08-26-2006
Corona688 is right. The only thing that comes to mind that you will be able to balance is I/O load. i.e., Moving hot files off busy disks and on to others, called load levelling. This is not something that you would want to do in C, anyway.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
modules-load.d
MODULES-LOAD.D(5) modules-load.d MODULES-LOAD.D(5)
NAME
modules-load.d - Configure kernel modules to load at boot
SYNOPSIS
/etc/modules-load.d/*.conf
/run/modules-load.d/*.conf
/usr/lib/modules-load.d/*.conf
DESCRIPTION
systemd uses files from the above directories to configure kernel modules to load during boot in a static list. Each configuration file is
named in the style of /etc/modules-load.d/<program>.conf. Note that it is usually a better idea to use the automatic module loading by PCI
ID, by DMI ID or similar triggers configured in the kernel modules themselves instead of relying on static configuration like this.
CONFIGURATION FORMAT
The configuration files should simply contain a list of kernel module names to load, separated by newlines. Empty lines and lines whose
first non-whitespace character is # or ; are ignored.
Each configuration file is named in the style of <program>.conf. Files in /etc/ overwrite files with the same name in /usr/lib/. Files in
/run overwrite files with the same name in /etc/ and /usr/lib/. Packages should install their configuration files in /usr/lib/, files in
/etc/ are reserved for the local administration, which possibly decides to overwrite the configurations installed from packages. All files
are sorted by filename in alphabetical order, regardless in which of the directories they reside, to ensure that a specific configuration
file takes precedence over another file with an alphabetically later name.
EXAMPLE
Example 1. /etc/modules-load.d/virtio-net.conf example:
# Load virtio-net.ko at boot
virtio-net
SEE ALSO
systemd(1), modprobe(8)
AUTHOR
Lennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>
Developer
systemd 10/07/2013 MODULES-LOAD.D(5)