware; see
# /usr/src/linux/Documentation/isdn/README.pcbit for more information)
#/sbin/modprobe pcbit
# Spellcaster BRI ISDN driver:
#/sbin/modprobe sc### Binary format support ###
#/sbin/modprobe binfmt_aout
#/sbin/modprobe binfmt_elf
#/sbin/modprobe binfmt_java
#/sbin/modprobe binfmt_misc### Filesystem support ###
#/sbin/modprobe adfs
#/sbin/modprobe affs
#/sbin/modprobe coda
#/sbin/modprobe ext2
#/sbin/modprobe fat
#/sbin/modprobe hfs
#/sbin/modprobe hpfs
#/sbin/modprobe isofs
#/sbin/modprobe minix
#/sbin/modprobe msdos
#/sbin/modprobe ncpfs
#/sbin/modprobe nfs
#/sbin/modprobe ntfs
#/sbin/modprobe qnx4
#/sbin/modprobe romfs
#/sbin/modprobe smbfs
#/sbin/modprobe sysv
#/sbin/modprobe ufs
#/sbin/modprobe umsdos
#/sbin/modprobe vfat### RAID (Multiple Devices) support ###
#/sbin/modprobe linear
#/sbin/modprobe raid0
#/sbin/modprobe raid1
#/sbin/modprobe raid5# *** THIS IS STILL LOADED BY DEFAULT ***
# SCSI emulation support. This will provide SCSI host adapter emulation
# for IDE ATAPI devices, and will allow you to use a SCSI device driver
# instead of a native ATAPI driver. This is useful if you have an ATAPI
# device for which no native driver has been written (for example, an ATAPI
# PD-CD or CD-RW drive); you can then use this emulation together with an
# appropriate SCSI device driver. Note that this option does NOT allow you
# to attach SCSI devices to a box that doesn’t have a SCSI host adapter
# installed. Also, you’ll need to exclude your CD-RW from being grabbed by
# the normal ATAPI driver by passing a flag to the kernel at boot time.
# If you’re using LILO, add this: append=”hdc=ide-scsi”
# Replace “hdc” with the appropriate device name.
/sbin/modprobe ide-scsi# SCSI kernel support:
#/sbin/modprobe scsi_mod
#/sbin/modprobe scsi_syms
#/sbin/modprobe sd_mod
#/sbin/modprobe sg
#/sbin/modprobe sr_mod
#/sbin/modprobe st# SCSI controller support:
# NCR53c7,8xx SCSI support (note there is another driver for
# the 53c8xx family below):
#/sbin/modprobe 53c7,8xx
# AM53/79C974 PCI SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe AM53C974
#
BusLogic MultiMaster and FlashPoint SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe BusLogic
# NCR53c406a SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe NCR53c406a
# Initio INI-A100U2W SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe a100u2w
# AdvanSys SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe advansys
# Adaptec AHA152X/2825 support:
#/sbin/modprobe aha152x
# Adaptec AHA1542 support:
#/sbin/modprobe aha1542
# Adaptec AHA1740 support:
#/sbin/modprobe aha1740
# This is support for the various aic7xxx based Adaptec SCSI
# controllers. These include the 274x EISA cards; 284x VLB cards;
# 2902, 2910, 293x, 294x, 394x, 3985 and several other PCI and
# motherboard based SCSI controllers from Adaptec:
#/sbin/modprobe aic7xxx
# ACARD 870U/W SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe atp870u
# DTC 3180/3280 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe dtc
# EATA ISA/EISA/PCI (DPT and generic EATA/DMA-compliant boards) support:
#/sbin/modprobe eata
# EATA-DMA [Obsolete — use above driver] (DPT, NEC, AT&T, SNI, AST,
# Olivetti, Alphatronix) support:
#/sbin/modprobe eata_dma
# EATA-PIO (old DPT PM2001, PM2012A) support:
#/sbin/modprobe eata_pio
# Future Domain 16xx SCSI/AHA-2920A support:
#/sbin/modprobe fdomain
# Generic NCR5380/53c400 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe g_NCR5380
# GDT SCSI Disk Array Controller support:
#/sbin/modprobe gdth
# IOMEGA parallel port (imm – newer drives like ZipPlus):
#/sbin/modprobe imm
# Always IN2000 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe in2000
# Initio 91XXU(W) SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe initio
# AMI MegaRAID support:
#/sbin/modprobe megaraid
# NCR53C8XX SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe ncr53c8xx
# PAS16 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe pas16
# PCI2000 support:
#/sbin/modprobe pci2000
# PCI2220i support:
#/sbin/modprobe pci2220i
# IOMEGA parallel port (ppa – older parallel Zip drives):
#/sbin/modprobe ppa
# PSI240i support:
#/sbin/modprobe psi240i
# Qlogic FastSCSI! cards:
#/sbin/modprobe qlogicfas
# QLogic ISP2100 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe qlogicfc
# This driver works for all QLogic PCI SCSI host adapters (IQ-PCI,
# IQ-PCI-10, IQ_PCI-D) except for the PCI-basic card. (This latter
# card is supported by the “AM53/79C974 PCI SCSI” driver):
#/sbin/modprobe qlogicisp
# Seagate ST-02 and Future Domain TMC-8xx SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe seagate
# Symbios Logic sym53c416 support:
#/sbin/modprobe sym53c416
# Trantor T128/T128F/T228 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe t128
# Tekram DC390(T) and Am53/79C974 (PCscsi) SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe tmscsim
# UltraStor 14F and 34F support (also see driver below):
#/sbin/modprobe u14-34f
# UltraStor 14F, 24F, and 34F support:
#/sbin/modprobe ultrastor
# Western Digital 7000 SCSI support:
#/sbin/modprobe wd7000### Mouse support:
# This is a rare type of busmouse that is connected to the back of an
# ATI video card:
#/sbin/modprobe atixlmouse
# Logitech mouse connected to a proprietary interface card. It’s
# generally a round connector with 9 pins. Note that the newer mice
# made by Logitech don’t use the Logitech protocol anymore; for those,
# you don’t need this option:
#/sbin/modprobe busmouse
# Microsoft busmouse support. These animals (also called Inport mice) are
# connected to an expansion board using a round connector with 9 pins. Be
# aware that several vendors talk about ‘Microsoft busmouse’ and actually
# mean PS/2 busmouse — so count the pins on the connector:
#/sbin/modprobe msbusmouse
# C&T 82C710 mouse port support (as on TI Travelmate):
#/sbin/modprobe qpmouse
# IBM PC110 palmtop digitizer pad:
#/sbin/modprobe pc110pad# Floppy drive support:
# (Most Linux kernels should already contain this)
#/sbin/modprobe floppy# Floppy tape support (such as Colorado Jumbo 250 or other QIC-80 drives):
#/sbin/modprobe ftape# IP masquerading modules:
# These modules are used with IP masquerading, a process which allows you to
# use a Linux box connected to the Internet (via PPP or SLIP, or some other
# means) as a gateway for other Linux, Windows, Macintosh boxes on your local
# network that don’t have real IP addresses on the Internet. The packets
# going through the Linux machine are “masqueraded”, or made to look as if
# they’re all coming from the one real IP address on the Internet.
#
# As a quick example (for a much more extensive treatment, see the IP-Masquerade
# mini-HOWTO) to allow Internet access to a local network 192.168.11.0 with a
# netmask of 255.255.255.0, you’d use these commands in /etc/rc.d/rc.local:
#
# # EXTERNAL -> external network interface
# # INTERNAL -> internal network interface
# EXTERNAL=eth0
# INTERNAL=eth1
# echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
# echo “Setting up NAT (Network Address Translation)…”
# # by default, nothing is forwarded.
# iptables -P FORWARD DROP
# # Allow all connections OUT and only related ones IN
# iptables -A FORWARD -i $EXTERNAL -o $INTERNAL -m state –state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT
# iptables -A FORWARD -i $INTERNAL -o $EXTERNAL -j ACCEPT
# # enable MASQUERADING
# iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o $EXTERNAL -j MASQUERADE
#
# Then you’d have to set the other boxes on your local network to use the
# Linux machine as their TCP/IP gateway. You’ll probably also need to plug
# in the IP address for your Internet service provider in each machine’s DNS
# setup.
#
# Now, on to the IP masquerading modules. The example above is good enough
# for most things that use TCP in a relatively simple fashion. It’ll work
# for telnet and http, for instance. But, the system breaks down when you
# get protocols that use ports in more complicated ways. Luckily the Linux
# kernel gurus have thought of this and have prepared some modules that
# support masquerading of trickier protocols. The ipchains command is mighty
# flexible as well, and a lot of things can be made to work just by setting
# that up correctly.
#
# Special modules for iptables. See also “man iptables” for information about
# that powerfull firewall tool.
#
#/sbin/modprobe ipt_conntrack
#/sbin/modprobe ip_conntrack
#/sbin/modprobe ip_conntrack_ftp
#/sbin/modprobe ip_conntrack_irc
#/sbin/modprobe ip_nat_ftp
#/sbin/modprobe ip_nat_irc
#/sbin/modprobe ip_nat_snmp_basic
#
# These modules below are for ipchains (kernel 2.2.x). You can install ipchains
# from /pasture. To use ipchains with newer kernels, you’ll need this:
# /sbin/modprobe ipchains
#
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_autofw
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_cuseeme
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_ftp
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_irc
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_mfw
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_portfw
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_quake
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_raudio
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_user
#/sbin/modprobe ip_masq_vdolive29. maj 2005. u 10:33 pm #27955Off-TopicUčesnikHvala na prikazanom fajlu, mozda bi ti vishe znachilo da si sam u njemu potrazio red:
# USB Mass Storage support:
#/sbin/modprobe usb-storageDakle samo skini tarabu sa ovog drugog reda i restartuj mashinu, ili jednostavno modprobe usb-storage, ono prvo da ne bi ruchno morao da uchitavash modul svaki put kadati treba.
A fajl se uopshte ne razlikuje, a i supr je to kod Slack-a, nezanima te modprobe.conf, jedino ako izvoljevash neki options.
A ako ti je ono ceo ispis na lsmod, a ono shta ti to imash u ili od mashine ???
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