The current implementation of fdt_get_path() has a couple of bugs,
fixed by this patch.
First, contrary to its documentation, on success it returns the length
of the node's path, rather than 0. The testcase is correspondingly
wrong, and the patch fixes this as well.
Second, in some circumstances, it will return -FDT_ERR_BADOFFSET
instead of -FDT_ERR_NOSPACE when given insufficient buffer space.
Specifically this happens when there is insufficient space even to
hold the path's second last component. This behaviour is corrected,
and the testcase updated to check it.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
This patch marks various functions not shared between c files
'static', as they should be. There are a couple of functions in dtc,
and many in the testsuite.
This is *almost* enough to enable the -Wmissing-prototypes warning.
It's not quite enough, because there's a mess of junk in the flex
generated code which triggers that warning which I'm not yet sure how
to deal with.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
I've recently worked with a FreeBSD developer, getting dtc and libfdt
working on FreeBSD. This showed up a number of portability problems
in the dtc package which this patch addresses. Changes are as
follows:
- the parent_offset and supernode_atdepth_offset testcases
used the glibc extension functions strchrnul() and strndupa(). Those
are removed, using slightly longer coding with standard C functions
instead.
- some other testcases had a #define _GNU_SOURCE for no
particular reason. This is removed.
- run_tests.sh has bash specific constructs removed, and the
interpreter changed to /bin/sh. This apparently now runs fine on
FreeBSD's /bin/sh, and I've also tested it with both ash and dash.
- convert-dtsv0-lexer.l has some extra #includes added. These
must have been included indirectly with Linux and glibc, but aren't on
FreeBSD.
- the endian handling functions in libfdt_env.h, based on
endian.h and byteswap.h are replaced with some portable open-coded
versions. Unfortunately, these result in fairly crappy code when
compiled, but as far as I can determine there doesn't seem to be any
POSIX, SUS or de facto standard way of determining endianness at
compile time, nor standard names for byteswapping functions.
- some more endian handling, from testdata.h using the
problematic endian.h is simply removed, since it wasn't actually being
used anyway.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
At present, the fdt_subnode_offset() and fdt_path_offset() functions
in libfdt require the exact name of the nodes in question be passed,
including unit address.
This is contrary to traditional OF-like finddevice() behaviour, which
allows the unit address to be omitted (which is useful when the device
name is unambiguous without the address).
This patch introduces similar behaviour to
fdt_subnode_offset_namelen(), and hence to fdt_subnode_offset() and
fdt_path_offset() which are implemented in terms of the former. The
unit address can be omitted from the given node name. If this is
ambiguous, the first such node in the flattened tree will be selected
(this behaviour is consistent with IEEE1275 which specifies only that
an arbitrary node matching the given information be selected).
This very small change is then followed by many more diffs which
change the test examples and testcases to exercise this behaviour.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
This patch adds an fdt_get_path() function to libfdt, which returns
the full path of a given node in a caller supplied buffer.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>