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man:inw

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

NAME

     outb, outw, outl, outsb, outsw, outsl, inb, inw, inl, insb, insw, insl,
     outb_p, outw_p, outl_p, inb_p, inw_p, inl_p - port I/O

SYNOPSIS

     #include <sys/io.h>
     unsigned char inb(unsigned short int port);
     unsigned char inb_p(unsigned short int port);
     unsigned short int inw(unsigned short int port);
     unsigned short int inw_p(unsigned short int port);
     unsigned int inl(unsigned short int port);
     unsigned int inl_p(unsigned short int port);
     void outb(unsigned char value, unsigned short int port);
     void outb_p(unsigned char value, unsigned short int port);
     void outw(unsigned short int value, unsigned short int port);
     void outw_p(unsigned short int value, unsigned short int port);
     void outl(unsigned int value, unsigned short int port);
     void outl_p(unsigned int value, unsigned short int port);
     void insb(unsigned short int port, void *addr,
                unsigned long int count);
     void insw(unsigned short int port, void *addr,
                unsigned long int count);
     void insl(unsigned short int port, void *addr,
                unsigned long int count);
     void outsb(unsigned short int port, const void *addr,
                unsigned long int count);
     void outsw(unsigned short int port, const void *addr,
                unsigned long int count);
     void outsl(unsigned short int port, const void *addr,
                unsigned long int count);

DESCRIPTION

     This family of functions is used to do low-level port input and output.
     The out* functions do port output, the in* functions do port input; the
     b-suffix functions are byte-width  and  the  w-suffix  functions  word-
     width; the _p-suffix functions pause until the I/O completes.
     They  are  primarily  designed for internal kernel use, but can be used
     from user space.
     You must compile with -O or -O2 or similar.  The functions are  defined
     as  inline  macros, and will not be substituted in without optimization
     enabled, causing unresolved references at link time.
     You use ioperm(2) or alternatively iopl(2) to tell the kernel to  allow
     the  user space application to access the I/O ports in question.  Fail-
     ure to do this will cause the application  to  receive  a  segmentation
     fault.

CONFORMING TO

     outb() and friends are hardware-specific.  The value argument is passed
     first and the port argument is passed second,  which  is  the  opposite
     order from most DOS implementations.

SEE ALSO

     ioperm(2), iopl(2)

COLOPHON

     This  page  is  part of release 4.16 of the Linux man-pages project.  A
     description of the project, information about reporting bugs,  and  the
     latest     version     of     this    page,    can    be    found    at
     https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Linux 2017-09-15 OUTB(2)

/data/webs/external/dokuwiki/data/pages/man/inw.txt · Last modified: 2019/05/17 09:32 by 127.0.0.1

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