summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/debug
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2017-09-05 15:14:09 +0000
committerJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2017-09-05 15:14:09 +0000
commit99d6791899c43eb31b4d1896134501d814da7741 (patch)
treeecc50e46abf386187fc9a5fbc2bad6faf296a68d /debug
parent3f802aeb3403a558426b50d42a50c6bfcc6cc425 (diff)
Fix pcprofiledump cross-endian condition (bug 22086).
debug/pcprofiledump.c contains code that tries to handle other-endian data. This uses a condition "(word & 0xfffffff0) == bswap_32 (0xdeb00000)". This condition is always false (the LHS always has the low four bits zero, the RHS doesn't); a correct comparison would use 0x0fffffff. This results in -Werror=tautological-compare build failures with the tile version of bits/byteswap.h and mainline GCC. https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-testresults/2017-q3/msg00400.html pcprofiledump.c: In function 'main': pcprofiledump.c:118:39: error: bitwise comparison always evaluates to false [-Werror=tautological-compare] int must_swap = (word & 0xfffffff0) == bswap_32 (0xdeb00000); ^~ This patch fixes the condition. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py that it fixes the build for tilegx-linux-gnu. (Note that I have not tested the actual pcprofiledump functionality, native or cross endian, which lacks any testsuite coverage.) [BZ #22086] * debug/pcprofiledump.c (main): Use byte-swapped mask when comparing word with byte-swapped constant.
Diffstat (limited to 'debug')
-rw-r--r--debug/pcprofiledump.c2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/debug/pcprofiledump.c b/debug/pcprofiledump.c
index a32cdefcf9..6a9641e803 100644
--- a/debug/pcprofiledump.c
+++ b/debug/pcprofiledump.c
@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ main (int argc, char *argv[])
error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, _("cannot read header"));
/* Check whether we have to swap the byte order. */
- int must_swap = (word & 0xfffffff0) == bswap_32 (0xdeb00000);
+ int must_swap = (word & 0x0fffffff) == bswap_32 (0xdeb00000);
if (must_swap)
word = bswap_32 (word);