On Wed, Nov 12, 2014 at 10:36:03AM +0100, Paolo Bonzini wrote: > > > On 12/11/2014 10:22, Alexander Graf wrote: > >>>> Absolutely lets make an example for qemu running on BE and LE > >>>> > >>>> byte order config space backing pci_default_read_config pcilg > >>>> (with cpu_to_le) > >>>> BE 0x78563412 0x12345678 0x78563412 > >>>> LE 0x78563412 0x78563412 0x78563412 > >>> > >>> No, pci_default_read_config() always returns 0x12345678 because it > >>> returns a register, not memory. > >>> > >> > >> You mean implementation of pci_default_read_config is broken? > >> If it should return a register it should not do "return le32_to_cpu(val);" > > > > It has to, to convert from memory (after memcpy) to an actual register > > value. Look at the value list in Paolo's email - I really have no idea > > how to explain it any better. > > pci_default_read_config is reading from a *device* register, and has > absolutely zero knowledge of the host CPU endianness. > > Another way to explain that the result of pci_default_read_config is > independent of the host endianness, is that the function is basically > doing this: > > switch (len) { > case 1: return d->config[address]; > case 2: return ldw_le_p(&d->config[address)]); > case 4: return ldl_le_p(&d->config[address)]); > default: abort(); > } > > So if you want to make the outcome big endian, you have to swap > unconditionally. > > Paolo
Hi Paolo, Alex, thx a lot for all the explanation and patience. I think I have understand your point now. I will change the code to unconditional swap. I feel I had a knowledge gap regarding running guest and host which different byte orders. Hope this gap is filled now ;) Frank >