This reverts commit
0486497e2b5f4d36fa968a1a60fea358cbf70b65.
The strtoul has well-defined semantics. It is defined by the C standard and
POSIX. To quote the relevant section of the man pages,
> If base is zero or 16, the string may then include a "0x" prefix, and the
> number will be read in base 16; otherwise, a zero base is taken as 10
> (decimal) unless the next character is '0', in which case it is taken as
> 8 (octal).
Keeping these semantics is important for several reasons. First, it is very
surprising for standard library functions to behave differently than usual.
Every other implementation of strtoul has different semantics than the
implementation in U-Boot at the moment. Second, it can result in very
surprising results from small changes. For example, changing the string
"1f" to "20" causes the parsed value to *decrease*. Forcing use of the "0x"
prefix to specify hexidecimal numbers is a feature, not a bug. Lastly, this
is slightly less performant, since the entire number is parsed twice.
This fixes the str_simple_strtoul test failing with
test/str_ut.c:29, run_strtoul(): expect_val == val: Expected 0x44b (1099), got 0x1099ab (1087915)
test/str_ut.c:46, str_simple_strtoul(): 0 == run_strtoul(uts, str2, 0, 1099, 4): Expected 0x0 (0), got 0x1 (1)
Signed-off-by: Sean Anderson <seanga2@gmail.com>
CC: Michal Simek <michal.simek@xilinx.com>
CC: Shiril Tichkule <shirilt@xilinx.com>
Reviewed-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>