__builtin_bswap32()
is used to reverse bytes (it\'s used for littel/big endian issues (from gcc)).
htonl()
is used to reverse bytes too (conver
bswap_32 always reverse byte order, on any architecture.
htonl/ntohl reverses byteorder on little endian machines only.
For example, on PowerPC (big endian), ntohl/htonl just returns input value, no more, while bswap32 anyway will reverse byte order.
Just look at source code : (example from glib 2.18)
#undef htonl
#undef ntohl
uint32_t
htonl (x)
uint32_t x;
{
#if BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN
return x;
#elif BYTE_ORDER == LITTLE_ENDIAN
return __bswap_32 (x);
#else
# error "What kind of system is this?"
#endif
}
weak_alias (htonl, ntohl)
And : #define __bswap_32(x) ((unsigned int)__builtin_bswap32(x))
Source here : http://fossies.org/dox/glibc-2.18/htonl_8c_source.html
As you can see, htonl
only call __builtin_bswap32
on little-endian machines.
I disagree with your statement that htonl()
is used to reverse byte order. It is used to convert from host to network byte order. Depending on the byte order of the host, that may, or may not, result in byte order being reversed.
I suggest that you use the function that expresses the correct semantic intent:
htonl()
.__builtin_bswap32()
.