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PROLOG

       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of
       this interface may differ (consult the corresponding Linux  manual  page  for  details  of
       Linux behavior), or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.

NAME

       ioctl — control a STREAMS device (STREAMS)

SYNOPSIS

       #include <stropts.h>

       int ioctl(int fildes, int request, ... /* arg */);

DESCRIPTION

       The  ioctl() function shall perform a variety of control functions on STREAMS devices. For
       non-STREAMS devices, the functions performed by this call  are  unspecified.  The  request
       argument  and  an  optional  third  argument  (with  varying  type) shall be passed to and
       interpreted by the appropriate part of the STREAM associated with fildes.

       The fildes argument is an open file descriptor that refers to a device.

       The request argument selects the control function to be performed and shall depend on  the
       STREAMS device being addressed.

       The arg argument represents additional information that is needed by this specific STREAMS
       device to perform the requested function. The type of  arg  depends  upon  the  particular
       control  request, but it shall be either an integer or a pointer to a device-specific data
       structure.

       The ioctl() commands applicable to STREAMS, their arguments,  and  error  conditions  that
       apply to each individual command are described below.

       The following ioctl() commands, with error values indicated, are applicable to all STREAMS
       files:

       I_PUSH      Pushes the module whose name is pointed to by arg onto the top of the  current
                   STREAM,  just  below the STREAM head. It then calls the open() function of the
                   newly-pushed module.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_PUSH command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL Invalid module name.

                   ENXIO  Open function of new module failed.

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

       I_POP       Removes the module just below the STREAM head of  the  STREAM  pointed  to  by
                   fildes.  The arg argument should be 0 in an I_POP request.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_POP command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL No module present in the STREAM.

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

       I_LOOK      Retrieves  the  name  of  the  module just below the STREAM head of the STREAM
                   pointed to by fildes, and places it in a character string pointed to  by  arg.
                   The  buffer  pointed to by arg should be at least FMNAMESZ+1 bytes long, where
                   FMNAMESZ is defined in <stropts.h>.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_LOOK command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL No module present in the STREAM.

       I_FLUSH     Flushes read and/or write queues, depending on the value of  arg.   Valid  arg
                   values are:

                   FLUSHR      Flush all read queues.

                   FLUSHW      Flush all write queues.

                   FLUSHRW     Flush all read and all write queues.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_FLUSH command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL Invalid arg value.

                   EAGAIN or ENOSR
                          Unable to allocate buffers for flush message.

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

       I_FLUSHBAND Flushes  a  particular band of messages. The arg argument points to a bandinfo
                   structure. The bi_flag member may be one of  FLUSHR,  FLUSHW,  or  FLUSHRW  as
                   described above. The bi_pri member determines the priority band to be flushed.

       I_SETSIG    Requests  that  the  STREAMS  implementation  send  the  SIGPOLL signal to the
                   calling process when a particular event has occurred on the STREAM  associated
                   with  fildes.   I_SETSIG  supports  an  asynchronous  processing capability in
                   STREAMS. The value of arg is a bitmask that specifies the events for which the
                   process  should be signaled. It is the bitwise-inclusive OR of any combination
                   of the following constants:

                   S_RDNORM    A normal (priority band set to 0) message has arrived at the  head
                               of  a  STREAM head read queue. A signal shall be generated even if
                               the message is of zero length.

                   S_RDBAND    A message with a non-zero priority band has arrived at the head of
                               a  STREAM head read queue. A signal shall be generated even if the
                               message is of zero length.

                   S_INPUT     A message, other than a high-priority message, has arrived at  the
                               head of a STREAM head read queue. A signal shall be generated even
                               if the message is of zero length.

                   S_HIPRI     A high-priority message is present on a STREAM head read queue.  A
                               signal shall be generated even if the message is of zero length.

                   S_OUTPUT    The  write  queue for normal data (priority band 0) just below the
                               STREAM head is no longer full.  This  notifies  the  process  that
                               there  is  room  on the queue for sending (or writing) normal data
                               downstream.

                   S_WRNORM    Equivalent to S_OUTPUT.

                   S_WRBAND    The write queue for a non-zero priority band just below the STREAM
                               head  is  no  longer full. This notifies the process that there is
                               room  on  the  queue  for  sending  (or  writing)  priority   data
                               downstream.

                   S_MSG       A  STREAMS  signal  message  that  contains the SIGPOLL signal has
                               reached the front of the STREAM head read queue.

                   S_ERROR     Notification of an error condition has reached the STREAM head.

                   S_HANGUP    Notification of a hangup has reached the STREAM head.

                   S_BANDURG   When used  in  conjunction  with  S_RDBAND,  SIGURG  is  generated
                               instead  of  SIGPOLL  when a priority message reaches the front of
                               the STREAM head read queue.

                   If arg is 0, the calling process shall be unregistered and shall  not  receive
                   further SIGPOLL signals for the stream associated with fildes.

                   Processes  that  wish  to  receive  SIGPOLL  signals  shall  ensure  that they
                   explicitly register to receive  them  using  I_SETSIG.  If  several  processes
                   register  to  receive  this signal for the same event on the same STREAM, each
                   process shall be signaled when the event occurs.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_SETSIG command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL The value of arg is invalid.

                   EINVAL The value of arg is 0 and the calling  process  is  not  registered  to
                          receive the SIGPOLL signal.

                   EAGAIN There were insufficient resources to store the signal request.

       I_GETSIG    Returns the events for which the calling process is currently registered to be
                   sent a SIGPOLL signal. The events are returned as a bitmask in an int  pointed
                   to by arg, where the events are those specified in the description of I_SETSIG
                   above.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_GETSIG command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL Process is not registered to receive the SIGPOLL signal.

       I_FIND      Compares the names of all modules currently present in the STREAM to the  name
                   pointed to by arg, and returns 1 if the named module is present in the STREAM,
                   or returns 0 if the named module is not present.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_FIND command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL arg does not contain a valid module name.

       I_PEEK      Retrieves the information in the first message on the STREAM head  read  queue
                   without  taking  the message off the queue. It is analogous to getmsg() except
                   that this command does not  remove  the  message  from  the  queue.   The  arg
                   argument points to a strpeek structure.

                   The  application shall ensure that the maxlen member in the ctlbuf and databuf
                   strbuf structures is set to the number of bytes of control information  and/or
                   data  information,  respectively,  to retrieve. The flags member may be marked
                   RS_HIPRI or 0, as described  by  getmsg().   If  the  process  sets  flags  to
                   RS_HIPRI,  for  example, I_PEEK shall only look for a high-priority message on
                   the STREAM head read queue.

                   I_PEEK returns 1 if a message was retrieved, and returns 0 if no  message  was
                   found  on the STREAM head read queue, or if the RS_HIPRI flag was set in flags
                   and a high-priority message was not present on the STREAM head read queue.  It
                   does not wait for a message to arrive. On return, ctlbuf specifies information
                   in the control buffer, databuf specifies information in the data  buffer,  and
                   flags contains the value RS_HIPRI or 0.

       I_SRDOPT    Sets  the  read  mode  using  the  value  of the argument arg.  Read modes are
                   described in read().  Valid arg flags are:

                   RNORM       Byte-stream mode, the default.

                   RMSGD       Message-discard mode.

                   RMSGN       Message-nondiscard mode.

                   The bitwise-inclusive OR of  RMSGD  and  RMSGN  shall  return  [EINVAL].   The
                   bitwise-inclusive  OR  of  RNORM and either RMSGD or RMSGN shall result in the
                   other flag overriding RNORM which is the default.

                   In addition, treatment of control messages by the STREAM head may  be  changed
                   by setting any of the following flags in arg:

                   RPROTNORM   Fail  read() with [EBADMSG] if a message containing a control part
                               is at the front of the STREAM head read queue.

                   RPROTDAT    Deliver the control part of a  message  as  data  when  a  process
                               issues a read().

                   RPROTDIS    Discard  the  control  part  of  a  message,  delivering  any data
                               portion, when a process issues a read().

                   The ioctl() function with the I_SRDOPT command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL The arg argument is not valid.

       I_GRDOPT    Returns the current read mode setting, as described above, in an  int  pointed
                   to by the argument arg.  Read modes are described in read().

       I_NREAD     Counts  the  number of data bytes in the data part of the first message on the
                   STREAM head read queue and places this value in the int  pointed  to  by  arg.
                   The return value for the command shall be the number of messages on the STREAM
                   head read queue. For example, if 0 is returned in arg, but the ioctl()  return
                   value  is greater than 0, this indicates that a zero-length message is next on
                   the queue.

       I_FDINSERT  Creates a message from specified buffer(s),  adds  information  about  another
                   STREAM,  and sends the message downstream. The message contains a control part
                   and an optional data  part.  The  data  and  control  parts  to  be  sent  are
                   distinguished  by  placement  in separate buffers, as described below. The arg
                   argument points to a strfdinsert structure.

                   The application shall  ensure  that  the  len  member  in  the  ctlbuf  strbuf
                   structure  is  set  to  the  size of a t_uscalar_t plus the number of bytes of
                   control information to be sent with the message. The fildes  member  specifies
                   the  file descriptor of the other STREAM, and the offset member, which must be
                   suitably aligned for use as a t_uscalar_t, specifies the offset from the start
                   of  the  control  buffer  where  I_FDINSERT  shall  store  a t_uscalar_t whose
                   interpretation is specific to the STREAM end.  The  application  shall  ensure
                   that  the  len  member in the databuf strbuf structure is set to the number of
                   bytes of data information to be sent with the message, or to 0 if no data part
                   is to be sent.

                   The flags member specifies the type of message to be created. A normal message
                   is created if flags is set to 0, and a high-priority  message  is  created  if
                   flags is set to RS_HIPRI. For non-priority messages, I_FDINSERT shall block if
                   the STREAM write queue is full due to internal flow control  conditions.   For
                   priority  messages,  I_FDINSERT  does  not  block  on this condition. For non-
                   priority messages, I_FDINSERT does not block when the write queue is full  and
                   O_NONBLOCK is set. Instead, it fails and sets errno to [EAGAIN].

                   I_FDINSERT  also  blocks,  unless  prevented  by  lack  of internal resources,
                   waiting for the availability of message blocks in the  STREAM,  regardless  of
                   priority or whether O_NONBLOCK has been specified. No partial message is sent.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_FDINSERT command shall fail if:

                   EAGAIN A  non-priority  message  is specified, the O_NONBLOCK flag is set, and
                          the STREAM write queue is full due to internal flow control conditions.

                   EAGAIN or ENOSR
                          Buffers cannot be allocated for the message that is to be created.

                   EINVAL One of the following:

                               --  The fildes member of the strfdinsert structure is not a valid,
                                   open STREAM file descriptor.

                               --  The  size of a t_uscalar_t plus offset is greater than the len
                                   member for the buffer specified through ctlbuf.

                               --  The offset member does not specify a properly-aligned location
                                   in the data buffer.

                               --  An undefined value is stored in flags.

                   ENXIO  Hangup  received on the STREAM identified by either the fildes argument
                          or the fildes member of the strfdinsert structure.

                   ERANGE The len member for the buffer specified through databuf does  not  fall
                          within  the  range specified by the maximum and minimum packet sizes of
                          the topmost STREAM module; or the len member for the  buffer  specified
                          through  databuf is larger than the maximum configured size of the data
                          part of a message; or the len member for the buffer  specified  through
                          ctlbuf  is  larger than the maximum configured size of the control part
                          of a message.

       I_STR       Constructs an internal STREAMS ioctl() message from the  data  pointed  to  by
                   arg, and sends that message downstream.

                   This  mechanism is provided to send ioctl() requests to downstream modules and
                   drivers. It allows information to be sent with ioctl(),  and  returns  to  the
                   process any information sent upstream by the downstream recipient. I_STR shall
                   block  until  the  system  responds  with  either  a  positive   or   negative
                   acknowledgement  message,  or until the request times out after some period of
                   time. If the request times out, it shall fail with errno set to [ETIME].

                   At most, one I_STR can be active on a STREAM. Further I_STR calls shall  block
                   until  the  active  I_STR  completes  at  the STREAM head. The default timeout
                   interval for these requests is 15 seconds. The O_NONBLOCK flag has  no  effect
                   on this call.

                   To send requests downstream, the application shall ensure that arg points to a
                   strioctl structure.

                   The ic_cmd member is the internal ioctl() command intended  for  a  downstream
                   module  or  driver  and ic_timout is the number of seconds (−1=infinite, 0=use
                   implementation-defined timeout interval, >0=as  specified)  an  I_STR  request
                   shall  wait  for  acknowledgement  before timing out.  ic_len is the number of
                   bytes in the data argument, and ic_dp is a pointer to the data  argument.  The
                   ic_len  member  has  two  uses:  on  input, it contains the length of the data
                   argument passed in, and on return from the command, it contains the number  of
                   bytes  being returned to the process (the buffer pointed to by ic_dp should be
                   large enough to contain the maximum amount of data  that  any  module  or  the
                   driver in the STREAM can return).

                   The  STREAM  head  shall  convert  the  information pointed to by the strioctl
                   structure to an internal ioctl() command message and send it downstream.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_STR command shall fail if:

                   EAGAIN or ENOSR
                          Unable to allocate buffers for the ioctl() message.

                   EINVAL The ic_len member is less than 0 or larger than the maximum  configured
                          size of the data part of a message, or ic_timout is less than −1.

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

                   ETIME  A downstream ioctl() timed out before acknowledgement was received.

                   An  I_STR  can  also  fail  while  waiting for an acknowledgement if a message
                   indicating an error or a hangup is received at the STREAM head.  In  addition,
                   an  error  code  can  be  returned in the positive or negative acknowledgement
                   message, in the event the ioctl() command sent  downstream  fails.  For  these
                   cases, I_STR shall fail with errno set to the value in the message.

       I_SWROPT    Sets  the  write mode using the value of the argument arg.  Valid bit settings
                   for arg are:

                   SNDZERO     Send a zero-length message downstream when a write()  of  0  bytes
                               occurs.  To  not  send  a  zero-length message when a write() of 0
                               bytes occurs, the application shall ensure that this  bit  is  not
                               set in arg (for example, arg would be set to 0).

                   The ioctl() function with the I_SWROPT command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL arg is not the above value.

       I_GWROPT    Returns the current write mode setting, as described above, in the int that is
                   pointed to by the argument arg.

       I_SENDFD    Creates a new reference to the open file description associated with the  file
                   descriptor  arg,  and  writes  a  message  on  the  STREAMS-based  pipe fildes
                   containing this reference, together with the user  ID  and  group  ID  of  the
                   calling process.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_SENDFD command shall fail if:

                   EAGAIN The sending STREAM is unable to allocate a message block to contain the
                          file pointer; or the read queue of the receiving STREAM  head  is  full
                          and cannot accept the message sent by I_SENDFD.

                   EBADF  The arg argument is not a valid, open file descriptor.

                   EINVAL The fildes argument is not connected to a STREAM pipe.

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_SENDFD command may fail if:

                   EINVAL The arg argument is equal to the fildes argument.

       I_RECVFD    Retrieves  the reference to an open file description from a message written to
                   a STREAMS-based pipe using the I_SENDFD command,  and  allocates  a  new  file
                   descriptor  in  the calling process that refers to this open file description.
                   The arg argument is a pointer to a strrecvfd  data  structure  as  defined  in
                   <stropts.h>.

                   The  fd member is a file descriptor. The uid and gid members are the effective
                   user ID and effective group ID, respectively, of the sending process.

                   If O_NONBLOCK is not set, I_RECVFD shall block until a message is  present  at
                   the  STREAM  head. If O_NONBLOCK is set, I_RECVFD shall fail with errno set to
                   [EAGAIN] if no message is present at the STREAM head.

                   If the message at the STREAM head is a message sent by an I_SENDFD, a new file
                   descriptor  shall  be allocated for the open file descriptor referenced in the
                   message. The new file descriptor is placed in the fd member of  the  strrecvfd
                   structure pointed to by arg.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_RECVFD command shall fail if:

                   EAGAIN A  message  is  not  present  at  the  STREAM  head  read queue and the
                          O_NONBLOCK flag is set.

                   EBADMSG
                          The message at the STREAM head read queue is not a message containing a
                          passed file descriptor.

                   EMFILE All file descriptors available to the process are currently open.

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

       I_LIST      Allows  the  process  to  list  all  the module names on the STREAM, up to and
                   including the topmost driver name. If arg is a null pointer, the return  value
                   shall  be  the number of modules, including the driver, that are on the STREAM
                   pointed to by fildes.  This lets the process allocate  enough  space  for  the
                   module names.  Otherwise, it should point to a str_list structure.

                   The  sl_nmods member indicates the number of entries the process has allocated
                   in the array. Upon return, the sl_modlist member  of  the  str_list  structure
                   shall  contain  the  list of module names, and the number of entries that have
                   been filled into the sl_modlist array is found in  the  sl_nmods  member  (the
                   number  includes the number of modules including the driver). The return value
                   from ioctl() shall be 0. The entries are filled in starting at the top of  the
                   STREAM  and  continuing  downstream  until  either  the  end  of the STREAM is
                   reached, or the number of requested modules (sl_nmods) is satisfied.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_LIST command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL The sl_nmods member is less than 1.

                   EAGAIN or ENOSR
                          Unable to allocate buffers.

       I_ATMARK    Allows the process to see if the message at the head of the STREAM  head  read
                   queue is marked by some module downstream. The arg argument determines how the
                   checking is done when there may be multiple marked messages on the STREAM head
                   read queue. It may take on the following values:

                   ANYMARK     Check if the message is marked.

                   LASTMARK    Check if the message is the last one marked on the queue.

                   The bitwise-inclusive OR of the flags ANYMARK and LASTMARK is permitted.

                   The return value shall be 1 if the mark condition is satisfied; otherwise, the
                   value shall be 0.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_ATMARK command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL Invalid arg value.

       I_CKBAND    Checks if the message of a given priority band exists on the STREAM head  read
                   queue.  This shall return 1 if a message of the given priority exists, 0 if no
                   such message exists, or −1 on error.  arg should be of type int.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_CKBAND command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL Invalid arg value.

       I_GETBAND   Returns the priority band of the first message on the STREAM head  read  queue
                   in the integer referenced by arg.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_GETBAND command shall fail if:

                   ENODATA
                          No message on the STREAM head read queue.

       I_CANPUT    Checks  if  a  certain  band  is writable.  arg is set to the priority band in
                   question. The return value shall be 0 if the band is flow-controlled, 1 if the
                   band is writable, or −1 on error.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_CANPUT command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL Invalid arg value.

       I_SETCLTIME This  request  allows  the process to set the time the STREAM head shall delay
                   when a STREAM is closing and there  is  data  on  the  write  queues.   Before
                   closing each module or driver, if there is data on its write queue, the STREAM
                   head shall delay for the specified amount of time to allow the data to  drain.
                   If,  after  the  delay,  data  is  still present, it shall be flushed. The arg
                   argument is a pointer to an integer specifying the number of  milliseconds  to
                   delay,  rounded up to the nearest valid value. If I_SETCLTIME is not performed
                   on a STREAM, an implementation-defined default timeout interval is used.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_SETCLTIME command shall fail if:

                   EINVAL Invalid arg value.

       I_GETCLTIME Returns the close time delay in the integer pointed to by arg.

   Multiplexed STREAMS Configurations
       The following commands are used  for  connecting  and  disconnecting  multiplexed  STREAMS
       configurations. These commands use an implementation-defined default timeout interval.

       I_LINK      Connects  two  STREAMs,  where  fildes  is  the  file descriptor of the STREAM
                   connected to the multiplexing driver, and arg is the file  descriptor  of  the
                   STREAM  connected to another driver. The STREAM designated by arg is connected
                   below the multiplexing driver. I_LINK requires the multiplexing driver to send
                   an  acknowledgement  message to the STREAM head regarding the connection. This
                   call shall return a multiplexer ID number (an identifier  used  to  disconnect
                   the multiplexer; see I_UNLINK) on success, and −1 on failure.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_LINK command shall fail if:

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

                   ETIME  Timeout before acknowledgement message was received at STREAM head.

                   EAGAIN or ENOSR
                          Unable to allocate STREAMS storage to perform the I_LINK.

                   EBADF  The arg argument is not a valid, open file descriptor.

                   EINVAL The  fildes  argument  does  not  support multiplexing; or arg is not a
                          STREAM or is already connected downstream from a  multiplexer;  or  the
                          specified  I_LINK  operation would connect the STREAM head in more than
                          one place in the multiplexed STREAM.

                   An I_LINK  can  also  fail  while  waiting  for  the  multiplexing  driver  to
                   acknowledge  the  request,  if  a  message  indicating an error or a hangup is
                   received at the STREAM head of fildes.  In addition,  an  error  code  can  be
                   returned in the positive or negative acknowledgement message. For these cases,
                   I_LINK fails with errno set to the value in the message.

       I_UNLINK    Disconnects the two STREAMs specified by fildes and arg.  fildes is  the  file
                   descriptor  of  the  STREAM  connected  to  the  multiplexing  driver. The arg
                   argument is the multiplexer ID number that was returned by the I_LINK  ioctl()
                   command  when  a STREAM was connected downstream from the multiplexing driver.
                   If arg is MUXID_ALL, then all STREAMs that were connected to fildes  shall  be
                   disconnected. As in I_LINK, this command requires acknowledgement.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_UNLINK command shall fail if:

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

                   ETIME  Timeout before acknowledgement message was received at STREAM head.

                   EAGAIN or ENOSR
                          Unable to allocate buffers for the acknowledgement message.

                   EINVAL Invalid multiplexer ID number.

                   An  I_UNLINK  can  also  fail  while  waiting  for  the multiplexing driver to
                   acknowledge the request if a message  indicating  an  error  or  a  hangup  is
                   received  at  the  STREAM  head  of fildes.  In addition, an error code can be
                   returned in the positive or negative acknowledgement message. For these cases,
                   I_UNLINK shall fail with errno set to the value in the message.

       I_PLINK     Creates  a persistent connection between two STREAMs, where fildes is the file
                   descriptor of the STREAM connected to the multiplexing driver, and arg is  the
                   file  descriptor  of  the  STREAM connected to another driver. This call shall
                   create a persistent connection which can exist even  if  the  file  descriptor
                   fildes  associated with the upper STREAM to the multiplexing driver is closed.
                   The STREAM designated by arg gets connected via a persistent connection  below
                   the  multiplexing  driver. I_PLINK requires the multiplexing driver to send an
                   acknowledgement  message  to  the  STREAM  head.  This  call  shall  return  a
                   multiplexer  ID  number  (an  identifier  that  may  be used to disconnect the
                   multiplexer; see I_PUNLINK) on success, and −1 on failure.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_PLINK command shall fail if:

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

                   ETIME  Timeout before acknowledgement message was received at STREAM head.

                   EAGAIN or ENOSR
                          Unable to allocate STREAMS storage to perform the I_PLINK.

                   EBADF  The arg argument is not a valid, open file descriptor.

                   EINVAL The fildes argument does not support multiplexing;  or  arg  is  not  a
                          STREAM  or  is  already connected downstream from a multiplexer; or the
                          specified I_PLINK operation would connect the STREAM head in more  than
                          one place in the multiplexed STREAM.

                   An  I_PLINK  can  also  fail  while  waiting  for  the  multiplexing driver to
                   acknowledge the request, if a message indicating  an  error  or  a  hangup  is
                   received  at  the  STREAM  head  of fildes.  In addition, an error code can be
                   returned in the positive or negative acknowledgement message. For these cases,
                   I_PLINK shall fail with errno set to the value in the message.

       I_PUNLINK   Disconnects  the  two  STREAMs  specified  by fildes and arg from a persistent
                   connection. The fildes argument is the file descriptor of the STREAM connected
                   to the multiplexing driver. The arg argument is the multiplexer ID number that
                   was returned by the I_PLINK  ioctl()  command  when  a  STREAM  was  connected
                   downstream from the multiplexing driver. If arg is MUXID_ALL, then all STREAMs
                   which are persistent connections  to  fildes  shall  be  disconnected.  As  in
                   I_PLINK,  this  command  requires  the  multiplexing driver to acknowledge the
                   request.

                   The ioctl() function with the I_PUNLINK command shall fail if:

                   ENXIO  Hangup received on fildes.

                   ETIME  Timeout before acknowledgement message was received at STREAM head.

                   EAGAIN or ENOSR
                          Unable to allocate buffers for the acknowledgement message.

                   EINVAL Invalid multiplexer ID number.

                   An I_PUNLINK can also fail  while  waiting  for  the  multiplexing  driver  to
                   acknowledge  the  request  if  a  message  indicating  an error or a hangup is
                   received at the STREAM head of fildes.  In addition,  an  error  code  can  be
                   returned in the positive or negative acknowledgement message. For these cases,
                   I_PUNLINK shall fail with errno set to the value in the message.

RETURN VALUE

       Upon successful completion, ioctl() shall return a value other than −1 that  depends  upon
       the  STREAMS  device  control  function.  Otherwise,  it  shall return −1 and set errno to
       indicate the error.

ERRORS

       Under the following general conditions, ioctl() shall fail if:

       EBADF  The fildes argument is not a valid open file descriptor.

       EINTR  A signal was caught during the ioctl() operation.

       EINVAL The STREAM or multiplexer referenced by fildes is linked (directly  or  indirectly)
              downstream from a multiplexer.

       If an underlying device driver detects an error, then ioctl() shall fail if:

       EINVAL The request or arg argument is not valid for this device.

       EIO    Some physical I/O error has occurred.

       ENOTTY The  file  associated with the fildes argument is not a STREAMS device that accepts
              control functions.

       ENXIO  The request and arg arguments are valid for this device  driver,  but  the  service
              requested cannot be performed on this particular sub-device.

       ENODEV The  fildes argument refers to a valid STREAMS device, but the corresponding device
              driver does not support the ioctl() function.

       If a STREAM is connected  downstream  from  a  multiplexer,  any  ioctl()  command  except
       I_UNLINK and I_PUNLINK shall set errno to [EINVAL].

       The following sections are informative.

EXAMPLES

       None.

APPLICATION USAGE

       The implementation-defined timeout interval for STREAMS has historically been 15 seconds.

RATIONALE

       None.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       The ioctl() function may be removed in a future version.

SEE ALSO

       Section  2.6,  STREAMS,  close(),  fcntl(),  getmsg(),  open(),  pipe(), poll(), putmsg(),
       read(), sigaction(), write()

       The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, <stropts.h>

COPYRIGHT

       Portions of this text are reprinted and  reproduced  in  electronic  form  from  IEEE  Std
       1003.1,  2013  Edition,  Standard  for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System
       Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, Copyright (C) 2013  by  the
       Institute  of  Electrical  and  Electronics  Engineers,  Inc and The Open Group.  (This is
       POSIX.1-2008 with the  2013  Technical  Corrigendum  1  applied.)  In  the  event  of  any
       discrepancy  between  this  version and the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard, the
       original IEEE and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The  original  Standard
       can be obtained online at http://www.unix.org/online.html .

       Any  typographical  or  formatting errors that appear in this page are most likely to have
       been introduced during the conversion of the source files to man page  format.  To  report
       such errors, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .