Implement the arbitrary bit-width integer feature. The feature allows
integers of any bitwidth (up to 64) to be defined instead of just 1, 8,
16, 32, and 64 bit integers.
This change does several things:
1. Introduces a new Derived Type, IntegerType, to represent the number of
bits in an integer. The Type classes SubclassData field is used to
store the number of bits. This allows 2^23 bits in an integer type.
2. Removes the five integer Type::TypeID values for the 1, 8, 16, 32 and
64-bit integers. These are replaced with just IntegerType which is not
a primitive any more.
3. Adjust the rest of LLVM to account for this change.
Note that while this incremental change lays the foundation for arbitrary
bit-width integers, LLVM has not yet been converted to actually deal with
them in any significant way. Most optimization passes, for example, will
still only deal with the byte-width integer types. Future increments
will rectify this situation.
llvm-svn: 33113
validate the prototype of intrinsic functions. This prevents GCC from going
crazy and inlining too much stuff, eventually running out of memory.
llvm-svn: 27283
independently, batch up checks so that identically typed intrinsics share
verifier code. This dramatically reduces the size of the verifier function,
which should help avoid GCC running out of memory compiling Verifier.cpp.
llvm-svn: 27281
mismatch against the enum table.
This is a part of Sabre's master plan to drive me nuts with subtle bugs that
happens to only affect x86 be. :-)
llvm-svn: 27237