ZwOpenKeyTransacted function (wdm.h)
The ZwOpenKeyTransacted routine opens an existing registry key and associates the key with a transaction.
Syntax
NTSYSAPI NTSTATUS ZwOpenKeyTransacted(
[out] PHANDLE KeyHandle,
[in] ACCESS_MASK DesiredAccess,
[in] POBJECT_ATTRIBUTES ObjectAttributes,
[in] HANDLE TransactionHandle
);
Parameters
[out] KeyHandle
A pointer to a HANDLE variable into which the routine writes the handle to the key.
[in] DesiredAccess
Specifies the type of access to the key that the caller requests. This parameter is an ACCESS_MASK value. For more information, see the description of the DesiredAccess parameter of the ZwCreateKey routine.
[in] ObjectAttributes
A pointer to the object attributes of the key being opened. This parameter points to an OBJECT_ATTRIBUTES structure that must have been previously initialized by the InitializeObjectAttributes routine. The caller must specify the name of the registry key as the ObjectName parameter in the call to InitializeObjectAttributes. If the caller is not running in a system thread context, it must set the OBJ_KERNEL_HANDLE attribute when it calls InitializeObjectAttributes.
[in] TransactionHandle
A handle to a transaction object. To obtain this handle, you can call the ZwCreateTransaction routine. Or, if you have a pointer to a transaction object, you can supply the pointer to the ObOpenObjectByPointer routine to obtain the corresponding transaction handle.
Return value
ZwOpenKeyTransacted returns STATUS_SUCCESS if the call successfully opens the key. Possible error return values include the following:
Return code | Description |
---|---|
|
The ObjectAttributes parameter is NULL or points to invalid information. |
|
The registry path in the object attributes is invalid. |
|
The registry path in the object attributes was not found. |
|
The caller did not have the required access rights to open a handle for the named registry key. |
|
A memory allocation operation failed. |
Remarks
This routine provides a handle with which the caller can access a registry key. Additionally, this routine associates the key with an active transaction.
After the handle that is pointed to by KeyHandle is no longer being used, the driver must call the ZwClose routine to close it.
If the specified key does not exist in the registry, ZwOpenKeyTransacted returns an error status value and does not supply a key handle. Unlike the ZwCreateKeyTransacted routine, the ZwOpenKeyTransacted routine does not create the specified key if the key does not exist. Both ZwCreateKeyTransacted and ZwOpenKeyTransacted associate a registry key with a transaction.
The ZwOpenKey routine is similar to ZwOpenKeyTransacted, but does not associate a key with a transaction.
After a kernel-mode driver obtains a handle to a transaction (for example, by calling ZwCreateTransaction), the driver can perform a series of registry operations that are part of this transaction. The driver can close the transaction either by committing to the changes that were made in the transaction or by rolling back the transaction.
After the driver successfully completes all registry operations that are part of a transaction, it can call the ZwCommitTransaction routine to commit to the changes. The driver can call the ZwRollbackTransaction routine to roll back the transaction.
During a transaction, a registry operation is part of the transaction if the system call that performs the operation meets either of the following conditions:
- The call specifies, as an input parameter, the transaction handle. For example, calls to ZwCreateKeyTransacted and ZwOpenKeyTransacted can associate one or more keys with the transaction.
- The call specifies, as an input parameter, a registry key handle that was obtained by a call to ZwCreateKeyTransacted or ZwOpenKeyTransacted to which the transaction handle was supplied. For example, a call to the ZwSetValueKey routine can use a key handle that was obtained in this way to set the value of a registry key as part of a transaction.
ZwOpenKeyTransacted ignores the security information in the structure that the ObjectAttributes parameter points to.
If the kernel-mode caller is not running in a system thread context, it must ensure that any handles it creates are kernel handles. Otherwise, the handle can be accessed by the process in whose context the driver is running. For more information, see Object Handles.
For more information about how to work with registry keys in kernel mode, see Using the Registry in a Driver.
Requirements
Requirement | Value |
---|---|
Minimum supported client | Available in Windows Vista and later versions of the Windows operating system. |
Target Platform | Universal |
Header | wdm.h (include Wdm.h, Ntddk.h, Ntifs.h) |
Library | NtosKrnl.lib |
DLL | NtosKrnl.exe |
IRQL | PASSIVE_LEVEL |
DDI compliance rules | HwStorPortProhibitedDDIs(storport), PowerIrpDDis(wdm) |