Most of the mechanism for loading modules for physical devices will be
the /sbin/hotplug interface:
- when the pci core code scans the pci bus, and finds a new
device, it calls out to /sbin/hotplug the pci device
information.
- /sbin/hotplug looks up the pci device info and tries to match
it up with a driver that will work for this device (see the
linux-hotplug.sf.net site for more info on how this works.)
- if it finds a module for the device, it calls modprobe on the
module, and now that pci device has a module loaded.
Repeat this process for the USB, IEEE1394, and other busses that support
MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE in the kernel tree.
> Doing so would allow the initramfs image to be composed solely of the
> modules to be loaded, which would reduce the need for the "klibc". It
> would also eliminate the need for any sort of control script to be in
> the image.
klibc (or some libc) is needed to build /sbin/hotplug, and modprobe in
this scenario.
greg k-h
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