As of Linux 2.4, you can rename the init and cleanup functions of your modules; they no longer have to be called init_module() and cleanup_module() respectively. This is done with the module_init() and module_exit() macros. These macros are defined in linux/init.h. The only caveat is that your init and cleanup functions must be defined before calling the macros, otherwise you'll get compilation errors. Here's an example of this technique:
Example 2-3. hello-2.c
/* hello-2.c - Demonstrating the module_init() and module_exit() macros. This is the * preferred over using init_module() and cleanup_module(). */ #include <linux/module.h> // Needed by all modules #include <linux/kernel.h> // Needed for KERN_ALERT #include <linux/init.h> // Needed for the macros static int hello_2_init(void) { printk(KERN_ALERT "Hello, world 2\n"); return 0; } static void hello_2_exit(void) { printk(KERN_ALERT "Goodbye, world 2\n"); } module_init(hello_2_init); module_exit(hello_2_exit);
So now we have two real kernel modules under our belt. With productivity as high as ours, we should have a high powered Makefile. Here's a more advanced Makefile which will compile both our modules at the same time. It's optimized for brevity and scalability. If you don't understand it, I urge you to read the makefile info pages or the GNU Make Manual.
Example 2-4. Makefile for both our modules
WARN := -W -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes INCLUDE := -isystem /lib/modules/`uname -r`/build/include CFLAGS := -O2 -DMODULE -D__KERNEL__ ${WARN} ${INCLUDE} CC := gcc-3.0 OBJS := ${patsubst %.c, %.o, ${wildcard *.c}} all: ${OBJS} .PHONY: clean clean: rm -rf *.o
As an exercise to the reader, if we had another module in the same directory, say hello-3.c, how would you modify this Makefile to automatically compile that module?