Lines Matching refs:endian

168 #  Some saved game files start with "TADS2 save/g\n\r\032\0", a little-endian
223 # big-endian or little-endian versions, depending on the mode they ran
692 # FIXME: Almost all little endian UTF-16 text with BOM are clobbered by these entries
1214 # Little-endian 32-bit-int a.out, merged from bsdi (for BSD/OS, from
1223 0 lelong 0407 a.out little-endian 32-bit executable
1227 0 lelong 0410 a.out little-endian 32-bit pure executable
1231 0 lelong 0413 a.out little-endian 32-bit demand paged pure executable
1236 # Big-endian 32-bit-int a.out, merged from sun (for old 68010 SunOS a.out),
1237 # mips (for old 68020(!) SGI a.out), and netbsd (for old big-endian a.out).
1243 0 belong 0407 a.out big-endian 32-bit executable
1246 0 belong 0410 a.out big-endian 32-bit pure executable
1249 0 belong 0413 a.out big-endian 32-bit demand paged executable
1464 2 string typedstream NeXT/Apple typedstream data, big endian
1469 2 string streamtyped NeXT/Apple typedstream data, little endian
1622 # been ports to little-endian 16-bit-int or 32-bit-int platforms
1624 # to use "PDP-11" for little-endian 16-bit and "VAX" for little-endian
1625 # 32-bit. There might have been big-endian ports of that sort as
1628 0 leshort 0177555 very old 16-bit-int little-endian archive
1629 0 beshort 0177555 very old 16-bit-int big-endian archive
1630 0 lelong 0177555 very old 32-bit-int little-endian archive
1631 0 belong 0177555 very old 32-bit-int big-endian archive
1633 0 leshort 0177545 old 16-bit-int little-endian archive
1635 0 beshort 0177545 old 16-bit-int big-endian archive
1637 0 lelong 0177545 old 32-bit-int little-endian archive
1639 0 belong 0177545 old 32-bit-int big-endian archive
2620 # that uses little-endian encoding and has a different magic number
2829 0 belong 0x64a30100 IRCAM file (VAX little-endian)
2830 0 belong 0x0001a364 IRCAM file (VAX big-endian)
2831 0 belong 0x64a30200 IRCAM file (Sun big-endian)
2832 0 belong 0x0002a364 IRCAM file (Sun little-endian)
2833 0 belong 0x64a30300 IRCAM file (MIPS little-endian)
2834 0 belong 0x0003a364 IRCAM file (MIPS big-endian)
2835 0 belong 0x64a30400 IRCAM file (NeXT big-endian)
2836 0 belong 0x64a30400 IRCAM file (NeXT big-endian)
2837 0 belong 0x0004a364 IRCAM file (NeXT little-endian)
2939 >31 byte &4 16bit little endian
3251 >8 lelong x context data (little endian, version %d)
3263 >8 belong x context data (big endian, version %d)
3280 >>8 string =v little endian
3286 >>8 string =V big endian
3293 >>8 string =v little endian
3299 >>8 string =V big endian
3316 # little-endian machines as well? If so, what's the deal with
4478 # Convexes are big-endian.
4547 0 lelong 0x70775631 Cracklib password index, little endian
4551 0 belong 0x70775631 Cracklib password index, big endian
4554 0 search/1 \0\0\0\0pwV1 Cracklib password index, big endian ("64-bit")
4648 0 belong 0x13579ace GNU dbm 1.x or ndbm database, big endian
4650 0 lelong 0x13579ace GNU dbm 1.x or ndbm database, little endian
4657 # Ian Darwin's file /etc/magic files: big/little-endian version.
4672 >>4 belong >0 (Hash, version %d, little-endian)
4678 >>4 belong >0 (Hash, version %d, big-endian)
4687 >4 belong >0 (Btree, version %d, big-endian)
4689 >4 lelong >0 (Btree, version %d, little-endian)
4694 >16 belong >0 (Hash, version %d, big-endian)
4696 >16 lelong >0 (Hash, version %d, little-endian)
4701 >16 belong >0 (Btree, version %d, big-endian)
4703 >16 lelong >0 (Btree, version %d, little-endian)
4708 >16 belong >0 (Queue, version %d, big-endian)
4710 >16 lelong >0 (Queue, version %d, little-endian)
4716 >16 belong >0 (Log, version %d, big-endian)
4718 >16 lelong >0 (Log, version %d, little-endian)
4997 >32 lelong 0x2601196D version 6, little-endian
5062 0 string \\[depot\\]\n\f Quick Database Manager, little endian
5063 0 string \\[DEPOT\\]\n\f Quick Database Manager, big endian
5314 24 belong 60012 new-fs dump file (big endian),
5317 24 belong 60011 old-fs dump file (big endian),
5320 24 lelong 60012 new-fs dump file (little endian),
5323 24 lelong 60011 old-fs dump file (little endian),
5327 24 belong 0x19540119 new-fs dump file (ufs2, big endian),
5330 24 lelong 0x19540119 new-fs dump file (ufs2, little endian),
5365 >7 byte&0x88 0x00 big-endian
5366 >7 byte&0x88 0x80 little-endian
5653 # XXX - needs to have the byte order specified (NS32K was little-endian,
5654 # dunno whether they run the 88K in little-endian mode or not).
7125 9564 lelong 0x00011954 Unix Fast File system [v1] (little-endian),
7141 42332 lelong 0x19540119 Unix Fast File system [v2] (little-endian)
7161 66908 lelong 0x19540119 Unix Fast File system [v2] (little-endian)
7181 9564 belong 0x00011954 Unix Fast File system [v1] (big-endian),
7201 42332 belong 0x19540119 Unix Fast File system [v2] (big-endian)
7221 66908 belong 0x19540119 Unix Fast File system [v2] (big-endian)
7296 >0x402 beshort > -1 Minix filesystem, V1 (big endian), %d zones
7306 >0x402 beshort > -1 Minix filesystem, V1, 30 char names (big endian), %d zones
7314 >0x402 beshort > -1 Minix filesystem, V2 (big endian), %d zones
7326 >0x402 beshort !0 Minix filesystem, V2, 30 char names (big endian), %d zones
7428 0 lelong 0x28cd3d45 Linux Compressed ROM File System data, little endian
7438 0 belong 0x28cd3d45 Linux Compressed ROM File System data, big endian
7460 0 lelong 0x34383931 Linux Journalled Flash File system, little endian
7461 0 belong 0x34383931 Linux Journalled Flash File system, big endian
7538 0 leshort 0x1984 Linux old jffs2 filesystem data little endian
7539 0 leshort 0x1985 Linux jffs2 filesystem data little endian
7542 0 string sqsh Squashfs filesystem, big endian,
7565 0 string hsqs Squashfs filesystem, little endian,
7968 # little-endian on x86).
8711 0 string \336\22\4\225 GNU message catalog (little endian),
8719 0 string \225\4\22\336 GNU message catalog (big endian),
9004 # a GUID is just like a UUID, except it's displayed mixed-endian.
9112 >8 string LE \b, little endian
9113 >8 string BE \b, big endian
9125 0 beshort 0x0500 Hitachi SH big-endian COFF
9127 #0 ubelong&0xFFFFNMPQ 0x0500NMPQ Hitachi SH big-endian COFF
9133 0 leshort 0x0550 Hitachi SH little-endian COFF
9146 # big-endian as it was mostly 68K-based.
9150 # big-endian or little-endian.
9893 # (CIFF) file. These are apparently all little-endian.
9903 # These are apparently all little-endian.
9914 0 string MM\x00\x2a TIFF image data, big-endian
9916 0 string II\x2a\x00 TIFF image data, little-endian
9919 0 string MM\x00\x2b Big TIFF image data, big-endian
9921 0 string II\x2b\x00 Big TIFF image data, little-endian
10165 # (FITS floating point formats are big-endian.)
10510 0 string SDPX DPX image data, big-endian,
10594 0 string MMOR Olympus ORF raw image data, big-endian
10596 0 string IIRO Olympus ORF raw image data, little-endian
10598 0 string IIRS Olympus ORF raw image data, little-endian
10729 # will match 0x9600 through 0x9603 in *both* little endian and big endian.
10734 0 leshort&0xFFFC 0x9600 little endian ispell
10756 0 beshort&0xFFFC 0x9600 big endian ispell
10897 # Little-endian
10947 # Big-endian
11321 36 lelong 0x016f2818 Linux kernel ARM boot executable zImage (little-endian)
11322 36 belong 0x016f2818 Linux kernel ARM boot executable zImage (big-endian)
11521 0 long 0xD28B7670 CLISP memory image data, other endian
12209 >4 lelong x (version %d) (little endian)
12211 >4 belong x (version %d) (big endian)
12276 >12 belong =1 version 1, big-endian
12277 >12 lelong =1 version 1, little-endian
12278 >12 belong x version %d, network-endian
12452 >126 short 0x494d (big endian)
12454 >126 short 0x4d49 (little endian)
13633 # Size is stored in bytes in a big-endian u64.
14307 0 string Octave-1-L Octave binary data (little endian)
14308 0 string Octave-1-B Octave binary data (big endian)
14721 >16 byte 0 little-endian,
14722 >16 byte 1 big-endian,
15046 >0x12 string ZZ Zenographics ZjStream printer data (big-endian)
15048 >0x12 string ZZ Zenographics ZjStream printer data (little-endian)
15136 # 20121 ( YEAR - 1995 ) + MONTH + DAY (little endian followed by "\r\n"
15210 # those have a little-endian offset immediately following the magic 'PACK',
15212 # version, since it's a tiny number stored in big-endian format, is always 0.
15254 0 string RIFF RIFF (little-endian) data
15429 # XXX - some of the below may only appear in little-endian form.
15434 0 string RIFX RIFF (big-endian) data
15470 # Notation Interchange File Format (big-endian only)
15478 # 128 bit RIFF-GUID { 66666972-912E-11CF-A5D6-28DB04C10000 } in little-endian
15676 >52 byte 1 , Little-endian
15677 >55 byte 1 , Big-endian
15695 >212 byte 17 \b, Big-endian
15697 >212 byte 68 \b, Little-endian
15703 >796 lelong <20 Little-endian, IP #%d,
15706 >796 belong <20 Big-endian, IP #%d,
15711 >796 lelong <20 Little-endian, IP #%d,
15714 >796 belong <20 Big-endian, IP #%d,
15861 # files for 68K; they are indistinguishable from other big-endian 32-bit
16132 # (NOTE: if `file' would be able to use indirect references in a endian format
16193 # little-endian
16201 # big-endian
16434 0 ubelong 0xa1b2c3d4 tcpdump capture file (big-endian)
16437 0 ulelong 0xa1b2c3d4 tcpdump capture file (little-endian)
16447 0 ubelong 0xa1b2cd34 extended tcpdump capture file (big-endian)
16449 0 ulelong 0xa1b2cd34 extended tcpdump capture file (little-endian)
16713 # Values for big-endian Sun (MC680x0, SPARC) binaries on pre-5.x
16716 # are in aout, as they're indistinguishable from other big-endian
17217 # XXX - needs byte-endian stuff (big-endian and little-endian DVI?)
17662 0 string \000\000\376\377 Unicode text, UTF-32, big-endian
17663 0 string \377\376\000\000 Unicode text, UTF-32, little-endian
17677 # VAX demand-paged files, as the magic number is little-endian on those
17710 >8 string \<\> \b, big-endian
17712 >8 string \>\< \b, litte-endian
17832 # VAX a.out (BSD; others collide with 386 and other 32-bit little-endian
18716 # Big-endian values
18717 8 string \000\000\000\002\365\272\313\254 ZFS shapshot (big-endian machine),
18746 # Little-endian values
18747 8 string \254\313\272\365\002\000\000\000 ZFS shapshot (little-endian machine),
18780 # Was it big-endian or little-endian? My Product Specification doesn't