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NtWriteFile function (ntifs.h)

The ZwWriteFile routine writes data to an open file.

Syntax

__kernel_entry NTSYSCALLAPI NTSTATUS NtWriteFile(
  [in]           HANDLE           FileHandle,
  [in, optional] HANDLE           Event,
  [in, optional] PIO_APC_ROUTINE  ApcRoutine,
  [in, optional] PVOID            ApcContext,
  [out]          PIO_STATUS_BLOCK IoStatusBlock,
  [in]           PVOID            Buffer,
  [in]           ULONG            Length,
  [in, optional] PLARGE_INTEGER   ByteOffset,
  [in, optional] PULONG           Key
);

Parameters

[in] FileHandle

Handle to the file object. This handle is created by a successful call to NtCreateFile or NtOpenFile.

[in, optional] Event

Optionally, a handle to an event object to set to the signaled state after the write operation completes. Device and intermediate drivers should set this parameter to NULL.

[in, optional] ApcRoutine

This parameter is reserved. Device and intermediate drivers should set this pointer to NULL.

[in, optional] ApcContext

This parameter is reserved. Device and intermediate drivers should set this pointer to NULL.

[out] IoStatusBlock

Pointer to an IO_STATUS_BLOCK structure that receives the final completion status and information about the requested write operation. The Information member receives the number of bytes actually written to the file.

[in] Buffer

Pointer to a caller-allocated buffer that contains the data to write to the file.

[in] Length

The size, in bytes, of the buffer pointed to by Buffer.

[in, optional] ByteOffset

Pointer to a variable that specifies the starting byte offset in the file for beginning the write operation. If Length and ByteOffset specify a write operation past the current end-of-file mark, NtWriteFile automatically extends the file and updates the end-of-file mark; any bytes that are not explicitly written between such old and new end-of-file marks are defined to be zero.

If the call to NtCreateFile set only the DesiredAccess flag FILE_APPEND_DATA, ByteOffset is ignored. Data in the given Buffer, for Length bytes, is written starting at the current end of file.

If the call to NtCreateFile set either of the CreateOptions flags, FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_ALERT or FILE_SYNCHRONOUS_IO_NONALERT, the I/O Manager maintains the current file position. If so, the caller of NtWriteFile can specify that the current file position offset be used instead of an explicit ByteOffset value. This specification can be made by using one of the following methods:

  • *Specify a pointer to a LARGE_INTEGER value with the HighPart member set to -1 and the LowPart member set to the system-defined value FILE_USE_FILE_POINTER_POSITION.
  • Pass a NULL pointer for ByteOffset.

NtWriteFile updates the current file position by adding the number of bytes written when it completes the write operation, if it is using the current file position maintained by the I/O Manager.

Even when the I/O Manager is maintaining the current file position, the caller can reset this position by passing an explicit ByteOffset value to NtWriteFile. Doing this automatically changes the current file position to that ByteOffsetvalue, performs the write operation, and then updates the position according to the number of bytes actually written. This technique gives the caller atomic seek-and-write service.

It is also possible to cause a write operation to start at the current end of file by specifying for ByteOffset a pointer to a LARGE_INTEGER value with HighPart set to -1 and LowPart set to FILE_WRITE_TO_END_OF_FILE. This works regardless of whether the I/O Manager is maintaining the current file position.

[in, optional] Key

Device and intermediate drivers should set this pointer to NULL.

Return value

NtWriteFile returns STATUS_SUCCESS on success or the appropriate NTSTATUS error code on failure.

Remarks

Callers of NtWriteFile must have already called NtCreateFile with the FILE_WRITE_DATA, FILE_APPEND_DATA, or GENERIC_WRITE flag set in the DesiredAccess parameter. Note that having only FILE_APPEND_DATA access to a file does not allow the caller to write anywhere in the file except at the current end-of-file mark, while having FILE_WRITE_DATA access to a file does not preclude the caller from writing to or beyond the end of a file.

If the preceding call to NtCreateFile set the CreateOptions flag FILE_NO_INTERMEDIATE_BUFFERING, the Length and ByteOffset parameters to NtWriteFile must be an integral of the sector size. For more information, see NtCreateFile.

NtWriteFile begins the write operation to the file at ByteOffset, at the current file position, or at the end-of-file mark. It terminates the write operation when it has written Length bytes from Buffer. If necessary, it extends the length of the file and resets the end-of-file mark.

If the caller opened the file with the DesiredAccess SYNCHRONIZE flag set, the caller can wait for this routine to set the given FileHandle to the signaled state.

Drivers should call NtWriteFile in the context of the system process in three cases:

  • The driver creates the file handle that it passes to NtWriteFile.
  • NtWriteFile notifies the driver of I/O completion by means of an event created by the driver.
  • NtWriteFile notifies the driver of I/O completion by means of an APC callback routine that the driver passes to NtWriteFile.

File and event handles are only valid in the process context where the handles are created. Therefore, to avoid security holes, the driver should create any file or event handle that it passes to NtWriteFile in the context of the system process instead of the process context that the driver is in.

Likewise, NtWriteFile should be called in the context of the system process if it notifies the driver of I/O completion by means of an APC, because APCs are always fired in the context of the thread issuing the I/O request. If the driver calls NtWriteFile in the context of a process other than the system process, the APC could be delayed indefinitely, or it might not fire at all as the originating thread may never enter an alertable wait state.

For more information about working with files, see Using Files in a Driver.

Callers of NtWriteFile must be running at IRQL = PASSIVE_LEVEL and with special kernel APCs enabled.

If the call to this function occurs in user mode, you should use the name "NtWriteFile" instead of "ZwWriteFile".

For calls from kernel-mode drivers, the NtXxx and ZwXxx versions of a Windows Native System Services routine can behave differently in the way that they handle and interpret input parameters. For more information about the relationship between the NtXxx and ZwXxx versions of a routine, see Using Nt and Zw Versions of the Native System Services Routines.

Requirements

Requirement Value
Minimum supported client Windows 2000
Target Platform Universal
Header ntifs.h (include Wdm.h, Ntddk.h, Ntifs.h)
Library NtosKrnl.lib
DLL NtosKrnl.exe
IRQL PASSIVE_LEVEL (see Remarks section)
DDI compliance rules HwStorPortProhibitedDDIs, PowerIrpDDis

See also

KeInitializeEvent

NtCreateFile

NtQueryInformationFile

NtReadFile

NtSetInformationFile