On Sat, 2017-06-17 at 07:23 +0200, Julia Lawall wrote: > On Fri, 16 Jun 2017, Joe Perches wrote: > > On Fri, 2017-06-16 at 19:45 +0200, Frans Klaver wrote: > > > The header field in struct pd_message is declared as an __le16 type. The > > > data in the message is supposed to be little endian. This means we don't > > > have to go and shift the individual bytes into position when we're > > > filling the buffer, we can just copy the contents right away. As an > > > added benefit we don't get fishy results on big endian systems anymore. > > > > Thanks for pointing this out. > > > > There are several instances of this class of error. > > > > Here's a cocci script to find them. > > > > This is best used with cocci's --all-includes option like: > > > > $ spatch --all-includes --very-quiet --sp-file lebe_bitshifts.cocci . > > [ many defects...] Probably would have been better as [ many possible defects... ] > > $ cat lebe_bitshifts.cocci > > @@ > > typedef __le16, __le32, __le64, __be16, __be32, __be64; > > { __le16, __le32, __le64, __be16, __be32, __be64 } a; > > expression b; > > @@ > > > > * a << b [etc...] > Is this always a problem? No, not always. If the CPU is the equivalent endian, the bitshift is fine. It can't be known if the code is only compiled on a single cpu type. It is rather odd though to use endian notation if the code is compiled for a single cpu type. > Would it be useful to add this to the scripts > in the kernel? Maybe. btw: is there a way for the operators to be surrounded by some \( \| \) or some other bracket style so it could be written with a single test? Something like: @@ typedef __le16, __le32, __le64, __be16, __be32, __be64; { __le16, __le32, __le64, __be16, __be32, __be64 } a; expression b; @@ * a [<<|<<=|>>|>>=] b _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://driverdev.linuxdriverproject.org/mailman/listinfo/driverdev-devel