[PATCH] word-at-a-time: use the same return type for has_zero regardless of endianness

Arnd Bergmann arnd at arndb.de
Thu Aug 3 04:17:32 AEST 2023


On Wed, Aug 2, 2023, at 19:37, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Wed, 2 Aug 2023 at 09:16, Nathan Chancellor <nathan at kernel.org> wrote:
>>
>> We see this warning with ARCH=arm64 defconfig + CONFIG_CPU_BIG_ENDIAN=y.
>
> Oh Christ. I didn't even realize that arm64 allowed a BE config.
>
> The config option goes back to 2013 - are there actually BE user space
> implementations around?

At least NXP's Layerscape and Huawei's SoCs ended up in big-endian
appliances, running legacy software ported from mips or powerpc.
I agree this was a mistake, but that wasn't nearly as obvious ten
years ago when there were still new BE-only sparc, mips and powerpc
put on the market -- that really only ended in 2017.

> People, why do we do that? That's positively crazy. BE is dead and
> should be relegated to legacy platforms. There are no advantages to
> being different just for the sake of being different - any "security
> by obscurity" argument would be far outweighed by the inconvenience to
> actual users.
>
> Yes, yes, I know the aarch64 architecture technically allows BE
> implementations - and apparently you can even do it by exception
> level, which I had to look up. But do any actually exist?
>
> Does the kernel even work right in BE mode? It's really easy to miss
> some endianness check when all the actual hardware and use is LE, and
> when (for example) instruction encoding and IO is then always LE
> anyway.

This was always only done for compatibility with non-portable
software when companies with large custom network stacks argued
that it was cheaper to build the entire open source software to
big-endian than port their own product to little-endian. ;-)

We (Linaro) used to test all toolchain and kernel releases in
big-endian mode as member companies had customers that asked
for it, but that stopped a while ago as those legacy software
stacks either got more portable or got replaced over time.

Many Arm systems won't boot BE kernels any more because UEFI
firmware only supports LE, or because of driver bugs.
Virtual machines are still likely to work fine though.
I'm fairly sure that all Arm Cortex and Neoverse cores still\
support BE mode in all exception levels, OTOH at least Apple's
custom CPUs do not implement it at all.

     Arnd


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