05-13-2008
The key here is the vendor and device code returned by lspci -n which is used by the kernel to look for the appropriate driver. In this case I guess you want the ath_cb driver for a CardBus interface. I believe the hotplug facility is still responsible for mapping a device to a driver and doing the driver loading.
I seem to have the same device; the vendor and device code for mine is 168c:0013 -- googling for that quickly turns up Madwifi as an apparently fully supported completely open-source driver (as indeed I have found to be the case).
As for how to go the other way around, figure out that PCI device 03:00.0 is managed by lsmod module so-and-so, I really only have vague ideas. Look in /proc/bus/pci, /proc/net and so forth.
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LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
what-patch
WHAT-PATCH(1) General Commands Manual WHAT-PATCH(1)
NAME
what-patch - detect which patch system a Debian package uses
SYNOPSIS
what-patch [options]
DESCRIPTION
what-patch examines the debian/rules file to determine which patch system the Debian package is using.
what-patch should be run from the root directory of the Debian source package.
OPTIONS
Listed below are the command line options for what-patch:
-h, --help
Display a help message and exit.
-v Enable verbose mode. This will include the listing of any files modified outside or the debian/ directory and report any additional
details about the patch system if available.
AUTHORS
what-patch was written by Kees Cook <kees@ubuntu.com>, Siegfried-A. Gevatter <rainct@ubuntu.com>, and Daniel Hahler <ubuntu@thequod.de>,
among others. This manual page was written by Jonathan Patrick Davies <jpds@ubuntu.com>.
Both are released under the GNU General Public License, version 3 or later.
SEE ALSO
The Ubuntu MOTU team has some documentation about patch systems at the Ubuntu wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/PackagingGuide/PatchSystems
cdbs-edit-patch(1), dbs-edit-patch(1), dpatch-edit-patch(1)
DEBIAN
Debian Utilities WHAT-PATCH(1)