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PROC_RWMEM(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | PROC_RWMEM(9) |
NAME¶
proc_rwmem
, proc_readmem
,
proc_writemem
—
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/ptrace.h>
int
proc_rwmem
(struct
proc *p, struct uio
*uio);
ssize_t
proc_readmem
(struct
thread *td, struct proc
*p, vm_offset_t va,
void *buf,
size_t len);
ssize_t
proc_writemem
(struct
thread *td, struct proc
*p, vm_offset_t va,
void *buf,
size_t len);
DESCRIPTION¶
These functions are used to read to or write from the address space of the process p. Theproc_rwmem
()
function requires the caller to specify the I/O parameters using a
struct uio, described in uio(9). The
proc_readmem
() and
proc_writemem
() functions provide a simpler, less
general interface which allows the caller to read into or write the kernel
buffer buf of size len from or to
the memory at offset va in the address space of
p. The operation is performed on behalf of thread
td, which will most often be the current thread.
These functions may sleep and thus may not be called with any non-sleepable locks held. The process p must be held by the caller using PHOLD(9).
RETURN VALUES¶
Theproc_rwmem
() function returns
0
on success. EFAULT
is
returned if the specified user address is invalid, and
ENOMEM
is returned if the target pages could not be
faulted in due to a resource shortage.
The proc_readmem
() and
proc_writemem
() functions return the number of bytes
read or written, respectively. This may be smaller than the number of bytes
requested, for example if the request spans multiple pages in the process
address space and one of them after the first is not mapped. Otherwise, -1
is returned.
SEE ALSO¶
copyin(9), locking(9), PHOLD(9), uio(9)AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>.December 7, 2015 | Linux 4.19.0-10-amd64 |