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Full Discussion: Game: Name this person
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Game: Name this person Post 302118181 by DeepakS on Saturday 19th of May 2007 09:40:56 PM
Old 05-19-2007
I think a hint or two may be in order. Smilie
 

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KNOTE(9)						   BSD Kernel Developer's Manual						  KNOTE(9)

NAME
knote, KNOTE -- raise kernel event SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/event.h> void knote(struct klist *list, long hint); KNOTE(struct klist *list, long hint); DESCRIPTION
The knote() function provides a hook into the kqueue kernel event notification mechanism to allow sections of the kernel to raise a kernel event in the form of a 'knote', which is a struct knote as defined in <sys/event.h>. knote() takes a singly linked list of knotes, along with a hint (which is passed to the appropriate filter routine). knote() then walks the list making calls to the filter routine for each knote. As each knote contains a reference to the data structure that it is attached to, the filter may choose to examine the data structure in deciding whether an event should be reported. The hint is used to pass in additional information, which may not be present in the data structure that the filter examines. If the filter decides that the event should be returned, it returns a non-zero value and knote() links the knote onto the tail end of the active list in the corresponding kqueue for the application to retrieve. If the knote is already on the active list, no action is taken, but the call to the filter occurs in order to provide an opportunity for the filter to record the activity. knote() must not be called from interrupt contexts running at an interrupt priority level higher than splsched(). KNOTE() is a macro that calls knote(list, hint) if list is not empty. SEE ALSO
kqueue(2), kfilter_register(9) HISTORY
The knote() and KNOTE() functions first appeared in FreeBSD 4.1, and then in NetBSD 2.0. AUTHORS
The kqueue() system was written by Jonathan Lemon <jlemon@FreeBSD.org>. BSD
February 18, 2004 BSD
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