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Don't define __*_ENDIAN__ macro on Unix. #495

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merged 1 commit into from
Jan 19, 2022
Merged

Don't define __*_ENDIAN__ macro on Unix. #495

merged 1 commit into from
Jan 19, 2022

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methane
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@methane methane commented Jan 19, 2022

@kulikjak
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Hi, this change broke msgpack (half the test suite) on big endian systems (in our case Solaris SPARC). Now, __LITTLE_ENDIAN is always chosen as default. Is that expected?

I managed to fix it by passing -D__BIG_ENDIAN__=1 to /usr/bin/python3 ./setup.py build but it's not exactly elegant :(.

@methane
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methane commented Jul 28, 2022

Please suggest an elegant way to detect endian.

@kulikjak
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Well, the previous solution of defining it in setup.py based on sys.byteorder seemed pretty nice before the borg issue.

If I understand the original borg issue, was the problem in the cross-compilation (which is why both LITTLE and BIG endians were defined at the same time)? If so, I can see why this is an issue (because msgpack doesn't detect cross compilation).

Maybe setup.py can check whether __BIG_ENDIAN__ or __LITTLE_ENDIAN__ is defined and only set it itself if neither of them is?

@methane
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methane commented Jul 28, 2022

It's not elegant.
C compile time solution is preferred.

@kulikjak
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That's true, not very elegant.

Well, I think __BYTE_ORDER__, which should be defined by most compilers, can be used for compile time detection. I am not sure that it's available everywhere, but I just checked clang 11.0, gcc 7, 10 and 11, and Solaris Studio 12.4, and all of those define it.

The sysdep.h header currently uses #if __BYTE_ORDER == __LITTLE_ENDIAN from arpa/inet.h but those are not standard and not defined on Solaris (or FreeBSD I tested as well), but it can be changed to #if __BYTE_ORDER__ == __ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__/#elif __BYTE_ORDER__ == __ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__, and let compiler to make it right (rather than header file with non-standard defines).

Or, to make it even more compatible, __BYTE_ORDER, __LITTLE_ENDIAN and __BIG_ENDIAN can be defined if they don't exist to __BYTE_ORDER__, __ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__ and __ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__ respectively.

@kulikjak
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kulikjak commented Aug 1, 2022

I created #513 to address this.

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