inadr OpenVMS usage:address_range type: longword (unsigned) access: read only mechanism: by reference-array reference or descriptor Starting and ending virtual addresses of the pages to be unlocked. The inadr argument is the address of a 2-longword array containing, in order, the starting and ending process virtual addresses. Only the virtual page number portion of each virtual address is used; the low-order byte-within-page bits are ignored. If the starting and ending virtual address are the same, a single page is unlocked. If more than one page is being unlocked and you need to determine specifically which pages had been previously unlocked, you should unlock the pages one at a time, that is, one page per call to $ULWSET. The condition value returned by $ULWSET indicates whether the page was previously unlocked. On Alpha and Integrity server systems, if the first address in the 2-longword array is within an image mapped to your process, the entire image specified by the address is unlocked from the working set. retadr OpenVMS usage:address_range type: longword (unsigned) access: write only mechanism: by reference-array reference or descriptor Starting and ending process virtual addresses of the pages that were actually unlocked by $CRMPSC. The retadr argument is the address of a 2-longword array containing, in order, the starting and ending process virtual addresses. If an error occurs while multiple pages are being unlocked, retadr specifies those pages that were successfully unlocked before the error occurred. If no pages were successfully unlocked, both longwords in the retadr array contain the value -1. On Alpha and Integrity server systems, if the inadr argument specifies an address within an image mapped to your process, retadr specifies only one range of pages unlocked from the working set. Many ranges of pages might be unlocked. acmode OpenVMS usage:access_mode type: longword (unsigned) access: read only mechanism: by value Access mode on behalf of which the request is being made. The acmode argument is a longword containing the access mode. The $PSLDEF macro defines the symbols for the four access modes. The most privileged access mode used is the access mode of the caller. To unlock any specified page, the resultant access mode must be equal to or more privileged than the access mode of the owner of that page.