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SHM_MAP(9) FreeBSD Kernel Developer's Manual SHM_MAP(9)
NAME
shm_map, shm_unmap - map shared memory objects into the kernel's address
space
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
int
shm_map(struct file *fp, size_t size, off_t offset, void **memp);
int
shm_unmap(struct file *fp, void *mem, size_t size);
DESCRIPTION
The shm_map() and shm_unmap() functions provide an API for mapping shared
memory objects into the kernel. Shared memory objects are created by
shm_open(2). These objects can then be passed into the kernel via file
descriptors.
A shared memory object cannot be shrunk while it is mapped into the
kernel. This is to avoid invalidating any pages that may be wired into
the kernel's address space. Shared memory objects can still be grown
while mapped into the kernel.
To simplify the accounting needed to enforce the above requirement,
callers of this API are required to unmap the entire region mapped by
shm_map() when calling shm_unmap(). Unmapping only a portion of the
region is not permitted.
The shm_map() function locates the shared memory object associated with
the open file fp. It maps the region of that object described by offset
and size into the kernel's address space. If it succeeds, *memp will be
set to the start of the mapping. All pages for the range will be wired
into memory upon successful return.
The shm_unmap() function unmaps a region previously mapped by shm_map().
The mem argument should match the value previously returned in *memp, and
the size argument should match the value passed to shm_map().
Note that shm_map() will not hold an extra reference on the open file fp
for the lifetime of the mapping. Instead, the calling code is required
to do this if it wishes to use shm_unmap() on the region in the future.
RETURN VALUES
The shm_map() and shm_unmap() functions return zero on success or an
error on failure.
EXAMPLES
The following function accepts a file descriptor for a shared memory
object. It maps the first sixteen kilobytes of the object into the
kernel, performs some work on that address, and then unmaps the address
before returning.
int
shm_example(int fd)
{
error = shm_map(fp, 16384, 0, &mem);
if (error) {
fdrop(fp, curthread);
return (error);
}
/* Do something with 'mem'. */
error = shm_unmap(fp, mem, 16384);
fdrop(fp, curthread);
return (error);
}
ERRORS
The shm_map() function returns the following errors on failure:
[EINVAL] The open file fp is not a shared memory object.
[EINVAL] The requested region described by offset and size
extends beyond the end of the shared memory object.
[ENOMEM] Insufficient address space was available.
[EACCES] The shared memory object could not be mapped due to a
protection error.
[EINVAL] The shared memory object could not be mapped due to
some other VM error.
The shm_unmap() function returns the following errors on failure:
[EINVAL] The open file fp is not a shared memory object.
[EINVAL] The address range described by mem and size is not a
valid address range.
[EINVAL] The address range described by mem and size is not
backed by the shared memory object associated with the
open file fp, or the address range does not cover the
entire mapping of the object.
SEE ALSO
shm_open(2)
HISTORY
This API was first introduced in FreeBSD 10.0.
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 December 14, 2011 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11