1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677 |
- .TH SYSCALL 1
- .SH NAME
- syscall \- test a system call
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B syscall
- [
- .B -osx
- ]
- .I entry
- [
- .I arg ...
- ]
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .I Syscall
- invokes the system call
- .I entry
- with the given arguments.
- (Some functions, such as
- .I write
- and
- .IR read (2),
- although not strictly system calls, are valid
- .IR entries .)
- It prints the return value and the error string, if there was an error.
- An argument is either an integer constant as in C (its value is passed),
- a string (its address is passed),
- or the literal
- .B buf
- (a pointer to a 1MB buffer is passed).
- .PP
- If
- .B -o
- is given, the contents of the 1MB buffer are printed as a zero-terminated string
- after the system call is done.
- The
- .B -x
- and
- .B -s
- options are similar, but
- .B -x
- formats the data as hexadecimal bytes, while
- .B -s
- interprets the data as a
- .IR stat (5)
- message and formats it similar to the style of
- .B ls
- .B -lqm
- (see
- .IR ls (1)),
- with extra detail about the modify and access times.
- .SH EXAMPLES
- Write a string to standard output:
- .IP
- .EX
- syscall write 1 hello 5
- .EE
- .PP
- Print information about the file connected to standard input:
- .IP
- .EX
- syscall -s fstat 0 buf 1024
- .EE
- .SH SOURCE
- .B /sys/src/cmd/syscall
- .SH "SEE ALSO"
- Section 2 of this manual.
- .SH DIAGNOSTICS
- If
- .I entry
- is not known to
- .IR syscall ,
- the exit status is
- .LR unknown .
- If the system call succeeds, the exit status is null;
- otherwise the exit status is the string that
- .IR errstr (2)
- returns.
|