Lines Matching refs:order

1843 >0xc		byte	00		\b, DOS 3.3 sector order
1846 >0xc byte 01 \b, ProDOS sector order
1937 # that I could find. The 1 and 2 really mean "order in which you defined
1949 # row- or column-order recalculation; the A or M means automatic or manual
2452 # coding indicated by setting the high-order bit of the leftmost byte
2503 # byte order as the machine running "file" with "cpio archive", and
2504 # to indicate archives produced on machines with the opposite byte order
2525 # They were written with binary values in host byte order, and
5940 # "VAX-order" and "VAX-order2"?
5944 0 short 03401 VAX-order 68K Blit (standalone) executable
5947 0 short 03001 VAX-order 68k Blit mpx/mux executable
6726 # XXX - what byte order does the Clipper use?
7194 # This magic number is byte-order-independent.
7199 # byte-order independent, and one of which is byte-order dependent?
8878 # Hash 1.85/1.86 databases store metadata in network byte order.
8879 # Btree 1.85/1.86 databases store the metadata in host byte order.
8880 # Hash and Btree 2.X and later databases store the metadata in host byte order.
8887 >>4 belong >0 (Hash, version %d, native byte-order)
8901 >>4 belong >0 (Hash, version %d, native byte-order)
8904 >4 long >0 (Btree, version %d, native byte-order)
8911 >16 long >0 (Hash, version %d, native byte-order)
8918 >16 long >0 (Btree, version %d, native byte-order)
8925 >16 long >0 (Queue, version %d, native byte-order)
8933 >16 long >0 (Log, version %d, native byte-order)
9929 # We specify both byte orders in order to recognize byte-swapped dumps.
10159 # We have to check the byte order flag to see what byte order all the
10461 >5 byte 0 invalid byte order
10492 # XXX - needs to have the byte order specified (NS32K was little-endian,
13683 # using native byte order.
13777 # All new-style FreeBSD magic numbers are in host byte order (i.e.,
13893 # 28: low order byte of the current PTD entry, always 0 since the
15308 # XXX - somebody should figure out whether any byte order needs to be
15319 # practice in order to avoid collisions.
15340 # The "misc" stuff needs a byte order; the archives look suspiciously
15350 0 long 01203604016 TML 0123 byte-order format
15351 0 long 01702407010 TML 1032 byte-order format
15352 0 long 01003405017 TML 2301 byte-order format
15353 0 long 01602007412 TML 3210 byte-order format
15597 # Unfortunately, HP-UX uses corehead blocks without specifying the order
15603 # The only observed order in real core files is KERNEL, EXEC, FORMAT, PROC
15604 # but we include all 6 variations of the order of the first 3, and
17819 # ulequad order: 0xGGGGGGGGRRRRRRRR, 0xAAAAAAAABBBBBBBB
19361 # "long" magic is a better practice in order to avoid collisions.
19596 # In order to aid telling these apart a new endian flag was added. In order
20025 # yes, this is separate from the low-order magic number bit
21803 # XXX - byte order?
21847 # The high-order word is an internal value that is implementation specific.
21848 # The low-order word is MINIDUMP_VERSION 0xA793
21878 # XXX - byte order?
24041 >>0x400A string \0\0\0\0\0\0 MSX ROM with nonstandard page order
24049 >>0x800A string \0\0\0\0\0\0 MSX ROM with nonstandard page order
24057 >0x3C008 string \0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0 MSX MegaROM with nonstandard page order
24242 # All new-style magic numbers are in network byte order.
25113 # We have to check the byte order flag to see what byte order all the
25138 >5 byte 0 invalid byte order
25151 >>18 leshort 1 AT&T WE32100 - invalid byte order,
25152 >>18 leshort 2 SPARC - invalid byte order,
25154 >>18 leshort 4 Motorola 68000 - invalid byte order,
25155 >>18 leshort 5 Motorola 88000 - invalid byte order,
25158 >>18 leshort 8 MIPS R3000_BE - invalid byte order,
25159 >>18 leshort 9 Amdahl - invalid byte order,
25161 >>18 leshort 11 RS6000 - invalid byte order,
25162 >>18 leshort 15 PA-RISC - invalid byte order,
25184 >>18 beshort 3 Intel 80386 - invalid byte order,
25187 >>18 beshort 6 Intel 80486 - invalid byte order,
25191 >>18 beshort 10 MIPS R3000_LE - invalid byte order,
25637 # XXX - byte order?
25885 >4 byte >0 (net-order %d)
26635 # XXX - byte order? Paging Hokey....
26937 # XXX - byte order?
26954 # two bytes of magic followed by "\r\n" in little endian order
28177 # XXX - byte order?
29079 # XXX - byte order?
30081 # ncurses6 (2015) uses this format, ignoring byte-order