pkey_alloc(2)

SECCIÓN: 2 - Llamadas al sistema

pkey_alloc(2) System Calls Manual pkey_alloc(2)

NAME

pkey_alloc, pkey_free - allocate or free a protection key

LIBRARY

Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS

#define _GNU_SOURCE /* See feature_test_macros(7) */

#include <sys/mman.h>

int pkey_alloc(unsigned int flags, unsigned int access_rights);

int pkey_free(int pkey);

DESCRIPTION

pkey_alloc() allocates a protection key (pkey) and allows it to be

passed to pkey_mprotect(2).

The pkey_alloc() flags is reserved for future use and currently must

always be specified as 0.

The pkey_alloc() access_rights argument may contain zero or more dis‐

able operations:

PKEY_DISABLE_ACCESS

Disable all data access to memory covered by the returned pro‐

tection key.

PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE

Disable write access to memory covered by the returned protec‐

tion key.

pkey_free() frees a protection key and makes it available for later al‐

locations. After a protection key has been freed, it may no longer be

used in any protection-key-related operations.

An application should not call pkey_free() on any protection key which

has been assigned to an address range by pkey_mprotect(2) and which is

still in use. The behavior in this case is undefined and may result in

an error.

RETURN VALUE

On success, pkey_alloc() returns a positive protection key value. On

success, pkey_free() returns zero. On error, -1 is returned, and errno

is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS

EINVAL pkey, flags, or access_rights is invalid.

ENOSPC (pkey_alloc()) All protection keys available for the current

process have been allocated. The number of keys available is

architecture-specific and implementation-specific and may be re‐

duced by kernel-internal use of certain keys. There are cur‐

rently 15 keys available to user programs on x86.

This error will also be returned if the processor or operating

system does not support protection keys. Applications should

always be prepared to handle this error, since factors outside

of the application's control can reduce the number of available

pkeys.

VERSIONS

pkey_alloc() and pkey_free() were added in Linux 4.9; library support

was added in glibc 2.27.

STANDARDS

The pkey_alloc() and pkey_free() system calls are Linux-specific.

NOTES

pkey_alloc() is always safe to call regardless of whether or not the

operating system supports protection keys. It can be used in lieu of

any other mechanism for detecting pkey support and will simply fail

with the error ENOSPC if the operating system has no pkey support.

The kernel guarantees that the contents of the hardware rights register

(PKRU) will be preserved only for allocated protection keys. Any time

a key is unallocated (either before the first call returning that key

from pkey_alloc() or after it is freed via pkey_free()), the kernel may

make arbitrary changes to the parts of the rights register affecting

access to that key.

EXAMPLES

See pkeys(7).

SEE ALSO

pkey_mprotect(2), pkeys(7)

Linux man-pages 6.03 2022-12-04 pkey_alloc(2)

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