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I am about to migrate a small project of C code (30+ kSLOC) from a 32-bit big to a 32-bit little endian platform. I would like to check ante festum, how much work this will be, so I would like to spot code that relies on the original endianess.

I am looking for an as comprehensive as possible collection of C code idioms, which are depending on big endian. Do not bother with the effort needed to detect the use of such idioms in real code, I have some code analysis tool support available.

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  • unions, bitmasks, network traffic, direct hardware accesses are mostly problematic
    – paladin
    Apr 27, 2022 at 13:36
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    @paladin bitmaks are not problematic. Endianess have no effect on that.
    – Fredrik
    Apr 27, 2022 at 13:37
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    @stevesummit could you give me an example? I mean for example, (n & 0x300) will always give you the 2 lowest bit on the second byte, regarldess of endian or how it's stored.
    – Fredrik
    Apr 27, 2022 at 13:46
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    C bitwise operators abstract away endianess.
    – Fredrik
    Apr 27, 2022 at 13:48
  • Network code is not a problem if it uses proper net-to-host and host-to-net functions.
    – stark
    Apr 27, 2022 at 13:57

1 Answer 1

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Some things to look out for:

  • Fishy pointer casts and fishy type conversions between integer types of different sizes. These may also be latent alignment or strict aliasing bugs.
  • Serialization/de-serialization code, where data is read from/written to byte arrays.
  • Data communication interfaces without serialization/de-serialization code. That is: CPU just happened to have same endianess as the network, which is common for big endian systems in particular. Ethernet, CAN, UART and so on.
  • Structs with bit-fields.
  • Union type punning.
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  • Thanks, Lundin. I'll start out with reviewing the uses of casts, unions and bit-fields. May 4, 2022 at 6:35

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