ioctl
Helpers for binding ioctl
s in Rust. Currently supports Linux on all architectures
except SPARC and Alpha. Other platforms welcome!
This library is pretty low-level and messy. ioctl
is not fun.
ioctl
?The ioctl
function is the grab-bag system call on POSIX systems. Don't want
to add a new syscall? Make it an ioctl
! ioctl
refers to both the syscall,
and the commands that can be send with it. ioctl
stands for "IO control",
and the commands are always sent to a file descriptor.
This library provides the ioctl!
macro, for binding ioctl
s. It also tries
to bind every ioctl
supported by the system with the said macro, but there
many ioctl
s require some amount of manual work to support (usually by
providing struct
s or other types) that this library does not support yet.
Additionally, in etc
, there are scripts for scraping system headers for
ioctl
definitions, and generating calls to ioctl!
corresponding to them.
Look at your system's headers. For example, /usr/include/linxu/input.h
has a
lot of lines defining macros which use _IOR
, _IOW
, _IOC
, and _IORW
.
These macros correspond to the ior!
, iow!
, ioc!
, and iorw!
macros
defined in this crate. Additionally, there is the ioctl!
macro for
creating a wrapper around ioctl
that is somewhat more type-safe.
Most ioctl
s have no or little documentation. You'll need to scrounge through
the source to figure out what they do and how they should be used.
```rust
extern crate ioctl;
ioctl!(bad kiocsound with 0x4B2F); ioctl!(none drmioctlsetmaster with b'd', 0x1e); ioctl!(read evgetversion with b'E', 0x01; u32); ioctl!(write evset_repeat with b'E', 0x03; [u32; 2]);
fn main() { let mut x = 0; let ret = unsafe { evgetversion(0, &mut x) }; println!("returned {}, x = {}", ret, x); } ```