I’m studying for my operating systems final and was wondering if someone could tell me why the OS needs to switch into kernel mode for syscalls?
I’m studying for my operating systems final and was wondering if someone could tell
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A syscall is used specifically to run an operating in the kernel mode since the usual user code is not allowed to do this for security reasons.
For example, if you wanted to allocate memory, the operating system is privileged to do it (since it knows the page tables and is allowed to access memory of other processes), but you as a user program should not be allowed to peek or ruin the memory of other processes.
It’s a way of sandboxing you. So you send a syscall requesting the operating system to allocate memory, and that happens at the kernel level.
Edit: I see now that the Wikipedia article is surprisingly useful on this