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SYSCALL_MODULE(9) Kernel Developer's Manual SYSCALL_MODULE(9)

NAME

SYSCALL_MODULEsyscall kernel module declaration macro

SYNOPSIS

#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
#include <sys/sysent.h>

SYSCALL_MODULE(name, int *offset, struct sysent *new_sysent, modeventhand_t evh, void *arg);

DESCRIPTION

The () macro declares a new syscall. SYSCALL_MODULE() expands into a kernel module declaration with name ‘sys/name’.

The rest of the arguments expected by this macro are:

offset
A pointer to an int which saves the offset in struct sysent where the syscall is allocated. If the location pointed to by offset holds a non 0 number it will be used if possible. If it holds 0 then one will be assigned.
new_sysent
is a pointer to a structure that specifies the function implementing the syscall and the number of arguments this function needs (see <sys/sysent.h>).
evh
A pointer to the kernel module event handler function with the argument arg. Please refer to module(9) for more information.
arg
The argument passed to the callback functions of the evh event handler when it is called.

The syscall number assigned to the module can be retrieved using the modstat(3) and modfind(3) library functions in libc. The MACRO () includes SYSCALL_MODULE() and much of its boilerplate code.

EXAMPLES

A minimal example for a syscall module can be found in /usr/share/examples/kld/syscall/module/syscall.c.

SEE ALSO

module(9)

/usr/share/examples/kld/syscall/module/syscall.c

AUTHORS

This manual page was written by Alexander Langer <alex@FreeBSD.org>.

January 24, 2015 Debian