For each device declared with DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN, find the set of
targets from the set of target/hw/*/device.o.

If the set of targets are all little or all big endian, re-declare
the device endianness as DEVICE_LITTLE_ENDIAN or DEVICE_BIG_ENDIAN
respectively.

This *naive* deduction may result in genuinely native endian devices
being incorrectly declared as little or big endian, but should not
introduce regressions for current targets.

These devices should be re-declared as DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN if 1) it
has a new target with an opposite endian or 2) someone informed knows
better =)

Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.ngu...@bt.com>
---
 hw/input/pl050.c | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/hw/input/pl050.c b/hw/input/pl050.c
index 1123037b38..873f44abad 100644
--- a/hw/input/pl050.c
+++ b/hw/input/pl050.c
@@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ static void pl050_write(void *opaque, hwaddr offset,
 static const MemoryRegionOps pl050_ops = {
     .read = pl050_read,
     .write = pl050_write,
-    .endianness = DEVICE_NATIVE_ENDIAN,
+    .endianness = DEVICE_LITTLE_ENDIAN,
 };
 
 static void pl050_realize(DeviceState *dev, Error **errp)
-- 
2.23.0


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