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Full Discussion: bad file descriptor?
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers bad file descriptor? Post 15771 by ftb on Tuesday 19th of February 2002 10:27:04 AM
Old 02-19-2002
bad file descriptor?

Ok, I'm sure this is a total newbie question, but I think I'm in the right place, no?

I'm trying to call a perl module from a cgi script - Mail::Sendmail - and my web host installed the module in a directory that doesn't seem to be accessible, at least not the way I'm trying. But I thought you could call a module just about anywhere as long as you include a 'use lib' statement so perl can find it...

Anyway, I guess my question is this: does 'bad file descriptor' indicate that a file pathname I've written is bunk? That basically the pathname is not correct?

Thanks in advance for any light shed for a Unix rookie...

Chris
 

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modload(2)							System Calls Manual							modload(2)

NAME
modload - load kernel modules on demand SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
allows processes with appropriate privilege to demand-load a kernel module into the running kernel. The module must be of a supported type and must have been registered via kcmodule(1M) before it can be loaded. The module to be loaded is specified by pathname. pathname may be either a module name or an absolute path name. If pathname is a module name, a list of directories specified by modpath is searched for a match. If pathname is absolute, only pathname is used to access the object file. The file must be an ELF64 relocatable object file. Notes is currently implemented as a macro. Security Restrictions is restricted to superuser processes and privileged processes. A privileged process requires the privilege to execute the system call. See privileges(5), for more information about the privilege. RETURN VALUE
On successful completion, returns a module identifier that can be passed to or On failure it returns -1 and sets to identify the error. ERRORS
fails if one or more of the following are true: A component of pathname denies search permission. The file named by pathname does not exist. The module being loaded is not currently registered. The file named by pathname is not appropriately pre-configured or has invalid dependency on other modules. The caller is not a superuser process or a privileged process. A relocation error occurred during the attempt to load the module, or the module references symbols not defined in the running kernel, or the module references symbols in another loadable mod- ule but it did not declare its dependence on this module in its module metadata. pathname is more than characters long. The module wrapper has an incorrect version number. The Dynamically Loadable Kernel Module feature is not initialized. SEE ALSO
kcmodule(1M), modstat(2), moduload(2), privileges(5). modload(2)
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