xref: /dragonfly/share/man/man9/ioctl.9 (revision 0ca59c34)
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30.Dd August 10, 2015
31.Dt IOCTL 9
32.Os
33.Sh NAME
34.Nm ioctl ,
35.Nm _IO ,
36.Nm _IOR ,
37.Nm _IOW ,
38.Nm _IOWR
39.Nd "how to implement a new ioctl call to access device drivers"
40.Sh SYNOPSIS
41.In sys/ioctl.h
42.In sys/ioccom.h
43.Ft int
44.Fn ioctl "int d" "unsigned long request" "..."
45.Fn _IO "g" "t"
46.Fn _IOR "g" "n" "t"
47.Fn _IOW "g" "n" "t"
48.Fn _IOWR "g" "n" "t"
49.Sh DESCRIPTION
50Whenever an
51.Xr ioctl 2
52call is made, the kernel dispatches it to the device driver
53which can then interpret the request number and data in a specialized
54manner.
55Ioctls are defined as:
56.Bd -literal
57#define MYDEVIOCTL   fun(g, n, t)
58.Ed
59.Pp
60where the different symbols correspond to:
61.Bl -tag -width ".Dv MYDEVIOCTL"
62.It Dv MYDEVIOCTL
63The name which will later be given in the
64.Xr ioctl 2
65system call as second argument, e.g.,
66.Bd -literal
67ioctl(fd, MYDEVIOCTL, ...)
68.Ed
69.It Fn fun
70A macro which can be one of:
71.Bl -tag -width ".Fn _IOWR"
72.It Fn _IO
73The call is a simple message to the kernel by itself.
74It does not copy anything into the kernel, nor does it want anything back.
75.It Fn _IOR
76The call only reads parameters from the kernel and does not
77pass any to it.
78.It Fn _IOW
79The call only writes parameters to the kernel, but does not want anything
80back.
81.It Fn _IOWR
82The call writes data to the kernel and wants information back.
83.El
84.Pp
85We always consider reading or writing to the kernel, from the user perspective.
86.It Fa g
87This integer describes to which subsystem the ioctl applies.
88Here are some examples:
89.Pp
90.Bl -tag -width xxxxx -compact
91.It '5'
92.Xr perfmon 4
93.It '8'
94.Xr aac 4
95.It 'a'
96.Xr nata 4
97.It 'B'
98.Xr bpf 4
99.It 'C'
100.Xr ciss 4
101.It 'd'
102.Xr disklabel 5
103.It 'd'
104diskslice
105.It 'd'
106.Xr drm 4
107.It 'f'
108generic file-descriptor
109.It 'F'
110frame buffer
111.It 'h'
112.Xr HAMMER 5
113.It 'i'
114.Xr iic 4
115.It 'i'
116.Xr carp 4
117.It 'i'
118.Xr gre 4
119.It 'k'
120.Xr keyboard 4
121and
122.Xr syscons 4
123.It 'm'
124.Xr mem 4
125.It 'm'
126.Pa /dev/midi
127.It 'm'
128.Xr mtio 4
129.It 'M'
130.Xr sound 4
131mixer
132.It 'n'
133.Xr smb 4
134.It 'n'
135NetWare volume mount
136.It 'p'
137.Pa /dev/dsp
138and
139.Pa /dev/audio
140.It 'p'
141.Xr pci 4
142.It 'p'
143.Xr ppbus 4
144.It 'p'
145.Xr procfs 5
146.It 'P'
147.Nm apm (deprecated)
148.It 'q'
149.Pa /dev/sequencer
150.It 'r'
151random number generator
152.It 't'
153.Xr tty 4
154.It 't'
155.Xr ppp 4
156.It 't'
157.Xr tap 4
158.It 't'
159.Xr tun 4
160.It 't'
161SLIP ttys
162.It 'T'
163.Xr snp 4
164.\".It 'V'
165.\"VMware
166.El
167.It Fa n
168This number uniquely identifies the ioctl within the group.
169That said, two subsystems may share the same
170.Fa g ,
171but there may be only one
172.Fa n
173for a given
174.Fa g .
175This is an unsigned 8 bit number.
176.It Fa t
177This specifies the type of the passed parameter.
178This one gets internally transformed to the size of the parameter, so
179for example, if you want to pass a structure, then you have to specify that
180structure and not a pointer to it or sizeof(struct MYDEV).
181.El
182.Pp
183In order for the new ioctl to be visible to the system, it is installed
184in either
185.In sys/ioctl.h or one of the files that are reached from
186.In sys/ioctl.h .
187.Sh RETURN VALUES
188A distinction must be made at this point.
189All
190.Fn *_ioctl
191routines from
192.Em within kernel
193should return either 0 for success
194or a defined error code, as described in
195.In sys/errno.h .
196At the libc level though a conversion takes place, so that eventually
197.Xr ioctl 2
198returns either 0 for success or -1 for failure, in which case the
199.Va errno
200variable is set accordingly.
201.Pp
202The use of magic numbers such as -1, to indicate that a given ioctl
203code was not handled, is strongly discouraged.
204The value -1 is bound to the
205.Er ERESTART
206pseudo-error, which is returned inside kernel to modify return to process.
207.Sh EXAMPLES
208Let's suppose that we want to pass an integer value to the kernel.
209From the user point of view, this is like writing to the kernel.
210So we define the ioctl as:
211.Bd -literal -offset indent
212#define	MYDEVIOCTL	_IOW('i', 25, int)
213.Ed
214.Pp
215Within the
216.Fn *_ioctl
217routine of the driver, it can be then accessed like:
218.Bd -literal -offset indent
219int
220mydev_ioctl(struct dev_ioctl_args *ap)
221{
222	int error;
223	int *a;
224
225	switch (ap->a_cmd) {
226	case MYDEVIOCTL:
227		a = (int *)ap->data;
228		kprintf("Value passed from userspace: %d\\n", *a);
229		return (0);    /* Success */
230		break;
231
232	/* Handle other ioctls here */
233
234        default:
235                /* Inappropriate ioctl for device */
236                error = ENOTTY;
237		break;
238	}
239
240	return (error);
241}
242.Ed
243.Pp
244In userspace:
245.Bd -literal -offset indent
246int a = 101;
247if (ioctl(fd, MYDEVIOCTL, \*[Am]a) == -1) {
248	/* Handle failure */
249}
250.Ed
251.Sh SEE ALSO
252.Xr ioctl 2
253