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Top Forums Programming Aplication user and kernel mode (data access) Post 302119066 by Brendan Kennedy on Sunday 27th of May 2007 09:44:40 AM
Old 05-27-2007
Aplication user and kernel mode (data access)

Hi all,

I am trying to setup a program to use a device driver and am confusing buffer access between User and Kernel mode. I think all applications running in User space have to communicate with the device drivers using io control calls and then have some functions called back from the driver app.

In this model, I guess the User app passes buffer pointer values to the driver
using the ioctl calls. Is that what happens? For example, I have a session
context struct created by the user app using malloc. Would that data have to
be copied to the driver for it to be used, or could I just pass a pointer to
the struct?

Is using ioctl calls the only way to 'switch to kernel mode'??
Also, am I right in saying the process running on the device driver is
separate from the one running in the application? how does that work in
relation to a threaded application? must a new thread be created with each
function call back?

You can probably tell I am very confused here, so any help is greatly
apreciated!

Regards,
Brendan
 

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PASS(4)                                                    BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual                                                    PASS(4)

NAME
pass -- CAM application passthrough driver SYNOPSIS
device pass DESCRIPTION
The pass driver provides a way for userland applications to issue CAM CCBs to the kernel. Since the pass driver allows direct access to the CAM subsystem, system administrators should exercise caution when granting access to this driver. If used improperly, this driver can allow userland applications to crash a machine or cause data loss. The pass driver attaches to every SCSI device found in the system. Since it attaches to every device, it provides a generic means of access- ing SCSI devices, and allows the user to access devices which have no "standard" peripheral driver associated with them. KERNEL CONFIGURATION
It is only necessary to configure one pass device in the kernel; pass devices are automatically allocated as SCSI devices are found. IOCTLS
CAMIOCOMMAND This ioctl takes most kinds of CAM CCBs and passes them through to the CAM transport layer for action. Note that some CCB types are not allowed through the passthrough device, and must be sent through the xpt(4) device instead. Some examples of xpt-only CCBs are XPT_SCAN_BUS, XPT_DEV_MATCH, XPT_RESET_BUS, XPT_SCAN_LUN, XPT_ENG_INQ, and XPT_ENG_EXEC. These CCB types have various attributes that make it illogical or impossible to service them through the passthrough interface. CAMGETPASSTHRU This ioctl takes an XPT_GDEVLIST CCB, and returns the passthrough device corresponding to the device in question. Although this ioctl is available through the pass driver, it is of limited use, since the caller must already know that the device in question is a passthrough device if they are issuing this ioctl. It is probably more useful to issue this ioctl through the xpt(4) device. FILES
/dev/passn Character device nodes for the pass driver. There should be one of these for each device accessed through the CAM subsystem. DIAGNOSTICS
None. SEE ALSO
cam(3), cam(4), cam_cdbparse(3), xpt(4), camcontrol(8) HISTORY
The CAM passthrough driver first appeared in FreeBSD 3.0. AUTHORS
Kenneth Merry <ken@FreeBSD.org> BUGS
It might be nice to have a way to asynchronously send CCBs through the passthrough driver. This would probably require some sort of read/write interface or an asynchronous ioctl interface. BSD October 10, 1998 BSD
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