I have come up with following version that seems to be working correctly for few test cases I have defined.
First we need a helper function that prints hex value given binary data:
void hexdump(unsigned char *data, int len)
{
int c = 0;
while (c < len)
{
cout << hex << std::setw(2) << std::setfill('0') << static_cast<int>(data[c++]);
}
printf("\n");
}
Now lets define the actual function that takes block.bits and converts it to 256 bit value in memory:
bool convert_bits(uint32_t bits, uint64_t* value, int val_len = 4)
{
assert(val_len == 4);
assert(value != NULL);
if (val_len != 4 || value == NULL)
{
return false;
}
// if bits = 0x1b0404cb, hex target = 0x0404cb * 2**(8*(0x1b - 3))
uint32_t x = 8 * ((bits >> 24) - 3); // number of zero bits on right
uint64_t val = bits & 0x00FFFFFF;
// Number of maximum bits required for val is 24.
assert(x <= (256 - 24));
if (x > (256 - 24))
{
return false;
}
int startq = (3 - int(x / 64));
int endq = (3 - int((x + 24) / 64));
int shift = ((3 + endq) * 64 - x);
if (startq != endq)
{
shift = 64 - shift;
}
value[startq] = htobe64(val << shift);
value[endq] = htobe64(val >> shift);
return true;
}
Now lets test the above function:
int main()
{
uint64_t num[4] = { 0, 0, 0, 0 };
if(convert_bits(0x1b0404cb, num))
{
hexdump((unsigned char *)num, sizeof(uint64_t) * 4);
}
return 0;
}
This prints: 00000000000404cb000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000