The I/O port space is byte addressable, even for word and long accesses.

An example is the VMware svga card, which has long ports on offsets 0,
1, and 2.

Signed-off-by: Avi Kivity <a...@redhat.com>
---
 ioport.c |    4 ++--
 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/ioport.c b/ioport.c
index 2e971fa..9800223 100644
--- a/ioport.c
+++ b/ioport.c
@@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ int register_ioport_read(pio_addr_t start, int length, int 
size,
         hw_error("register_ioport_read: invalid size");
         return -1;
     }
-    for(i = start; i < start + length; i += size) {
+    for(i = start; i < start + length; ++i) {
         ioport_read_table[bsize][i] = func;
         if (ioport_opaque[i] != NULL && ioport_opaque[i] != opaque)
             hw_error("register_ioport_read: invalid opaque for address 0x%x",
@@ -166,7 +166,7 @@ int register_ioport_write(pio_addr_t start, int length, int 
size,
         hw_error("register_ioport_write: invalid size");
         return -1;
     }
-    for(i = start; i < start + length; i += size) {
+    for(i = start; i < start + length; ++i) {
         ioport_write_table[bsize][i] = func;
         if (ioport_opaque[i] != NULL && ioport_opaque[i] != opaque)
             hw_error("register_ioport_write: invalid opaque for address 0x%x",
-- 
1.7.5.3


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