On 5/29/21 8:06 AM, Phil Perry wrote:> On 29/05/2021 15:52, Emmett Culley via CentOS wrote:
>> Sometime ago I thought I needed kmod-wl to support a new wireless card.
Turns out I didn't need to do that. Now I'd like to remove kmod
entirely.? But when I try I get this:
>>
>> [root at ws1 etc]# dnf remove kmod
>> Error:
>> Problem: The operation would result in removing the following protected
packages: systemd-udev
>> (try to add '--skip-broken' to skip uninstallable packages)
>>
>> I am sure I don't want to remove systemd-udev, so I am a loss.
>>
>> I did disable akmods:
>>
>> systemctl disable akmods
>>
>> But I still see that kmod-wl is built each time the kernal is updated.
>>
>> Any suggestions where I can find out how to remove kmod.
>>
>> Note that searching the internet only brings me info on removing
kmod-nvidia, and mostly on ubuntu, and they are no help because mostly what they
discuss is how get back to neuveau.
>>
>> Even docs I've found that discuss how to install kmod on CentOS say
nothing about removal.
>>
>> Emmett
>
> Try:
>
> dnf remove kmod-wl
>
> which should do it for you.
>
> the 'kmod' package is the package that provides the underlying kmod
architecture. The kmod package providing the individual driver is (probably)
called kmod-wl.
>
> Hope that helps.
>
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I tried that before:
[root at ws1 etc]# dnf remove kmod-wl
No match for argument: kmod-wl
No packages marked for removal.
Dependencies resolved.
Nothing to do.
Complete!
Seem there is no such package. I believe because it get built newly each time a
new kernel is installed.
Emmett