inadr OpenVMS usage:address_range type: longword (unsigned) access: read only mechanism: by reference Starting and ending virtual addresses of the range of pages whose fault characteristic is to be changed. The inadr argument is the address of a 2-longword array containing, in order, the starting and ending process virtual addresses. Addresses are adjusted up or down to fall on CPU-specific page boundaries. Only the virtual page number portion of each virtual address is used; the low-order byte-within-page bits are ignored. If the starting and ending virtual addresses are the same, the fault characteristic is changed for a single page. retadr OpenVMS usage:address_range type: longword (unsigned) access: write only mechanism: by reference-array reference or descriptor Starting and ending virtual addresses of the range of pages whose fault characteristic was actually changed by $SETFLT. The retadr argument is the address of a 2-longword array containing, in order, the starting and ending process virtual addresses. If an error occurs while the fault characteristic is being changed, $SETFLT writes into retadr the range of pages that were successfully changed before the error occurred. If no pages were affected before the error occurred, $SETFLT writes the value -1 into each longword of the 2-longword array. acmode OpenVMS usage:access_mode type: longword (unsigned) access: read only mechanism: by value Access mode associated with the call to $SETFLT. The acmode argument is a longword containing the access mode. The $PSLDEF macro defines symbols for the access modes. The $SETFLT service uses whichever of the following two access modes is less privileged: (1) the access mode specified by acmode or (2) the access mode of the caller. To change the fault characteristic of any page in the specified range, the resultant access mode must be equal to or more privileged than the access mode of the owner of that page. fault_flag OpenVMS usage:mask_longword type: longword (unsigned) access: read only mechanism: by value Flag mask specifying the request options. The fault_flag argument is a longword bit vector in which each bit corresponds to a flag. The $FLTDEF macro and the FLTDEF.H file define a symbolic name for each flag. The $FLTDEF macro defines the following symbolic names for the fault characteristic codes: Symbol Description FLT$M_NO_EXECUTE Fault on execute access attempt FLT$M_EXECUTABLE Allow execute access If you specify the fault characteristic as the value 0, the characteristic defaults to no execute access.