For each device declared with DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN, find the set of targets from the set of target/hw/*/device.o. If the set of targets are all little or all big endian, re-declare the device endianness as DEVICE_LITTLE_ENDIAN or DEVICE_BIG_ENDIAN respectively. This *naive* deduction may result in genuinely native endian devices being incorrectly declared as little or big endian, but should not introduce regressions for current targets. These devices should be re-declared as DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN if 1) it has a new target with an opposite endian or 2) someone informed knows better =) Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen --- hw/sd/pl181.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/hw/sd/pl181.c b/hw/sd/pl181.c index 81b406d..f2027aa 100644 --- a/hw/sd/pl181.c +++ b/hw/sd/pl181.c @@ -449,7 +449,7 @@ static void pl181_write(void *opaque, hwaddr offset, static const MemoryRegionOps pl181_ops = { .read = pl181_read, .write = pl181_write, - .endianness = DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN, + .endianness = DEVICE_LITTLE_ENDIAN, }; static void pl181_reset(DeviceState *d) -- 1.8.3.1 ?