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PHYSIO(9) Kernel Developer's Manual PHYSIO(9)

physioinitiate I/O on raw devices

int
physio(void (*strategy)(struct buf *), dev_t dev, int flags, void (*minphys)(struct buf *), struct uio *uio);

() is a helper function typically called from character device read and write routines to start I/O on a user process buffer. It calls back on the provided strategy routine one or more times to complete the transfer described by uio. The maximum amount of data to transfer with each call to strategy is determined by the minphys routine. Since uio normally describes user space addresses, physio() needs to lock the appropriate data area into memory before each transaction with strategy (see the () and () functions in uvm(9)). physio() always awaits the completion of the entire requested transfer before returning, unless an error condition is detected earlier.

In all cases, a temporary buffer is allocated from a system pool. This buffer will have the B_BUSY, B_PHYS, and B_RAW flags set when passed to the strategy routine.

A break-down of the arguments follows:

strategy
The device strategy routine to call for each chunk of data to initiate device I/O.
dev
The device number identifying the device to interact with.
flags
Direction of transfer; the only valid settings are B_READ or B_WRITE.
minphys
A device specific routine called to determine the maximum transfer size that the device's strategy routine can handle.
uio
The description of the entire transfer as requested by the user process. Currently, the results of passing a uio structure with the ‘uio_segflg’ set to anything other than UIO_USERSPACE, are undefined.

If successful, physio() returns 0. EFAULT is returned if the address range described by uio is not accessible by the requesting process. physio() will return any error resulting from calls to the device strategy routine, by examining the B_ERROR buffer flag and the ‘b_error’ field. Note that the actual transfer size may be less than requested by uio if the device signals an “end of file” condition.

read(2), write(2)

September 22, 2010 OpenBSD-5.4