pciconfig_read, pciconfig_write, pciconfig_iobase - pci device
information handling
#include <pci.h>
int pciconfig_read(unsigned long bus, unsigned long dfn,
unsigned long off, unsigned long len, void *buf);
int pciconfig_write(unsigned long bus, unsigned long dfn,
unsigned long off, unsigned long len, void *buf);
int pciconfig_iobase(long which, unsigned long bus,
unsigned long devfn);
Most of the interaction with PCI devices is already handled by the
kernel PCI layer, and thus these calls should not normally need to be
accessed from user space.
- pciconfig_read()
- Reads to buf from device dev at offset off
value.
- pciconfig_write()
- Writes from buf to device dev at offset off
value.
- pciconfig_iobase()
- You pass it a bus/devfn pair and get a physical address for either the
memory offset (for things like prep, this is 0xc0000000), the IO base for
PIO cycles, or the ISA holes if any.
- pciconfig_read()
- On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned and errno is
set appropriately.
- pciconfig_write()
- On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned and errno is
set appropriately.
- pciconfig_iobase()
- Returns information on locations of various I/O regions in physical memory
according to the which value. Values for which are:
IOBASE_BRIDGE_NUMBER, IOBASE_MEMORY, IOBASE_IO,
IOBASE_ISA_IO, IOBASE_ISA_MEM.
- EINVAL
- len value is invalid. This does not apply to
pciconfig_iobase().
- EIO
- I/O error.
- ENODEV
- For pciconfig_iobase(), "hose" value is NULL. For the
other calls, could not find a slot.
- ENOSYS
- The system has not implemented these calls (CONFIG_PCI not
defined).
- EOPNOTSUPP
- This return value is valid only for pciconfig_iobase(). It is
returned if the value for which is invalid.
- EPERM
- User does not have the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability. This does not
apply to pciconfig_iobase().
These calls are Linux-specific, available since Linux
2.0.26/2.1.11.
This page is part of release 5.10 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/.