| PROP_COPYIN_IOCTL(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | PROP_COPYIN_IOCTL(9) |
prop_object_copyin,
prop_object_copyin_size,
prop_object_copyin_ioctl,
prop_object_copyin_ioctl_size,
prop_object_copyout,
prop_object_copyout_ioctl —
Copy property lists to and from kernel space
#include
<prop/proplib.h>
int
prop_object_copyin(const
struct plistref *pref,
prop_object_t
*arrayp);
int
prop_object_copyin_size(const
struct plistref *pref,
prop_object_t *arrayp,
size_t lim);
int
prop_object_copyin_ioctl(const
struct plistref *pref,
const u_long cmd,
prop_object_t
*arrayp);
int
prop_object_copyin_ioctl_size(const
struct plistref *pref,
const u_long cmd,
prop_object_t *arrayp,
size_t lim);
int
prop_object_copyout(struct
plistref *pref,
prop_object_t array);
int
prop_object_copyout_ioctl(struct
plistref *pref, const
u_long cmd, prop_object_t
array);
The prop_object_copyin_ioctl,
prop_object_copyin_ioctl_size, and
prop_object_copyout_ioctl functions implement the
kernel side of a protocol for copying property lists to and from the kernel
using ioctl(2). The functions
prop_object_copyin,
prop_object_copyin_size, and
prop_object_copyout implement the kernel side of a
protocol for copying property lists to the kernel as arguments of normal
system calls.
A kernel routine receiving or returning a property list will be passed a pointer to a struct plistref. This structure encapsulates the reference to the property list in externalized form.
The functions prop_object_copyin_size and
prop_object_copyin_ioctl_size take an explicit size
limit argument lim while
prop_object_copyin and
prop_object_copyin_ioctl have an implicit size limit
of 128KB. Attempts to transfer objects larger than the limit result in an
E2BIG return value.
The functions
prop_array_copyin(),
prop_array_copyin_size(),
prop_array_copyin_ioctl(),
prop_array_copyin_ioctl_size(),
prop_dictionary_copyin(),
prop_dictionary_copyin_size(),
prop_dictionary_copyin_ioctl(),
and
prop_dictionary_copyin_ioctl_size()
are provided as wrappers around the corresponding generic object functions.
They are provided for backwards compatibility and will fail if the object
copied in is not of the specified type, preserving the previous
behavior.
The functions
prop_array_copyout(),
prop_array_copyout_ioctl(),
prop_dictionary_copyout(),
and
prop_dictionary_copyout_ioctl()
are also provided as backwards compatibility wrappers around the
corresponding generic object functions, but impose no object type
constraints.
If successful, functions return zero. Otherwise, an error number will be returned to indicate the error.
The following (simplified) example demonstrates using
prop_object_copyin_ioctl() and
prop_object_copyout_ioctl() in an ioctl routine:
extern prop_dictionary_t fooprops;
int
fooioctl(dev_t dev, u_long cmd, caddr_t data, int flag, struct lwp *l)
{
prop_dictionary_t dict, odict;
int error;
switch (cmd) {
case FOOSETPROPS: {
const struct plistref *pref = (const struct plistref *) data;
error = prop_object_copyin_ioctl(pref, cmd,
(prop_object_t *)&dict);
if (error)
return (error);
odict = fooprops;
fooprops = dict;
prop_object_release(odict);
break;
}
case FOOGETPROPS: {
struct plistref *pref = (struct plistref *) data;
error = prop_object_copyout_ioctl(pref, cmd, fooprops);
break;
}
default:
return (EPASSTHROUGH);
}
return (error);
}
The following (simplified) example demonstrates using
prop_object_copyin() in a routine:
int
foocopyin(const struct plistref *pref))
{
prop_array_t array;
int error;
error = prop_object_copyin(pref, (prop_object_t *)&array);
if (error)
return (error);
...
}
prop_object_copyin_ioctl() will fail
if:
E2BIG]EFAULT]EIO]ENOMEM]prop_object_copyout_ioctl() will fail
if:
prop_array(3), prop_dictionary(3), prop_object(3), prop_send_ioctl(3), prop_send_syscall(3), proplib(3)
The proplib property container object
library first appeared in NetBSD 4.0.
| April 20, 2025 | NetBSD 11.0 |