Sysdriver: How to capture Input data and play user audio application data

Hi Tim_Roberts ,

inside AddDevice function i have added

ntStatus = IoRegisterDeviceInterface(
PhysicalDeviceObject,
&RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO,
NULL,
&referenceIOCtlString
);

if (ntStatus == STATUS_SUCCESS)
{
	ntStatus = IoSetDeviceInterfaceState(&referenceIOCtlString, TRUE);
}

after that do I need to create call IoCreateSymbolicLink or not required.

or: where and how to create symbolic link in sysvad example??? plz help i am stuck with this

Hi ,

my createfile function returns INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE,

hDev = CreateFile(
(LPCSTR)DeviceInterfaceList,
GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE,
0,
NULL,
OPEN_EXISTING,
FILE_SHARE_READ|FILE_SHARE_WRITE,
NULL
);

i have below code in place:

inside driverentry:
DriverObject->MajorFunction[IRP_MJ_CREATE] = IoctlCreateClose;
DriverObject->MajorFunction[IRP_MJ_CLOSE] = IoctlCreateClose;

definition:

NTSTATUS IoctlCreateClose(In DEVICE_OBJECT* _DeviceObject,
Inout IRP* _Irp)
{
UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER(_DeviceObject);

PIO_STACK_LOCATION stackLocation = NULL;
stackLocation = IoGetCurrentIrpStackLocation(_Irp);

switch (stackLocation->MajorFunction)
{
case IRP_MJ_CREATE:
	DbgPrint("Handle to symbolink link %wZ opened", DEVICE_SYMBOLIC_NAME);
	break;
case IRP_MJ_CLOSE:
	DbgPrint("Handle to symbolink link %wZ closed", DEVICE_SYMBOLIC_NAME);
	break;
default:
	break;
}

_Irp->IoStatus.Information = 0;
_Irp->IoStatus.Status = STATUS_SUCCESS;
IoCompleteRequest(_Irp, IO_NO_INCREMENT);
PcDispatchIrp(_DeviceObject, _Irp);

return STATUS_SUCCESS;

}

in output console i am getting

\?\ROOT#MEDIA#0001#{4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}/////////DeviceInterfaceList value
fail to open device (0x2)/////how to resolve this

hello All,

need your help on above post,
plz i am totally stuck on this, not able to find the reason why my CreateFile api gives ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND , while the value of device interface is ?\ROOT#MEDIA#0001#{4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}

Please do let me know if u need any more input inorder to understand my issue

after that do I need to create call IoCreateSymbolicLink or not required

Not required.

IoRegisterDeviceInterface … RPC_AUDIO_IOCTL

Is that actually a GUID? That’s a very strange name for a Device Interface GUID.

And WHERE do you want to access the device from? In user mode, you lookup the GUID using CM_Get_Device_Interface_List

None of the code that you posted makes much sense to me… I don’t feel like I’ve got the full picture of what you’re trying to do, where, and how…

Peter

You don’t need to call IoCreateSymbolicLink, but you do need to call IoSetDeviceInterfaceState to turn it on.

4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318

That’s the Media class GUID. Your driver should already be registered there. How did you define RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO? Where did DEVICE_SYMBOLIC_LINK come from in your driver code?

Also, you need to remember that you are going to see IRP_MJ_CREATE calls both from your test application AND from the Audio Engine. Audio Engine opens many file handles into an audio device: some for the filter while it’s probing, some for the filter while it is operating, and some for each of the pins, where the traffic really flows. You need to check in your “create” handler whether it is a request from your app or not. If it is, you handle it and complete it. If not, you pass it to PcDispatchIrp.

_Irp->IoStatus.Information = 0;
_Irp->IoStatus.Status = STATUS_SUCCESS;
IoCompleteRequest(_Irp, IO_NO_INCREMENT);
PcDispatchIrp(_DeviceObject, _Irp);

If you were looking for the fastest way to generate a blue screen, this is it. Do you really not understand what’s going on here at all? PcDispatchIrp tells the Port Class driver to handle this request using its normal processing. It’s going to go through it’s own “create” processing, then it will complete the request. Since you have already completed, it, BANG, blue screen. You need to ONE or the OTHER. Never both. If you handle the IRP, then you don’t let Port Class see it. If you don’t handle it, then you pass it to Port Class.

@“Peter_Viscarola_(OSR)” said:

after that do I need to create call IoCreateSymbolicLink or not required

Not required.

IoRegisterDeviceInterface … RPC_AUDIO_IOCTL

Is that actually a GUID? That’s a very strange name for a Device Interface GUID.

And WHERE do you want to access the device from? In user mode, you lookup the GUID using CM_Get_Device_Interface_List

None of the code that you posted makes much sense to me… I don’t feel like I’ve got the full picture of what you’re trying to do, where, and how…

Peter

DEFINE_GUIDSTRUCT(“4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318”, RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO);
#define RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO DEFINE_GUIDNAMED(RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO)

in user application:

GUID guid = { 0x4d36e96c, 0xe325, 0x11ce, 0xbf, 0xc1, 0x8, 0x0, 0x2b, 0xe1, 0x3, 0x18 };

CONFIGRET cr;

// char* DevicePath = NULL;
PZZSTR DeviceInterfaceList = NULL;
ULONG DeviceInterfaceListLength = 0;

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List_Size(
    &DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    &guid,
    NULL,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_ALL_DEVICES
);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list size\n");
    return ;
}

// WCHAR DeviceInterfaceList[4096];
//DeviceInterfaceList = (PZZSTR)malloc(DeviceInterfaceListLength);
DeviceInterfaceList = (PZZSTR)HeapAlloc(
GetProcessHeap(),
HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY,
DeviceInterfaceListLength * sizeof(WCHAR));

if (DeviceInterfaceList == NULL) {
    wprintf(L"allocate interface list buffer fail\n");
    return ;
}

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List(
    &guid,
    NULL,
    DeviceInterfaceList,
    DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_PRESENT);

_tprintf(_T(“%s\n”), (LPCSTR)DeviceInterfaceList);
HANDLE hDev = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;

hDev = CreateFile(
    (LPCSTR)DeviceInterfaceList,
    GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE,
    0,
    NULL,
    OPEN_EXISTING,
    FILE_SHARE_READ|FILE_SHARE_WRITE,
    NULL
);

DeviceInterfaceList value is : ?\ROOT#MEDIA#0001#{4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}

but Createfile returns ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND//////need help on this

@Tim_Roberts said:
You don’t need to call IoCreateSymbolicLink, but you do need to call IoSetDeviceInterfaceState to turn it on.

4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318

That’s the Media class GUID. Your driver should already be registered there. How did you define RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO? Where did DEVICE_SYMBOLIC_LINK come from in your driver code?

Also, you need to remember that you are going to see IRP_MJ_CREATE calls both from your test application AND from the Audio Engine. Audio Engine opens many file handles into an audio device: some for the filter while it’s probing, some for the filter while it is operating, and some for each of the pins, where the traffic really flows. You need to check in your “create” handler whether it is a request from your app or not. If it is, you handle it and complete it. If not, you pass it to PcDispatchIrp.

_Irp->IoStatus.Information = 0;
_Irp->IoStatus.Status = STATUS_SUCCESS;
IoCompleteRequest(_Irp, IO_NO_INCREMENT);
PcDispatchIrp(_DeviceObject, _Irp);

If you were looking for the fastest way to generate a blue screen, this is it. Do you really not understand what’s going on here at all? PcDispatchIrp tells the Port Class driver to handle this request using its normal processing. It’s going to go through it’s own “create” processing, then it will complete the request. Since you have already completed, it, BANG, blue screen. You need to ONE or the OTHER. Never both. If you handle the IRP, then you don’t let Port Class see it. If you don’t handle it, then you pass it to Port Class.

Hi,

my device is already registered at 4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318 in registry,

#define IOCTL_NT_DEVICE_NAME L"\Device\RemotePCVad"
UNICODE_STRING referenceIOCtlString;

DEFINE_GUIDSTRUCT(“4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318”, RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO);
#define RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO DEFINE_GUIDNAMED(RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO)

I think since i am using

RtlInitUnicodeString(&referenceIOCtlString, IOCTL_NT_DEVICE_NAME);

ntStatus = IoRegisterDeviceInterface(
	PhysicalDeviceObject,
	&RPC_IOCTL_AUDIO,
	NULL,
	&referenceIOCtlString
);

if (ntStatus == STATUS_SUCCESS)
{
	ntStatus = IoSetDeviceInterfaceState(&referenceIOCtlString, TRUE);
}

so Symbolinclink is not required, I will remove DbgPrint(“Handle to symbolink link %wZ opened”, DEVICE_SYMBOLIC_NAME); code from IoctlCreateClose function

but why Createfile returns ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND;

my testapp code:

GUID guid = { 0x4d36e96c, 0xe325, 0x11ce, 0xbf, 0xc1, 0x8, 0x0, 0x2b, 0xe1, 0x3, 0x18 };/

CONFIGRET cr;
PZZSTR DeviceInterfaceList = NULL;
ULONG DeviceInterfaceListLength = 0;

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List_Size(
    &DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    &guid,
    NULL,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_ALL_DEVICES
);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list size\n");
    return ;
}

DeviceInterfaceList = (PZZSTR)HeapAlloc(
    GetProcessHeap(),
    HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY,
    DeviceInterfaceListLength * sizeof(WCHAR));

if (DeviceInterfaceList == NULL) {
    wprintf(L"allocate interface list buffer fail\n");
    return ;
}

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List(
    &guid,
    NULL,
    DeviceInterfaceList,
    DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_PRESENT);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list\n");
   return ;
}

// strncpy_s(DevicePath, DeviceInterfaceListLength,DeviceInterfaceList, DeviceInterfaceListLength);
//StringCchCopy(DevicePath, DeviceInterfaceListLength, DeviceInterfaceList);
///printf(L"%s\n", (const char*)DeviceInterfaceList);

_tprintf(_T("%s\n"), (LPCSTR)DeviceInterfaceList);
HANDLE hDev = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;

hDev = CreateFile(
    (LPCSTR)DeviceInterfaceList,
    GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE,
    0,
    NULL,
    OPEN_EXISTING,
    FILE_SHARE_READ|FILE_SHARE_WRITE,
    NULL
);

errNum = GetLastError();//////errNum value is 2/////this is issue i am facing

in registry i can see my device registered under:

Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\DeviceClasses{4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}##?#ROOT#MEDIA#0001#{4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318}

How to know who(user app or audio engine) calls IRP_MJ_CREATE

my device is already registered at 4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318 in registry

That GUID does not belong to you. That’s a Microsoft GUID, and exposing it makes other promises. You need to create your own GUID for your own private interface.

All of the casts you are doing make me suspicious that you’ve made a rookie mistake. You shouldn’t have to cast any of that. Just for now, you should throw out the _tprintf and use straight puts to make absolutely sure you’re getting an ANSI string, and not a Unicode string. Get rid of any casts where you are passing that variable to other APIs. If you get compilation errors, then you are mixing character sets, which is disastrous. That’s especially true for CreateFile. If you have to cast the file name to get it into CreateFile, then you have made a mistake.

How to know who(user app or audio engine) calls IRP_MJ_CREATE

It’s tricky, The most common way is to add a reference string when you create your device interface, and look for that reference string in the file name field when you get the IRP_MJ_CREATE call.

Is your create handler getting called at all? I’m guessing it isn’t, because you would have seen a blue screen. Does your device appear in Device Manager as a sound device?

@Tim_Roberts said:

my device is already registered at 4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318 in registry

That GUID does not belong to you. That’s a Microsoft GUID, and exposing it makes other promises. You need to create your own GUID for your own private interface.

All of the casts you are doing make me suspicious that you’ve made a rookie mistake. You shouldn’t have to cast any of that. Just for now, you should throw out the _tprintf and use straight puts to make absolutely sure you’re getting an ANSI string, and not a Unicode string. Get rid of any casts where you are passing that variable to other APIs. If you get compilation errors, then you are mixing character sets, which is disastrous. That’s especially true for CreateFile. If you have to cast the file name to get it into CreateFile, then you have made a mistake.

How to know who(user app or audio engine) calls IRP_MJ_CREATE

It’s tricky, The most common way is to add a reference string when you create your device interface, and look for that reference string in the file name field when you get the IRP_MJ_CREATE call.

Is your create handler getting called at all? I’m guessing it isn’t, because you would have seen a blue screen. Does your device appear in Device Manager as a sound device?

Hi Tim,

You are right, i have seen bluescreen issue, but my device appear in device manager, and also i can see the virtual mic in my sound control panel, the only issue i am facing is blue screen(thats bcz of PCDispatcher as u mentioned in create function) and CreateFile error.

for CreateFile i removed all the casting:

GUID guid = {0x4d36e96c, 0xe325, 0x11ce, 0xbf, 0xc1, 0x8, 0x0, 0x2b, 0xe1, 0x3, 0x18 };
CONFIGRET cr;
PWSTR DeviceInterfaceList = NULL;
ULONG DeviceInterfaceListLength = 0;

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List_Size(
    &DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    &guid,
    NULL,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_ALL_DEVICES
);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list size\n");
    return -1;
}

DeviceInterfaceList = (PWSTR)HeapAlloc(
    GetProcessHeap(),
    HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY,
    DeviceInterfaceListLength * sizeof(WCHAR));

if (DeviceInterfaceList == NULL) {
    wprintf(L"allocate interface list buffer fail\n");
    return -2;
}

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List(
    &guid,
    NULL,
    DeviceInterfaceList,/////////////////////////////getting error here:    'function': incompatible types - from 'PWSTR' to 'PZZSTR'
    DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_ALL_DEVICES);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list\n");
    return -3;
}

wprintf(L"%s\n", DeviceInterfaceList);

HANDLE hDev = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;

hDev = CreateFile(
    DeviceInterfaceList,
    FILE_GENERIC_READ,
    0,
    NULL,
    OPEN_EXISTING,
    0,
    NULL
);

if (hDev == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
    wprintf(L"fail to open device (0x%X)\n", GetLastError());
    return -4;
}

plz help me to resolve ‘function’: incompatible types - from ‘PWSTR’ to ‘PZZSTR’ error in CM_Get_Device_Interface_List function

@chauhan_sumit001 said:

@Tim_Roberts said:

my device is already registered at 4d36e96c-e325-11ce-bfc1-08002be10318 in registry

That GUID does not belong to you. That’s a Microsoft GUID, and exposing it makes other promises. You need to create your own GUID for your own private interface.

All of the casts you are doing make me suspicious that you’ve made a rookie mistake. You shouldn’t have to cast any of that. Just for now, you should throw out the _tprintf and use straight puts to make absolutely sure you’re getting an ANSI string, and not a Unicode string. Get rid of any casts where you are passing that variable to other APIs. If you get compilation errors, then you are mixing character sets, which is disastrous. That’s especially true for CreateFile. If you have to cast the file name to get it into CreateFile, then you have made a mistake.

How to know who(user app or audio engine) calls IRP_MJ_CREATE

It’s tricky, The most common way is to add a reference string when you create your device interface, and look for that reference string in the file name field when you get the IRP_MJ_CREATE call.

Is your create handler getting called at all? I’m guessing it isn’t, because you would have seen a blue screen. Does your device appear in Device Manager as a sound device?

Hi Tim,

You are right, i have seen bluescreen issue, but my device appear in device manager, and also i can see the virtual mic in my sound control panel, the only issue i am facing is blue screen(thats bcz of PCDispatcher as u mentioned in create function) and CreateFile error.

That GUID i have added in INF file .

Is it complaining about PZZSTR, or about PZZWSTR? If it is complaining about PZZSTR, then you have somehow mixed up your APIs, because it means you have the ANSI CM_Get_Device_Interface_List and the Unicode CreateFile. If it is complaining about PZZWSTR, then I will allow you to insert a cast to eliminate that warning. :wink: Just make sure the wprintf prints something readable.

That GUID I have added in INF file.

Why? It doesn’t need to be there. And it’s STILL not your GUID.

@Tim_Roberts said:
Is it complaining about PZZSTR, or about PZZWSTR? If it is complaining about PZZSTR, then you have somehow mixed up your APIs, because it means you have the ANSI CM_Get_Device_Interface_List and the Unicode CreateFile. If it is complaining about PZZWSTR, then I will allow you to insert a cast to eliminate that warning. :wink: Just make sure the wprintf prints something readable.

That GUID I have added in INF file.

Why? It doesn’t need to be there. And it’s STILL not your GUID.

It was complaining about PZZSTR that too inside CM_Get_Device_Interface_List.

GUID guid = { 0x4d36e96c, 0xe325, 0x11ce, 0xbf, 0xc1, 0x8, 0x0, 0x2b, 0xe1, 0x3, 0x18 };

CONFIGRET cr;
LPTSTR  DeviceInterfaceList = NULL;////////////////////////LPTSTR instead of PWSTR
ULONG DeviceInterfaceListLength = 0;

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List_Size(
    &DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    &guid,
    NULL,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_ALL_DEVICES
);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list size\n");
    return ;
}
DeviceInterfaceList = (LPTSTR)HeapAlloc(//(PZZSTR)HeapAlloc(
    GetProcessHeap(),
    HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY,
    DeviceInterfaceListLength * sizeof(WCHAR));

if (DeviceInterfaceList == NULL) {
    wprintf(L"allocate interface list buffer fail\n");
    return ;
}

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List(
    &guid,
    NULL,
    DeviceInterfaceList,
    DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_PRESENT);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list\n");
   return ;
}

printf("%s\n", DeviceInterfaceList);

HANDLE hDev = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;

hDev = CreateFile(
    DeviceInterfaceList,//DeviceInterfaceList,
    GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE,
    0,
    NULL,
    OPEN_EXISTING,
    FILE_SHARE_READ|FILE_SHARE_WRITE,
    NULL
);

if I declare DeviceInterfaceList as LPTSTR instead of PWSTR its compiling and , value of DeviceInterfaceList also gettingprinted as

\?\ROOT#UNNAMED_DEVICE#0001#{4d36e96c - e325 - 11ce - bfc1 - 08002be10318}

is it fine???

@Tim_Roberts said:
Is it complaining about PZZSTR, or about PZZWSTR? If it is complaining about PZZSTR, then you have somehow mixed up your APIs, because it means you have the ANSI CM_Get_Device_Interface_List and the Unicode CreateFile. If it is complaining about PZZWSTR, then I will allow you to insert a cast to eliminate that warning. :wink: Just make sure the wprintf prints something readable.

That GUID I have added in INF file.

Why? It doesn’t need to be there. And it’s STILL not your GUID.

It was complaining about PZZSTR that too inside CM_Get_Device_Interface_List ,

then I changed the variable DeviceInterfaceList type from PWSTR to LPTSTR

GUID guid = { 0x01ee4b4f, 0x6fb0, 0x4763, 0xa8, 0x43, 0x41, 0x55, 0x91, 0xf1, 0xf0, 0x1 };

CONFIGRET cr;
LPTSTR  DeviceInterfaceList = NULL;
ULONG DeviceInterfaceListLength = 0;

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List_Size(
    &DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    &guid,
    NULL,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_ALL_DEVICES
);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list size\n");
    return ;
}
DeviceInterfaceList = (LPTSTR)HeapAlloc(//(PZZSTR)HeapAlloc(
    GetProcessHeap(),
    HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY,
    DeviceInterfaceListLength * sizeof(WCHAR));

if (DeviceInterfaceList == NULL) {
    wprintf(L"allocate interface list buffer fail\n");
    return ;
}

cr = CM_Get_Device_Interface_List(
    &guid,
    NULL,
    DeviceInterfaceList,
    DeviceInterfaceListLength,
    CM_GET_DEVICE_INTERFACE_LIST_PRESENT);

if (cr != CR_SUCCESS) {
    wprintf(L"fail to get interface list\n");
   return ;
}

printf("%s\n", DeviceInterfaceList);
HANDLE hDev = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;

hDev = CreateFile(
    DeviceInterfaceList,//DeviceInterfaceList,
    GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE,
    0,
    NULL,
    OPEN_EXISTING,
    FILE_SHARE_READ|FILE_SHARE_WRITE,
    NULL
);

got DeviceInterfaceList as \?\ROOT#UNNAMED_DEVICE#0001#{01ee4b4f-6fb0-4763-a843-415591f1f001}

Is it fine , need your approval

You don’t need MY approval, you need WINDOWS’ approval. Does your CreateFile call get into the driver now?

@Tim_Roberts said:
You don’t need MY approval, you need WINDOWS’ approval. Does your CreateFile call get into the driver now?

that i still need to check.

but one more help i already asked, need solution

NTSTATUS IoctlCreateClose(In DEVICE_OBJECT* _DeviceObject,
Inout IRP* _Irp)
{
UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER(_DeviceObject);

PIO_STACK_LOCATION stackLocation = NULL;
stackLocation = IoGetCurrentIrpStackLocation(_Irp);
stackLocation->FileObject->FileName == 
switch (stackLocation->MajorFunction)
{
case IRP_MJ_CREATE:
	DbgPrint("Handle to symbolink link  opened");
	break;
case IRP_MJ_CLOSE:
	DbgPrint("Handle to symbolink link closed");
	break;
default:
	break;
}
_Irp->IoStatus.Information = 0;
_Irp->IoStatus.Status = STATUS_SUCCESS;
IoCompleteRequest(_Irp, IO_NO_INCREMENT);
////PcDispatchIrp(_DeviceObject, _Irp);

return STATUS_SUCCESS;

}

how to knoe that user application calls this api, so that in that case i can avoid PcDispatchIrp

without PcDispatchIrp call here, i couldnot see virtual mic in sound control panel, how to proceed for now

Hi Tim,

For now i have only added PcDispatchIrp and commented IoCompleteRequest(_Irp, IO_NO_INCREMENT); part in IRP_MJ_CREATE handler function still my CreateFile returns FILE_NOT_FOUND error number 2.

some bug in my code that you can only identify sir.

Any help on above post…thanks in advance

Hi Tim,

inside IRP_MJ_CREATE handler function for now i commented PcDispatchIrp(_DeviceObject, _Irp);

with that Createfile is working, but i am not able to see virtual device sound control panel.
while it is visible in device manager.

so plz help me how i can have both PcDispatchIrp(_DeviceObject, _Irp); and IoCompleteRequest(_Irp, IO_NO_INCREMENT); in IRP_MJ_CREATE handler. under condition that when user app call IRP_MJ_CREATE it should skip PcDispatchIrp(_DeviceObject, _Irp);

NTSTATUS IoctlCreateClose(In DEVICE_OBJECT* _DeviceObject,
Inout IRP* _Irp)
{
UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER(_DeviceObject);

PIO_STACK_LOCATION stackLocation = NULL;
stackLocation = IoGetCurrentIrpStackLocation(_Irp);

switch (stackLocation->MajorFunction)
{
case IRP_MJ_CREATE:
	DbgPrint("Handle to symbolink link  opened");
	break;
case IRP_MJ_CLOSE:
	DbgPrint("Handle to symbolink link closed");
	break;
default:
	break;
}

_Irp->IoStatus.Information = 0;
_Irp->IoStatus.Status = STATUS_SUCCESS;
IoCompleteRequest(_Irp, IO_NO_INCREMENT);
//PcDispatchIrp(_DeviceObject, _Irp);////////////////////////how to keep this also

return STATUS_SUCCESS;

}

@chauhan_sumit001 said:
Any help on above post…thanks in advance

my createfile is working now,after commenting pcdispatcher from IRP_MJ_CREATE handler, but i want PCDispatcher also,how to do that

I did tell you that earlier in the thread. Port Class uses the file name in the IRP_MJ_CREATE IRP to decide what kind of open it is. You can dump those file names in the debugger to see what they look like. You can add a reference string to your device interface, and that reference string will be passed as the file name. If you use a custom reference string, then you can identify when the open comes from your application.

Hi Tim,

Plz give some clue on above post.