Hi everybody, In my project I have an USB composite device (a LTE modem) which use USB to communicate with the processor. This device has several interface to communicate but I do not use all of them. In particular, it loads cdc_ether device which I don't use and I have an undesired ethXX which interferes with a service in my system. To schematize, let's say my device is loaded on port 2 of usb1, I have the following USB topology: - 1-2:1.0: tty - 1-2:1.1: tty - 1-2:1.2: tty - 1-2:1.3: tty - 1-2:1.4: tty - 1-2:1.5: eth (not desired) Is there a way to prevent this specific ethXX to mount? I've already tried to create a udev rules, but I don't manage to stop the loading process. Here is a summary of my tries: 1/ I couldn't use the /sys/bus/usb1/.../1-2/activated file in my udev rule because it's an USB composite device and I want to use the tty interfaces but not the eth interface 2/ I have tried to stop the udev loading process, but setting MODALIAS environment variable to a NULL-string doesn(t do the trick and last-rule udev option has been removed in my udev version (1.8.2). 3/ I have tried to create a custom environment variable IGNORE_ETH and modify my last rule which run modprobe with the modalias variable. In the logs I see that modprobe isn't called by udev rules, but the cdc_ether device is loaded all the same. 4/ I have think of creating a stub cdc_ether driver and use the /etc/modprobe.d/my_file.conf to preempt the loading for my specific usb composite device but this solution is ugly and I'm not sure it will work. Any idea will be great. Best Regads Loic _______________________________________________ Kernelnewbies mailing list Kernelnewbies@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies