1 This file contains information about GCC releases up to GCC 2.8.1, and
2 some information about EGCS releases. For more details of changes in
3 EGCS releases, and details of changes in GCC 2.95 and more recent
4 releases, see the release notes on the GCC web site and the file NEWS
5 which contains the most relevant parts of those release notes in text
8 Noteworthy changes in GCC for EGCS 1.1.
9 ---------------------------------------
11 The compiler now implements global common subexpression elimination (gcse) as
12 well as global constant/copy propagation. (link to gcse page).
14 More major improvements have been made to the alias analysis code. A new
15 option to allow front-ends to provide alias information to the optimizers
16 has also been added (-fstrict-aliasing). -fstrict-aliasing is off by default
17 now, but will be enabled by default in the future. (link to alias page)
19 Major changes continue in the exception handling support. This release
20 includes some changes to reduce static overhead for exception handling. It
21 also includes some major changes to the setjmp/longjmp based EH mechanism to
22 make it less pessimistic. And finally, major infrastructure improvements
23 to the dwarf2 EH mechanism have been made to make our EH support extensible.
25 We have fixed the infamous security problems with temporary files.
27 The "regmove" optimization pass has been nearly completely rewritten. It now
28 uses much more information about the target to determine profitability of
31 The compiler now recomputes register usage information immediately before
32 register allocation. Previously such information was only not kept up to
33 date after instruction combination which led to poor register allocation
34 choices by our priority based register allocator.
36 The register reloading phase of the compiler has been improved to better
37 optimize spill code. This primarily helps targets which generate lots of
38 spills (like the x86 ports and many register poor embedded ports).
40 A few changes in the heuristics used by the register allocator and scheduler
41 have been made which can significantly improve performance for certain
44 The compiler's branch shortening algorithms have been significantly improved
45 to work better on targets which align jump targets.
47 The compiler now supports the "ADDRESSOF" optimization which can significantly
48 reduce the overhead for certain inline calls (and inline calls in general).
50 The compiler now supports a code size optimization switch (-Os). When enabled
51 the compiler will prefer optimizations which improve code size over those
52 which improve code speed.
54 The compiler has been improved to completely eliminate library calls which
55 compute constant values. This is particularly useful on machines which
56 do not have integer mul/div or floating point support on-chip.
58 GCC now supports a "--help" option to print detailed help information.
60 cpplib has been greatly improved. It is probably useable for some sites now
61 (major missing feature is trigraphs).
63 Memory footprint for the compiler has been significantly reduced for certain
66 Build time improvements for targets which support lots of sched parameters
67 (alpha and mips primarily).
69 Compile time for certain programs using large constant initializers has been
70 improved (affects glibc significantly).
72 Plus an incredible number of infrastructure changes, warning fixes, bugfixes
73 and local optimizations.
75 Various improvements have been made to better support cross compilations. They
76 are still not easy, but they are improving.
80 Sparc: Now includes V8 plus and V9 support, lots of tuning for Ultrasparcs
81 and uses the Haifa scheduler by default.
83 Alpha: EV6 tuned, optimized expansion of memcpy/bzero.
85 x86: Data in the static store is aligned per Intel recommendations. Jump
86 targets are aligned per Intel recommendations. Improved epilogue
87 sequences for Pentium chips. Backend improvements which should help
88 register allocation on all x86 variants. Support for PPro conditional
89 move instructions has been fixed and enabled. Random changes
90 throughout the port to make generated code more Pentium friendly.
91 Improved support for 64bit integer operations.
92 Unixware 7, a System V Release 5 target is now supported.
93 SCO OpenServer targets can support GAS. See gcc/INSTALL for details.
95 RS6000/PowerPC: Includes AIX4.3 support as well as PowerPC64 support.
96 Haifa instruction scheduling is enabled by default now.
98 MIPS: Multiply/Multiply-Add support has been largely rewritten to generate
99 more efficient code. Includes mips16 support.
101 M68K: Various micro-optimizations and Coldfire fixes.
103 M32r: Major improvements to this port.
105 Arm: Includes Thumb and super interworking support.
107 EGCS includes all gcc2 changes up to and including the June 9, 1998 snapshot.
110 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.8.1
111 ---------------------------------------
113 Numerous bugs have been fixed and some minor performance
114 improvements (compilation speed) have been made.
116 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.8.0
117 ---------------------------------------
119 A major change in this release is the addition of a framework for
120 exception handling, currently used by C++. Many internal changes and
121 optimization improvements have been made. These increase the
122 maintainability and portability of GCC. GCC now uses autoconf to
123 compute many host parameters.
125 The following lists changes that add new features or targets.
127 See cp/NEWS for new features of C++ in this release.
129 New tools and features:
131 The Dwarf 2 debugging information format is supported on ELF systems, and
132 is the default for -ggdb where available. It can also be used for C++.
133 The Dwarf version 1 debugging format is also permitted for C++, but
136 gcov.c is provided for test coverage analysis and branch profiling
137 analysis is also supported; see -fprofile-arcs, -ftest-coverage,
138 and -fbranch-probabilities.
140 Support for the Checker memory checking tool.
142 New switch, -fstack-check, to check for stack overflow on systems that
143 don't have such built into their ABI.
145 New switches, -Wundef and -Wno-undef to warn if an undefined identifier
146 is evaluated in an #if directive.
148 Options -Wall and -Wimplicit now cause GCC to warn about implicit int
149 in declarations (e.g. `register i;'), since the C Standard committee
150 has decided to disallow this in the next revision of the standard;
151 -Wimplicit-function-declarations and -Wimplicit-int are subsets of
154 Option -Wsign-compare causes GCC to warn about comparison of signed and
157 Add -dI option of cccp for cxref.
159 New features in configuration, installation and specs file handling:
161 New option --enable-c-cpplib to configure script.
163 You can use --with-cpu on the configure command to specify the default
164 CPU that GCC should generate code for.
166 The -specs=file switch allows you to override default specs used in
167 invoking programs like cc1, as, etc.
169 Allow including one specs file from another and renaming a specs
172 You can now relocate all GCC files with a single environment variable
173 or a registry entry under Windows 95 and Windows NT.
175 Changes in Objective-C:
177 The Objective-C Runtime Library has been made thread-safe.
179 The Objective-C Runtime Library contains an interface for creating
180 mutexes, condition mutexes, and threads; it requires a back-end
181 implementation for the specific platform and/or thread package.
182 Currently supported are DEC/OSF1, IRIX, Mach, OS/2, POSIX, PCThreads,
183 Solaris, and Windows32. The --enable-threads parameter can be used
184 when configuring GCC to enable and select a thread back-end.
186 Objective-C is now configured as separate front-end language to GCC,
187 making it more convenient to conditionally build it.
189 The internal structures of the Objective-C Runtime Library have
190 changed sufficiently to warrant a new version number; now version 8.
191 Programs compiled with an older version must be recompiled.
193 The Objective-C Runtime Library can be built as a DLL on Windows 95
194 and Windows NT systems.
196 The Objective-C Runtime Library implements +load.
198 The following new targets are supported (see also list under each
199 individual CPU below):
201 Embedded target m32r-elf.
202 Embedded Hitachi Super-H using ELF.
203 RTEMS real-time system on various CPU targets.
206 Matsushita MN10200 processor.
207 Matsushita MN10300 processor.
208 Sparc and PowerPC running on VxWorks.
209 Support both glibc versions 1 and 2 on Linux-based GNU systems.
211 New features for DEC Alpha systems:
213 Allow detailed specification of IEEE fp support:
214 -mieee, -mieee-with-inexact, and -mieee-conformant
215 -mfp-trap-mode=xxx, -mfp-round-mode=xxx, -mtrap-precision=xxx
216 -mcpu=xxx for CPU selection
217 Support scheduling parameters for EV5.
218 Add support for BWX, CIX, and MAX instruction set extensions.
219 Support Linux-based GNU systems.
222 Additional supported processors and systems for MIPS targets:
224 MIPS4 instruction set.
225 R4100, R4300 and R5000 processors.
230 New features for Intel x86 family:
232 Add scheduling parameters for Pentium and Pentium Pro.
233 Support stabs on Solaris-x86.
234 Intel x86 processors running the SCO OpenServer 5 family.
235 Intel x86 processors running DG/UX.
236 Intel x86 using Cygwin32 or Mingw32 on Windows 95 and Windows NT.
238 New features for Motorola 68k family:
240 Support for 68060 processor.
241 More consistent switches to specify processor.
242 Motorola 68k family running AUX.
243 68040 running pSOS, ELF object files, DBX debugging.
244 Coldfire variant of Motorola m68k family.
246 New features for the HP PA RISC:
248 -mspace and -mno-space
249 -mlong-load-store and -mno-long-load-store
250 -mbig-switch -mno-big-switch
252 GCC on the PA requires either gas-2.7 or the HP assembler; for best
253 results using GAS is highly recommended. GAS is required for -g and
254 exception handling support.
256 New features for SPARC-based systems:
259 The sparclet cpu, supporting only a.out file format.
260 Sparc running SunOS 4 with the GNU assembler.
261 Sparc running the Linux-based GNU system.
262 Embedded Sparc processors running the ELF object file format.
267 -malign-functions=xxx
268 -mimpure-text and -mno-impure-text
270 Options -mno-v8 and -mno-sparclite are no longer supported on SPARC
271 targets. Options -mcypress, -mv8, -msupersparc, -msparclite, -mf930,
272 and -mf934 are deprecated and will be deleted in GCC 2.9. Use
275 New features for rs6000 and PowerPC systems:
277 Solaris 2.51 running on PowerPC's.
278 The Linux-based GNU system running on PowerPC's.
279 -mcpu=604e,602,603e,620,801,823,mpc505,821,860,power2
281 -mrelocatable-lib, -mno-relocatable-lib
283 -mupdate, -mno-update
284 -mfused-madd, -mno-fused-madd
288 -mcall-linux, -mcall-solaris, -mcall-sysv-eabi, -mcall-sysv-noeabi
289 -msdata, -msdata=none, -msdata=default, -msdata=sysv, -msdata=eabi
292 wchar_t is now of type long as per the ABI, not unsigned short.
294 -mcpu=403 now implies -mstrict-align.
295 Implement System V profiling.
297 Aix 4.1 GCC targets now default to -mcpu=common so that programs
298 compiled can be moved between rs6000 and powerpc based systems. A
299 consequence of this is that -static won't work, and that some programs
300 may be slightly slower.
302 You can select the default value to use for -mcpu=xxx on rs6000 and
303 powerpc targets by using the --with-cpu=xxx option when configuring the
304 compiler. In addition, a new options, -mtune=xxx was added that
305 selects the machine to schedule for but does not select the
308 Directory names used for storing the multilib libraries on System V
309 and embedded PowerPC systems have been shortened to work with commands
310 like tar that have fixed limits on pathname size.
312 New features for the Hitachi H8/300(H):
315 -ms (for the Hitachi H8/S processor)
318 New features for the ARM:
320 -march=xxx, -mtune=xxx, -mcpu=xxx
321 Support interworking with Thumb code.
322 ARM processor with a.out object format, COFF, or AOF assembler.
323 ARM on "semi-hosted" platform.
325 ARM running the Linux-based GNU system.
327 New feature for Solaris systems:
329 GCC installation no longer makes a copy of system include files,
330 thus insulating GCC better from updates to the operating system.
333 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.7.2
334 ---------------------------------------
336 A few bugs have been fixed (most notably the generation of an
337 invalid assembler opcode on some RS/6000 systems).
339 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.7.1
340 ---------------------------------------
342 This release fixes numerous bugs (mostly minor) in GCC 2.7.0, but
343 also contains a few new features, mostly related to specific targets.
345 Major changes have been made in code to support Windows NT.
347 The following new targets are supported:
351 HP/UX version 10 on HP PA RISC (treated like version 9)
352 DEC Alpha running Windows NT
354 When parsing C, GCC now recognizes C++ style `//' comments unless you
355 specify `-ansi' or `-traditional'.
357 The PowerPC System V targets (powerpc-*-sysv, powerpc-*-eabi) now use the
358 calling sequence specified in the System V Application Binary Interface
359 Processor Supplement (PowerPC Processor ABI Supplement) rather than the calling
360 sequence used in GCC version 2.7.0. That calling sequence was based on the AIX
361 calling sequence without function descriptors. To compile code for that older
362 calling sequence, either configure the compiler for powerpc-*-eabiaix or use
363 the -mcall-aix switch when compiling and linking.
365 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.7.0
366 ---------------------------------------
368 GCC now works better on systems that use ".obj" and ".exe" instead of
369 ".o" and no extension. This involved changes to the driver program,
370 gcc.c, to convert ".o" names to ".obj" and to GCC's Makefile to use
371 ".obj" and ".exe" in filenames that are not targets. In order to
372 build GCC on such systems, you may need versions of GNU make and/or
373 compatible shells. At this point, this support is preliminary.
375 Object file extensions of ".obj" and executable file extensions of
376 ".exe" are allowed when using appropriate version of GNU Make.
378 Numerous enhancements were made to the __attribute__ facility including
379 more attributes and more places that support it. We now support the
380 "packed", "nocommon", "noreturn", "volatile", "const", "unused",
381 "transparent_union", "constructor", "destructor", "mode", "section",
382 "align", "format", "weak", and "alias" attributes. Each of these
383 names may also be specified with added underscores, e.g., "__packed__".
384 __attribute__ may now be applied to parameter definitions, function
385 definitions, and structure, enum, and union definitions.
387 GCC now supports returning more structures in registers, as specified by
388 many calling sequences (ABIs), such as on the HP PA RISC.
390 A new option '-fpack-struct' was added to automatically pack all structure
391 members together without holes.
393 There is a new library (cpplib) and program (cppmain) that at some
394 point will replace cpp (aka cccp). To use cppmain as cpp now, pass
395 the option CCCP=cppmain to make. The library is already used by the
396 fix-header program, which should speed up the fixproto script.
398 New options for supported targets:
401 NetBSD on MIPS, m68k, VAX, and x86.
402 LynxOS on x86, m68k, Sparc, and RS/6000.
403 VxWorks on many targets.
405 Windows/NT on x86 architecture. Initial support for Windows/NT on Alpha
408 Many embedded targets, specifically UDI on a29k, aout, coff, elf,
409 and vsta "operating systems" on m68k, m88k, mips, sparc, and x86.
411 Additional support for x86 (i386, i486, and Pentium):
413 Work with old and new linkers for Linux-based GNU systems,
414 supporting both a.out and ELF.
417 -malign-double, -mregparm=, -malign-loops= and -malign-jumps= switches.
418 On ISC systems, support -Xp like -posix.
420 Additions for RS/6000:
422 Instruction scheduling information for PowerPC 403.
424 -mstring and -mno-string.
425 -msoft-float and floating-point emulation included.
426 Preliminary support for PowerPC System V.4 with or without the GNU as.
427 Preliminary support for EABI.
428 Preliminary support for 64-bit systems.
429 Both big and little endian systems.
431 New features for MIPS-based systems:
437 Allow dollar signs in labels on SGI/Irix 5.x.
439 New support for HP PA RISC:
441 Generation of PIC (requires binutils-2.5.2.u6 or later).
442 HP-UX version 9 on HP PA RISC (dynamically links even with -g).
443 Processor variants for HP PA RISC: 700, 7100, and 7100LC.
444 Automatic generation of long calls when needed.
445 -mfast-indirect-calls for kernels and static binaries.
447 The called routine now copies arguments passed by invisible reference,
448 as required by the calling standard.
450 Other new miscellaneous target-specific support:
453 -mold-align for i960.
454 Configuration for "semi-hosted" ARM.
455 -momit-leaf-frame-pointer for M88k.
456 SH3 variant of Hitachi Super-H and support both big and little endian.
458 Changes to Objective-C:
460 Bare-bones implementation of NXConstantString has been added,
461 which is invoked by the @"string" directive.
463 Class * has been changed to Class to conform to the NextSTEP and
466 Enhancements to make dynamic loading easier.
468 The module version number has been updated to Version 7, thus existing
469 code will need to be recompiled to use the current run-time library.
471 GCC now supports the ISO Normative Addendum 1 to the C Standard.
474 The header <iso646.h> defines macros for C programs written
475 in national variants of ISO 646.
477 The following digraph tokens are supported:
479 These behave like the following, respectively:
482 Digraph tokens are supported unless you specify the `-traditional'
483 option; you do not need to specify `-ansi' or `-trigraphs'. Except
484 for contrived and unlikely examples involving preprocessor
485 stringizing, digraph interpretation doesn't change the meaning of
486 programs; this is unlike trigraph interpretation, which changes the
487 meanings of relatively common strings.
489 The macro __STDC_VERSION__ has the value 199409L.
491 As usual, for full conformance to the standard, you also need a
492 C library that conforms.
494 The following lists changes that have been made to g++. If some
495 features mentioned below sound unfamiliar, you will probably want to
496 look at the recently-released public review copy of the C++ Working
497 Paper. For PostScript and PDF (Adobe Acrobat) versions, see the
498 archive at ftp://research.att.com/dist/stdc++/WP. For HTML and ASCII
499 versions, see ftp://ftp.cygnus.com/pub/g++. On the web, see
500 http://www.cygnus.com/~mrs/wp-draft.
502 The scope of variables declared in the for-init-statement has been changed
503 to conform to http://www.cygnus.com/~mrs/wp-draft/stmt.html#stmt.for; as a
504 result, packages such as groff 1.09 will not compile unless you specify the
505 -fno-for-scope flag. PLEASE DO NOT REPORT THIS AS A BUG; this is a change
506 mandated by the C++ standardization committee.
508 Binary incompatibilities:
510 The builtin 'bool' type is now the size of a machine word on RISC targets,
511 for code efficiency; it remains one byte long on CISC targets.
513 Code that does not use #pragma interface/implementation will most
514 likely shrink dramatically, as g++ now only emits the vtable for a
515 class in the translation unit where its first non-inline, non-abstract
516 virtual function is defined.
518 Classes that do not define the copy constructor will sometimes be
519 passed and returned in registers. This may illuminate latent bugs in
522 Support for automatic template instantiation has *NOT* been added, due
523 to a disagreement over design philosophies.
525 Support for exception handling has been improved; more targets are now
526 supported, and throws will use the RTTI mechanism to match against the
527 catch parameter type. Optimization is NOT SUPPORTED with
528 -fhandle-exceptions; no need to report this as a bug.
530 Support for Run-Time Type Identification has been added with -frtti.
531 This support is still in alpha; one major restriction is that any file
532 compiled with -frtti must include <typeinfo.h>.
534 Preliminary support for namespaces has been added. This support is far
535 from complete, and probably not useful.
537 Synthesis of compiler-generated constructors, destructors and
538 assignment operators is now deferred until the functions are used.
540 The parsing of expressions such as `a ? b : c = 1' has changed from
541 `(a ? b : c) = 1' to `a : b ? (c = 1)'.
543 The code generated for testing conditions, especially those using ||
544 and &&, is now more efficient.
546 The operator keywords and, and_eq, bitand, bitor, compl, not, not_eq,
547 or, or_eq, xor and xor_eq are now supported. Use -ansi or
548 -foperator-names to enable them.
550 The 'explicit' keyword is now supported. 'explicit' is used to mark
551 constructors and type conversion operators that should not be used
554 g++ now accepts the typename keyword, though it currently has no
555 semantics; it can be a no-op in the current template implementation.
556 You may want to start using it in your code, however, since the
557 pending rewrite of the template implementation to compile STL properly
558 (perhaps for 2.8.0, perhaps not) will require you to use it as
559 indicated by the current draft.
561 Handling of user-defined type conversion has been overhauled so that
562 type conversion operators are now found and used properly in
563 expressions and function calls.
565 -fno-strict-prototype now only applies to function declarations with
568 g++ now warns about 'if (x=0)' with -Wparentheses or -Wall.
570 #pragma weak and #pragma pack are supported on System V R4 targets, as
571 are various other target-specific #pragmas supported by gcc.
573 new and delete of const types is now allowed (with no additional
576 Explicit instantiation of template methods is now supported. Also,
577 'inline template class foo<int>;' can be used to emit only the vtable
578 for a template class.
580 With -fcheck-new, g++ will check the return value of all calls to
581 operator new, and not attempt to modify a returned null pointer.
583 The template instantiation code now handles more conversions when
584 passing to a parameter that does not depend on template arguments.
585 This means that code like 'string s; cout << s;' now works.
587 Invalid jumps in a switch statement past declarations that require
588 initializations are now caught.
590 Functions declared 'extern inline' now have the same linkage semantics
591 as inline member functions. On supported targets, where previously
592 these functions (and vtables, and template instantiations) would have
593 been defined statically, they will now be defined as weak symbols so
594 that only one out-of-line definition is used.
596 collect2 now demangles linker output, and c++filt has become part of
597 the gcc distribution.
599 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.6.3:
601 A few more bugs have been fixed.
603 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.6.2:
605 A few bugs have been fixed.
607 Names of attributes can now be preceded and followed by double underscores.
609 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.6.1:
611 Numerous (mostly minor) bugs have been fixed.
613 The following new configurations are supported:
615 GNU on x86 (instead of treating it like MACH)
616 NetBSD on Sparc and Motorola 68k
617 AIX 4.1 on RS/6000 and PowerPC systems
618 Sequent DYNIX/ptx 1.x and 2.x.
619 Both COFF and ELF configurations on AViiON without using /bin/gcc
620 Windows/NT on x86 architecture; preliminary
621 AT&T DSP1610 digital signal processor chips
622 i960 systems on bare boards using COFF
623 PDP11; target only and not extensively tested
625 The -pg option is now supported for Alpha under OSF/1 V3.0 or later.
627 Files with an extension of ".c++" are treated as C++ code.
629 The -Xlinker and -Wl arguments are now passed to the linker in the
630 position they were specified on the command line. This makes it
631 possible, for example, to pass flags to the linker about specific
634 The use of positional arguments to the configure script is no longer
635 recommended. Use --target= to specify the target; see the GCC manual.
637 The 386 now supports two new switches: -mreg-alloc=<string> changes
638 the default register allocation order used by the compiler, and
639 -mno-wide-multiply disables the use of the mul/imul instructions that
640 produce 64 bit results in EAX:EDX from 32 bit operands to do long long
641 multiplies and 32-bit division by constants.
643 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.6.0:
645 Numerous bugs have been fixed, in the C and C++ front-ends, as
646 well as in the common compiler code.
648 This release includes the C, Objective-C, and C++ compilers. However,
649 we have moved the files for the C++ compiler (G++) files to a
650 subdirectory, cp. Subsequent releases of GCC will split these files
651 to a separate TAR file.
653 The G++ team has been tracking the development of the ANSI standard for C++.
654 Here are some new features added from the latest working paper:
656 * built-in boolean type 'bool', with constants 'true' and 'false'.
657 * array new and delete (operator new [] and delete []).
658 * WP-conforming lifetime of temporaries.
659 * explicit instantiation of templates (template class A<int>;),
660 along with an option (-fno-implicit-templates) to disable emission
661 of implicitly instantiated templates, obsoletes -fexternal-templates.
662 * static member constants (static const int foo = 4; within the
665 Many error messages have been improved to tell the user more about the
666 problem. Conformance checking with -pedantic-errors has been
667 improved. G++ now compiles Fresco.
669 There is now an experimental implementation of virtual functions using
670 thunks instead of Cfront-style vtables, enabled with -fvtable-thunks.
671 This option also enables a heuristic which causes the compiler to only
672 emit the vtable in the translation unit where its first non-inline
673 virtual function is defined; using this option and
674 -fno-implicit-templates, users should be able to avoid #pragma
675 interface/implementation altogether.
677 Signatures have been added as a GNU C++ extension. Using the option
678 -fhandle-signatures, users are able to turn on recognition of
679 signatures. A short introduction on signatures is in the section
680 `Extension to the C++ Language' in the manual.
682 The `g++' program is now a C program, rather than a shell script.
684 Lots and lots and lots of bugs fixes, in nested types, access control,
685 pointers to member functions, the parser, templates, overload
686 resolution, etc, etc.
688 There have been two major enhancements to the Objective-C compiler:
690 1) Added portability. It now runs on Alpha, and some problems with
691 message forwarding have been addressed on other platforms.
693 2) Selectors have been redefined to be pointers to structs like:
694 { void *sel_id, char *sel_types }, where the sel_id is the unique
695 identifier, the selector itself is no longer unique.
697 Programmers should use the new function sel_eq to test selector
700 The following major changes have been made to the base compiler and
701 machine-specific files.
703 - The MIL-STD-1750A is a new port, but still preliminary.
705 - The h8/300h is now supported; both the h8/300 and h8/300h ports come
706 with 32 bit IEEE 754 software floating point support.
708 - The 64-bit Sparc (v9) and 64-bit MIPS chips are supported.
710 - NetBSD is supported on m68k, Intel x86, and pc523 systems and FreeBSD
713 - COFF is supported on x86, m68k, and Sparc systems running LynxOS.
715 - 68K systems from Bull and Concurrent are supported and System V
716 Release 4 is supported on the Atari.
718 - GCC supports GAS on the Motorola 3300 (sysV68) and debugging
719 (assuming GAS) on the Plexus 68K system. (However, GAS does not yet
720 work on those systems).
722 - System V Release 4 is supported on MIPS (Tandem).
724 - For DG/UX, an ELF configuration is now supported, and both the ELF
725 and BCS configurations support ELF and COFF object file formats.
727 - OSF/1 V2.0 is supported on Alpha.
729 - Function profiling is also supported on Alpha.
731 - GAS and GDB is supported for Irix 5 (MIPS).
733 - "common mode" (code that will run on both POWER and PowerPC
734 architectures) is now supported for the RS/6000 family; the
735 compiler knows about more PPC chips.
737 - Both NeXTStep 2.1 and 3 are supported on 68k-based architectures.
739 - On the AMD 29k, the -msoft-float is now supported, as well as
740 -mno-sum-in-toc for RS/6000, -mapp-regs and -mflat for Sparc, and
741 -membedded-pic for MIPS.
743 - GCC can now convert division by integer constants into the equivalent
744 multiplication and shift operations when that is faster than the
747 - Two new warning options, -Wbad-function-cast and
748 -Wmissing-declarations have been added.
750 - Configurations may now add machine-specific __attribute__ options on
751 type; many machines support the `section' attribute.
753 - The -ffast-math flag permits some optimization that violate strict
754 IEEE rules, such as converting X * 0.0 to 0.0.
756 Noteworthy changes in GCC version 2.5.8:
758 This release only fixes a few serious bugs. These include fixes for a
759 bug that prevented most programs from working on the RS/6000, a bug
760 that caused invalid assembler code for programs with a `switch'
761 statement on the NS32K, a G++ problem that caused undefined names in
762 some configurations, and several less serious problems, some of which
763 can affect most configuration.
765 Noteworthy change in GCC version 2.5.7:
767 This release only fixes a few bugs, one of which was causing bootstrap
768 compare errors on some systems.
770 Noteworthy change in GCC version 2.5.6:
772 A few backend bugs have been fixed, some of which only occur on one
775 The C++ compiler in 2.5.6 includes:
777 * fixes for some common crashes
778 * correct handling of nested types that are referenced as `foo::bar'
779 * spurious warnings about friends being declared static and never
780 defined should no longer appear
781 * enums that are local to a method in a class, or a class that's
782 local to a function, are now handled correctly. For example:
783 class foo { void bar () { enum { x, y } E; x; } };
784 void bar () { class foo { enum { x, y } E; E baz; }; }
786 Noteworthy change in GCC version 2.5.5:
788 A large number of C++ bugs have been fixed.
790 The fixproto script adds prototypes conditionally on __cplusplus.
792 Noteworthy change in GCC version 2.5.4:
794 A bug fix in passing of structure arguments for the HP-PA architecture
795 makes code compiled with GCC 2.5.4 incompatible with code compiled
796 with earlier versions (if it passes struct arguments of 33 to 64 bits,
797 interspersed with other types of arguments).
799 Noteworthy change in gcc version 2.5.3:
801 The method of "mangling" C++ function names has been changed. So you
802 must recompile all C++ programs completely when you start using GCC
803 2.5. Also, GCC 2.5 requires libg++ version 2.5. Earlier libg++
804 versions won't work with GCC 2.5. (This is generally true--GCC
805 version M.N requires libg++ version M.N.)
807 Noteworthy GCC changes in version 2.5:
809 * There is now support for the IBM 370 architecture as a target.
810 Currently the only operating system supported is MVS; GCC does not run
811 on MVS, so you must produce .s files using GCC as a cross compiler,
812 then transfer them to MVS to assemble them. This port is not reliable
815 * The Power PC is now supported.
817 * The i860-based Paragon machine is now supported.
819 * The Hitachi 3050 (an HP-PA machine) is now supported.
821 * The variable __GNUC_MINOR__ holds the minor version number of GCC, as
822 an integer. For version 2.5.X, the value is 5.
824 * In C, initializers for static and global variables are now processed
825 an element at a time, so that they don't need a lot of storage.
827 * The C syntax for specifying which structure field comes next in an
828 initializer is now `.FIELDNAME='. The corresponding syntax for
829 array initializers is now `[INDEX]='. For example,
832 = { [' '] = 1, ['\t'] = 1, ['\n'] = 1 };
834 This was changed to accord with the syntax proposed by the Numerical
835 C Extensions Group (NCEG).
837 * Complex numbers are now supported in C. Use the keyword __complex__
838 to declare complex data types. See the manual for details.
840 * GCC now supports `long double' meaningfully on the Sparc (128-bit
841 floating point) and on the 386 (96-bit floating point). The Sparc
842 support is enabled on Solaris 2.x because earlier system versions
843 (SunOS 4) have bugs in the emulation.
845 * All targets now have assertions for cpu, machine and system. So you
846 can now use assertions to distinguish among all supported targets.
848 * Nested functions in C may now be inline. Just declare them inline
851 * Packed structure members are now supported fully; it should be possible
852 to access them on any supported target, no matter how little alignment
855 * To declare that a function does not return, you must now write
856 something like this (works only in 2.5):
858 void fatal () __attribute__ ((noreturn));
860 or like this (works in older versions too):
862 typedef void voidfn ();
864 volatile voidfn fatal;
866 It used to be possible to do so by writing this:
868 volatile void fatal ();
870 but it turns out that ANSI C requires that to mean something
871 else (which is useless).
873 Likewise, to declare that a function is side-effect-free
874 so that calls may be deleted or combined, write
875 something like this (works only in 2.5):
877 int computation () __attribute__ ((const));
879 or like this (works in older versions too):
881 typedef int intfn ();
883 const intfn computation;
885 * The new option -iwithprefixbefore specifies a directory to add to
886 the search path for include files in the same position where -I would
887 put it, but uses the specified prefix just like -iwithprefix.
889 * Basic block profiling has been enhanced to record the function the
890 basic block comes from, and if the module was compiled for debugging,
891 the line number and filename. A default version of the basic block
892 support module has been added to libgcc2 that appends the basic block
893 information to a text file 'bb.out'. Machine descriptions can now
894 override the basic block support module in the target macro file.
898 * The new flag `-fansi-overloading' for C++. Use a newly implemented
899 scheme of argument matching for C++. It makes g++ more accurately
900 obey the rules set down in Chapter 13 of the Annotated C++ Reference
901 Manual (the ARM). This option will be turned on by default in a
904 * The -finline-debug flag is now gone (it was never really used by the
907 * Recognizing the syntax for pointers to members, e.g., "foo::*bar", has been
908 dramatically improved. You should not get any syntax errors or incorrect
909 runtime results while using pointers to members correctly; if you do, it's
912 * Forward declaration of an enum is now flagged as an error.
914 * Class-local typedefs are now working properly.
916 * Nested class support has been significantly improved. The compiler
917 will now (in theory) support up to 240 nested classes before hitting
918 other system limits (like memory size).
920 * There is a new C version of the `g++' driver, to replace the old
921 shell script. This should significantly improve the performance of
922 executing g++ on a system where a user's PATH environment variable
923 references many NFS-mounted filesystems. This driver also works
924 under MS-DOS and OS/2.
926 * The ANSI committee working on the C++ standard has adopted a new
927 keyword `mutable'. This will allow you to make a specific member be
928 modifiable in an otherwise const class.
930 Noteworthy GCC changes in version 2.4.4:
932 A crash building g++ on various hosts (including m68k) has been
933 fixed. Also the g++ compiler no longer reports incorrect
934 ambiguities in some situations where they do not exist, and
935 const template member functions are now being found properly.
937 Noteworthy GCC changes in version 2.4:
939 * On each target, the default is now to return short structures
940 compatibly with the "usual" compiler on that target.
942 For most targets, this means the default is to return all structures
943 in memory, like long structures, in whatever way is used on that
944 target. Use -freg-struct-return to enable returning short structures
945 (and unions) in registers.
947 This change means that newly compiled binaries are incompatible with
948 binaries compiled with previous versions of GCC.
950 On some targets, GCC is itself the usual compiler. On these targets,
951 the default way to return short structures is still in registers.
952 Use -fpcc-struct-return to tell GCC to return them in memory.
954 * There is now a floating point emulator which can imitate the way all
955 supported target machines do floating point arithmetic.
957 This makes it possible to have cross compilation to and from the VAX,
958 and between machines of different endianness. However, this works
959 only when the target machine description is updated to use the new
960 facilities, and not all have been updated.
962 This also makes possible support for longer floating point types.
963 GCC 2.4 supports extended format on the 68K if you use `long double',
964 for targets that have a 68881. (When we have run time library
965 routines for extended floating point, then `long double' will use
966 extended format on all 68K targets.)
968 We expect to support extended floating point on the i386 and Sparc in
971 * Building GCC now automatically fixes the system's header files.
972 This should require no attention.
974 * GCC now installs an unsigned data type as size_t when it fixes the
975 header files (on all but a handful of old target machines).
976 Therefore, the bug that size_t failed to be unsigned is fixed.
978 * Building and installation are now completely separate.
979 All new files are constructed during the build process;
980 installation just copies them.
982 * New targets supported: Clipper, Hitachi SH, Hitachi 8300, and Sparc
985 * A totally new and much better Objective C run time system is included.
987 * Objective C supports many new features. Alas, I can't describe them
988 since I don't use that language; however, they are the same ones
989 supported in recent versions of the NeXT operating system.
991 * The builtin functions __builtin_apply_args, __builtin_apply and
992 __builtin_return let you record the arguments and returned
993 value of a function without knowing their number or type.
995 * The builtin string variables __FUNCTION__ and __PRETTY_FUNCTION__
996 give the name of the function in the source, and a pretty-printed
997 version of the name. The two are the same in C, but differ in C++.
999 * Casts to union types do not yield lvalues.
1001 * ## before an empty rest argument discards the preceding sequence
1002 of non-whitespace characters from the macro definition.
1003 (This feature is subject to change.)
1006 New features specific to C++:
1008 * The manual contains a new section ``Common Misunderstandings with
1009 GNU C++'' that C++ users should read.
1011 * #pragma interface and #pragma implementation let you use the same
1012 C++ source file for both interface and implementation.
1013 However, this mechanism is still in transition.
1015 * Named returned values let you avoid an extra constructor call
1016 when a function result has a class type.
1018 * The C++ operators <? and >? yield min and max, respectively.
1020 * C++ gotos can exit a block safely even if the block has
1021 aggregates that require destructors.
1023 * gcc defines the macro __GNUG__ when compiling C++ programs.
1025 * GNU C++ now correctly distinguishes between the prefix and postfix
1026 forms of overloaded operator ++ and --. To avoid breaking old
1027 code, if a class defines only the prefix form, the compiler
1028 accepts either ++obj or obj++, unless -pedantic is used.
1030 * If you are using version 2.3 of libg++, you need to rebuild it with
1031 `make CC=gcc' to avoid mismatches in the definition of `size_t'.
1033 Newly documented compiler options:
1036 Omit the standard system startup files when linking.
1039 Consider memory references to extern and global data items to
1043 Add DIR to the second include path.
1046 Specify PREFIX for later -iwithprefix options.
1049 Add PREFIX/DIR to the second include path.
1052 Emit Sparc v8 code (with integer multiply and divide).
1054 Emit Sparclite code (roughly v7.5).
1056 -print-libgcc-file-name
1057 Search for the libgcc.a file, print its absolute file name, and exit.
1059 -Woverloaded-virtual
1060 Warn when a derived class function declaration may be an error
1061 in defining a C++ virtual function.
1063 -Wtemplate-debugging
1064 When using templates in a C++ program, warn if debugging is
1065 not yet fully available.
1068 Control how C++ virtual function definitions are used