xref: /titanic_50/usr/src/man/man9f/putnextctl.9f (revision abc79d9dd51e98eafb6fc25b4a0b4f66bef40b00)
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Copyright 1989 AT&T
Copyright (c) 2006, Sun Microsystems, Inc., All Rights Reserved
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PUTNEXTCTL 9F "Jan 16, 2006"
NAME
putnextctl - send a control message to a queue
SYNOPSIS

#include <sys/stream.h>



int putnextctl(queue_t *q, int type);
INTERFACE LEVEL

Architecture independent level 1 (DDI/DKI).

PARAMETERS
q

Queue to which the message is to be sent.

type

Message type (must be control, not data type).

DESCRIPTION

The putnextctl() function tests the type argument to make sure a data type has not been specified, and then attempts to allocate a message block. putnextctl() fails if type is M_DATA, M_PROTO, or M_PCPROTO, or if a message block cannot be allocated. If successful, putnextctl() calls the put(9E) routine of the queue pointed to by q with the newly allocated and initialized messages.

A call to putnextctl(q,type) is an atomic equivalent of putctl(q->q_next,type). The STREAMS framework provides whatever mutual exclusion is necessary to insure that dereferencing q through its q_next field and then invoking putctl(9F) proceeds without interference from other threads.

The putnextctl() function should always be used in preference to putctl(9F)

RETURN VALUES

On success, 1 is returned. If type is a data type, or if a message block cannot be allocated, 0 is returned.

CONTEXT

The putnextctl() function can be user, interrupt, or kernel context.

EXAMPLES

The send_ctl routine is used to pass control messages downstream. M_BREAK messages are handled with putnextctl(\|) (line 8). putnextctl1(9F) (line 13) is used for M_DELAY messages, so that parm can be used to specify the length of the delay. In either case, if a message block cannot be allocated a variable recording the number of allocation failures is incremented (lines 9, 14). If an invalid message type is detected, cmn_err(9F) panics the system (line 18).

1 void
 2 send_ctl(queue_t *wrq, uchar_t type, uchar_t parm)
 3 {
 4 extern int num_alloc_fail;
 5
 6 switch (type) {
 7 case M_BREAK:
 8 if (!putnextctl(wrq, M_BREAK))
 9 num_alloc_fail++;
10 break;
11
12 case M_DELAY:
13 if (!putnextctl1(wrq, M_DELAY, parm))
14 num_alloc_fail++;
15 break;
16
17 default:
18 cmn_err(CE_PANIC, "send_ctl: bad message type passed");
19 break;
20 }
21 }
SEE ALSO

put(9E), cmn_err(9F), datamsg(9F), putctl(9F), putnextctl1(9F)

Writing Device Drivers

STREAMS Programming Guide