ObCloseHandle function (wdm.h)
The ObCloseHandle routine closes an object handle.
Syntax
NTSTATUS ObCloseHandle(
[in] HANDLE Handle,
[in] KPROCESSOR_MODE PreviousMode
);
Parameters
[in] Handle
A handle to a system-supplied object of any type.
[in] PreviousMode
Specifies the previous processor mode of the thread that opened the handle. To close a kernel handle set this parameter to KernelMode. To close a user handle, set this parameter to UserMode. For more information about these two handle types, see Remarks.
Return value
ObCloseHandle returns STATUS_SUCCESS if the call is successful. Possible error return values include the following NTSTATUS codes.
Return code | Description |
---|---|
STATUS_INVALID_HANDLE | Handle is not a valid handle. |
STATUS_HANDLE_NOT_CLOSABLE | The calling thread does not have permission to close the handle. |
Remarks
A kernel-mode driver calls ObCloseHandle to close a handle to any type of object that is created by the Windows kernel. A driver must close every handle that it opens as soon as the handle is no longer required.
After ObCloseHandle closes an object's handle, the caller must treat the handle as invalid and avoid using the handle to access the object. However, other handles might remain open on the same object. During an ObCloseHandle call, the system decrements the handle count for the object and checks whether the object can be deleted. The system does not delete the object until all of the object's handles are closed and all reference-counted pointers to the object are released.
The PreviousMode parameter specifies whether the handle to be closed is a kernel handle or a user handle. To close a kernel handle, set PreviousMode to KernelMode. To close a user handle, set PreviousMode to UserMode.
A kernel handle is a handle that is opened by a system thread, or by a kernel-mode driver that assigns the OBJ_KERNEL_HANDLE attribute to the handle. (For example, see the description of OBJ_KERNEL_HANDLE in ZwCreateFile.) If a kernel-mode driver opens a handle for its private use, and this driver runs in the context of a user-mode thread, the driver must open the handle with the OBJ_KERNEL_HANDLE attribute. This attribute ensures that the handle is inaccessible to user-mode applications.
A user handle is a handle that is opened by a user-mode application, or by a kernel-mode driver that runs in the context of a user-mode thread but that does not open the handle with the OBJ_KERNEL_HANDLE attribute. If a driver creates a user handle to be used by a user-mode application, but an error occurs that requires the driver to close the handle on behalf of the application, the driver can call ObCloseHandle to close the handle.
The ZwClose routine is similar to ObCloseHandle but can close only kernel handles. The call ZwClose(hObject), which closes kernel handle hObject, has the same effect as the call ObCloseHandle(hObject, KernelMode). For more information about closing a kernel handle, see ZwClose.
To determine whether a handle is a kernel handle or a user handle, a driver that receives a handle can call the ExGetPreviousMode routine. Or, the driver can read the RequestorMode field from the IRP structure that describes the I/O request. The I/O manager sets the RequestorMode field to the previous processor mode of the thread that requested the I/O operation.
Callers of ObCloseHandle should not assume that this routine automatically waits for all pending I/O operations to complete before it returns.
For more information, see Object Handles.
ObCloseHandle is not declared in a header file prior to Windows 7. To use this routine in your driver, include the following function declaration in your driver code:
#if (NTDDI_VERSION < NTDDI_WIN7)
NTKERNELAPI
NTSTATUS
ObCloseHandle(
__in HANDLE Handle,
__in KPROCESSOR_MODE PreviousMode
);
#endif
Requirements
Requirement | Value |
---|---|
Target Platform | Universal |
Header | wdm.h |
Library | Ntoskrnl.lib |
DLL | Ntoskrnl.exe |
IRQL | PASSIVE_LEVEL |