1DELETE_MODULE(2) Linux Programmer's Manual DELETE_MODULE(2)
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6 delete_module - unload a kernel module
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9 int delete_module(const char *name, int flags);
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11 Note: No declaration of this system call is provided in glibc headers;
12 see NOTES.
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15 The delete_module() system call attempts to remove the unused loadable
16 module entry identified by name. If the module has an exit function,
17 then that function is executed before unloading the module. The flags
18 argument is used to modify the behavior of the system call, as
19 described below. This system call requires privilege.
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21 Module removal is attempted according to the following rules:
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23 1. If there are other loaded modules that depend on (i.e., refer to
24 symbols defined in) this module, then the call fails.
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26 2. Otherwise, if the reference count for the module (i.e., the number
27 of processes currently using the module) is zero, then the module
28 is immediately unloaded.
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30 3. If a module has a nonzero reference count, then the behavior
31 depends on the bits set in flags. In normal usage (see NOTES), the
32 O_NONBLOCK flag is always specified, and the O_TRUNC flag may addi‐
33 tionally be specified.
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35 The various combinations for flags have the following effect:
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37 flags == O_NONBLOCK
38 The call returns immediately, with an error.
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40 flags == (O_NONBLOCK | O_TRUNC)
41 The module is unloaded immediately, regardless of whether it
42 has a nonzero reference count.
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44 (flags & O_NONBLOCK) == 0
45 If flags does not specify O_NONBLOCK, the following steps
46 occur:
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48 * The module is marked so that no new references are per‐
49 mitted.
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51 * If the module's reference count is nonzero, the caller is
52 placed in an uninterruptible sleep state (TASK_UNINTER‐
53 RUPTIBLE) until the reference count is zero, at which
54 point the call unblocks.
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56 * The module is unloaded in the usual way.
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58 The O_TRUNC flag has one further effect on the rules described above.
59 By default, if a module has an init function but no exit function, then
60 an attempt to remove the module fails. However, if O_TRUNC was speci‐
61 fied, this requirement is bypassed.
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63 Using the O_TRUNC flag is dangerous! If the kernel was not built with
64 CONFIG_MODULE_FORCE_UNLOAD, this flag is silently ignored. (Normally,
65 CONFIG_MODULE_FORCE_UNLOAD is enabled.) Using this flag taints the
66 kernel (TAINT_FORCED_RMMOD).
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69 On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned and errno is
70 set appropriately.
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73 EBUSY The module is not "live" (i.e., it is still being initialized or
74 is already marked for removal); or, the module has an init func‐
75 tion but has no exit function, and O_TRUNC was not specified in
76 flags.
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78 EFAULT name refers to a location outside the process's accessible
79 address space.
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81 ENOENT No module by that name exists.
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83 EPERM The caller was not privileged (did not have the CAP_SYS_MODULE
84 capability), or module unloading is disabled (see /proc/sys/ker‐
85 nel/modules_disabled in proc(5)).
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87 EWOULDBLOCK
88 Other modules depend on this module; or, O_NONBLOCK was speci‐
89 fied in flags, but the reference count of this module is nonzero
90 and O_TRUNC was not specified in flags.
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93 delete_module() is Linux-specific.
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96 The delete_module() system call is not supported by glibc. No declara‐
97 tion is provided in glibc headers, but, through a quirk of history,
98 glibc versions before 2.23 did export an ABI for this system call.
99 Therefore, in order to employ this system call, it is (before glibc
100 2.23) sufficient to manually declare the interface in your code; alter‐
101 natively, you can invoke the system call using syscall(2).
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103 The uninterruptible sleep that may occur if O_NONBLOCK is omitted from
104 flags is considered undesirable, because the sleeping process is left
105 in an unkillable state. As at Linux 3.7, specifying O_NONBLOCK is
106 optional, but in future kernels it is likely to become mandatory.
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108 Linux 2.4 and earlier
109 In Linux 2.4 and earlier, the system call took only one argument:
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111 int delete_module(const char *name);
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113 If name is NULL, all unused modules marked auto-clean are removed.
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115 Some further details of differences in the behavior of delete_module()
116 in Linux 2.4 and earlier are not currently explained in this manual
117 page.
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120 create_module(2), init_module(2), query_module(2), lsmod(8), mod‐
121 probe(8), rmmod(8)
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124 This page is part of release 5.02 of the Linux man-pages project. A
125 description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
126 latest version of this page, can be found at
127 https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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131Linux 2017-09-15 DELETE_MODULE(2)