freebsd man page for g_read_data

Query: g_read_data

OS: freebsd

Section: 9

Format: Original Unix Latex Style Formatted with HTML and a Horizontal Scroll Bar

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

NAME
g_read_data, g_write_data -- read/write data from/to GEOM consumer
SYNOPSIS
#include <geom/geom.h> void * g_read_data(struct g_consumer *cp, off_t offset, off_t length, int *error); int g_write_data(struct g_consumer *cp, off_t offset, void *ptr, off_t length);
DESCRIPTION
The g_read_data() function reads length bytes of data from the provider attached to consumer cp, starting at offset offset. The buffer returned from g_read_data() is allocated with g_malloc(), so it should be freed by the caller with g_free() after use. If the operation fails, an error value will be stored in the error argument if it is not NULL. The g_write_data() function writes length bytes of data from the buffer pointed to by ptr to the provider attached to consumer cp, starting at offset offset.
RESTRICTIONS
/CONDITIONS The length argument should be a multiple of the provider's sectorsize and less than or equal to DFLTPHYS (DFLTPHYS is defined in <sys/param.h>). The topology lock must not be held.
RETURN VALUES
The g_read_data() function returns a pointer to a data buffer or NULL if an error occurred. In that case an error value is stored in the error argument unless it is NULL. The g_write_data() function returns 0 if successful; otherwise an error code is returned.
ERRORS
Possible errors: [EIO] An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the consumer.
SEE ALSO
geom(4), DECLARE_GEOM_CLASS(9), g_access(9), g_attach(9), g_bio(9), g_consumer(9), g_event(9), g_geom(9), g_provider(9), g_provider_by_name(9), g_wither_geom(9)
AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>.
BSD
January 16, 2004 BSD
Related Man Pages
g_attach(9) - debian
g_access(9) - debian
g_consumer(9) - debian
g_destroy_consumer(9) - debian
g_destroy_consumer(9) - freebsd
Similar Topics in the Unix Linux Community
The Whole Story on #! /usr/bin/ksh
Valid separator in time and date format
UNIX Environment Setup - (Just starting!)
Is it safe to install x86 Solaris 10 U6 after installed-Linux-and-FreeBSD?