[CCd to linux-kernel and dvb lists. Context: SuSE 9.0, kernel 2.4.21, ttusb_dec module fails]
> > Is cipcb really needed in Release 1.36? It is the only modules which gives > > crc32 as a symbol. > > >>EIP; dde5ba82 <[cipcb]crc32+12/30> <===== > > >> > > >>eax; dea04560 <[ttusb_dec]dsp_dec2000t+0/69100> > > >>edx; dea0455f <[ttusb_dec]dec3000s_frontend_info+bf/c0> > > >>esi; ddcfde18 <[snd-mixer-oss].data.end+eaf2141/ec4c389> > > >>edi; ddcfde20 <[snd-mixer-oss].data.end+eaf2149/ec4c389> > > >>esp; ddcfcdb4 <[snd-mixer-oss].data.end+eaf10dd/ec4c389> > No, cipcb isn't needed. It should be using the crc32 function from the main > kernel. If it's trying to use the one in cipcb, which takes very different > arguments, it's no wonder there is a problem. > > I'm unsure of the right way to fix this. Suggestions anyone? Eeek. If the OP didn't even know if he needed the cipcb module, this should mean he didn't knowingly start the CIPE driver, and[*] thus the cipcb module was loaded by the modprobe dependency mechanism by virtue of it defining a symbol called "crc32". modprobe shouldn't know of that symbol in the CIPE module at all, because it's not meant to be exported. There are some definitions in the module subsystem which deal with the exporting of symbols. I suspect either CIPE or DVB (or both of them) needs a fix in this area. Anyone here knows more? Another data point: crc32 isn't available in 2.4.21 at all, so it's apparently(?) not a kernel configuration problem. But shouldn't that mean that the ttusb_dec driver wouldn't run at all under that kernel? Ah, by the way, this could perhaps have been avoided completely if the kernel was compiled with CONFIG_MODVERSIONS enabled (because then the crc32 function, if properly exported, would have gotten a name which depends on its arguments). This not being on unconditionally is one of my pet peeves with Linux and distros, because of the many CIPE bugreports I get which are due to just version incompatibilities. Olaf [*] unless SUSE has really screwed it up and started a CIPE process by default, but this is rather implausible as it needs nontrivial configuration, and loading the module without the ciped process just wastes memory. -- Info: To unsubscribe send a mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe linux-dvb" as subject.
