Re: [RFC] ASLA design, depth of code review and lack thereof

From: Takashi Iwai
Date: Mon Jun 07 2004 - 08:21:53 EST


At Fri, 4 Jun 2004 16:29:20 -0700 (PDT),
Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
>
>
> On Sat, 5 Jun 2004 viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> >
> >
> > case SNDRV_PCM_FORMAT_FLOAT_BE:
> > {
> > union {
> > float f;
> > u_int32_t i;
> > } u;
> > u.f = 0.0;
> > #ifdef SNDRV_LITTLE_ENDIAN
> > return bswap_32(u.i);
> > #else
> > return u.i;
> > #endif
>
> So what I wonder about is why anybody does something like this in the
> first place?
>
> Any IEEE format architecture will make 0.0 be all-zeroes, last I saw. In
> fact, any architecture (IEEE or not) where that isn't true will have
> serious problems with floating point values in bss (hint: the bss isn't
> initialzed to 0.0, it's initialized to the bit pattern 0).
>
> So what the above boils dow to is a very very strange way of writing
>
> return 0;
>
> and it has absolutely _zero_ to do with "little-endian" or anything else
> for that matter.

Yes, fully agreed.
We'll fix the code around this.


--
Takashi Iwai <tiwai@xxxxxxx> ALSA Developer - www.alsa-project.org
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