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KVM_OPEN(3)	       FreeBSD Library Functions Manual		   KVM_OPEN(3)

NAME
     kvm_open, kvm_open2, kvm_openfiles, kvm_close -- initialize kernel	vir-
     tual memory access

LIBRARY
     Kernel Data Access	Library	(libkvm, -lkvm)

SYNOPSIS
     #include <fcntl.h>
     #include <kvm.h>

     kvm_t *
     kvm_open(const char *execfile, const char *corefile,
	 const char *swapfile, int flags, const	char *errstr);

     kvm_t *
     kvm_open2(const char *execfile, const char	*corefile, int flags,
	 char *errbuf, int (*resolver)(const char *name, kvaddr_t *addr));

     kvm_t *
     kvm_openfiles(const char *execfile, const char *corefile,
	 const char *swapfile, int flags, char *errbuf);

     int
     kvm_close(kvm_t *kd);

DESCRIPTION
     The functions kvm_open(), kvm_open2(), and	kvm_openfiles()	return a
     descriptor	used to	access kernel virtual memory via the kvm(3) library
     routines.	Both active kernels and	crash dumps are	accessible through
     this interface.

     The execfile argument is the executable image of the kernel being exam-
     ined.  This file must contain a symbol table.  If this argument is	NULL,
     the currently running system is assumed, as determined from
     getbootfile(3).

     The corefile argument is the kernel memory	device file.  It can be	either
     /dev/mem or a crash dump core generated by	savecore(8).  If corefile is
     NULL, the default indicated by _PATH_MEM from <paths.h> is	used.  It can
     also be set to a special value /dev/null by utilities like	ps(1) that do
     not directly access kernel	memory.

     The swapfile argument is currently	unused.

     The flags argument	indicates read/write access as in open(2) and applies
     only to the core file.  Only O_RDONLY, O_WRONLY, and O_RDWR are permit-
     ted.

     The kvm library provides two different error reporting mechanisms.	 One
     provides backward compatibility with the SunOS kvm	library, while the
     other provides an improved	error reporting	framework.  The	mechanism used
     by	a descriptor is	determined by the function used	to open	the descrip-
     tor.

     The kvm_open() function is	the Sun	kvm compatible open call.  Here, the
     errstr argument indicates how errors should be handled.  If it is NULL,
     no	errors are reported and	the application	cannot know the	specific
     nature of the failed kvm call.  If	it is not NULL,	errors are printed to
     stderr with errstr	prepended to the message, as in	perror(3).  Normally,
     the name of the program is	used here.  The	string is assumed to persist
     at	least until the	corresponding kvm_close() call.

     The kvm_open2() and kvm_openfiles() functions provide BSD style error
     reporting.	 Here, error messages are not printed out by the library.
     Instead, the application obtains the error	message	corresponding to the
     most recent kvm library call using	kvm_geterr() (see kvm_geterr(3)).  The
     results are undefined if the most recent kvm call did not produce an
     error.  Since kvm_geterr()	requires a kvm descriptor, but the open	rou-
     tines return NULL on failure, kvm_geterr()	cannot be used to get the
     error message if open fails.  Thus, kvm_open2() and kvm_openfiles() will
     place any error message in	the errbuf argument.  This buffer should be
     _POSIX2_LINE_MAX characters large (from <limits.h>).

     The resolver argument points to a function	used by	the kvm	library	to map
     symbol names to kernel virtual addresses.	When the resolver function is
     called, name specifies the	requested symbol name.	If the function	is
     able to resolve the name to an address, the address should	be set in
     *addr and the function should return zero.	 If the	function is not	able
     to	resolve	the name to an address,	it should return a non-zero value.
     When opening a native kernel image, resolver may be set to	NULL to	use an
     internal function to resolve symbol names.	 Non-native kernel images
     (such as when cross-debugging a crash dump) require a valid resolver.

RETURN VALUES
     The kvm_open(), kvm_open2(), and kvm_openfiles() functions	return a
     descriptor	to be used in all subsequent kvm library calls.	 The library
     is	fully re-entrant.  On failure, NULL is returned, in which case
     kvm_open2() and kvm_openfiles() write the error message into errbuf.

     The kvm_close() function returns 0	on success and -1 on failure.

SEE ALSO
     open(2), kvm(3), kvm_getargv(3), kvm_getenvv(3), kvm_geterr(3),
     kvm_getprocs(3), kvm_native(3), kvm_nlist(3), kvm_read(3),	kvm_write(3),
     kmem(4), mem(4)

BUGS
     There should not be three open calls.  The	ill-defined error semantics of
     the Sun library and the desire to have a backward-compatible library for
     BSD left little choice.

FreeBSD	11.1		       November	27, 2015		  FreeBSD 11.1

NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUES | SEE ALSO | BUGS

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