On Thursday 10 March 2016, Lada Trimasova wrote: > Driver is 8250, kernel is built for BE arc, nsim option in model > "nsim_isa_big_endian = 1". > > With current "readl" and "writel" implementation for ARC we read word from > memory without any endianess manipulation. So in case of little endian > architecture we get what we want: the first memory byte is the low byte in > the word. But in case of big endian architecture the word endianess is > swapped: the first memory byte is the high word byte. > > And for example, let's see what happens when we use "readl" in function > "serial8250_early_in" in driver/tty/serial/8250. > > Take a look to one line from memory dump: > 0xf0000010: 0x0b 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x60 0x00 0x00 0x00 > > When kernel is built for little endian architecture, we read this data in > status register in function "serial_putc" using "readl" function in > driver/tty/serial/8250 as: > r0: 0x0000006 > The low byte is 0x0b, so the condition "if ((status & BOTH_EMPTY) == > BOTH_EMPTY)" is true, as BOTH_EMPTY is some mask with low bytes set. > > When kernel is built with "CPU_BIG_ENDIAN" and model nsim option is > "nsim_isa_big_endian=1", we read this data as: > r0: 0x6000000 > So as you can see the low byte is 0x00 and above mentioned condition never > becomes true, we can't continue initialization. >
Ok, this sounds like a completely normal architecture implementation then, and your patch looks correct. If some other driver breaks because of this change, you should investigate what went wrong there, and treat it as a driver specific problem. Arnd _______________________________________________ linux-snps-arc mailing list linux-snps-arc@lists.infradead.org http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-snps-arc