include/uapi/asm-generic/ioctl.h
Source file repositories/reference/linux-study-clean/include/uapi/asm-generic/ioctl.h
File Facts
- System
- Linux kernel
- Corpus path
include/uapi/asm-generic/ioctl.h- Extension
.h- Size
- 3559 bytes
- Lines
- 108
- Domain
- Repository Root And Misc
- Bucket
- include
- Inferred role
- Repository Root And Misc: implementation source
- Status
- source implementation candidate
Why This File Exists
Top-level or miscellaneous repository surface. Use this as map coverage unless a later manual pass promotes the file into a deeper subsystem dossier.
- Top-level or miscellaneous repository surface. Use this as map coverage unless a later manual pass promotes the file into a deeper subsystem dossier.
Dependency Surface
- No C-style include directives detected by the generator.
Detected Declarations
- No top-level syscall, struct, function, initcall, or export declaration detected by the generator.
Annotated Snippet
#ifndef _UAPI_ASM_GENERIC_IOCTL_H
#define _UAPI_ASM_GENERIC_IOCTL_H
/* ioctl command encoding: 32 bits total, command in lower 16 bits,
* size of the parameter structure in the lower 14 bits of the
* upper 16 bits.
* Encoding the size of the parameter structure in the ioctl request
* is useful for catching programs compiled with old versions
* and to avoid overwriting user space outside the user buffer area.
* The highest 2 bits are reserved for indicating the ``access mode''.
* NOTE: This limits the max parameter size to 16kB -1 !
*/
/*
* The following is for compatibility across the various Linux
* platforms. The generic ioctl numbering scheme doesn't really enforce
* a type field. De facto, however, the top 8 bits of the lower 16
* bits are indeed used as a type field, so we might just as well make
* this explicit here. Please be sure to use the decoding macros
* below from now on.
*/
#define _IOC_NRBITS 8
#define _IOC_TYPEBITS 8
/*
* Let any architecture override either of the following before
* including this file.
*/
#ifndef _IOC_SIZEBITS
# define _IOC_SIZEBITS 14
#endif
#ifndef _IOC_DIRBITS
# define _IOC_DIRBITS 2
#endif
#define _IOC_NRMASK ((1 << _IOC_NRBITS)-1)
#define _IOC_TYPEMASK ((1 << _IOC_TYPEBITS)-1)
#define _IOC_SIZEMASK ((1 << _IOC_SIZEBITS)-1)
#define _IOC_DIRMASK ((1 << _IOC_DIRBITS)-1)
#define _IOC_NRSHIFT 0
#define _IOC_TYPESHIFT (_IOC_NRSHIFT+_IOC_NRBITS)
#define _IOC_SIZESHIFT (_IOC_TYPESHIFT+_IOC_TYPEBITS)
#define _IOC_DIRSHIFT (_IOC_SIZESHIFT+_IOC_SIZEBITS)
/*
* Direction bits, which any architecture can choose to override
* before including this file.
*
* NOTE: _IOC_WRITE means userland is writing and kernel is
* reading. _IOC_READ means userland is reading and kernel is writing.
*/
#ifndef _IOC_NONE
# define _IOC_NONE 0U
#endif
#ifndef _IOC_WRITE
# define _IOC_WRITE 1U
#endif
#ifndef _IOC_READ
# define _IOC_READ 2U
#endif
#define _IOC(dir,type,nr,size) \
(((dir) << _IOC_DIRSHIFT) | \
((type) << _IOC_TYPESHIFT) | \
((nr) << _IOC_NRSHIFT) | \
((size) << _IOC_SIZESHIFT))
#ifndef __KERNEL__
#define _IOC_TYPECHECK(t) (sizeof(t))
#endif
/*
* Used to create numbers.
*
* NOTE: _IOW means userland is writing and kernel is reading. _IOR
* means userland is reading and kernel is writing.
*/
#define _IO(type,nr) _IOC(_IOC_NONE,(type),(nr),0)
#define _IOR(type,nr,argtype) _IOC(_IOC_READ,(type),(nr),(_IOC_TYPECHECK(argtype)))
#define _IOW(type,nr,argtype) _IOC(_IOC_WRITE,(type),(nr),(_IOC_TYPECHECK(argtype)))
#define _IOWR(type,nr,argtype) _IOC(_IOC_READ|_IOC_WRITE,(type),(nr),(_IOC_TYPECHECK(argtype)))
#define _IOR_BAD(type,nr,argtype) _IOC(_IOC_READ,(type),(nr),sizeof(argtype))
#define _IOW_BAD(type,nr,argtype) _IOC(_IOC_WRITE,(type),(nr),sizeof(argtype))
#define _IOWR_BAD(type,nr,argtype) _IOC(_IOC_READ|_IOC_WRITE,(type),(nr),sizeof(argtype))
Annotation
- Atlas domain: Repository Root And Misc / include.
- Implementation status: source implementation candidate.
Implementation Notes
- This generated page is the file-by-file coverage layer; curated subsystem chapters should link here when they synthesize a multi-file control flow.
- Core OS pages should be promoted from atlas-only to deep-reviewed when they explain data structures, invariants, locking, lifecycle, and C implementation snippets.
- Driver-family pages are intentionally pattern-oriented unless they are part of the selected PCIe/NVMe representative device path.