Hello. In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (at Wed, 7 Nov 2007 16:58:59 +0100), Ingo Oeser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> says:
> > + eui[0] = 0; > > + > > + /* Check for RFC3330 global address ranges */ > > + if (((ipv4 >= 0x01000000) && (ipv4 < 0x0a000000)) || > > + ((ipv4 >= 0x0b000000) && (ipv4 < 0x7f000000)) || > > + ((ipv4 >= 0x80000000) && (ipv4 < 0xa9fe0000)) || > > + ((ipv4 >= 0xa9ff0000) && (ipv4 < 0xac100000)) || > > + ((ipv4 >= 0xac200000) && (ipv4 < 0xc0a80000)) || > > + ((ipv4 >= 0xc0a90000) && (ipv4 < 0xc6120000)) || > > + ((ipv4 >= 0xc6140000) && (ipv4 < 0xe0000000))) eui[0] |= > > 0x2; > > + > > Instead of converting network to host byte order at runtime > and comparing the results to constants, let the compiler convert > the constants to network byte order and compare in network order. > > so use: > > if (((*addr >= htonl(0x01000000)) && (*addr < htonl(0x0a000000))) || .... > > instead. The compiler will notice that "0x01000000" is a constant and will > use "_constant_htonl()" automatically. No, you cannot do this. When you check the "range", you need to use host-byte order. > > + > > +static inline int ipv6_addr_is_isatap(const struct in6_addr *addr) > > +{ > > + return (addr->s6_addr32[2] == __constant_htonl(0x02005EFE) || > > + addr->s6_addr32[2] == __constant_htonl(0x00005EFE)); > > +} > > +#endif > > The compiler will notice that "0x01000000" is a constant and will > use "_constant_htonl()" automatically. Please use simply htonl(). Right. And, maybe, you can write as follows: return ((addr->s6_addr32[2] | htonl(0x02000000)) == htonl(0x02005EFE)); --yoshfuji - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html