ref: fc1d4d1b24669d870a45310f8122e6b10ff953d0
dir: /sys/man/1/syscall/
.TH SYSCALL 1 .SH NAME syscall \- test a system call .SH SYNOPSIS .B syscall [ .B -os ] .I entry [ .I arg ... ] .SH DESCRIPTION .I Syscall invokes the system call .I entry with the given arguments. The return value is printed. If an error occurred, the error string is also printed. .PP For convenience, .IR write (2) and .IR read (2) are included in .IR entries , even though they are not strictly syscalls. .PP .I Syscall arguments are integer constants, strings, or the literal .BR buf . The literal .B buf refers to a writable 1 megabyte buffer. Strings and .B buf are passed as pointers. Integers are passed as values. .PP The .B -o option prints contents of the 1MB buffer. For .IR errstr (2) and .IR fd2path (2), the buffer is treated as a 0-terminated string. For other calls, the number of bytes printed is determined by the system call's return value. .PP The .B -s option is similar, but interprets the data as a .IR stat (5) message and formats it to standard output. .SH EXAMPLES Write a string to standard output: .IP .EX syscall write 1 hello 5 .EE .PP Print information about the file connected to standard input: .IP .EX syscall -s fstat 0 buf 1024 .EE .SH SOURCE .B /sys/src/cmd/syscall .SH "SEE ALSO" Section 2 of this manual. .SH DIAGNOSTICS If .I entry is not known to .IR syscall , the exit status is .LR unknown . If the system call succeeds, the exit status is null; otherwise the exit status is the string that .IR errstr (2) returns.