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man pages section 9: DDI and DKI Kernel Functions

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Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2022
 
 

ddi_peek32(9F)

Name

ddi_peek, ddi_peek8, ddi_peek16, ddi_peek32, ddi_peek64, ddi_peekc, ddi_peeks, ddi_peekl, ddi_peekd - read a value from a location

Synopsis

#include <sys/ddi.h>
#include <sys/sunddi.h>

int ddi_peek8(dev_info_t *dip, int8_t *addr, int8_t *valuep);
int ddi_peek16(dev_info_t *dip, int16_t *addr, int16_t *valuep);
int ddi_peek32(dev_info_t *dip, int32_t *addr, int32_t *valuep);
int ddi_peek64(dev_info_t *dip, int64_t *addr, int64_t *valuep);

Interface Level

Solaris DDI specific (Solaris DDI). The ddi_peekc(), ddi_peeks(), ddi_peekl(), and ddi_peekd() functions are obsolete. Use, respectively, ddi_peek8(), ddi_peek16(), ddi_peek32 (), and ddi_peek64(), instead.

Parameters

dip

A pointer to the device's dev_info structure.

addr

Virtual address of the location to be examined.

valuep

Pointer to a location to hold the result. If a null pointer is specified, then the value read from the location will simply be discarded.

Description

These routines cautiously attempt to read a value from a specified virtual address, and return the value to the caller, using the parent nexus driver to assist in the process where necessary.

If the address is not valid, or the value cannot be read without an error occurring, an error code is returned.

The routines are most useful when first trying to establish the presence of a device on the system in a driver's probe(9E) or attach(9E) routines.

Return Values

DDI_SUCCESS

The value at the given virtual address was successfully read, and if valuep is non-null, *valuep will have been updated.

DDI_FAILURE

An error occurred while trying to read the location. *valuep is unchanged.

Context

These functions can be called from user, interrupt, or kernel context.

Examples

Example 1 Checking to see that the status register of a device is mapped into the kernel address space:

if (ddi_peek8(dip, csr, (int8_t *)0) != DDI_SUCCESS) {
        cmn_err(CE_WARN, "Status register not mapped");
        return (DDI_FAILURE);
}
Example 2 Reading and logging the device type of a particular device:

int
xx_attach(dev_info_t *dip, ddi_attach_cmd_t cmd)
{
       …
      /* map device registers */
       …

      if (ddi_peek32(dip, id_addr, &id_value) != DDI_SUCCESS) {
              cmn_err(CE_WARN, "%s%d: cannot read device identifier",
                ddi_get_name(dip), ddi_get_instance(dip));
              goto failure;
      } else
              cmn_err(CE_CONT, "!%s%d: device type 0x%x\n",
                ddi_get_name(dip), ddi_get_instance(dip), id_value);
	      …
	      …

      ddi_report_dev(dip);
      return (DDI_SUCCESS);

failure:
      /* free any resources allocated */
      …
      return (DDI_FAILURE);
}

See Also

attach(9E), probe(9E), ddi_poke(9F)

Writing Device Drivers in Oracle Solaris 11.4

Notes

The functions described in this manual page previously used symbolic names which specified their data access size; the function names have been changed so they now specify a fixed-width data size. See the following table for the new name equivalents:

Previous Name
New Name
ddi_peekc
ddi_peek8
ddi_peeks
ddi_peek16
ddi_peekl
ddi_peek32
ddi_peekd
ddi_peek64