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kcmp(2) [linux man page]

KCMP(2) 						     Linux Programmer's Manual							   KCMP(2)

NAME
kcmp - compare two processes to determine if they share a kernel resource SYNOPSIS
#include <linux/kcmp.h> int kcmp(pid_t pid1, pid_t pid2, int type, unsigned long idx1, unsigned long idx2); Note: There is no glibc wrapper for this system call; see NOTES. DESCRIPTION
The kcmp() system call can be used to check whether the two processes identified by pid1 and pid2 share a kernel resource such as virtual memory, file descriptors, and so on. The type argument specifies which resource is to be compared in the two processes. It has one of the following values: KCMP_FILE Check whether a file descriptor idx1 in the process pid1 refers to the same open file description (see open(2)) as file descriptor idx2 in the process pid2. KCMP_FILES Check whether the process share the same set of open file descriptors. The arguments idx1 and idx2 are ignored. KCMP_FS Check whether the processes share the same filesystem information (i.e., file mode creation mask, working directory, and filesystem root). The arguments idx1 and idx2 are ignored. KCMP_IO Check whether the processes share I/O context. The arguments idx1 and idx2 are ignored. KCMP_SIGHAND Check whether the processes share the same table of signal dispositions. The arguments idx1 and idx2 are ignored. KCMP_SYSVSEM Check whether the processes share the same list of System V semaphore undo operations. The arguments idx1 and idx2 are ignored. KCMP_VM Check whether the processes share the same address space. The arguments idx1 and idx2 are ignored. Note the kcmp() is not protected against false positives which may occur if tasks are running. One should stop tasks by sending SIGSTOP (see signal(7)) prior to inspection with this system call to obtain meaningful results. RETURN VALUE
The return value of a successful call to kcmp() is simply the result of arithmetic comparison of kernel pointers (when the kernel compares resources, it uses their memory addresses). The easiest way to explain is to consider an example. Suppose that v1 and v2 are the addresses of appropriate resources, then the return value is one of the following: 0 v1 is equal to v2; in other words, the two processes share the resource. 1 v1 is less than v2. 2 v1 is greater than v2. 3 v1 is not equal to v2, but ordering information is unavailable. On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately. kcmp() was designed to return values suitable for sorting. This is particularly handy if one needs to compare a large number of file descriptors. ERRORS
EBADF type is KCMP_FILE and fd1 or fd2 is not an open file descriptor. EINVAL type is invalid. EPERM Insufficient permission to inspect process resources. The CAP_SYS_PTRACE capability is required to inspect processes that you do not own. ESRCH Process pid1 or pid2 does not exist. VERSIONS
The kcmp() system call first appeared in Linux 3.5. CONFORMING TO
kcmp() is Linux-specific and should not be used in programs intended to be portable. NOTES
Glibc does not provide a wrapper for this system call; call it using syscall(2). This system call is available only if the kernel was configured with CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE. The main use of the system call is for the checkpoint/restore in user space (CRIU) feature. The alternative to this system call would have been to expose suitable process informa- tion via the proc(5) filesystem; this was deemed to be unsuitable for security reasons. See clone(2) for some background information on the shared resources referred to on this page. SEE ALSO
clone(2), unshare(2) Linux 2013-12-08 KCMP(2)
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