KLDLOAD(8) | MidnightBSD System Manager's Manual | KLDLOAD(8) |
kldload
— load a
file into the kernel
kldload |
[-nqv ] file ... |
The kldload
utility loads
file.ko into the kernel using
the kernel linker. Note that if multiple modules are specified then an
attempt will be made to load them all, even if some fail. The
.ko extension name is not mandatory when loading a
given module using kldload
. It does not hurt to
specify it though.
If a bare filename is requested it will only be loaded if it is
found within the module path as defined by the sysctl
kern.module_path. To load a module from the current
directory it must be specified as a full or relative path. The
kldload
utility will warn if a module is requested
as a bare filename and is present in the current directory.
The following options are available:
The kernel security level settings may prevent a module from being loaded or unloaded by giving Operation not permitted.
The kldload
utility exits 0 on
success, and >0 if an error occurs.
To load by module name:
> kldload foo
To load by file name within the module path:
> kldload foo.ko
To load by relative path:
> kldload ./foo.ko
To load by full path:
> kldload /boot/kernel/foo.ko
Some modules (pf, ipfw, ipf, etc.) may be automatically loaded at boot time when the corresponding rc.conf(5) statement is used. Modules may also be auto-loaded through their addition to loader.conf(5).
kldload(2), loader.conf(5), rc.conf(5), security(7), kldconfig(8), kldstat(8), kldunload(8), kldxref(8)
The kldload
utility first appeared in
FreeBSD 3.0, replacing the
lkm
interface.
Doug Rabson <dfr@FreeBSD.org>
April 27, 2017 | midnightbsd-3.1 |