Please personally CC me with responses on this posting:
I would like to use the "query_module" system call with the QM_SYMBOLS flag
in an application, but I am not sure of what the appropriate way of doing it
is, and whether it is safe.
I have the man-page for query_module on the system on which I am compiling,
but I can't find the function prototype in <linux/module.h>. So, I just
wrote the prototype in my code. Is this the way this should be done?
Other than that, the man page states that struct module_symbol looks like
this:
struct module_symbol
{
unsigned long value;
unsigned long name;
};
But in module.h it is defined as:
struct module_symbol
{
unsigned long value;
const char *name;
};
>From my understanding, the second definition is the way the kernel uses this
struct, and the first definition is the way the user should interpret the
result of query_module with the QM_SYMBOLS flag. Am I right? (Shouldn't
there be 2 different structures for this?)
Most importantly, I would like to understand whether it is safe to use this
system call. If I compile my application on a machine in which this function
is implemented (in libc), is the system call guaranteed to work on kernels
2.2 and up? Do I need to do a preliminary check such as "if
(query_module(NULL, 0, NULL, 0, NULL))" for the existence of the system
call, or would it simply fail if I use it regularly?
Thanks for your help,
Zvi.
---------------
Zvi Vlodavsky
Software Engineer
Network Communications Group, Intel Corp.
Zvi.Vlodavsky@intel.com
Disclaimer: In this e-mail, I do not speak on behalf of Intel corp.
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Feb 07 2002 - 21:00:32 EST