UEFI code is always little-endian. Remove a superfluous test.

Remove a superfluous type conversion.

Signed-off-by: Heinrich Schuchardt <heinrich.schucha...@canonical.com>
---
 lib/efi_selftest/efi_selftest_fdt.c | 15 ++++++++-------
 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)

diff --git a/lib/efi_selftest/efi_selftest_fdt.c 
b/lib/efi_selftest/efi_selftest_fdt.c
index eae98208f6..412ba286ea 100644
--- a/lib/efi_selftest/efi_selftest_fdt.c
+++ b/lib/efi_selftest/efi_selftest_fdt.c
@@ -23,23 +23,24 @@ static const char *fdt;
 static const efi_guid_t fdt_guid = EFI_FDT_GUID;
 static const efi_guid_t acpi_guid = EFI_ACPI_TABLE_GUID;
 
-/*
- * Convert FDT value to host endianness.
+/**
+ * f2h() - convert FDT value to host endianness.
  *
- * @val                FDT value
- * @return     converted value
+ * UEFI code is always low endian. The FDT is big endian.
+ *
+ * @val:       FDT value
+ * Return:     converted value
  */
 static uint32_t f2h(fdt32_t val)
 {
        char *buf = (char *)&val;
        char i;
 
-#if __BYTE_ORDER__ == __ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__
        /* Swap the bytes */
        i = buf[0]; buf[0] = buf[3]; buf[3] = i;
        i = buf[1]; buf[1] = buf[2]; buf[2] = i;
-#endif
-       return *(uint32_t *)buf;
+
+       return val;
 }
 
 /**
-- 
2.32.0

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