On 7/12/19 1:48 AM, Richard Henderson wrote:
> On 7/12/19 12:32 AM, Jan Bobek wrote:
>> insnv allows emitting variable-length instructions in little-endian or
>> big-endian byte order; it subsumes functionality of former insn16()
>> and insn32() functions.
>>
>> randint can reliably generate signed
Jan Bobek writes:
> insnv allows emitting variable-length instructions in little-endian or
> big-endian byte order; it subsumes functionality of former insn16()
> and insn32() functions.
>
> randint can reliably generate signed or unsigned integers of arbitrary
> width.
>
> Signed-off-by: Jan B
On 7/12/19 12:32 AM, Jan Bobek wrote:
> insnv allows emitting variable-length instructions in little-endian or
> big-endian byte order; it subsumes functionality of former insn16()
> and insn32() functions.
>
> randint can reliably generate signed or unsigned integers of arbitrary
> width.
>
> Si
insnv allows emitting variable-length instructions in little-endian or
big-endian byte order; it subsumes functionality of former insn16()
and insn32() functions.
randint can reliably generate signed or unsigned integers of arbitrary
width.
Signed-off-by: Jan Bobek
---
risugen_common.pm | 55 ++