* Support for FreeBSD 6.x
* Support for compilation with SML/NJ
* Cross-compilation with mingw32
PR: 124061
Submitted by: Timothy Bourke <timbob@bigpond.com>
Approved by: maintainer
2008-09-19 java/java-gcj-compat: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 lang/screamer: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-10-01 misc/documancer: Unmaintained upstream
2008-09-19 misc/ipbt: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-10-13 multimedia/manslide: Use multimedia/smile instead
2008-09-19 net/globus4: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 net/p5-Parallel-MPI: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-01-28 net/p54u: website disappeared
2008-09-19 net-im/ginsu: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 net-p2p/py-kenosis-bittorrent: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 sysutils/sjog: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 textproc/Ebnf2ps: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 www/roxen: Has been broken for more than 6 months
2008-09-19 x11-fm/evidence: Has been broken for more than 6 months
cfortran.h is an easy-to-use powerful bridge between C and FORTRAN.
It provides a transparent, machine independent interface between
C and FORTRAN routines and global data.
Features:
* SMALL! You can compile and execute C code everywhere, for example on rescue
disks (about 100KB for x86 TCC executable, including C preprocessor,
C compiler, assembler and linker).
* FAST! tcc generates x86 code. No byte code overhead. Compile, assemble and
link several times faster than GCC.
* UNLIMITED! Any C dynamic library can be used directly. TCC is heading torward
full ISOC99 compliance. TCC can of course compile itself.
* SAFE! tcc includes an optional memory and bound checker. Bound checked code
can be mixed freely with standard code.
* Compile and execute C source directly. No linking or assembly necessary.
Full C preprocessor and GNU-like assembler included.
* C script supported : just add '#!/usr/local/bin/tcc -run' at the first line
of your C source, and execute it directly from the command line.
* With libtcc, you can use TCC as a backend for dynamic code generation.
WWW: http://bellard.org/tcc/
language implementations using an Objective-C runtime for the object model.
This is used by SmalltalkKit, implementing Etoile's Pragmatic Smalltalk,
a Smalltalk JIT compiler which generates code binary-compatible with
Objective-C, allowing classes to be written in a mixture of Smalltalk
and Objective-C.
WWW: http://www.etoile-project.org/
Distributed Objects. It simply exports a dictionary containing a set of named
objects for scripting with Objective-C or any languages based on the LanguageKit
such as Pragmatic Smalltalk.
This is used for example by the hit corners and gesture recognition tool to run
arbitrary commands in response to corner activations or mouse gestures, and by
ScriptServices which allows arbitrary shell or Smalltalk scripts to be invoked
on the current selection from any GNUstep or Etoile application.
WWW: http://www.etoile-project.org/
some MSVC extensions. It also provides many useful analyses for warnings. It
uses libFIRM, which provides a SSA-based intermediate representation in form of
explicit dependency graphs, for optimization and code generation. Parsing is
done with a handwritten recursive descent parser. The AST representation is
straightforward, so it can be used for other purposes than code generation.
* fast recursive descent parser, parses C89 and C99
* handles most GCC extensions, f.e. __attribute__, inline assembler,
computed goto, statement expressions
* handles some MSVC extensions (like declspec)
* provides many useful warnings
* format string checker for char and wchar_t
* unreachable code analysis
* missing return statement check, which pinpoints exact location(s)
* write-only/-self variables detection
* missing and redundant forward declarations
* most warnings switches, which are available for GCC
* provides concise messages in case of error, for example when encountering
misspelled typenames
* compiler driver compatible with with GCC (-fxxx, -Wxxx, -M, ...)
* uses libFIRM for optimization and code generation (devel/libfirm)
WWW: http://www.libfirm.org
Submitted by: Christoph Mallon <christoph.mallon at gmx.de>