* it is an implementation detail used for prime testing
* there is upcoming work by @czurnieden regarding a generalised prime sieve
* furthermore remove jacobi test (replaced by kronecker)
mp_word is an internal type and it is problematic if it is exposed
in the public api. See for example #216 - MSVC does not support 128 bit
mp_words. But it is perfectly ok to use those internally in the library,
as long as the library is compiled with GCC.
The return type of mp_get_bit was imprecise (either mp_err or mp_bool),
therefore this function is deprecated in favor of s_mp_get_bit for now.
If we need s_mp_get_bit to be public, we should add it under a different
name. However since mp_set_bit is not available, I don't think there any
downstream users (ab)using mp_int as bitsets.
* MP_USE_ENUMS enables enums
* Wc++-compat catches some implicit conversions if MP_USE_ENUMS is defined
* 100% backwards compatible API/ABI if MP_USE_ENUMS is not defined
* (!) Always zero buffer before freeing if MP_NO_ZERO_ON_FREE is not defined
* Add MP_NO_ZERO_ON_FREE to disable hardening
* Add MP_ZERO_BUFFER, MP_ZERO_DIGITS, MP_FREE_BUFFFER, MP_FREE_DIGITS
* Never use MP_FREE directly, use MP_FREE_DIGITS or MP_FREE_BUFFER
* Add MP_USE_MEMSET to use memset instead of loop
* Disable astyle backups which are annonying in the times of git
* In the default settings, a cutoff X can be modified at runtime
by adjusting the corresponding X_CUTOFF variable.
* Tunability of the library can be disabled at compile time
by defining the MP_FIXED_CUTOFFS macro.
* There is an additional file tommath_cutoffs.h, which defines
the default cutoffs. These can be adjusted manually or by the
autotuner.