UADMIN(2) System Calls UADMIN(2)

uadmin - administrative control

#include <sys/uadmin.h>
int uadmin(int cmd, int fcn, uintptr_t mdep);

The uadmin() function provides control for basic administrative functions. This function is tightly coupled to the system administrative procedures and is not intended for general use. The argument mdep is provided for machine-dependent use and is not defined here. It should be initialized to NULL if not used.

As specified by cmd, the following commands are available:

A_SHUTDOWN

The system is shut down. All user processes are killed, the buffer cache is flushed, and the root file system is unmounted. The action to be taken after the system has been shut down is specified by fcn. The functions are generic; the hardware capabilities vary on specific machines.

AD_HALT

Halt the processor(s).

AD_POWEROFF

Halt the processor(s) and turn off the power.

AD_BOOT

Reboot the system, using the kernel file.

AD_IBOOT

Interactive reboot; user is prompted for bootable program name.

AD_FASTREBOOT

Bypass BIOS and boot loader

A_REBOOT

The system stops immediately without any further processing. The action to be taken next is specified by fcn as above.

A_DUMP

The system is forced to panic immediately without any further processing and a crash dump is written to the dump device (see dumpadm(8)). The action to be taken next is specified by fcn, as above.

A_REMOUNT

The root file system is mounted again after having been fixed. This should be used only during the startup process.

A_FREEZE

Suspend the whole system. The system state is preserved in the state file. The following subcommands, specified by fcn, are available.

AD_SUSPEND_TO_DISK

Save the system state to the state file. This subcommand is equivalent to ACPI state S4.

AD_CHECK_SUSPEND_TO_DISK

Check if your system supports suspend to disk. Without performing a system suspend/resume, this subcommand checks if this feature is currently available on your system.

AD_SUSPEND_TO_RAM

Save the system state to memory This subcommand is equivalent to ACPI state S3.

AD_CHECK_SUSPEND_TO_RAM

Check if your system supports suspend to memory. Without performing a system suspend/resume, this subcommand checks if this feature is currently available on your system.

The following subcommands, specified by fcn, are obsolete and might be removed in a subsequent release:

AD_COMPRESS

Save the system state to the state file with compression of data. This subcommand has been replaced by AD_SUSPEND_TO_DISK, which should be used instead.

AD_CHECK

Check if your system supports suspend and resume. Without performing a system suspend/resume, this command checks if this feature is currently available on your system. This subcommand has been replaced by AD_CHECK_SUSPEND_TO_DISK, which should be used instead.

AD_FORCE

Force AD_COMPRESS even when threads of user applications are not suspendable. This subcommand should never be used, as it might result in undefined behavior.

Upon successful completion, the value returned depends on cmd as follows:

A_SHUTDOWN

Never returns.

A_REBOOT

Never returns.

A_FREEZE

0 upon resume.

A_REMOUNT

0.

Otherwise, −1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.

The uadmin() function will fail if:

EBUSY

Suspend is already in progress.

EINVAL

The cmd argument is invalid.

ENOMEM

Suspend/resume ran out of physical memory.

ENOSPC

Suspend/resume could not allocate enough space on the root file system to store system information.

ENOTSUP

Suspend/resume is not supported on this platform or the command specified by cmd is not allowed.

ENXIO

Unable to successfully suspend system.

EPERM

The {PRIV_SYS_CONFIG} privilege is not asserted in the effective set of the calling process.

See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Interface Stability See below.

The A_FREEZE command and its subcommands are Committed.

attributes(7), privileges(7), dumpadm(8), halt(8), kernel(8), reboot(8), uadmin(8)

Shutting down or halting the system by means of uadmin(8) does not update the boot archive. Avoid using this command after

editing of files such as /etc/system
installing new driver binaries or kernel binaries
updating existing driver binaries or kernel binaries.

Use reboot(8) or halt(8) instead.

March 25, 2009 OmniOS