No, I can't, because there isn't a single module loaded with even the
name "gpio" in it.

So running: $ lsmod|grep gpio == No result

It's in the kernel, not a module. I reverted to the GA kernel and
although with that I've had some issue with on headless *Intel* NUC
running Virtual Machines that use the more optimized Ubuntu KVM kernel,
using libvirt (host uses the latest HWE), where both host and VMs slow
down to a crawl randomly without errors.

But on my Ryzen 9 workstation the GA kernel is super stable, fast and
just works. A little slower in Vulkan *Benchmarks*, that's basically it.
And yes, it runs a bunch of server services. Mainly does that like
"22/7", for LAN and WAN.

Biggest "drawback" is that the 5.4 kernel's k10temp module does not
display the temperatures of my Corsair PCIe4 5.5 GB/s NVMEs (just
running "sensors"), but well that doesn't matter. I've stressed them
well enough before, to see that my cooling is absolutely enough (and
they come with a built-in heatsink.

Sure I could've reverted to the previous 5.8 kernel, but it's tied to
HWE (metapackages), unless I uninstall them, and then, well no security
updates.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1937897

Title:
  GPIO error logs in start and dmesg after update of kernel

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