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NAME
| | outb, outw, outl, repoutsb, repoutsw, repoutsd - write to an I/O port |
SYNOPSIS
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#include <sys/ddi.h>
#include <sys/sunddi.h> void outb(int port, unsigned char
value); |
| | void outw(int port, unsigned short
value); |
| | void outl(int port, unsigned long
value); |
| | void repoutsb(int port, unsigned char *addr, int
count); |
| | void repoutsw(int port, unsigned short *addr, int
count); |
| | void repoutsd(int port, unsigned long *addr, int
count); |
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The functions described here are obsolete. For the outb(), outw(), and outl() functions use, respectively, ddi_put8(9F), ddi_put16(9F), and ddi_put32(9F) instead. For repoutsb(), repoutsw(), andrepoutsl(), use, respectively, ddi_rep_put8(9F), ddi_rep_put16(9F), and ddi_rep_put32(9F) instead.
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port
- A valid I/O port address.
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value
- The data to be written to the I/O port.
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addr
- The address of a buffer from which the values will be fetched.
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count
- The number of values to be written to the I/O port.
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These routines write data of various sizes to the I/O port with the address specified by port.
The outb(), outw(), and outl() functions write 8 bits, 16 bits, and 32 bits of data respectively, writing the data specified by value.
The repoutsb(), repoutsw(), and repoutsd() functions write multiple 8-bit, 16-bit, and 32-bit values, respectively. count specifies the number of values to be written. addr is a pointer to a buffer
from which the output values are fetched.
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These functions may be called from user or interrupt context.
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See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
| Architecture | x86 |
| Stability Level | Obsolete |
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Company Info
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Contact
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Copyright 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Use is subject to license terms.
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