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synced 2025-07-16 02:27:32 -05:00
Stop using unqualified {GET,PUT}_32BIT.
Those were a reasonable abbreviation when the code almost never had to deal with little-endian numbers, but they've crept into enough places now (e.g. the ECC formatting) that I think I'd now prefer that every use of the integer read/write macros was clearly marked with its endianness. So all uses of GET_??BIT and PUT_??BIT are now qualified. The special versions in x11fwd.c, which used variable endianness because so does the X11 protocol, are suffixed _X11 to make that clear, and where that pushed line lengths over 80 characters I've taken the opportunity to name a local variable to remind me of what that extra parameter actually does.
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@ -891,7 +891,7 @@ static char *answer_filemapping_message(const char *mapname)
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goto cleanup;
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}
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msglen = GET_32BIT((unsigned char *)mapaddr);
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msglen = GET_32BIT_MSB_FIRST((unsigned char *)mapaddr);
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#ifdef DEBUG_IPC
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debug("msg length=%08x, msg type=%02x\n",
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@ -925,7 +925,7 @@ static char *answer_filemapping_message(const char *mapname)
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}
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/* Write in the initial length field, and we're done. */
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PUT_32BIT(((unsigned char *)mapaddr), reply.len);
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PUT_32BIT_MSB_FIRST(((unsigned char *)mapaddr), reply.len);
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cleanup:
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/* expectedsid has the lifetime of the program, so we don't free it */
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