Hi Simon,

Am 12.03.2021 um 05:45 schrieb Simon Glass:
Hi Stefan,

On Mon, 8 Mar 2021 at 03:45, Stefan Herbrechtsmeier
<stefan.herbrechtsmeier-...@weidmueller.com> wrote:

Hi,

Am 06.03.2021 um 21:12 schrieb Tom Rini:
On Fri, Mar 05, 2021 at 07:35:24AM -0700, Simon Glass wrote:
Hi,

On Fri, 5 Mar 2021 at 07:33, Stefan Herbrechtsmeier
<stefan.herbrechtsmeier-...@weidmueller.com> wrote:

Hi Eugeniu,

Am 05.03.2021 um 12:52 schrieb Eugeniu Rosca:
Hello Stefan,

On Fri, Mar 05, 2021 at 07:39:04AM +0000, Stefan Herbrechtsmeier wrote:
From: Stefan Herbrechtsmeier <stefan.herbrechtsme...@weidmueller.com>

The part number sub-command returns the hexadecimal value with a leading
0x.

That's to make sure that:
      - users have clear and unequivocal feedback that '10'
        returned by the command is really HEX 10, not DEC 10.
      - other U-Boot commands which need to take '0x10' as input
        will interpret it correctly, regardless of the way these
        other commands implement ascii-to-integer conversion.

'Almost all U-Boot commands expect numbers to be entered in hexadecimal
input format.' [1]

The filesystem commands use `simple_strtoul(.., 16)` and interpret the
value as hexadecimal value.

The 0x suggests that a 10 will be interpreted as decimal value and this
isn't true.

This is inconsistent with other values in the command

It could be, but it is then better to fix the inconsistency in those
commands/sub-commands which add the ambiguity.

Normally you are right but U-Boot by design use hexadecimal values
without 0x. The env_set_hex functions doesn't use 0x.

and U-Boot uses hexadecimal values generally.

The key word is "generally", but not always. Some U-Boot commands will
process '10' as HEX 10 and some will process 10 as DEC 10. So, in order
to avoid these games, I vote for leaving the 0x in place.

I would be very surprised if 10 means 0d10 in a partition number. I
agree that putting a 0x in these values is a dangerous precedent and
will just cause confusion. U-Boot uses hex for addresses and most
arguments


You can avoid it only if you could mark decimal numbers and that is
impossible.

0d10 is available. People are not used to it though.

Reviewed-by: Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org>


@Tom: Does U-Boot still expect numbers to be hexadecimal values?

[1] https://www.denx.de/wiki/DULG/UBootCommandLineInterface


Signed-off-by: Stefan Herbrechtsmeier <stefan.herbrechtsme...@weidmueller.com>

---

    cmd/part.c | 2 +-
    1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/cmd/part.c b/cmd/part.c
index 3395c17b89..56e1852c66 100644
--- a/cmd/part.c
+++ b/cmd/part.c
@@ -152,7 +152,7 @@ static int do_part_info(int argc, char *const argv[], enum 
cmd_part_info param)
               snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), LBAF, info.size);
               break;
       case CMD_PART_INFO_NUMBER:
-            snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "0x%x", part);
+            snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "%x", part);


I am not a fan of this change as well, especially having spent time on
some platforms that have literally 20+ partition entries.  Being clear
here that this is a hex value is important.

But isn't it confusing to use a 0x for a value which is treated as
hexadecimal value by the commands independent of the 0x. The 0x results
in the assumption that the partition is a decimal value without the 0x.

What is the correct way to convert a hexadecimal value into a decimal
value on the shell? I need a value without prefix (decimal value) to
pass it to the root parameter of the bootargs.

At the moment the different default numeral systems of common functions
like load and test are very irritating. The load command uses
hexadecimal value and doesn't support decimal value. The test command
uses decimal value by default but supports hexadecimal values with a
prefix. This means that the returned variable filesize of the command
load couldn't be checked by test and the user have to use the itest command.

Let's use hex where possible. I am not sure what to do with the test
command, nor how often we use 'test' with addresses, but I think
adding an option to 'test' to make it use hex or dec would be good.

But what is the difference to test vs itest?

Then one day we could change the default to hex.

Is this possible? This would be a breaking change.

I think the main problem is the unclear default numeral system. It would be much easy if every number without a prefix have the same numeral system. This would mean that a `simple_strtoul(.., 0)` would fall back to the default numeral system if the value hasn't any prefix (0x or 0d). At the moment `simple_strtoul(.., 0)` fall back to decimal and many commands use different numeral systems (`simple_strtoul(.., 10)` or `simple_strtoul(.., 16)`).

Independent of this problem I need a command to convert a value to decimal without any prefix. Can you recommend any command or should I add a printf command?

Regards
  Stefan

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