COMPATIBILITY
 The kvm interface was first introduced in SunOS. A considerable number of programs have been developed that use this interface, making backward compatibility highly desirable. In most respects, the Sun kvm interface is consistent and clean. Accordingly, the generic portion of the interface (i.e.,  kvm_open,  kvm_close,  kvm_read,  kvm_write, and  kvm_nlist) has been incorporated into the BSD  interface. Indeed, many kvm applications (i.e., debuggers and statistical monitors) use only this subset of the interface.  The process interface was not kept. This is not a portability issue since any code that manipulates processes is inherently machine dependent. 
 Finally, the Sun kvm error reporting semantics are poorly defined. The library can be configured either to print errors to  stderr automatically, or to print no error messages at all. In the latter case, the nature of the error cannot be determined. To overcome this, the BSD  interface includes a routine, kvm_geterr(3), to return (not print out) the error message corresponding to the most recent error condition on the given descriptor.   
SEE ALSO
 kvm_close(3), kvm_getargv(3), kvm_getenvv(3), kvm_geterr(3), kvm_getfiles(3), kvm_getloadavg(3), kvm_getprocs(3), kvm_getswapinfo(3), kvm_nlist(3), kvm_open(3), kvm_openfiles(3), kvm_read(3), kvm_write(3), kmem(4), mem(4)