@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ BGTITLE="ALSA-Info v $SCRIPT_VERSION"
PASTEBINKEY="C9cRIO8m/9y8Cs0nVs0FraRx7U0pHsuc"
WGET=$(which wget 2>/dev/null | sed 's|^[^/]*||' 2>/dev/null)
-REQUIRES="mktemp grep pgrep whereis ping awk date uname cat dmesg amixer alsactl"
+REQUIRES="mktemp grep pgrep whereis ping awk date uname cat sort dmesg amixer alsactl"
#
# Define some simple functions
@@ -131,11 +131,11 @@ withaplay() {
echo "" >> $FILE
}
-withlsmod() {
+withmodules() {
echo "!!All Loaded Modules" >> $FILE
echo "!!------------------" >> $FILE
echo "" >> $FILE
- lsmod | awk '{print $1}' >> $FILE
+ awk '{print $1}' < /proc/modules | sort >> $FILE
echo "" >> $FILE
echo "" >> $FILE
}
@@ -254,7 +254,7 @@ withall() {
withaplay
withamixer
withalsactl
- withlsmod
+ withmodules
withsysfs
withdmesg
WITHALL="no"
@@ -366,7 +366,6 @@ information about your ALSA installation and sound related hardware.
dmesg
lspci
- lsmod
aplay
amixer
alsactl
Sorting the list of loaded modules makes it much easier to compare two alsa-info.txt files, even if they are both from the same system (since the order actually changes after each reboot). lsmod just formats the contents of /proc/modules. After this script calls lsmod, it strips everything but module names from the output. This same result can be obtained just as easily by reading directly from /proc/modules; then there is no need to remove the header line printed by lsmod before sorting the output. Signed-off-by: David Ward <david.ward@ll.mit.edu> --- alsa-info/alsa-info.sh | 9 ++++----- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)