On 05/30/2014 01:09 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>>
>> I came up with the following, it seems like a reasonable simplification:
>>
>>> #define _LE(x, bits, ifnot)                                           \
>>>       __builtin_choose_expr(                                          \
>>>               (sizeof(x) == bits/8),                                  \
>>>               (__typeof__(x))le##bits##toh(x), ifnot)
> 
> This will do awful things if x is a floating-point type, and, for
> integers, the cast is probably unnecessary.  But it should be okay.
> 

I mostly wanted to preserve the signedness.  Yes, if we care about
floating-point it gets trickier.

At some point hopefully there will be a native C feature to handle this
crap.

>>> extern void bad_le(uint64_t);
> 
> If this ever goes in a common header, then we should do the
> __attribute__((error)) thing.  I wonder if it would ever make sense to
> have __LINUX_HOSTPROG__ and make some of the basic headers work.  Hmm.
> 
>>> #define _LAST_LE(x)                                                   \
>>>       __builtin_choose_expr(sizeof(x) == 1, (x), bad_le(x))
>>>
>>> #define LE(x)                                                         \
>>>       _LE(x, 64, _LE(x, 32, _LE(x, 16, _LAST_LE(x))))
>>
>> What do you think?
> 
> My only real real objection is that _LE sounds like converting *to*
> little-endian to me.  Admittedly, that's the same thing on any
> remotely sane architecture, but still.

GET_LE() then?

        -hpa


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