очистить содержимое кеша инструкций и / или данных (flush contents of instruction and/or data cache)
Имя (Name)
cacheflush - flush contents of instruction and/or data cache
Синопсис (Synopsis)
#include <sys/cachectl.h>
int cacheflush(void *
addr, int
nbytes, int
cache);
Note: On some architectures, there is no glibc wrapper for this
system call; see NOTES.
Описание (Description)
cacheflush
() flushes the contents of the indicated cache(s) for
the user addresses in the range addr to (addr+nbytes-1). cache
may be one of:
ICACHE
Flush the instruction cache.
DCACHE
Write back to memory and invalidate the affected valid
cache lines.
BCACHE
Same as (ICACHE|DCACHE)
.
Возвращаемое значение (Return value)
cacheflush
() returns 0 on success. On error, it returns -1 and
sets errno to indicate the error.
Ошибки (Error)
EFAULT
Some or all of the address range addr to (addr+nbytes-1)
is not accessible.
EINVAL
cache is not one of ICACHE
, DCACHE
, or BCACHE
(but see
BUGS).
Стандарты (Conforming to)
Historically, this system call was available on all MIPS UNIX
variants including RISC/os, IRIX, Ultrix, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and
FreeBSD (and also on some non-UNIX MIPS operating systems), so
that the existence of this call in MIPS operating systems is a
de-facto standard.
Caveat
cacheflush
() should not be used in programs intended to be
portable. On Linux, this call first appeared on the MIPS
architecture, but nowadays, Linux provides a cacheflush
() system
call on some other architectures, but with different arguments.
Примечание (Note)
Architecture-specific variants
Glibc provides a wrapper for this system call, with the prototype
shown in SYNOPSIS, for the following architectures: ARC, CSKY,
MIPS, and NIOS2.
On some other architectures, Linux provides this system call,
with different arguments:
M68K:
int cacheflush(unsigned long
addr, int
scope, int
cache,
unsigned long
len);
SH:
int cacheflush(unsigned long
addr, unsigned long
len, int
op);
NDS32:
int cacheflush(unsigned int
start, unsigned int
end, int
cache);
On the above architectures, glibc does not provide a wrapper for
this system call; call it using syscall(2).
GCC alternative
Unless you need the finer grained control that this system call
provides, you probably want to use the GCC built-in function
__builtin___clear_cache
(), which provides a portable interface
across platforms supported by GCC and compatible compilers:
void __builtin___clear_cache(void *
begin, void *
end);
On platforms that don't require instruction cache flushes,
__builtin___clear_cache
() has no effect.
Note: On some GCC-compatible compilers, the prototype for this
built-in function uses char * instead of void * for the
parameters.
Ошибки (баги) (Bugs)
Linux kernels older than version 2.6.11 ignore the addr and
nbytes arguments, making this function fairly expensive.
Therefore, the whole cache is always flushed.
This function always behaves as if BCACHE
has been passed for the
cache argument and does not do any error checking on the cache
argument.