| 1 | /*
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| 2 | Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
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| 3 | SMB Byte handling
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| 4 | Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 1992-1998
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| 5 |
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| 6 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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| 7 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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| 8 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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| 9 | (at your option) any later version.
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| 10 |
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| 11 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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| 12 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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| 13 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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| 14 | GNU General Public License for more details.
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| 15 |
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| 16 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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| 17 | along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
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| 18 | Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
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| 19 | */
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| 20 |
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| 21 | #ifndef _BYTEORDER_H
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| 22 | #define _BYTEORDER_H
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| 23 |
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| 24 | /*
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| 25 | This file implements macros for machine independent short and
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| 26 | int manipulation
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| 27 |
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| 28 | Here is a description of this file that I emailed to the samba list once:
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| 29 |
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| 30 | > I am confused about the way that byteorder.h works in Samba. I have
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| 31 | > looked at it, and I would have thought that you might make a distinction
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| 32 | > between LE and BE machines, but you only seem to distinguish between 386
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| 33 | > and all other architectures.
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| 34 | >
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| 35 | > Can you give me a clue?
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| 36 |
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| 37 | sure.
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| 38 |
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| 39 | The distinction between 386 and other architectures is only there as
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| 40 | an optimisation. You can take it out completely and it will make no
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| 41 | difference. The routines (macros) in byteorder.h are totally byteorder
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| 42 | independent. The 386 optimsation just takes advantage of the fact that
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| 43 | the x86 processors don't care about alignment, so we don't have to
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| 44 | align ints on int boundaries etc. If there are other processors out
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| 45 | there that aren't alignment sensitive then you could also define
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| 46 | CAREFUL_ALIGNMENT=0 on those processors as well.
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| 47 |
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| 48 | Ok, now to the macros themselves. I'll take a simple example, say we
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| 49 | want to extract a 2 byte integer from a SMB packet and put it into a
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| 50 | type called uint16 that is in the local machines byte order, and you
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| 51 | want to do it with only the assumption that uint16 is _at_least_ 16
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| 52 | bits long (this last condition is very important for architectures
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| 53 | that don't have any int types that are 2 bytes long)
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| 54 |
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| 55 | You do this:
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| 56 |
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| 57 | #define CVAL(buf,pos) (((unsigned char *)(buf))[pos])
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| 58 | #define PVAL(buf,pos) ((unsigned)CVAL(buf,pos))
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| 59 | #define SVAL(buf,pos) (PVAL(buf,pos)|PVAL(buf,(pos)+1)<<8)
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| 60 |
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| 61 | then to extract a uint16 value at offset 25 in a buffer you do this:
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| 62 |
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| 63 | char *buffer = foo_bar();
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| 64 | uint16 xx = SVAL(buffer,25);
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| 65 |
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| 66 | We are using the byteoder independence of the ANSI C bitshifts to do
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| 67 | the work. A good optimising compiler should turn this into efficient
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| 68 | code, especially if it happens to have the right byteorder :-)
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| 69 |
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| 70 | I know these macros can be made a bit tidier by removing some of the
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| 71 | casts, but you need to look at byteorder.h as a whole to see the
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| 72 | reasoning behind them. byteorder.h defines the following macros:
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| 73 |
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| 74 | SVAL(buf,pos) - extract a 2 byte SMB value
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| 75 | IVAL(buf,pos) - extract a 4 byte SMB value
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| 76 | SVALS(buf,pos) signed version of SVAL()
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| 77 | IVALS(buf,pos) signed version of IVAL()
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| 78 |
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| 79 | SSVAL(buf,pos,val) - put a 2 byte SMB value into a buffer
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| 80 | SIVAL(buf,pos,val) - put a 4 byte SMB value into a buffer
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| 81 | SSVALS(buf,pos,val) - signed version of SSVAL()
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| 82 | SIVALS(buf,pos,val) - signed version of SIVAL()
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| 83 |
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| 84 | RSVAL(buf,pos) - like SVAL() but for NMB byte ordering
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| 85 | RSVALS(buf,pos) - like SVALS() but for NMB byte ordering
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| 86 | RIVAL(buf,pos) - like IVAL() but for NMB byte ordering
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| 87 | RIVALS(buf,pos) - like IVALS() but for NMB byte ordering
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| 88 | RSSVAL(buf,pos,val) - like SSVAL() but for NMB ordering
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| 89 | RSIVAL(buf,pos,val) - like SIVAL() but for NMB ordering
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| 90 | RSIVALS(buf,pos,val) - like SIVALS() but for NMB ordering
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| 91 |
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| 92 | it also defines lots of intermediate macros, just ignore those :-)
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| 93 |
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| 94 | */
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| 95 |
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| 96 | #undef CAREFUL_ALIGNMENT
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| 97 |
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| 98 | /* we know that the 386 can handle misalignment and has the "right"
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| 99 | byteorder */
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| 100 | #ifdef __i386__
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| 101 | #define CAREFUL_ALIGNMENT 0
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| 102 | #endif
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| 103 |
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| 104 | #ifndef CAREFUL_ALIGNMENT
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| 105 | #define CAREFUL_ALIGNMENT 1
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| 106 | #endif
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| 107 |
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| 108 | #define CVAL(buf,pos) ((unsigned)(((const unsigned char *)(buf))[pos]))
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| 109 | #define CVAL_NC(buf,pos) (((unsigned char *)(buf))[pos]) /* Non-const version of CVAL */
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| 110 | #define PVAL(buf,pos) (CVAL(buf,pos))
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| 111 | #define SCVAL(buf,pos,val) (CVAL_NC(buf,pos) = (val))
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| 112 |
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| 113 |
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| 114 | #if CAREFUL_ALIGNMENT
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| 115 |
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| 116 | #define SVAL(buf,pos) (PVAL(buf,pos)|PVAL(buf,(pos)+1)<<8)
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| 117 | #define IVAL(buf,pos) (SVAL(buf,pos)|SVAL(buf,(pos)+2)<<16)
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| 118 | #define SSVALX(buf,pos,val) (CVAL_NC(buf,pos)=(unsigned char)((val)&0xFF),CVAL_NC(buf,pos+1)=(unsigned char)((val)>>8))
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| 119 | #define SIVALX(buf,pos,val) (SSVALX(buf,pos,val&0xFFFF),SSVALX(buf,pos+2,val>>16))
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| 120 | #define SVALS(buf,pos) ((int16)SVAL(buf,pos))
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| 121 | #define IVALS(buf,pos) ((int32)IVAL(buf,pos))
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| 122 | #define SSVAL(buf,pos,val) SSVALX((buf),(pos),((uint16)(val)))
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| 123 | #define SIVAL(buf,pos,val) SIVALX((buf),(pos),((uint32)(val)))
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| 124 | #define SSVALS(buf,pos,val) SSVALX((buf),(pos),((int16)(val)))
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| 125 | #define SIVALS(buf,pos,val) SIVALX((buf),(pos),((int32)(val)))
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| 126 |
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| 127 | #else /* CAREFUL_ALIGNMENT */
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| 128 |
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| 129 | /* this handles things for architectures like the 386 that can handle
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| 130 | alignment errors */
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| 131 | /*
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| 132 | WARNING: This section is dependent on the length of int16 and int32
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| 133 | being correct
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| 134 | */
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| 135 |
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| 136 | /* get single value from an SMB buffer */
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| 137 | #define SVAL(buf,pos) (*(const uint16 *)((const char *)(buf) + (pos)))
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| 138 | #define SVAL_NC(buf,pos) (*(uint16 *)((char *)(buf) + (pos))) /* Non const version of above. */
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| 139 | #define IVAL(buf,pos) (*(const uint32 *)((const char *)(buf) + (pos)))
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| 140 | #define IVAL_NC(buf,pos) (*(uint32 *)((char *)(buf) + (pos))) /* Non const version of above. */
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| 141 | #define SVALS(buf,pos) (*(const int16 *)((const char *)(buf) + (pos)))
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| 142 | #define SVALS_NC(buf,pos) (*(int16 *)((char *)(buf) + (pos))) /* Non const version of above. */
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| 143 | #define IVALS(buf,pos) (*(const int32 *)((const char *)(buf) + (pos)))
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| 144 | #define IVALS_NC(buf,pos) (*(int32 *)((char *)(buf) + (pos))) /* Non const version of above. */
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| 145 |
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| 146 | /* store single value in an SMB buffer */
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| 147 | #define SSVAL(buf,pos,val) SVAL_NC(buf,pos)=((uint16)(val))
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| 148 | #define SIVAL(buf,pos,val) IVAL_NC(buf,pos)=((uint32)(val))
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| 149 | #define SSVALS(buf,pos,val) SVALS_NC(buf,pos)=((int16)(val))
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| 150 | #define SIVALS(buf,pos,val) IVALS_NC(buf,pos)=((int32)(val))
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| 151 |
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| 152 | #endif /* CAREFUL_ALIGNMENT */
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| 153 |
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| 154 | /* now the reverse routines - these are used in nmb packets (mostly) */
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| 155 | #define SREV(x) ((((x)&0xFF)<<8) | (((x)>>8)&0xFF))
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| 156 | #define IREV(x) ((SREV(x)<<16) | (SREV((x)>>16)))
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| 157 |
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| 158 | #define RSVAL(buf,pos) SREV(SVAL(buf,pos))
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| 159 | #define RSVALS(buf,pos) SREV(SVALS(buf,pos))
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| 160 | #define RIVAL(buf,pos) IREV(IVAL(buf,pos))
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| 161 | #define RIVALS(buf,pos) IREV(IVALS(buf,pos))
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| 162 | #define RSSVAL(buf,pos,val) SSVAL(buf,pos,SREV(val))
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| 163 | #define RSSVALS(buf,pos,val) SSVALS(buf,pos,SREV(val))
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| 164 | #define RSIVAL(buf,pos,val) SIVAL(buf,pos,IREV(val))
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| 165 | #define RSIVALS(buf,pos,val) SIVALS(buf,pos,IREV(val))
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| 166 |
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| 167 | /* Alignment macros. */
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| 168 | #define ALIGN4(p,base) ((p) + ((4 - (PTR_DIFF((p), (base)) & 3)) & 3))
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| 169 | #define ALIGN2(p,base) ((p) + ((2 - (PTR_DIFF((p), (base)) & 1)) & 1))
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| 170 |
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| 171 | #endif /* _BYTEORDER_H */
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