If a user process is working with kernel module, I want that another process can't fire rmmod for that module. How to achieve this type of functionality?
-beginner in Linux kernel programming.
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If a user process is working with kernel module, I want that another process can't fire rmmod for that module. How to achieve this type of functionality? -beginner in Linux kernel programming. |
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If the reference count is incremented when a user process is connected (and decremented when it disconnects), you'll be fine. If the module exposes a device, or is mounted as a filesystem, this should be handled naturally - if not, I guess it'll depend on the userspace interface, but this where to start looking. By the way, |
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