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Hey hey, nearly three months without a sourceware update and I'm busting at the seams with incredibly great stuff to tell you about. Sunlight bad, hacking good--skip this weekend's picnic and play with all these neato things we've got on-line instead. GREAT NEW STUFF Insight is out! http://sourceware.cygnus.com/insight/ This is some great stuff. It's a GUI for GDB, the GNU Debugger, written largely in the tcl/tk scripting language. You may have seen this in the past under the name "GDBtk"; that was our first prototypey cut at the idea. We've been developing and refining this bugger for nearly five years. It is now totally sweet, and we're releasing it under the terms of the GPL. Insight will help you to debug like you've never debugged before; it will strike fear in the hearts of your bugs. Cower, bugs! Sourceware CD http://www.cygnus.com/sourcewarecd/ We've got all the free software you could ever want on a handy little CD. To be a little more accurate, this CD has the entire contents of the sourceware.cygnus.com ftp site from late May, 1999. If you'd like to have all the sources on a groovy CD, check this out. There is a link from the web page to some e-commerce site that will gleefully snarf up your credit card information. Docbook tools http://sourceware.cygnus.com/docbook-tools/ Convenient packaging of all the usual Docbook processing tools! Mark Galassi has set up all the things you'd need to process and format documents written in Docbook, an SGML format intended for writing software and hardware documentation. If you've ever tried to track down all the necessary tools to work with something like Docbook, you'll really appreciate the convenience of this. Prebuilt x86 RPMs are provided on the ftp site for those on appropriate boxes. GNU libc (glibc) http://sourceware.cygnus.com/glibc/ The GNU C library has moved to Sourceware! This is the C library used on all the Linux systems, and works on a myriad of other hosts as well. Ulrich Drepper is the current maintainer and primary developer of glibc, and he's got the whole host of Sourceware access set up: Ftp directory, anonymous CVS, web-browsable CVS, mailing lists, web archives for mailing lists, and so on. Guile http://sourceware.cygnus.com/guile/ Guile is the Scheme-based GNU extension language (``Duct Tape for Bits''--I love that motto), and has a habit of showing up behind the scenes of large projects like GNOME. Guile has the usual host of infrastructure available, including a very active developer's mailing list and browsable / read-only accessible CVS repository. I have no idea how Jim Blandy keeps up with all of the developments happening simultaneously on Guile, but he seems to pull it off. Check this one out. NEW RELEASES eCos 1.2.1 is out! http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ecos/ This is a gigantic new release from the eCos folks with lots of goodies for you embedded OS users. Support for ARM and SPARClite, support for more PowerPC variants, several more boards supported, bunches of new tools including a synthesized target that runs on Linux native, and the current sources are now available by anonymous CVS. EGCS becomes GCC, GCC 2.95 coming out http://egcs.cygnus.com/ EGCS, the Enhanced GNU Compiler Suite, has been blessed as the official GNU C Compiler. Future releases are going to be called gcc instead of egcs, and the first one of these releases will be going out within the few days--gcc 2.95. GCC 2.95 has seen a lot of testing and should be wildly great, so get on the gcc-announce mailing list and hear the very second when it is released. Jeff Law, I have no idea how you pulled this off without large doses of illegal drugs--my hat is off to you and your stamina. INFRASTRUCTURE and other exciting things to discuss with your parents When we last tuned in, I had just started setting up a search engine. That's all in place now--you can search any old thing anywhere on the site that you'd care to, including all the mailing lists. I've started setting up GNATS based bug databases for projects and you can expect to see most of them start using these soon. automake, autoconf, Java, and Insight now have them. I'm using the gnatsweb web-based user interface for them, and it is GREAT! I'm very happy with this, it should impose some organization on the randomness that is bug reports. There has been a lot of exciting infrastructure work going on behind the scenes to make your Sourceware experience a more rewarding, direct, efficient one (snort! I can't believe I wrote that! I must go wash my hands repeatedly). Let me know if you have any ideas or suggestions for making the site even better. Keep it real, Jason Free the Software!
It's two thirty on a Monday night, I've got half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark outside, and I'm wearing sunglasses. Since I'm not standing in line waiting for a ticket to Star Wars, it must be time for yet another installment of AS THE SOURCEWARE TURNS. Hit it! NEW PROJECTS GDB! Here's one near and dear to my own heart, I'm glad to see it on sourceware. GDB is the GNU Debugger, it slices it dices, it finds your bugs automatically. Really! You just sit back and let GDB do all the work. OK, maybe it just helps you to fix your own problems, but it does it really well. Mailing lists are on-line, the ftp site is set up, and there is a publically viewable/browsable CVS archive. As an added plus, I've put a collection of old GDB's on the ftp site. The oldest is GDB 2.4, released in early 1998. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/gdb/ BINUTILS -- when I'm down on my luck, when I'm feeling sad, I chase those blues away with the help of these heartwarming utilities. An assembler, a linker; a little something for everyone. Binutils joins sourceware with a mailing list, mail archives for the discussions going back to 1994, and a viewable/browsable CVS archive. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/binutils/ XCONQ: an Empire-type strategy game where players contest for world domination. Fun for the whole family. Stan Shebs has been developing/making releases of xconq for over a decade. It runs on PCs, Macs, and Unix systems, it has an AI engine smarter than most US high school students, and networks more naturally than a marketing executive. Can you guess what it includes? You're right! Mailing list, web page, browsable/viewable CVS archives--who would have thunk it. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/xconq/ NEW RELEASES PTHREADS-WIN32 had their first big release of their compatibility library. Check it at http://sourceware.cygnus.com/pthreads-win32/ GDB 4.18 provides a great chance to check out the latest action with the hippest debugger around. We've got tons of stuff from HP to enhance HPUX support, we've for several new processors supported (Fujitsu FR30, Intel StrongARM, Mitsubishi D30V), and a slew of neato new stuff for remote debugging. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/gdb/ Our JAVA LANGUAGE PROJECT had a majorly huge announcement with the release of LIBGCJ, the run-time half of our setup. GCJ is the compiler that compiles your Java source to native code, and LIBGCJ provides the run-time support for those binaries. Check it at http://sourceware.cygnus.com/java/ INFRASTRUCTURE and OTHER THINGS TO DISCUSS AT PARTIES I've been an unstoppable Infrastructure Maniac for the past couple of months. I've got a gazillion mailing lists moved to sourceware; I'm mostly done migrating lists now. I've been improving on the web archive presentation/interface to make it easier to use, and I've been putting all the old archives on-line for fun historical reference. Just tonight I set up a search engine for sourceware. I'll be refining this interface over the next week or two, but the functionality is all there and--if I may say so myself--it is KICKIN. You will see little search boxes appearing on the mailing list web archive pages over the next few days. Until next time, peace and out, Jason ---- Want to unsubscribe from this list? Send a mail note to sourceware-announce-unsubscribe@sourceware.cygnus.com
We're in the middle of exciting times for free software, and a lot has been happening on sourceware.cygnus.com site since my last update to this mailing list. First off, LIST ADMIN DETAILS The list has moved. It used to be sourceware-announce@cygnus.com. It is now sourceware-announce@sourceware.cygnus.com. I'm the only one who posts to it, so this is not a big deal. However, to unsubscribe, you'll need to send a note to sourceware-announce-unsubscribe@sourceware.cygnus.com To get off the list. The message body and Subject line are ignored. Send me mail directly if you need help, jsm@cygnus.com. WEB PAGE CHANGES No original ideas here, I've been quietly editing the http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ web page to make it more useful. Contact me if you have comments or tasty recipes. NEW PROJECTS Since my last update, there have been two swanky cool new projects added to sourceware.cygnus.com: MAUVE - a collaborative effort to create a free testsuite for Java-TM class libraries. Most of the free software Java projects are pitching in, and HP has just donated a bunch of code. Mauve went public just this week. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/mauve/ LIBSTDC++ - an implementation of the ISO Standard C++ Library for the EGCS compiler, http://sourceware.cygnus.com/libstdc++/ PTHREADS-WIN32 - a pthreads implementation for Win32 systems (Win95/98/NT) for all you blokes who have yet to install Linux over your Win32 partitions, http://sourceware.cygnus.com/pthreads-win32/ GSL - GNU Scientific Library, a library of routines for numerical processing, http://sourceware.cygnus.com/gsl/ NEW RELEASES CYGWIN released B20.1 in December 1998, this is a hugely fastly cooly superlatively great upgrade from B19 and I have been told that the UK's Queen uses it herself. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/ AUTOCONF released version 2.13 in January 1999. This is the first new release of Autoconf in about two years, and includes a whole barrel full of fun portability tests. Don't download this one right before bedtime or you may not get to sleep due to the sheer joy of making your programs portable. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/autoconf/ AUTOMAKE, not to be outdone by its autoconf sibling, released version 1.4 in January 1999. It's nearly as captivating to play with automake as it is to play with autoconf. People who suffer from addictions should avoid prolonged exposure to both of these programs. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/automake/ INFRASTRUCTURE and OTHER THINGS TO DISCUSS AT PARTIES MAILING LISTS - we're handling all kinds of mailing lists on sourceware.cygnus.com with the qmail+ezmlm packages. You'll see this used more and more for all of our mailing lists. I've also set up mhonarc-generated web archives for all of the mailing lists, so most of the projects will have browsable web archives available. I'll be adding a search engine in the near future for extra bonus fun. PARTY TALK - CYGNUS NAMING CONTEST. Cygnus is soliciting ideas for a new company name. The winner gets an Pentium II workstation running Linux. Enter early, enter often. http://www.cygnus.com/contest/ Over and out, Jason
We have released the sources to version 1.1 of the Cygnus Embedded Real Time OS, eCos! You can get the sources and the full documentation from the eCos Sourceware web page, http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ecos/ The documentation is included in the eCos 1.1 download files, so you don't need to read it off of the Sourceware site. Supported hosts with eCos 1.1 include Windows and Linux, and target support includes Matsushita MN10300, Toshiba TX39 and PowerPC. The all important downloading and installation instructions are covered in the "Getting Started" section. We have also created the new ecos-discuss mailing list for discussion of all aspects of eCos by users and contributors. Sign up for this in the "Keeping in Touch" section. Jason jsm@cygnus.com
The Cygwin project (formerly known as gnu-win32 or cygwin32) has been added to the sourceware.cygnus.com site! At the same time, a new release of Cygwin, B20, has been released. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/ Cygwin is a compatability library and port of the GNU development tools to Windows95, 98, and NT. These tools allow you to compile UNIX programs and run them on these Win32-based systems with a minimum of fuss. The B20 release includes many new features and huge bug fixes, so if you're trying to work in both the Windows and Unix worlds, you should give Cygwin a look. Jason jsm@cygnus.com
Howdy howdy howdy, we've got three new projects up and running on sourceware.cygnus.com and I want to send a note to let everyone know about them. Automake is a tool used to generate Makefiles. You create the basic information necessary--the files in your project, how they relate--and automake spits out a portable Makefile which has all the little niceties we've all come to love. Automake is used to generate Makefiles for most GNU software out there these days. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/automake/ Autoconf is a tool used in writing portable programs. It runs tests on the host environment to see what kinds of things are available. Are the ISO C standard header files around? Is the 'const' reserved word supported? Where are the X header files? Is the setpgrp provided a BSD one or a POSIX.1 one (they take different arguments)? There are a bazillion little tests like these, and there is even a tool to find out which tests you might want to use for your program to help increase portability. Autoconf eliminates the #ifdef mess where you test against particular compilers, operating systems, chips, or even OS versions. With autoconf, you test for the features you care about directly. You reduce the #if hackery in your program, you increase its portability across different hosts, and your program will stand a better chance of being compilable on some as-yet-unseen OS years from now. As an added bonus, Ben Elliston has just taken over autoconf maintenance after over two years of it being dormant. Ben lives in Australia and is in one of the only cities that _aren't_ by the sea there, so he has nothing better to do all day than look at bug reports against autoconf. So get the latest autoconf code and start testing--there's a big release coming due and he could use your help! http://sourceware.cygnus.com/autoconf/ The last project that is over on sourceware is the pthreads-win32 library. This project is working to provide a pthreads (POSIX threads) API for Win32 (Win95/98/NT) systems and has a few active contributors. Check it out at http://sourceware.cygnus.com/pthreads-win32/ That's it for today! We will add more things in the near future, including the first eCos source release early next week. It should be a blast. Jason Molenda jsm@cygnus.com
Howdy howdy howdy, we've got three new projects up and running on sourceware.cygnus.com and I want to send a note to let everyone know about them. Automake is a tool used to generate Makefiles. You create the basic information necessary--the files in your project, how they relate--and automake spits out a portable Makefile which has all the little niceties we've all come to love. Automake is used to generate Makefiles for most GNU software out there these days. http://sourceware.cygnus.com/automake/ Autoconf is a tool used in writing portable programs. It runs tests on the host environment to see what kinds of things are available. Are the ISO C standard header files around? Is the 'const' reserved word supported? Where are the X header files? Is the setpgrp provided a BSD one or a POSIX.1 one (they take different arguments)? There are a bazillion little tests like these, and there is even a tool to find out which tests you might want to use for your program to help increase portability. Autoconf eliminates the #ifdef mess where you test against particular compilers, operating systems, chips, or even OS versions. With autoconf, you test for the features you care about directly. You reduce the #if hackery in your program, you increase its portability across different hosts, and your program will stand a better chance of being compilable on some as-yet-unseen OS years from now. As an added bonus, Ben Elliston has just taken over autoconf maintenance after over two years of it being dormant. Ben lives in Australia and is in one of the only cities that _aren't_ by the sea there, so he has nothing better to do all day than look at bug reports against autoconf. So get the latest autoconf code and start testing--there's a big release coming due and he could use your help! http://sourceware.cygnus.com/autoconf/ The last project that is over on sourceware is the pthreads-win32 library. This project is working to provide a pthreads (POSIX threads) API for Win32 (Win95/98/NT) systems and has a few active contributors. Check it out at http://sourceware.cygnus.com/pthreads-win32/ That's it for today! We will add more things in the near future, including the first eCos source release early next week. It should be a blast. Jason Molenda jsm@cygnus.com
Hi all, welcome to the sourceware-announce mailing list. This is our first announcement about new things on the sourceware.cygnus.com site. We've just put the first public information about eCos, the Embedded Cygnus OS, on-line. eCos is a Sourceware Real Time OS designed from the ground up over the last eighteen months for embedded applications. We have the full documentation for our first two ports, the Matsushita MN10300 and Toshiba TX-39, and the license agreement for eCos on-line right now. We'll be releasing the sources and a lot of additional information on November 2nd. Please give the Sourceware eCos web page a gander for more information: http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ecos/ Jason // Sourceware Czar Free the Software!