ioctl(9E) Driver Entry Points ioctl(9E)NAMEioctl - control a character device
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/cred.h>
#include <sys/file.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/errno.h>
#include <sys/ddi.h>
#include <sys/sunddi.h>
int prefixioctl(dev_t dev, int cmd, intptr_t arg, int mode, cred_t
*cred_p, int *rval_p);
INTERFACE LEVEL
Architecture independent level 1 (DDI/DKI). This entry point is
optional.
ARGUMENTS
dev Device number.
cmd Command argument the driver ioctl() routine interprets as the
operation to be performed.
arg Passes parameters between a user program and the driver. When
used with terminals, the argument is the address of a user
program structure containing driver or hardware settings.
Alternatively, the argument may be a value that has meaning
only to the driver. The interpretation of the argument is
driver dependent and usually depends on the command type; the
kernel does not interpret the argument.
mode A bit field that contains:
· Information set when the device was opened. The driver
may use it to determine if the device was opened for
reading or writing. The driver can make this determina‐
tion by checking the FREAD or FWRITE flags. See the
flag argument description of the open() routine for fur‐
ther values.
· Information on whether the caller is a 32-bit or 64-bit
thread.
· In some circumstances address space information about the
arg argument. See below.
cred_p Pointer to the user credential structure.
rval_p Pointer to return value for calling process. The driver may
elect to set the value which is valid only if the ioctl()
succeeds.
DESCRIPTIONioctl() provides character-access drivers with an alternate entry point
that can be used for almost any operation other than a simple transfer
of characters in and out of buffers. Most often, ioctl() is used to
control device hardware parameters and establish the protocol used by
the driver in processing data.
The kernel determines that this is a character device, and looks up the
entry point routines in cb_ops(9S). The kernel then packages the user
request and arguments as integers and passes them to the driver's
ioctl() routine. The kernel itself does no processing of the passed
command, so it is up to the user program and the driver to agree on
what the arguments mean.
I/O control commands are used to implement the terminal settings passed
from ttymon(1M) and stty(1), to format disk devices, to implement a
trace driver for debugging, and to clean up character queues. Since the
kernel does not interpret the command type that defines the operation,
a driver is free to define its own commands.
Drivers that use an ioctl() routine typically have a command to
``read'' the current ioctl() settings, and at least one other that
sets new settings. Drivers can use the mode argument to determine if
the device unit was opened for reading or writing, if necessary, by
checking the FREAD or FWRITE setting.
If the third argument, arg, is a pointer to a user buffer, the driver
can call the copyin(9F) and copyout(9F) functions to transfer data
between kernel and user space.
Other kernel subsystems may need to call into the drivers ioctl() rou‐
tine. Drivers that intend to allow their ioctl() routine to be used in
this way should publish the ddi-kernel-ioctl property on the associated
devinfo node(s).
When the ddi-kernel-ioctl property is present, the mode argument is
used to pass address space information about arg through to the driver.
If the driver expects arg to contain a buffer address, and the FKIOCTL
flag is set in mode, then the driver should assume that it is being
handed a kernel buffer address. Otherwise, arg may be the address of a
buffer from a user program. The driver can use ddi_copyin(9F) and
ddi_copyout(9F) perform the correct type of copy operation for either
kernel or user address spaces. See the example on ddi_copyout(9F).
Drivers have to interact with 32-bit and 64-bit applications. If a
device driver shares data structures with the application (for example,
through exported kernel memory) and the driver gets recompiled for a
64-bit kernel but the application remains 32-bit, binary layout of any
data structures will be incompatible if they contain longs or pointers.
The driver needs to know whether there is a model mismatch between the
current thread and the kernel and take necessary action. The mode argu‐
ment has additional bits set to determine the C Language Type Model
which the current thread expects. mode has FILP32 set if the current
thread expects 32-bit ( ILP32) semantics, or FLP64 if the current
thread expects 64-bit ( LP64) semantics. mode is used in combination
with ddi_model_convert_from(9F) and the FMODELS mask to determine
whether there is a data model mismatch between the current thread and
the device driver (see the example below). The device driver might have
to adjust the shape of data structures before exporting them to a user
thread which supports a different data model.
To implement I/O control commands for a driver the following two steps
are required:
1. Define the I/O control command names and the associated value in
the driver's header and comment the commands.
2. Code the ioctl() routine in the driver that defines the function‐
ality for each I/O control command name that is in the header.
The ioctl() routine is coded with instructions on the proper action to
take for each command. It is commonly a switch statement, with each
case definition corresponding to an ioctl() name to identify the
action that should be taken. However, the command passed to the driver
by the user process is an integer value associated with the command
name in the header.
RETURN VALUESioctl() should return 0 on success, or the appropriate error number.
The driver may also set the value returned to the calling process
through rval_p.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: ioctl() entry point
The following is an example of the ioctl() entry point and how to sup‐
port 32-bit and 64-bit applications with the same device driver.
struct passargs32 {
int len;
caddr32_t addr;
};
struct passargs {
int len;
caddr_t addr;
};
xxioctl(dev_t dev, int cmd, intptr_t arg, int mode,
cred_t *credp, int *rvalp) {
struct passargs pa;
#ifdef _MULTI_DATAMODEL
switch (ddi_model_convert_from(mode & FMODELS)) {
case DDI_MODEL_ILP32:
{
struct passargs32 pa32;
ddi_copyin(arg, &pa32, sizeof (struct passargs32), mode);
pa.len = pa32.len;
pa.address = pa32.address;
break;
}
case DDI_MODEL_NONE:
ddi_copyin(arg, &pa, sizeof (struct passargs), mode);
break;
}
#else /* _MULTI_DATAMODEL */
ddi_copyin(arg, &pa, sizeof (struct passargs), mode);
#endif /* _MULTI_DATAMODEL */
do_ioctl(&pa);
....
}
SEE ALSOstty(1), ttymon(1M), dkio(7I), fbio(7I), termio(7I), open(9E), put(9E),
srv(9E), copyin(9F), copyout(9F), ddi_copyin(9F), ddi_copyout(9F),
ddi_model_convert_from(9F), cb_ops(9S)
Writing Device Drivers
WARNINGS
Non-STREAMS driver ioctl() routines must make sure that user data is
copied into or out of the kernel address space explicitly using
copyin(9F), copyout(9F), ddi_copyin(9F), or ddi_copyout(9F), as appro‐
priate.
It is a severe error to simply dereference pointers to the user address
space, even when in user context.
Failure to use the appropriate copying routines can result in panics
under load on some platforms, and reproducible panics on others.
NOTES
STREAMS drivers do not have ioctl() routines. The stream head converts
I/O control commands to M_IOCTL messages, which are handled by the
driver's put(9E) or srv(9E) routine.
SunOS 5.10 3 Dec 1996 ioctl(9E)