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1 /* This file contains the definitions and documentation for the
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2 machine modes used in the GNU compiler.
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3 Copyright (C) 1987, 1992, 1994, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2005,
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4 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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5
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6 This file is part of GCC.
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7
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8 GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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9 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
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10 Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later
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11 version.
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12
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13 GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
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14 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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15 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
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16 for more details.
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17
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18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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19 along with GCC; see the file COPYING3. If not see
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20 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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21
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22
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23 /* This file defines all the MACHINE MODES used by GCC.
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24
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25 A machine mode specifies a size and format of data
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26 at the machine level.
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27
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28 Each RTL expression has a machine mode.
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29
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30 At the syntax tree level, each ..._TYPE and each ..._DECL node
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31 has a machine mode which describes data of that type or the
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32 data of the variable declared. */
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33
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34 /* This file is included by the genmodes program. Its text is the
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35 body of a function. Do not rely on this, it will change in the
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36 future.
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37
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38 The following statements can be used in this file -- all have
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39 the form of a C macro call. In their arguments:
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40
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41 A CLASS argument must be one of the constants defined in
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42 mode-classes.def, less the leading MODE_ prefix; some statements
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43 that take CLASS arguments have restrictions on which classes are
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44 acceptable. For instance, INT.
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45
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46 A MODE argument must be the printable name of a machine mode,
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47 without quotation marks or trailing "mode". For instance, SI.
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48
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49 A PRECISION, BYTESIZE, or COUNT argument must be a positive integer
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50 constant.
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51
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52 A FORMAT argument must be one of the real_mode_format structures
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53 declared in real.h, or else a literal 0. Do not put a leading &
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54 on the argument.
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55
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56 An EXPR argument must be a syntactically valid C expression.
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57 If an EXPR contains commas, you may need to write an extra pair of
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58 parentheses around it, so it appears to be a single argument to the
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59 statement.
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60
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61 This file defines only those modes which are of use on almost all
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62 machines. Other modes can be defined in the target-specific
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63 mode definition file, config/ARCH/ARCH-modes.def.
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64
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65 Order matters in this file in so far as statements which refer to
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66 other modes must appear after the modes they refer to. However,
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67 statements which do not refer to other modes may appear in any
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68 order.
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69
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70 RANDOM_MODE (MODE);
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71 declares MODE to be of class RANDOM.
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72
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73 CC_MODE (MODE);
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74 declares MODE to be of class CC.
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75
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76 INT_MODE (MODE, BYTESIZE);
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77 declares MODE to be of class INT and BYTESIZE bytes wide.
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78 All of the bits of its representation are significant.
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79
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80 FRACTIONAL_INT_MODE (MODE, PRECISION, BYTESIZE);
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81 declares MODE to be of class INT, BYTESIZE bytes wide in
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82 storage, but with only PRECISION significant bits.
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83
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84 FLOAT_MODE (MODE, BYTESIZE, FORMAT);
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85 declares MODE to be of class FLOAT and BYTESIZE bytes wide,
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86 using floating point format FORMAT.
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87 All of the bits of its representation are significant.
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88
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89 DECIMAL FLOAT_MODE (MODE, BYTESIZE);
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90 declares MODE to be of class DECIMAL_FLOAT and BYTESIZE bytes
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91 wide. All of the bits of its representation are significant.
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92
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93 FRACTIONAL_FLOAT_MODE (MODE, PRECISION, BYTESIZE, FORMAT);
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94 declares MODE to be of class FLOAT, BYTESIZE bytes wide in
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95 storage, but with only PRECISION significant bits, using
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96 floating point format FORMAT.
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97
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98 FRACT_MODE (MODE, BYTESIZE, FBIT);
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99 declares MODE to be of class FRACT and BYTESIZE bytes wide
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100 with FBIT fractional bits. There may be padding bits.
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101
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102 UFRACT_MODE (MODE, BYTESIZE, FBIT);
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103 declares MODE to be of class UFRACT and BYTESIZE bytes wide
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104 with FBIT fractional bits. There may be padding bits.
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105
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106 ACCUM_MODE (MODE, BYTESIZE, IBIT, FBIT);
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107 declares MODE to be of class ACCUM and BYTESIZE bytes wide
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108 with IBIT integral bits and FBIT fractional bits.
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109 There may be padding bits.
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110
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111 UACCUM_MODE (MODE, BYTESIZE, FBIT);
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112 declares MODE to be of class UACCUM and BYTESIZE bytes wide
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113 with IBIT integral bits and FBIT fractional bits.
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114 There may be padding bits.
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115
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116 RESET_FLOAT_FORMAT (MODE, FORMAT);
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117 changes the format of MODE, which must be class FLOAT,
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118 to FORMAT. Use in an ARCH-modes.def to reset the format
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119 of one of the float modes defined in this file.
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120
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121 PARTIAL_INT_MODE (MODE);
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122 declares a mode of class PARTIAL_INT with the same size as
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123 MODE (which must be an INT mode). The name of the new mode
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124 is made by prefixing a P to the name MODE. This statement
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125 may grow a PRECISION argument in the future.
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126
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127 VECTOR_MODE (CLASS, MODE, COUNT);
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128 Declare a vector mode whose component mode is MODE (of class
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129 CLASS) with COUNT components. CLASS must be INT or FLOAT.
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130 The name of the vector mode takes the form VnX where n is
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131 COUNT in decimal and X is MODE.
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132
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133 VECTOR_MODES (CLASS, WIDTH);
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134 For all modes presently declared in class CLASS, construct
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135 corresponding vector modes having width WIDTH. Modes whose
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136 byte sizes do not evenly divide WIDTH are ignored, as are
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137 modes that would produce vector modes with only one component,
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138 and modes smaller than one byte (if CLASS is INT) or smaller
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139 than two bytes (if CLASS is FLOAT). CLASS must be INT or
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140 FLOAT. The names follow the same rule as VECTOR_MODE uses.
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141
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142 COMPLEX_MODES (CLASS);
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143 For all modes presently declared in class CLASS, construct
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144 corresponding complex modes. Modes smaller than one byte
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145 are ignored. For FLOAT modes, the names are derived by
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146 replacing the 'F' in the mode name with a 'C'. (It is an
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147 error if there is no 'F'. For INT modes, the names are
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148 derived by prefixing a C to the name.
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149
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150 ADJUST_BYTESIZE (MODE, EXPR);
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151 ADJUST_ALIGNMENT (MODE, EXPR);
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152 ADJUST_FLOAT_FORMAT (MODE, EXPR);
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153 ADJUST_IBIT (MODE, EXPR);
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154 ADJUST_FBIT (MODE, EXPR);
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155 Arrange for the byte size, alignment, floating point format, ibit,
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156 or fbit of MODE to be adjustable at run time. EXPR will be executed
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157 once after processing all command line options, and should
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158 evaluate to the desired byte size, alignment, format, ibit or fbit.
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159
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160 Unlike a FORMAT argument, if you are adjusting a float format
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161 you must put an & in front of the name of each format structure.
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162
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163 Note: If a mode is ever made which is more than 255 bytes wide,
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164 machmode.h and genmodes.c will have to be changed to allocate
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165 more space for the mode_size and mode_alignment arrays. */
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166
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167 /* VOIDmode is used when no mode needs to be specified,
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168 as for example on CONST_INT RTL expressions. */
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169 RANDOM_MODE (VOID);
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170
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171 /* BLKmode is used for structures, arrays, etc.
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172 that fit no more specific mode. */
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173 RANDOM_MODE (BLK);
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174
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175 /* Single bit mode used for booleans. */
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176 FRACTIONAL_INT_MODE (BI, 1, 1);
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177
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178 /* Basic integer modes. We go up to TI in generic code (128 bits).
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179 The name OI is reserved for a 256-bit type (needed by some back ends).
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180 FIXME TI shouldn't be generically available either. */
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181 INT_MODE (QI, 1);
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182 INT_MODE (HI, 2);
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183 INT_MODE (SI, 4);
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184 INT_MODE (DI, 8);
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185 INT_MODE (TI, 16);
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186
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187 /* No partial integer modes are defined by default. */
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188
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189 /* Basic floating point modes. SF and DF are the only modes provided
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190 by default. The names QF, HF, XF, and TF are reserved for targets
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191 that need 1-word, 2-word, 80-bit, or 128-bit float types respectively.
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192
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193 These are the IEEE mappings. They can be overridden with
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194 RESET_FLOAT_FORMAT or at runtime (in OVERRIDE_OPTIONS). */
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195
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196 FLOAT_MODE (SF, 4, ieee_single_format);
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197 FLOAT_MODE (DF, 8, ieee_double_format);
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198
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199 /* Basic CC modes.
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200 FIXME define this only for targets that need it. */
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201 CC_MODE (CC);
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202
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203 /* Fixed-point modes. */
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204 FRACT_MODE (QQ, 1, 7); /* s.7 */
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205 FRACT_MODE (HQ, 2, 15); /* s.15 */
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206 FRACT_MODE (SQ, 4, 31); /* s.31 */
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207 FRACT_MODE (DQ, 8, 63); /* s.63 */
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208 FRACT_MODE (TQ, 16, 127); /* s.127 */
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209
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210 UFRACT_MODE (UQQ, 1, 8); /* .8 */
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211 UFRACT_MODE (UHQ, 2, 16); /* .16 */
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212 UFRACT_MODE (USQ, 4, 32); /* .32 */
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213 UFRACT_MODE (UDQ, 8, 64); /* .64 */
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214 UFRACT_MODE (UTQ, 16, 128); /* .128 */
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215
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216 ACCUM_MODE (HA, 2, 8, 7); /* s8.7 */
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217 ACCUM_MODE (SA, 4, 16, 15); /* s16.15 */
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218 ACCUM_MODE (DA, 8, 32, 31); /* s32.31 */
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219 ACCUM_MODE (TA, 16, 64, 63); /* s64.63 */
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220
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221 UACCUM_MODE (UHA, 2, 8, 8); /* 8.8 */
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222 UACCUM_MODE (USA, 4, 16, 16); /* 16.16 */
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223 UACCUM_MODE (UDA, 8, 32, 32); /* 32.32 */
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224 UACCUM_MODE (UTA, 16, 64, 64); /* 64.64 */
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225
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226 /* Allow the target to specify additional modes of various kinds. */
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227 #if HAVE_EXTRA_MODES
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228 # include EXTRA_MODES_FILE
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229 #endif
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230
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231 /* Complex modes. */
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232 COMPLEX_MODES (INT);
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233 COMPLEX_MODES (FLOAT);
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234
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235 /* Decimal floating point modes. */
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236 DECIMAL_FLOAT_MODE (SD, 4, decimal_single_format);
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237 DECIMAL_FLOAT_MODE (DD, 8, decimal_double_format);
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238 DECIMAL_FLOAT_MODE (TD, 16, decimal_quad_format);
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239
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240 /* The symbol Pmode stands for one of the above machine modes (usually SImode).
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241 The tm.h file specifies which one. It is not a distinct mode. */
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242
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243 /*
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244 Local variables:
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245 mode:c
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246 version-control: t
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247 End:
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248 */
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