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Talk:Kernel Syscalls
i dont know if its right, pls correct me if im wrong :) --Zmaster 13:58, 29 November 2011 (MST)
HTTP/i0nic:
The following is hardly "bogus".
0x30d2ad54 <chown>: mov r12, #16 ; 0x10, being # of chown
0x30d2ad58 <chown+4>: svc 0x00000080
is a direct disassembly of libSystem. You can see that with gdb on a jb device.
SVC is an ARM instruction to invoke a "supervisor call". The 0x80 is the call #, because the chip allows an interrupt vector, much like Intel's INT instruction. Then, you place the syscall # (in the above example, chown) in r12. morpheus ||3/1/2012, 20:01 EST.
-- Edit:
OOOOOH. Now I get it. He meant the CPU syscalls, not the kernel syscalls. This needs more research (who originally put that part?) --The preceding unsigned comment was added by morpheus (talk) 2 Mar 2012 02:04 UTC. Please consult this page for more info on how to sign pages, and how to fix this.