On Wednesday, August 19, 2015 at 12:14:21 PM, Jian.Luo4 wrote:
> Hi Marek,
Hi,
> the last sed line is invalid for my GNU sed 4.2.2.
> Maybe missed a semicolon?
>
> sed -n '/^unsigned/ !b; :next {/^unsigned/ {s/\[.*\]/[]/;s/unsigned
> long/const u8/};p;n;b next}' \ #
Hi Marek,
the last sed line is invalid for my GNU sed 4.2.2.
Maybe missed a semicolon?
sed -n '/^unsigned/ !b; :next {/^unsigned/ {s/\[.*\]/[]/;s/unsigned long/const
u8/};p;n;b next}' \
# ^here
Best regards,
*Jian Luo
DC-IA/EAH2*
Tel. +4
On Wednesday, August 19, 2015 at 05:09:23 AM, Dinh Nguyen wrote:
> On 8/10/15 6:10 PM, Marek Vasut wrote:
> > Now that we're actually converting the QTS-generated header files,
> > we can even adjust their data types. A good candidate for this is
> > the pinmux table, where each entry can have valu
On 8/10/15 6:10 PM, Marek Vasut wrote:
> Now that we're actually converting the QTS-generated header files,
> we can even adjust their data types. A good candidate for this is
> the pinmux table, where each entry can have value in the range of
> 0..3, but each element is declared as unsigned long
Now that we're actually converting the QTS-generated header files,
we can even adjust their data types. A good candidate for this is
the pinmux table, where each entry can have value in the range of
0..3, but each element is declared as unsigned long. By changing
the type to u8, we can save over 60
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