On 23/02/2017 12:34, Peter Maydell wrote: > On 23 February 2017 at 10:33, Paolo Bonzini <pbonz...@redhat.com> wrote: >> >> >> On 23/02/2017 11:23, Peter Maydell wrote: >>> On 23 February 2017 at 10:10, Paolo Bonzini <pbonz...@redhat.com> wrote: >>>> On 23/02/2017 11:02, Peter Maydell wrote: >>>>> I'm really not convinced we need DEVICE_HOST_ENDIAN. RAM >>>>> areas should be target-endian (you can probably define >>>>> "target endianness" as "the endianness that RAM areas have".) >>>> >>>> This is not RAM. This is MMIO, backed by a MMIO area in the host. >>> >>> Hmm, I see...the naming is a bit unfortunate if it's not RAM. >> >> Yeah, it's called like that because it is backed by a RAMBlock but it >> returns false for memory_access_is_direct. > > We should probably update the doc comment to note that the > pointer is to host-endianness memory (and that this is not > like normal RAM which is target-endian)...
I wouldn't call it host-endianness memory, and I disagree that normal RAM is target-endian---in both cases it's just a bunch of bytes. However, the access done by the MemoryRegionOps callbacks needs to match the endianness declared by the MemoryRegionOps themselves. Paolo >>>> The >>>> MemoryRegionOps read from the MMIO area (so the data has host >>>> endianness) and do not do any further swap: >>>> >>>> data = *(uint16_t *)(mr->ram_block->host + addr); >>>> >>>> Here, the dereference is basically the same as ldl_he_p. >>>> >>>> If you wanted to make the MemoryRegion use DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN, you'd >>>> need to tswap around the access. Or you can use ldl_le_p and >>>> DEVICE_LITTLE_ENDIAN (this is what Yongji's patch open codes), or >>>> ldl_be_p and DEVICE_BIG_ENDIAN. They are all the same in the end. >>> >>> Using stl_p &c in a DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN MR would work too, right? >>> (This is how all the NATIVE_ENDIAN MRs in exec.c work.) >> >> Yes, it should, as long as the memcpy(...) of {ld,st}*_he_p is compiled >> to a single access, which should be the case. > > ...and whichever of these approaches we take, we should have > a comment which notes that we are converting from the host > endianness memory to the endianness specified by the MemoryRegion > endianness attribute. > > thanks > -- PMM >