Adding /etc/modprobe.d folder for module configuration (#397)
* Add a /etc/modprobe.d folder populated using a config USB stick with folder modprobe * Add the documentation for the modprobe folder
This commit is contained in:
committed by
Pascal Vizeli
parent
d861ecae6f
commit
5e82060124
@@ -8,18 +8,20 @@ Format a USB stick with FAT32/EXT4/NTFS and name it `CONFIG`. Alternative you ca
|
||||
```text
|
||||
network/
|
||||
modules/
|
||||
modprobe/
|
||||
udev/
|
||||
authorized_keys
|
||||
timesyncd.conf
|
||||
hassos-xy.raucb
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
- The `network` folder can contain any kind of NetworkManager connection files. For more information see [Network][network.md].
|
||||
- The `network` folder can contain any kind of NetworkManager connection files. For more information see [Network][network.md].
|
||||
- The `modules` folder is for modules-load configuration files.
|
||||
- The `modprobe` folder is for modules configuration files (/etc/modprobe.d)
|
||||
- The `udev` folder is for udev rules files.
|
||||
- The `authorized_keys` file activates debug SSH access on port `22222`. See [Debugging Hassio][debug-hassio].
|
||||
- The `timesyncd.conf` file allow you to set different NTP servers. HassOS won't boot without correct working time servers!
|
||||
- The `hassos-*.raucb` file is a firmware OTA update which will be installed. These can be found on on the [release][hassos-release] page.
|
||||
- The `hassos-*.raucb` file is a firmware OTA update which will be installed. These can be found on on the [release][hassos-release] page.
|
||||
|
||||
You can put this USB stick into the device and it will be read on startup. You can also trigger this process later over the
|
||||
API/UI or by calling `systemctl restart hassos-config` on the host.
|
||||
@@ -32,7 +34,7 @@ You can edit or create a `cmdline.txt` in your boot partition. That will be read
|
||||
|
||||
### Kernel-Module
|
||||
|
||||
The kernel module folder `/etc/modules-load.d` is persistent and you can add your configuration files there. See [Systemd modules load][systemd-modules].
|
||||
The kernel module folder `/etc/modules-load.d` is persistent and you can add your configuration files there. See [Systemd modules load][systemd-modules]. You can add the modules configuration files in `/etc/modprobe.d` that is also persistent.
|
||||
|
||||
### Udev rules
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user