Le 08/04/2015 14:19, Frank Rowand a écrit : > On 4/7/2015 11:44 PM, Florian Fainelli wrote: >> Commit 51975db0b7333 ("of/flattree: merge early_init_dt_scan_memory() >> common code") consolidated some code from PowerPC (typically >> big-endian), and ended-up adding a pr_debug() printing reg properties in >> big-endian (DT native) format, not CPU endian. Unsurprisingly, when >> these messages are turned on a little-endian systems, this is confusing, >> so do the conversion while printing the values. >> >> Signed-off-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@xxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> drivers/of/fdt.c | 3 ++- >> 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) >> >> diff --git a/drivers/of/fdt.c b/drivers/of/fdt.c >> index 3a896c9aeb74..0d8f0e4bd107 100644 >> --- a/drivers/of/fdt.c >> +++ b/drivers/of/fdt.c >> @@ -880,7 +880,8 @@ int __init early_init_dt_scan_memory(unsigned long node, const char *uname, >> endp = reg + (l / sizeof(__be32)); >> >> pr_debug("memory scan node %s, reg size %d, data: %x %x %x %x,\n", >> - uname, l, reg[0], reg[1], reg[2], reg[3]); >> + uname, l, be32_to_cpu(reg[0]), be32_to_cpu(reg[1]), >> + be32_to_cpu(reg[2]), be32_to_cpu(reg[3])); > > The pr_debug() assumes that the length of reg[] is >= 4 elements, which might not be true. > Since the following while loop checks the length of reg[] and then uses pr_debug() to > print each (base, size) tuple with the correct endian, maybe it would be better to > just remove reg[0] through reg[3] from the above pr_debug() instead of fixing the > endian issue. Right, that works too, will follow-up with a patch removing the reg[0..3] prints. Thanks! -- Florian -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html