dmidecode/0007-dmidecode-Document-how-the-UUID-fields-are-interpret.patch
Anton Arapov 48d35dd3e4 v3.2 patched up to upstream commit 62bce59f
Signed-off-by: Anton Arapov <arapov@gmail.com>
2019-11-18 12:03:01 +01:00

46 lines
1.8 KiB
Diff

From 72fa3909cfabe8822e2b8709e5d324008f55022a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Jean Delvare <jdelvare@suse.de>
Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2019 14:11:42 +0100
Subject: [PATCH 07/18] dmidecode: Document how the UUID fields are interpreted
There has always been a lot of confusion about the byte order of UUID
fields. While dmidecode is doing "the right thing", documenting it
can't hurt.
This should address bug #55510:
https://savannah.nongnu.org/bugs/index.php?55510
Signed-off-by: Jean Delvare <jdelvare@suse.de>
---
man/dmidecode.8 | 14 ++++++++++++++
1 file changed, 14 insertions(+)
diff --git a/man/dmidecode.8 b/man/dmidecode.8
index 33f7d33..52100a8 100644
--- a/man/dmidecode.8
+++ b/man/dmidecode.8
@@ -256,6 +256,20 @@ It is crafted to hard-code the table address at offset 0x20.
.IP \(bu "\w'\(bu'u+1n"
The DMI table is located at offset 0x20.
+.SH UUID FORMAT
+There is some ambiguity about how to interpret the UUID fields prior to SMBIOS
+specification version 2.6. There was no mention of byte swapping, and RFC 4122
+says that no byte swapping should be applied by default. However, SMBIOS
+specification version 2.6 (and later) explicitly states that the first 3 fields
+of the UUID should be read as little-endian numbers (byte-swapped).
+Furthermore, it implies that the same was already true for older versions of
+the specification, even though it was not mentioned. In practice, many hardware
+vendors were not byte-swapping the UUID. So, in order to preserve
+compatibility, it was decided to interpret the UUID fields according to RFC
+4122 (no byte swapping) when the SMBIOS version is older than 2.6, and to
+interpret the first 3 fields as little-endian (byte-swapped) when the SMBIOS
+version is 2.6 or later. The Linux kernel follows the same logic.
+
.SH FILES
.I /dev/mem
.br
--
2.24.0