linux/Documentation/process/magic-number.rst
наб 21c660fd7c MIPS: remove define-only GDA_MAGIC, previously magic number
The last user was removed in the 2.6.4 "MIPS mega-patch", pre-git

Found with
grep MAGIC Documentation/process/magic-number.rst | while read -r mag _;
do git grep -wF "$mag"  | grep -ve '^Documentation.*magic-number.rst:' \
-qe ':#define '"$mag" || git grep -wF "$mag" | while IFS=: read -r f _;
do sed -i '/\b'"$mag"'\b/d' "$f"; done ; done

Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/c2e7510beebdd698e20d0704712e623fad00fc1c.1663280877.git.nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2022-09-24 14:17:18 +02:00

110 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText

.. _magicnumbers:
Linux magic numbers
===================
This file is a registry of magic numbers which are in use. When you
add a magic number to a structure, you should also add it to this
file, since it is best if the magic numbers used by various structures
are unique.
It is a **very** good idea to protect kernel data structures with magic
numbers. This allows you to check at run time whether (a) a structure
has been clobbered, or (b) you've passed the wrong structure to a
routine. This last is especially useful --- particularly when you are
passing pointers to structures via a void * pointer. The tty code,
for example, does this frequently to pass driver-specific and line
discipline-specific structures back and forth.
The way to use magic numbers is to declare them at the beginning of
the structure, like so::
struct tty_ldisc {
int magic;
...
};
Please follow this discipline when you are adding future enhancements
to the kernel! It has saved me countless hours of debugging,
especially in the screwy cases where an array has been overrun and
structures following the array have been overwritten. Using this
discipline, these cases get detected quickly and safely.
Changelog::
Theodore Ts'o
31 Mar 94
The magic table is current to Linux 2.1.55.
Michael Chastain
<mailto:mec@shout.net>
22 Sep 1997
Now it should be up to date with Linux 2.1.112. Because
we are in feature freeze time it is very unlikely that
something will change before 2.2.x. The entries are
sorted by number field.
Krzysztof G. Baranowski
<mailto: kgb@knm.org.pl>
29 Jul 1998
Updated the magic table to Linux 2.5.45. Right over the feature freeze,
but it is possible that some new magic numbers will sneak into the
kernel before 2.6.x yet.
Petr Baudis
<pasky@ucw.cz>
03 Nov 2002
Updated the magic table to Linux 2.5.74.
Fabian Frederick
<ffrederick@users.sourceforge.net>
09 Jul 2003
===================== ================ ======================== ==========================================
Magic Name Number Structure File
===================== ================ ======================== ==========================================
PG_MAGIC 'P' pg_{read,write}_hdr ``include/linux/pg.h``
HDLC_MAGIC 0x239e n_hdlc ``drivers/char/n_hdlc.c``
APM_BIOS_MAGIC 0x4101 apm_user ``arch/x86/kernel/apm_32.c``
FASYNC_MAGIC 0x4601 fasync_struct ``include/linux/fs.h``
SLIP_MAGIC 0x5302 slip ``drivers/net/slip.h``
TTY_MAGIC 0x5401 tty_struct ``include/linux/tty.h``
MGSL_MAGIC 0x5401 mgsl_info ``drivers/char/synclink.c``
TTY_DRIVER_MAGIC 0x5402 tty_driver ``include/linux/tty_driver.h``
MGSLPC_MAGIC 0x5402 mgslpc_info ``drivers/char/pcmcia/synclink_cs.c``
FULL_DUPLEX_MAGIC 0x6969 ``drivers/net/ethernet/dec/tulip/de2104x.c``
CG_MAGIC 0x00090255 ufs_cylinder_group ``include/linux/ufs_fs.h``
RIEBL_MAGIC 0x09051990 ``drivers/net/atarilance.c``
NBD_REQUEST_MAGIC 0x12560953 nbd_request ``include/linux/nbd.h``
BAYCOM_MAGIC 0x19730510 baycom_state ``drivers/net/baycom_epp.c``
SAVEKMSG_MAGIC2 0x4B4D5347 savekmsg ``arch/*/amiga/config.c``
COW_MAGIC 0x4f4f4f4d cow_header_v1 ``arch/um/drivers/ubd_user.c``
SAVEKMSG_MAGIC1 0x53415645 savekmsg ``arch/*/amiga/config.c``
EEPROM_MAGIC_VALUE 0x5ab478d2 lanai_dev ``drivers/atm/lanai.c``
HDLCDRV_MAGIC 0x5ac6e778 hdlcdrv_state ``include/linux/hdlcdrv.h``
KV_MAGIC 0x5f4b565f kernel_vars_s ``arch/mips/include/asm/sn/klkernvars.h``
FW_HEADER_MAGIC 0x65726F66 fw_header ``drivers/atm/fore200e.h``
LO_MAGIC 0x68797548 nbd_device ``include/linux/nbd.h``
NBD_REPLY_MAGIC 0x96744668 nbd_reply ``include/linux/nbd.h``
ENI155_MAGIC 0xa54b872d midway_eprom ``drivers/atm/eni.h``
CODA_MAGIC 0xC0DAC0DA coda_file_info ``fs/coda/coda_fs_i.h``
YAM_MAGIC 0xF10A7654 yam_port ``drivers/net/hamradio/yam.c``
CCB_MAGIC 0xf2691ad2 ccb ``drivers/scsi/ncr53c8xx.c``
QUEUE_MAGIC_FREE 0xf7e1c9a3 queue_entry ``drivers/scsi/arm/queue.c``
QUEUE_MAGIC_USED 0xf7e1cc33 queue_entry ``drivers/scsi/arm/queue.c``
NMI_MAGIC 0x48414d4d455201 nmi_s ``arch/mips/include/asm/sn/nmi.h``
===================== ================ ======================== ==========================================
Note that there are also defined special per-driver magic numbers in sound
memory management. See ``include/sound/sndmagic.h`` for complete list of them. Many
OSS sound drivers have their magic numbers constructed from the soundcard PCI
ID - these are not listed here as well.
HFS is another larger user of magic numbers - you can find them in
``fs/hfs/hfs.h``.