This is not needed in Python 3. Drop it.
Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
# Spilt the text into two parts so that we can make the entry point two
# bytes after the start of the text section
- text_bytes1 = ['\t.byte\t%#x' % tools.ToByte(byte) for byte in text[:2]]
- text_bytes2 = ['\t.byte\t%#x' % tools.ToByte(byte) for byte in text[2:]]
- data_bytes = ['\t.byte\t%#x' % tools.ToByte(byte) for byte in data]
+ text_bytes1 = ['\t.byte\t%#x' % byte for byte in text[:2]]
+ text_bytes2 = ['\t.byte\t%#x' % byte for byte in text[2:]]
+ data_bytes = ['\t.byte\t%#x' % byte for byte in data]
with open(s_file, 'w') as fd:
print('''/* Auto-generated C program to produce an ELF file for testing */
return '%#x' % fdt_util.fdt32_to_cpu(value)
elif ftype == fdt.Type.BYTE:
ch = value[0]
- return '%#x' % ord(ch) if type(ch) == str else ch
+ return '%#x' % (ord(ch) if type(ch) == str else ch)
elif ftype == fdt.Type.STRING:
# Handle evil ACPI backslashes by adding another backslash before them.
# So "\\_SB.GPO0" in the device tree effectively stays like that in C
"""
return bytes([byte]) * size
-def ToByte(ch):
- """Convert a character to an ASCII value
-
- This is useful because in Python 2 bytes is an alias for str, but in
- Python 3 they are separate types. This function converts the argument to
- an ASCII value in either case.
-
- Args:
- ch: A string (Python 2) or byte (Python 3) value
-
- Returns:
- integer ASCII value for ch
- """
- return ord(ch) if type(ch) == str else ch
-
def ToChar(byte):
"""Convert a byte to a character