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author | Roland McGrath <roland@gnu.org> | 1995-02-18 01:27:10 +0000 |
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committer | Roland McGrath <roland@gnu.org> | 1995-02-18 01:27:10 +0000 |
commit | 28f540f45bbacd939bfd07f213bcad2bf730b1bf (patch) | |
tree | 15f07c4c43d635959c6afee96bde71fb1b3614ee /hurd/hurd.h | |
download | glibc-28f540f45bbacd939bfd07f213bcad2bf730b1bf.tar.gz glibc-28f540f45bbacd939bfd07f213bcad2bf730b1bf.tar.xz glibc-28f540f45bbacd939bfd07f213bcad2bf730b1bf.zip |
initial import
Diffstat (limited to 'hurd/hurd.h')
-rw-r--r-- | hurd/hurd.h | 292 |
1 files changed, 292 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/hurd/hurd.h b/hurd/hurd.h new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..472fb9173b --- /dev/null +++ b/hurd/hurd.h @@ -0,0 +1,292 @@ +/* Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +This file is part of the GNU C Library. + +The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or +modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as +published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the +License, or (at your option) any later version. + +The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU +Library General Public License for more details. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public +License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If +not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, +Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ + +#ifndef _HURD_H + +#define _HURD_H 1 +#include <features.h> + + +/* Get types, macros, constants and function declarations + for all Mach microkernel interaction. */ +#include <mach.h> +#include <mach/mig_errors.h> + +/* Get types and constants necessary for Hurd interfaces. */ +#include <hurd/hurd_types.h> + +/* Get MiG stub declarations for commonly used Hurd interfaces. */ +#include <hurd/auth.h> +#include <hurd/process.h> +#include <hurd/fs.h> +#include <hurd/io.h> + +/* Get `struct hurd_port' and related definitions implementing lightweight + user references for ports. These are used pervasively throughout the C + library; this is here to avoid putting it in nearly every source file. */ +#include <hurd/port.h> + +#include <errno.h> +#define __hurd_fail(err) (errno = (err), -1) + +/* Basic ports and info, initialized by startup. */ + +extern int _hurd_exec_flags; /* Flags word passed in exec_startup. */ +extern struct hurd_port *_hurd_ports; +extern unsigned int _hurd_nports; +extern volatile mode_t _hurd_umask; + +/* Shorthand macro for referencing _hurd_ports (see <hurd/port.h>). */ + +#define __USEPORT(which, expr) \ + HURD_PORT_USE (&_hurd_ports[INIT_PORT_##which], (expr)) + + +/* Base address and size of the initial stack set up by the exec server. + If using cthreads, this stack is deallocated in startup. + Not locked. */ + +extern vm_address_t _hurd_stack_base; +extern vm_size_t _hurd_stack_size; + +/* Initial file descriptor table we were passed at startup. If we are + using a real dtable, these are turned into that and then cleared at + startup. If not, these are never changed after startup. Not locked. */ + +extern mach_port_t *_hurd_init_dtable; +extern mach_msg_type_number_t _hurd_init_dtablesize; + +/* Current process IDs. */ + +extern pid_t _hurd_pid, _hurd_ppid, _hurd_pgrp; +extern int _hurd_orphaned; + +/* This variable is incremented every time the process IDs change. */ + +unsigned int _hurd_pids_changed_stamp; + +/* This condition is broadcast every time the process IDs change. */ +struct condition _hurd_pids_changed_sync; + +/* Unix `data break', for brk and sbrk. + If brk and sbrk are not used, this info will not be initialized or used. */ + + +/* Data break. This is what `sbrk (0)' returns. */ + +extern vm_address_t _hurd_brk; + +/* End of allocated space. This is generally `round_page (_hurd_brk)'. */ + +extern vm_address_t _hurd_data_end; + +/* This mutex locks _hurd_brk and _hurd_data_end. */ + +extern struct mutex _hurd_brk_lock; + +/* Set the data break to NEWBRK; _hurd_brk_lock must + be held, and is released on return. */ + +extern int _hurd_set_brk (vm_address_t newbrk); + +#define __need_FILE +#include <stdio.h> + +/* Calls to get and set basic ports. */ + +extern error_t _hurd_ports_get (int which, mach_port_t *result); +extern error_t _hurd_ports_set (int which, mach_port_t newport); + +extern process_t getproc (void); +extern file_t getcwdir (void), getcrdir (void); +extern auth_t getauth (void); +extern mach_port_t getcttyid (); +extern int setproc (process_t); +extern int setcwdir (file_t), setcrdir (file_t); +extern int setcttyid (mach_port_t); + +/* Does reauth with the proc server and fd io servers. */ +extern int __setauth (auth_t), setauth (auth_t); + + +/* Split FILE into a directory and a name within the directory. Look up a + port for the directory and store it in *DIR; store in *NAME a pointer + into FILE where the name within directory begins. The directory lookup + uses CRDIR for the root directory and CWDIR for the current directory. + Returns zero on success or an error code. */ + +extern error_t __hurd_file_name_split (file_t crdir, file_t cwdir, + const char *file, + file_t *dir, char **name); +extern error_t hurd_file_name_split (file_t crdir, file_t cwdir, + const char *file, + file_t *dir, char **name); + +/* Open a port to FILE with the given FLAGS and MODE (see <fcntl.h>). + The file lookup uses CRDIR for the root directory and CWDIR for the + current directory. If successful, returns zero and store the port + to FILE in *PORT; otherwise returns an error code. */ + +extern error_t __hurd_file_name_lookup (file_t crdir, file_t cwdir, + const char *file, + int flags, mode_t mode, + file_t *port); +extern error_t hurd_file_name_lookup (file_t crdir, file_t cwdir, + const char *filename, + int flags, mode_t mode, + file_t *port); + +/* Process the values returned by `dir_lookup' et al, and loop doing + `dir_lookup' calls until one returns FS_RETRY_NONE. CRDIR is the + root directory used for things like symlinks to absolute file names; the + other arguments should be those just passed to and/or returned from + `dir_lookup', `fsys_getroot', or `file_invoke_translator'. This + function consumes the reference in *RESULT even if it returns an error. */ + +extern error_t __hurd_file_name_lookup_retry (file_t crdir, + enum retry_type doretry, + char retryname[1024], + int flags, mode_t mode, + file_t *result); +extern error_t hurd_file_name_lookup_retry (file_t crdir, + enum retry_type doretry, + char retryname[1024], + int flags, mode_t mode, + file_t *result); + + +/* Split FILE into a directory and a name within the directory. The + directory lookup uses the current root and working directory. If + successful, stores in *NAME a pointer into FILE where the name + within directory begins and returns a port to the directory; + otherwise sets `errno' and returns MACH_PORT_NULL. */ + +extern file_t __file_name_split (const char *file, char **name); +extern file_t file_name_split (const char *file, char **name); + +/* Open a port to FILE with the given FLAGS and MODE (see <fcntl.h>). + The file lookup uses the current root and working directory. + Returns a port to the file if successful; otherwise sets `errno' + and returns MACH_PORT_NULL. */ + +extern file_t __file_name_lookup (const char *file, int flags, mode_t mode); +extern file_t file_name_lookup (const char *file, int flags, mode_t mode); + +/* Invoke any translator set on the node FILE represents, and return in + *TRANSLATED a port to the translated node. FLAGS are as for + `dir_lookup' et al, but the returned port will not necessarily have + any more access rights than FILE does. */ + +extern error_t __hurd_invoke_translator (file_t file, int flags, + file_t *translated); +extern error_t hurd_invoke_translator (file_t file, int flags, + file_t *translated); + + +/* Open a file descriptor on a port. FLAGS are as for `open'; flags + affected by io_set_openmodes are not changed by this. If successful, + this consumes a user reference for PORT (which will be deallocated on + close). */ + +extern int openport (io_t port, int flags); + +/* Open a stream on a port. MODE is as for `fopen'. + If successful, this consumes a user reference for PORT + (which will be deallocated on fclose). */ + +extern FILE *fopenport (io_t port, const char *mode); +extern FILE *__fopenport (io_t port, const char *mode); + + +/* Execute a file, replacing TASK's current program image. */ + +extern error_t _hurd_exec (task_t task, + file_t file, + char *const argv[], + char *const envp[]); + + +/* Inform the proc server we have exitted with STATUS, and kill the + task thoroughly. This function never returns, no matter what. */ + +extern void _hurd_exit (int status) __attribute__ ((noreturn)); + + +/* Initialize the library data structures from the + ints and ports passed to us by the exec server. + Then vm_deallocate PORTARRAY and INTARRAY. */ + +extern void _hurd_init (int flags, char **argv, + mach_port_t *portarray, size_t portarraysize, + int *intarray, size_t intarraysize); + +/* Do startup handshaking with the proc server. */ + +extern void _hurd_proc_init (char **argv); + + +/* Return the socket server for sockaddr domain DOMAIN. If DEAD is + nonzero, remove the old cached port and always do a fresh lookup. + + It is assumed that a socket server will stay alive during a complex socket + operation involving several RPCs. But a socket server may die during + long idle periods between socket operations. Callers should first pass + zero for DEAD; if the first socket RPC tried on the returned port fails + with MACH_SEND_INVALID_DEST or MIG_SERVER_DIED (indicating the server + went away), the caller should call _hurd_socket_server again with DEAD + nonzero and retry the RPC on the new socket server port. */ + +extern socket_t _hurd_socket_server (int domain, int dead); + +/* Send a `sig_post' RPC to process number PID. If PID is zero, + send the message to all processes in the current process's process group. + If PID is < -1, send SIG to all processes in process group - PID. + SIG and REFPORT are passed along in the request message. */ + +extern error_t _hurd_sig_post (pid_t pid, int sig, mach_port_t refport); +extern error_t hurd_sig_post (pid_t pid, int sig, mach_port_t refport); + +/* Fetch the host privileged port and device master port from the proc + server. They are fetched only once and then cached in the + variables below. A special program that gets them from somewhere + other than the proc server (such as a bootstrap filesystem) can set + these variables to install the ports. */ + +extern kern_return_t get_privileged_ports (host_priv_t *host_priv_ptr, + device_t *device_master_ptr); +extern mach_port_t _hurd_host_priv, _hurd_device_master; + +/* Return the PID of the task whose control port is TASK. + On error, sets `errno' and returns -1. */ + +extern pid_t __task2pid (task_t task), task2pid (task_t task); + +/* Return the task control port of process PID. + On error, sets `errno' and returns MACH_PORT_NULL. */ + +extern task_t __pid2task (pid_t pid), pid2task (pid_t pid); + + +/* Return the io server port for file descriptor FD. + This adds a Mach user reference to the returned port. + On error, sets `errno' and returns MACH_PORT_NULL. */ + +extern io_t __getdport (int fd), getdport (int fd); + + +#endif /* hurd.h */ |