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KVM(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual KVM(3)
NAME
kvm - kernel memory interface
LIBRARY
Kernel Data Access Library (libkvm, -lkvm)
DESCRIPTION
The kvm library provides a uniform interface for accessing kernel virtual
memory images, including live systems and crash dumps. Access to live
systems is via sysctl(3) for some functions, and mem(4) and kmem(4) for
other functions, while crash dumps can be examined via the core file
generated by savecore(8). The interface behaves similarly in both cases.
Memory can be read and written, kernel symbol addresses can be looked up
efficiently, and information about user processes can be gathered.
The kvm_open() function is first called to obtain a descriptor for all
subsequent calls.
COMPATIBILITY
The kvm interface was first introduced in SunOS. A considerable number
of programs have been developed that use this interface, making backward
compatibility highly desirable. In most respects, the Sun kvm interface
is consistent and clean. Accordingly, the generic portion of the
interface (i.e., kvm_open(), kvm_close(), kvm_read(), kvm_write(), and
kvm_nlist()) has been incorporated into the BSD interface. Indeed, many
kvm applications (i.e., debuggers and statistical monitors) use only this
subset of the interface.
The process interface was not kept. This is not a portability issue
since any code that manipulates processes is inherently machine
dependent.
Finally, the Sun kvm error reporting semantics are poorly defined. The
library can be configured either to print errors to stderr automatically,
or to print no error messages at all. In the latter case, the nature of
the error cannot be determined. To overcome this, the BSD interface
includes a routine, kvm_geterr(3), to return (not print out) the error
message corresponding to the most recent error condition on the given
descriptor.
CROSS DEBUGGING
The kvm library supports inspection of crash dumps from non-native
kernels. Only a limited subset of the kvm interface is supported for
these dumps. To inspect a crash dump of a non-native kernel, the caller
must provide a resolver function when opening a descriptor via
kvm_open2(). In addition, the kvm interface defines an integer type
(kvaddr_t) that is large enough to hold all valid addresses of all
supported architectures. The interface also defines a new namelist
structure type (struct kvm_nlist) for use with kvm_nlist2(). To avoid
address truncation issues, the caller should use kvm_nlist2() and
kvm_read2() in place of kvm_nlist() and kvm_read(), respectively.
Finally, only a limited subset of operations are supported for non-native
crash dumps: kvm_close(), kvm_geterr(), kvm_kerndisp(), kvm_open2(),
kvm_native(), kvm_nlist2(), and kvm_read2().
SEE ALSO
kvm_close(3), kvm_getargv(3), kvm_getenvv(3), kvm_geterr(3),
first appeared in FreeBSD 11.0.
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 February 5, 2020 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11