1 This file contains information about GCC releases which has been generated
2 automatically from the online release notes. It covers releases of GCC
3 (and the former EGCS project) since EGCS 1.0, on the line of development
4 that led to GCC 3. For information on GCC 2.8.1 and older releases of GCC 2,
7 ======================================================================
8 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/index.html
10 GCC 3.4 Release Series
14 The [1]GNU project and the GCC developers are pleased to announce the
17 This release is a bug-fix release, containing fixes for regressions in
18 GCC 3.4.1 relative to previous releases of GCC.
22 The [2]GNU project and the GCC developers are pleased to announce the
25 This release is a bug-fix release, containing fixes for regressions in
26 GCC 3.4.0 relative to previous releases of GCC.
30 The [3]GNU project and the GCC developers are pleased to announce the
33 The GCC 3.4 release series includes numerous [4]new features,
34 improvements, bug fixes, and other changes, thanks to an [5]amazing
40 September 6, 2004 ([6]changes)
43 July 1, 2004 ([7]changes)
46 April 18, 2004 ([8]changes)
48 References and Acknowledgements
50 GCC used to stand for the GNU C Compiler, but since the compiler
51 supports several other languages aside from C, it now stands for the
52 GNU Compiler Collection.
54 A list of [9]successful builds is updated as new information becomes
57 The GCC developers would like to thank the numerous people that have
58 contributed new features, improvements, bug fixes, and other changes
59 as well as test results to GCC. This [10]amazing group of volunteers
60 is what makes GCC successful.
62 For additional information about GCC please refer to the [11]GCC
63 project web site or contact the [12]GCC development mailing list.
65 To obtain GCC please use [13]our mirror sites, one of the [14]GNU
66 mirror sites, or [15]our CVS server.
67 _________________________________________________________________
69 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [16]gnu@gnu.org. There
70 are also [17]other ways to contact the FSF.
72 These pages are maintained by [18]the GCC team.
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78 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
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94 3. http://www.gnu.org/
95 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/changes.html
96 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html
97 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/changes.html#3.4.2
98 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/changes.html#3.4.1
99 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/changes.html
100 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/buildstat.html
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116 ======================================================================
117 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/changes.html
119 GCC 3.4 Release Series
120 Changes, New Features, and Fixes
122 GCC 3.4 has [1]many improvements in the C++ frontend. Before reporting
123 a bug, please make sure it's really GCC, and not your code, that is
128 * GNU Make is now required to build GCC.
129 * With -nostdinc the preprocessor used to ignore both standard
130 include paths and include paths contained in environment
131 variables. It was neither documented nor intended that environment
132 variable paths be ignored, so this has been corrected.
133 * GCC no longer accepts the options -fvolatile, -fvolatile-global
134 and -fvolatile-static. It is unlikely that they worked correctly
136 * GCC no longer ships <varargs.h>. Use <stdarg.h> instead.
137 * Support for all the systems [2]obsoleted in GCC 3.3 has been
138 removed from GCC 3.4. See below for a [3]list of systems which are
139 obsoleted in this release.
140 * GCC now requires an ISO C90 (ANSI C89) C compiler to build. K&R C
141 compilers will not work.
142 * The implementation of the [4]MIPS ABIs has changed. As a result,
143 the code generated for certain MIPS targets will not be binary
144 compatible with earlier releases.
145 * In previous releases, the MIPS port had a fake "hilo" register
146 with the user-visible name accum. This register has been removed.
147 * The implementation of the [5]SPARC ABIs has changed. As a result,
148 the code generated will not be binary compatible with earlier
149 releases in certain cases.
150 * The configure option --enable-threads=pthreads has been removed;
151 use --enable-threads=posix instead, which should have the same
153 * Code size estimates used by inlining heuristics for C,
154 Objective-C, C++ and Java have been redesigned significantly. As a
155 result the parameters of -finline-insns, --param
156 max-inline-insns-single and --param max-inline-insns-auto need to
158 * --param max-inline-slope and --param min-inline-insns have been
159 removed; they are not needed for the new bottom-up inlining
161 * The new unit-at-a-time compilation scheme has several
162 compatibility issues:
163 + The order in which functions, variables, and top-level asm
164 statements are emitted may have changed. Code relying on some
165 particular ordering needs to be updated. The majority of such
166 top-level asm statements can be replaced by section
168 + Unreferenced static variables and functions are removed. This
169 may result in undefined references when an asm statement
170 refers to the variable/function directly. In that case either
171 the variable/function shall be listed in asm statement
172 operand or in the case of top-level asm statements the
173 attribute used shall be used to force function/variable to be
174 always output and considered as a possibly used by unknown
176 For variables the attribute is accepted only by GCC 3.4 and
177 newer, while for earlier versions it is sufficient to use
178 unused to silence warnings about the variables not being
179 referenced. To keep code portable across different GCC
180 versions, you can use appropriate preprocessor conditionals.
181 + Static functions now can use non-standard passing conventions
182 that may break asm statements calling functions directly.
183 Again the attribute used shall be used to prevent this
185 As a temporary workaround, -fno-unit-at-a-time can be used, but
186 this scheme may not be supported by future releases of GCC.
187 * GCC 3.4 automatically places zero-initialized variables in the
188 .bss section on some operating systems. Versions of GNU Emacs up
189 to (and including) 21.3 will not work correctly when using this
190 optimization; you can use -fno-zero-initialized-in-bss to disable
193 General Optimizer Improvements
195 * Usability of the profile feedback and coverage testing has been
197 + Performance of profiled programs has been improved by faster
198 profile merging code.
199 + Better use of the profile feedback for optimization (loop
200 unrolling and loop peeling).
201 + File locking support allowing fork() calls and parallel runs
202 of profiled programs.
203 + Coverage file format has been redesigned.
204 + gcov coverage tool has been improved.
205 + make profiledbootstrap available to build a faster compiler.
206 Experiments made on i386 hardware showed an 11% speedup on
207 -O0 and a 7.5% speedup on -O2 compilation of a [6]large C++
209 + New value profiling pass enabled via -fprofile-values
210 + New value profile transformations pass enabled via -fvpt aims
211 to optimize some code sequences by exploiting knowledge about
212 value ranges or other properties of the operands. At the
213 moment a conversion of expensive divisions into cheaper
214 operations has been implemented.
215 + New -fprofile-generate and -fprofile-use command line options
216 to simplify the use of profile feedback.
217 * A new unit-at-a-time compilation scheme for C, Objective-C, C++
218 and Java which is enabled via -funit-at-a-time (and implied by
219 -O2). In this scheme a whole file is parsed first and optimized
220 later. The following basic inter-procedural optimizations are
222 + Removal of unreachable functions and variables
223 + Discovery of local functions (functions with static linkage
224 whose address is never taken)
225 + On i386, these local functions use register parameter passing
227 + Reordering of functions in topological order of the call
228 graph to enable better propagation of optimizing hints (such
229 as the stack alignments needed by functions) in the back end.
230 + Call graph based out-of-order inlining heuristics which
231 allows to limit overall compilation unit growth (--param
233 Overall, the unit-at-a-time scheme produces a 1.3% improvement for
234 the SPECint2000 benchmark on the i386 architecture (AMD Athlon
236 * More realistic code size estimates used by inlining for C,
237 Objective-C, C++ and Java. The growth of large functions can now
238 be limited via --param large-function-insns and --param
239 large-function-growth.
240 * A new cfg-level loop optimizer pass replaces the old loop
241 unrolling pass and adds two other loop transformations -- loop
242 peeling and loop unswitching -- and also uses the profile feedback
243 to limit code growth. (The three optimizations are enabled by
244 -funroll-loops, -fpeel-loops and -funswitch-loops flags,
246 The old loop unroller still can be enabled by -fold-unroll-loops
247 and may produce better code in some cases, especially when the
248 webizer optimization pass is not run.
249 * A new web construction pass enabled via -fweb (and implied by -O3)
250 improves the quality of register allocation, CSE, first scheduling
251 pass and some other optimization passes by avoiding re-use of
252 pseudo registers with non-overlapping live ranges. The pass almost
253 always improves code quality but does make debugging difficult and
254 thus is not enabled by default by -O2
255 The pass is especially effective as cleanup after code duplication
256 passes, such as the loop unroller or the tracer.
257 * Experimental implementations of superblock or trace scheduling in
258 the second scheduling pass can be enabled via
259 -fsched2-use-superblocks and -fsched2-use-traces, respectively.
261 New Languages and Language specific improvements
265 * The Ada front end has been updated to include numerous bug fixes
266 and enhancements. These include:
267 + Improved project file support
268 + Additional set of warnings about potential wrong code
269 + Improved error messages
270 + Improved code generation
271 + Improved cross reference information
273 + Better run-time check elimination
274 + Better error recovery
275 + More efficient implementation of unbounded strings
276 + Added features in GNAT.Sockets, GNAT.OS_Lib,
277 GNAT.Debug_Pools, ...
278 + New GNAT.xxxx packages (e.g. GNAT.Strings,
279 GNAT.Exception_Action)
281 + New -gnatS switch replacing gnatpsta
282 + Implementation of new Ada features (in particular limited
283 with, limited aggregates)
287 * Precompiled headers are now supported. Precompiled headers can
288 dramatically speed up compilation of some projects. There are some
289 known defects in the current precompiled header implementation
290 that will result in compiler crashes in relatively rare
291 situations. Therefore, precompiled headers should be considered a
292 "technology preview" in this release. Read the manual for details
293 about how to use precompiled headers.
294 * File handling in the preprocessor has been rewritten. GCC no
295 longer gets confused by symlinks and hardlinks, and now has a
296 correct implementation of #import and #pragma once. These two
297 directives have therefore been un-deprecated.
298 * The undocumented extension that allowed C programs to have a label
299 at the end of a compound statement, which has been deprecated
300 since GCC 3.0, has been removed.
301 * The cast-as-lvalue extension has been removed for C++ and
302 deprecated for C and Objective-C. In particular, code like this:
310 is no longer accepted for C++ and will not be accepted for C and
311 Objective-C in a future version.
312 * The conditional-expression-as-lvalue extension has been deprecated
313 for C and Objective-C. In particular, code like this:
317 will not be accepted for C and Objective-C in a future version.
318 * The compound-expression-as-lvalue extension has been deprecated
319 for C and Objective-C. In particular, code like this:
323 will not be accepted for C and Objective-C in a future version. A
324 possible non-intrusive workaround is the following:
327 * Several [7]built-in functions such as __builtin_popcount for
328 counting bits, finding the highest and lowest bit in a word, and
329 parity have been added.
330 * The -fwritable-strings option has been deprecated and will be
332 * Many C math library functions are now recognized as built-ins and
334 * The C, C++, and Objective-C compilers can now handle source files
335 written in any character encoding supported by the host C library.
336 The default input character set is taken from the current locale,
337 and may be overridden with the -finput-charset command line
338 option. In the future we will add support for inline encoding
343 * G++ is now much closer to full conformance to the ISO/ANSI C++
344 standard. This means, among other things, that a lot of invalid
345 constructs which used to be accepted in previous versions will now
346 be rejected. It is very likely that existing C++ code will need to
347 be fixed. This document lists some of the most common issues.
348 * A hand-written recursive-descent C++ parser has replaced the
349 YACC-derived C++ parser from previous GCC releases. The new parser
350 contains much improved infrastructure needed for better parsing of
351 C++ source codes, handling of extensions, and clean separation
352 (where possible) between proper semantics analysis and parsing.
353 The new parser fixes many bugs that were found in the old parser.
354 * You must now use the typename and template keywords to
355 disambiguate dependent names, as required by the C++ standard.
357 typedef int mytype_t;
360 template <class T1> struct A {
361 template <class T2> struct B {
365 template <int N> void bar(void)
367 // Use 'typename' to tell the parser that T1::mytype_t names
368 // a type. This is needed because the name is dependent (in
369 // this case, on template parameter T1).
370 typename T1::mytype_t x;
375 template <class T> void template_func(void)
377 // Use 'template' to prefix member templates within
378 // dependent types (a has type A<T>, which depends on
379 // the template parameter T).
383 // Use 'template' to tell the parser that B is a nested
384 // template class (dependent on template parameter T), and
385 // 'typename' because the whole A<T>::B<int> is
386 // the name of a type (again, dependent).
387 typename A<T>::template B<int> b;
391 void non_template_func(void)
393 // Outside of any template class or function, no names can be
394 // dependent, so the use of the keyword 'typename' and 'template'
395 // is not needed (and actually forbidden).
401 * In a template definition, unqualified names will no longer find
402 members of a dependent base. For example,
403 template <typename T> struct B {
411 template <typename T> struct C : B<T> {
416 n = 0; // ::n is modified
417 g (); // ::g is called
420 You must make the names dependent by prefixing them with this->.
421 Here is the corrected definition of C<T>::g,
422 template <typename T> void C<T>::g ()
429 * In templates, all non-dependent names are now looked up and bound
430 at definition time (while parsing the code), instead of later when
431 the template is instantiated. For instance:
434 template <int> struct A {
435 static void bar(void){
444 A<0>::bar(); // Calls foo(int), used to call foo(char).
446 * In an explicit instantiation of a class template, you must
447 use class or struct before the template-id:
451 template A<0>; // error, not accepted anymore
452 template class A<0>; // OK
453 * The "named return value" and "implicit typename" extensions have
455 * Default arguments in function types have been deprecated and will
457 * ARM-style name-injection of friend declarations has been
458 deprecated and will be removed. For example: struct S { friend
459 void f(); }; void g() { f(); } will not be accepted by future
460 versions of G++; instead a declaration of "f" will need to be
461 present outside of the scope of "S".
462 * Covariant returns are implemented for all but varadic functions
463 that require an adjustment.
464 * When -pedantic is used, G++ now issues errors about spurious
465 semicolons. For example,
466 namespace N {}; // Invalid semicolon.
467 void f() {}; // Invalid semicolon.
468 * G++ no longer accepts attributes for a declarator after the
469 initializer associated with that declarator. For example,
470 X x(1) __attribute__((...));
471 is no longer accepted. Instead, use:
472 X x __attribute__((...)) (1);
473 * Inside the scope of a template class, the name of the class itself
474 can be treated as either a class or a template. So GCC used to
475 accept the class name as argument of type template, and template
476 template parameter. However this is not C++ standard compliant.
477 Now the name is not treated as a valid template template argument
478 unless you qualify the name by its scope. For example, the code
479 below no longer compiles.
480 template <template <class> class TT> class X {};
481 template <class T> class Y {
482 X<Y> x; // Invalid, Y is always a type template parameter.
484 The valid code for the above example is
486 (Notice the space between < and : to prevent GCC to interpret this
488 * Friend declarations that refer to template specializations are
489 rejected if the template has not already been declared. For
491 template <typename T>
493 friend void f<> (C&);
495 is rejected. You must first declare f as a template,
496 template <typename T>
498 * In case of friend declarations, every name used in the friend
499 declaration must be accessible at the point of that declaration.
500 Previous versions of G++ used to be less strict about this and
501 allowed friend declarations for private class members, for
502 example. See the ISO C++ Standard Committee's [8]defect report
504 * Declaration of member functions of class templates as friends are
505 supported. For example,
506 template <typename T> struct A {
510 template <typename T> friend void A<T>::f();
512 * You must use template <> to introduce template specializations, as
513 required by the standard. For example,
514 template <typename T>
518 is rejected. You must write,
519 template <> struct S<int> {};
520 * G++ used to accept code like this,
526 This behavior is not mandated by the standard. Now G++ issues an
527 error about this code. To avoid the error, you must move the
528 declaration of g before the declaration of f. The default
529 arguments for g must be visible at the point where it is called.
530 * The C++ ABI Section 3.3.3 specifications for the array
531 construction routines __cxa_vec_new2 and __cxa_vec_new3 were
532 changed to return NULL when the allocator argument returns NULL.
533 These changes are incorporated into the libstdc++ runtime library.
534 * Using a name introduced by a typedef in a friend declaration or in
535 an explicit instantiation is now rejected, as specified by the ISO
540 friend class B; // error, no typedef name here
541 friend B; // error, friend always needs class/struct/enum
542 friend class A; // OK
545 template <int> class Q {};
547 template class R; // error, no typedef name here
548 template class Q<0>; // OK
549 * When allocating an array with a new expression, GCC used to allow
550 parentheses around the type name. This is actually ill-formed and
552 int* a = new (int)[10]; // error, not accepted anymore
553 int* a = new int[10]; // OK
554 * When binding an rvalue of class type to a reference, the copy
555 constructor of the class must be accessible. For instance,
556 consider the following code:
563 A(const A&); // private copy ctor
571 foo(A()); // error, copy ctor is not accessible
572 foo(makeA()); // error, copy ctor is not accessible
575 foo(a1); // OK, a1 is a lvalue
577 This might be surprising at first sight, especially since most
578 popular compilers do not correctly implement this rule ([9]further
580 * When forming a pointer to member or a pointer to member function,
581 access checks for class visibility (public, protected, private)
582 are now performed using the qualifying scope of the name itself.
583 This is better explained with an example:
599 &A::pub_func; // OK, pub_func is accessible through A
600 &A::prot_func; // error, cannot access prot_func through A
601 &A::priv_func; // error, cannot access priv_func through A
603 &B::pub_func; // OK, pub_func is accessible through B
604 &B::prot_func; // OK, can access prot_func through B (within B)
605 &B::priv_func; // error, cannot access priv_func through B
609 Runtime Library (libstdc++)
612 + Streamlined streambuf, filebuf, separate synched with C
613 Standard I/O streambuf.
614 + All formatted I/O now uses cached locale information.
615 + STL optimizations (memory/speed for list, red-black trees as
616 used by sets and maps).
617 + More use of GCC builtins.
618 + String optimizations (avoid contention on
619 increment/decrement-and-test of the reference count in the
620 empty-string object, constructor from input_iterators
622 * Static linkage size reductions.
623 * Large File Support (files larger than 2 GB on 32-bit systems).
624 * Wide character and variable encoding filebuf work (UTF-8,
626 * Generic character traits.
627 * Also support wchar_t specializations on Mac OS 10.3.x, FreeBSD
628 5.x, Solaris 2.7 and above, AIX 5.x, Irix 6.5.
629 * The allocator class is now standard-conformant, and two additional
630 extension allocators have been added, mt_alloc and
632 * PCH support: -include bits/stdc++.h (2x compile speedup).
633 * Rewrote __cxa_demangle with support for C++ style allocators.
634 * New debug modes for STL containers and iterators.
635 * Testsuite rewrite: five times as many tests, plus increasingly
636 sophisticated tests, including I/O, MT, multi-locale, wide and
638 * Use current versions of GNU "autotools" for build/configuration.
642 * The Objective-C front end has been updated to include the numerous
643 bug fixes and enhancements previously available only in Apple's
644 version of GCC. These include:
645 + Structured exception (@try... @catch... @finally, @throw) and
646 synchronization (@synchronized) support. These are accessible
647 via the -fobjc-exceptions switch; as of this writing, they
648 may only be used in conjunction with -fnext-runtime on Mac OS
649 X 10.3 and later. See [10]Options Controlling Objective-C
650 Dialect for more information.
651 + An overhaul of @encode logic. The C99 _Bool and C++ bool type
652 may now be encoded as 'B'. In addition, the back-end/codegen
653 dependencies have been removed.
654 + An overhaul of message dispatch construction, ensuring that
655 the various receiver types (and casts thereof) are handled
656 properly, and that correct diagnostics are issued.
657 + Support for "Zero-Link" (-fzero-link) and "Fix-and-Continue"
658 (-freplace-objc-classes) debugging modes, currently available
659 on Mac OS X 10.3 and later. See [11]Options Controlling
660 Objective-C Dialect for more information.
661 + Access to optimized runtime entry points (-fno-nil-receivers
662 ) on the assumption that message receivers are never nil.
663 This is currently available on Mac OS X 10.3 and later. See
664 [12]Options Controlling Objective-C Dialect for more
669 * Compiling a .jar file will now cause non-.class entries to be
670 automatically compiled as resources.
671 * libgcj has been ported to Darwin.
672 * Jeff Sturm has adapted Jan Hubicka's call graph optimization code
674 * libgcj has a new gcjlib URL type; this lets URLClassLoader load
675 code from shared libraries.
676 * libgcj has been much more completely merged with [13]GNU
678 * Class loading is now much more correct; in particular the caller's
679 class loader is now used when that is required.
680 * [14]Eclipse 2.x will run out of the box using gij.
681 * Parts of java.nio have been implemented. Direct and indirect
682 buffers work, as do fundamental file and socket operations.
683 * java.awt has been improved, though it is still not ready for
685 * The HTTP protocol handler now uses HTTP/1.1 and can handle the
687 * The MinGW port has matured. Enhancements include socket timeout
688 support, thread interruption, improved Runtime.exec() handling and
689 support for accented characters in filenames.
693 * Fortran improvements are listed in the [15]Fortran documentation.
695 New Targets and Target Specific Improvements
699 * Several [16]built-in functions have been added such as
700 __builtin_alpha_zap to allow utilizing the more obscure
701 instructions of the CPU.
702 * Parameter passing of complex arguments has changed to match the
703 [17]ABI. This change is incompatible with previous GCC versions,
704 but does fix compatibility with the Tru64 compiler and several
705 corner cases where GCC was incompatible with itself.
709 * Nicolas Pitre has contributed his hand-coded floating-point
710 support code for ARM. It is both significantly smaller and faster
711 than the existing C-based implementation, even when building
712 applications for Thumb. The arm-elf configuration has been
713 converted to use the new code.
714 * Support for the Intel's iWMMXt architecture, a second generation
715 XScale processor, has been added. Enabled at run time with the
716 -mcpu=iwmmxt command line switch.
717 * A new ARM target has been added: arm-wince-pe. This is similar to
718 the arm-pe target, but it defaults to using the APCS32 ABI.
719 * The existing ARM pipeline description has been converted to the
720 use the [18]DFA processor pipeline model. There is not much change
721 in code performance, but the description is now [19]easier to
723 * Support for the Cirrus EP9312 Maverick floating point co-processor
724 added. Enabled at run time with the -mcpu=ep9312 command line
725 switch. Note however that the multilibs to support this chip are
726 currently disabled in gcc/config/arm/t-arm-elf, so if you want to
727 enable their production you will have to uncomment the entries in
732 * Support for long long has been added.
733 * Support for saveall attribute has been added.
734 * Pavel Pisa contributed hand-written 32-bit-by-32-bit division code
735 for H8/300H and H8S, which is much faster than the previous
737 * A lot of small performance improvements.
741 * Tuning for K8 (AMD Opteron/Athlon64) core is available via
742 -march=k8 and -mcpu=k8.
743 * Scalar SSE code generation carefully avoids reformatting
744 penalties, hidden dependencies and minimizes the number of uops
745 generated on both Intel and AMD CPUs.
746 * Vector MMX and SSE operands are now passed in registers to improve
747 performance and match the argument passing convention used by the
748 Intel C++ Compiler. As a result it is not possible to call
749 functions accepting vector arguments compiled by older GCC
751 * Conditional jump elimination is now more aggressive on modern
753 * The Athlon ports has been converted to use the DFA processor
754 pipeline description.
755 * Optimization of indirect tail calls is now possible in a similar
756 fashion as direct sibcall optimization.
757 * Further small performance improvements.
758 * -m128bit-long-double is now less buggy.
759 * __float128 support in 64-bit compilation.
760 * Support for data structures exceeding 2GB in 64-bit mode.
761 * -mcpu has been renamed to -mtune.
765 * Tuning code for the Itanium 2 processor has been added. The
766 generation of code tuned for Itanium 2 (option -mtune=itanium2) is
767 enabled by default now. To generate code tuned for Itanium 1 the
768 option -mtune=itanium1 should be used.
769 * [20]DFA processor pipeline descriptions for the IA-64 processors
770 have been added. This resulted in about 3% improvement on the
771 SPECInt2000 benchmark for Itanium 2.
772 * Instruction bundling for the IA-64 processors has been rewritten
773 using the DFA pipeline hazard recognizer. It resulted in about 60%
774 compiler speedup on the SPECInt2000 C programs.
778 * Support for the M32R/2 processor has been added by Renesas.
779 * Support for an M32R Linux target and PIC code generation has been
784 * Bernardo Innocenti (Develer S.r.l.) has contributed the
785 m68k-uclinux target, based on former work done by Paul Dale
786 (SnapGear Inc.). Code generation for the ColdFire processors
787 family has been enhanced and extended to support the MCF 53xx and
788 MCF 54xx cores, integrating former work done by Peter Barada
793 Processor-specific changes
795 * Support for the RM7000 and RM9000 processors has been added. It
796 can be selected using the -march compiler option and should work
797 with any MIPS I (mips-*) or MIPS III (mips64-*) configuration.
798 * Support for revision 2 of the MIPS32 ISA has been added. It can be
799 selected with the command-line option -march=mips32r2.
800 * There is a new option, -mfix-sb1, to work around certain SB-1
805 * It is possible to customize GCC using the following configure-time
807 + --with-arch, which specifies the default value of the -march
809 + --with-tune, which specifies the default value of the -mtune
811 + --with-abi, which specifies the default ABI.
812 + --with-float=soft, which tells GCC to use software floating
814 + --with-float=hard, which tells GCC to use hardware floating
816 * A 64-bit GNU/Linux port has been added. The associated
817 configurations are mips64-linux-gnu and mips64el-linux-gnu.
818 * The 32-bit GNU/Linux port now supports Java.
819 * The IRIX 6 configuration now supports the o32 ABI and will build
820 o32 multilibs by default. This support is compatible with both
821 binutils and the SGI tools, but note that several features,
822 including debugging information and DWARF2 exception handling, are
823 only available when using the GNU assembler. Use of the GNU
824 assembler and linker (version 2.15 or above) is strongly
826 * The IRIX 6 configuration now supports 128-bit long doubles.
827 * There are two new RTEMS-specific configurations, mips-rtems and
829 * There are two new *-elf configurations, mipsisa32r2-elf and
834 * Several [21]ABI bugs have been fixed. Unfortunately, these changes
835 will break binary compatibility with earlier releases.
836 * GCC can now use explicit relocation operators when generating
837 -mabicalls code. This behavior is controlled by -mexplicit-relocs
838 and can have several performance benefits. For example:
839 + It allows for more optimization of GOT accesses, including
840 better scheduling and redundancy elimination.
841 + It allows sibling calls to be implemented as jumps.
842 + n32 and n64 leaf functions can use a call-clobbered global
843 pointer instead of $28.
844 + The code to set up $gp can be removed from functions that
846 * A new option, -mxgot, allows the GOT to be bigger than 64k. This
847 option is equivalent to the assembler's -xgot option and should be
848 used instead of -Wa,-xgot.
849 * Frame pointer elimination is now supported when generating 64-bit
851 * Inline block moves have been optimized to take more account of
852 alignment information.
853 * Many internal changes have been made to the MIPS port, mostly
854 aimed at reducing the reliance on assembler macros.
858 * Support for shared/dylib gcc libraries has been added. It is
859 enabled by default on powerpc-apple-darwin7.0.0 and up.
860 * Libgcj is enabled by default. On systems older than
861 powerpc-apple-darwin7.0.0 you need to install [22]dlcompat.
865 * New command-line options allow to specify the intended execution
866 environment for generated code:
867 + -mesa/-mzarch allows to specify whether to generate code
868 running in ESA/390 mode or in z/Architecture mode (this is
869 applicable to 31-bit code only).
870 + -march allows to specify a minimum processor architecture
871 level (g5, g6, z900, or z990).
872 + -mtune allows to specify which processor to tune for.
873 * It is possible to customize GCC using the following configure-time
875 + --with-mode, which specifies whether to default to assuming
876 ESA/390 or z/Architecture mode.
877 + --with-arch, which specifies the default value of the -march
879 + --with-tune, which specifies the default value of the -mtune
881 * Support for the z990 processor has been added, and can be selected
882 using -march=z990 or -mtune=z990. This includes instruction
883 scheduling tuned for the superscalar instruction pipeline of the
884 z990 processor as well as support for all new instructions
885 provided by the long-displacement facility.
886 * Support to generate 31-bit code optimized for zSeries processors
887 (running in ESA/390 or in z/Architecture mode) has been added.
888 This can be selected using -march=z900 and -mzarch respectively.
889 * Instruction scheduling for the z900 and z990 processors now uses
890 the DFA pipeline hazard recognizer.
891 * GCC no longer generates code to maintain a stack backchain,
892 previously used to generate stack backtraces for debugging
893 purposes. As replacement that does not incur runtime overhead,
894 DWARF-2 call frame information is provided by GCC; this is
895 supported by GDB 6.1. The old behavior can be restored using the
897 * The stack frame size of functions may now exceed 2 GB in 64-bit
899 * A port for the 64-bit IBM TPF operating system has been added; the
900 configuration is s390x-ibm-tpf. This configuration is supported as
901 cross-compilation target only.
902 * Various changes to improve the generated code have been
903 implemented, including:
904 + GCC now uses the MULTIPLY AND ADD and MULTIPLY AND SUBTRACT
905 instructions to significantly speed up many floating-point
907 + GCC now uses the ADD LOGICAL WITH CARRY and SUBTRACT LOGICAL
908 WITH BORROW instructions to speed up long long arithmetic.
909 + GCC now uses the SEARCH STRING instruction to implement
911 + In many cases, function call overhead for 31-bit code has
912 been reduced by placing the literal pool after the function
913 code instead of after the function prolog.
914 + Register 14 is no longer reserved in 64-bit code.
915 + Handling of global register variables has been improved.
919 * The option -mflat is deprecated.
920 * Support for large (> 2GB) frames has been added to the 64-bit
922 * Several [23]ABI bugs have been fixed. Unfortunately, these changes
923 will break binary compatibility with earlier releases.
924 * The default debugging format has been switched from STABS to
925 DWARF-2 for 32-bit code on Solaris 7 and later. DWARF-2 is already
926 the default debugging format for 64-bit code on Solaris.
930 * Support for the SH2E processor has been added. Enabled at run time
931 with the -m2e command line switch, or at configure time by
932 specifying sh2e as the machine part of the target triple.
936 * Support for the Mitsubishi V850E1 processor has been added. This
937 is a variant of the V850E processor with some additional debugging
942 * Several ABI bugs have been fixed. Unfortunately, these changes
943 break binary compatibility with earlier releases.
944 + For big-endian processors, the padding of aggregate return
945 values larger than a word has changed. If the size of an
946 aggregate return value is not a multiple of 32 bits, previous
947 versions of GCC inserted padding in the most-significant
948 bytes of the first return value register. Aggregates larger
949 than a word are now padded in the least-significant bytes of
950 the last return value register used. Aggregates smaller than
951 a word are still padded in the most-significant bytes. The
952 return value padding has not changed for little-endian
954 + Function arguments with 16-byte alignment are now properly
956 + The implementation of the va_list type has changed. A va_list
957 value created by va_start from a previous release cannot be
958 used with va_arg from this release, or vice versa.
959 * More processor configuration options for Xtensa processors are
961 + the ABS instruction is now optional;
962 + the ADDX* and SUBX* instructions are now optional;
963 + an experimental CONST16 instruction can be used to synthesize
964 constants instead of loading them from constant pools.
965 These and other Xtensa processor configuration options can no
966 longer be enabled or disabled by command-line options; the
967 processor configuration must be specified by the xtensa-config.h
968 header file when building GCC. Additionally, the
969 -mno-serialize-volatile option is no longer supported.
973 Support for a number of older systems has been declared obsolete in
974 GCC 3.4. Unless there is activity to revive them, the next release of
975 GCC will have their sources permanently removed.
977 All configurations of the following processor architectures have been
979 * Mitsubishi D30V, d30v-*
980 * AT&T DSP1600 and DSP1610, dsp16xx-*
983 Also, some individual systems have been obsoleted:
985 + Support for generating code for operation in APCS/26 mode
988 + "Bigfoot" port, i370-*. (The other port, s390-*, is actively
989 maintained and supported.)
991 + MOSS, i?86-moss-msdos and i?86-*-moss*
992 + NCR 3000 running System V r.4, i?86-ncr-sysv4*
993 + FreeBSD with a.out object format, i?86-*-freebsd*aout* and
995 + Linux with a.out object format, i?86-linux*aout*
996 + Linux with libc5, a.k.a. glibc1, i?86-linux*libc1*
997 + Interix versions before Interix 3, i?86-*-interix
998 + Mach microkernel, i?86-mach*
999 + SCO UnixWare with UDK, i?86-*-udk*
1000 + Generic System V releases 1, 2, and 3, i?86-*-sysv[123]*
1001 + VSTa microkernel, i386-*-vsta
1002 * Motorola M68000 family
1003 + HPUX, m68k-hp-hpux* and m68000-hp-hpux*
1004 + NetBSD with a.out object format (before NetBSD 1.4),
1005 m68k-*-*-netbsd* except m68k-*-*-netbsdelf*
1006 + Generic System V r.4, m68k-*-sysv4*
1008 + Generic VAX, vax-*-* (This is generic VAX only; we have not
1009 obsoleted any VAX triples for specific operating systems.)
1011 Documentation improvements
1013 Other significant improvements
1015 * The build system has undergone several significant cleanups.
1016 Subdirectories will only be configured if they are being built,
1017 and all subdirectory configures are run from the make command. The
1018 top level has been autoconfiscated.
1019 * Building GCC no longer writes to its source directory. This should
1020 help those wishing to share a read-only source directory over NFS
1021 or build from a CD. The exceptions to this feature are if you
1022 configure with either --enable-maintainer-mode or
1023 --enable-generated-files-in-srcdir.
1024 * The -W warning option has been renamed to -Wextra, which is more
1025 easily understood. The older spelling will be retained for
1026 backwards compatibility.
1027 * Substantial improvements in compile time have been made,
1028 particularly for non-optimizing compilations.
1029 _________________________________________________________________
1035 A vast number of bugs have been fixed in 3.4.0, too many to publish a
1036 complete list here. [24]Follow this link to query the Bugzilla
1037 database for the list of over 900 bugs fixed in 3.4.0. This is the
1038 list of all bugs marked as resolved and fixed in 3.4.0 that are not
1039 flagged as 3.4 regressions.
1040 _________________________________________________________________
1046 This section lists the problem reports (PRs) from GCC's bug tracking
1047 system that are known to be fixed in the 3.4.1 release. This list
1048 might not be complete (that is, it is possible that some PRs that have
1049 been fixed are not listed here).
1053 * [25]10129 Ada bootstrap fails on PPC-Darwin - invalid assembler
1054 emitted - PIC related
1055 * [26]14576 [ARM] ICE in libiberty when building gcc-3.4 for arm-elf
1056 * [27]14760 A bug in configure.in prevents using both
1057 --program-suffix and --program-prefix
1058 * [28]14671 [hppa64] bootstrap fails: ICE in
1059 save_call_clobbered_regs, in caller_save.c
1060 * [29]15093 [alpha][Java] make bootstrap fails to configure libffi
1062 * [30]15178 Solaris 9/x86 fails linking after stage 3
1064 Multi-platform internal compiler errors (ICEs)
1066 * [31]12753 (preprocessor) Memory corruption in preprocessor on bad
1068 * [32]13985 ICE in gcc.c-torture/compile/930621-1.c
1069 * [33]14810 (c++) tree check failures with invalid code involving
1071 * [34]14883 (c++) ICE on invalid code, in cp_parser_lookup_name, in
1073 * [35]15044 (c++) ICE on syntax error, template header
1074 * [36]15057 (c++) Compiling of conditional value throw constructs
1075 cause a segmentation violation
1076 * [37]15064 (c++) typeid of template parameter gives ICE
1077 * [38]15142 (c++) ICE when passing a string where a char* is
1078 expected in a throw statement
1079 * [39]15159 ICE in rtl_verify_flow_info_1
1080 * [40]15165 (c++) ICE in instantiate_template
1081 * [41]15193 Unary minus using pointer to V4SF vector causes
1082 -fforce-mem to exhaust all memory
1083 * [42]15209 (c++) Runs out of memory with packed structs
1084 * [43]15227 (c++) Trouble with invalid function definition
1085 * [44]15285 (c++) instantiate_type ICE when forming pointer to
1087 * [45]15299 (c++) ICE in resolve_overloaded_unification
1088 * [46]15329 (c++) ICE on constructor of member template
1089 * [47]15550 ICE in extract_insn, in recog.c
1090 * [48]15554 (c++) ICE in tsubst_copy, in cp/pt.c
1091 * [49]15640 (c++) ICE on invalid code in arg_assoc, in
1093 * [50]15666 [unit-at-a-time] Gcc abort on valid code
1094 * [51]15696 (c++) ICE with bad pointer-to-member code
1095 * [52]15701 (c++) ICE with friends and template template parameter
1096 * [53]15761 ICE in do_SUBST, in combine.c
1097 * [54]15829 (c++) ICE on Botan-1.3.13 due to -funroll-loops
1101 * [55]14538 All RTEMS targets broken for gnat
1105 * [56]12391 missing warning about assigning to an incomplete type
1106 * [57]14649 atan(1.0) should not be a constant expression
1107 * [58]15004 [unit-at-a-time] no warning for unused paramater in
1109 * [59]15749 --pedantic-errors behaves differently from --pedantic
1110 with C-compiler on GNU/Linux
1112 C++ compiler and library
1114 * [60]10646 non-const reference is incorrectly matched in a "const
1115 T" partial specialization
1116 * [61]12077 wcin.rdbuf()->in_avail() return value too high
1117 * [62]13598 enc_filebuf doesn't work
1118 * [63]14211 const_cast returns lvalue but should be rvalue
1119 * [64]14220 num_put::do_put() undesired float/double behavior
1120 * [65]14245 problem with user-defined allocators in
1122 * [66]14340 libstdc++ Debug mode: failure to convert iterator to
1124 * [67]14600 __gnu_cxx::stdio_sync_filebuf should expose internal
1126 * [68]14668 no warning anymore for reevaluation of declaration
1127 * [69]14775 LFS (large file support) tests missing
1128 * [70]14821 Duplicate namespace alias declaration should not
1130 * [71]14930 Friend declaration ignored
1131 * [72]14932 cannot use offsetof to get offsets of array elements in
1133 * [73]14950 [non unit-at-a-time] always_inline does not mix with
1135 * [74]14962 g++ ignores #pragma redefine_extname
1136 * [75]14975 Segfault on low-level write error during imbue
1137 * [76]15002 Linewise stream input is unusably slow (std::string
1139 * [77]15025 compiler accepts redeclaration of template as
1141 * [78]15046 [arm] Math functions misdetected by cross configuration
1142 * [79]15069 a bit test on a variable of enum type is miscompiled
1143 * [80]15074 g++ -lsupc++ still links against libstdc++
1144 * [81]15083 spurious "statement has no effect" warning
1145 * [82]15096 parse error with templates and pointer to const member
1146 * [83]15287 combination of operator[] and operator .* fails in
1148 * [84]15317 __attribute__ unused in first parameter of constructor
1150 * [85]15337 sizeof on incomplete type diagnostic
1151 * [86]15361 bitset<>::_Find_next fails
1152 * [87]15412 _GLIBCXX_ symbols symbols defined and used in different
1154 * [88]15427 valid code results in incomplete type error
1155 * [89]15471 Incorrect member pointer offsets in anonymous
1157 * [90]15503 nested template problem
1158 * [91]15507 compiler hangs while laying out union
1159 * [92]15542 operator & and template definitions
1160 * [93]15565 SLES9: leading + sign for unsigned int with showpos
1161 * [94]15625 friend defined inside a template fails to find static
1163 * [95]15629 Function templates, overloads, and friend name injection
1164 * [96]15742 'noreturn' attribute ignored in method of template
1166 * [97]15775 Allocator::pointer consistently ignored
1167 * [98]15821 Duplicate namespace alias within namespace rejected
1168 * [99]15862 'enum yn' fails (confict with undeclared builtin)
1169 * [100]15875 rejects pointer to member in template
1170 * [101]15877 valid code using templates and anonymous enums is
1172 * [102]15947 Puzzling error message for wrong destructor declaration
1174 * [103]16020 cannot copy __gnu_debug::bitset
1175 * [104]16154 input iterator concept too restrictive
1176 * [105]16174 deducing top-level consts
1180 * [106]14315 Java compiler is not parallel make safe
1184 * [107]15151 [g77] incorrect logical i/o in 64-bit mode
1188 * [108]7993 private variables cannot be shadowed in subclasses
1192 * [109]15228 useless copies of floating point operands
1193 * [110]15345 [non-unit-at-a-time] unreferenced nested inline
1194 functions not optimized away
1195 * [111]15945 Incorrect floating point optimization
1196 * [112]15526 ftrapv aborts on 0 * (-1)
1197 * [113]14690 Miscompiled POOMA tests
1198 * [114]15112 GCC generates code to write to unchanging memory
1202 * [115]15067 Minor glitch in the source of cpp
1204 Main driver program bugs
1206 * [116]1963 collect2 interprets -oldstyle_liblookup as -o
1209 x86-specific (Intel/AMD)
1211 * [117]15717 Error: can't resolve `L0' {*ABS* section} - `xx' {*UND*
1216 * [118]14782 GCC produces an unaligned data access at -O2
1217 * [119]14828 FAIL: gcc.c-torture/execute/20030408-1.c execution, -O2
1218 * [120]15202 ICE in reload_cse_simplify_operands, in postreload.c
1222 * [121]14610 __float80 constants incorrectly emitted
1223 * [122]14813 init_array sections are initialized in the wrong order
1224 * [123]14857 GCC segfault on duplicated asm statement
1225 * [124]15598 Gcc 3.4 ICE on valid code
1226 * [125]15653 Gcc 3.4 ICE on valid code
1230 * [126]15189 wrong filling of delay slot with -march=mips1 -G0
1231 -mno-split-addresses -mno-explicit-relocs
1232 * [127]15331 Assembler error building gnatlib on IRIX 6.5 with GNU
1234 * [128]16144 Bogus reference to __divdf3 when -O1
1235 * [129]16176 Miscompilation of unaligned data in MIPS backend
1239 * [130]11591 ICE in gcc.dg/altivec-5.c
1240 * [131]12028 powerpc-eabispe produces bad sCOND operation
1241 * [132]14478 rs6000 geu/ltu patterns generate incorrect code
1242 * [133]14567 long double and va_arg complex args
1243 * [134]14715 Altivec stack layout may overlap gpr save with stack
1245 * [135]14902 (libstdc++) Stream checking functions fail when
1246 -pthread option is used.
1247 * [136]14924 Compiler ICE on valid code
1248 * [137]14960 -maltivec affects vector return with -mabi=no-altivec
1249 * [138]15106 vector varargs failure passing from altivec to
1250 non-altivec code for -m32
1251 * [139]16026 ICE in function.c:4804, assign_parms, when -mpowerpc64
1252 & half-word operation
1253 * [140]15191 -maltivec -mabi=no-altivec results in mis-aligned lvx
1255 * [141]15662 Segmentation fault when an exception is thrown - even
1256 if try and catch are specified
1260 * [142]15054 Bad code due to overlapping stack temporaries
1264 * [143]15783 ICE with union assignment in 64-bit mode
1265 * [144]15626 GCC 3.4 emits "ld: warning: relocation error:
1270 * [145]14326 boehm-gc hardcodes to 3DNow! prefetch for x86_64
1271 * [146]14723 Backported -march=nocona from mainline
1272 * [147]15290 __float128 failed to pass to function properly
1274 Cygwin/Mingw32-specific
1276 * [148]15250 Option -mms-bitfields support on GCC 3.4 is not
1277 conformant to MS layout
1278 * [149]15551 -mtune=pentium4 -O2 with sjlj EH breaks stack probe
1279 worker on windows32 targets
1281 Bugs specific to embedded processors
1283 * [150]8309 [m68k] -m5200 produces erroneous SImode set of short
1285 * [151]13250 [SH] Gcc code for rotation clobbers the register, but
1286 gcc continues to use the register as if it was not clobbered
1287 * [152]13803 [coldfire] movqi operand constraints too restrictivefor
1289 * [153]14093 [SH] ICE for code when using -mhitachi option in SH
1290 * [154]14457 [m6811hc] ICE with simple c++ source
1291 * [155]14542 [m6811hc] ICE on simple source
1292 * [156]15100 [SH] cc1plus got hang-up on
1293 libstdc++-v3/testsuite/abi_check.cc
1294 * [157]15296 [CRIS] Delayed branch scheduling causing invalid code
1296 * [158]15396 [SH] ICE with -O2 -fPIC
1297 * [159]15782 [coldfire] m68k_output_mi_thunk emits wrong code for
1300 Testsuite problems (compiler not affected)
1302 * [160]11610 libstdc++ testcases 27_io/* don't work properly
1304 * [161]15488 (libstdc++) possibly insufficient file permissions for
1305 executing test suite
1306 * [162]15489 (libstdc++) testsuite_files determined incorrectly
1310 * [163]13928 (libstdc++) no whatis info in some man pages generated
1312 * [164]14150 Ada documentation out of date
1313 * [165]14949 (c++) Need to document method visibility changes
1314 * [166]15123 libstdc++-doc: Allocators.3 manpage is empty
1315 _________________________________________________________________
1321 This section lists the problem reports (PRs) from GCC's bug tracking
1322 system that are known to be fixed in the 3.4.2 release. This list
1323 might not be complete (that is, it is possible that some PRs that have
1324 been fixed are not listed here).
1326 Bootstrap failures and issues
1328 * [167]16469 [mips-sgi-irix5.3] bootstrap fails in
1329 libstdc++-v3/testsuite
1330 * [168]16344 [hppa-linux-gnu] libstdc++'s PCH built by
1331 profiledbootstrap does not work with the built compiler
1332 * [169]16842 [Solaris/x86] mkheaders can not find mkheaders.conf
1334 Multi-platform internal compiler errors (ICEs)
1336 * [170]12608 (c++) ICE: expected class 't', have 'x' (error_mark) in
1337 cp_parser_class_specifier, in cp/parser.c
1338 * [171]14492 ICE in loc_descriptor_from_tree, in dwarf2out.c
1339 * [172]15461 (c++) ICE due to NRV and inlining
1340 * [173]15890 (c++) ICE in c_expand_expr, in c-common.c
1341 * [174]16180 ICE: segmentation fault in RTL optimization
1342 * [175]16224 (c++) ICE in write_unscoped_name (template/namespace)
1343 * [176]16408 ICE: in delete_insn, in cfgrtl.c
1344 * [177]16529 (c++) ICE for: namespace-alias shall not be declared as
1345 the name of any other entity
1346 * [178]16698 (c++) ICE with exceptions and declaration of
1348 * [179]16706 (c++) ICE in finish_member_declaration, in
1350 * [180]16810 (c++) Legal C++ program with cast gives ICE in
1352 * [181]16851 (c++) ICE when throwing a comma expression
1353 * [182]16870 (c++) Boost.Spirit causes ICE in tsubst, in cp/pt.c
1354 * [183]16904 (c++) ICE in finish_class_member_access_expr, in
1356 * [184]16905 (c++) ICE (segfault) with exceptions
1357 * [185]16964 (c++) ICE in cp_parser_class_specifier due to
1359 * [186]17068 (c++) ICE: tree check: expected class 'd', have 'x'
1360 (identifier_node) in dependent_template_p, in cp/pt.c
1364 * [187]16366 Preprocessor option -remap causes memory corruption
1368 * [188]15345 unreferenced nested inline functions not optimized away
1369 * [189]16590 Incorrect execution when compiling with -O2
1370 * [190]16693 Bitwise AND is lost when used within a cast to an enum
1371 of the same precision
1372 * [191]17078 Jump into if(0) substatement fails
1374 Problems in generated debug information
1376 * [192]13956 incorrect stabs for nested local variables
1380 * [193]16684 GCC should not warn about redundant redeclarations of
1383 C++ compiler and library
1385 * [194]12658 Thread safety problems in locale::global() and
1387 * [195]13092 g++ accepts invalid pointer-to-member conversion
1388 * [196]15320 Excessive memory consumption
1389 * [197]16246 Incorrect template argument deduction
1390 * [198]16273 Memory exhausted when using nested classes and virtual
1392 * [199]16401 ostringstream in gcc 3.4.x very slow for big data
1393 * [200]16411 undefined reference to
1394 __gnu_cxx::stdio_sync_filebuf<char, std::char_traits<char>
1396 * [201]16489 G++ incorrectly rejects use of a null constant integral
1397 expression as a null constant pointer
1398 * [202]16618 offsetof fails with constant member
1399 * [203]16637 syntax error reported for valid input code
1400 * [204]16717 __attribute__((constructor)) broken in C++
1401 * [205]16813 compiler error in DEBUG version of range insertion
1403 * [206]16853 pointer-to-member initialization from incompatible one
1405 * [207]16889 ambiguity is not detected
1406 * [208]16959 Segmentation fault in ios_base::sync_with_stdio
1408 Java compiler and library
1410 * [209]7587 direct threaded interpreter not thread-safe
1411 * [210]16473 ServerSocket accept() leaks file descriptors
1412 * [211]16478 Hash synchronization deadlock with finalizers
1416 * [212]10695 ICE in dwarf2out_frame_debug_expr, in dwarf2out.c
1417 * [213]16974 could not split insn (ice in final_scan_insn, in
1422 * [214]16298 ICE in output_operand
1423 * [215]17113 ICE with SSE2 intrinsics
1424 * [216]17171 [i386-aout] Unrecognized comments in generated asm
1428 * [217]14697 libstdc++ couldn't find 32bit libgcc_s
1432 * [218]15869 [mips64] No NOP after LW (with -mips1 -O0)
1433 * [219]16325 [mips64] value profiling clobbers gp on mips
1434 * [220]16357 [mipsisa64-elf] ICE copying 7 bytes between extern
1436 * [221]16380 [mips64] Use of uninitialised register after dbra
1438 * [222]16407 [mips64] Unaligned access to local variables
1439 * [223]16643 [mips64] verify_local_live_at_start ICE after
1440 crossjumping & cfgcleanup
1444 * [224]15927 THUMB -O2: strength-reduced iteration variable ends up
1446 * [225]15948 THUMB: ICE with non-commutative cbranch
1447 * [226]17019 THUMB: bad switch statement in md code for
1448 addsi3_cbranch_scratch
1452 * [227]16130 ICE on valid code: in bundling, in config/ia64/ia64.c
1454 * [228]16142 ICE on valid code: in bundling, in config/ia64/ia64.c
1456 * [229]16278 Gcc failed to build Linux kernel with -mtune=merced
1457 * [230]16414 ICE on valid code: typo in comparison of asm_noperands
1459 * [231]16445 ICE on valid code: don't count ignored insns
1460 * [232]16490 ICE (segfault) while compiling with -fprofile-use
1461 * [233]16683 ia64 does not honor SUBTARGET_EXTRA_SPECS
1465 * [234]16195 (ppc64): Miscompilation of GCC 3.3.x by 3.4.x
1466 * [235]16239 ICE on ppc64 (mozilla 1.7 compile, -O1 -fno-exceptions
1471 * [236]16199 ICE while compiling apache 2.0.49
1472 * [237]16416 -m64 doesn't imply -mcpu=v9 anymore
1473 * [238]16430 ICE when returning non-C aggregates larger than 16
1476 Bugs specific to embedded processors
1478 * [239]16379 [m32r] can't output large model function call of memcpy
1479 * [240]17093 [m32r] ICE with -msdata=use -O0
1480 * [241]17119 [m32r] ICE at switch case 0x8000
1484 * [242]15928 libstdc++ in 3.4.x doesn't cross-compile for djgpp
1486 Alpha Tru64-specific
1488 * [243]16210 libstdc++ gratuitously omits "long long" I/O
1490 Testsuite, documentation issues (compiler is not affected):
1492 * [244]15488 (libstdc++) possibly insufficient file permissions for
1493 executing test suite
1494 * [245]16250 ada/doctools runs makeinfo even in release tarball
1495 _________________________________________________________________
1497 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [246]gnu@gnu.org. There
1498 are also [247]other ways to contact the FSF.
1500 These pages are maintained by [248]the GCC team.
1503 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
1504 pages and the [249]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
1505 [250]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
1506 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
1507 to our developer mailing list at [251]gcc@gnu.org or
1508 [252]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [253]public archives.
1510 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
1511 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
1513 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
1514 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
1516 Last modified 2004-09-05 [254]Valid XHTML 1.0
1520 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/changes.html#cplusplus
1521 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html#obsolete_systems
1522 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/changes.html#obsolete_systems
1523 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/mips-abi.html
1524 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/sparc-abi.html
1525 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=8361
1526 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Other-Builtins.html#Other%20Builtins
1527 8. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_closed.html#209
1528 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#cxx_rvalbind
1529 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Objective-C-Dialect-Options.html
1530 11. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Objective-C-Dialect-Options.html
1531 12. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Objective-C-Dialect-Options.html
1532 13. http://www.gnu.org/software/classpath/
1533 14. http://www.eclipse.org/
1534 15. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/g77/News.html
1535 16. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Alpha-Built-in-Functions.html#Alpha%20Built-in%20Functions
1536 17. http://h30097.www3.hp.com/docs/base_doc/DOCUMENTATION/V51A_HTML/ARH9MBTE/DTMNPLTN.HTM#normal-argument-list-structure
1537 18. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Processor-pipeline-description.html
1538 19. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Comparison-of-the-two-descriptions.html
1539 20. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Processor-pipeline-description.html
1540 21. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/mips-abi.html
1541 22. http://www.opendarwin.org/projects/dlcompat/
1542 23. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.4/sparc-abi.html
1543 24. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/buglist.cgi?short_desc_type=notregexp&short_desc=%5C%5B3%5C.4.*%5BRr%5Degression&target_milestone=3.4.0&bug_status=RESOLVED&resolution=FIXED
1544 25. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10129
1545 26. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14576
1546 27. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14760
1547 28. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14671
1548 29. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15093
1549 30. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15178
1550 31. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12753
1551 32. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13985
1552 33. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14810
1553 34. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14883
1554 35. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15044
1555 36. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15057
1556 37. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15064
1557 38. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15142
1558 39. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15159
1559 40. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15165
1560 41. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15193
1561 42. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15209
1562 43. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15227
1563 44. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15285
1564 45. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15299
1565 46. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15329
1566 47. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15550
1567 48. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15554
1568 49. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15640
1569 50. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15666
1570 51. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15696
1571 52. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15701
1572 53. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15761
1573 54. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15829
1574 55. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14538
1575 56. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12391
1576 57. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14649
1577 58. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15004
1578 59. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15749
1579 60. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10646
1580 61. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12077
1581 62. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13598
1582 63. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14211
1583 64. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14220
1584 65. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14245
1585 66. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14340
1586 67. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14600
1587 68. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14668
1588 69. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14775
1589 70. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14821
1590 71. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14930
1591 72. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14932
1592 73. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14950
1593 74. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14962
1594 75. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14975
1595 76. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15002
1596 77. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15025
1597 78. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15046
1598 79. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15069
1599 80. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15074
1600 81. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15083
1601 82. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15096
1602 83. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15287
1603 84. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15317
1604 85. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15337
1605 86. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15361
1606 87. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15412
1607 88. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15427
1608 89. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15471
1609 90. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15503
1610 91. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15507
1611 92. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15542
1612 93. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15565
1613 94. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15625
1614 95. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15629
1615 96. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15742
1616 97. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15775
1617 98. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15821
1618 99. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15862
1619 100. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15875
1620 101. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15877
1621 102. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15947
1622 103. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16020
1623 104. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16154
1624 105. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16174
1625 106. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14315
1626 107. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15151
1627 108. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7993
1628 109. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15228
1629 110. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15345
1630 111. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15945
1631 112. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15526
1632 113. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14690
1633 114. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15112
1634 115. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15067
1635 116. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR1963
1636 117. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15717
1637 118. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14782
1638 119. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14828
1639 120. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15202
1640 121. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14610
1641 122. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14813
1642 123. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14857
1643 124. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15598
1644 125. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15653
1645 126. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15189
1646 127. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15331
1647 128. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16144
1648 129. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16176
1649 130. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11591
1650 131. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12028
1651 132. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14478
1652 133. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14567
1653 134. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14715
1654 135. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14902
1655 136. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14924
1656 137. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14960
1657 138. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15106
1658 139. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16026
1659 140. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15191
1660 141. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15662
1661 142. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15054
1662 143. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15783
1663 144. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15626
1664 145. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14326
1665 146. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14723
1666 147. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15290
1667 148. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15250
1668 149. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15551
1669 150. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8309
1670 151. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13250
1671 152. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13803
1672 153. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14093
1673 154. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14457
1674 155. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14542
1675 156. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15100
1676 157. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15296
1677 158. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15396
1678 159. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15782
1679 160. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11610
1680 161. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15488
1681 162. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15489
1682 163. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13928
1683 164. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14150
1684 165. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14949
1685 166. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15123
1686 167. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16469
1687 168. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16344
1688 169. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16842
1689 170. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12608
1690 171. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14492
1691 172. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15461
1692 173. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15890
1693 174. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16180
1694 175. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16224
1695 176. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16408
1696 177. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16529
1697 178. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16698
1698 179. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16706
1699 180. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16810
1700 181. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16851
1701 182. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16870
1702 183. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16904
1703 184. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16905
1704 185. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16964
1705 186. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR17068
1706 187. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16366
1707 188. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15345
1708 189. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16590
1709 190. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16693
1710 191. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR17078
1711 192. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13956
1712 193. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16684
1713 194. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12658
1714 195. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13092
1715 196. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15320
1716 197. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16246
1717 198. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16273
1718 199. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16401
1719 200. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16411
1720 201. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16489
1721 202. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16618
1722 203. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16637
1723 204. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16717
1724 205. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16813
1725 206. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16853
1726 207. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16889
1727 208. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16959
1728 209. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7587
1729 210. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16473
1730 211. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16478
1731 212. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10695
1732 213. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16974
1733 214. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16298
1734 215. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR17113
1735 216. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR17171
1736 217. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR14697
1737 218. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15869
1738 219. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16325
1739 220. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16357
1740 221. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16380
1741 222. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16407
1742 223. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16643
1743 224. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15927
1744 225. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15948
1745 226. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR17019
1746 227. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16130
1747 228. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16142
1748 229. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16278
1749 230. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16414
1750 231. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16445
1751 232. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16490
1752 233. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16683
1753 234. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16195
1754 235. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16239
1755 236. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16199
1756 237. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16416
1757 238. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16430
1758 239. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16379
1759 240. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR17093
1760 241. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR17119
1761 242. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15928
1762 243. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16210
1763 244. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR15488
1764 245. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR16250
1765 246. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
1766 247. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
1767 248. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
1768 249. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
1769 250. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
1770 251. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
1771 252. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
1772 253. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
1773 254. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
1774 ======================================================================
1775 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/index.html
1777 GCC 3.3 Release Series
1781 The [1]GNU project and the GCC developers are pleased to announce the
1782 release of GCC 3.3.4. This release was actually completed on May 31,
1783 but various reasons delayed the actual announcement.
1785 The GCC 3.3 release series includes numerous [2]new features,
1786 improvements, bug fixes, and other changes, thanks to an [3]amazing
1787 group of volunteers.
1792 February 14, 2004 ([4]changes)
1795 October 16, 2003 ([5]changes)
1798 August 8, 2003 ([6]changes)
1801 May 14, 2003 ([7]changes)
1803 References and Acknowledgements
1805 GCC used to stand for the GNU C Compiler, but since the compiler
1806 supports several other languages aside from C, it now stands for the
1807 GNU Compiler Collection.
1809 A list of [8]successful builds is updated as new information becomes
1812 The GCC developers would like to thank the numerous people that have
1813 contributed new features, improvements, bug fixes, and other changes
1814 as well as test results to GCC. This [9]amazing group of volunteers is
1815 what makes GCC successful.
1817 For additional information about GCC please refer to the [10]GCC
1818 project web site or contact the [11]GCC development mailing list.
1820 To obtain GCC please use [12]our mirror sites, one of the [13]GNU
1821 mirror sites, or [14]our CVS server.
1822 _________________________________________________________________
1824 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [15]gnu@gnu.org. There
1825 are also [16]other ways to contact the FSF.
1827 These pages are maintained by [17]the GCC team.
1830 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
1831 pages and the [18]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
1832 [19]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
1833 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
1834 to our developer mailing list at [20]gcc@gnu.org or
1835 [21]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [22]public archives.
1837 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
1838 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
1840 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
1841 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
1843 Last modified 2004-08-06 [23]Valid XHTML 1.0
1847 1. http://www.gnu.org/
1848 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html
1849 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html
1850 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html#3.3.3
1851 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html#3.3.2
1852 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html#3.3.1
1853 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html
1854 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/buildstat.html
1855 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html
1856 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/index.html
1857 11. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
1858 12. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
1859 13. http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html
1860 14. http://gcc.gnu.org/cvs.html
1861 15. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
1862 16. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
1863 17. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
1864 18. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
1865 19. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
1866 20. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
1867 21. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
1868 22. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
1869 23. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
1870 ======================================================================
1871 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html
1873 GCC 3.3 Release Series
1874 Changes, New Features, and Fixes
1876 The latest release in the 3.3 release series is [1]GCC 3.3.3.
1880 * The preprocessor no longer accepts multi-line string literals.
1881 They were deprecated in 3.0, 3.1, and 3.2.
1882 * The preprocessor no longer supports the -A- switch when appearing
1883 alone. -A- followed by an assertion is still supported.
1884 * Support for all the systems [2]obsoleted in GCC 3.1 has been
1885 removed from GCC 3.3. See below for a [3]list of systems which are
1886 obsoleted in this release.
1887 * Checking for null format arguments has been decoupled from the
1888 rest of the format checking mechanism. Programs which use the
1889 format attribute may regain this functionality by using the new
1890 [4]nonnull function attribute. Note that all functions for which
1891 GCC has a built-in format attribute, an appropriate built-in
1892 nonnull attribute is also applied.
1893 * The DWARF (version 1) debugging format has been deprecated and
1894 will be removed in a future version of GCC. Version 2 of the DWARF
1895 debugging format will continue to be supported for the foreseeable
1897 * The C and Objective-C compilers no longer accept the "Naming
1898 Types" extension (typedef foo = bar); it was already unavailable
1899 in C++. Code which uses it will need to be changed to use the
1900 "typeof" extension instead: typedef typeof(bar) foo. (We have
1901 removed this extension without a period of deprecation because it
1902 has caused the compiler to crash since version 3.0 and no one
1903 noticed until very recently. Thus we conclude it is not in
1905 * The -traditional C compiler option has been removed. It was
1906 deprecated in 3.1 and 3.2. (Traditional preprocessing remains
1907 available.) The <varargs.h> header, used for writing variadic
1908 functions in traditional C, still exists but will produce an error
1910 * GCC 3.3.1 automatically places zero-initialized variables in the
1911 .bss section on some operating systems. Versions of GNU Emacs up
1912 to (and including) 21.3 will not work correctly when using this
1913 optimization; you can use -fno-zero-initialized-in-bss to disable
1916 General Optimizer Improvements
1918 * A new scheme for accurately describing processor pipelines, the
1919 [5]DFA scheduler, has been added.
1920 * Pavel Nejedly, Charles University Prague, has contributed new file
1921 format used by the edge coverage profiler (-fprofile-arcs).
1922 The new format is robust and diagnoses common mistakes where
1923 profiles from different versions (or compilations) of the program
1924 are combined resulting in nonsensical profiles and slow code to
1925 produced with profile feedback. Additionally this format allows
1926 extra data to be gathered. Currently, overall statistics are
1927 produced helping optimizers to identify hot spots of a program
1928 globally replacing the old intra-procedural scheme and resulting
1929 in better code. Note that the gcov tool from older GCC versions
1930 will not be able to parse the profiles generated by GCC 3.3 and
1932 * Jan Hubicka, SuSE Labs, has contributed a new superblock formation
1933 pass enabled using -ftracer. This pass simplifies the control flow
1934 of functions allowing other optimizations to do better job.
1935 He also contributed the function reordering pass
1936 (-freorder-functions) to optimize function placement using profile
1939 New Languages and Language specific improvements
1943 * The preprocessor now accepts directives within macro arguments. It
1944 processes them just as if they had not been within macro
1946 * The separate ISO and traditional preprocessors have been
1947 completely removed. The front end handles either type of
1948 preprocessed output if necessary.
1949 * In C99 mode preprocessor arithmetic is done in the precision of
1950 the target's intmax_t, as required by that standard.
1951 * The preprocessor can now copy comments inside macros to the output
1952 file when the macro is expanded. This feature, enabled using the
1953 -CC option, is intended for use by applications which place
1954 metadata or directives inside comments, such as lint.
1955 * The method of constructing the list of directories to be searched
1956 for header files has been revised. If a directory named by a -I
1957 option is a standard system include directory, the option is
1958 ignored to ensure that the default search order for system
1959 directories and the special treatment of system header files are
1961 * A few more [6]ISO C99 features now work correctly.
1962 * A new function attribute, nonnull, has been added which allows
1963 pointer arguments to functions to be specified as requiring a
1964 non-null value. The compiler currently uses this information to
1965 issue a warning when it detects a null value passed in such an
1967 * A new type attribute, may_alias, has been added. Accesses to
1968 objects with types with this attribute are not subjected to
1969 type-based alias analysis, but are instead assumed to be able to
1970 alias any other type of objects, just like the char type.
1974 * Type based alias analysis has been implemented for C++ aggregate
1979 * Generate an error if Objective-C objects are passed by value in
1980 function and method calls.
1981 * When -Wselector is used, check the whole list of selectors at the
1982 end of compilation, and emit a warning if a @selector() is not
1984 * Define __NEXT_RUNTIME__ when compiling for the NeXT runtime.
1985 * No longer need to include objc/objc-class.h to compile self calls
1986 in class methods (NeXT runtime only).
1987 * New -Wundeclared-selector option.
1988 * Removed selector bloating which was causing object files to be 10%
1989 bigger on average (GNU runtime only).
1990 * Using at run time @protocol() objects has been fixed in certain
1991 situations (GNU runtime only).
1992 * Type checking has been fixed and improved in many situations
1993 involving protocols.
1997 * The java.sql and javax.sql packages now implement the JDBC 3.0
1999 * The JDK 1.4 assert facility has been implemented.
2000 * The bytecode interpreter is now direct threaded and thus faster.
2004 * Fortran improvements are listed in [7]the Fortran documentation.
2008 * Ada tasking now works with glibc 2.3.x threading libraries.
2010 New Targets and Target Specific Improvements
2012 * The following changes have been made to the HP-PA port:
2013 + The port now defaults to scheduling for the PA8000 series of
2015 + Scheduling support for the PA7300 processor has been added.
2016 + The 32-bit port now supports weak symbols under HP-UX 11.
2017 + The handling of initializers and finalizers has been improved
2018 under HP-UX 11. The 64-bit port no longer uses collect2.
2019 + Dwarf2 EH support has been added to the 32-bit linux port.
2020 + ABI fixes to correct the passing of small structures by
2022 * The SPARC, HP-PA, SH4, and x86/pentium ports have been converted
2023 to use the DFA processor pipeline description.
2024 * The following NetBSD configurations for the SuperH processor
2025 family have been added:
2026 + SH3, big-endian, sh-*-netbsdelf*
2027 + SH3, little-endian, shle-*-netbsdelf*
2028 + SH5, SHmedia, big-endian, 32-bit default, sh5-*-netbsd*
2029 + SH5, SHmedia, little-endian, 32-bit default, sh5le-*-netbsd*
2030 + SH5, SHmedia, big-endian, 64-bit default, sh64-*-netbsd*
2031 + SH5, SHmedia, little-endian, 64-bit default, sh64le-*-netbsd*
2032 * The following changes have been made to the IA-32/x86-64 port:
2033 + SSE2 and 3dNOW! intrinsics are now supported.
2034 + Support for thread local storage has been added to the IA-32
2036 + The x86-64 port has been significantly improved.
2037 * The following changes have been made to the MIPS port:
2038 + All configurations now accept the -mabi switch. Note that you
2039 will need appropriate multilibs for this option to work
2041 + ELF configurations will always pass an ABI flag to the
2042 assembler, except when the MIPS EABI is selected.
2043 + -mabi=64 no longer selects MIPS IV code.
2044 + The -mcpu option, which was deprecated in 3.1 and 3.2, has
2045 been removed from this release.
2046 + -march now changes the core ISA level. In previous releases,
2047 it would change the use of processor-specific extensions, but
2048 would leave the core ISA unchanged. For example, mips64-elf
2049 -march=r8000 will now generate MIPS IV code.
2050 + Under most configurations, -mipsN now acts as a synonym for
2052 + There are some new preprocessor macros to describe the -march
2053 and -mtune settings. See the documentation of those options
2055 + Support for the NEC VR-Series processors has been added. This
2056 includes the 54xx, 5500, and 41xx series.
2057 + Support for the Sandcraft sr71k processor has been added.
2058 * The following changes have been made to the S/390 port:
2059 + Support to build the Java runtime libraries has been added.
2060 Java is now enabled by default on s390-*-linux* and
2061 s390x-*-linux* targets.
2062 + Multilib support for the s390x-*-linux* target has been
2063 added; this allows to build 31-bit binaries using the -m31
2065 + Support for thread local storage has been added.
2066 + Inline assembler code may now use the 'Q' constraint to
2067 specify memory operands without index register.
2068 + Various platform-specific performance improvements have been
2069 implemented; in particular, the compiler now uses the BRANCH
2070 ON COUNT family of instructions and makes more frequent use
2071 of the TEST UNDER MASK family of instructions.
2072 * The following changes have been made to the PowerPC port:
2073 + Support for IBM Power4 processor added.
2074 + Support for Motorola e500 SPE added.
2075 + Support for AIX 5.2 added.
2076 + Function and Data sections now supported on AIX.
2077 + Sibcall optimizations added.
2078 * The support for H8 Tiny is added to the H8/300 port with -mn.
2082 Support for a number of older systems has been declared obsolete in
2083 GCC 3.3. Unless there is activity to revive them, the next release of
2084 GCC will have their sources permanently removed.
2086 All configurations of the following processor architectures have been
2088 * Matsushita MN10200, mn10200-*-*
2089 * Motorola 88000, m88k-*-*
2090 * IBM ROMP, romp-*-*
2092 Also, some individual systems have been obsoleted:
2094 + Interix, alpha*-*-interix*
2095 + Linux libc1, alpha*-*-linux*libc1*
2096 + Linux ECOFF, alpha*-*-linux*ecoff*
2098 + Generic a.out, arm*-*-aout*
2099 + Conix, arm*-*-conix*
2100 + "Old ABI," arm*-*-oabi
2101 + StrongARM/COFF, strongarm-*-coff*
2103 + Generic OSF, hppa1.0-*-osf*
2104 + Generic BSD, hppa1.0-*-bsd*
2105 + HP/UX versions 7, 8, and 9, hppa1.[01]-*-hpux[789]*
2106 + HiUX, hppa*-*-hiux*
2107 + Mach Lites, hppa*-*-lites*
2109 + Windows NT 3.x, i?86-*-win32
2111 + HP systems, m68000-hp-bsd* and m68k-hp-bsd*
2112 + Sun systems, m68000-sun-sunos*, m68k-sun-sunos*, and
2114 + AT&T systems, m68000-att-sysv*
2115 + Atari systems, m68k-atari-sysv*
2116 + Motorola systems, m68k-motorola-sysv*
2117 + NCR systems, m68k-ncr-sysv*
2118 + Plexus systems, m68k-plexus-sysv*
2119 + Commodore systems, m68k-cbm-sysv*
2120 + Citicorp TTI, m68k-tti-*
2121 + Unos, m68k-crds-unos*
2122 + Concurrent RTU, m68k-ccur-rtu*
2123 + Linux a.out, m68k-*-linux*aout*
2124 + Linux libc1, m68k-*-linux*libc1*
2125 + pSOS, m68k-*-psos*
2127 + Generic ECOFF, mips*-*-ecoff*
2128 + SINIX, mips-sni-sysv4
2129 + Orion RTEMS, mips64orion-*-rtems*
2130 * National Semiconductor 32000
2131 + OpenBSD, ns32k-*-openbsd*
2132 * POWER (aka RS/6000) and PowerPC
2133 + AIX versions 1, 2, and 3, rs6000-ibm-aix[123]*
2134 + Bull BOSX, rs6000-bull-bosx
2135 + Generic Mach, rs6000-*-mach*
2136 + Generic SysV, powerpc*-*-sysv*
2137 + Linux libc1, powerpc*-*-linux*libc1*
2139 + Generic a.out, sparc-*-aout*, sparclet-*-aout*,
2140 sparclite-*-aout*, and sparc86x-*-aout*
2141 + NetBSD a.out, sparc-*-netbsd*aout*
2142 + Generic BSD, sparc-*-bsd*
2143 + ChorusOS, sparc-*-chorusos*
2144 + Linux a.out, sparc-*-linux*aout*
2145 + Linux libc1, sparc-*-linux*libc1*
2146 + LynxOS, sparc-*-lynxos*
2147 + Solaris on HAL hardware, sparc-hal-solaris2*
2148 + SunOS versions 3 and 4, sparc-*-sunos[34]*
2150 + RTEMS, v850-*-rtems*
2154 Documentation improvements
2156 Other significant improvements
2158 * Almost all front-end dependencies in the compiler have been
2159 separated out into a set of language hooks. This should make
2160 adding a new front end clearer and easier.
2161 * One effect of removing the separate preprocessor is a small
2162 increase in the robustness of the compiler in general, and the
2163 maintainability of target descriptions. Previously target-specific
2164 built-in macros and others, such as __FAST_MATH__, had to be
2165 handled with so-called specs that were hard to maintain. Often
2166 they would fail to behave properly when conflicting options were
2167 supplied on the command line, and define macros in the user's
2168 namespace even when strict ISO compliance was requested.
2169 Integrating the preprocessor has cleanly solved these issues.
2170 * The Makefile suite now supports redirection of make install by
2171 means of the variable DESTDIR.
2172 _________________________________________________________________
2176 Detailed release notes for the GCC 3.3 release follow.
2182 * [8]10140 cross compiler build failures: missing __mempcpy (DUP:
2185 Internal compiler errors (multi-platform)
2187 * [11]3581 large string causes segmentation fault in cc1
2188 * [12]4382 __builtin_{set,long}jmp with -O3 can crash the compiler
2189 * [13]5533 (c++) ICE when processing std::accumulate(begin, end,
2191 * [14]6387 -fpic -gdwarf-2 -g1 combination gives ICE in dwarf2out
2192 * [15]6412 (c++) ICE in retrieve_specialization
2193 * [16]6620 (c++) partial template specialization causes an ICE
2194 (segmentation fault)
2195 * [17]6663 (c++) ICE with attribute aligned
2196 * [18]7068 ICE with incomplete types
2197 * [19]7083 (c++) ICE using -gstabs with dodgy class derivation
2198 * [20]7647 (c++) ICE when data member has the name of the enclosing
2200 * [21]7675 ICE in fixup_var_refs_1
2201 * [22]7718 'complex' template instantiation causes ICE
2202 * [23]8116 (c++) ICE in member template function
2203 * [24]8358 (ada) Ada compiler accesses freed memory, crashes
2204 * [25]8511 (c++) ICE: (hopefully) reproducible cc1plus segmentation
2206 * [26]8564 (c++) ICE in find_function_data, in function.c
2207 * [27]8660 (c++) template overloading ICE in tsubst_expr, in cp/pt.c
2208 * [28]8766 (c++) ICE after failed initialization of static template
2210 * [29]8803 ICE in instantiate_virtual_regs_1, in function.c
2211 * [30]8846 (c++) ICE after diagnostic if fr_FR@euro locale is set
2212 * [31]8906 (c++) ICE (Segmentation fault) when parsing nested-class
2214 * [32]9216 (c++) ICE on missing template parameter
2215 * [33]9261 (c++) ICE in arg_assoc, in cp/decl2.c
2216 * [34]9263 (fortran) ICE caused by invalid PARAMETER in implied DO
2218 * [35]9429 (c++) ICE in template instantiation with a pointered new
2220 * [36]9516 Internal error when using a big array
2221 * [37]9600 (c++) ICE with typedefs in template class
2222 * [38]9629 (c++) virtual inheritance segfault
2223 * [39]9672 (c++) ICE: Error reporting routines re-entered
2224 * [40]9749 (c++) ICE in write_expression on invalid function
2226 * [41]9794 (fortran) ICE: floating point exception during constant
2228 * [42]9829 (c++) Missing colon in nested namespace usage causes ICE
2229 * [43]9916 (c++) ICE with noreturn function in ?: statement
2230 * [44]9936 ICE with local function and variable-length 2d array
2231 * [45]10262 (c++) cc1plus crashes with large generated code
2232 * [46]10278 (c++) ICE in parser for invalid code
2233 * [47]10446 (c++) ICE on definition of nonexistent member function
2234 of nested class in a class template
2235 * [48]10451 (c++) ICE in grokdeclarator on spurious mutable
2237 * [49]10506 (c++) ICE in build_new at cp/init.c with
2238 -fkeep-inline-functions and multiple inheritance
2239 * [50]10549 (c++) ICE in store_bit_field on bitfields that exceed
2240 the precision of the declared type
2244 * [51]2001 Inordinately long compile times in reload CSE regs
2245 * [52]2391 Exponential compilation time explosion in combine
2246 * [53]2960 Duplicate loop conditions even with -Os
2247 * [54]4046 redundant conditional branch
2248 * [55]6405 Loop-unrolling related performance regressions
2249 * [56]6798 very long compile time with large case-statement
2250 * [57]6871 const objects shouldn't be moved to .bss
2251 * [58]6909 problem w/ -Os on modified loop-2c.c test case
2252 * [59]7189 gcc -O2 -Wall does not print ``control reaches end of
2253 non-void function'' warning
2254 * [60]7642 optimization problem with signbit()
2255 * [61]8634 incorrect code for inlining of memcpy under -O2
2256 * [62]8750 Cygwin prolog generation erroneously emitting __alloca as
2257 regular function call
2261 * [63]2161 long if-else cascade overflows parser stack
2262 * [64]4319 short accepted on typedef'd char
2263 * [65]8602 incorrect line numbers in warning messages when using
2265 * [66]9177 -fdump-translation-unit: C front end deletes
2266 function_decl AST nodes and breaks debugging dumps
2267 * [67]9853 miscompilation of non-constant structure initializer
2269 c++ compiler and library
2271 * [68]45 legal template specialization code is rejected (DUP:
2273 * [70]764 lookup failure: friend operator and dereferencing a
2274 pointer and templates (DUP: [71]5116)
2275 * [72]2862 gcc accepts invalid explicit instantiation syntax (DUP:
2277 * [73]3663 G++ doesn't check access control during template
2279 * [74]3797 gcc fails to emit explicit specialization of a template
2281 * [75]3948 Two destructors are called when no copy destructor is
2282 defined (ABI change)
2283 * [76]4137 Conversion operator within template is not accepted
2284 * [77]4361 bogus ambiguity taking the address of a member template
2285 * [78]4802 g++ accepts illegal template code (access to private
2286 member; DUP: [79]5837)
2287 * [80]4803 inline function is used but never defined, and g++ does
2289 * [81]5094 Partial specialization cannot be friend?
2290 * [82]5730 complex<double>::norm() -- huge slowdown from
2292 * [83]6713 Regression wrt 3.0.4: g++ -O2 leads to seg fault at run
2294 * [84]7015 certain __asm__ constructs rejected
2295 * [85]7086 compile time regression (quadratic behavior in
2297 * [86]7099 G++ doesn't set the noreturn attribute on std::exit and
2299 * [87]7247 copy constructor missing when inlining enabled (invalid
2301 * [88]7441 string array initialization compilation time regression
2302 from seconds to minutes
2303 * [89]7768 __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ for template destructor is wrong
2304 * [90]7804 bad printing of floating point constant in warning
2306 * [91]8099 Friend classes and template specializations
2307 * [92]8117 member function pointers and multiple inheritance
2308 * [93]8205 using declaration and multiple inheritance
2309 * [94]8645 unnecessary non-zero checks in stl_tree.h
2310 * [95]8724 explicit destructor call for incomplete class allowed
2311 * [96]8805 compile time regression with many member variables
2312 * [97]8691 -O3 and -fno-implicit-templates are incompatible
2313 * [98]8700 unhelpful error message for binding temp to reference
2314 * [99]8724 explicit destructor call for incomplete class allowed
2315 * [100]8949 numeric_limits<>::denorm_min() and is_iec559 problems
2316 * [101]9016 Failure to consistently constant fold "constant" C++
2318 * [102]9053 g++ confused about ambiguity of overloaded function
2320 * [103]9152 undefined virtual thunks
2321 * [104]9182 basic_filebuf<> does not report errors in codecvt<>::out
2322 * [105]9297 data corruption due to codegen bug (when copying.)
2323 * [106]9318 i/ostream::operator>>/<<(streambuf*) broken
2324 * [107]9320 Incorrect usage of traits_type::int_type in
2326 * [108]9400 bogus -Wshadow warning: shadowed declaration of this in
2328 * [109]9424 i/ostream::operator>>/<<(streambuf*) drops characters
2329 * [110]9425 filebuf::pbackfail broken (DUP: [111]9439)
2330 * [112]9474 GCC freezes in compiling a weird code mixing <iostream>
2332 * [113]9548 Incorrect results from setf(ios::fixed) and
2333 precision(-1) [114][DR 231]
2334 * [115]9555 ostream inserters fail to set badbit on exception
2335 * [116]9561 ostream inserters rethrow exception of wrong type
2336 * [117]9563 ostream::sentry returns true after a failed preparation
2337 * [118]9582 one-definition rule violation in std::allocator
2338 * [119]9622 __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ incorrect in template destructors
2339 * [120]9683 bug in initialization chains for static const variables
2340 from template classes
2341 * [121]9791 -Woverloaded-virtual reports hiding of destructor
2342 * [122]9817 collate::compare doesn't handle nul characters
2343 * [123]9825 filebuf::sputbackc breaks sbumpc
2344 * [124]9826 operator>>(basic_istream, basic_string) fails to compile
2346 * [125]9924 Multiple using statements for builtin functions not
2348 * [126]9946 destructor is not called for temporary object
2349 * [127]9964 filebuf::close() sometimes fails to close file
2350 * [128]9988 filebuf::overflow writes EOF to file
2351 * [129]10033 optimization breaks polymorphic references w/ typeid
2353 * [130]10097 filebuf::underflow drops characters
2354 * [131]10132 filebuf destructor can throw exceptions
2355 * [132]10180 gcc fails to warn about non-inlined function
2356 * [133]10199 method parametrized by template does not work
2358 * [134]10300 use of array-new (nothrow) in segfaults on NULL return
2359 * [135]10427 Stack corruption with variable-length automatic arrays
2360 and virtual destructors
2361 * [136]10503 Compilation never stops in fixed_type_or_null
2365 * [137]5956 selectors aren't matched properly when added to the
2368 Fortran compiler and library
2370 * [138]1832 list directed i/o overflow hangs, -fbounds-check doesn't
2372 * [139]3924 g77 generates code that is rejected by GAS if COFF debug
2374 * [140]5634 doc: explain that configure --prefix=~/... does not work
2375 * [141]6367 multiple repeat counts confuse namelist read into array
2376 * [142]6491 Logical operations error on logicals when using
2378 * [143]6742 Generation of C++ Prototype for FORTRAN and extern "C"
2379 * [144]7113 Failure of g77.f-torture/execute/f90-intrinsic-bit.f -Os
2381 * [145]7236 OPEN(...,RECL=nnn,...) without ACCESS='DIRECT' should
2382 assume a direct access file
2383 * [146]7278 g77 "bug"; the executable misbehaves (with -O2
2385 * [147]7384 DATE_AND_TIME milliseconds field inactive on Windows
2386 * [148]7388 Incorrect output with 0-based array of characters
2387 * [149]8587 Double complex zero ** double precision number -> NaN
2389 * [150]9038 -ffixed-line-length-none -x f77-cpp-input gives:
2390 Warning: unknown register name line-length-none
2391 * [151]10197 Direct access files not unformatted by default
2393 Java compiler and library
2395 * [152]6005 gcj fails to build rhug on alpha
2396 * [153]6389 System.getProperty("") should always throw an
2397 IllegalArgumentException
2398 * [154]6576 java.util.ResourceBundle.getResource ignores locale
2399 * [155]6652 new java.io.File("").getCanonicalFile() throws exception
2400 * [156]7060 getMethod() doesn't search super interface
2401 * [157]7073 bytecode interpreter gives wrong answer for interface
2403 * [158]7180 possible bug in
2404 javax.naming.spi.NamingManager.getPlusPath()
2405 * [159]7416 java.security startup refs "GNU libgcj.security"
2406 * [160]7570 Runtime.exec with null envp: child doesn't inherit
2407 parent env (DUP: [161]7578)
2408 * [162]7611 Internal error while compiling libjava with -O
2409 * [163]7709 NullPointerException in _Jv_ResolvePoolEntry
2410 * [164]7766 ZipInputStream.available returns 0 immediately after
2412 * [165]7785 Calendar.getTimeInMillis/setTimeInMillis should be
2414 * [166]7786 TimeZone.getDSTSavings() from JDK1.4 not implemented
2415 * [167]8142 '$' in class names vs. dlopen 'dynamic string tokens'
2416 * [168]8234 ZipInputStream chokes when InputStream.read() returns
2418 * [169]8415 reflection bug: exception info for Method
2419 * [170]8481 java.Random.nextInt(int) may return negative
2420 * [171]8593 Error reading GZIPped files with BufferedReader
2421 * [172]8759 java.beans.Introspector has no flushCaches() or
2422 flushFromCaches() methods
2423 * [173]8997 spin() calls Thread.sleep
2424 * [174]9253 on win32, java.io.File.listFiles("C:\\") returns pwd
2425 instead of the root content of C:
2426 * [175]9254 java::lang::Object::wait(), threads-win32.cc returns
2428 * [176]9271 Severe bias in java.security.SecureRandom
2430 Ada compiler and library
2432 * [177]6767 make gnatlib-shared fails on -laddr2line
2433 * [178]9911 gnatmake fails to link when GCC configured with
2434 --with-sjlj-exceptions=yes
2435 * [179]10020 Can't bootstrap gcc on AIX with Ada enabled
2436 * [180]10546 Ada tasking not working on Red Hat 9
2440 * [181]7029 preprocessor should ignore #warning with -M
2444 * [182]2903 [arm] Optimization bug with long long arithmetic
2445 * [183]7873 arm-linux-gcc fails when assigning address to a bit
2450 * [184]7680 float functions undefined in math.h/cmath with #define
2453 HP-UX or HP-PA-specific
2455 * [185]8705 [HP-PA] ICE in emit_move_insn_1, in expr.c
2456 * [186]9986 [HP-UX] Incorrect transformation of fputs_unlocked to
2458 * [187]10056 [HP-PA] ICE at -O2 when building c++ code from doxygen
2462 * [188]6744 Bad assembler code generated: reference to pseudo
2464 * [189]7361 Internal compiler error in reload_cse_simplify_operands,
2469 * [190]9496 [mips-linux] bug in optimizer?
2473 * [191]7067 -Os with -mcpu=powerpc optimizes for speed (?) instead
2475 * [192]8480 reload ICEs for LAPACK code on powerpc64-linux
2476 * [193]8784 [AIX] Internal compiler error in simplify_gen_subreg
2477 * [194]10315 [powerpc] ICE: in extract_insn, in recog.c
2481 * [195]10267 (documentation) Wrong build instructions for
2484 x86-specific (Intel/AMD)
2486 * [196]7916 ICE in instantiate_virtual_register_1
2487 * [197]7926 (c++) i486 instructions in header files make c++
2488 programs crash on i386
2489 * [198]8555 ICE in gen_split_1231
2490 * [199]8994 ICE with -O -march=pentium4
2491 * [200]9426 ICE with -fssa -funroll-loops -fprofile-arcs
2492 * [201]9806 ICE in inline assembly with -fPIC flag
2493 * [202]10077 gcc -msse2 generates movd to move dwords between xmm
2495 * [203]10233 64-bit comparison only comparing bottom 32-bits
2496 * [204]10286 type-punning doesn't work with __m64 and -O
2497 * [205]10308 [x86] ICE with -O -fgcse or -O2
2498 _________________________________________________________________
2504 This section lists the problem reports (PRs) from GCC's bug tracking
2505 system that are known to be fixed in the 3.3.1 release. This list
2506 might not be complete (that is, it is possible that some PRs that have
2507 been fixed are not listed here).
2511 * [206]11272 [Solaris] make bootstrap fails while building libstdc++
2513 Internal compiler errors (multi-platform)
2515 * [207]5754 ICE on invalid nested template class
2516 * [208]6597 ICE in set_mem_alias_set compiling Qt with -O2 on ia64
2517 and --enable-checking
2518 * [209]6949 (c++) ICE in tsubst_decl, in cp/pt.c
2519 * [210]7053 (c++) ICE when declaring a function already defined as a
2520 friend method of a template class
2521 * [211]8164 (c++) ICE when using different const expressions as
2523 * [212]8384 (c++) ICE in is_base_type, in dwarf2out.c
2524 * [213]9559 (c++) ICE with invalid initialization of a static const
2525 * [214]9649 (c++) ICE in finish_member_declaration, in
2526 cp/semantics.c when redeclaring a static member variable
2527 * [215]9864 (fortran) ICE in add_abstract_origin_attribute, in
2528 dwarfout.c with -g -O -finline-functions
2529 * [216]10432 (c++) ICE in poplevel, in cp/decl.c
2530 * [217]10475 ICE in subreg_highpart_offset for code with long long
2531 * [218]10635 (c++) ICE when dereferencing an incomplete type casted
2533 * [219]10661 (c++) ICE in instantiate_decl, in cp/pt.c while
2534 instantiating static member variables
2535 * [220]10700 ICE in copy_to_mode_reg on 64-bit targets
2536 * [221]10712 (c++) ICE in constructor_name_full, in cp/decl2.c
2537 * [222]10796 (c++) ICE when defining an enum with two values: -1 and
2539 * [223]10890 ICE in merge_assigned_reloads building Linux 2.4.2x
2541 * [224]10939 (c++) ICE with template code
2542 * [225]10956 (c++) ICE when specializing a template member function
2543 of a template class, in tsubst, in cp/pt.c
2544 * [226]11041 (c++) ICE: const myclass &x = *x; (when operator*()
2546 * [227]11059 (c++) ICE with empty union
2547 * [228]11083 (c++) ICE in commit_one_edge_insertion, in cfgrtl.c
2548 with -O2 -fnon-call-exceptions
2549 * [229]11105 (c++) ICE in mangle_conv_op_name_for_type
2550 * [230]11149 (c++) ICE on error when instantiation with call
2551 function of a base type
2552 * [231]11228 (c++) ICE on new-expression using array operator new
2553 and default-initialization
2554 * [232]11282 (c++) Infinite memory usage after syntax error
2555 * [233]11301 (fortran) ICE with -fno-globals
2556 * [234]11308 (c++) ICE when using an enum type name as if it were a
2558 * [235]11473 (c++) ICE with -gstabs when empty struct inherits from
2560 * [236]11503 (c++) ICE when instantiating template with ADDR_EXPR
2561 * [237]11513 (c++) ICE in push_template_decl_real, in cp/pt.c:
2562 template member functions
2566 * [238]11198 -O2 -frename-registers generates wrong code (aliasing
2568 * [239]11304 Wrong code production with -fomit-frame-pointer
2569 * [240]11381 volatile memory access optimized away
2570 * [241]11536 [strength-reduce] -O2 optimization produces wrong code
2571 * [242]11557 constant folding bug generates wrong code
2575 * [243]5897 No warning for statement after return
2576 * [244]11279 DWARF-2 output mishandles large enums
2580 * [245]11022 no warning for non-compatible macro redefinition
2582 C++ compiler and library
2584 * [246]2330 static_cast<>() to a private base is allowed
2585 * [247]5388 Incorrect message "operands to ?: have different types"
2586 * [248]5390 Libiberty fails to demangle multi-digit template
2588 * [249]7877 Incorrect parameter passing to specializations of member
2590 * [250]9393 Anonymous namespaces and compiling the same file twice
2591 * [251]10032 -pedantic converts some errors to warnings
2592 * [252]10468 const typeof(x) is non-const, but only in templates
2593 * [253]10527 confused error message with "new int()" parameter
2595 * [254]10679 parameter MIN_INLINE_INSNS is not honored
2596 * [255]10682 gcc chokes on a typedef for an enum inside a class
2598 * [256]10689 pow(std::complex(0),1/3) returns (nan, nan) instead of
2600 * [257]10845 template member function (with nested template as
2601 parameter) cannot be called anymore if another unrelated template
2602 member function is defined
2603 * [258]10849 Cannot define an out-of-class specialization of a
2604 private nested template class
2605 * [259]10888 Suppress -Winline warnings for system headers
2606 * [260]10929 -Winline warns about functions for which no definition
2608 * [261]10931 valid conversion static_cast<const unsigned
2609 int&>(lvalue-of-type-int) is rejected
2610 * [262]10940 Bad code with explicit specialization
2611 * [263]10968 If member function implicitly instantiated, explicit
2612 instantiation of class fails to instantiate it
2613 * [264]10990 Cannot convert with dynamic_cast<> to a private base
2614 class from within a member function
2615 * [265]11039 Bad interaction between implicit typename deprecation
2617 * [266]11062 (libstdc++) avoid __attribute__ ((unused)); say
2618 "__unused__" instead
2619 * [267]11095 C++ iostream manipulator causes segfault when called
2620 with negative argument
2621 * [268]11098 g++ doesn't emit complete debugging information for
2622 local variables in destructors
2623 * [269]11137 Linux shared library constructors not called unless
2624 there's one global object
2625 * [270]11154 spurious ambiguity report for template class
2627 * [271]11329 Compiler cannot find user defined implicit typecast
2628 * [272]11332 Spurious error with casts in ?: expression
2629 * [273]11431 static_cast behavior with subclasses when default
2630 constructor available
2631 * [274]11528 money_get facet does not accept "$.00" as valid
2632 * [275]11546 Type lookup problems in out-of-line definition of a
2633 class doubly nested from a template class
2634 * [276]11567 C++ code containing templated member function with same
2635 name as pure virtual member function results in linking failure
2636 * [277]11645 Failure to deal with using and private inheritance
2638 Java compiler and library
2640 * [278]5179 Qualified static field access doesn't initialize its
2642 * [279]8204 gcj -O2 to native reorders certain instructions
2644 * [280]10838 java.io.ObjectInputStream syntax error
2645 * [281]10886 The RMI registry that comes with GCJ does not work
2647 * [282]11349 JNDI URL context factories not located correctly
2649 x86-specific (Intel/AMD)
2651 * [283]4823 ICE on inline assembly code
2652 * [284]8878 miscompilation with -O and SSE
2653 * [285]9815 (c++ library) atomicity.h - fails to compile with -O3
2655 * [286]10402 (inline assembly) [x86] ICE in merge_assigned_reloads,
2657 * [287]10504 ICE with SSE2 code and -O3 -mcpu=pentium4 -msse2
2658 * [288]10673 ICE for x86-64 on freebsd libc vfprintf.c source
2659 * [289]11044 [x86] out of range loop instructions for FP code on K6
2660 * [290]11089 ICE: instantiate_virtual_regs_lossage while using SSE
2662 * [291]11420 [x86_64] gcc generates invalid asm code when "-O -fPIC"
2665 SPARC- or Solaris- specific
2667 * [292]9362 solaris 'as' dies when fed .s and "-gstabs"
2668 * [293]10142 [SPARC64] gcc produces wrong code when passing
2670 * [294]10663 New configure check aborts with Sun tools.
2671 * [295]10835 combinatorial explosion in scheduler on HyperSPARC
2672 * [296]10876 ICE in calculate_giv_inc when building KDE
2673 * [297]10955 wrong code at -O3 for structure argument in context of
2675 * [298]11018 -mcpu=ultrasparc busts tar-1.13.25
2676 * [299]11556 [sparc64] ICE in gen_reg_rtx() while compiling 2.6.x
2681 * [300]10907 gcc violates the ia64 ABI (GP must be preserved)
2682 * [301]11320 scheduler bug (in machine depended reorganization pass)
2683 * [302]11599 bug with conditional and __builtin_prefetch
2687 * [303]9745 [powerpc] gcc mis-compiles libmcrypt (alias problem
2689 * [304]10871 error in rs6000_stack_info save_size computation
2690 * [305]11440 gcc mis-compiles c++ code (libkhtml) with -O2,
2695 * [306]7594 [m68k] ICE on legal code associated with simplify-rtx
2696 * [307]10557 [m68k] ICE in subreg_offset_representable_p
2697 * [308]11054 [m68k] ICE in reg_overlap_mentioned_p
2701 * [309]10834 [arm] GCC 3.3 still generates incorrect instructions
2702 for functions with __attribute__ ((interrupt ("IRQ")))
2703 * [310]10842 [arm] Clobbered link register is copied to pc under
2704 certain circumstances
2705 * [311]11052 [arm] noce_process_if_block() can lose REG_INC notes
2706 * [312]11183 [arm] ICE in change_address_1 (3.3) / subreg_hard_regno
2711 * [313]11084 ICE in propagate_one_insn, in flow.c
2715 * [314]10331 can't compile c++ part of gcc cross compiler for sh-elf
2716 * [315]10413 [SH] ICE in reload_cse_simplify_operands, in reload1.c
2717 * [316]11096 i686-linux to sh-linux cross compiler fails to compile
2720 GNU/Linux (or Hurd?) specific
2722 * [317]2873 Bogus fixinclude of stdio.h from glibc 2.2.3
2726 * [318]3163 configure bug: gcc/aclocal.m4 mmap test fails on
2729 Cygwin (or mingw) specific
2731 * [319]5287 ICE with dllimport attribute
2732 * [320]10148 [MingW/CygWin] Compiler dumps core
2736 * [321]8787 GCC fails to emit .intel_syntax when invoked with
2737 -masm=intel on DJGPP
2739 Darwin (and MacOS X) specific
2741 * [322]10900 trampolines crash
2745 * [323]1607 (c++) Format attributes on methods undocumented
2746 * [324]4252 Invalid option `-fdump-translation-unit'
2747 * [325]4490 Clarify restrictions on -m96bit-long-double,
2748 -m128bit-long-double
2749 * [326]10355 document an issue with regparm attribute on some
2750 systems (e.g. Solaris)
2751 * [327]10726 (fortran) Documentation for function "IDate Intrinsic
2753 * [328]10805 document bug in old version of Sun assembler
2754 * [329]10815 warn against GNU binutils on AIX
2755 * [330]10877 document need for newer binutils on i?86-*-linux-gnu
2756 * [331]11280 Manual incorrect with respect to -freorder-blocks
2757 * [332]11466 Document -mlittle-endian and its restrictions for the
2760 Testsuite bugs (compiler itself is not affected)
2762 * [333]10737 newer bison causes g++.dg/parse/crash2.C to incorrectly
2764 * [334]10810 gcc-3.3 fails make check: buffer overrun in
2766 _________________________________________________________________
2772 This section lists the problem reports (PRs) from [335]GCC's bug
2773 tracking system that are known to be fixed in the 3.3.2 release. This
2774 list might not be complete (that is, it is possible that some PRs that
2775 have been fixed are not listed here).
2777 Bootstrap failures and problems
2779 * [336]8336 [SCO5] bootstrap config still tries to use COFF options
2780 * [337]9330 [alpha-osf] Bootstrap failure on Compaq Tru64 with
2781 --enable-threads=posix
2782 * [338]9631 [hppa64-linux] gcc-3.3 fails to bootstrap
2783 * [339]9877 fixincludes makes a bad sys/byteorder.h on svr5
2785 * [340]11687 xstormy16-elf build fails in libf2c
2786 * [341]12263 [SGI IRIX] bootstrap fails during compile of
2787 libf2c/libI77/backspace.c
2788 * [342]12490 buffer overflow in scan-decls.c (during Solaris 9
2789 fix-header processing)
2791 Internal compiler errors (multi-platform)
2793 * [343]7277 Casting integers to vector types causes ICE
2794 * [344]7939 (c++) ICE on invalid function template specialization
2795 * [345]11063 (c++) ICE on parsing initialization list of const array
2797 * [346]11207 ICE with negative index in array element designator
2798 * [347]11522 (fortran) g77 dwarf-2 ICE in
2799 add_abstract_origin_attribute
2800 * [348]11595 (c++) ICE on duplicate label definition
2801 * [349]11646 (c++) ICE in commit_one_edge_insertion with
2802 -fnon-call-exceptions -fgcse -O
2803 * [350]11665 ICE in struct initializer when taking address
2804 * [351]11852 (c++) ICE with bad struct initializer.
2805 * [352]11878 (c++) ICE in cp_expr_size
2806 * [353]11883 ICE with any -O on mercury-generated C code
2807 * [354]11991 (c++) ICE in cxx_incomplete_type_diagnostic, in
2808 cp/typeck2.c when applying typeid operator to template template
2810 * [355]12146 ICE in lookup_template_function, in cp/pt.c
2811 * [356]12215 ICE in make_label_edge with -fnon-call-exceptions
2813 * [357]12369 (c++) ICE with templates and friends
2814 * [358]12446 ICE in emit_move_insn on complicated array reference
2815 * [359]12510 ICE in final_scan_insn
2816 * [360]12544 ICE with large parameters used in nested functions
2818 C and optimization bugs
2820 * [361]9862 spurious warnings with -W -finline-functions
2821 * [362]10962 lookup_field is a linear search on a linked list (can
2822 be slow if large struct)
2823 * [363]11370 -Wunreachable-code gives false complaints
2824 * [364]11637 invalid assembly with -fnon-call-exceptions
2825 * [365]11885 Problem with bitfields in packed structs
2826 * [366]12082 Inappropriate unreachable code warnings
2827 * [367]12180 Inline optimization fails for variadic function
2828 * [368]12340 loop unroller + gcse produces wrong code
2830 C++ compiler and library
2832 * [369]3907 nested template parameter collides with member name
2833 * [370]5293 confusing message when binding a temporary to a
2835 * [371]5296 [DR115] Pointers to functions and to template functions
2836 behave differently in deduction
2837 * [372]7939 ICE on function template specialization
2838 * [373]8656 Unable to assign function with __attribute__ and pointer
2839 return type to an appropriate variable
2840 * [374]10147 Confusing error message for invalid template function
2842 * [375]11400 std::search_n() makes assumptions about Size parameter
2843 * [376]11409 issues with using declarations, overloading, and
2845 * [377]11740 ctype<wchar_t>::do_is(mask, wchar_t) doesn't handle
2846 multiple bits in mask
2847 * [378]11786 operator() call on variable in other namespace not
2849 * [379]11867 static_cast ignores ambiguity
2850 * [380]11928 bug with conversion operators that are typedefs
2851 * [381]12114 Uninitialized memory accessed in dtor
2852 * [382]12163 static_cast + explicit constructor regression
2853 * [383]12181 Wrong code with comma operator and c++
2854 * [384]12236 regparm and fastcall messes up parameters
2855 * [385]12266 incorrect instantiation of unneeded template during
2857 * [386]12296 istream::peek() doesn't set eofbit
2858 * [387]12298 [sjlj exceptions] Stack unwind destroys
2859 not-yet-constructed object
2860 * [388]12369 ICE with templates and friends
2861 * [389]12337 apparently infinite loop in g++
2862 * [390]12344 stdcall attribute ignored if function returns a pointer
2863 * [391]12451 missing(late) class forward declaration in cxxabi.h
2864 * [392]12486 g++ accepts invalid use of a qualified name
2866 x86 specific (Intel/AMD)
2868 * [393]8869 [x86 MMX] ICE with const variable optimization and MMX
2870 * [394]9786 ICE in fixup_abnormal_edges with -fnon-call-exceptions
2872 * [395]11689 g++3.3 emits un-assembleable code for k6 architecture
2873 * [396]12116 [k6] Invalid assembly output values with X-MAME code
2874 * [397]12070 ICE converting between double and long double with
2879 * [398]11184 [ia64 hpux] ICE on __builtin_apply building libobjc
2880 * [399]11535 __builtin_return_address may not work on ia64
2881 * [400]11693 [ia64] ICE in gen_nop_type
2882 * [401]12224 [ia64] Thread-local storage doesn't work
2886 * [402]11087 [powerpc64-linux] GCC miscompiles raid1.c from linux
2888 * [403]11319 loop miscompiled on ppc32
2889 * [404]11949 ICE Compiler segfault with ffmpeg -maltivec code
2893 * [405]11662 wrong code for expr. with cast to long long and
2895 * [406]11965 invalid assembler code for a shift < 32 operation
2896 * [407]12301 (c++) stack corruption when a returned expression
2901 * [408]11717 [alpha-linux] unrecognizable insn compiling for.c of
2906 * [409]11313 problem with #pragma weak and static inline functions
2907 * [410]11712 __STDC_EXT__ not defined for C++ by default anymore?
2911 * [411]12166 Profiled programs crash if PROFDIR is set
2913 Solaris-x86 specific
2915 * [412]12101 i386 Solaris no longer works with GNU as?
2917 Miscellaneous embedded target-specific bugs
2919 * [413]10988 [m32r-elf] wrong blockmove code with -O3
2920 * [414]11805 [h8300-unknown-coff] [H8300] ICE for simple code with
2922 * [415]11902 [sh4] spec file improperly inserts rpath even when none
2924 * [416]11903 [sh4] -pthread fails to link due to error in spec file
2926 _________________________________________________________________
2932 In addition to the bug fixes documented below, this release contains
2933 few minor features such as:
2934 * Support for --with-sysroot
2935 * Support for automatic detection of executable stacks
2936 * Support for SSE3 instructions
2937 * Support for thread local storage debugging under GDB on S390
2941 This section lists the problem reports (PRs) from [417]GCC's bug
2942 tracking system that are known to be fixed in the 3.3.3 release. This
2943 list might not be complete (that is, it is possible that some PRs that
2944 have been fixed are not listed here).
2946 Bootstrap failures and issues
2948 * [418]11890 Building cross gcc-3.3.1 for sparc-sun-solaris2.6 fails
2949 * [419]12399 boehm-gc fails (when building a cross compiler):
2950 libtool unable to infer tagged configuration
2951 * [420]13068 mklibgcc.in doesn't handle multi-level multilib
2952 subdirectories properly
2954 Internal compiler errors (multi-platform)
2956 * [421]10060 ICE (stack overflow) on huge file (300k lines) due to
2957 recursive behaviour of copy_rtx_if_shared, in emit_rtl.c
2958 * [422]10555 (c++) ICE on undefined template argument
2959 * [423]10706 (c++) ICE in mangle_class_name_for_template
2960 * [424]11496 (fortran) error in flow_loops_find when -funroll-loops
2962 * [425]11741 ICE in pre_insert_copy_insn, in gcse.c
2963 * [426]12440 GCC crashes during compilation of quicktime4linux 2.0.0
2964 * [427]12632 (fortran) -fbounds-check ICE
2965 * [428]12712 (c++) ICE on short legit C++ code fragment with gcc
2967 * [429]12726 (c++) ICE (segfault) on trivial code
2968 * [430]12890 (c++) ICE on compilation of class with throwing method
2969 * [431]12900 (c++) ICE in rtl_verify_flow_info_1
2970 * [432]13060 (fortran) ICE in fixup_var_refs_1, in function.c on
2971 correct code with -O2 -fno-force-mem
2972 * [433]13289 (c++) ICE in regenerate_decl_from_template on recursive
2974 * [434]13318 ICE: floating point exception in the loop optimizer
2975 * [435]13392 (c++) ICE in convert_from_eh_region_ranges_1, in
2977 * [436]13574 (c++) invalid array default initializer in class lets
2978 gcc consume all memory and die
2979 * [437]13475 ICE on SIMD variables with partial value initialization
2980 * [438]13797 (c++) ICE on invalid template parameter
2981 * [439]13824 (java) gcj SEGV with simple .java program
2983 C and optimization bugs
2985 * [440]8776 loop invariants are not removed (most likely)
2986 * [441]10339 [sparc,ppc,ppc64] Invalid optimization: replacing
2988 * [442]11350 undefined labels with -Os -fPIC
2989 * [443]12826 Optimizer removes reference through volatile pointer
2990 * [444]12500 stabs debug info: void no longer a predefined / builtin
2992 * [445]12941 builtin-bitops-1.c miscompilation (latent bug)
2993 * [446]12953 tree inliner bug (in inline_forbidden_p) and fix
2994 * [447]13041 linux-2.6/sound/core/oss/rate.c miscompiled
2995 * [448]13507 spurious printf format warning
2996 * [449]13382 Type information for const pointer disappears during
2998 * [450]13394 noreturn attribute ignored on recursive invokation
2999 * [451]13400 Compiled code crashes storing to read-only location
3000 * [452]13521 Endless loop in calculate_global_regs_live
3002 C++ compiler and library
3004 Some of the bug fixes in this list were made to implement decisions
3005 that the ISO C++ standards committee has made concerning several
3006 defect reports (DRs). Links in the list below point to detailed
3007 discussion of the relevant defect report.
3008 * [453]2094 unimplemented: use of `ptrmem_cst' in template type
3010 * [454]2294 using declaration confusion
3011 * [455]5050 template instantiation depth exceeds limit: recursion
3013 * [456]9371 Bad exception handling in
3014 i/ostream::operator>>/<<(streambuf*)
3015 * [457]9546 bad exception handling in ostream members
3016 * [458]10081 basic_ios::_M_cache_locale leaves NULL members in the
3017 face of unknown locales
3018 * [459]10093 [460][DR 61] Setting failbit in exceptions doesn't work
3019 * [461]10095 istream::operator>>(int&) sets ios::badbit when
3020 ios::failbit is set.
3021 * [462]11554 Warning about reordering of initializers doesn't
3022 mention location of constructor
3023 * [463]12297 istream::sentry::sentry() handles eof() incorrectly.
3024 * [464]12352 Exception safety problems in src/localename.cc
3025 * [465]12438 Memory leak in locale::combine()
3026 * [466]12540 Memory leak in locale::locale(const char*)
3027 * [467]12594 DRs [468]60 [TC] and [469]63 [TC] not implemented
3028 * [470]12657 Resolution of [471]DR 292 (WP) still unimplemented
3029 * [472]12696 memory eating infinite loop in diagnostics (error
3031 * [473]12815 Code compiled with optimization behaves unexpectedly
3032 * [474]12862 Conflicts between typedefs/enums and namespace member
3034 * [475]12926 Wrong value after assignment in initialize list using
3036 * [476]12967 Resolution of [477]DR 300 [WP] still unimplemented
3037 * [478]12971 Resolution of [479]DR 328 [WP] still unimplemented
3038 * [480]13007 basic_streambuf::pubimbue, imbue wrong
3039 * [481]13009 Implicitly-defined assignment operator writes to wrong
3041 * [482]13057 regparm attribute not applied to destructor
3042 * [483]13070 -Wformat option ignored in g++
3043 * [484]13081 forward template declarations in <complex> let inlining
3045 * [485]13239 Assertion does not seem to work correctly anymore
3046 * [486]13262 "xxx is private within this context" when initializing
3047 a self-contained template class
3048 * [487]13290 simple typo in concept checking for std::generate_n
3049 * [488]13323 Template code does not compile in presence of typedef
3050 * [489]13369 __verify_grouping (and __add_grouping?) not correct
3051 * [490]13371 infinite loop with packed struct and inlining
3052 * [491]13445 Template argument replacement "dereferences" a typedef
3053 * [492]13461 Fails to access protected-ctor from public constant
3054 * [493]13462 Non-standard-conforming type set::pointer
3055 * [494]13478 gcc uses wrong constructor to initialize a const
3057 * [495]13544 "conflicting types" for enums in different scopes
3058 * [496]13650 string::compare should not (always) use
3059 traits_type::length()
3060 * [497]13683 bogus warning about passing non-PODs through ellipsis
3061 * [498]13688 Derived class is denied access to protected base class
3063 * [499]13774 Member variable cleared in virtual multiple inheritance
3065 * [500]13884 Protect sstream.tcc from extern template use
3067 Java compiler and library
3069 * [501]10746 [win32] garbage collection crash in GCJ
3071 Objective-C compiler and library
3073 * [502]11433 Crash due to dereferencing null pointer when querying
3076 Fortran compiler and library
3078 * [503]12633 logical expression gives incorrect result with
3079 -fugly-logint option
3080 * [504]13037 [gcse-lm] g77 generates incorrect code
3081 * [505]13213 Hex constant problem when compiling with -fugly-logint
3084 x86-specific (Intel/AMD)
3086 * [506]4490 ICE with -m128bit-long-double
3087 * [507]12292 [x86_64] ICE: RTL check: expected code `const_int',
3088 have `reg' in make_field_assignment, in combine.c
3089 * [508]12441 ICE: can't find a register to spill
3090 * [509]12943 array static-init failure under -fpic, -fPIC
3091 * [510]13608 Incorrect code with -O3 -ffast-math
3095 * [511]11598 testcase gcc.dg/20020118-1.c fails runtime check of
3096 __attribute__((aligned(16)))
3097 * [512]11793 ICE in extract_insn, in recog.c (const_vector's)
3098 * [513]12467 vmsumubm emitted when vmsummbm appropriate (typo in
3100 * [514]12537 g++ generates writeable text sections
3104 * [515]12496 wrong result for __atomic_add(&value, -1) when using
3106 * [516]12865 mprotect call to make trampoline executable may fail
3107 * [517]13354 ICE in sparc_emit_set_const32
3111 * [518]10467 [arm] ICE in pre_insert_copy_insn,
3115 * [519]11226 ICE passing struct arg with two floats
3116 * [520]11227 ICE for _Complex float, _Complex long double args
3117 * [521]12644 GCC 3.3.2 fails to compile glibc on ia64
3118 * [522]13149 build gcc-3.3.2 1305 error:unrecognizable insn
3119 * Various fixes for libunwind
3123 * [523]12654 Incorrect comparison code generated for Alpha
3124 * [524]12965 SEGV+ICE in cc1plus on alpha-linux with -O2
3125 * [525]13031 ICE (unrecognizable insn) when building
3130 * [526]11634 [hppa] ICE in verify_local_live_at_start, in flow.c
3131 * [527]12158 [hppa] compilation does not terminate at -O1
3135 * [528]11992 Wrong built-in code for memcmp with length 1<<24: only
3136 (1<<24)-1 possible for CLCL-Instruction
3140 * [529]9365 segfault in gen_far_branch (config/sh/sh.c)
3141 * [530]10392 optimizer generates faulty array indexing
3142 * [531]11322 SH profiler outputs multiple definitions of symbol
3143 * [532]13069 gcc/config/sh/rtems.h broken
3144 * [533]13302 Putting a va_list in a struct causes seg fault
3145 * [534]13585 Incorrect optimization of call to sfunc
3146 * Fix inappropriately exported libgcc functions from the shared
3149 Other embedded target specific
3151 * [535]8916 [mcore] unsigned char assign gets hosed.
3152 * [536]11576 [h8300] ICE in change_address_1, in emit-rtl.c
3153 * [537]13122 [h8300] local variable gets corrupted by function call
3154 when -fomit-frame-pointer is given
3155 * [538]13256 [cris] strict_low_part mistreated in delay slots
3156 * [539]13373 [mcore] optimization with -frerun-cse-after-loop
3157 -fexpensive-optimizations produces wrong code on mcore
3161 * [540]12561 gcc/config/t-gnu needs updating to work with
3166 * [541]6243 testsuite fails almost all tests due to no libintl in
3167 LD_LIBRARY_PATH during test.
3168 * [542]11397 weak aliases broken on Tru64 UNIX
3172 * [543]12505 build failure due to defines of uchar in cpphash.h and
3174 * [544]13150 WEAK symbols not exported by collect2
3178 * [545]12666 fixincludes problem on IRIX 6.5.19m
3182 * [546]12969 Including sys/byteorder.h breaks configure checks
3184 Testsuite problems (compiler is not affected)
3186 * [547]10819 testsuite creates CR+LF on compiler version lines in
3188 * [548]11612 abi_check not finding correct libgcc_s.so.1
3192 * [549]13211 using -###, incorrect warnings about unused linker file
3194 _________________________________________________________________
3196 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [550]gnu@gnu.org. There
3197 are also [551]other ways to contact the FSF.
3199 These pages are maintained by [552]the GCC team.
3202 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
3203 pages and the [553]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
3204 [554]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
3205 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
3206 to our developer mailing list at [555]gcc@gnu.org or
3207 [556]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [557]public archives.
3209 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
3210 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
3212 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
3213 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
3215 Last modified 2004-08-06 [558]Valid XHTML 1.0
3219 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html#3.3.3
3220 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.1/changes.html#obsolete_systems
3221 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html#obsolete_systems
3222 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/changes.html#nonnull_attribute
3223 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/dfa.html
3224 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.3/c99status.html
3225 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/g77/News.html
3226 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10140
3227 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10198
3228 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10338
3229 11. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR3581
3230 12. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4382
3231 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5533
3232 14. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6387
3233 15. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6412
3234 16. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6620
3235 17. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6663
3236 18. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7068
3237 19. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7083
3238 20. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7647
3239 21. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7675
3240 22. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7718
3241 23. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8116
3242 24. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8358
3243 25. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8511
3244 26. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8564
3245 27. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8660
3246 28. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8766
3247 29. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8803
3248 30. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8846
3249 31. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8906
3250 32. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9216
3251 33. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9261
3252 34. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9263
3253 35. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9429
3254 36. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9516
3255 37. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9600
3256 38. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9629
3257 39. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9672
3258 40. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9749
3259 41. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9794
3260 42. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9829
3261 43. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9916
3262 44. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9936
3263 45. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10262
3264 46. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10278
3265 47. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10446
3266 48. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10451
3267 49. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10506
3268 50. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10549
3269 51. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2001
3270 52. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2391
3271 53. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2960
3272 54. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4046
3273 55. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6405
3274 56. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6798
3275 57. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6871
3276 58. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6909
3277 59. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7189
3278 60. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7642
3279 61. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8634
3280 62. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8750
3281 63. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2161
3282 64. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4319
3283 65. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8602
3284 66. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9177
3285 67. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9853
3286 68. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR45
3287 69. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR3784
3288 70. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR764
3289 71. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5116
3290 72. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2862
3291 73. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR3663
3292 74. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR3797
3293 75. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR3948
3294 76. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4137
3295 77. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4361
3296 78. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4802
3297 79. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5837
3298 80. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4803
3299 81. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5094
3300 82. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5730
3301 83. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6713
3302 84. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7015
3303 85. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7086
3304 86. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7099
3305 87. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7247
3306 88. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7441
3307 89. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7768
3308 90. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7804
3309 91. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8099
3310 92. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8117
3311 93. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8205
3312 94. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8645
3313 95. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8724
3314 96. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8805
3315 97. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8691
3316 98. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8700
3317 99. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8724
3318 100. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8949
3319 101. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9016
3320 102. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9053
3321 103. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9152
3322 104. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9182
3323 105. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9297
3324 106. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9318
3325 107. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9320
3326 108. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9400
3327 109. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9424
3328 110. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9425
3329 111. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9439
3330 112. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9474
3331 113. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9548
3332 114. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#231
3333 115. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9555
3334 116. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9561
3335 117. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9563
3336 118. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9582
3337 119. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9622
3338 120. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9683
3339 121. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9791
3340 122. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9817
3341 123. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9825
3342 124. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9826
3343 125. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9924
3344 126. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9946
3345 127. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9964
3346 128. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9988
3347 129. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10033
3348 130. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10097
3349 131. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10132
3350 132. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10180
3351 133. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10199
3352 134. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10300
3353 135. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10427
3354 136. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10503
3355 137. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5956
3356 138. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR1832
3357 139. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR3924
3358 140. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5634
3359 141. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6367
3360 142. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6491
3361 143. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6742
3362 144. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7113
3363 145. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7236
3364 146. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7278
3365 147. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7384
3366 148. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7388
3367 149. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8587
3368 150. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9038
3369 151. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10197
3370 152. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6005
3371 153. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6389
3372 154. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6576
3373 155. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6652
3374 156. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7060
3375 157. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7073
3376 158. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7180
3377 159. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7416
3378 160. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7570
3379 161. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7578
3380 162. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7611
3381 163. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7709
3382 164. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7766
3383 165. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7785
3384 166. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7786
3385 167. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8142
3386 168. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8234
3387 169. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8415
3388 170. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8481
3389 171. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8593
3390 172. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8759
3391 173. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8997
3392 174. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9253
3393 175. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9254
3394 176. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9271
3395 177. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6767
3396 178. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9911
3397 179. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10020
3398 180. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10546
3399 181. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7029
3400 182. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2903
3401 183. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7873
3402 184. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7680
3403 185. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8705
3404 186. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9986
3405 187. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10056
3406 188. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6744
3407 189. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7361
3408 190. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9496
3409 191. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7067
3410 192. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8480
3411 193. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8784
3412 194. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10315
3413 195. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10267
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3415 197. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7926
3416 198. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8555
3417 199. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8994
3418 200. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9426
3419 201. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9806
3420 202. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10077
3421 203. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10233
3422 204. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10286
3423 205. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10308
3424 206. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11272
3425 207. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5754
3426 208. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6597
3427 209. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6949
3428 210. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7053
3429 211. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8164
3430 212. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8384
3431 213. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9559
3432 214. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9649
3433 215. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9864
3434 216. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10432
3435 217. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10475
3436 218. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10635
3437 219. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10661
3438 220. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10700
3439 221. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10712
3440 222. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10796
3441 223. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10890
3442 224. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10939
3443 225. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10956
3444 226. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11041
3445 227. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11059
3446 228. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11083
3447 229. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11105
3448 230. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11149
3449 231. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11228
3450 232. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11282
3451 233. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11301
3452 234. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11308
3453 235. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11473
3454 236. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11503
3455 237. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11513
3456 238. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11198
3457 239. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11304
3458 240. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11381
3459 241. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11536
3460 242. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11557
3461 243. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5897
3462 244. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11279
3463 245. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11022
3464 246. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2330
3465 247. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5388
3466 248. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5390
3467 249. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7877
3468 250. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9393
3469 251. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10032
3470 252. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10468
3471 253. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10527
3472 254. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10679
3473 255. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10682
3474 256. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10689
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3477 259. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10888
3478 260. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10929
3479 261. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10931
3480 262. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10940
3481 263. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10968
3482 264. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10990
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3487 269. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11137
3488 270. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11154
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3494 276. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11567
3495 277. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11645
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3500 282. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11349
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3502 284. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8878
3503 285. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9815
3504 286. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10402
3505 287. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10504
3506 288. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10673
3507 289. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11044
3508 290. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11089
3509 291. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11420
3510 292. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9362
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3553 335. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/
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3555 337. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9330
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3574 356. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12215
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3586 368. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12340
3587 369. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR3907
3588 370. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5293
3589 371. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5296
3590 372. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7939
3591 373. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8656
3592 374. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10147
3593 375. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11400
3594 376. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11409
3595 377. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11740
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3598 380. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11928
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3600 382. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12163
3601 383. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12181
3602 384. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12236
3603 385. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12266
3604 386. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12296
3605 387. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12298
3606 388. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12369
3607 389. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12337
3608 390. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12344
3609 391. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12451
3610 392. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12486
3611 393. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8869
3612 394. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9786
3613 395. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11689
3614 396. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12116
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3618 400. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11693
3619 401. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12224
3620 402. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11087
3621 403. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11319
3622 404. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11949
3623 405. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11662
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3626 408. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11717
3627 409. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11313
3628 410. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11712
3629 411. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12166
3630 412. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12101
3631 413. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10988
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3633 415. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11902
3634 416. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11903
3635 417. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/
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3637 419. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12399
3638 420. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13068
3639 421. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10060
3640 422. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10555
3641 423. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10706
3642 424. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11496
3643 425. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11741
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3645 427. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12632
3646 428. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12712
3647 429. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12726
3648 430. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12890
3649 431. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12900
3650 432. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13060
3651 433. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13289
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3653 435. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13392
3654 436. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13574
3655 437. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13475
3656 438. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13797
3657 439. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13824
3658 440. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8776
3659 441. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10339
3660 442. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11350
3661 443. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12826
3662 444. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12500
3663 445. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12941
3664 446. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12953
3665 447. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13041
3666 448. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13507
3667 449. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13382
3668 450. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13394
3669 451. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13400
3670 452. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13521
3671 453. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2094
3672 454. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2294
3673 455. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5050
3674 456. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9371
3675 457. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9546
3676 458. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10081
3677 459. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10093
3678 460. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#61
3679 461. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10095
3680 462. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11554
3681 463. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12297
3682 464. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12352
3683 465. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12438
3684 466. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12540
3685 467. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12594
3686 468. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#60
3687 469. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#63
3688 470. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12657
3689 471. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#292
3690 472. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12696
3691 473. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12815
3692 474. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12862
3693 475. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12926
3694 476. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12967
3695 477. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html
3696 478. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12971
3697 479. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html#328
3698 480. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13007
3699 481. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13009
3700 482. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13057
3701 483. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13070
3702 484. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13081
3703 485. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13239
3704 486. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13262
3705 487. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13290
3706 488. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13323
3707 489. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13369
3708 490. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13371
3709 491. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13445
3710 492. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13461
3711 493. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13462
3712 494. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13478
3713 495. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13544
3714 496. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13650
3715 497. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13683
3716 498. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13688
3717 499. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13774
3718 500. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13884
3719 501. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10746
3720 502. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11433
3721 503. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12633
3722 504. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13037
3723 505. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13213
3724 506. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4490
3725 507. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12292
3726 508. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12441
3727 509. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12943
3728 510. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13608
3729 511. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11598
3730 512. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11793
3731 513. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12467
3732 514. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12537
3733 515. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12496
3734 516. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12865
3735 517. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13354
3736 518. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10467
3737 519. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11226
3738 520. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11227
3739 521. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12644
3740 522. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13149
3741 523. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12654
3742 524. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12965
3743 525. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13031
3744 526. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11634
3745 527. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12158
3746 528. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11992
3747 529. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9365
3748 530. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10392
3749 531. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11322
3750 532. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13069
3751 533. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13302
3752 534. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13585
3753 535. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8916
3754 536. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11576
3755 537. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13122
3756 538. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13256
3757 539. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13373
3758 540. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12561
3759 541. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6243
3760 542. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11397
3761 543. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12505
3762 544. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13150
3763 545. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12666
3764 546. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR12969
3765 547. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10819
3766 548. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11612
3767 549. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13211
3768 550. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
3769 551. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
3770 552. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
3771 553. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
3772 554. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
3773 555. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
3774 556. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
3775 557. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
3776 558. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
3777 ======================================================================
3778 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/index.html
3780 GCC 3.2 Release Series
3784 The [1]GNU project and the GCC developers are pleased to announce the
3785 release of GCC 3.2.3.
3787 The purpose of the GCC 3.2 release series is to provide a stable
3788 platform for OS distributors to use building their next releases. A
3789 primary objective was to stabilize the C++ ABI; we believe that the
3790 interface to the compiler and the C++ standard library are now
3793 Be aware that C++ code compiled by GCC 3.2.x will (in general) not
3794 interoperate with code compiled by GCC 3.1.1 or earlier.
3796 Please refer to our [2]detailed list of news, caveats, and bug-fixes
3797 for further information.
3802 April 25, 2003 ([3]changes)
3805 February 5, 2003 ([4]changes)
3808 November 19, 2002 ([5]changes)
3811 August 14, 2002 ([6]changes)
3813 References and Acknowledgements
3815 GCC used to stand for the GNU C Compiler, but since the compiler
3816 supports several other languages aside from C, it now stands for the
3817 GNU Compiler Collection.
3819 A list of [7]successful builds is updated as new information becomes
3822 The GCC developers would like to thank the numerous people that have
3823 contributed new features, improvements, bug fixes, and other changes
3824 as well as test results to GCC. This [8]amazing group of volunteers is
3825 what makes GCC successful.
3827 For additional information about GCC please refer to the [9]GCC
3828 project web site or contact the [10]GCC development mailing list.
3830 To obtain GCC please use [11]our mirror sites, one of the [12]GNU
3831 mirror sites, or [13]our CVS server.
3832 _________________________________________________________________
3834 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [14]gnu@gnu.org. There
3835 are also [15]other ways to contact the FSF.
3837 These pages are maintained by [16]the GCC team.
3840 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
3841 pages and the [17]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
3842 [18]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
3843 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
3844 to our developer mailing list at [19]gcc@gnu.org or
3845 [20]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [21]public archives.
3847 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
3848 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
3850 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
3851 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
3853 Last modified 2004-08-06 [22]Valid XHTML 1.0
3857 1. http://www.gnu.org/
3858 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/changes.html
3859 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/changes.html#3.2.3
3860 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/changes.html#3.2.2
3861 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/changes.html#3.2.1
3862 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/changes.html#3.2
3863 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/buildstat.html
3864 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html
3865 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/index.html
3866 10. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
3867 11. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
3868 12. http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html
3869 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/cvs.html
3870 14. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
3871 15. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
3872 16. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
3873 17. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
3874 18. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
3875 19. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
3876 20. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
3877 21. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
3878 22. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
3879 ======================================================================
3880 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/changes.html
3882 GCC 3.2 Release Series
3883 Changes, New Features, and Fixes
3885 The latest release in the 3.2 release series is [1]GCC 3.2.3.
3887 Caveats and New Features
3891 * The C++ compiler does not correctly zero-initialize
3892 pointers-to-data members. You must explicitly initialize them. For
3893 example: int S::*m(0); will work, but depending on
3894 default-initialization to zero will not work. This bug cannot be
3895 fixed in GCC 3.2 without inducing unacceptable risks. It will be
3897 * This GCC release is based on the GCC 3.1 sourcebase, and thus has
3898 all the [2]changes in the GCC 3.1 series. In addition, GCC 3.2 has
3899 a number of C++ ABI fixes which make its C++ compiler generate
3900 binary code which is incompatible with the C++ compilers found in
3901 earlier GCC releases, including GCC 3.1 and GCC 3.1.1.
3903 Frontend Enhancements
3907 * The method of constructing the list of directories to be searched
3908 for header files has been revised. If a directory named by a -I
3909 option is a standard system include directory, the option is
3910 ignored to ensure that the default search order for system
3911 directories and the special treatment of system header files are
3913 * The C and Objective-C compilers no longer accept the "Naming
3914 Types" extension (typedef foo = bar); it was already unavailable
3915 in C++. Code which uses it will need to be changed to use the
3916 "typeof" extension instead: typedef typeof(bar) foo. (We have
3917 removed this extension without a period of deprecation because it
3918 has caused the compiler to crash since version 3.0 and no one
3919 noticed until very recently. Thus we conclude it is not in
3924 * GCC 3.2 fixed serveral differences between the C++ ABI implemented
3925 in GCC and the multi-vendor standard, but more have been found
3926 since the release. 3.2.1 adds a new warning, -Wabi, to warn about
3927 code which is affected by these bugs. We will fix these bugs in
3928 some future release, once we are confident that all have been
3929 found; until then, it is our intention to make changes to the ABI
3930 only if they are necessary for correct compilation of C++, as
3931 opposed to conformance to the ABI documents.
3932 * For details on how to build an ABI compliant compiler for
3933 GNU/Linux systems, check the [3]common C++ ABI page.
3935 New Targets and Target Specific Improvements
3939 * Fixed a number of bugs in SSE and MMX intrinsics.
3940 * Fixed common compiler crashes with SSE instruction set enabled
3941 (implied by -march=pentium3, pentium4, athlon-xp)
3942 * __m128 and __m128i is not 128bit aligned when used in structures.
3946 * A bug whereby the compiler could generate bad code for bzero has
3948 * ABI fixes (implying ABI incompatibilities with previous version in
3950 * Fixed prefetch code generation
3951 _________________________________________________________________
3955 3.2.3 is a bug fix release only; there are no new features that were
3956 not present in GCC 3.2.2.
3960 This section lists the problem reports (PRs) from GCC's bug tracking
3961 system that are known to be fixed in the 3.2.3 release. This list
3962 might not be complete (that is, it is possible that some PRs that have
3963 been fixed are not listed here), and some of the titles have been
3964 changed to make them more clear.
3966 Internal Compiler Errors (multi-platform)
3968 * [4]3782: (c++) -quiet -fstats produces a segmentation fault in
3970 * [5]6440: (c++) template specializations cause ICE
3971 * [6]7050: (c++) ICE on: (i ? get_string() : throw)
3972 * [7]7741: ICE on conflicting types (make_decl_rtl in varasm.c)
3973 * [8]7982: (c++) ICE due to infinite recursion (using STL set)
3974 * [9]8068: exceedingly high (infinite) memory usage
3975 * [10]8178: ICE with __builtin_ffs
3976 * [11]8396: ICE in copy_to_mode_reg, in explow.c
3977 * [12]8674: (c++) ICE in cp_expr_size, in cp/cp-lang.c
3978 * [13]9768: ICE when optimizing inline code at -O2
3979 * [14]9798: (c++) Infinite recursion (segfault) in
3980 cp/decl.c:push_using_directive with recursive using directives
3981 * [15]9799: mismatching structure initializer with nested flexible
3983 * [16]9928: ICE on duplicate enum declaration
3984 * [17]10114: ICE in mem_loc_descriptor, in dwarf2out.c (affects
3986 * [18]10352: ICE in find_reloads_toplev
3987 * [19]10336: ICE with -Wunreachable-code
3991 * [20]8224: Incorrect joining of signed and unsigned division
3992 * [21]8613: -O2 produces wrong code with builtin strlen and
3994 * [22]8828: gcc reports some code is unreachable when it is not
3995 * [23]9226: GCSE breaking argument passing
3996 * [24]9853: miscompilation of non-constant structure initializer
3997 * [25]9797: C99-style struct initializers are miscompiled
3998 * [26]9967: Some standard C function calls should not be replaced
3999 when optimizing for size
4000 * [27]10116: ce2: invalid merge of join_bb in the context of switch
4002 * [28]10171: wrong code for inlined function
4003 * [29]10175: -Wunreachable-code doesn't work for single lines
4005 C++ compiler and library:
4007 * [30]8316: Confusing diagnostic for code that misuses conversion
4009 * [31]9169: filebuf output fails if codecvt<>::out returns noconv
4010 * [32]9420: incomplete type incorrectly reported
4011 * [33]9459: typeof in return type specification of template not
4013 * [34]9507: filebuf::open handles ios_base::ate incorrectly
4014 * [35]9538: Out-of-bounds memory access in streambuf::sputbackc
4015 * [36]9602: Total confusion about template/friend/virtual/abstract
4016 * [37]9993: destructor not called for local object created within
4017 and returned from infinite loop
4018 * [38]10167: ieee_1003.1-2001 locale specialisations on a
4021 Java compiler and library:
4023 * [39]9652: libgcj build fails on irix6.5.1[78]
4024 * [40]10144: gas on solaris complains about bad .stabs lines for
4025 java, native as unaffected
4027 x86-specific (Intel/AMD):
4029 * [41]8746: gcc miscompiles Linux kernel ppa driver on x86
4030 * [42]9888: -mcpu=k6 -Os produces out of range loop instructions
4031 * [43]9638: Cross-build for target i386-elf and i586-pc-linux-gnu
4033 * [44]9954: Cross-build for target i586-pc-linux-gnu (--with-newlib)
4038 * [45]7784: [Sparc] ICE in extract_insn, in recog.c
4039 * [46]7796: sparc extra failure with -m64 on execute/930921-1.c in
4041 * [47]8281: ICE when compiling with -O2 -fPIC for Ultrasparc
4042 * [48]8366: [Sparc] C testsuite failure with -m64 -fpic -O in
4044 * [49]8726: gcc -O2 miscompiles Samba 2.2.7 on 32-bit sparc
4045 * [50]9414: Scheduling bug on Ultrasparc
4046 * [51]10067: GCC-3.2.2 outputs invalid asm on sparc64
4050 * [52]7248: broken "inclusive or" code
4051 * [53]8343: m68k-elf/rtems ICE at instantiate_virtual_regs_1
4055 * [54]9732: Wrong code with -O2 -fPIC
4056 * [55]10073: ICE: powerpc cannot split insn
4060 * [56]7702: optimization problem on a DEC alpha under OSF1
4061 * [57]9671: gcc.3.2.2 does not build on a HP Tru64 Unix v5.1B system
4065 * [58]8694: <string> breaks <ctype.h> on HP-UX 10.20 (DUP: 9275)
4066 * [59]9953: (ada) gcc 3.2.x can't build 3.3-branch ada on HP-UX 10
4068 * [60]10271: Floating point args don't get reloaded across function
4073 * [61]6362: mips-irix6 gcc-3.1 C testsuite failure with -mips4 in
4078 * [62]10377: gcc-3.2.2 creates bad assembler code for cris
4080 Miscellaneous and minor bugs:
4082 * [63]6955: collect2 says "core dumped" when there is no core
4083 _________________________________________________________________
4087 Beginning with 3.2.2, GCC's Makefile suite supports redirection of
4088 make install by means of the DESTDIR variable. Parts of the GCC tree
4089 have featured that support long before, but now it is available even
4092 Other than that, GCC 3.2.2 is a bug fix release only; there are no new
4093 features that were not present in GCC 3.2.1.
4097 On the following i386-based systems GCC 3.2.1 broke the C ABI wrt.
4098 functions returning structures: Cygwin, FreeBSD (GCC 3.2.1 as shipped
4099 with FreeBSD 5.0 does not have this problem), Interix, a.out-based
4100 Linux and NetBSD, OpenBSD, and Darwin. GCC 3.2.2 reverts this ABI
4101 change, and thus restores ABI-compatibility with previous releases
4102 (except GCC 3.2.1) on these platforms.
4104 This section lists the problem reports (PRs) from GCC's bug tracking
4105 system that are known to be fixed in the 3.2.2 release. This list
4106 might not be complete (that is, it is possible that some PRs that have
4107 been fixed are not listed here) and some of the titles have been
4108 changed to make them more clear.
4110 Internal Compiler Errors (multi-platform)
4112 * [64]5919: (c++) ICE when passing variable array to template
4114 * [65]7129: (c++) ICE with min/max assignment operators (<?= and
4116 * [66]7507: ICE with -O2 when address of called function is a
4117 complicated expression
4118 * [67]7622: ICE with nested inline functions if function's address
4120 * [68]7681: (fortran) ICE in compensate_edge, in reg-stack.c (also
4122 * [70]8031: (c++) ICE in code comparing typeids and casting from
4124 * [71]8275: ICE in simplify_subreg
4125 * [72]8332: (c++) builtin strlen/template interaction causes ICE
4126 * [73]8372: (c++) ICE on explicit call of destructor
4127 * [74]8439: (c, not c++) empty struct causes ICE
4128 * [75]8442: (c++) ICE with nested template classes
4129 * [76]8518: ICE when compiling mplayer ("extern inline" issue)
4130 * [77]8615: (c++) ICE with out-of-range character constant template
4132 * [78]8663: (c++) ICE in cp_expr_size, at cp-lang.c:307
4133 * [79]8799: (c++) ICE: error reporting routines re-entered
4134 * [80]9328: (c++) ICE with typeof(X) for overloaded X
4135 * [81]9465: (preprocessor) cpp -traditional ICE on null bytes
4137 C++ (compiler and library) bugs
4139 * [82]47: scoping in nested classes is broken
4140 * [83]6745: problems with iostream rdbuf() member function
4141 * [84]8214: conversion from const char* const to char* sometimes
4143 * [85]8493: builtin strlen and overload resolution (same bug as
4145 * [87]8503: strange behaviour of function types
4146 * [88]8727: compiler confused by inheritance from an anonymous
4148 * [89]7445: poor performance of std::locale::classic() in
4149 multi-threaded applications
4150 * [90]8230: mishandling of overflow in vector<T>::resize
4151 * [91]8399: sync_with_stdio(false) breaks unformatted input
4152 * [92]8662: illegal access of private member of unnamed class is
4154 * [93]8707: "make distclean" fails in libstdc++-v3 directory
4155 * [94]8708: __USE_MALLOC doesn't work
4156 * [95]8790: Use of non-thread-safe strtok in src/localename.cc
4157 * [96]8887: Bug in date formats with --enable-clocale=generic
4158 * [97]9076: Call Frame Instructions are not handled correctly during
4160 * [98]9151: std::setprecision limited to 16 digits when outputting a
4162 * [99]9168: codecvt<char, char, mbstate_t> overwrites output buffers
4163 * [100]9269: libstdc++ headers: explicit specialization of function
4164 must precede its first use
4165 * [101]9322: return value of basic_streambuf<>::getloc affected by
4167 * [102]9433: segfault in runtime support for dynamic_cast
4169 C and optimizer bugs
4171 * [103]8032: GCC incorrectly initializes static structs that have
4173 * [104]8639: simple arithmetic expression broken
4174 * [105]8794: optimization improperly eliminates certain expressions
4175 * [106]8832: traditional "asm volatile" code is illegally optimized
4176 * [107]8988: loop optimizer bug: with -O2, code is generated that
4177 segfaults (found on i386, bug present for all platforms)
4178 * [108]9492: structure copy clobbers subsequent stores to structure
4182 * [109]9267: Objective-C parser won't build with newer bison
4183 versions (e.g. 1.875)
4187 * [110]8344: Ada build problem due to conflict between gcc/final.o,
4192 * [111]8524: _Pragma within macros is improperly expanded
4193 * [112]8880: __WCHAR_TYPE__ macro incorrectly set to "long int" with
4198 * [113]9090: arm ICE with >= -O2; regression from gcc-2.95
4200 x86-specific (Intel/AMD)
4202 * [114]8588: ICE in extract_insn, at recog.c:NNNN (shift
4204 * [115]8599: loop unroll bug with -march=k6-3
4205 * [116]9506: ABI breakage in structure return (affects BSD and
4206 Cygwin, but not GNU/Linux)
4208 FreeBSD 5.0 specific
4210 * [117]9484: GCC 3.2.1 Bootstrap failure on FreeBSD 5.0
4214 * [118]9292: hppa1.1-rtems configurery problems
4215 * [119]9293: [m68k-elf/rtems] config/m68k/t-crtstuff bug
4216 * [120]9295: [mips-rtems] config/mips/rtems.h init/fini issue
4217 * [121]9296: gthr-rtems regression
4218 * [122]9316: powerpc-rtems: extending multilibs
4222 * [123]9493: ICE with -O2 when building a simple function
4226 * [124]7341: hyperlink to gcov in GCC documentation doesn't work
4227 * [125]8947: Please add a warning about "-malign-double" in docs
4228 * [126]7448, [127]8882: typo cleanups
4229 _________________________________________________________________
4233 3.2.1 adds a new warning, -Wabi. This option warns when GNU C++
4234 generates code that is known not to be binary-compatible with the
4235 vendor-neutral ia32/ia64 ABI. Please consult the GCC manual, included
4236 in the distribution, for details.
4238 This release also removes an old GCC extension, "naming types", and
4239 the documentation now directs users to use a different GCC extension,
4240 __typeof__, instead. The feature had evidently been broken for a
4243 Otherwise, 3.2.1 is a bug fix release only; other than bug fixes and
4244 the new warning there are no new features that were not present in GCC
4247 In addition, the previous fix for [128]PR 7445 (poor performance of
4248 std::locale::classic() in multi-threaded applications) was reverted
4249 ("unfixed"), because the "fix" was not thread-safe.
4253 This section lists the problem reports (PRs) from GCC's bug tracking
4254 system that are known to be fixed in the 3.2.1 release. This list
4255 might not be complete (that is, it is possible that some PRs that have
4256 been fixed are not listed here). As you can see, the number of bug
4257 fixes is quite large, so it is strongly recommended that users of
4258 earlier GCC 3.x releases upgrade to GCC 3.2.1.
4260 Internal Compiler Errors (multi-platform)
4262 * [129]2521: (c++) ICE in build_ptrmemfunc, in cp/typeck.c
4263 * [130]5661: (c++) ICE instantiating template on array of unknown
4265 * [131]6419: (c++) ICE in make_decl_rtl for "longest" attribute on
4267 * [132]6994: (c++) ICE in find_function_data
4268 * [133]7150: preprocessor: GCC -dM -E gives an ICE
4269 * [134]7160: ICE when optimizing branches without a return value
4270 * [135]7228: (c++) ICE when using member template and template
4272 * [136]7266: (c++) ICE with -pedantic on missing typename
4273 * [137]7353: ICE from use of "Naming Types" extension, see above
4274 * [138]7411: ICE in instantiate_virtual_regs_1, in function.c
4275 * [139]7478: (c++) ICE on static_cast inside template
4276 * [140]7526: preprocessor core dump when _Pragma implies #pragma
4278 * [141]7721: (c++) ICE on simple (but incorrect) template ([142]7803
4280 * [143]7754: (c++) ICE on union with template parameter
4281 * [144]7788: (c++) redeclaring a definition as an incomplete class
4283 * [145]8031: (c++) ICE in comptypes, in cp/typeck.c
4284 * [146]8055: preprocessor dies with SIG11 when building FreeBSD
4286 * [147]8067: (c++) ICE due to mishandling of __FUNCTION__ and
4288 * [148]8134: (c++) ICE in force_store_init_value on legal code
4289 * [149]8149: (c++) ICE on incomplete type
4290 * [150]8160: (c++) ICE in build_modify_expr, in cp/typeck.c: array
4293 C++ (compiler and library) bugs
4295 * [151]5607: No pointer adjustment in covariant return types
4296 * [152]6579: Infinite loop with statement expressions in member
4298 * [153]6803: Default copy constructor bug in GCC 3.1
4299 * [154]7176: g++ confused by friend and static member with same name
4300 * [155]7188: Segfault with template class and recursive (incorrect)
4302 * [156]7306: Regression: GCC 3.x fails to compile code with virtual
4303 inheritance if a method has a variable number of arguments
4304 * [157]7461: ctype<char>::classic_table() returns offset array on
4306 * [158]7524: f(const float arg[3]) fails
4307 * [159]7584: Erroneous ambiguous base error on using declaration
4308 * [160]7676: Member template overloading problem
4309 * [161]7679: infinite loop when a right parenthesis is missing
4310 * [162]7811: default locale not taken from environment
4311 * [163]7961: compare( char *) implemented incorrectly in
4313 * [164]8071: basic_ostream::operator<<(streambuf*) loops forever if
4314 streambuf::underflow() leaves gptr() NULL (dups: [165]8127,
4316 * [167]8096: deque::at() throws std::range_error instead of
4318 * [168]8127: cout << cin.rdbuf() infinite loop
4319 * [169]8218: Excessively large memory consumed for classes with
4321 * [170]8287: GCC 3.2: Destructor called for non-constructed local
4323 * [171]8347: empty vector range used in string construction causes
4325 * [172]8348: fail() flag is set in istringstream when eof() flag is
4327 * [173]8391: regression: infinite loop in cp/decl2.c(finish_file)
4329 C and optimizer bugs
4331 * [174]6627: -fno-align-functions doesn't seem to disable function
4333 * [175]6631: life_analysis misoptimizes code to initialize fields of
4335 * [176]7102: unsigned char division results in floating exception
4336 * [177]7120: Run once loop should *always* be unrolled
4338 * [178]7209: Bug involving array referencing and ?: operator
4339 * [179]7515: invalid inlining of global function with -O3
4340 * [180]7814: incorrect scheduling for glibc-2.2.92 strcpy test
4341 * [181]8467: bug in sibling call optimization
4345 * [182]4890: incorrect line markers from the traditional
4347 * [183]7357: -M option omits system headers files (making it the
4349 * [184]7358: Changes to Sun's make Dependencies
4350 * [185]7602: C++ header files found in CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH treated as
4352 * [186]7862: Interrupting GCC -MD removes .d file but not .o
4353 * [187]8190: Failed compilation deletes -MD dependency file
4354 * [188]8524: _Pragma within macro is improperly expanded
4356 x86 specific (Intel/AMD)
4358 * [189]5351: (i686-only) function pass-by-value structure copy
4359 corrupts stack ([190]7591 is a duplicate)
4360 * [191]6845, [192]7034, [193]7124, [194]7174: ICE's with
4361 -march=pentium3/pentium2/athlon (these are all the same underlying
4362 bug, in MMX register use)
4363 * [195]7134, [196]7375, [197]7390: ICE with -march=athlon (maybe
4365 * [198]6890: xmmintrin.h, _MM_TRANSPOSE4_PS is broken
4366 * [199]6981: wrong code in 64-bit manipulation on x86
4367 * [200]7242: GCC -mcpu=pentium[23] doesn't define
4368 __tune_pentiumpro__ macro
4369 * [201]7396: ix86: cmpgt_ss, cmpge_ss, cmpngt_ss, and cmpnge_ss SSE
4370 intrinsics are broken
4371 * [202]7630: GCC 3.2 breaks on Mozilla 1.0's JS sources with
4373 * [203]7693: Typo in i386 mmintrin.h header
4374 * [204]7723: ICE - Pentium3 sse - GCC 3.2
4375 * [205]7951: ICE on -march=pentium4 -O2 -mfpmath=sse
4376 * [206]8146: (i686 only) gcc 3.2 miscompiles gcc 2.95.3
4380 * [207]5967: GCC bug when profiling nested functions on powerpc
4381 * [208]6984: wrong code generated with -O2, -O3, -Os for do-while
4383 * [209]7114: PowerPC: ICE building strcoll.op from glibc-2.2.5
4384 * [210]7130: miscompiled code for GCC-3.1 in powerpc linux with
4386 * [211]7133: PowerPC ICE: unrecognizable insn
4387 * [212]7380: ICE in extract_insn, at recog.c:2148
4388 * [213]8252: ICE on Altivec code with optimization turned on
4389 * [214]8451: Altivec ICE in GCC 3.2
4393 * [215]7250: __ashrdi3 returns wrong value on 32 bit hppa
4397 * [216]6668: when using --disable-multilib, libgcc_s.so is installed
4398 in the wrong place on sparc-solaris
4399 * [217]7151: ICE when compiling for UltraSPARC
4400 * [218]7335: SPARC: ICE in verify_wide_reg (flow.c:557) with long
4402 * [219]7842: [REGRESSION] SPARC code gen bug
4406 * [220]7856: [arm] invalid offset in constant pool reference
4407 * [221]7967: optimization produces wrong code (ARM)
4411 * [222]7374: __builtin_fabsl broken on alpha
4415 * [223]7370: ICE in fixup_var_refs_1 on s390x
4416 * [224]7409: loop optimization bug on s390x-linux-gnu
4417 * [225]8232: s390x: ICE when using bcmp with int length argument
4421 * [226]7623: SCO OpenServer build fails with machmode.def: undefined
4422 symbol: BITS_PER_UNIT
4424 m68k/Coldfire specific
4426 * [227]8314: crtbegin, crtend need to be multilib'ed for this
4431 * [228]761: Document some undocumented options
4432 * [229]5610: Fix documentation about invoking SSE instructions
4434 * [230]7484: List -Wmissing-declarations as C-only option
4435 * [231]7531: -mcmodel not documented for x86-64
4436 * [232]8120: Update documentation of bad use of ##
4437 _________________________________________________________________
4441 3.2 is a small bug fix release, but there is a change to the
4442 application binary interface (ABI), hence the change to the second
4443 part of the version number.
4445 The main purpose of the 3.2 release is to correct a couple of problems
4446 in the C++ ABI, with the intention of providing a stable interface
4447 going forward. Accordingly, 3.2 is only a small change to 3.1.1.
4453 * [233]7320: g++ 3.2 relocation problem
4454 * [234]7470: vtable: virtual function pointers not in declaration
4459 * [235]6410: Trouble with non-ASCII monetary symbols and wchar_t
4460 * [236]6503, [237]6642, [238]7186: Problems with comparing or
4461 subtracting various types of const and non-const iterators
4462 * [239]7216: ambiguity with basic_iostream::traits_type
4463 * [240]7220: problem with basic_istream::ignore(0,delimiter)
4464 * [241]7222: locale::operator==() doesn't work on std::locale("")
4465 * [242]7286: placement operator delete issue
4466 * [243]7442: cxxabi.h does not match the C++ ABI
4467 * [244]7445: poor performance of std::locale::classic() in
4468 multi-threaded applications
4472 * [245]7291: off-by-one in generated inline bzero code for x86-64
4473 _________________________________________________________________
4475 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [246]gnu@gnu.org. There
4476 are also [247]other ways to contact the FSF.
4478 These pages are maintained by [248]the GCC team.
4481 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
4482 pages and the [249]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
4483 [250]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
4484 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
4485 to our developer mailing list at [251]gcc@gnu.org or
4486 [252]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [253]public archives.
4488 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
4489 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
4491 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
4492 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
4494 Last modified 2004-08-30 [254]Valid XHTML 1.0
4498 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/changes.html#3.2.3
4499 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.1/changes.html
4500 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.2/c++-abi.html
4501 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR3782
4502 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6440
4503 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7050
4504 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7741
4505 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7982
4506 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8068
4507 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8178
4508 11. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8396
4509 12. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8674
4510 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9768
4511 14. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9798
4512 15. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9799
4513 16. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9928
4514 17. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10114
4515 18. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10352
4516 19. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10336
4517 20. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8224
4518 21. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8613
4519 22. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8828
4520 23. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9226
4521 24. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9853
4522 25. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9797
4523 26. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9967
4524 27. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10116
4525 28. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10171
4526 29. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10175
4527 30. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8316
4528 31. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9169
4529 32. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9420
4530 33. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9459
4531 34. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9507
4532 35. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9538
4533 36. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9602
4534 37. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9993
4535 38. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10167
4536 39. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9652
4537 40. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10144
4538 41. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8746
4539 42. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9888
4540 43. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9638
4541 44. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9954
4542 45. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7784
4543 46. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7796
4544 47. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8281
4545 48. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8366
4546 49. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8726
4547 50. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9414
4548 51. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10067
4549 52. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7248
4550 53. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8343
4551 54. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9732
4552 55. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10073
4553 56. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7702
4554 57. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9671
4555 58. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8694
4556 59. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9953
4557 60. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10271
4558 61. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6362
4559 62. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR10377
4560 63. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6955
4561 64. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5919
4562 65. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7129
4563 66. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7507
4564 67. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7622
4565 68. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7681
4566 69. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9528
4567 70. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8031
4568 71. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8275
4569 72. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8332
4570 73. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8372
4571 74. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8439
4572 75. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8442
4573 76. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8518
4574 77. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8615
4575 78. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8663
4576 79. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8799
4577 80. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9328
4578 81. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9465
4579 82. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR47
4580 83. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6745
4581 84. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8214
4582 85. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8493
4583 86. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8332
4584 87. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8503
4585 88. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8727
4586 89. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7445
4587 90. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8230
4588 91. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8399
4589 92. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8662
4590 93. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8707
4591 94. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8708
4592 95. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8790
4593 96. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8887
4594 97. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9076
4595 98. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9151
4596 99. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9168
4597 100. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9269
4598 101. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9322
4599 102. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9433
4600 103. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8032
4601 104. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8639
4602 105. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8794
4603 106. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8832
4604 107. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8988
4605 108. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9492
4606 109. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9267
4607 110. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8344
4608 111. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8524
4609 112. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8880
4610 113. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9090
4611 114. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8588
4612 115. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8599
4613 116. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9506
4614 117. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9484
4615 118. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9292
4616 119. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9293
4617 120. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9295
4618 121. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9296
4619 122. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9316
4620 123. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR9493
4621 124. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7341
4622 125. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8947
4623 126. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7448
4624 127. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8882
4625 128. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7445
4626 129. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR2521
4627 130. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5661
4628 131. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6419
4629 132. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6994
4630 133. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7150
4631 134. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7160
4632 135. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7228
4633 136. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7266
4634 137. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7353
4635 138. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7411
4636 139. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7478
4637 140. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7526
4638 141. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7721
4639 142. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7803
4640 143. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7754
4641 144. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7788
4642 145. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8031
4643 146. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8055
4644 147. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8067
4645 148. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8134
4646 149. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8149
4647 150. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8160
4648 151. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5607
4649 152. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6579
4650 153. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6803
4651 154. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7176
4652 155. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7188
4653 156. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7306
4654 157. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7461
4655 158. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7524
4656 159. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7584
4657 160. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7676
4658 161. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7679
4659 162. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7811
4660 163. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7961
4661 164. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8071
4662 165. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8127
4663 166. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6745
4664 167. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8096
4665 168. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8127
4666 169. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8218
4667 170. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8287
4668 171. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8347
4669 172. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8348
4670 173. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8391
4671 174. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6627
4672 175. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6631
4673 176. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7102
4674 177. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7120
4675 178. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7209
4676 179. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7515
4677 180. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7814
4678 181. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8467
4679 182. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR4890
4680 183. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7357
4681 184. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7358
4682 185. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7602
4683 186. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7862
4684 187. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8190
4685 188. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8524
4686 189. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5351
4687 190. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7591
4688 191. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6845
4689 192. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7034
4690 193. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7124
4691 194. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7174
4692 195. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7134
4693 196. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7375
4694 197. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7390
4695 198. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6890
4696 199. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6981
4697 200. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7242
4698 201. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7396
4699 202. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7630
4700 203. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7693
4701 204. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7723
4702 205. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7951
4703 206. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8146
4704 207. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5967
4705 208. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6984
4706 209. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7114
4707 210. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7130
4708 211. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7133
4709 212. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7380
4710 213. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8252
4711 214. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8451
4712 215. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7250
4713 216. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6668
4714 217. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7151
4715 218. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7335
4716 219. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7842
4717 220. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7856
4718 221. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7967
4719 222. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7374
4720 223. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7370
4721 224. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7409
4722 225. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8232
4723 226. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7623
4724 227. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8314
4725 228. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR761
4726 229. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR5610
4727 230. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7484
4728 231. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7531
4729 232. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR8120
4730 233. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7320
4731 234. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7470
4732 235. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6410
4733 236. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6503
4734 237. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR6642
4735 238. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7186
4736 239. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7216
4737 240. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7220
4738 241. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7222
4739 242. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7286
4740 243. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7442
4741 244. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7445
4742 245. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR7291
4743 246. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
4744 247. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
4745 248. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
4746 249. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
4747 250. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
4748 251. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
4749 252. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
4750 253. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
4751 254. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
4752 ======================================================================
4753 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.1/index.html
4759 The [1]GNU project and the GCC developers are pleased to announce the
4760 release of GCC 3.1.1.
4762 The links below still apply to GCC 3.1.1.
4766 The [2]GNU project and the GCC developers are pleased to announce the
4769 GCC used to stand for the GNU C Compiler, but since the compiler
4770 supports several other languages aside from C, it now stands for the
4771 GNU Compiler Collection.
4773 A list of [3]successful builds is updated as new information becomes
4776 The GCC developers would like to thank the numerous people that have
4777 contributed [4]new features, improvements, bug fixes, and other
4778 changes as well as test results to GCC. This [5]amazing group of
4779 volunteers is what makes GCC successful.
4781 For additional information about GCC please refer to the [6]GCC
4782 project web site or contact the [7]GCC development mailing list.
4784 To obtain GCC please use [8]our mirror sites, one of the [9]GNU mirror
4785 sites, or [10]our CVS server.
4786 _________________________________________________________________
4787 _________________________________________________________________
4789 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [11]gnu@gnu.org. There
4790 are also [12]other ways to contact the FSF.
4792 These pages are maintained by [13]the GCC team.
4795 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
4796 pages and the [14]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
4797 [15]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
4798 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
4799 to our developer mailing list at [16]gcc@gnu.org or
4800 [17]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [18]public archives.
4802 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
4803 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
4805 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
4806 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
4808 Last modified 2004-08-06 [19]Valid XHTML 1.0
4812 1. http://www.gnu.org/
4813 2. http://www.gnu.org/
4814 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.1/buildstat.html
4815 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.1/changes.html
4816 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html
4817 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/index.html
4818 7. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
4819 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
4820 9. http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html
4821 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/cvs.html
4822 11. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
4823 12. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
4824 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
4825 14. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
4826 15. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
4827 16. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
4828 17. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
4829 18. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
4830 19. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
4831 ======================================================================
4832 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.1/changes.html
4834 GCC 3.1 Release Series
4835 Changes, New Features, and Fixes
4837 Additional changes in GCC 3.1.1
4839 * A bug related to how structures and unions are returned has been
4840 fixed for powerpc-*-netbsd*.
4841 * An important bug in the implementation of -fprefetch-loop-arrays
4842 has been fixed. Previously the optimization prefetched random
4843 blocks of memory for most targets except for i386.
4844 * The Java compiler now compiles Java programs much faster and also
4845 works with parallel make.
4846 * Nested functions have been fixed for mips*-*-netbsd*.
4847 * Some missing floating point support routines have beed added for
4849 * This [1]message gives additional information about the bugs fixed
4854 * The -traditional C compiler option has been deprecated and will be
4855 removed in GCC 3.3. (It remains possible to preprocess non-C code
4856 with the traditional preprocessor.)
4857 * The default debugging format for most ELF platforms (including
4858 GNU/Linux and FreeBSD; notable exception is Solaris) has changed
4859 from stabs to DWARF2. This requires GDB 5.1.1 or later.
4861 General Optimizer Improvements
4863 * Jan Hubicka, SuSE Labs, together with Richard Henderson, Red Hat,
4864 and Andreas Jaeger, SuSE Labs, has contributed [2]infrastructure
4865 for profile driven optimizations.
4866 Options -fprofile-arcs and -fbranch-probabilities can now be used
4867 to improve speed of the generated code by profiling the actual
4868 program behaviour on typical runs. In the absence of profile info
4869 the compiler attempts to guess the profile statically.
4870 * [3]SPEC2000 and SPEC95 benchmark suites are now used daily to
4871 monitor performance of the generated code.
4872 According to the SPECInt2000 results on an AMD Athlon CPU, the
4873 code generated by GCC 3.1 is 6% faster on the average (8.2% faster
4874 with profile feedback) compared to GCC 3.0. The code produced by
4875 GCC 3.0 is about 2.1% faster compared to 2.95.3. Tests were done
4876 using the -O2 -march=athlon command-line options.
4877 * Alexandre Oliva, of Red Hat, has generalized the tree inlining
4878 infrastructure developed by CodeSourcery, LLC for the C++ front
4879 end, so that it is now used in the C front end too. Inlining
4880 functions as trees exposes them earlier to the compiler, giving it
4881 more opportunities for optimization.
4882 * Support for data prefetching instructions has been added to the
4883 GCC back end and several targets. A new __builtin_prefetch
4884 intrinsic is available to explicitly insert prefetch instructions
4885 and experimental support for loop array prefetching has been added
4886 (see -fprefetch-loop-array documentation).
4887 * Support for emitting debugging information for macros has been
4888 added for DWARF2. It is activated using -g3.
4890 New Languages and Language specific improvements
4894 * A few more [4]ISO C99 features.
4895 * The preprocessor is 10-50% faster than the preprocessor in GCC
4897 * The preprocessor's symbol table has been merged with the symbol
4898 table of the C, C++ and Objective-C front ends.
4899 * The preprocessor consumes less memory than the preprocessor in GCC
4900 3.0, often significantly so. On normal input files, it typically
4901 consumes less memory than pre-3.0 cccp-based GCC, too.
4905 * -fhonor-std and -fno-honor-std have been removed. -fno-honor-std
4906 was a workaround to allow std compliant code to work with the
4907 non-std compliant libstdc++-v2. libstdc++-v3 is std compliant.
4908 * The C++ ABI has been fixed so that void (A::*)() const is mangled
4909 as "M1AKFvvE", rather than "MK1AFvvE" as before. This change only
4910 affects pointer to cv-qualified member function types.
4911 * The C++ ABI has been changed to correctly handle this code:
4913 void operator delete[] (void *, size_t);
4916 struct B : public A {
4921 The amount of storage allocated for the array will be greater than
4922 it was in 3.0, in order to store the number of elements in the
4923 array, so that the correct size can be passed to operator delete[]
4924 when the array is deleted. Previously, the value passed to
4925 operator delete[] was unpredictable.
4926 This change will only affect code that declares a two-argument
4927 operator delete[] with a second parameter of type size_t in a base
4928 class, and does not override that definition in a derived class.
4929 * The C++ ABI has been changed so that:
4931 void operator delete[] (void *, size_t);
4932 void operator delete[] (void *);
4935 does not cause unnecessary storage to be allocated when an array
4936 of A objects is allocated.
4937 This change will only affect code that declares both of these
4938 forms of operator delete[], and declared the two-argument form
4939 before the one-argument form.
4940 * The C++ ABI has been changed so that when a parameter is passed by
4941 value, any cleanup for that parameter is performed in the caller,
4942 as specified by the ia64 C++ ABI, rather than the called function
4943 as before. As a result, classes with a non-trivial destructor but
4944 a trivial copy constructor will be passed and returned by
4945 invisible reference, rather than by bitwise copy as before.
4946 * G++ now supports the "named return value optimization": for code
4954 G++ will allocate a in the return value slot, so that the return
4955 becomes a no-op. For this to work, all return statements in the
4956 function must return the same variable.
4957 * Improvements to the C++ library are listed in [5]the libstdc++-v3
4962 * Annoying linker warnings (due to incorrect code being generated)
4964 * If a class method cannot be found, the compiler no longer issues a
4965 warning if a corresponding instance method exists in the root
4967 * Forward @protocol declarations have been fixed.
4968 * Loading of categories has been fixed in certain situations (GNU
4970 * The class lookup in the run-time library has been rewritten so
4971 that class method dispatch is more than twice as fast as it used
4972 to be (GNU run time only).
4976 * libgcj now includes RMI, java.lang.ref.*, javax.naming, and
4978 * Property files and other system resources can be compiled into
4979 executables which use libgcj using the new gcj --resource feature.
4980 * libgcj has been ported to more platforms. In particular there is
4981 now a mostly-functional mingw32 (Windows) target port.
4982 * JNI and CNI invocation interfaces were implemented, so
4983 gcj-compiled Java code can now be called from a C/C++ application.
4984 * gcj can now use builtin functions for certain known methods, for
4986 * gcj can now automatically remove redundant array-store checks in
4988 * The --no-store-checks optimization option was added. This can be
4989 used to omit runtime store checks for code which is known not to
4990 throw ArrayStoreException
4991 * The following third party interface standards were added to
4992 libgcj: org.w3c.dom and org.xml.sax.
4993 * java.security has been merged with GNU Classpath. The new package
4994 is now JDK 1.2 compliant, and much more complete.
4995 * A bytecode verifier was added to the libgcj interpreter.
4996 * java.lang.Character was rewritten to comply with the Unicode 3.0
4997 standard, and improve performance.
4998 * Partial support for many more locales was added to libgcj.
4999 * Socket timeouts have been implemented.
5000 * libgcj has been merged into a single shared library. There are no
5001 longer separate shared libraries for the garbage collector and
5003 * Several performance improvements were made to gcj and libgcj:
5004 + Hash synchronization (thin locks)
5005 + A special allocation path for finalizer-free objects
5006 + Thread-local allocation
5007 + Parallel GC, and other GC tweaks
5011 Fortran improvements are listed in [6]the Fortran documentation.
5015 [7]Ada Core Technologies, Inc, has contributed its GNAT Ada 95 front
5016 end and associated tools. The GNAT compiler fully implements the Ada
5017 language as defined by the ISO/IEC 8652 standard.
5019 Please note that the integration of the Ada front end is still work in
5022 New Targets and Target Specific Improvements
5024 * Hans-Peter Nilsson has contributed a port to [8]MMIX, the CPU
5025 architecture used in new editions of Donald E. Knuth's The Art of
5026 Computer Programming.
5027 * [9]Axis Communications has contributed its port to the CRIS CPU
5028 architecture, used in the ETRAX system-on-a-chip series. See
5029 [10]Axis' developer site for technical information.
5030 * Alexandre Oliva, of Red Hat, has contributed a port to the
5031 [11]SuperH SH5 64-bit RISC microprocessor architecture, extending
5032 the existing SH port.
5033 * UltraSPARC is fully supported in 64-bit mode. The option -m64
5035 * For compatibility with the Sun compiler #pragma redefine_extname
5036 has been implemented on Solaris.
5037 * The x86 back end has had some noticeable work done to it.
5038 + SuSE Labs developers Jan Hubicka, Bo Thorsen and Andreas
5039 Jaeger have contributed a port to the AMD x86-64
5040 architecture. For more information on x86-64 see
5041 [12]http://www.x86-64.org.
5042 + The compiler now supports MMX, 3DNow!, SSE, and SSE2
5043 instructions. Options -mmmx, -m3dnow, -msse, and -msse2 will
5044 enable the respective instruction sets. Intel C++ compatible
5045 MMX/3DNow!/SSE intrinsics are implemented. SSE2 intrinsics
5046 will be added in next major release.
5047 + Following those improvements, targets for Pentium MMX, K6-2,
5048 K6-3, Pentium III, Pentium 4, and Athlon 4 Mobile/XP/MP were
5049 added. Refer to the documentation on -march= and -mcpu=
5050 options for details.
5051 + For those targets that support it, -mfpmath=sse will cause
5052 the compiler to generate SSE/SSE2 instructions for floating
5053 point math instead of x87 instructions. Usually, this will
5054 lead to quicker code -- especially on the Pentium 4. Note
5055 that only scalar floating point instructions are used and GCC
5056 does not exploit SIMD features yet.
5057 + Prefetch support has been added to the Pentium III, Pentium
5058 4, K6-2, K6-3, and Athlon series.
5059 + Code generated for floating point to integer conversions has
5060 been improved leading to better performance of many 3D
5062 * The PowerPC back end has added 64-bit PowerPC GNU/Linux support.
5063 * C++ support for AIX has been improved.
5064 * Aldy Hernandez, of Red Hat, Inc, has contributed extensions to the
5065 PowerPC port supporting the AltiVec programming model (SIMD). The
5066 support, though presently useful, is experimental and is expected
5067 to stabilize for 3.2. The support is written to conform to
5068 Motorola's AltiVec specs. See -maltivec.
5072 Support for a number of older systems has been declared obsolete in
5073 GCC 3.1. Unless there is activity to revive them, the next release of
5074 GCC will have their sources permanently removed.
5076 All configurations of the following processor architectures have been
5078 * MIL-STD-1750A, 1750a-*-*
5079 * AMD A29k, a29k-*-*
5080 * Convex, c*-convex-*
5081 * Clipper, clipper-*-*
5083 * Intel i860, i860-*-*
5084 * Sun picoJava, pj-*-* and pjl-*-*
5085 * Western Electric 32000, we32k-*-*
5087 Most configurations of the following processor architectures have been
5088 declared obsolete, but we are preserving a few systems which may have
5089 active developers. It is unlikely that the remaining systems will
5090 survive much longer unless we see definite signs of port activity.
5091 * Motorola 88000 except
5092 + Generic a.out, m88k-*-aout*
5093 + Generic SVR4, m88k-*-sysv4
5094 + OpenBSD, m88k-*-openbsd*
5096 + NetBSD, ns32k-*-netbsd*
5097 + OpenBSD, ns32k-*-openbsd*.
5099 + OpenBSD, romp-*-openbsd*.
5101 Finally, only some configurations of these processor architectures are
5104 + OSF/1, alpha*-*-osf[123]*. (Digital Unix and Tru64 Unix, aka
5105 alpha*-*-osf[45], are still supported.)
5107 + RISCiX, arm-*-riscix*.
5109 + 386BSD, i?86-*-bsd*
5110 + Chorus, i?86-*-chorusos*
5111 + DG/UX, i?86-*-dgux*
5112 + FreeBSD 1.x, i?86-*-freebsd1.*
5113 + IBM AIX, i?86-*-aix*
5114 + ISC UNIX, i?86-*-isc*
5115 + Linux with pre-BFD linker, i?86-*-linux*oldld*
5116 + NEXTstep, i?86-next-*
5117 + OSF UNIX, i?86-*-osf1* and i?86-*-osfrose*
5118 + RTEMS/coff, i?86-*-rtemscoff*
5119 + RTEMS/go32, i?86-go32-rtems*
5120 + Sequent/BSD, i?86-sequent-bsd*
5121 + Sequent/ptx before version 3, i?86-sequent-ptx[12]* and
5123 + SunOS, i?86-*-sunos*
5125 + Altos, m68[k0]*-altos-*
5126 + Apollo, m68[k0]*-apollo-*
5127 + Apple A/UX, m68[k0]*-apple-*
5128 + Bull, m68[k0]*-bull-*
5129 + Convergent, m68[k0]*-convergent-*
5130 + Generic SVR3, m68[k0]*-*-sysv3*
5131 + ISI, m68[k0]*-isi-*
5132 + LynxOS, m68[k0]*-*-lynxos*
5133 + NEXT, m68[k0]*-next-*
5134 + RTEMS/coff, m68[k0]*-*-rtemscoff*
5135 + Sony, m68[k0]*-sony-*
5137 + DEC Ultrix, mips-*-ultrix* and mips-dec-*
5138 + Generic BSD, mips-*-bsd*
5139 + Generic System V, mips-*-sysv*
5140 + IRIX before version 5, mips-sgi-irix[1234]*
5141 + RiscOS, mips-*-riscos*
5143 + Tandem, mips-tandem-*
5145 + RTEMS/a.out, sparc-*-rtemsaout*.
5147 Documentation improvements
5149 * The old manual ("Using and Porting the GNU Compiler Collection")
5150 has been replaced by a users manual ("Using the GNU Compiler
5151 Collection") and a separate internals reference manual ("GNU
5152 Compiler Collection Internals").
5153 * More complete and much improved documentation about GCC's internal
5154 representation used by the C and C++ front ends.
5155 * Many cleanups and improvements in general.
5156 _________________________________________________________________
5158 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [13]gnu@gnu.org. There
5159 are also [14]other ways to contact the FSF.
5161 These pages are maintained by [15]the GCC team.
5164 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
5165 pages and the [16]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
5166 [17]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
5167 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
5168 to our developer mailing list at [18]gcc@gnu.org or
5169 [19]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [20]public archives.
5171 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
5172 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
5174 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
5175 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
5177 Last modified 2004-08-06 [21]Valid XHTML 1.0
5181 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2002-07/msg01208.html
5182 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/profiledriven.html
5183 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/benchmarks/
5184 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.1/c99status.html
5185 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/faq/index.html#4_1
5186 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/g77/News.html
5187 7. http://www.gnat.com/
5188 8. http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/mmix.html
5189 9. http://www.axis.com/
5190 10. http://developer.axis.com/
5191 11. http://www.superh.com/
5192 12. http://www.x86-64.org/
5193 13. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
5194 14. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
5195 15. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
5196 16. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
5197 17. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
5198 18. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
5199 19. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
5200 20. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
5201 21. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
5202 ======================================================================
5203 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/gcc-3.0.html
5209 The [1]GNU project and the GCC developers are pleased to announce the
5210 release of GCC 3.0.4, which is a bug-fix release for the GCC 3.0
5213 GCC used to stand for the GNU C Compiler, but since the compiler
5214 supports several other languages aside from C, it now stands for the
5215 GNU Compiler Collection.
5217 GCC 3.0.x has several new optimizations, new targets, new languages
5218 and many other new features, relative to GCC 2.95.x. See the [2]new
5219 features page for a more complete list.
5221 A list of [3]successful builds is updated as new information becomes
5224 The GCC developers would like to thank the numerous people that have
5225 contributed new features, test results, bugfixes, etc to GCC. This
5226 [4]amazing group of volunteers is what makes GCC successful.
5228 And finally, we can't in good conscience fail to mention some
5229 [5]caveats to using GCC 3.0.x.
5231 For additional information about GCC please refer to the [6]GCC
5232 project web site or contact the [7]GCC development mailing list.
5234 To obtain GCC please use [8]our mirror sites, one of the [9]GNU mirror
5235 sites, or [10]our CVS server.
5236 _________________________________________________________________
5238 Previous 3.0.x Releases
5240 December 20, 2001: GCC 3.0.3 has been released.
5241 October 25, 2001: GCC 3.0.2 has been released.
5242 August 20, 2001: GCC 3.0.1 has been released.
5243 June 18, 2001: GCC 3.0 has been released.
5244 _________________________________________________________________
5246 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [11]gnu@gnu.org. There
5247 are also [12]other ways to contact the FSF.
5249 These pages are maintained by [13]the GCC team.
5252 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
5253 pages and the [14]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
5254 [15]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
5255 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
5256 to our developer mailing list at [16]gcc@gnu.org or
5257 [17]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [18]public archives.
5259 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
5260 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
5262 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
5263 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
5265 Last modified 2004-08-06 [19]Valid XHTML 1.0
5269 1. http://www.gnu.org/
5270 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/features.html
5271 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/buildstat.html
5272 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html
5273 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/caveats.html
5274 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/index.html
5275 7. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
5276 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
5277 9. http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html
5278 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/cvs.html
5279 11. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
5280 12. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
5281 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
5282 14. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
5283 15. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
5284 16. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
5285 17. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
5286 18. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
5287 19. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
5288 ======================================================================
5289 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/features.html
5291 GCC 3.0 New Features
5293 Additional changes in GCC 3.0.4
5295 * GCC 3.0 now supports newer versions of the [1]NetBSD operating
5296 system, which use the ELF object file format, on x86 processors.
5297 * Correct debugging information is generated from functions that
5298 have lines from multiple files (e.g. yacc output).
5299 * A fix for whitespace handling in the -traditional preprocessor,
5300 which can affect Fortran.
5301 * Fixes to the exception handling runtime.
5302 * More fixes for bad code generation in C++.
5303 * A fix for shared library generation under AIX 4.3.
5304 * Documentation updates.
5305 * Port of GCC to Tensilica's Xtensa processor contributed.
5306 * A fix for compiling the PPC Linux kernel (FAT fs wouldn't link).
5308 Additional changes in GCC 3.0.3
5310 * A fix to correct an accidental change to the PowerPC ABI.
5311 * Fixes for bad code generation on a variety of architectures.
5312 * Improvements to the debugging information generated for C++
5314 * Fixes for bad code generation in C++.
5315 * A fix to avoid crashes in the C++ demangler.
5316 * A fix to the C++ standard library to avoid buffer overflows.
5317 * Miscellaneous improvements for a variety of architectures.
5319 Additional changes in GCC 3.0.2
5321 * Fixes for bad code generation during loop unrolling.
5322 * Fixes for bad code generation by the sibling call optimization.
5323 * Minor improvements to x86 code generation.
5324 * Implementation of function descriptors in C++ vtables for IA64.
5325 * Numerous minor bug-fixes.
5327 Additional changes in GCC 3.0.1
5329 * C++ fixes for incorrect code-generation.
5330 * Improved cross-compiling support for the C++ standard library.
5331 * Fixes for some embedded targets that worked in GCC 2.95.3, but not
5333 * Fixes for various exception-handling bugs.
5334 * A port to the S/390 architecture.
5336 General Optimizer Improvements
5338 * [2]Basic block reordering pass.
5339 * New if-conversion pass with support for conditional (predicated)
5341 * New tail call and sibling call elimination optimizations.
5342 * New register renaming pass.
5343 * New (experimental) [3]static single assignment (SSA)
5344 representation support.
5345 * New dead-code elimination pass implemented using the SSA
5347 * [4]Global null pointer test elimination.
5348 * [5]Global code hoisting/unification.
5349 * More builtins and optimizations for stdio.h, string.h and old BSD
5350 functions, as well as for ISO C99 functions.
5351 * New builtin __builtin_expect for giving hints to the branch
5354 New Languages and Language specific improvements
5356 * The GNU Compiler for the Java(TM) language (GCJ) is now integrated
5357 and supported, including the run-time library containing most
5358 common non-GUI Java classes, a bytecode interpreter, and the Boehm
5359 conservative garbage collector. Many bugs have been fixed. GCJ can
5360 compile Java source or Java bytecodes to either native code or
5361 Java class files, and supports native methods written in either
5362 the standard JNI or the more efficient and convenient CNI.
5363 * Here is a [6]partial list of C++ improvements, both new features
5364 and those no longer supported.
5365 * New C++ ABI. On the IA-64 platform GCC is capable of
5366 inter-operating with other IA-64 compilers.
5367 * The new ABI also significantly reduces the size of symbol and
5369 * New [7]C++ support library and many C++ bug fixes, vastly
5370 improving our conformance to the ISO C++ standard.
5371 * New [8]inliner for C++.
5372 * Rewritten C preprocessor, integrated into the C, C++ and Objective
5373 C compilers, with very many improvements including ISO C99 support
5374 and [9]improvements to dependency generation.
5375 * Support for more [10]ISO C99 features.
5376 * Many improvements to support for checking calls to format
5377 functions such as printf and scanf, including support for ISO C99
5378 format features, extensions from the Single Unix Specification and
5379 GNU libc 2.2, checking of strfmon formats and features to assist
5380 in auditing for format string security bugs.
5381 * New warnings for C code that may have undefined semantics because
5382 of violations of sequence point rules in the C standard (such as a
5383 = a++;, a[n] = b[n++]; and a[i++] = i;), included in -Wall.
5384 * Additional warning option -Wfloat-equal.
5385 * Improvements to -Wtraditional.
5386 * Fortran improvements are listed in [11]the Fortran documentation.
5388 New Targets and Target Specific Improvements
5390 * New x86 back-end, generating much improved code.
5391 * Support for a generic i386-elf target contributed.
5392 * New option to emit x86 assembly code using Intel style syntax
5394 * HPUX 11 support contributed.
5395 * Improved PowerPC code generation, including scheduled prologue and
5397 * Port of GCC to Intel's IA-64 processor contributed.
5398 * Port of GCC to Motorola's MCore 210 and 340 contributed.
5399 * New unified back-end for Arm, Thumb and StrongArm contributed.
5400 * Port of GCC to Intel's XScale processor contributed.
5401 * Port of GCC to Atmel's AVR microcontrollers contributed.
5402 * Port of GCC to Mitsubishi's D30V processor contributed.
5403 * Port of GCC to Matsushita's AM33 processor (a member of the
5404 MN10300 processor family) contributed.
5405 * Port of GCC to Fujitsu's FR30 processor contributed.
5406 * Port of GCC to Motorola's 68HC11 and 68HC12 processors
5408 * Port of GCC to Sun's picoJava processor core contributed.
5410 Documentation improvements
5412 * Substantially rewritten and improved C preprocessor manual.
5413 * Many improvements to other documentation.
5414 * Manpages for gcc, cpp and gcov are now generated automatically
5415 from the master Texinfo manual, eliminating the problem of
5416 manpages being out of date. (The generated manpages are only
5417 extracts from the full manual, which is provided in Texinfo form,
5418 from which info, HTML, other formats and a printed manual can be
5420 * Generated info files are included in the release tarballs
5421 alongside their Texinfo sources, avoiding problems on some
5422 platforms with building makeinfo as part of the GCC distribution.
5424 Other significant improvements
5426 * Garbage collection used internally by the compiler for most memory
5427 allocation instead of obstacks.
5428 * Lengauer and Tarjan algorithm used for computing dominators in the
5429 CFG. This algorithm can be significantly faster and more space
5430 efficient than our older algorithm.
5431 * gccbug script provided to assist in submitting bug reports to our
5432 bug tracking system. (Bug reports previously submitted directly to
5433 our mailing lists, for which you received no bug tracking number,
5434 should be submitted again using gccbug if you can reproduce the
5435 problem with GCC 3.0.)
5436 * The internal libgcc library is [12]built as a shared library on
5437 systems that support it.
5438 * Extensive testsuite included with GCC, with many new tests. In
5439 addition to tests for GCC bugs that have been fixed, many tests
5440 have been added for language features, compiler warnings and
5442 * Additional language-independent warning options -Wpacked,
5443 -Wpadded, -Wunreachable-code and -Wdisabled-optimization.
5444 * Target-independent options -falign-functions, -falign-loops and
5447 Plus a great many bugfixes and almost all the [13]features found in
5449 _________________________________________________________________
5451 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [14]gnu@gnu.org. There
5452 are also [15]other ways to contact the FSF.
5454 These pages are maintained by [16]the GCC team.
5457 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
5458 pages and the [17]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
5459 [18]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
5460 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
5461 to our developer mailing list at [19]gcc@gnu.org or
5462 [20]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [21]public archives.
5464 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
5465 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
5467 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
5468 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
5470 Last modified 2004-08-06 [22]Valid XHTML 1.0
5474 1. http://www.netbsd.org/
5475 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/reorder.html
5476 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/ssa.html
5477 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/null.html
5478 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/unify.html
5479 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/c++features.html
5480 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/libstdc++/
5481 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/inlining.html
5482 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/dependencies.html
5483 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/c99status.html
5484 11. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/g77/News.html
5485 12. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/libgcc.html
5486 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/features.html
5487 14. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
5488 15. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
5489 16. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
5490 17. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
5491 18. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
5492 19. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
5493 20. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
5494 21. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
5495 22. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
5496 ======================================================================
5497 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-3.0/caveats.html
5501 * -fstrict-aliasing is now part of -O2 and higher optimization
5502 levels. This allows the compiler to assume the strictest aliasing
5503 rules applicable to the language being compiled. For C and C++,
5504 this activates optimizations based on the type of expressions.
5505 This optimization may thus break old, non-compliant code.
5506 * Enumerations are now properly promoted to int in function
5507 parameters and function returns. Normally this change is not
5508 visible, but when using -fshort-enums this is an ABI change.
5509 * The undocumented extension that allowed C programs to have a label
5510 at the end of a compound statement has been deprecated and may be
5511 removed in a future version. Programs that now generate a warning
5512 about this may be fixed by adding a null statement (a single
5513 semicolon) after the label.
5514 * The poorly documented extension that allowed string constants in
5515 C, C++ and Objective C to contain unescaped newlines has been
5516 deprecated and may be removed in a future version. Programs using
5517 this extension may be fixed in several ways: the bare newline may
5518 be replaced by \n, or preceded by \n\, or string concatenation may
5519 be used with the bare newline preceded by \n" and " placed at the
5520 start of the next line.
5521 * The Chill compiler is not included in GCC 3.0, because of the lack
5522 of a volunteer to convert it to use garbage collection.
5523 * Certain non-standard iostream methods from earlier versions of
5524 libstdc++ are not included in libstdc++ v3, i.e. filebuf::attach,
5525 ostream::form, and istream::gets. Here are workaround hints for:
5526 [1]ostream::form, [2]filebuf::attach.
5527 * The new C++ ABI is not yet fully supported by current (as of
5528 2001-07-01) releases and development versions of GDB, or any
5529 earlier versions. There is a problem setting breakpoints by line
5530 number, and other related issues that have been fixed in GCC 3.0
5531 but not yet handled in GDB:
5532 [3]http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-bugs/2001-06/msg00421.html
5533 _________________________________________________________________
5535 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [4]gnu@gnu.org. There
5536 are also [5]other ways to contact the FSF.
5538 These pages are maintained by [6]the GCC team.
5541 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
5542 pages and the [7]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
5543 [8]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
5544 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
5545 to our developer mailing list at [9]gcc@gnu.org or
5546 [10]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [11]public archives.
5548 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
5549 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
5551 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
5552 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
5554 Last modified 2004-08-06 [12]Valid XHTML 1.0
5558 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/21_strings/howto.html
5559 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/ext/howto.html
5560 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-bugs/2001-06/msg00421.html
5561 4. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
5562 5. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
5563 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
5564 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
5565 8. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
5566 9. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
5567 10. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
5568 11. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
5569 12. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
5570 ======================================================================
5571 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/index.html
5575 July 31, 1999: The GNU project and the GCC/EGCS developers are pleased
5576 to announce the release of GCC version 2.95. This is the first release
5577 of GCC since the April 1999 GCC/EGCS reunification and includes nearly
5578 a year's worth of new development and bugfixes.
5580 August 19, 1999: GCC version 2.95.1 has been released.
5582 October 27, 1999: GCC version 2.95.2 has been released.
5584 March 16, 2001: GCC version 2.95.3 has been released.
5586 GCC used to stand for the GNU C Compiler, but since the compiler
5587 supports several other languages aside from C, it now stands for the
5588 GNU Compiler Collection.
5590 The whole suite has been extensively [1]regression tested and
5591 [2]package tested. It should be reliable and suitable for widespread
5594 The compiler has several new optimizations, new targets, new languages
5595 and other new features. See the [3]new features page for a more
5596 complete list of new features found in the GCC 2.95 releases.
5598 The sources include installation instructions in both HTML and
5599 plaintext forms in the install directory in the distribution. However,
5600 the most up to date [4]installation instructions and [5]build/test
5601 status are on the web pages. We will update those pages as new
5602 information becomes available.
5604 The GCC developers would like to thank the numerous people that have
5605 contributed new features, test results, bugfixes, etc to GCC. This
5606 [6]amazing group of volunteers is what makes GCC successful.
5608 And finally, we can't in good conscience fail to mention some
5609 [7]caveats to using GCC 2.95.
5611 Download GCC 2.95 from the [8]GNU FTP server (ftp://ftp.gnu.org)
5612 [9]Find a GNU mirror site
5613 [10]Find a GCC mirror site
5615 For additional information about GCC please see the [11]GCC project
5616 web server or contact the [12]GCC development mailing list.
5617 _________________________________________________________________
5619 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [13]gnu@gnu.org. There
5620 are also [14]other ways to contact the FSF.
5622 These pages are maintained by [15]the GCC team.
5625 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
5626 pages and the [16]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
5627 [17]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
5628 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
5629 to our developer mailing list at [18]gcc@gnu.org or
5630 [19]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [20]public archives.
5632 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
5633 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
5635 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
5636 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
5638 Last modified 2004-08-06 [21]Valid XHTML 1.0
5642 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/regress.html
5643 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/othertest.html
5644 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/features.html
5645 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/install/
5646 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/buildstat.html
5647 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html
5648 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/caveats.html
5649 8. ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gcc/
5650 9. http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html
5651 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
5652 11. http://gcc.gnu.org/index.html
5653 12. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
5654 13. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
5655 14. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
5656 15. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
5657 16. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
5658 17. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
5659 18. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
5660 19. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
5661 20. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
5662 21. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
5663 ======================================================================
5664 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/features.html
5666 GCC 2.95 New Features
5668 * General Optimizer Improvements:
5669 + [1]Localized register spilling to improve speed and code
5670 density especially on small register class machines.
5671 + [2]Global CSE using lazy code motion algorithms.
5672 + [3]Improved global constant/copy propagation.
5673 + [4]Improved control flow graph analysis and manipulation.
5674 + [5]Local dead store elimination.
5675 + [6]Memory Load hoisting/store sinking in loops.
5676 + [7]Type based alias analysis is enabled by default. Note this
5677 feature will expose bugs in the Linux kernel. Please refer to
5678 the FAQ (as shipped with GCC 2.95) for additional information
5680 + Major revamp of GIV detection, combination and simplification
5681 to improve loop performance.
5682 + Major improvements to register allocation and reloading.
5683 * New Languages and Language specific improvements
5684 + [8]Many C++ improvements.
5685 + [9]Many Fortran improvements.
5686 + [10]Java front-end has been integrated. [11]runtime library
5687 is available separately.
5688 + [12]ISO C99 support
5689 + [13]Chill front-end and runtime has been integrated.
5690 + Boehm garbage collector support in libobjc.
5691 + More support for various pragmas which appear in vendor
5693 * New Targets and Target Specific Improvements
5694 + [14]Sparc backend rewrite.
5695 + -mschedule=8000 will optimize code for PA8000 class
5696 processors; -mpa-risc-2-0 will generate code for PA2.0
5698 + Various micro-optimizations for the ia32 port. K6
5700 + Compiler will attempt to align doubles in the stack on the
5704 + RS6000/PowerPC: -mcpu=401 was added as an alias for
5705 -mcpu=403. -mcpu=e603e was added to do -mcpu=603e and
5711 + Support for new systems (OpenBSD, FreeBSD, UWIN, Interix,
5713 + vxWorks targets include support for vxWorks threads
5714 + StrongARM 110 and ARM9 support added. ARM Scheduling
5715 parameters rewritten.
5716 + Various changes to the MIPS port to avoid assembler macros,
5717 which in turn improves performance
5718 + Various performance improvements to the i960 port.
5719 + Major rewrite of ns32k port
5720 * Other significant improvements
5721 + [15]Ability to dump cfg information and display it using vcg.
5722 + The new faster scheme for fixing vendor header files is
5724 + Experimental internationalization support.
5725 + multibyte character support
5726 + Some compile-time speedups for pathological problems
5727 + Better support for complex types
5728 * Plus the usual mountain of bugfixes
5729 * Core compiler is based on the gcc2 development tree from Sept 30,
5730 1998, so we have all of the [16]features found in GCC 2.8.
5732 Additional Changes in GCC 2.95.1
5734 * Generic bugfixes and improvements
5735 + Various documentation fixes related to the GCC/EGCS merger.
5736 + Fix memory management bug which could lead to spurious
5737 aborts, core dumps or random parsing errors in the compiler.
5738 + Fix a couple bugs in the dwarf1 and dwarf2 debug record
5740 + Fix infinite loop in the CSE optimizer.
5741 + Avoid undefined behavior in compiler FP emulation code
5742 + Fix install problem when prefix is overridden on the make
5744 + Fix problem with unwanted installation of assert.h on some
5746 + Fix problem with finding the wrong assembler in a single tree
5748 + Avoid increasing the known alignment of a register that is
5749 already known to be a pointer.
5750 * Platform specific bugfixes and improvements
5751 + Codegen bugfix for prologue/epilogue for cpu32 target.
5752 + Fix long long code generation bug for the Coldfire target.
5753 + Fix various aborts in the SH compiler.
5754 + Fix bugs in libgcc support library for the SH.
5755 + Fix alpha ev6 code generation bug.
5756 + Fix problems with EXIT_SUCCESS/EXIT_FAILURE redefinitions on
5758 + Fix -fpic code generation bug for rs6000/ppc svr4 targets.
5759 + Fix varargs/stdarg code generation bug for rs6000/ppc svr4
5761 + Fix weak symbol handling for rs6000/ppc svr4 targets.
5762 + Fix various problems with 64bit code generation for the
5764 + Fix codegen bug which caused tetex to be mis-compiled on the
5766 + Fix compiler abort in new cfg code exposed by x86 port.
5767 + Fix out of range array reference in code convert flat
5768 registers to the x87 stacked FP register file.
5769 + Fix minor vxworks configuration bug.
5770 + Fix return type of bsearch for SunOS 4.x.
5771 * Language & Runtime specific fixes.
5772 + The G++ signature extension has been deprecated. It will be
5773 removed in the next major release of G++. Use of signatures
5774 will result in a warning from the compiler.
5775 + Several bugs relating to templates and namespaces were fixed.
5776 + A bug that caused crashes when combining templates with -g on
5777 DWARF1 platforms was fixed.
5778 + Pointers-to-members, virtual functions, and multiple
5779 inheritance should now work together correctly.
5780 + Some code-generation bugs relating to function try blocks
5782 + G++ is a little bit more lenient with certain archaic
5783 constructs than in GCC 2.95.
5784 + Fix to prevent shared library version #s from bring truncated
5786 + Fix missing std:: in the libstdc++ library.
5787 + Fix stream locking problems in libio.
5788 + Fix problem in java compiler driver.
5790 Additional Changes in GCC 2.95.2
5792 The -fstrict-aliasing is not enabled by default for GCC 2.95.2. While
5793 the optimizations performed by -fstrict-aliasing are valid according
5794 to the C and C++ standards, the optimization have caused some
5795 problems, particularly with old non-conforming code.
5797 The GCC developers are experimenting with ways to warn users about
5798 code which violates the C/C++ standards, but those warnings are not
5799 ready for widespread use at this time. Rather than wait for those
5800 warnings the GCC developers have chosen to disable -fstrict-aliasing
5801 by default for the GCC 2.95.2 release.
5803 We strongly encourage developers to find and fix code which violates
5804 the C/C++ standards as -fstrict-aliasing may be enabled by default in
5805 future releases. Use the option -fstrict-aliasing to re-enable these
5807 * Generic bugfixes and improvements
5808 + Fix incorrectly optimized memory reference in global common
5809 subexpression elimination (GCSE) optimization pass.
5810 + Fix code generation bug in regmove.c in which it could
5811 incorrectly change a "const" value.
5812 + Fix bug in optimization of conditionals involving volatile
5814 + Avoid over-allocation of stack space for some procedures.
5815 + Fixed bug in the compiler which caused incorrect optimization
5816 of an obscure series of bit manipulations, shifts and
5818 + Fixed register allocator bug which caused teTeX to be
5819 mis-compiled on Sparc targets.
5820 + Avoid incorrect optimization of degenerate case statements
5821 for certain targets such as the ARM.
5822 + Fix out of range memory reference in the jump optimizer.
5823 + Avoid dereferencing null pointer in fix-header.
5824 + Fix test for GCC specific features so that it is possible to
5825 bootstrap with gcc-2.6.2 and older versions of GCC.
5826 + Fix typo in scheduler which could potentially cause out of
5827 range memory accesses.
5828 + Avoid incorrect loop reversal which caused incorrect code for
5829 certain loops on PowerPC targets.
5830 + Avoid incorrect optimization of switch statements on certain
5831 targets (for example the ARM).
5832 * Platform specific bugfixes and improvements
5833 + Work around bug in Sun V5.0 compilers which caused bootstrap
5834 comparison failures on Sparc targets.
5835 + Fix Sparc backend bug which caused aborts in final.c.
5836 + Fix sparc-hal-solaris2* configuration fragments.
5837 + Fix bug in sparc block profiling.
5838 + Fix obscure code generation bug for the PARISC targets.
5839 + Define __STDC_EXT__ for HPUX configurations.
5840 + Various POWERPC64 code generation bugfixes.
5841 + Fix abort for PPC targets using ELF (ex GNU/Linux).
5842 + Fix collect2 problems for AIX targets.
5843 + Correct handling of .file directive for PPC targets.
5844 + Fix bug in fix_trunc x86 patterns.
5845 + Fix x86 port to correctly pop the FP stack for functions that
5846 return structures in memory.
5847 + Fix minor bug in strlen x86 pattern.
5848 + Use stabs debugging instead of dwarf1 for x86-solaris
5850 + Fix template repository code to handle leading underscore in
5852 + Fix weak/weak alias support for OpenBSD.
5853 + GNU/Linux for the ARM has C++ compatible include files.
5854 * Language & Runtime specific fixes.
5855 + Fix handling of constructor attribute in the C front-end
5856 which caused problems building the Chill runtime library on
5858 + Fix minor problem merging type qualifiers in the C front-end.
5859 + Fix aliasing bug for pointers and references (C/C++).
5860 + Fix incorrect "non-constant initializer bug" when
5861 -traditional or -fwritable-strings is enabled.
5862 + Fix build error for Chill front-end on SunOS.
5863 + Do not complain about duplicate instantiations when using
5865 + Fix array bounds handling in C++ front-end which caused
5866 problems with dwarf debugging information in some
5868 + Fix minor namespace problem.
5869 + Fix problem linking java programs.
5871 Additional Changes in GCC 2.95.3
5873 * Generic bugfixes and improvements
5874 + Fix numerous problems that caused incorrect optimization in
5875 the register reloading code.
5876 + Fix numerous problems that caused incorrect optimization in
5878 + Fix aborts in the functions build_insn_chain and scan_loops
5879 under some circumstances.
5880 + Fix an alias analysis bug.
5881 + Fix an infinite compilation bug in the combiner.
5882 + A few problems with complex number support have been fixed.
5883 + It is no longer possible for gcc to act as a fork bomb when
5884 installed incorrectly.
5885 + The -fpack-struct option should be recognized now.
5886 + Fixed a bug that caused incorrect code to be generated due to
5887 a lost stack adjustment.
5888 * Platform specific bugfixes and improvements
5889 + Support building ARM toolchains hosted on Windows.
5890 + Fix attribute calculations in ARM toolchains.
5891 + arm-linux support has been improved.
5892 + Fix a PIC failure on sparc targets.
5893 + On ix86 targets, the regparm attribute should now work
5895 + Several updates for the h8300 port.
5896 + Fix problem building libio with glibc 2.2.
5897 _________________________________________________________________
5899 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [17]gnu@gnu.org. There
5900 are also [18]other ways to contact the FSF.
5902 These pages are maintained by [19]the GCC team.
5905 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
5906 pages and the [20]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
5907 [21]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
5908 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
5909 to our developer mailing list at [22]gcc@gnu.org or
5910 [23]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [24]public archives.
5912 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
5913 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
5915 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
5916 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
5918 Last modified 2004-08-06 [25]Valid XHTML 1.0
5922 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/spill.html
5923 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/lcm.html
5924 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/cprop.html
5925 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/cfg.html
5926 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/dse.html
5927 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/hoist.html
5928 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/alias.html
5929 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/c++features.html
5930 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/g77/News.html
5931 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/java/gcj-announce.txt
5932 11. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/javaannounce.html
5933 12. http://gcc.gnu.org/c99status.html
5934 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/chill.html
5935 14. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/sparc.html
5936 15. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/egcs-vcg.html
5937 16. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/features-2.8.html
5938 17. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
5939 18. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
5940 19. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
5941 20. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
5942 21. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
5943 22. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
5944 23. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
5945 24. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
5946 25. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
5947 ======================================================================
5948 http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-2.95/caveats.html
5952 * GCC 2.95 will issue an error for invalid asm statements that had
5953 been silently accepted by earlier versions of the compiler. This
5954 is particularly noticeable when compiling older versions of the
5955 Linux kernel (2.0.xx). Please refer to the FAQ (as shipped with
5956 GCC 2.95) for more information on this issue.
5957 * GCC 2.95 implements type based alias analysis to disambiguate
5958 memory references. Some programs, particularly the Linux kernel
5959 violate ANSI/ISO aliasing rules and therefore may not operate
5960 correctly when compiled with GCC 2.95. Please refer to the FAQ (as
5961 shipped with GCC 2.95) for more information on this issue.
5962 * GCC 2.95 has a known bug in its handling of complex variables for
5963 64bit targets. Instead of silently generating incorrect code, GCC
5964 2.95 will issue a fatal error for situations it can not handle.
5965 This primarily affects the Fortran community as Fortran makes more
5966 use of complex variables than C or C++.
5967 * GCC 2.95 has an integrated libstdc++, but does not have an
5968 integrated libg++. Furthermore old libg++ releases will not work
5969 with GCC 2.95. You can retrieve a recent copy of libg++ from the
5971 Note most C++ programs only need libstdc++.
5972 * Exception handling may not work with shared libraries,
5973 particularly on alphas, hppas, rs6000/powerpc and mips based
5974 platforms. Exception handling is known to work on x86 GNU/Linux
5975 platforms with shared libraries.
5976 * In general, GCC 2.95 is more rigorous about rejecting invalid C++
5977 code or deprecated C++ constructs than G++ 2.7, G++ 2.8, EGCS 1.0,
5978 or EGCS 1.1. As a result it may be necessary to fix C++ code
5979 before it will compile with GCC 2.95.
5980 * G++ is also converting toward the ISO C++ standard; as a result
5981 code which was previously valid (and thus accepted by other
5982 compilers and older versions of g++) may no longer be accepted.
5983 The flag -fpermissive may allow some non-conforming code to
5984 compile with GCC 2.95.
5985 * GCC 2.95 compiled C++ code is not binary compatible with EGCS
5986 1.1.x, EGCS 1.0.x or GCC 2.8.x.
5987 * GCC 2.95 does not have changes from the GCC 2.8 tree that were
5988 made between Sept 30, 1998 and April 30, 1999 (the official end of
5989 the GCC 2.8 project). Future GCC releases will include all the
5990 changes from the defunct GCC 2.8 sources.
5991 _________________________________________________________________
5993 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [2]gnu@gnu.org. There
5994 are also [3]other ways to contact the FSF.
5996 These pages are maintained by [4]the GCC team.
5999 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6000 pages and the [5]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6001 [6]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6002 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6003 to our developer mailing list at [7]gcc@gnu.org or
6004 [8]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [9]public archives.
6006 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
6007 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
6009 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
6010 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
6012 Last modified 2004-08-06 [10]Valid XHTML 1.0
6016 1. ftp://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/infrastructure/libg++-2.8.1.3.tar.gz
6017 2. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
6018 3. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
6019 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
6020 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
6021 6. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
6022 7. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
6023 8. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
6024 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
6025 10. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
6026 ======================================================================
6027 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/index.html
6031 September 3, 1998: We are pleased to announce the release of EGCS 1.1.
6032 December 1, 1998: We are pleased to announce the release of EGCS
6034 March 15, 1999: We are pleased to announce the release of EGCS 1.1.2.
6036 EGCS is a free software project to further the development of the GNU
6037 compilers using an open development environment.
6039 EGCS 1.1 is a major new release of the EGCS compiler system. It has
6040 been [1]extensively tested and is believed to be stable and suitable
6043 EGCS 1.1 is based on an June 6, 1998 snapshot of the GCC 2.8
6044 development sources; it contains all of the new features found in GCC
6045 2.8.1 as well as all new development from GCC up to June 6, 1998.
6047 EGCS 1.1 also contains many improvements and features not found in GCC
6048 or in older versions of EGCS:
6049 * Global common subexpression elimination and global constant/copy
6050 propagation (aka [2]gcse)
6051 * Ongoing improvements to the [3]alias analysis support to allow for
6052 better optimizations throughout the compiler.
6053 * Vastly improved [4]C++ compiler and integrated C++ runtime
6055 * Fixes for the /tmp symlink race security problems.
6056 * New targets including mips16, arm-thumb and 64 bit PowerPC.
6057 * Improvements to GNU Fortran (g77) compiler and runtime library
6058 made since g77 version 0.5.23.
6060 See the [5]new features page for a more complete list of new features
6061 found in EGCS 1.1 releases.
6063 EGCS 1.1.1 is a minor update to fix several serious problems in EGCS
6065 * General improvements and fixes
6066 + Avoid some stack overflows when compiling large functions.
6067 + Avoid incorrect loop invariant code motions.
6068 + Fix some core dumps on Linux kernel code.
6069 + Bring back the imake -Di386 and friends fix from EGCS 1.0.2.
6070 + Fix code generation problem in gcse.
6071 + Various documentation related fixes.
6072 * g++/libstdc++ improvements and fixes
6073 + MT safe EH fix for setjmp/longjmp based exception handling.
6074 + Fix a few bad interactions between optimization and exception
6076 + Fixes for demangling of template names starting with "__".
6077 + Fix a bug that would fail to run destructors in some cases
6079 + Fix 'new' of classes with virtual bases.
6080 + Fix crash building Qt on the Alpha.
6081 + Fix failure compiling WIFEXITED macro on GNU/Linux.
6082 + Fix some -frepo failures.
6083 * g77 and libf2c improvements and fixes
6084 + Various documentation fixes.
6085 + Avoid compiler crash on RAND intrinsic.
6086 + Fix minor bugs in makefiles exposed by BSD make programs.
6087 + Define _XOPEN_SOURCE for libI77 build to avoid potential
6088 problems on some 64-bit systems.
6089 + Fix problem with implicit endfile on rewind.
6090 + Fix spurious recursive I/O errors.
6091 * platform specific improvements and fixes
6092 + Match all versions of UnixWare7.
6093 + Do not assume x86 SVR4 or UnixWare targets can handle stabs.
6094 + Fix PPC/RS6000 LEGITIMIZE_ADDRESS macro and bug in conversion
6095 from unsigned ints to double precision floats.
6096 + Fix ARM ABI issue with NetBSD.
6097 + Fix a few arm code generation bugs.
6098 + Fixincludes will fix additional broken SCO OpenServer header
6100 + Fix a m68k backend bug which caused invalid offsets in reg+d
6102 + Fix problems with 64bit AIX 4.3 support.
6103 + Fix handling of long longs for varargs/stdarg functions on
6105 + Minor fixes to CPP predefines for Windows.
6106 + Fix code generation problems with gpr<->fpr copies for 64bit
6108 + Fix a few coldfire code generation bugs.
6109 + Fix some more header file problems on SunOS 4.x.
6110 + Fix assert.h handling for RTEMS.
6111 + Fix Windows handling of TREE_SYMBOL_REFERENCED.
6112 + Fix x86 compiler abort in reg-stack pass.
6113 + Fix cygwin/windows problem with section attributes.
6114 + Fix Alpha code generation problem exposed by SMP Linux
6116 + Fix typo in m68k 32->64bit integer conversion.
6117 + Make sure target libraries build with -fPIC for PPC & Alpha
6120 EGCS 1.1.2 is a minor update to fix several serious problems in EGCS
6122 * General improvements and fixes
6123 + Fix bug in loop optimizer which caused the SPARC (and
6124 potentially other) ports to segfault.
6125 + Fix infinite recursion in alias analysis and combiner code.
6126 + Fix bug in regclass preferencing.
6127 + Fix incorrect loop reversal which caused incorrect code to be
6128 generated for several targets.
6129 + Fix return value for builtin memcpy.
6130 + Reduce compile time for certain loops which exposed quadratic
6131 behavior in the loop optimizer.
6132 + Fix bug which caused volatile memory to be written multiple
6133 times when only one write was needed/desired.
6134 + Fix compiler abort in caller-save.c
6135 + Fix combiner bug which caused incorrect code generation for
6136 certain division by constant operations.
6137 + Fix incorrect code generation due to a bug in range check
6139 + Fix incorrect code generation due to mis-handling of
6140 clobbered values in CSE.
6141 + Fix compiler abort/segfault due to incorrect register
6142 splitting when unrolling loops.
6143 + Fix code generation involving autoincremented addresses with
6145 + Work around bug in the scheduler which caused qt to be
6146 mis-compiled on some platforms.
6147 + Fix code generation problems with -fshort-enums.
6148 + Tighten security for temporary files.
6149 + Improve compile time for codes which make heavy use of
6150 overloaded functions.
6151 + Fix multiply defined constructor/destructor symbol problems.
6152 + Avoid setting bogus RPATH environment variable during
6154 + Avoid GNU-make dependencies in the texinfo subdir.
6155 + Install CPP wrapper script in $(prefix)/bin if --enable-cpp.
6156 --enable-cpp=<dirname> can be used to specify an additional
6157 install directory for the cpp wrapper script.
6158 + Fix CSE bug which caused incorrect label-label refs to appear
6160 + Avoid linking in EH routines from libgcc if they are not
6162 + Avoid obscure bug in aliasing code.
6163 + Fix bug in weak symbol handling.
6164 * Platform-specific improvements and fixes
6165 + Fix detection of PPro/PII on Unixware 7.
6166 + Fix compiler segfault when building spec99 and other programs
6168 + Fix code-generation bugs for integer and floating point
6169 conditional move instructions on the PPro/PII.
6170 + Use fixincludes to fix byteorder problems on i?86-*-sysv.
6171 + Fix build failure for the arc port.
6172 + Fix floating point format configuration for i?86-gnu port.
6173 + Fix problems with hppa1.0-hp-hpux10.20 configuration when
6174 threads are enabled.
6175 + Fix coldfire code generation bugs.
6176 + Fix "unrecognized insn" problems for Alpha and PPC ports.
6177 + Fix h8/300 code generation problem with floating point values
6179 + Fix unrecognized insn problems for the m68k port.
6180 + Fix namespace-pollution problem for the x86 port.
6181 + Fix problems with old assembler on x86 NeXT systems.
6182 + Fix PIC code-generation problems for the SPARC port.
6183 + Fix minor bug with LONG_CALLS in PowerPC SVR4 support.
6184 + Fix minor ISO namespace violation in Alpha varargs/stdarg
6186 + Fix incorrect "braf" instruction usage for the SH port.
6187 + Fix minor bug in va-sh which prevented its use with -ansi.
6188 + Fix problems recognizing and supporting FreeBSD.
6189 + Handle OpenBSD systems correctly.
6190 + Minor fixincludes fix for Digital UNIX 4.0B.
6191 + Fix problems with ctors/dtors in SCO shared libraries.
6192 + Abort instead of generating incorrect code for PPro/PII
6193 floating point conditional moves.
6194 + Avoid multiply defined symbols on Linux/GNU systems using
6196 + Fix abort in alpha compiler.
6197 * Fortran-specific fixes
6198 + Fix the IDate intrinsic (VXT) (in libg2c) so the returned
6199 year is in the documented, non-Y2K-compliant range of 0-99,
6200 instead of being returned as 100 in the year 2000.
6201 + Fix the `Date_and_Time' intrinsic (in libg2c) to return the
6202 milliseconds value properly in Values(8).
6203 + Fix the `LStat' intrinsic (in libg2c) to return device-ID
6204 information properly in SArray(7).
6206 Each release includes installation instructions in both HTML and
6207 plaintext forms (see the INSTALL directory in the toplevel directory
6208 of the distribution). However, we also keep the most up to date
6209 [6]installation instructions and [7]build/test status on our web page.
6210 We will update those pages as new information becomes available.
6212 The EGCS project would like to thank the numerous people that have
6213 contributed new features, test results, bugfixes, etc. This [8]amazing
6214 group of volunteers is what makes EGCS successful.
6216 And finally, we can't in good conscience fail to mention some
6217 [9]caveats to using EGCS 1.1.
6219 Download EGCS from egcs.cygnus.com (USA California).
6221 The EGCS 1.1 release is also available on many mirror sites.
6222 [10]Goto mirror list to find a closer site.
6223 _________________________________________________________________
6225 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [11]gnu@gnu.org. There
6226 are also [12]other ways to contact the FSF.
6228 These pages are maintained by [13]the GCC team.
6231 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6232 pages and the [14]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6233 [15]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6234 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6235 to our developer mailing list at [16]gcc@gnu.org or
6236 [17]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [18]public archives.
6238 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
6239 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
6241 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
6242 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
6244 Last modified 2004-08-06 [19]Valid XHTML 1.0
6248 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/egcs-1.1-test.html
6249 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/gcse.html
6250 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/alias.html
6251 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/c++features.html
6252 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/features.html
6253 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/install/
6254 7. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/buildstat.html
6255 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html
6256 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/caveats.html
6257 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
6258 11. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
6259 12. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
6260 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
6261 14. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
6262 15. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
6263 16. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
6264 17. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
6265 18. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
6266 19. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
6267 ======================================================================
6268 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/features.html
6270 EGCS 1.1 new features
6272 * Integrated GNU Fortran (g77) compiler and runtime library with
6273 improvements, based on [1]g77 version 0.5.23.
6274 * Vast improvements in the C++ compiler; so many they have [2]page
6276 * Compiler implements [3]global common subexpression elimination and
6277 global copy/constant propagation.
6278 * More major improvements in the [4]alias analysis code.
6279 * More major improvements in the exception handling code to improve
6280 performance, lower static overhead and provide the infrastructure
6281 for future improvements.
6282 * The infamous /tmp symlink race security problems have been fixed.
6283 * The regmove optimization pass has been nearly completely rewritten
6284 to improve performance of generated code.
6285 * The compiler now recomputes register usage information before
6286 local register allocation. By providing more accurate information
6287 to the priority based allocator, we get better register
6289 * The register reloading phase of the compiler optimizes spill code
6290 much better than in previous releases.
6291 * Some bad interactions between the register allocator and
6292 instruction scheduler have been fixed, resulting in much better
6293 code for certain programs. Additionally, we have tuned the
6294 scheduler in various ways to improve performance of generated code
6295 for some architectures.
6296 * The compiler's branch shortening algorithms have been
6297 significantly improved to work better on targets which align jump
6299 * The compiler now supports -Os to prefer optimizing for code space
6300 over optimizing for code speed.
6301 * The compiler will now totally eliminate library calls which
6302 compute constant values. This primarily helps targets with no
6303 integer div/mul support and targets without floating point
6305 * The compiler now supports an extensive "--help" option.
6306 * cpplib has been greatly improved and may be suitable for limited
6308 * Memory footprint for the compiler has been significantly reduced
6309 for some pathological cases.
6310 * The time to build EGCS has been improved for certain targets
6311 (particularly the alpha and mips platforms).
6312 * Many infrastructure improvements throughout the compiler, plus the
6313 usual mountain of bugfixes and minor improvements.
6314 * Target dependent improvements:
6315 + SPARC port now includes V8 plus and V9 support as well as
6316 performance tuning for Ultra class machines. The SPARC port
6317 now uses the Haifa scheduler.
6318 + Alpha port has been tuned for the EV6 processor and has an
6319 optimized expansion of memcpy/bzero. The Alpha port now uses
6320 the Haifa scheduler.
6321 + RS6000/PowerPC: support for the Power64 architecture and AIX
6322 4.3. The RS6000/PowerPC port now uses the Haifa scheduler.
6323 + x86: Alignment of static store data and jump targets is per
6324 Intel recommendations now. Various improvements throughout
6325 the x86 port to improve performance on Pentium processors
6326 (including improved epilogue sequences for Pentium chips and
6327 backend improvements which should help register allocation on
6328 all x86 variants. Conditional move support has been fixed and
6329 enabled for PPro processors. The x86 port also better
6330 supports 64bit operations now. Unixware 7, a System V Release
6331 5 target, is now supported and SCO OpenServer targets can
6333 + MIPS has improved multiply/multiply-add support and now
6334 includes mips16 ISA support.
6335 + M68k has many micro-optimizations and Coldfire fixes.
6336 * Core compiler is based on the GCC development tree from June 9,
6337 1998, so we have all of the [5]features found in GCC 2.8.
6338 _________________________________________________________________
6340 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [6]gnu@gnu.org. There
6341 are also [7]other ways to contact the FSF.
6343 These pages are maintained by [8]the GCC team.
6346 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6347 pages and the [9]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6348 [10]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6349 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6350 to our developer mailing list at [11]gcc@gnu.org or
6351 [12]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [13]public archives.
6353 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
6354 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
6356 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
6357 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
6359 Last modified 2004-08-06 [14]Valid XHTML 1.0
6363 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/g77/News.html
6364 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/c++features.html
6365 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/gcse.html
6366 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/news/alias.html
6367 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/features-2.8.html
6368 6. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
6369 7. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
6370 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
6371 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
6372 10. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
6373 11. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
6374 12. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
6375 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
6376 14. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
6377 ======================================================================
6378 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.1/caveats.html
6382 * EGCS has an integrated libstdc++, but does not have an integrated
6383 libg++. Furthermore old libg++ releases will not work with EGCS;
6384 HJ Lu has made a libg++-2.8.1.2 snapshot available which may work
6386 Note most C++ programs only need libstdc++.
6387 * Exception handling may not work with shared libraries,
6388 particularly on alphas, hppas, rs6000/powerpc and mips based
6389 platforms. Exception handling is known to work on x86-linux
6390 platforms with shared libraries.
6391 * Some versions of the Linux kernel have bugs which prevent them
6392 from being compiled or from running when compiled by EGCS. See the
6393 FAQ (as shipped with EGCS 1.1) for additional information.
6394 * In general, EGCS is more rigorous about rejecting invalid C++ code
6395 or deprecated C++ constructs than g++-2.7, g++-2.8 or EGCS 1.0. As
6396 a result it may be necessary to fix C++ code before it will
6398 * G++ is also converting toward the ISO C++ standard; as a result
6399 code which was previously valid (and thus accepted by other
6400 compilers and older versions of g++) may no longer be accepted.
6401 * EGCS 1.1 compiled C++ code is not binary compatible with EGCS
6402 1.0.x or GCC 2.8.x due to changes necessary to support thread safe
6404 _________________________________________________________________
6406 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [1]gnu@gnu.org. There
6407 are also [2]other ways to contact the FSF.
6409 These pages are maintained by [3]the GCC team.
6412 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6413 pages and the [4]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6414 [5]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6415 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6416 to our developer mailing list at [6]gcc@gnu.org or
6417 [7]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [8]public archives.
6419 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
6420 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
6422 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
6423 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
6425 Last modified 2004-08-06 [9]Valid XHTML 1.0
6429 1. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
6430 2. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
6431 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
6432 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
6433 5. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
6434 6. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
6435 7. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
6436 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
6437 9. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
6438 ======================================================================
6439 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/egcs-1.0.3.html
6445 We are pleased to announce the release of EGCS 1.0.3.
6447 EGCS is a collaborative effort involving several groups of hackers
6448 using an open development model to accelerate development and testing
6449 of GNU compilers and runtime libraries.
6451 EGCS 1.0.3 is a minor update to the EGCS 1.0.2 compiler to fix a few
6452 problems reported by Red Hat for builds of Red Hat 5.1.
6454 + Fix a typo in the libio library which resulted in incorrect
6455 behavior of istream::get.
6456 + Fix the Fortran negative array index problem.
6457 + Fix a major problem with the ObjC runtime thread support
6459 + Reduce memory consumption of the Haifa scheduler.
6460 * Target specific bugfixes:
6461 + Fix one x86 floating point code generation bug exposed by
6463 + Fix one x86 internal compiler error exposed by glibc2 builds.
6464 + Fix profiling bugs on the Alpha.
6465 + Fix ImageMagick & emacs 20.2 build problems on the Alpha.
6466 + Fix rs6000/ppc bug when converting values from integer types
6467 to floating point types.
6469 An important goal of EGCS is to allow wide scale testing of new
6470 features and optimizations which are still under development. However,
6471 EGCS has been carefully tested and should be comparable in quality to
6474 EGCS 1.0.3 is based on an August 2, 1997 snapshot of the GCC 2.8
6475 development sources; it contains nearly all of the new features found
6478 EGCS also contains many improvements and features not found in GCC 2.7
6480 * Integrated C++ runtime libraries, including support for most major
6482 * The integrated libstdc++ library includes a verbatim copy of SGI's
6483 STL release instead of a modified copy.
6484 * Integrated GNU Fortran compiler.
6485 * New instruction scheduler.
6486 * New alias analysis code.
6488 See the [1]new features page for a more complete list of new features
6489 found in EGCS 1.0.x releases.
6491 The EGCS 1.0.3 release includes installation instructions in both HTML
6492 and plaintext forms (see the INSTALL directory in the toplevel
6493 directory of the EGCS 1.0.3 distribution). However, we also keep the
6494 most up to date [2]installation instructions and [3]build/test status
6495 on our web page. We will update those pages as new information becomes
6498 And, we can't in good conscience fail to mention some [4]caveats to
6501 Update: Big thanks to Stanford for providing a high speed link for
6502 downloading EGCS (go.cygnus.com)!
6504 Download EGCS from ftp.cygnus.com (USA California) or go.cygnus.com
6505 (USA California -- High speed link provided by Stanford).
6507 The EGCS 1.0.3 release is also available on many mirror sites.
6508 [5]Goto mirror list to find a closer site
6510 We'd like to thank the numerous people that have contributed new
6511 features, test results, bugfixes, etc. Unfortunately, they're far too
6512 numerous to mention by name.
6513 _________________________________________________________________
6515 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [6]gnu@gnu.org. There
6516 are also [7]other ways to contact the FSF.
6518 These pages are maintained by [8]the GCC team.
6521 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6522 pages and the [9]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6523 [10]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6524 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6525 to our developer mailing list at [11]gcc@gnu.org or
6526 [12]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [13]public archives.
6528 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
6529 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
6531 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
6532 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
6534 Last modified 2004-08-06 [14]Valid XHTML 1.0
6538 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/features.html
6539 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/install/
6540 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/buildstat.html
6541 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/caveats.html
6542 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
6543 6. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
6544 7. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
6545 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
6546 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
6547 10. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
6548 11. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
6549 12. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
6550 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
6551 14. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
6552 ======================================================================
6553 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/egcs-1.0.2.html
6559 We are pleased to announce the release of EGCS 1.0.2.
6561 EGCS is a collaborative effort involving several groups of hackers
6562 using an open development model to accelerate development and testing
6563 of GNU compilers and runtime libraries.
6565 EGCS 1.0.2 is a minor update to the EGCS 1.0.1 compiler to fix several
6566 serious problems in EGCS 1.0.1.
6567 * General improvements and fixes
6568 + Memory consumption significantly reduced, especially for
6569 templates and inline functions.
6570 + Fix various problems with glibc2.1.
6571 + Fix loop optimization bug exposed by rs6000/ppc port.
6572 + Fix to avoid potential code generation problems in jump.c.
6573 + Fix some undefined symbol problems in dwarf1 debug support.
6574 * g++/libstdc++ improvements and fixes
6575 + libstdc++ in the EGCS release has been updated and should be
6576 link compatible with libstdc++-2.8.
6577 + Various fixes in libio/libstdc++ to work better on Linux
6579 + Fix problems with duplicate symbols on systems that do not
6580 support weak symbols.
6581 + Memory corruption bug and undefined symbols in bastring have
6583 + Various exception handling fixes.
6584 + Fix compiler abort for very long thunk names.
6585 * g77 improvements and fixes
6586 + Fix compiler crash for omitted bound in Fortran CASE
6588 + Add missing entries to g77 lang-options.
6589 + Fix problem with -fpedantic in the g77 compiler.
6590 + Fix "backspace" problem with g77 on alphas.
6591 + Fix x86 backend problem with Fortran literals and -fpic.
6592 + Fix some of the problems with negative subscripts for g77 on
6594 + Fixes for Fortran builds on cygwin32/mingw32.
6595 * platform specific improvements and fixes
6596 + Fix long double problems on x86 (exposed by glibc).
6597 + x86 ports define i386 again to keep imake happy.
6598 + Fix exception handling support on NetBSD ports.
6599 + Several changes to collect2 to fix many problems with AIX.
6600 + Define __ELF__ for rs6000/linux.
6601 + Fix -mcall-linux problem on rs6000/linux.
6602 + Fix stdarg/vararg problem for rs6000/linux.
6603 + Allow autoconf to select a proper install problem on AIX 3.1.
6604 + m68k port support includes -mcpu32 option as well as cpu32
6606 + Fix stdarg bug for irix6.
6607 + Allow EGCS to build on irix5 without the gnu assembler.
6608 + Fix problem with static linking on sco5.
6609 + Fix bootstrap on sco5 with native compiler.
6610 + Fix for abort building newlib on H8 target.
6611 + Fix fixincludes handling of math.h on SunOS.
6612 + Minor fix for Motorola 3300 m68k systems.
6614 An important goal of EGCS is to allow wide scale testing of new
6615 features and optimizations which are still under development. However,
6616 EGCS has been carefully tested and should be comparable in quality to
6619 EGCS 1.0.2 is based on an August 2, 1997 snapshot of the GCC 2.8
6620 development sources; it contains nearly all of the new features found
6623 EGCS also contains many improvements and features not found in GCC 2.7
6625 * Integrated C++ runtime libraries, including support for most major
6627 * The integrated libstdc++ library includes a verbatim copy of SGI's
6629 * Integrated GNU Fortran compiler.
6630 * New instruction scheduler.
6631 * New alias analysis code.
6633 See the [1]new features page for a more complete list of new features
6634 found in EGCS 1.0.x releases.
6636 The EGCS 1.0.2 release includes installation instructions in both HTML
6637 and plaintext forms (see the INSTALL directory in the toplevel
6638 directory of the EGCS 1.0.2 distribution). However, we also keep the
6639 most up to date [2]installation instructions and [3]build/test status
6640 on our web page. We will update those pages as new information becomes
6643 And, we can't in good conscience fail to mention some [4]caveats to
6646 Update: Big thanks to Stanford for providing a high speed link for
6647 downloading EGCS (go.cygnus.com)!
6649 Download EGCS from ftp.cygnus.com (USA California) or go.cygnus.com
6650 (USA California -- High speed link provided by Stanford).
6652 The EGCS 1.0.2 release is also available on many mirror sites.
6653 [5]Goto mirror list to find a closer site
6655 We'd like to thank the numerous people that have contributed new
6656 features, test results, bugfixes, etc. Unfortunately, they're far too
6657 numerous to mention by name.
6658 _________________________________________________________________
6660 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [6]gnu@gnu.org. There
6661 are also [7]other ways to contact the FSF.
6663 These pages are maintained by [8]the GCC team.
6666 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6667 pages and the [9]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6668 [10]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6669 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6670 to our developer mailing list at [11]gcc@gnu.org or
6671 [12]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [13]public archives.
6673 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
6674 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
6676 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
6677 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
6679 Last modified 2004-08-06 [14]Valid XHTML 1.0
6683 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/features.html
6684 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/install/index.html
6685 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/buildstat.html
6686 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/caveats.html
6687 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
6688 6. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
6689 7. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
6690 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
6691 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
6692 10. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
6693 11. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
6694 12. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
6695 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
6696 14. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
6697 ======================================================================
6698 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/egcs-1.0.1.html
6704 We are pleased to announce the release of EGCS 1.0.1.
6706 EGCS is a collaborative effort involving several groups of hackers
6707 using an open development model to accelerate development and testing
6708 of GNU compilers and runtime libraries.
6710 EGCS 1.0.1 is a minor update to the EGCS 1.0 compiler to fix a few
6711 critical bugs and add support for Red Hat 5.0 Linux. Changes since the
6713 * Add support for Red Hat 5.0 Linux and better support for Linux
6714 systems using glibc2.
6715 Many programs failed to link when compiled with EGCS 1.0 on Red
6716 Hat 5.0 or on systems with newer versions of glibc2. EGCS 1.0.1
6717 should fix these problems.
6718 * Compatibility with both EGCS 1.0 and GCC 2.8 libgcc exception
6719 handling interfaces.
6720 To avoid future compatibility problems, we strongly urge anyone
6721 who is planning on distributing shared libraries that contain C++
6722 code to upgrade to EGCS 1.0.1 first.
6723 Soon after EGCS 1.0 was released, the GCC developers made some
6724 incompatible changes in libgcc's exception handling interfaces.
6725 These changes were needed to solve problems on some platforms.
6726 This means that GCC 2.8.0, when released, will not be seamlessly
6727 compatible with shared libraries built by EGCS 1.0. The reason is
6728 that the libgcc.a in GCC 2.8.0 will not contain a function needed
6729 by the old interface.
6730 The result of this is that there may be compatibility problems
6731 with shared libraries built by EGCS 1.0 when used with GCC 2.8.0.
6732 With EGCS 1.0.1, generated code uses the new (GCC 2.8.0)
6733 interface, and libgcc.a has the support routines for both the old
6734 and the new interfaces (so EGCS 1.0.1 and EGCS 1.0 code can be
6735 freely mixed, and EGCS 1.0.1 and GCC 2.8.0 code can be freely
6737 The maintainers of GCC 2.x have decided against including seamless
6738 support for the old interface in 2.8.0, since it was never
6739 "official", so to avoid future compatibility problems we recommend
6740 against distributing any shared libraries built by EGCS 1.0 that
6741 contain C++ code (upgrade to 1.0.1 and use that).
6742 * Various bugfixes in the x86, hppa, mips, and rs6000/ppc backends.
6743 The x86 changes fix code generation errors exposed when building
6744 glibc2 and the Linux dynamic linker (ld.so).
6745 The hppa change fixes a compiler abort when configured for use
6747 The MIPS changes fix problems with the definition of LONG_MAX on
6748 newer systems, allow for command line selection of the target ABI,
6749 and fix one code generation problem.
6750 The rs6000/ppc change fixes some problems with passing structures
6751 to varargs/stdarg functions.
6752 * A few machine independent bugfixes, mostly to fix code generation
6753 errors when building Linux kernels or glibc.
6754 * Fix a few critical exception handling and template bugs in the C++
6756 * Fix Fortran namelist bug on alphas.
6757 * Fix build problems on x86-solaris systems.
6759 An important goal of EGCS is to allow wide scale testing of new
6760 features and optimizations which are still under development. However,
6761 EGCS has been carefully tested and should be comparable in quality to
6764 EGCS 1.0.1 is based on an August 2, 1997 snapshot of the GCC 2.8
6765 development sources; it contains nearly all of the new features found
6768 EGCS also contains many improvements and features not found in GCC 2.7
6769 and even the soon to be released GCC 2.8 compilers.
6770 * Integrated C++ runtime libraries, including support for most major
6772 * The integrated libstdc++ library includes a verbatim copy of SGI's
6774 * Integrated GNU Fortran compiler
6775 * New instruction scheduler
6776 * New alias analysis code
6778 See the [1]new features page for a more complete list of new features
6779 found in EGCS 1.0.x releases.
6781 The EGCS 1.0.1 release includes installation instructions in both HTML
6782 and plaintext forms (see the INSTALL directory in the toplevel
6783 directory of the EGCS 1.0.1 distribution). However, we also keep the
6784 most up to date [2]installation instructions and [3]build/test status
6785 on our web page. We will update those pages as new information becomes
6788 And, we can't in good conscience fail to mention some [4]caveats to
6791 Update: Big thanks to Stanford for providing a high speed link for
6792 downloading EGCS (go.cygnus.com)!
6794 Download EGCS from ftp.cygnus.com (USA California) or go.cygnus.com
6795 (USA California -- High speed link provided by Stanford).
6797 The EGCS 1.0.1 release is also available on many mirror sites.
6798 [5]Goto mirror list to find a closer site
6800 We'd like to thank the numerous people that have contributed new
6801 features, test results, bugfixes, etc. Unfortunately, they're far too
6802 numerous to mention by name.
6803 _________________________________________________________________
6805 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [6]gnu@gnu.org. There
6806 are also [7]other ways to contact the FSF.
6808 These pages are maintained by [8]the GCC team.
6811 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6812 pages and the [9]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6813 [10]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6814 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6815 to our developer mailing list at [11]gcc@gnu.org or
6816 [12]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [13]public archives.
6818 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
6819 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
6821 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
6822 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
6824 Last modified 2004-08-06 [14]Valid XHTML 1.0
6828 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/features.html
6829 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/install/index.html
6830 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/buildstat.html
6831 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/caveats.html
6832 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
6833 6. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
6834 7. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
6835 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
6836 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
6837 10. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
6838 11. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
6839 12. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
6840 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
6841 14. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
6842 ======================================================================
6843 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/egcs-1.0.html
6849 We are pleased to announce the release of EGCS 1.0.
6851 EGCS is a collaborative effort involving several groups of hackers
6852 using an open development model to accelerate development and testing
6853 of GNU compilers and runtime libraries.
6855 An important goal of EGCS is to allow wide scale testing of
6856 experimental features and optimizations; therefore, EGCS contains some
6857 features and optimizations which are still under development. However,
6858 EGCS has been carefully tested and should be comparable in quality to
6861 EGCS 1.0 is based on an August 2, 1997 snapshot of the GCC 2.8
6862 development sources; it contains nearly all of the new features found
6865 EGCS 1.0 also contains many improvements and features not found in GCC
6866 2.7 and even the soon to be released GCC 2.8 compilers.
6867 * Integrated C++ runtime libraries, including support for most major
6869 * The integrated libstdc++ library includes a verbatim copy of SGI's
6871 * Integrated GNU Fortran compiler.
6872 * New instruction scheduler.
6873 * New alias analysis code.
6875 See the [1]new features page for a more complete list of new features.
6877 The EGCS 1.0 release includes installation instructions in both HTML
6878 and plaintext forms (see the INSTALL directory in the toplevel
6879 directory of the EGCS 1.0 distribution). However, we also keep the
6880 most up to date [2]installation instructions and [3]build/test status
6881 on our web page. We will update those pages as new information becomes
6884 And, we can't in good conscience fail to mention some [4]caveats to
6887 Update: The T1 into our main California offices has been 100%
6888 saturated since shortly after the release. We've added an EGCS 1.0
6889 mirror at our Massachusetts office to help share the load. We also
6890 encourage folks to use the many mirrors available throughout the
6893 Update: Big thanks to Stanford for providing a high speed link for
6894 downloading EGCS (go.cygnus.com)!
6896 Download EGCS from ftp.cygnus.com (USA California) or go.cygnus.com
6897 (USA California -- High speed link provided by Stanford).
6899 The EGCS 1.0 release should be available on most mirror sites by now.
6900 [5]Goto mirror list to find a closer site
6902 We'd like to thank the numerous people that have contributed new
6903 features, test results, bugfixes, etc. Unfortunately, they're far too
6904 numerous to mention by name.
6905 _________________________________________________________________
6907 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [6]gnu@gnu.org. There
6908 are also [7]other ways to contact the FSF.
6910 These pages are maintained by [8]the GCC team.
6913 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6914 pages and the [9]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6915 [10]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6916 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6917 to our developer mailing list at [11]gcc@gnu.org or
6918 [12]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [13]public archives.
6920 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
6921 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
6923 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
6924 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
6926 Last modified 2004-08-06 [14]Valid XHTML 1.0
6930 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/features.html
6931 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/install/index.html
6932 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/buildstat.html
6933 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/caveats.html
6934 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/mirrors.html
6935 6. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
6936 7. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
6937 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
6938 9. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
6939 10. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
6940 11. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
6941 12. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
6942 13. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
6943 14. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
6944 ======================================================================
6945 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/features.html
6949 * Core compiler is based on the gcc2 development tree from Aug 2,
6950 1997, so we have most of the [1]features found in GCC 2.8.
6951 * Integrated GNU Fortran compiler based on g77-0.5.22-19970929.
6952 * Vast improvements in the C++ compiler; so many they have [2]page
6954 * Integrated C++ runtime libraries, including support for most major
6956 * New instruction scheduler from IBM Haifa which includes support
6957 for function wide instruction scheduling as well as superscalar
6959 * Significantly improved alias analysis code.
6960 * Improved register allocation for two address machines.
6961 * Significant code generation improvements for Fortran code on
6963 * Various optimizations from the g77 project as well as improved
6965 * Dwarf2 debug format support for some targets.
6966 * egcs libstdc++ includes the SGI STL implementation without
6968 * As a result of these and other changes, egcs libstc++ is not
6969 binary compatible with previous releases of libstdc++.
6970 * Various new ports -- UltraSPARC, Irix6.2 & Irix6.3 support, The
6971 SCO Openserver 5 family (5.0.{0,2,4} and Internet FastStart 1.0
6972 and 1.1), Support for RTEMS on several embedded targets, Support
6973 for arm-linux, Mitsubishi M32R, Hitachi H8/S, Matsushita MN102 and
6974 MN103, NEC V850, Sparclet, Solaris & Linux on PowerPCs, etc.
6975 * Integrated testsuites for gcc, g++, g77, libstdc++ and libio.
6976 * RS6000/PowerPC ports generate code which can run on all
6977 RS6000/PowerPC variants by default.
6978 * -mcpu= and -march= switches for the x86 port to allow better
6979 control over how the x86 port generates code.
6980 * Includes the template repository patch (aka repo patch); note the
6981 new template code makes repo obsolete for ELF systems using gnu-ld
6983 * Plus the usual assortment of bugfixes and improvements.
6984 _________________________________________________________________
6986 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [3]gnu@gnu.org. There
6987 are also [4]other ways to contact the FSF.
6989 These pages are maintained by [5]the GCC team.
6992 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
6993 pages and the [6]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
6994 [7]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
6995 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
6996 to our developer mailing list at [8]gcc@gnu.org or
6997 [9]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [10]public archives.
6999 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
7000 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
7002 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
7003 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
7005 Last modified 2004-08-06 [11]Valid XHTML 1.0
7009 1. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/features-2.8.html
7010 2. http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/c++features.html
7011 3. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
7012 4. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
7013 5. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
7014 6. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
7015 7. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
7016 8. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
7017 9. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
7018 10. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
7019 11. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
7020 ======================================================================
7021 http://gcc.gnu.org/egcs-1.0/caveats.html
7025 * EGCS has an integrated libstdc++, but does not have an integrated
7026 libg++. Furthermore old libg++ releases will not work with egc; HJ
7027 Lu has made a libg++-2.8.1.2 available which may work with EGCS.
7028 Note most C++ programs only need libstdc++.
7029 * Note that using -pedantic or -Wreturn-type can cause an explosion
7030 in the amount of memory needed for template-heavy C++ code, such
7031 as code that uses STL. Also note that -Wall includes
7032 -Wreturn-type, so if you use -Wall you will need to specify
7033 -Wno-return-type to turn it off.
7034 * Exception handling may not work with shared libraries,
7035 particularly on alphas, hppas, and mips based platforms. Exception
7036 handling is known to work on x86-linux platforms with shared
7038 * Some versions of the Linux kernel have bugs which prevent them
7039 from being compiled or from running when compiled by EGCS. See the
7040 FAQ (as shipped with EGCS 1.0) for additional information.
7041 * In general, EGCS is more rigorous about rejecting invalid C++ code
7042 or deprecated C++ constructs than G++ 2.7. As a result it may be
7043 necessary to fix C++ code before it will compile with EGCS.
7044 * G++ is also aggressively tracking the C++ standard; as a result
7045 code which was previously valid (and thus accepted by other
7046 compilers and older versions of G++) may no longer be accepted.
7047 * EGCS 1.0 may not work with Red Hat Linux 5.0 on all targets. EGCS
7048 1.0.x and later releases should work with Red Hat Linux 5.0.
7049 _________________________________________________________________
7051 Please send FSF & GNU inquiries & questions to [1]gnu@gnu.org. There
7052 are also [2]other ways to contact the FSF.
7054 These pages are maintained by [3]the GCC team.
7057 For questions related to the use of GCC, please consult these web
7058 pages and the [4]GCC manuals. If that fails, the
7059 [5]gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org mailing list might help.
7060 Please send comments on these web pages and the development of GCC
7061 to our developer mailing list at [6]gcc@gnu.org or
7062 [7]gcc@gcc.gnu.org. All of our lists have [8]public archives.
7064 Copyright (C) Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite
7065 330, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
7067 Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted
7068 in any medium, provided this notice is preserved.
7070 Last modified 2004-08-06 [9]Valid XHTML 1.0
7074 1. mailto:gnu@gnu.org
7075 2. http://www.gnu.org/home.html#ContactInfo
7076 3. http://gcc.gnu.org/about.html
7077 4. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/
7078 5. mailto:gcc-help@gcc.gnu.org
7079 6. mailto:gcc@gnu.org
7080 7. mailto:gcc@gcc.gnu.org
7081 8. http://gcc.gnu.org/lists.html
7082 9. http://validator.w3.org/check/referer
7083 ======================================================================