Chapter 10. Replacing Printks

Table of Contents
Replacing printk
Flashing keyboard LEDs

Replacing printk

In the Section called Using X in Chapter 1, I said that X and kernel module programming don't mix. That's true for developing kernel modules, but in actual use, you want to be able to send messages to whichever tty[1] the command to load the module came from.

The way this is done is by using current, a pointer to the currently running task, to get the current task's tty structure. Then, we look inside that tty structure to find a pointer to a string write function, which we use to write a string to the tty.

Example 10-1. print_string.c

/* 
 *  print_string.c - Send output to the tty we're running on, regardless if it's
 *  through X11, telnet, etc.  We do this by printing the string to the tty
 *  associated with the current task.
 */
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/sched.h>	/* For current */
#include <linux/tty.h>		/* For the tty declarations */
#include <linux/version.h>	/* For LINUX_VERSION_CODE */

MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
MODULE_AUTHOR("Peter Jay Salzman");

static void print_string(char *str)
{
	struct tty_struct *my_tty;

	/* 
	 * tty struct went into signal struct in 2.6.6 
	 */
#if ( LINUX_VERSION_CODE <= KERNEL_VERSION(2,6,5) )
	/* 
	 * The tty for the current task 
	 */
	my_tty = current->tty;
#else
	/* 
	 * The tty for the current task, for 2.6.6+ kernels 
	 */
	my_tty = current->signal->tty;
#endif

	/* 
	 * If my_tty is NULL, the current task has no tty you can print to 
	 * (ie, if it's a daemon).  If so, there's nothing we can do.
	 */
	if (my_tty != NULL) {

		/* 
		 * my_tty->driver is a struct which holds the tty's functions,
		 * one of which (write) is used to write strings to the tty. 
		 * It can be used to take a string either from the user's or 
		 * kernel's memory segment.
		 *
		 * The function's 1st parameter is the tty to write to,
		 * because the same function would normally be used for all 
		 * tty's of a certain type.  The 2nd parameter controls whether
		 * the function receives a string from kernel memory (false, 0)
		 * or from user memory (true, non zero).  The 3rd parameter is
		 * a pointer to a string.  The 4th parameter is the length of
		 * the string.
		 */
		((my_tty->driver)->write) (my_tty,	/* The tty itself */
					   0,	/* Don't take the string 
						   from user space        */
					   str,	/* String                 */
					   strlen(str));	/* Length */

		/* 
		 * ttys were originally hardware devices, which (usually) 
		 * strictly followed the ASCII standard.  In ASCII, to move to
		 * a new line you need two characters, a carriage return and a
		 * line feed.  On Unix, the ASCII line feed is used for both 
		 * purposes - so we can't just use \n, because it wouldn't have
		 * a carriage return and the next line will start at the
		 * column right after the line feed.
		 *
		 * This is why text files are different between Unix and 
		 * MS Windows.  In CP/M and derivatives, like MS-DOS and 
		 * MS Windows, the ASCII standard was strictly adhered to,
		 * and therefore a newline requirs both a LF and a CR.
		 */
		((my_tty->driver)->write) (my_tty, 0, "\015\012", 2);
	}
}

static int __init print_string_init(void)
{
	print_string("The module has been inserted.  Hello world!");
	return 0;
}

static void __exit print_string_exit(void)
{
	print_string("The module has been removed.  Farewell world!");
}

module_init(print_string_init);
module_exit(print_string_exit);

Notes

[1]

Teletype, originally a combination keyboard-printer used to communicate with a Unix system, and today an abstraction for the text stream used for a Unix program, whether it's a physical terminal, an xterm on an X display, a network connection used with telnet, etc.