table of contents
| PHYSIO(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | PHYSIO(9) |
NAME¶
physio —
initiate I/O on raw devices
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/bio.h>
#include <sys/buf.h>
int
physio(struct
cdev *dev, struct uio
*uio, int
ioflag);
DESCRIPTION¶
Thephysio() is a helper function typically called from
character device read() and
write() routines to start I/O on a user process
buffer. The maximum amount of data to transfer with each call is determined by
dev->si_iosize_max. The
physio() call converts the I/O request into a
strategy() request and passes the new request to the
driver's strategy() routine for processing.
Since uio normally describes user space
addresses, physio() needs to lock those pages into
memory. This is done by calling vmapbuf() for the
appropriate pages. physio() always awaits the
completion of the entire requested transfer before returning, unless an
error condition is detected earlier.
A break-down of the arguments follows:
- dev
- The device number identifying the device to interact with.
- uio
- The description of the entire transfer as requested by the user process.
Currently, the results of passing a uio structure
with the uio_segflg set to anything other than
UIO_USERSPACEare undefined. - ioflag
- The ioflag argument from the
read() orwrite() function callingphysio().
RETURN VALUES¶
If successfulphysio() returns 0.
EFAULT is returned if the address range described by
uio is not accessible by the requesting process.
physio() will return any error resulting from calls to
the device strategy routine, by examining the B_ERROR
buffer flag and the b_error field. Note that the actual
transfer size may be less than requested by uio if the
device signals an “end of file” condition.
SEE ALSO¶
read(2), write(2)HISTORY¶
Thephysio manual page is originally from
NetBSD with minor changes for applicability with
FreeBSD.
The physio call has been completely
re-written for providing higher I/O and paging performance.
| January 19, 2012 | Linux 4.9.0-9-amd64 |