Write (system call)
The write is one of the most basic routines provided by a Unix-like operating system kernel. It writes data from a buffer declared by the user to a given device, such as a file. This is the primary way to output data from a program by directly using a system call. The destination is identified by a numeric code. The data to be written, for instance a piece of text, is defined by a pointer and a size, given in number of bytes.
write thus takes three arguments:- The file code.
- The pointer to a buffer where the data is stored.
- The number of bytes to write from the buffer.
POSIX usage
ssize_t write;
In above syntax,
ssize_t is a typedef. It is a signed data type defined in stddef.h. Note that write does not return an unsigned value; it returns -1 if an error occurs so it must return a signed value.The write function returns the number of bytes successfully written into the file, which may at times be less than the specified nbytes. It returns -1 if an exceptional condition is encountered, see section on [|errors] below.
Linux
Historically, Linux would use different system call tables for different architectures.write has the call number 1 on x86-64, but 4 on ARM. However, more recent architectures supported by Linux have adopted a universal system call table, in which write's call number is 64'.'When compiling software, the kernel exposes the call numbers for the target architecture as integer constants in the C header
. Several macros are defined in the form of __NR_xxx, which expand to the call number for the system call xxx. As such, write's call number is exposed as __NR_write. This header may also be included by assembler code using the C preprocessor.