ID: Q100947
The information in this article applies to:
In enhanced mode Windows, the I/O permission bitmap (IOPM) is used by the virtual machine manager (VMM) to determine whether I/O is permitted at a given I/O port. The IOPM is clear when the VMM is initialized, which means that any I/O port can be accessed. VxDs can trap specific I/O ports to prevent direct access. Therefore, unless a VxD traps a port, direct I/O access is permitted. In standard mode, the IOPM is not used, so direct I/O access is always permitted. This does not apply to Windows NT.
The sample IOPORT.ZIP lists ports trapped by the standard VxDs included in enhanced mode Windows (IOPMPORT.XLS and IOPMPORT.TXT), and an MS-DOS program IOPM.EXE, which lists all currently trapped ports. Also, the DT (dump TSS) command in WDEB386 lists all currently trapped ports.
The following file is available for download from the Microsoft Software Library:
~ IOPORT.EXE (size: 23176 bytes)
For more information about downloading files from the Microsoft Software
Library, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
ARTICLE-ID: Q119591
TITLE : How to Obtain Microsoft Support Files from
Online Services
The IOPM is contained in the task state segment (TSS). The I/O
privilege level (IOPL) and the I/O permission bitmap determine whether
a task is allowed to perform I/O. The IOPL determines the minimum
privilege level required to perform I/O without checking the
permission bitmap. For example, if IOPL = 1, then a procedure must
have a code privilege level (CPL) of 1 or 0 (zero) to perform
unrestricted I/O. However, if the CPL of the current task is greater
than the IOPL, or the processor is operating in virtual 8086 mode,
then the I/O permission bitmap is checked to determine whether I/O is
permitted at the requested port.
In enhanced mode Windows, CPL is always greater than IOPL, so the IOPM is always checked to determine whether direct I/O access is permitted. In standard mode, CPL equals IOPL, so the IOPM is never checked.
Each bit in the bitmap corresponds to an I/O port byte address. For example, the bit for port address 60 (decimal) corresponds to the 60th bit, or the 4th bit in the 8th byte of the bitmap. In enhanced mode Windows, the bitmap is always 8192 bytes, and the bitmap is initialized to allow I/O at any port.
When a VxD is initialized, it can call Install_IO_Handler to trap specific I/O ports. Install_IO_Handler sets the corresponding bits in the IOPM. When a trapped port is accessed, the VxD I/O handler will take over and perform the appropriate action. Windows maintains a single TSS for all VMs. When a VM switch occurs, the TSS IOPM is updated to reflect the local IOPM of the incoming VM. Port trapping for a specific port may be disabled locally or globally from a VxD by calling Disable_Local_Trapping or Disable_Global_Trapping.
Additional query words: softlib IOPORT.ZIP kbfile
Keywords : kbsample kb16bitonly kbWinOS310 kbWinOS300
Version : 3.00 3.10
Platform : WINDOWS
Last Reviewed: December 12, 1998