The pcl726 driver has an "interrupt" subdevice that supports Comedi
asynchronous commands, placing a value in the Comedi buffer for each
interrupt. The subdevice uses Comedi's 16-bit sample format but the
interrupt handler is calling `comedi_buf_write_samples()` with the
address of a 32-bit integer `&s->state`. On bigendian machines, this
will copy 2 bytes from the wrong end of the 32-bit integer. This isn't
really a problem since `s->state` will always be 0 for this subdevice,
but clean it up by using a 16-bit variable initialized to 0 to pass the
value.
Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210223143055.257402-15-abbotti@mev.co.uk
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
struct pcl726_private *devpriv = dev->private;
if (devpriv->cmd_running) {
+ unsigned short val = 0;
+
pcl726_intr_cancel(dev, s);
- comedi_buf_write_samples(s, &s->state, 1);
+ comedi_buf_write_samples(s, &val, 1);
comedi_handle_events(dev, s);
}