Couldn't the source be patched to use DeviceIOControl instead of ioctl?
According to MSDN about porting from UNIX to Win32, ioctl maps directly to
DeviceIOControl, so it could be possible to simply change all the instances
of ioctl to DeviceIOControl...
On 9/22/07, Aleksey Bragin <aleksey(a)reactos.org> wrote:
I didn't thoroughly look through the OSS source code, but if it has
some kind of platform-independent design in mind, then I would really
recommend porting, and porting with as minimal changes to the
original source code required (you probably are going to need a
wrapper-library, for ioctls at least, plus NT-specific parts).
I may help too, because of the usb stack wrapping I did a while ago.
WBR,
Aleksey Bragin.
I've been in touch with the guy that ported OSS to Haiku (open-
source BeOS)
after some
discussion with the folks over at #winehackers to get some help
with audio
development.
Anyway, basically the idea so far is to use OSS as a "fall-back" audio
driver
implementation. So unless there is a "better" driver installed (ie an
official one for
an audio device), ReactOS can use an Open Sound System driver instead.
The result? There will at least be sound functionality.
OSS is designed to be mostly platform-independent. By rewriting a
few of
the core
modules, the entire set of drivers will be able to work with whatever
platform you
desire.
This can be implemented on top of the existing MME API architecture
for the
moment, and
can later be translated to use the WDM audio framework.
Anyway, having stuck the OSS code into my local ReactOS source
tree, I'm
trying to
figure out how to get it to compile using rbuild. The first hurdle
I have
come across is
that there is extensive use of ioctl. Indeed it seems that most
ports of
OSS work on
platforms based on Posix (Unix?)
So my main question at this time is how to handle this? The calls in
question appear to
be documented inside a file called "soundcard.h" in the OSS sources
however
this just
seems to be definitions for the ioctl codes. So I suspect a
majority of the
drivers are
calling ioctl.
Therefore, I figure the best way around this is probably to provide
a fake
ioctl that
provides the expected functionality, and make this wrap
DeviceIoControl
with something
that can translate the ioctl parameters into whatever...
The only other way I see around this is to rewrite all calls to
ioctl, and
rewrite the
IOCTL codes with NT-style ones.
Thoughts/ideas?
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