On Fri, Apr 28, 2023, at 13:27, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: > On Fri, Apr 28, 2023 at 2:18 PM Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 2023-04-28 10:27, Thomas Zimmermann wrote: >> > - >> > -#elif defined(__i386__) || defined(__alpha__) || defined(__x86_64__) || \ >> > - defined(__hppa__) || defined(__sh__) || defined(__powerpc__) || \ >> > - defined(__arm__) || defined(__aarch64__) || defined(__mips__) >> > - >> > -#define fb_readb __raw_readb >> > -#define fb_readw __raw_readw >> > -#define fb_readl __raw_readl >> > -#define fb_readq __raw_readq >> > -#define fb_writeb __raw_writeb >> > -#define fb_writew __raw_writew >> > -#define fb_writel __raw_writel >> > -#define fb_writeq __raw_writeq >> >> Note that on at least some architectures, the __raw variants are >> native-endian, whereas the regular accessors are explicitly >> little-endian, so there is a slight risk of inadvertently changing >> behaviour on big-endian systems (MIPS most likely, but a few old ARM >> platforms run BE as well). > > Also on m68k, when ISA or PCI are enabled. > > In addition, the non-raw variants may do some extras to guarantee > ordering, which you do not need on a frame buffer. > > So I'd go for the __raw_*() variants everywhere. The only implementations in fbdev are 1) sparc sbus 2) __raw_writel 3) direct pointer dereference But none use the byte-swapping writel() implementations, and the only ones that use the direct pointer dereference or sbus are the ones on which these are defined the same as __raw_writel Arnd