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I386_GET_IOPERM(2)
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i386_get_ioperm, i386_set_ioperm - manage i386 per-process I/O permission
bitmap
i386 Architecture Library (libi386, -li386)
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <machine/sysarch.h>
int
i386_get_ioperm(u_long *iomap);
int
i386_set_ioperm(u_long *iomap);
i386_get_ioperm() copies the current I/O permission bitmap into the memory
referenced by iomap.
i386_set_ioperm() sets the I/O permission bitmap from the data pointed to
by iomap. This call is restricted to the super-user.
The permission bitmap contains 1024 bits in 32 longwords. If bit n is
clear in the bitmap, then access is granted to I/O port n. If bit n is
set in the bitmap, then an attempt to access I/O port n results in delivery
of a SIGBUS signal unless the process's I/O permission level would
grant I/O access. Bit #0 is the LSB of the first longword in the array.
Upon successful completion, i386_get_ioperm() and i386_set_ioperm()
return 0. Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned and the global variable
errno is set to indicate the error.
i386_get_ioperm() and i386_set_ioperm() will fail if:
[EFAULT] Iomap points outside the process's allocated address space.
[EPERM] The caller was not the super-user, or the operation was not
permitted at the current security level.
i386_iopl(2)
i386 Microprocessor Programmer's Reference Manual, Intel
You can really hose your machine if you enable user-level I/O and write
to hardware ports without care.
The bitmap should really cover 65536 bits, but that's just too big for
allocation in a kernel structure. If you need access to ports beyond
1024, use i386_iopl(2).
BSD October 14, 1995 BSD
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