NIST is asking for 64-bit code in ANSI C (no 64-bit types) and ISO 9660 formatted CDROMs with long filenames (nope)http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/ST/post-quantum-crypto/submission-requirements/digital-optical-media.html …
Current ANSI C is ISO C11; see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_C#History_and_outlook …. Target is x86-64 so there are 64-bit types. CD-ROM is just 1 option.
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ANSI C is ISO C90; C11 was not standardized by ANSI. Also see your gcc man page for -ansi; with -pedant it blocks "long long".
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"This standard [C99] has been withdrawn by both ANSI/INCITS[6] and ISO/IEC[7] in favour of C11" and http://webstore.ansi.org/RecordDetail.aspx?sku=INCITS%2fISO%2fIEC+9899-2012 ….
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Fair enough. Perhaps someone should tell gcc and the C community. However, this is how compilers see it.
End of conversation
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It does seem strange that one cannot submit x86-64 assembly language. I'm guessing that's b/c there's no ANSI standard for it.
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