xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/io.4 (revision 2e3f49888ec8851bafb22011533217487764fdb0)
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28.Dd June 1, 2010
29.Dt IO 4
30.Os
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm io
33.Nd I/O privilege file
34.Sh SYNOPSIS
35.Cd "device io"
36.Pp
37.In sys/types.h
38.In sys/ioctl.h
39.In dev/io/iodev.h
40.In machine/iodev.h
41.Bd -literal
42struct iodev_pio_req {
43	u_int access;
44	u_int port;
45	u_int width;
46	u_int val;
47};
48.Ed
49.Sh DESCRIPTION
50The special file
51.Pa /dev/io
52is a controlled security hole that allows a process to gain I/O
53privileges
54(which are normally reserved for kernel-internal code).
55This can be useful in order to write userland
56programs that handle some hardware directly.
57.Pp
58The usual operations on the device are to open it via the
59.Xr open 2
60interface and to send I/O requests to the file descriptor using the
61.Xr ioctl 2
62syscall.
63.Pp
64The
65.Xr ioctl 2
66requests available for
67.Pa /dev/io
68are mostly platform dependent, but there are also some in common between
69all of them.
70The
71.Dv IODEV_PIO
72is used by all the architectures in order to request that an I/O operation
73be performed.
74It takes a 'struct iodev_pio_req' argument that must be previously setup.
75.Pp
76The
77.Fa access
78member specifies the type of operation requested.
79It may be:
80.Bl -tag -width IODEV_PIO_WRITE
81.It Dv IODEV_PIO_READ
82The operation is an "in" type.
83A value will be read from the specified port
84(retrieved from the
85.Fa port
86member) and the result will be stored in the
87.Fa val
88member.
89.It Dv IODEV_PIO_WRITE
90The operation is a "out" type.
91The value will be fetched from the
92.Fa val
93member and will be written out to the specified port (defined as the
94.Fa port
95member).
96.El
97.Pp
98Finally, the
99.Fa width
100member specifies the size of the operand to be read/written, expressed
101in bytes.
102.Pp
103In addition to any file access permissions on
104.Pa /dev/io ,
105the kernel enforces that only the super-user may open this device.
106.Sh LEGACY
107The
108.Pa /dev/io
109interface used to be very i386 specific and worked differently.
110The initial implementation simply raised the
111.Em IOPL
112of the current thread when
113.Xr open 2
114was called on the device.
115This behaviour is retained in the current implementation as legacy
116support for both i386 and amd64 architectures.
117.Sh SEE ALSO
118.Xr close 2 ,
119.Xr i386_get_ioperm 2 ,
120.Xr i386_set_ioperm 2 ,
121.Xr ioctl 2 ,
122.Xr open 2 ,
123.Xr mem 4
124.Sh HISTORY
125The
126.Nm
127file appeared in
128.Fx 1.0 .
129