Linux Audio

Check our new training course

Embedded Linux Audio

Check our new training course
with Creative Commons CC-BY-SA
lecture materials

Bootlin logo

Elixir Cross Referencer

Loading...
Ioctl Numbers
10 Apr 1997
Michael Chastain
<mec@shout.net>

If you are adding new ioctl's to the kernel, you should use the _IO
macros defined in <linux/ioctl.h>:

    _IO    an ioctl with no parameters
    _IOW   an ioctl with write parameters (from user's point of view)
    _IOR   an ioctl with read parameters (from user's point of view)
    _IOWR  an ioctl with both write and read parameters.

'Write' and 'read' are from the user's point of view.  This is like the
system calls 'write' and 'read'.  For example, a SET_FOO ioctl would be
_IOW, although the kernel would actually read data from user space; a
GET_FOO ioctl would be _IOR, although the kernel would actually write
data to user space.

The first argument to _IO, _IOW, _IOR, or _IOWR is an identifying letter
or number from the table below.  If you are writing a driver for a new
device and need a letter, pick an unused letter.  You can register the
letter by patching this file and submitting the patch to Linus Torvalds.
Or you can e-mail me at <mec@shout.net> and I'll register one for you.

The second argument to _IO, _IOW, _IOR, or _IOWR is a sequence number
to distinguish ioctls from each other.  The third argument is the size
of the structure going into the kernel or coming out of the kernel.

Some devices use their major number as the identifier; this is not
recommended.  Some devices are even more irregular and don't follow
the convention at all.

Following the convention is good because:

(1) Keeping the ioctl's globally unique helps error checking:
    if a program calls an ioctl on the wrong device, it will get an
    error rather than some unexpected behaviour.

(2) The 'strace' build procedure automatically finds ioctl numbers
    defined with _IO, _IOW, _IOR, or _IOWR.

(3) 'strace' can decode numbers back into useful names when the
    numbers are unique.

(4) People looking for ioctls can grep for them more easily when
    the convention is used to define the ioctl numbers.

(5) When following the convention, the driver code can use generic
    code to call verify_area to validate parameters.

This table lists ioctls visible from user land for Linux/i386.  It is
current to Linux 2.1.15.

Code	Seq#	Include File		Comments
========================================================
0x00	01-02	linux/fs.h		conflict!
0x00	01-04	scsi/scsi_ioctl.h	conflict!
0x02	all	linux/fd.h
0x03	all	linux/hdreg.h
0x04	all	linux/umsdos_fs.h
0x06	all	linux/lp.h
0x09	all	linux/md.h
0x12	all	linux/fs.h
0x20	all	linux/cm206.h
0x22	all	scsi/sg.h
'A'	all	linux/apm_bios.h
'C'	all	linux/soundcard.h
'F'	all	linux/fb.h
'I'	all	linux/isdn.h
'K'	all	linux/kd.h
'L'	all	linux/loop.h
'M'	all	linux/soundcard.h
'P'	all	linux/soundcard.h
'Q'	all	linux/soundcard.h
'R'	all	linux/random.h
'S'	00-1F	linux/cdrom.h
'S'	20-7F	linux/ucdrom.h
'S'	80-81	scsi/scsi_ioctl.h
'S'	82-FF	scsi/scsi.h
'T'	all	linux/soundcard.h	conflict!
'T'	all	asm-i386/ioctls.h	conflict!
'V'	all	linux/vt.h
'W'	00-1F	linux/router.h		conflict [Please reallocate]
'W'	00-1F	linux/watchdog.h
'W'	20-27	linux/octal-relay.h	in development
'W'	28-2F	linux/iso16-relay.h	in development
'Y'	all	linux/cyclades.h
'a'	all	various, see http://lrcwww.epfl.ch/linux-atm/magic.html
'b'	00-3F	bit3 vme host bridge	in development:
					<mailto:natalia@nikhefk.nikhef.nl>
'c'	all	linux/comstats.h
'f'	all	linux/ext2_fs.h
'k'	all	asm-sparc/kbio.h, asm-sparc64/kbio.h
'l'	00-3F	linux/tcfs_fs.h		in development:
					<http://mikonos.dia.unisa.it/tcfs>
'm'	all	linux/mtio.h		conflict!
'm'	all	linux/soundcard.h	conflict!
'n'	all	linux/ncp_fs.h
'p'	00-3F	linux/mc146818rtc.h
'p'	40-7F	linux/nvram.h
'r'	all	linux/msdos_fs.h
's'	all	linux/cdk.h
't'	00-7F	linux/if_ppp.h
't'	80-8F	linux/isdn_ppp.h
'u'	all	linux/smb_fs.h
'v'	all	linux/ext2_fs.h
'w'	all	CERN SCI driver		in development
0x89	00-0F	asm-i386/sockios.h
0x89	10-DF	linux/sockios.h
0x89	E0-EF	linux/sockios.h		SIOCPROTOPRIVATE range
0x89	F0-FF	linux/sockios.h		SIOCDEVPRIVATE range
0x8B	all	linux/wireless.h
0x8C	00-3F	WiNRADiO driver		in development:
					<http://www.proximity.com.au/~brian/winradio/>
0x90	00	linux/sbpcd.h
0x93	60-7F	linux/auto_fs.h
0x99	00-0F	537-Addinboard driver	in development:
					<mailto:b.kohl@ipn-b.comlink.apc.org>
0xA0	all	Small Device Project	in development:
					<mailto:khollis@northwest.com>