Re: loading ipmi_watchdog causes tons of other watchdog modules to be loaded

From: Kay Sievers
Date: Thu Oct 09 2008 - 15:19:42 EST


On Thu, Oct 9, 2008 at 9:02 PM, Arkadiusz Miskiewicz
<a.miskiewicz@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Thursday 09 October 2008, Kay Sievers wrote:
>> On Thu, Oct 9, 2008 at 7:22 PM, Arkadiusz Miskiewicz
>>
>
>> > ... but that ipmi_watchdog is the correct driver that handles
>> > /dev/watchdog, so this shouldn't be happening, correct?
>>
>> While the driver you expect to work is loaded, what does:
>> ls -l /dev/watchdog
>> print?
>>
>> If the devno of this node is 10:130, what does:
>> find /sys/class /sys/devices/ -name dev | xargs grep 10:130
>> print?
>
> # ls -l /dev/watchdog
> crw------- 1 root root 10, 130 sie 8 17:00 /dev/watchdog
> # find /sys/class /sys/devices/ -name dev | xargs grep 10:130
> /sys/class/misc/watchdog/dev:10:130

Ok, so you actually have a driver bound to that device number, and it
should not trigger the usual module autoloading mechanism.

What does:
ls -l /sys/class/misc/watchdog/
and
ls -l /sys/class/misc/watchdog/device/
print?

Does the /sys/class/misc/watchdog/ directory exist, before you load
the module you expect to be the driver behind /dev/watchdog?

To clarify, the other modules get loaded, after you loaded but module,
the above /sys/class/misc/watchdog/ directory exists, and only if you
read from the device, all the other modules get loaded?

Kay
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