On 22-04-2025 01:37 pm, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: > Hi Aditya, Hector, > > On Tue, 8 Apr 2025 at 08:48, Aditya Garg <gargaditya08@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >> From: Hector Martin <marcan@xxxxxxxxx> >> >> %p4cc is designed for DRM/V4L2 FourCCs with their specific quirks, but >> it's useful to be able to print generic 4-character codes formatted as >> an integer. Extend it to add format specifiers for printing generic >> 32-bit FourCCs with various endian semantics: >> >> %p4ch Host byte order >> %p4cn Network byte order >> %p4cl Little-endian >> %p4cb Big-endian >> >> The endianness determines how bytes are interpreted as a u32, and the >> FourCC is then always printed MSByte-first (this is the opposite of >> V4L/DRM FourCCs). This covers most practical cases, e.g. %p4cn would >> allow printing LSByte-first FourCCs stored in host endian order >> (other than the hex form being in character order, not the integer >> value). >> >> Acked-by: Rasmus Villemoes <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> Reviewed-by: Andy Shevchenko <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> Reviewed-by: Petr Mladek <pmladek@xxxxxxxx> >> Tested-by: Petr Mladek <pmladek@xxxxxxxx> >> Signed-off-by: Hector Martin <marcan@xxxxxxxxx> >> Signed-off-by: Aditya Garg <gargaditya08@xxxxxxxx> > > Thanks for your patch, which is now commit 1938479b2720ebc0 > ("lib/vsprintf: Add support for generic FourCCs by extending %p4cc") > in drm-misc-next/ > >> --- a/Documentation/core-api/printk-formats.rst >> +++ b/Documentation/core-api/printk-formats.rst >> @@ -648,6 +648,38 @@ Examples:: >> %p4cc Y10 little-endian (0x20303159) >> %p4cc NV12 big-endian (0xb231564e) >> >> +Generic FourCC code >> +------------------- >> + >> +:: >> + %p4c[hnlb] gP00 (0x67503030) >> + >> +Print a generic FourCC code, as both ASCII characters and its numerical >> +value as hexadecimal. >> + >> +The generic FourCC code is always printed in the big-endian format, >> +the most significant byte first. This is the opposite of V4L/DRM FourCCs. >> + >> +The additional ``h``, ``n``, ``l``, and ``b`` specifiers define what >> +endianness is used to load the stored bytes. The data might be interpreted >> +using the host byte order, network byte order, little-endian, or big-endian. >> + >> +Passed by reference. >> + >> +Examples for a little-endian machine, given &(u32)0x67503030:: >> + >> + %p4ch gP00 (0x67503030) >> + %p4cn 00Pg (0x30305067) >> + %p4cl gP00 (0x67503030) >> + %p4cb 00Pg (0x30305067) >> + >> +Examples for a big-endian machine, given &(u32)0x67503030:: >> + >> + %p4ch gP00 (0x67503030) >> + %p4cn 00Pg (0x30305067) > > This doesn't look right to me, as network byte order is big endian? > Note that I didn't check the code. Originally, it was %p4cr (reverse-endian), but on the request of the maintainers, it was changed to %p4cn. So here network means reverse of host, not strictly big-endian. > >> + %p4cl 00Pg (0x30305067) >> + %p4cb gP00 (0x67503030) >> + >> Rust >> ---- >> > > Gr{oetje,eeting}s, > > Geert >