On Mon, 11 Feb 2008, Mayank Kaushik wrote:

> On Feb 8, 2008 2:28 AM, Robert P. J. Day <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > see?  total freedom in terms of how you interpret the values, which is
> > why ioctl() calls are actually deprecated these days -- they're just
> > too unstructured, and are being phased out in terms of /proc or sysfs
> > entries.  but there's obviously a lot of them still in the kernel.
> >
>
> They are being phased out? You mean they may not be supported in future
> kernel versions?
> And is the alternative to ioctl()s, reading/writing to special /proc or
> /sysfs entries? Is that faster/slower than ioctl()s, or just cleaner.

just FYI, i may have phrased it overly strongly that ioctl's were on
their way out -- there's obviously a lot of them still in the kernel,
but just as obviously, they're considered old school, as you can read
here in this article from way back in 2001.

http://lwn.net/2001/0524/kernel.php3

i doubt they'll ever *truly* go away, but there are obviously better
alternatives these days with /proc and /sys.

rday
--



========================================================================
Robert P. J. Day
Linux Consulting, Training and Annoying Kernel Pedantry:
    Have classroom, will lecture.

http://crashcourse.ca                          Waterloo, Ontario, CANADA
========================================================================

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