NdisAcquireReadWriteLock - NtDoc

Native API online documentation, based on the System Informer (formerly Process Hacker) phnt headers
// ndis.h

VOID NdisAcquireReadWriteLock(
  [in, out] PNDIS_RW_LOCK Lock,
  [in]      BOOLEAN       fWrite,
  [_out_]   PLOCK_STATE   LockState
);
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Windows Driver Kit DDI reference (nf-ndis-ndisacquirereadwritelock)

NdisAcquireReadWriteLock function

Description

The NdisAcquireReadWriteLock function acquires a lock that the caller uses for either write or read access to the resources that are shared among driver threads.

Note The read-write lock interface is deprecated for NDIS 6.20 and later drivers, which should use NdisAcquireRWLockRead or NdisAcquireRWLockWrite instead of NdisAcquireReadWriteLock.

Parameters

Lock [in, out]

A pointer to an opaque variable that represents a lock. The caller can use this lock to access shared resources.

fWrite [in]

A Boolean value. If the value is TRUE, this function is provided with write access to shared resources; if the value is FALSE, this function is provided with read access.

LockState [_out_]

LockState. A pointer to an opaque variable that tracks the state of the lock. This variable exists in the interval between the time the caller acquires and releases the lock. The caller must use a different variable of type LOCK_STATE for each attempt that it makes to acquire the lock from the same non-ISR driver thread.

Remarks

The driver must initialize a variable of type NDIS_RW_LOCK using the NdisInitializeReadWriteLock function before the driver calls any other NdisXxxReadWriteLock function. The driver must provide resident storage for the locks it uses.

After acquiring a lock by using NdisAcquireReadWriteLock, the caller must release that lock by calling the NdisReleaseReadWriteLock function. To decrement the reference count of the lock, a driver must call NdisReleaseReadWriteLock once for each call to NdisAcquireReadWriteLock.

To modify resources that are shared among driver threads, a driver thread must acquire a write lock. To simply monitor those resources, a driver thread must acquire a read-only lock. Read access does not require interlocked operations or contention for spin locks. Using read-only access helps to maintain good operating system and driver performance.

A driver thread should never hold a write lock for more than 25 microseconds. Holding a write lock for a prolonged period degrades both operating system and driver performance.

The driver cannot use a lock to protect resources from read or write access that its other functions share with the MiniportInterrupt and/or MiniportDisableInterruptEx functions. Instead, the driver must call NdisMSynchronizeWithInterruptEx so that its MiniportSynchronizeInterrupt function accesses such shared resources at the same DIRQL at which its MiniportInterrupt and/or MiniportDisableInterruptEx functions do.

NdisAcquireReadWriteLock always raises the IRQL. For a write operation, NdisAcquireReadWriteLock raises the IRQL by acquiring a spin lock. For a read operation, NdisAcquireReadWriteLock explicitly raises the IRQL to IRQL = DISPATCH_LEVEL.

For more information about acquiring and releasing NDIS spin locks, see Synchronization and Notification in Network Drivers.

See also

MiniportDisableInterruptEx

MiniportInterrupt

MiniportSynchronizeInterrupt

NdisAcquireRWLockRead

NdisAcquireRWLockWrite

NdisInitializeReadWriteLock

NdisMSynchronizeWithInterruptEx

NdisReleaseReadWriteLock