1==================== 2The Linux Kernel API 3==================== 4 5 6List Management Functions 7========================= 8 9.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/list.h 10 :internal: 11 12Basic C Library Functions 13========================= 14 15When writing drivers, you cannot in general use routines which are from 16the C Library. Some of the functions have been found generally useful 17and they are listed below. The behaviour of these functions may vary 18slightly from those defined by ANSI, and these deviations are noted in 19the text. 20 21String Conversions 22------------------ 23 24.. kernel-doc:: lib/vsprintf.c 25 :export: 26 27.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/kstrtox.h 28 :functions: kstrtol kstrtoul 29 30.. kernel-doc:: lib/kstrtox.c 31 :export: 32 33.. kernel-doc:: lib/string_helpers.c 34 :export: 35 36String Manipulation 37------------------- 38 39.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/fortify-string.h 40 :internal: 41 42.. kernel-doc:: lib/string.c 43 :export: 44 45.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/string.h 46 :internal: 47 48.. kernel-doc:: mm/util.c 49 :functions: kstrdup kstrdup_const kstrndup kmemdup kmemdup_nul memdup_user 50 vmemdup_user strndup_user memdup_user_nul 51 52Basic Kernel Library Functions 53============================== 54 55The Linux kernel provides more basic utility functions. 56 57Bit Operations 58-------------- 59 60.. kernel-doc:: include/asm-generic/bitops/instrumented-atomic.h 61 :internal: 62 63.. kernel-doc:: include/asm-generic/bitops/instrumented-non-atomic.h 64 :internal: 65 66.. kernel-doc:: include/asm-generic/bitops/instrumented-lock.h 67 :internal: 68 69Bitmap Operations 70----------------- 71 72.. kernel-doc:: lib/bitmap.c 73 :doc: bitmap introduction 74 75.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/bitmap.h 76 :doc: declare bitmap 77 78.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/bitmap.h 79 :doc: bitmap overview 80 81.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/bitmap.h 82 :doc: bitmap bitops 83 84.. kernel-doc:: lib/bitmap.c 85 :export: 86 87.. kernel-doc:: lib/bitmap.c 88 :internal: 89 90.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/bitmap.h 91 :internal: 92 93Command-line Parsing 94-------------------- 95 96.. kernel-doc:: lib/cmdline.c 97 :export: 98 99Sorting 100------- 101 102.. kernel-doc:: lib/sort.c 103 :export: 104 105.. kernel-doc:: lib/list_sort.c 106 :export: 107 108Text Searching 109-------------- 110 111.. kernel-doc:: lib/textsearch.c 112 :doc: ts_intro 113 114.. kernel-doc:: lib/textsearch.c 115 :export: 116 117.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/textsearch.h 118 :functions: textsearch_find textsearch_next \ 119 textsearch_get_pattern textsearch_get_pattern_len 120 121CRC and Math Functions in Linux 122=============================== 123 124Arithmetic Overflow Checking 125---------------------------- 126 127.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/overflow.h 128 :internal: 129 130CRC Functions 131------------- 132 133.. kernel-doc:: lib/crc4.c 134 :export: 135 136.. kernel-doc:: lib/crc7.c 137 :export: 138 139.. kernel-doc:: lib/crc8.c 140 :export: 141 142.. kernel-doc:: lib/crc16.c 143 :export: 144 145.. kernel-doc:: lib/crc32.c 146 147.. kernel-doc:: lib/crc-ccitt.c 148 :export: 149 150.. kernel-doc:: lib/crc-itu-t.c 151 :export: 152 153Base 2 log and power Functions 154------------------------------ 155 156.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/log2.h 157 :internal: 158 159Integer power Functions 160----------------------- 161 162.. kernel-doc:: lib/math/int_pow.c 163 :export: 164 165.. kernel-doc:: lib/math/int_sqrt.c 166 :export: 167 168Division Functions 169------------------ 170 171.. kernel-doc:: include/asm-generic/div64.h 172 :functions: do_div 173 174.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/math64.h 175 :internal: 176 177.. kernel-doc:: lib/math/gcd.c 178 :export: 179 180UUID/GUID 181--------- 182 183.. kernel-doc:: lib/uuid.c 184 :export: 185 186Kernel IPC facilities 187===================== 188 189IPC utilities 190------------- 191 192.. kernel-doc:: ipc/util.c 193 :internal: 194 195FIFO Buffer 196=========== 197 198kfifo interface 199--------------- 200 201.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/kfifo.h 202 :internal: 203 204relay interface support 205======================= 206 207Relay interface support is designed to provide an efficient mechanism 208for tools and facilities to relay large amounts of data from kernel 209space to user space. 210 211relay interface 212--------------- 213 214.. kernel-doc:: kernel/relay.c 215 :export: 216 217.. kernel-doc:: kernel/relay.c 218 :internal: 219 220Module Support 221============== 222 223Kernel module auto-loading 224-------------------------- 225 226.. kernel-doc:: kernel/module/kmod.c 227 :export: 228 229Module debugging 230---------------- 231 232.. kernel-doc:: kernel/module/stats.c 233 :doc: module debugging statistics overview 234 235dup_failed_modules - tracks duplicate failed modules 236**************************************************** 237 238.. kernel-doc:: kernel/module/stats.c 239 :doc: dup_failed_modules - tracks duplicate failed modules 240 241module statistics debugfs counters 242********************************** 243 244.. kernel-doc:: kernel/module/stats.c 245 :doc: module statistics debugfs counters 246 247Inter Module support 248-------------------- 249 250Refer to the files in kernel/module/ for more information. 251 252Hardware Interfaces 253=================== 254 255DMA Channels 256------------ 257 258.. kernel-doc:: kernel/dma.c 259 :export: 260 261Resources Management 262-------------------- 263 264.. kernel-doc:: kernel/resource.c 265 :internal: 266 267.. kernel-doc:: kernel/resource.c 268 :export: 269 270MTRR Handling 271------------- 272 273.. kernel-doc:: arch/x86/kernel/cpu/mtrr/mtrr.c 274 :export: 275 276Security Framework 277================== 278 279.. kernel-doc:: security/security.c 280 :internal: 281 282.. kernel-doc:: security/inode.c 283 :export: 284 285Audit Interfaces 286================ 287 288.. kernel-doc:: kernel/audit.c 289 :export: 290 291.. kernel-doc:: kernel/auditsc.c 292 :internal: 293 294.. kernel-doc:: kernel/auditfilter.c 295 :internal: 296 297Accounting Framework 298==================== 299 300.. kernel-doc:: kernel/acct.c 301 :internal: 302 303Block Devices 304============= 305 306.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/bio.h 307.. kernel-doc:: block/blk-core.c 308 :export: 309 310.. kernel-doc:: block/blk-core.c 311 :internal: 312 313.. kernel-doc:: block/blk-map.c 314 :export: 315 316.. kernel-doc:: block/blk-sysfs.c 317 :internal: 318 319.. kernel-doc:: block/blk-settings.c 320 :export: 321 322.. kernel-doc:: block/blk-flush.c 323 :export: 324 325.. kernel-doc:: block/blk-lib.c 326 :export: 327 328.. kernel-doc:: block/blk-integrity.c 329 :export: 330 331.. kernel-doc:: kernel/trace/blktrace.c 332 :internal: 333 334.. kernel-doc:: block/genhd.c 335 :internal: 336 337.. kernel-doc:: block/genhd.c 338 :export: 339 340.. kernel-doc:: block/bdev.c 341 :export: 342 343Char devices 344============ 345 346.. kernel-doc:: fs/char_dev.c 347 :export: 348 349Clock Framework 350=============== 351 352The clock framework defines programming interfaces to support software 353management of the system clock tree. This framework is widely used with 354System-On-Chip (SOC) platforms to support power management and various 355devices which may need custom clock rates. Note that these "clocks" 356don't relate to timekeeping or real time clocks (RTCs), each of which 357have separate frameworks. These :c:type:`struct clk <clk>` 358instances may be used to manage for example a 96 MHz signal that is used 359to shift bits into and out of peripherals or busses, or otherwise 360trigger synchronous state machine transitions in system hardware. 361 362Power management is supported by explicit software clock gating: unused 363clocks are disabled, so the system doesn't waste power changing the 364state of transistors that aren't in active use. On some systems this may 365be backed by hardware clock gating, where clocks are gated without being 366disabled in software. Sections of chips that are powered but not clocked 367may be able to retain their last state. This low power state is often 368called a *retention mode*. This mode still incurs leakage currents, 369especially with finer circuit geometries, but for CMOS circuits power is 370mostly used by clocked state changes. 371 372Power-aware drivers only enable their clocks when the device they manage 373is in active use. Also, system sleep states often differ according to 374which clock domains are active: while a "standby" state may allow wakeup 375from several active domains, a "mem" (suspend-to-RAM) state may require 376a more wholesale shutdown of clocks derived from higher speed PLLs and 377oscillators, limiting the number of possible wakeup event sources. A 378driver's suspend method may need to be aware of system-specific clock 379constraints on the target sleep state. 380 381Some platforms support programmable clock generators. These can be used 382by external chips of various kinds, such as other CPUs, multimedia 383codecs, and devices with strict requirements for interface clocking. 384 385.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/clk.h 386 :internal: 387 388Synchronization Primitives 389========================== 390 391Read-Copy Update (RCU) 392---------------------- 393 394.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/rcupdate.h 395 396.. kernel-doc:: kernel/rcu/tree.c 397 398.. kernel-doc:: kernel/rcu/tree_exp.h 399 400.. kernel-doc:: kernel/rcu/update.c 401 402.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/srcu.h 403 404.. kernel-doc:: kernel/rcu/srcutree.c 405 406.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/rculist_bl.h 407 408.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/rculist.h 409 410.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/rculist_nulls.h 411 412.. kernel-doc:: include/linux/rcu_sync.h 413 414.. kernel-doc:: kernel/rcu/sync.c 415