xref: /freebsd/share/man/man9/uio.9 (revision 195ebc7e9e4b129de810833791a19dfb4349d6a9)
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26.\" $FreeBSD$
27.\"
28.Dd October 30, 2007
29.Os
30.Dt UIO 9
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm uio ,
33.Nm uiomove
34.Nd device driver I/O routines
35.Sh SYNOPSIS
36.In sys/types.h
37.In sys/uio.h
38.Pp
39.Bd -literal
40struct uio {
41	struct	iovec *uio_iov;		/* scatter/gather list */
42	int	uio_iovcnt;		/* length of scatter/gather list */
43	off_t	uio_offset;		/* offset in target object */
44	int	uio_resid;		/* remaining bytes to copy */
45	enum	uio_seg uio_segflg;	/* address space */
46	enum	uio_rw uio_rw;		/* operation */
47	struct	thread *uio_td;		/* owner */
48};
49.Ed
50.Ft int
51.Fn uiomove "void *buf" "int howmuch" "struct uio *uiop"
52.Sh DESCRIPTION
53The function
54.Fn uiomove
55is used to handle transfer of data between buffers and I/O vectors
56that might possibly also cross the user/kernel space boundary.
57.Pp
58As a result of any
59.Xr read 2 ,
60.Xr write 2 ,
61.Xr readv 2 ,
62or
63.Xr writev 2
64system call that is being passed to a character-device driver, the
65appropriate driver
66.Va d_read
67or
68.Va d_write
69entry will be called with a pointer to a
70.Vt "struct uio"
71being passed.
72The transfer request is encoded in this structure.
73The driver itself should use
74.Fn uiomove
75to get at the data in this structure.
76.Pp
77The fields in the
78.Vt uio
79structure are:
80.Bl -tag -width ".Va uio_iovcnt"
81.It Va uio_iov
82The array of I/O vectors to be processed.
83In the case of scatter/gather
84I/O, this will be more than one vector.
85.It Va uio_iovcnt
86The number of I/O vectors present.
87.It Va uio_offset
88The offset into the device.
89.It Va uio_resid
90The remaining number of bytes to process, updated after transfer.
91.It Va uio_segflg
92One of the following flags:
93.Bl -tag -width ".Dv UIO_USERSPACE"
94.It Dv UIO_USERSPACE
95The I/O vector points into a process's address space.
96.It Dv UIO_SYSSPACE
97The I/O vector points into the kernel address space.
98.It Dv UIO_NOCOPY
99Do not copy, already in object.
100.El
101.It Va uio_rw
102The direction of the desired transfer, either
103.Dv UIO_READ ,
104or
105.Dv UIO_WRITE .
106.It Va uio_td
107The pointer to a
108.Vt "struct thread"
109for the associated thread; used if
110.Va uio_segflg
111indicates that the transfer is to be made from/to a process's address
112space.
113.El
114.Sh RETURN VALUES
115On success
116.Fn uiomove
117will return 0, on error it will return an appropriate errno.
118.Sh ERRORS
119.Fn uiomove
120will fail and return the following error code if:
121.Bl -tag -width Er
122.It Bq Er EFAULT
123The invoked
124.Xr copyin 9
125or
126.Xr copyout 9
127returned
128.Er EFAULT
129.El
130.Sh EXAMPLES
131The idea is that the driver maintains a private buffer for its data,
132and processes the request in chunks of maximal the size of this
133buffer.
134Note that the buffer handling below is very simplified and
135will not work (the buffer pointer is not being advanced in case of a
136partial read), it is just here to demonstrate the
137.Nm
138handling.
139.Bd -literal
140/* MIN() can be found there: */
141#include <sys/param.h>
142
143#define BUFSIZE 512
144static char buffer[BUFSIZE];
145
146static int data_available;	/* amount of data that can be read */
147
148static int
149fooread(dev_t dev, struct uio *uio, int flag)
150{
151	int rv, amnt;
152
153	rv = 0;
154	while (uio->uio_resid > 0) {
155		if (data_available > 0) {
156			amnt = MIN(uio->uio_resid, data_available);
157			rv = uiomove(buffer, amnt, uio);
158			if (rv != 0)
159				break;
160			data_available -= amnt;
161		} else
162			tsleep(...);	/* wait for a better time */
163	}
164	if (rv != 0) {
165		/* do error cleanup here */
166	}
167	return (rv);
168}
169.Ed
170.Sh SEE ALSO
171.Xr read 2 ,
172.Xr readv 2 ,
173.Xr write 2 ,
174.Xr writev 2 ,
175.Xr copyin 9 ,
176.Xr copyout 9 ,
177.Xr sleep 9
178.Sh HISTORY
179The
180.Nm
181mechanism appeared in some early version of
182.Ux .
183.Sh AUTHORS
184This manual page was written by
185.An J\(:org Wunsch .
186