#include <sys/uio.h> ssize_t process_vm_readv(pid_t pid, const struct iovec *local_iov, unsigned long liovcnt, const struct iovec *remote_iov, unsigned long riovcnt, unsigned long flags); ssize_t process_vm_writev(pid_t pid, const struct iovec *local_iov, unsigned long liovcnt, const struct iovec *remote_iov, unsigned long riovcnt, unsigned long flags);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
process_vm_readv(), process_vm_write():
The process_vm_readv() system call transfers data from the remote process to the local process. The data to be transferred is identified by remote_iov and riovcnt: remote_iov is a pointer to an array describing address ranges in the process pid, and riovcnt specifies the number of elements in remote_iov. The data is transferred to the locations specified by local_iov and liovcnt: local_iov is a pointer to an array describing address ranges in the calling process, and liovcnt specifies the number of elements in local_iov.
The process_vm_writev() system call is the converse of process_vm_readv()---it transfers data from the local process to the remote process. Other than the direction of the transfer, the arguments liovcnt, local_iov, riovcnt, and remote_iov have the same meaning as for process_vm_readv().
The local_iov and remote_iov arguments point to an array of iovec structures, defined in <sys/uio.h> as:
struct iovec { void *iov_base; /* Starting address */ size_t iov_len; /* Number of bytes to transfer */ };
Buffers are processed in array order. This means that process_vm_readv() completely fills local_iov[0] before proceeding to local_iov[1], and so on. Likewise, remote_iov[0] is completely read before proceeding to remote_iov[1], and so on.
Similarly, process_vm_writev() writes out the entire contents of local_iov[0] before proceeding to local_iov[1], and it completely fills remote_iov[0] before proceeding to remote_iov[1].
The lengths of remote_iov[i].iov_len and local_iov[i].iov_len do not have to be the same. Thus, it is possible to split a single local buffer into multiple remote buffers, or vice versa.
The flags argument is currently unused and must be set to 0.
The values specified in the liovcnt and riovcnt arguments must be less than or equal to IOV_MAX (defined in <limits.h> or accessible via the call sysconf(_SC_IOV_MAX)).
The count arguments and local_iov are checked before doing any transfers. If the counts are too big, or local_iov is invalid, or the addresses refer to regions that are inaccessible to the local process, none of the vectors will be processed and an error will be returned immediately.
Note, however, that these system calls do not check the memory regions in the remote process until just before doing the read/write. Consequently, a partial read/write (see RETURN VALUE) may result if one of the remote_iov elements points to an invalid memory region in the remote process. No further reads/writes will be attempted beyond that point. Keep this in mind when attempting to read data of unknown length (such as C strings that are null-terminated) from a remote process, by avoiding spanning memory pages (typically 4KiB) in a single remote iovec element. (Instead, split the remote read into two remote_iov elements and have them merge back into a single write local_iov entry. The first read entry goes up to the page boundary, while the second starts on the next page boundary.)
In order to read from or write to another process, either the caller must have the capability CAP_SYS_PTRACE, or the real user ID, effective user ID, and saved set-user-ID of the remote process must match the real user ID of the caller and the real group ID, effective group ID, and saved set-group-ID of the remote process must match the real group ID of the caller. (The permission required is exactly the same as that required to perform a ptrace(2) PTRACE_ATTACH on the remote process.)
On error, -1 is returned and errno is set appropriately.
These system calls were designed to permit fast message passing by allowing messages to be exchanged with a single copy operation (rather than the double copy that would be required when using, for example, shared memory or pipes).
#include <sys/uio.h> int main(void) { struct iovec local[2]; struct iovec remote[1]; char buf1[10]; char buf2[10]; ssize_t nread; pid_t pid = 10; /* PID of remote process */ local[0].iov_base = buf1; local[0].iov_len = 10; local[1].iov_base = buf2; local[1].iov_len = 10; remote[0].iov_base = (void *) 0x10000; remote[0].iov_len = 20; nread = process_vm_readv(pid, local, 2, remote, 1, 0); if (nread != 20) return 1; else return 0; }