sysinfo(2)sysinfo(2)NAMEsysinfo - manages system information strings
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/systeminfo.h>
long sysinfo(
int command,
char *buf,
long count );
PARAMETERS
Specifies the commands that manage the system information strings. They
are described in the Available Commands section. Specifies the buffer
used for the storage of system information. Specifies the size of the
buffer pointed to by the buf parameter.
DESCRIPTION
The sysinfo function retrieves and sets information relating to the
operating system into a buffer pointed to by the buf parameter. This
function is similar to the sysconf function which returns an integer
instead of a string.
Available Commands
This section describes the commands that may be specified with the com‐
mand parameter. The commands allow you to set certain attributes and
they are listed in alphabetical order: Copies a string into the speci‐
fied buffer that describes the instruction set of the current system's
architecture. These names cannot conflict with predefined names in the
C language compilation system. Copies a string into the specified buf‐
fer that represents the name of the present host machine. This is the
same string that would be returned by the uname function in the node‐
name field. The name is typically the hostname or nodename that the
machine is recognized by locally.
The hostname is the name of the target machine as it is used in
a network. Although the hostname may differ on various net‐
works, the nodename that is presented to the appropriate network
directory or name-to-address mapping service should produce a
transport end point address. The name may not be fully quali‐
fied.
Internet host names can be up to 256 bytes in length including
the terminating null. Copies a string into the specified buffer
that represents the name of the hardware manufacturer. This
command is not supported in this implementation of the operating
system. Copies a string into the specified buffer the ASCII
representation of the hardware-specific serial number of the
machine that executed the function call. This can be initiated
in Read Only Memory through the software constants set when the
machine is built. The string can contain non-numeric charac‐
ters. This command is not supported in this implementation of
the operating system. Copies a string into the specified buffer
that represents the name of the machine. This is the same
string that would be returned by the uname function in the
machine field. Copies a string into the specified buffer that
represents the name of the release. This is the same string
that would be returned by the uname function in the release
field. Copies the null-terminated contents of the specified
buffer into the string that is maintained by the kernel. This
value will be returned by successive calls to the sysinfo func‐
tion when used with the SI_HOSTNAME command. Superuser privi‐
leges are required to perform this action. Specifies that the
string returned by the sysinfo function using the SI_SRPC_DOMAIN
command is to be set to the value of the array pointed to by the
buf parameter. This command is not supported in this implementa‐
tion of the operating system. The command SI_SET_SYSNAME sets
the system name. Copies the Secure Remote Procedure Call com‐
mand name into the specified buffer. This command is not sup‐
ported in this implementation of the operating system. Copies a
string into the specified buffer the value that would be
returned by the uname function in the sysname field. This is
the name of the implementation of the operating system.
RESTRICTIONS
Two commands, SI_SRPC_DOMAIN and SI_SET_SRPC_DOMAIN, are not currently
supported. If either of these commands is specified, a value of -1 is
returned and errno is set.
RETURN VALUES
On success, the return value specifies the size in bytes required for
the buffer to hold the value and terminating character of the string.
If this value does not exceed the value specified in the count parame‐
ter, the string is copied. If this value exceeds the value specified
by the count parameter, the string that is copied to the specified buf‐
fer is truncated to the count-1 bytes and a terminating character.
If an error is encountered, a value of -1 is returned and errno is set
to indicate the error.
ERRORS
Specifies that the buf parameter does not point to a valid address, or
that the data for a SET command is not allowed in this implementation.
Specifies that an invalid command was specified. See the RESTRICTIONS
section. Specifies that the process does not have the appropriate
privileges for a SET command.
SEE ALSO
Functions: getrlimit(2), setrlimit(2), sysconf(3), uname(2)sysinfo(2)