On Tue 2022-09-06 14:19:44, Russell King wrote: > From: Hector Martin <marcan@xxxxxxxxx> > > %p4cc is designed for DRM/V4L2 FOURCCs with their specific quirks, but > it's useful to be able to print generic 4-character codes formatted as > an integer. Extend it to add format specifiers for printing generic > 32-bit FOURCCs with various endian semantics: > > %p4ch Host-endian > %p4cl Little-endian > %p4cb Big-endian > %p4cr Reverse-endian > > The endianness determines how bytes are interpreted as a u32, and the > FOURCC is then always printed MSByte-first (this is the opposite of > V4L/DRM FOURCCs). This covers most practical cases, e.g. %p4cr would > allow printing LSByte-first FOURCCs stored in host endian order > (other than the hex form being in character order, not the integer > value). > > --- a/Documentation/core-api/printk-formats.rst > +++ b/Documentation/core-api/printk-formats.rst > @@ -625,6 +625,38 @@ Passed by reference. > %p4cc Y10 little-endian (0x20303159) > %p4cc NV12 big-endian (0xb231564e) > > +Generic FourCC code > +------------------- > + > +:: > + %p4c[hnbl] gP00 (0x67503030) > + > +Print a generic FourCC code, as both ASCII characters and its numerical > +value as hexadecimal. > + > +The additional ``h``, ``r``, ``b``, and ``l`` specifiers are used to specify > +host, reversed, big or little endian order data respectively. Host endian > +order means the data is interpreted as a 32-bit integer and the most > +significant byte is printed first; that is, the character code as printed > +matches the byte order stored in memory on big-endian systems, and is reversed > +on little-endian systems. > + > +Passed by reference. > + > +Examples for a little-endian machine, given &(u32)0x67503030:: > + > + %p4ch gP00 (0x67503030) > + %p4cl gP00 (0x67503030) > + %p4cb 00Pg (0x30305067) > + %p4cr 00Pg (0x30305067) Nit: I would prefer to keep the same order (h,r,b,l) everywhere. I guess that you wanted to show exactly the same results next to each other. But it is not the case on big-endian anyway. > + > +Examples for a big-endian machine, given &(u32)0x67503030:: > + > + %p4ch gP00 (0x67503030) > + %p4cl 00Pg (0x30305067) > + %p4cb gP00 (0x67503030) > + %p4cr 00Pg (0x30305067) Same here. > + > Thanks > ====== > > diff --git a/lib/vsprintf.c b/lib/vsprintf.c > index 3c1853a9d1c0..31707499f90f 100644 > --- a/lib/vsprintf.c > +++ b/lib/vsprintf.c > @@ -1757,27 +1757,50 @@ char *fourcc_string(char *buf, char *end, const u32 *fourcc, > char output[sizeof("0123 little-endian (0x01234567)")]; > char *p = output; > unsigned int i; > + bool pix_fmt = false; Nit: I would prefer "pixel_fmt". I am not a graphics guy and wondered what "pix" did stands for ;-) > u32 orig, val; > > - if (fmt[1] != 'c' || fmt[2] != 'c') > + if (fmt[1] != 'c') > return error_string(buf, end, "(%p4?)", spec); > > if (check_pointer(&buf, end, fourcc, spec)) > return buf; > > orig = get_unaligned(fourcc); > - val = orig & ~BIT(31); > + switch (fmt[2]) { > + case 'h': > + val = orig; > + break; > + case 'r': > + val = orig = swab32(orig); > + break; > + case 'l': > + val = orig = le32_to_cpu(orig); > + break; > + case 'b': > + val = orig = be32_to_cpu(orig); > + break; > + case 'c': > + /* Pixel formats are printed LSB-first */ > + val = swab32(orig & ~BIT(31)); > + pix_fmt = true; > + break; > + default: > + return error_string(buf, end, "(%p4?)", spec); > + } > > for (i = 0; i < sizeof(u32); i++) { > - unsigned char c = val >> (i * 8); > + unsigned char c = val >> ((3 - i) * 8); This hardcodes '3' but the for-cycle uses i < sizeof(u32). We should be consistent. A solution would be: int i; for (i = sizeof(u32); --i >= 0;) { unsigned char c = val >> (i * 8); > /* Print non-control ASCII characters as-is, dot otherwise */ > *p++ = isascii(c) && isprint(c) ? c : '.'; > } > > - *p++ = ' '; > - strcpy(p, orig & BIT(31) ? "big-endian" : "little-endian"); > - p += strlen(p); > + if (pix_fmt) { > + *p++ = ' '; > + strcpy(p, orig & BIT(31) ? "big-endian" : "little-endian"); > + p += strlen(p); > + } > > *p++ = ' '; > *p++ = '('; Best Regards, Petr