+Jessica +Steve +lkml On Wed, Mar 11, 2020 at 6:33 AM Konstantin Kharlamov <hi-angel@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Once in a while there's a need to remove a module (for example because you rebuilt it, or to reload it with different parameters, or whatever…). And then doing `rmmod modulename` and `modprobe -r modulename` gives: > > rmmod: ERROR: Module modulename is in use > > If you're lucky, firing up `lsmod | grep modulename` will get you offenders inside "used by" column. But often there's nothing except the count above zero. It is very easy to reproduce if you check `lsmod` output for your graphics driver. I checked it on `i915` and `amdgpu`: when graphics session is opened you can't remove it and `lsmod` doesn't show who's using it. > > There's very popular and old question on SO¹ that at the moment has over 55k views, and the only answer that seem to work for people is insanely big and convoluted; it is using a custom kernel driver and kernel tracing capabilities. I guess this amount of research means: no, currently there's no easy way to get who's using a module. > > It would be amazing if kernel has capability to figure out who's using a module. Yeah, right now this would need some work on the kernel side to record the callers of try_module_get()/__module_get()... usually done e.g on fops-like structs in a owner field. The only thing we have there right now is the trace. The trace is not so bad since it can be added in the kernel command line, but would usually only be enabled while debugging. For implementing such a feature I think we would need to add/remove module owner into the mod struct whenever we have a _get()/_put(). Maybe it's worth it, but it doesn't come without overhead. I'd like to hear what other people think. Thanks Lucas De Marchi > > 1: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/448999/is-there-a-way-to-figure-out-what-is-using-a-linux-kernel-module > > P.S.: please, add me to CC when replying, I'm not subscribed to the list. -- Lucas De Marchi