Chandler Carruth 19061ddb5f [docs] Delete tons of bad information in the requirements section of the
getting started guide.

Some highlights:
- I heard there was this Clang compiler that you could use for your
  host compiler. Not sure though.
- We no longer have a GCC frontend with weird build restrictions.
- Windows is doing a bit better than partially supported.
- We nuked everything to do with itanium.
- SPUs? Really?
- Xcode 2.5 and gcc 4.0.1 are really not a concern -- they don't work.
- OMG, we actually tried building LLVM on Alpha? Really?
- PowerPC works pretty well these days.

There is still a lot of stuff here I'm pretty dubious about, but I nuked
most of what was actively misleading, out of date, or patently wrong.
Some of it (mingw stuff especially) isn't really lacking, its just that
the comments here were actively wrong. Hopefully folks that know those
platforms can add back correct / modern information.

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@202370 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2014-02-27 09:33:55 +00:00
2014-02-25 09:30:54 +00:00
2014-02-27 03:30:36 +00:00
2014-02-18 14:03:17 +00:00
2013-12-20 00:33:39 +00:00

Low Level Virtual Machine (LLVM)
================================

This directory and its subdirectories contain source code for the Low Level
Virtual Machine, a toolkit for the construction of highly optimized compilers,
optimizers, and runtime environments.

LLVM is open source software. You may freely distribute it under the terms of
the license agreement found in LICENSE.txt.

Please see the documentation provided in docs/ for further
assistance with LLVM, and in particular docs/GettingStarted.rst for getting
started with LLVM and docs/README.txt for an overview of LLVM's
documentation setup.

If you're writing a package for LLVM, see docs/Packaging.rst for our
suggestions.

Description
LLVM backend for 6502
Readme 277 MiB
Languages
C++ 48.7%
LLVM 38.5%
Assembly 10.2%
C 0.9%
Python 0.4%
Other 1.2%