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man:syscall

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

NAME

     syscall - indirect system call

SYNOPSIS

     #define _GNU_SOURCE         /* See feature_test_macros(7) */
     #include <unistd.h>
     #include <sys/syscall.h>   /* For SYS_xxx definitions */
     long syscall(long number, ...);

DESCRIPTION

     syscall()  is  a  small  library  function that invokes the system call
     whose assembly language interface has the  specified  number  with  the
     specified  arguments.  Employing syscall() is useful, for example, when
     invoking a system call that has no wrapper function in the C library.
     syscall() saves CPU registers before making the system  call,  restores
     the  registers  upon  return from the system call, and stores any error
     code returned by the system call in errno(3) if an error occurs.
     Symbolic constants for system call numbers can be found in  the  header
     file <sys/syscall.h>.

RETURN VALUE

     The  return value is defined by the system call being invoked.  In gen-
     eral, a 0 return value indicates success.  A -1 return value  indicates
     an error, and an error code is stored in errno.

NOTES

     syscall() first appeared in 4BSD.
 Architecture-specific requirements
     Each architecture ABI has its own requirements on how system call argu-
     ments are passed to the kernel.  For system calls  that  have  a  glibc
     wrapper (e.g., most system calls), glibc handles the details of copying
     arguments to the right registers in a manner suitable for the architec-
     ture.   However, when using syscall() to make a system call, the caller
     might need to handle architecture-dependent details;  this  requirement
     is most commonly encountered on certain 32-bit architectures.
     For  example,  on  the  ARM  architecture Embedded ABI (EABI), a 64-bit
     value (e.g., long long) must be  aligned  to  an  even  register  pair.
     Thus,  using  syscall()  instead  of the wrapper provided by glibc, the
     readahead() system call would be invoked as follows on the  ARM  archi-
     tecture with the EABI in little endian mode:
         syscall(SYS_readahead, fd, 0,
                 (unsigned int) (offset & 0xFFFFFFFF),
                 (unsigned int) (offset >> 32),
                 count);
     Since  the  offset  argument is 64 bits, and the first argument (fd) is
     passed in r0, the caller must manually split and align the 64-bit value
     so  that it is passed in the r2/r3 register pair.  That means inserting
     a dummy value into r1 (the second argument of 0).  Care  also  must  be
     taken  so that the split follows endian conventions (according to the C
     ABI for the platform).
     Similar issues can occur on MIPS with the O32 ABI, on PowerPC with  the
     32-bit ABI, and on Xtensa.
     Note  that  while the parisc C ABI also uses aligned register pairs, it
     uses a shim layer to hide the issue from user space.
     The  affected  system  calls   are   fadvise64_64(2),   ftruncate64(2),
     posix_fadvise(2),      pread64(2),      pwrite64(2),      readahead(2),
     sync_file_range(2), and truncate64(2).
     This does not affect syscalls that manually split and  assemble  64-bit
     values  such  as  _llseek(2),  preadv(2),  preadv2(2), pwritev(2).  and
     pwritev2(2).  Welcome to the wonderful world of historical baggage.
 Architecture calling conventions
     Every architecture has its own way of invoking and passing arguments to
     the  kernel.   The  details for various architectures are listed in the
     two tables below.
     The first table lists the instruction used to transition to kernel mode
     (which  might  not be the fastest or best way to transition to the ker-
     nel, so you might have to refer to vdso(7)), the register used to indi-
     cate  the  system  call  number, the register used to return the system
     call result, and the register used to signal an error.
     arch/ABI    instruction           syscall #  retval  error    Notes
     --------------------------------------------------------------------
     alpha       callsys               v0         a0      a3       [1]
     arc         trap0                 r8         r0      -
     arm/OABI    swi NR                -          a1      -        [2]
     arm/EABI    swi 0x0               r7         r0      -
     arm64       svc #0                x8         x0      -
     blackfin    excpt 0x0             P0         R0      -
     i386        int $0x80             eax        eax     -
     ia64        break 0x100000        r15        r8      r10      [1]
     m68k        trap #0               d0         d0      -
     microblaze  brki r14,8            r12        r3      -
     mips        syscall               v0         v0      a3       [1]
     nios2       trap                  r2         r2      r7
     parisc      ble 0x100(%sr2, %r0)  r20        r28     -
     powerpc     sc                    r0         r3      r0       [1]
     riscv       scall                 a7         a0      -
     s390        svc 0                 r1         r2      -        [3]
     s390x       svc 0                 r1         r2      -        [3]
     superh      trap #0x17            r3         r0      -        [4]
     sparc/32    t 0x10                g1         o0      psr/csr  [1]
     sparc/64    t 0x6d                g1         o0      psr/csr  [1]
     tile        swint1                R10        R00     R01      [1]
     x86-64      syscall               rax        rax     -        [5]
     x32         syscall               rax        rax     -        [5]
     xtensa      syscall               a2         a2      -
     Notes:
         [1] On a few architectures, a register is  used  as  a  boolean  (0
             indicating no error, and -1 indicating an error) to signal that
             the system call failed.  The actual error value is  still  con-
             tained  in  the return register.  On sparc, the carry bit (csr)
             in the processor status register (psr) is  used  instead  of  a
             full register.
         [2] NR is the system call number.
         [3] For  s390  and s390x, NR (the system call number) may be passed
             directly with svc NR if it is less than 256.
         [4] On SuperH, the trap number controls the maximum number of argu-
             ments  passed.   A  trap #0x10 can be used with only 0-argument
             system calls, a trap #0x11 can be used with  0-  or  1-argument
             system  calls, and so on up to trap #0x17 for 7-argument system
             calls.
         [5] The x32 ABI uses the same instruction as the x86-64 ABI and  is
             used  on  the  same processors.  To differentiate between them,
             the bit mask __X32_SYSCALL_BIT is bitwise-ORed into the  system
             call  number  for  system calls under the x32 ABI.  Both system
             call tables are available though, so setting the bit is  not  a
             hard requirement.
     The second table shows the registers used to pass the system call argu-
     ments.
     arch/ABI      arg1  arg2  arg3  arg4  arg5  arg6  arg7  Notes
     --------------------------------------------------------------
     alpha         a0    a1    a2    a3    a4    a5    -
     arc           r0    r1    r2    r3    r4    r5    -
     arm/OABI      a1    a2    a3    a4    v1    v2    v3
     arm/EABI      r0    r1    r2    r3    r4    r5    r6
     arm64         x0    x1    x2    x3    x4    x5    -
     blackfin      R0    R1    R2    R3    R4    R5    -
     i386          ebx   ecx   edx   esi   edi   ebp   -
     ia64          out0  out1  out2  out3  out4  out5  -
     m68k          d1    d2    d3    d4    d5    a0    -
     microblaze    r5    r6    r7    r8    r9    r10   -
     mips/o32      a0    a1    a2    a3    -     -     -     [1]
     mips/n32,64   a0    a1    a2    a3    a4    a5    -
     nios2         r4    r5    r6    r7    r8    r9    -
     parisc        r26   r25   r24   r23   r22   r21   -
     powerpc       r3    r4    r5    r6    r7    r8    r9
     riscv         a0    a1    a2    a3    a4    a5    -
     s390          r2    r3    r4    r5    r6    r7    -
     s390x         r2    r3    r4    r5    r6    r7    -
     superh        r4    r5    r6    r7    r0    r1    r2
     sparc/32      o0    o1    o2    o3    o4    o5    -
     sparc/64      o0    o1    o2    o3    o4    o5    -
     tile          R00   R01   R02   R03   R04   R05   -
     x86-64        rdi   rsi   rdx   r10   r8    r9    -
     x32           rdi   rsi   rdx   r10   r8    r9    -
     xtensa        a6    a3    a4    a5    a8    a9    -
     Notes:
         [1] The mips/o32 system call convention passes arguments 5  through
             8 on the user stack.
     Note  that these tables don't cover the entire calling convention--some
     architectures may indiscriminately clobber other registers  not  listed
     here.

EXAMPLE

     #define   _GNU_SOURCE   #include  <unistd.h>  #include  <sys/syscall.h>
     #include <sys/types.h> #include <signal.h>
     int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
         pid_t tid;
         tid = syscall(SYS_gettid);
         syscall(SYS_tgkill, getpid(), tid, SIGHUP); }

SEE ALSO

     _syscall(2), intro(2), syscalls(2), errno(3), vdso(7)

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 2018-04-30 SYSCALL(2)

/home/gen.uk/domains/wiki.gen.uk/public_html/data/pages/man/syscall.txt · Last modified: 2019/05/17 09:47 by 127.0.0.1

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