An error was found in the ACPICA provided non-native ACPI_IS_PRINT() causing the
following difference with the native isprint() implementation:
The GNU libc isprint('\n') test result:
isprint(0x20) is FALSE
The Linux kernel isprint('\n') test result:
ACPI: isprint(0x20) is FALSE
The _acpi_ctype isprint('\n') test result:
isprint(0x20) is TRUE
The ACPI_IS_PRINT() macro generated for _acpi_ctype is wrong. It should use
_ACPI_XS instead of _ACPI_SP. _ACPI_XS is white space only. Other space
characters should be non printable.
This patch fixes this issue. For OSPMs that are using native standard
isprint() implementations, this patch is a no-op. Lv Zheng.
Signed-off-by: Lv Zheng <lv.zheng@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Bob Moore <robert.moore@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Rafael J. Wysocki <rafael.j.wysocki@intel.com>
#define ACPI_IS_XDIGIT(c) (_acpi_ctype[(unsigned char)(c)] & (_ACPI_XD))
#define ACPI_IS_UPPER(c) (_acpi_ctype[(unsigned char)(c)] & (_ACPI_UP))
#define ACPI_IS_LOWER(c) (_acpi_ctype[(unsigned char)(c)] & (_ACPI_LO))
-#define ACPI_IS_PRINT(c) (_acpi_ctype[(unsigned char)(c)] & (_ACPI_LO | _ACPI_UP | _ACPI_DI | _ACPI_SP | _ACPI_PU))
+#define ACPI_IS_PRINT(c) (_acpi_ctype[(unsigned char)(c)] & (_ACPI_LO | _ACPI_UP | _ACPI_DI | _ACPI_XS | _ACPI_PU))
#define ACPI_IS_ALPHA(c) (_acpi_ctype[(unsigned char)(c)] & (_ACPI_LO | _ACPI_UP))
#endif /* !ACPI_USE_SYSTEM_CLIBRARY */