outpd

write a double-word to an 80x86 hardware port

Synopsis:

#include <conio.h>
unsigned long outpd( int port,
            unsigned long value );

Description:

The outpd() function writes a double word (four bytes), determined by value, to the 80x86 hardware port whose number is given by port.

A hardware port is used to communicate with a device. One, two or four bytes can be read and/or written from each port, depending upon the hardware. Consult the technical documentation for your computer to determine the port numbers for a device and the expected usage of each port for a device.

When you use the outpd() function, your program must be linked for privity level 1, and the process must be run by the superuser or by a setuid program owned by the superuser. For more information on privity, see

Returns:

the value transmitted

See also:

inp(), inpd(), inpw(), outp(), outpw()

Examples:

#include <conio.h>
#define DEVICE 34

void main()
  {
    outpd( DEVICE, 0x12345678 );
  }

Classification:

Intel

Systems:

DOS/32, Win386, Win32, QNX/32, OS/2-32, Netware