@John In a traditional tool chain, the compiler produces assembly language as output, and doesn't need to be aware of endianness. Depending on object file format, the assembler might need to be, and the linker almost certainly would. Some compilers (e.g., Microsoft) produce object files directly, in which case they'd normally need to be also.
Most executable formats have an endianness flag, so in theory, you could push it all off to the loader, which would have to do swapping as it loaded a file in the wrong endianness. I'd guess most loaders don't do that though--they probably check that the flag is what they expect, and give up if it's not (but I've never looked to be sure).