I am trying to understand and implement a simple file system based on FAT12. I am currently looking at the following snippet of code and its driving me crazy:
int getTotalSize(char * mmap)
{
int *tmp1 = malloc(sizeof(int));
int *tmp2 = malloc(sizeof(int));
int retVal;
* tmp1 = mmap[19];
* tmp2 = mmap[20];
printf("%d and %d read\n",*tmp1,*tmp2);
retVal = *tmp1+((*tmp2)<<8);
free(tmp1);
free(tmp2);
return retVal;
};
From what I've read so far, the FAT12 format stores the integers in little endian format. and the code above is getting the size of the file system which is stored in the 19th and 20th byte of boot sector.
however I don't understand why
retVal = *tmp1+((*tmp2)<<8);
works. is the bitwise <<8 converting the second byte to decimal? or to big endian format?
why is it only doing it to the second byte and not the first one?
the bytes in question are [in little endian format] :
40 0B
and i tried converting them manually by switching the order first to
0B 40
and then converting from hex to decimal, and I get the right output, I just don't understand how adding the first byte to the bitwise shift of second byte does the same thing? Thanks