Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
hselasky
d9340a46aa Implement flag for telling cuse(3) clients if the peer is running in 32-bit
compat mode or not. This is useful when implementing compatibility ioctl(2)
handlers in userspace.

MFC after:		1 week
Sponsored by:		Mellanox Technologies
2019-04-18 19:04:07 +00:00
hselasky
a1144014f8 Add support for new cuse(3) error code, CUSE_ERR_NO_DEVICE.
This error code is useful when emulating Linux input event
devices from userspace.

PR:			218626
Submitted by:		jan.kokemueller@gmail.com
MFC after:		1 week
Sponsored by:		Mellanox Technologies
2017-10-05 16:42:02 +00:00
joel
d94b51f5b9 mdoc: remove superfluous paragraph macros. 2014-06-23 18:40:21 +00:00
brueffer
1ec8e864a5 Mdoc cleanup, typo and grammar fixes. 2014-06-06 12:06:40 +00:00
hselasky
672c28ec68 Initial import of character device in userspace support for FreeBSD.
The CUSE library is a wrapper for the devfs kernel functionality which
is exposed through /dev/cuse . In order to function the CUSE kernel
code must either be enabled in the kernel configuration file or loaded
separately as a module. Currently none of the committed items are
connected to the default builds, except for installing the needed
header files. The CUSE code will be connected to the default world and
kernel builds in a follow-up commit.

The CUSE module was written by Hans Petter Selasky, somewhat inspired
by similar functionality found in FUSE. The CUSE library can be used
for many purposes. Currently CUSE is used when running Linux kernel
drivers in user-space, which need to create a character device node to
communicate with its applications. CUSE has full support for almost
all devfs functionality found in the kernel:
 - kevents
 - read
 - write
 - ioctl
 - poll
 - open
 - close
 - mmap
 - private per file handle data

Requested by several people. Also see "multimedia/cuse4bsd-kmod" in
ports.
2014-05-23 08:46:28 +00:00