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- <!-- This HTML file has been created by texi2html 1.30
- from bull9.texi on 28 January 1995 -->
- <TITLE>GNU's Bulletin, vol. 1 no. 9 - June, 1990</TITLE>
- <H1>GNU's Bulletin, vol. 1 no. 9 - June, 1990</H1>
- <P>
- <HR>
- <P>
- The GNU's Bulletin is the semi-annual newsletter of the
- Free Software Foundation, bringing you news about the GNU Project.
- <P>
- Free Software Foundation, Inc. Telephone: (617) 876-3296 <BR> 675
- Massachusetts Avenue Electronic mail: gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu <BR>
- Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
- <P>
- <HR>
- <P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC3" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC3">GNU's Who</A></H1>
- <P>
- <B>Joseph Arceneaux</B> is developing Emacs Version 19. <B>Jim
- Kingdon</B> is working on GDB. <B>Michael Rowan</B> is writing a
- <CODE>login</CODE> replacement to work with <CODE>xdm</CODE>. <B>Roland
- McGrath</B> will again be on the payroll starting in July; he is finishing
- up the C library and maintains GNU make. <B>David MacKenzie</B> has
- been hired as a summer programmer and is maintaining the file
- utilities.<P>
- <B>Brian Fox</B> is maintaining various programs that he has written,
- including the <CODE>readline</CODE> library, the <CODE>makeinfo</CODE> and Info
- programs, BASH, and the new GNU <CODE>finger</CODE>. <B>Jay Fenlason</B>
- continues with the GNU spreadsheet, Oleo, as well as maintaining
- <CODE>tar</CODE>, <CODE>sed</CODE> and the GNU assembler.<P>
- <B>Mike Haertel</B> continues work on the C interpreter; he is also
- maintaining and improving the "bin" utilities and species of
- <CODE>grep</CODE>. <B>David Lawrence</B>, who works for us at the Rensselaer
- Polytechnic Institute, is maintaining the Lisp libraries for Emacs.
- <B>Kathy Hargreaves</B> is now working on Ghostscript, having just
- finished making the regular expression routines mostly POSIX-compliant.
- <B>Karl Berry</B> is also working on Ghostscript.<P>
- <B>Amy Gorin</B> has been hired as a documentation writer, starting with
- the manual for <CODE>tar</CODE>. <B>Diane Barlow Close</B> continues work on
- the <CITE>BASH Programming Manual</CITE>. <B>Grace Sylvan</B> is writing the
- <CITE>GNU C Reference Manual</CITE>.<P>
- <B>S. Opus Goldstein</B> is still doing a great job running our office.
- <B>Erica Brigid</B> is answering phone calls, handling correspondence,
- and making distribution tapes. <B>Robert J. Chassell</B>, our
- Treasurer, is working on an elementary introduction to programming in
- Emacs Lisp, in addition to the many Foundation issues not related to
- programming.<P>
- <B>Richard Stallman</B> continues as a volunteer who does countless tasks,
- including refining the C compiler, GNU Emacs, etc., and their
- documentation. Finally, volunteer <B>Len Tower</B> remains our
- electronic JOAT (jack-of-all-trades), handling mailing lists and
- gnUSENET, information requests, and the like.<P>
- <HR>
- <P>
- <H3><A NAME="SEC4" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC4">GNU's Bulletin</A></H3>
- <P>
- Copyright (C) 1990 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- <P>
- Written by: Michael Rowan, Robert J. Chassell, Richard Stallman,
- <BLOCKQUOTE>
- Leonard H. Tower Jr., and Michael Bloom
- </BLOCKQUOTE>
- <P>
- Illustrations: Etienne Suvasa
- <P>
- Japanese Edition: Mieko Hikichi and Nobuyuki Hikichi
- <P>
- <BLOCKQUOTE>
- Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies of
- this document as received, in any medium, provided that the copyright
- notice and permission notice are preserved, and that the distributor
- grants the recipient permission for further redistribution as permitted
- by this notice.</BLOCKQUOTE>
- <P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC5" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC5">What Is the Free Software Foundation?</A></H1>
- <P>
- The Free Software Foundation is dedicated to eliminating restrictions on
- copying, redistribution, understanding, and modification of computer
- programs. We do this by promoting the development and use of free
- software in all areas of computer use. Specifically, we are putting
- together a complete integrated software system named "GNU" (GNU's Not
- Unix) that will be upwardly compatible with Unix. Some large parts of
- this system are already working, and we are distributing them
- now.<P>
- The word "free" in our name refers to two specific freedoms: first,
- the freedom to copy a program and give it away to your friends and
- co-workers; second, the freedom to change a program as you wish, by
- having full access to source code. Furthermore, you can study the
- source and learn how such programs are written. You may then be able to
- port it, improve it, and share your changes with others.<P>
- Other organizations distribute whatever free software happens to be
- available. By contrast, FSF concentrates on development of new free
- software, working towards a GNU system complete enough to eliminate the
- need to purchase a proprietary system.<P>
- Besides developing GNU, the Foundation has secondary functions:
- producing tapes and printed manuals of GNU software, carrying out
- distribution, and accepting gifts to support GNU development. We are
- tax exempt; you can deduct donations to us on your tax returns. Our
- development effort is funded partly from donations and partly from
- distribution fees. Note that the distribution fees purchase just the
- service of distribution: you never have to pay anyone license fees to
- use GNU software, and you always have the freedom to make your copy from
- a friend's computer at no charge (provided your friend is
- willing).<P>
- The Foundation also maintains a Service Directory: a list of people who
- offer service for pay to users of GNU programs and systems. The Service
- Directory is located in file <TT>`etc/SERVICE'</TT> in the GNU Emacs
- distribution. Service can mean answering questions for new users,
- customizing programs, porting to new systems, or anything else. Contact
- us if you want to be listed or wish a copy.<P>
- After we create our programs, we continually update and improve them.
- We release between 2 and 20 updates a year for each program. Doing this
- while developing new programs takes a lot of work, so any donations of
- pertinent source code and documentation, machines, labor, or money are
- always appreciated.<P>
- The board of the Foundation is: Richard Stallman, President; Robert J.
- Chassell, Treasurer; Gerald J. Sussman, Harold Abelson and Leonard H.
- Tower Jr., Directors.\vfil
- <P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC6" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC6">What Is Copyleft?</A></H1>
- <P>
- In the previous section entitled "What Is the Free Software
- Foundation?" we state that "you never have to pay anyone license fees
- to use GNU software, and you always have the freedom to make your copy
- from a friend's computer at no charge." What exactly do we mean by
- this, and how do we make sure that it stays true?<P>
- The simplest way to make a program free is to put it in the public
- domain. Then people who get it from sharers can share it with others.
- But this also allows bad citizens to do what they like to do: sell
- binary-only versions under typical don't-share-with-your-neighbor
- licenses. They would thus enjoy the benefits of the freeness of the
- original program while withholding these benefits from the users. It
- could easily come about that most users get the program this way, and
- our goal of making the program free for <EM>all</EM> users would have been
- undermined.<P>
- To prevent this from happening, we don't normally place GNU programs in
- the public domain. Instead, we protect them by what we call
- <DFN>copylefts</DFN>. A copyleft is a legal instrument that makes everybody
- free to copy a program as long as the person getting the copy gets with
- it the freedom to distribute further copies, and the freedom to modify
- their copy (which means that they must get access to the source code).
- Typical software companies use copyrights to take away these freedoms;
- now software sharers use copylefts to preserve these freedoms.<P>
- The copyleft used by the GNU Project is made from a combination of a
- copyright notice and the <DFN>GNU General Public License</DFN>. The
- copyright notice is the usual kind. The General Public License is a
- copying license which basically says that you have the freedoms we want
- you to have and that you can't take these freedoms away from anyone
- else. (The actual document consists of several pages of rather
- complicated legalbol that our lawyer said we needed.) The complete
- license is included in all GNU source code distributions and many
- manuals. We will send you a copy on request.<P>
- We encourage others to copyleft their programs using the General Public
- License; basically programs only need to include a few sentences stating
- that the license applies to them. Specifics on using the License
- accompany it, so refer there for details.<P>
- <BLOCKQUOTE>
- <EM>"As we enjoy great advantages from the inventions of others, we
- should be glad of an opportunity to serve others by any invention of
- ours."</EM></BLOCKQUOTE>
- <P>
- --Benjamin Franklin
- <P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC7" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC7">GNUs Flashes</A></H1>
- <P>
- <UL>
- <LI>
- <B>Emacs Lisp Reference Manual</B>
- <P>
- It's here! We are now shipping the long awaited <CITE>GNU Emacs Lisp
- Reference Manual</CITE>. It describes the GNU Emacs Lisp programming language
- in great detail. The manual is about 550 pages and can be ordered from
- us for $50. Early drafts of this manual are still floating around from
- several years ago, mostly at <CODE>ftp</CODE> sites. We strongly urge you to
- update to the new version since the improvements are innumerable. (As
- always you can <CODE>ftp</CODE> the manual from the usual sources.)<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Smalltalk</B>
- <P>
- GNU now has a Smalltalk system. It was written by Steve Byrne. We
- currently have Version 1.0 available on <CODE>prep.ai.mit.edu</CODE>.
- Version 1.1 should be out soon. GNU Smalltalk is based on the
- <CITE>"blue book"</CITE> definition of the Smalltalk language. It is
- written in highly portable C and runs on a number of UNIX machines
- (Version 1.1 will offer more ports than the current version, which only
- runs on 4 or 5 machines). A graphical user interface is also planned.
- Response to the system has generally been very favorable, especially for
- a young system.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU Finger</B>
- <P>
- GNU Finger is now available. This is a daemon--based finger program
- that polls all of the hosts at a site for finger--related information.
- With GNU Finger, information can now be retrieved for a user on a
- site--wide basis instead of a host--specific basis. Our finger also
- displays bitmaps of users' faces where available. See "GNU Finger"
- under "GNU Project Status Report" for more information.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Donation from the Open Software Foundation</B>
- <P>
- We want to thank OSF for yet another donation of $25,000. It is also
- planning significant improvements for the GNU Assembler and
- binutils.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Long-named options</B>
- <P>
- As we have mentioned before, we are adding long-named options to many of
- our utilities. We have done this by adding functionality to our
- <CODE>getopt</CODE> library. <CODE>getopt_long</CODE> can now be used to parse long
- options as well as the normal single-lettered options allowed by the
- standard <CODE>getopt</CODE>. For example, instead of remembering whether to
- use <CODE>-v</CODE> or <CODE>-V</CODE>, you can use <CODE>+verbose</CODE> (or any
- unambiguous abbreviation) in all programs. Eventually we hope to
- provide command-line completion for long option names.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>DBM replacement</B>
- <P>
- Version 1.3 of our <CODE>gdbm</CODE> library has been released. It is a
- replacement for the <CODE>dbm</CODE> and <CODE>ndbm</CODE> libraries. Our
- <CODE>gdbm</CODE> database is stored in one file which contains no large
- holes, supports read/write interlocking, handles keys and data of
- unlimited size, and provides routines supporting both the <CODE>ndbm</CODE>
- and <CODE>dbm</CODE> interfaces. These features separate <CODE>gdbm</CODE> from its
- proprietary predecessors.<P>
- </UL>
- <P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC8" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC8">Possible New Terms for GNU Libraries</A></H1>
- <P>
- by Richard Stallman
- <P>
- We are considering changing the distribution terms for some GNU
- libraries, such as <CODE>libg++</CODE> and the (as yet unreleased) C
- library.<P>
- The GNU General Public License was designed for utility programs, such
- as Emacs and GCC. It makes a sharp distinction between using the
- program and copying any part of it: Any program containing any
- significant portion of the GNU program must be freely redistributable to
- be permitted at all. However, merely using the program (for example, an
- editor) imposes no restriction on the work that is done with it.<P>
- Libraries blur the distinction between modifying or adding to a program
- and simply using it. Linking a program with a library, without changing
- the library, is in some sense simply using the library, and analogous to
- running a utility program or application program. However, in a textual
- and legal sense, the linked executable is a combined work which is a
- derivative of the original library, and the ordinary General Public
- License treats it as such. As a result, developers of proprietary
- software have not used the GNU libraries.<P>
- The goal of the Free Software Foundation is to promote the freedom to
- share software, for software developers and for users; we develop
- software for sharing as a means to this end. As a pragmatic matter, if
- the conditions for use of this software are such that most developers
- choose not to use it, then we don't achieve the goal. At the same time,
- if the conditions are so loose that people can use the software without
- much additional sharing, then we don't achieve the goal.<P>
- It seems that the ordinary General Public License is too restrictive for
- libraries, and is discouraging their use rather than encouraging
- further sharing. However, it would not be best to do what
- proprietary software developers ask us to do--to permit completely
- unrestricted use of our libraries in proprietary software--because
- then the end users of that software wouldn't get a jot of additional
- freedom as a consequence of the use of our library. We need to find a
- proper middle ground.<P>
- Our idea is to require the distributor of the proprietary executable to
- make the source to our library available along with the object files for
- the rest of the application. The user could then recompile the library
- (perhaps with changes) and relink to get a usable program. This way the
- user will, in some sense, get the benefit of the free status of the
- library within the executable.<P>
- However, not all the details are settled, so we aren't announcing the
- precise new library terms just yet.<P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC9" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC9">League for Programming Freedom</A></H1>
- <P>
- by Michael Bloom and Richard Stallman
- <P>
- The League for Programming Freedom is an organization of people who
- oppose the attempt to monopolize common user interfaces through "look
- and feel" copyright lawsuits. Some of us are programmers who worry
- that such monopolies will obstruct our work. Some of us are users who
- want new computer systems to be compatible with the interfaces we
- know.<P>
- "Look and feel" lawsuits aim to create a new class of
- government-enforced monopolies that would be broader in scope than ever
- before. Such a system of user-interface copyright would impose
- gratuitous incompatibility, reduce competition, and stifle
- innovation.<P>
- We in the League hope to prevent these problems by preventing
- user-interface copyright. The League is not opposed to copyright law as
- it was understood until 1986--i.e., copyright on particular programs.
- Our aim is to stop changes in the copyright system, which would take
- away programmers' traditional freedom to write new programs that are
- compatible with existing programs and practices.<P>
- The League for Programming Freedom will act against the doctrine
- behind look-and-feel suits by any means consistent with the law and
- intellectual liberty. We will write editorials, talk with public
- officials, file amicus curiae briefs with the courts, and boycott
- egregious offenders. If you have other ideas, please suggest
- them.<P>
- The League members are now voting on the question of opposing software
- patents, which threaten to make every design decision in software
- development a chance for a lawsuit. The League's founders consider
- software patents potentially more dangerous than look-and-feel
- copyright, and the members voting so far seem to agree. Final results
- will be known at the beginning of June.<P>
- The more members we have, the more effective we will be. Even if you
- cannot donate any time, simply joining will make a difference.<P>
- The dues are $42 for professionals, $21 for others, except students
- whose dues are $10.50. To join, write to:<P>
- <PRE>
- League for Programming Freedom, 1 Kendall Square #143,
- P.O.Box 9171, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. Phone: (617) 492--0023.
- <CODE>league@prep.ai.mit.edu</CODE>
- </PRE>
- <P>
- Note that the League for Programming Freedom is a separate organization
- from the Free Software Foundation; please direct all League inquiries to
- the above address, not to the Foundation.<P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC10" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC10">Free Software Support</A></H1>
- <P>
- The Free Software Foundation develops and distributes freely available
- software. Our goal is to help computer users as a community. We
- envision a world in which software is freely redistributable. This
- means software will be sold at a competitive market price rather than a
- monopoly established price; often, it will be given away. We see
- programmers as providing a service, much as doctors and lawyers now
- do--both medical knowledge and the law are freely redistributable
- entities for which the practitioners charge a distribution and service
- fee.<P>
- To help you find support and other consulting services, we maintain a
- list of people who offer such services. We call this list the GNU
- Service Directory. This list is contained in the file
- <TT>`etc/SERVICE'</TT> in the GNU Emacs distribution. If you want to offer
- services, you can use this list to help make yourself known. (Contact us
- if you would like a copy of this directory or wish to be
- included.)<P>
- Most of the listings in the GNU Service Directory are for individuals,
- but one is for Cygnus Support, which is the first for-profit corporation
- that we know of that provides support <EM>only</EM> for free software.
- Their address is <CODE>info@cygnus.com</CODE> or Cygnus Support, 814
- University Ave., Palo Alto, CA 94301. FSF is not affiliated with Cygnus
- Support, but we hope that Cygnus Support is a harbinger of the
- future.<P>
- If you find a deficiency in any GNU software, we want to know. We
- maintain a considerable number of Internet mailing lists for making
- announcements, reporting bugs and for asking questions. The Emacs
- and GCC Manuals have chapters explaining where to send bug reports and
- what information to put in them. Incidentally, on the larger lists, it
- is not surprising to see an enquiry answered on the same day it is
- posted.<P>
- These mailing lists are also gatewayed into USENET news. If your site
- receives USENET, you can follow these discussions using news software.
- To find out more about the <CODE>gnu.*</CODE> newsgroups, ask your system
- administrator.<P>
- If you don't have Internet access, you can receive mail and USENET news
- with a UUCP connection. Contact either a system administrator at a
- local UUCP site, or UUNET Communications, which can set up a UUCP
- connection for a modest fee. (UUNET is a non-profit organization that
- provides network connections.) You can contact UUNET by e-mail at
- <CODE>info@uunet.uu.net</CODE> or by paper mail at:<P>
- <PRE>
- UUNET Communications Services, 3110 Fairview Park Drive -- Suite 570,
- Falls Church, VA 22042 Phone: (703) 876--5050
- </PRE>
- <P>
- When we receive a bug report, we will usually try to fix the problem in
- order to make the software better. This may help you in the long run;
- however, we may not provide you with immediate assistance. This is not
- and should not be our job. Our task is so large that we must focus on
- that which helps the community as a whole, such as developing and
- maintaining software and documentation. We mustn't let ourselves be
- sidetracked into helping individuals one by one. We do not have the
- resources. Thus, do tell us how an installation script doesn't work or
- where the documentation is unclear--but please don't ask us to help you
- install the software or figure out how to use it.<P>
- If your bug report does not evoke a solution from us, you may still get
- one from the many other users who read our bug reporting mailing lists.
- Otherwise, use the Service Directory.<P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC11" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC11">GNU Project Status Report</A></H1>
- <P>
- <UL>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU Emacs</B>
- <P>
- GNU Emacs 18 is now stable. Only a few important bugs have been
- encountered since Version 18.55.<P>
- Berkeley is distributing GNU Emacs with the 4.3 distribution, and
- numerous companies also distribute it.<P>
- Version 18 maintenance continues and a new version, 18.56, is expected
- soon. It has no new features, however. Version 19 approaches release
- with a host of new features: before and after change hooks; X selection
- processing (including CLIPBOARD selections); scrollbars; support for
- European character sets; floating point numbers; per-buffer mouse
- commands; interfacing with the X resource manager; mouse-tracking;
- Lisp-level binding of function keys; and multiple X windows (`screens'
- to Emacs).<P>
- Thanks go to Alan Carroll and the people who worked on Epoch for
- generating initial feedback to a multi-windowed Emacs. Emacs 19
- supports two styles of multiple windows, one with a separate screen for
- the minibuffer, and another with a minibuffer attached to each
- screen.<P>
- More features of Version 19 are buffer allocation, which uses a new
- mechanism capable of returning storage to the system when a buffer is
- killed, and a new input system--all input now arrives in the form of
- Lisp objects.<P>
- Other features being considered for Version 19 include:
- <P>
- <UL>
- <LI>
- Associating property lists with regions of text in a buffer.<LI>
- Multiple font, color, and pixmaps defined by those properties.<LI>
- Different visibility conditions for the regions, and for the various
- windows showing one buffer.<LI>
- Incremental syntax analysis for various programming languages.<LI>
- Hooks to be run if point or mouse moves outside a certain range.<LI>
- Source-level debugging for Emacs Lisp.<LI>
- Incrementally saving undo history in a file, so that recover-file also
- reinstalls buffer's undo history.<LI>
- Static menu bars, and better pop-up menus.<LI>
- A more sophisticated emacsclient/server model, which would provide
- network transparent Emacs widget functionality.</UL>
- <P>
- <LI>
- <B>Kernel</B>
- <P>
- We hope to use the Mach message-passing kernel being developed at CMU.
- The current distributed version of Mach is not free because it contains
- code from BSD of AT&T origin. However, Mach developers say that all
- this will be replaced with free code, or at least be moved into user
- processes. Mach will be free then. This version of Mach should be
- available in a couple of months (as of May 1990). Until this happens,
- and we see precisely what is available and on what terms, we can't say
- for certain whether we can use it.<P>
- We will not use Mach unless we can share it with everyone, and all users
- can redistribute it. In particular, if an export control prevents
- distribution outside the US, we will not use it.<P>
- If we can't use Mach, then we may start developing the GNU kernel with
- either MIT's TRIX kernel or Berkeley's Sprite system. TRIX is a remote
- procedure call kernel which runs and supports basic Unix compatibility
- at about the level of Version 7. It needs a lot of additional features.
- Sprite is at about the same architectural level as BSD Unix, but has a
- fancy distributed file system and process migration.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU Debugger</B>
- <P>
- The GNU source-level C debugger, GDB, is now being distributed along
- with the GNU C Compiler as GDB Version 3.5. Version 2.8, that used to
- be distributed on the Emacs tape, is now obsolete, and has been replaced
- by Version 3.5.<P>
- We have also started work on GDB Version 4. We have added watchpoints,
- remote cross-debugging, and a host of minor features. We plan to add
- over-the-ethernet debugging before the initial release of Version
- 4.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>C Compiler</B>
- <P>
- The GNU C compiler (GCC) Version 1 is now quite reliable. It supports
- ANSI standard C. NeXT builds its entire system, including its port of
- the Mach kernel and NFS, with GCC. We have also been told that GCC
- successfully compiled a System V.3 kernel. GCC has compiled almost all
- of the BSD source tree.<P>
- GCC performs automatic register allocation, invariant code motion from
- loops, common subexpression elimination, induction variable
- optimizations, constant propagation and copy propagation, delaying
- popping of function call arguments, tail recursion elimination, and many
- local optimizations that are automatically deduced from the machine
- description.<P>
- Supported CPUs include the 680x0, Vax, 32x32, 80386, 80860, Sparc (Sun
- 4), SPUR, Convex, MIPS, Tahoe, Pyramid, and Alliant.<P>
- We are trying to stabilize GCC Version 1 while incorporating new
- improvements into Version 2. Version 2 now has support for nested
- functions, a certain amount of CSE between basic blocks, and a new
- feature for classifying instructions--which can be used to choose
- between long and short branches or to provide raw data for instruction
- scheduling. Instruction scheduling and perhaps global CSE will be added
- by the time Version 2 is finished. More general calling conventions are
- supported.<P>
- Version 2 supports both C++ and Objective C on the same basis as C
- itself: the name of the source file selects the language. Michael
- Tiemann of Cygnus Support has written the C++ front end for GCC (which
- is available in Version 1 as G++). The front end for Objective C has
- been donated by NeXT. It will support the Motorola 88000, AMD 29000,
- IBM RT, and TRON. Ports for the IBM 370, the 3b2, the Ncube, a Gould
- machine (we don't know which one), and the HP Spectrum may be
- written.<P>
- Front ends for Modula, Fortran and Pascal are being developed by
- volunteers. There are rumors about various other languages. So far, no
- one has volunteered to write Ada or Cobol.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>C Library</B>
- <P>
- Roland McGrath and others continue to work on the C Library. The C
- library currently contains all of the ANSI C and POSIX.1 functions, and
- work is in progress on POSIX.2 and Unix features. This means that the
- library will have not only all of ANSI, POSIX 1003.1, and POSIX 1003.2,
- but almost everything found in BSD and System V.<P>
- The GNU regular-expression functions (<CODE>regex</CODE>) are now mostly
- conformant to the POSIX.2 standard.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Ghostscript</B>
- <P>
- We are distributing Ghostscript on tape. This program provides nearly
- all the facilities of a Postscript interpreter.<P>
- Ghostscript release 1.4 is now available. Staff members Karl Berry and
- Kathy Hargreaves are working on preparing a new release of Ghostscript,
- together with Peter Deutsch, the original author of the program. Kathy
- and Karl are also working on producing free PostScript font
- files.<P>
- Highlights of the new release include drivers for HP's Deskjet and
- Laserjet as well as the Epson LX-800 (all in low density mode).
- Ghostscript may be built with multiple drivers (e.g. an X Window driver
- and a printer driver), and you can switch between them
- dynamically.<P>
- The new release also includes about 20 scalable fonts algorithmically
- derived from the BDF fonts in the X11 distribution. These include
- Charter, Courier, Helvetica, New Century Schoolbook, Symbol, and Times
- fonts. All but the Symbol are provided in different variations.<P>
- Right now, Ghostscript will accept commands in PostScript and execute
- them by drawing on an X Window or writing a file that can be transferred
- directly to a printer. It also includes a C-callable graphics library
- (for client programs that don't want to deal with the PostScript
- Language), and supports IBM PCs and compatibles with EGA graphics as
- well (but don't ask us about this; we don't use PCs and don't have time
- to learn anything about them).<P>
- Ghostscript needs enhancements: to serve as a previewer for multi-page
- files; to serve other X clients by drawing on their windows; to be
- improved both in its performance and visual quality; and more fonts.
- Any suggestions for enhancements are welcome.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU Finger</B>
- <P>
- Brian Fox has released the new GNU Finger program. Finger is a
- daemon-based replacement for (or supplement to) BSD <CODE>finger</CODE>. Our
- finger now handles the newer paradigm of each user having his/her own
- small Unix host (workstation). GNU finger has a per site server that
- will poll all of the machines at a site. Thus queries can now be site
- wide rather than host specific. For example, fingering
- <B>bfox@pogo.ai.mit.edu</B> with our finger would tell you if he was
- logged in and what host he is using. If he isn't logged in, it will
- tell you what host he was last using.<P>
- Our finger also does faces! If a site has face bitmaps online (and is
- running GNU Finger, of course) you can get the user's face in a X Window
- on your display.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Oleo</B>
- <P>
- Jay Fenlason is writing a spreadsheet named Oleo (which is better for
- you than the more expensive spreadsheet). Oleo is in alpha test right
- now; we do not know when it will be available. Jay says that "really
- brave" people can contact him about being alpha testers.<P>
- Oleo currently reads and writes SC and Multiplan SYLK files, but
- teaching it new formats is fairly simple. It has a full set of
- expressions as well as mathematical, financial, and string functions.
- Keys may all be rebound and Oleo also has primitive macro
- support.<P>
- Oleo uses the <CODE>curses</CODE> library and an X11 interface is planned.
- Right now it runs on BSD Unix machines as well as IBM PC's and
- compatibles.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>groff</B>
- <P>
- James Clark is writing <CODE>groff</CODE>, an implementation in C++ of the
- traditional Unix document formatting tools. So far <CODE>troff</CODE>,
- <CODE>pic</CODE>, <CODE>tbl</CODE>, <CODE>eqn</CODE>, <CODE>man</CODE> macros, and a PostScript
- driver have been written. A version of the Berkeley <CODE>me</CODE> macros
- will be included. He is currently implementing a driver which produces
- TeX <CODE>.dvi</CODE> format and a driver for typewriter-like devices.
- Useful additions would be <CODE>mm</CODE> and <CODE>ms</CODE> macros, <CODE>grap</CODE>,
- and <CODE>refer</CODE>.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU Mailer</B>
- <P>
- Development of Smail is coming to an end. We are satisfied with the
- program's current features, except for the queueing system. We hope we
- can replace Smail's queueing system with the queueing system found in
- Zmailer. Otherwise a new one will have to be written.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>File Manipulation Utilities</B>
- <P>
- We have added a collection of utilities for file manipulation to the
- Pre-Release tape. The collection includes <CODE>ls</CODE>, <CODE>mv</CODE>,
- <CODE>cp</CODE>, <CODE>cat</CODE>, <CODE>rm</CODE>, <CODE>du</CODE>, <CODE>head</CODE>, <CODE>tail</CODE>,
- <CODE>cmp</CODE>, <CODE>chmod</CODE>, <CODE>mkdir</CODE>, and <CODE>ln</CODE>. These tools are
- either fully POSIX compliant or being worked on to become so. <CODE>cp</CODE>
- now has options to preserve the last-modification timestamp on copies,
- thus replacing some uses of <CODE>tar</CODE> or <CODE>cpio</CODE>.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Smalltalk</B>
- <P>
- Our Smalltalk system will be available in tape form when we release our
- "Experimental" tape in November. It is currently available via
- <CODE>ftp</CODE> on <CODE>prep.ai.mit.edu</CODE>. The current version is 1.1, with
- Version 1.2 expected to be out soon. Thanks to Steve Byrne who wrote
- our Smalltalk based on the <CITE>blue book</CITE> definition of the
- language.</UL>
- <P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC12" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC12">GNU Wish List</A></H1>
- <P>
- Wishes for this issue are for:<P>
- <UL>
- <LI>
- Someone skilled in compiler maintenance who could take over GCC
- maintenance for RMS. This would probably be a full-time job.<P>
- <LI>
- A Sun with a SCSI port to be donated or loaned so we can make
- distribution tapes. We also need machines to be donated or loaned for
- use by FSF programmers and documentation people who are not located near
- our offices in Cambridge.<P>
- <LI>
- Professors who might be interested in sponsoring or hosting research
- assistants to do GNU development, with full or partial FSF support.
- Several schools have done this and we welcome others to join in.<P>
- <LI>
- Volunteers to help write utilities and documentation. Send mail to
- <CODE>gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu</CODE> for the task list and coding
- standards.<P>
- <LI>
- Speech and character recognition software (if the devices aren't too
- weird), with the device drivers (if possible). This would help the
- productivity of at least one partially disabled programmer we
- know.<P>
- <LI>
- Grammar checking software for English and other natural
- languages.<P>
- <LI>
- Copies of newspaper and journal articles mentioning the GNU Project or
- GNU software. Send these to the address on the front cover, or send a
- citation to <CODE>gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu</CODE>.<P>
- <LI>
- Money, as always. Please remember, donations are tax-deductible. With
- the latest donations, we have been able to expand our staff again. With
- the increased staff we have an even greater need for donations.<P>
- One way to give us a small amount of money is to order a distribution
- tape or two. This may not count as a donation for tax purposes, but it
- can qualify as a business expense.<P>
- </UL>
- <P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC13" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC13">GNU Documentation</A></H1>
- <P>
- GNU is dedicated to having quality, easy-to-use, on-line and printed
- documentation. GNU manuals are intended to explain the underlying
- concepts, describe how to use all the features of each program, and give
- examples of command use.<P>
- GNU documentation is distributed as Texinfo source files. Texinfo
- source yields both a typeset hardcopy and on-line presentations,
- accessed by a menu-driven system.<P>
- The following manuals, provided with our software, are also available in
- hardcopy; see the order form on the inside back cover.<P>
- The <B>Emacs Manual</B> describes the use of GNU Emacs. It also explains
- advanced features, such as outline mode and regular expression search.
- The manual tells how to use special modes for programming in languages
- such as C and Lisp, how to use the tags utility, and how to compile and
- correct code. It also describes how to make your own keybindings and
- other elementary customizations.<P>
- The <B>Emacs Lisp Reference Manual</B> covers the GNU Emacs Lisp
- programming language in great depth. It goes into data types, control
- structures, functions, macros, byte compilation, keymaps, windows,
- markers, searching and matching, modes, syntax tables, operating system
- interface, etc.<P>
- The <B>Texinfo Manual</B> describes how to write documents in Texinfo
- source code. It explains the markup language used to create both an
- Info file and a printed document from the same source file. This tells
- you how to make tables, lists, chapters, nodes, indices, and cross
- references. It also describes how to use Texinfo mode in GNU Emacs and
- catch mistakes.<P>
- The <B>Termcap Manual</B> is often described as "Twice as much as you ever
- wanted to know about Termcap." It describes the format of the Termcap
- database, the definitions of terminal capabilities, and the process of
- interrogating a terminal description. This manual is primarily for
- programmers.<P>
- The <B>Bison Manual</B> covers writing grammar descriptions that can be
- converted into C coded parsers. This manual assumes no prior
- knowledge of parser generators. It describes the concepts and then
- provides a series of increasingly complex examples before
- describing what happens in considerable detail.<P>
- The <B>GAWK Manual</B> describes how to use the GNU implementation of AWK.
- It is written for someone who has never used AWK, and describes all the
- features of this powerful string manipulating language.<P>
- The <B>Make Manual</B> describes the GNU Make utility, a program used to
- rebuild parts of other programs when and as needed. It covers makefile
- writing, which specifies how a program is to be compiled and what each
- part of the program depends on.<P>
- The <B>GDB Manual</B> explains how to use the GNU Debugger. It describes
- running your program under debugger control, how to examine and alter
- data as well as modify the flow of control within the program, and how
- to use GDB through GNU Emacs, with auto-display of source lines.<P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC14" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC14">GNU Software Available Now</A></H1>
- <P>
- We offer Unix software source distribution tapes, plus VMS tapes for GNU
- Emacs and GNU C that include sources and VMS executables.<P>
- The first Unix tape (called the "Release" or "Emacs" tape) contains
- GNU Emacs as well as various other well-tested programs that we consider
- reliable. The second Unix tape (called the "Pre-Release" or
- "Compiler" tape) contains the GNU C compiler, related utilities, and
- other new programs that are less thoroughly tested. The third and
- fourth Unix tapes (called the "X11" tapes) contain the X11
- distribution from the MIT X Consortium.<P>
- The GNU C compiler and various related programs are on a tape that we
- have called our "Beta Test" tape in the past. However, this software
- is becoming more stable; to reflect this change, we are renaming the
- tape the "Pre-Release" tape. (The tape also contains Ghostscript,
- which is not stable; for the moment, this is the best place to put
- it.)<P>
- Sometime in the Fall, probably in early November, we will introduce a
- new beta test tape of "experimental" software. We will put new major,
- test releases of existing more-or-less stable programs such as GCC,
- Emacs, and GDB on this tape when they appear, as well as new programs
- such as Smalltalk and the C library. The contents of the
- "Experimental" tape will fluctuate because versions will move to the
- other tapes when they become stable. We are calling this the
- "Experimental" tape to prevent confusion with the older Beta
- tape.<P>
- We will put Ghostscript on the "Experimental" tape when it appears.
- But as a convenience, we will continue to include it on the
- "Pre-Release" tape until the current order form expires in January
- 1991, even though this action is somewhat inconsistent with the tape
- naming conventions.<P>
- Please do not order an "Experimental" tape until at least November,
- unless you see an announcement sooner than that on the net--we have put
- nothing on this tape as yet!<P>
- See the order form on the inside back cover for details about media,
- etc. Note that the contents of the 1600bpi 9-track tapes and the QIC-24
- DC300XLP 1/4 inch cartridge tapes for UNIX systems are the same. It is
- only the media that are different.<P>
- <H3><A NAME="SEC15" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC15">Contents of the Emacs Release Tape</A></H3>
- <P>
- The software on this release tape is considered fairly stable, but as
- always, we welcome your bug reports.<P>
- <UL>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU Emacs</B>
- <P>
- In 1975, Richard Stallman developed the first Emacs, an extensible,
- customizable real-time display editor. GNU Emacs is his second
- implementation of Emacs. It's the first Emacs available on Unix systems
- that offers true Lisp--smoothly integrated into the editor--for
- writing extensions. It also provides a special interface to MIT's free
- X window system. The current version of Emacs is 18.55.<P>
- GNU Emacs has been in widespread use since 1985 and often displaces
- proprietary implementations of Emacs because of its greater reliability
- as well as its additional features and easier extensibility. DEC,
- Berkeley, and NeXT are all distributing Emacs with their systems. When
- Isaac Salzman set out to review various versions of Emacs, only one
- company wanted its product to be compared with GNU Emacs. In his
- review, which appeared in the July, 1989 issue of <I>Unix Review</I>,
- Salzman concluded, "When it comes to Emacs, GNU is the way to
- go."<P>
- pGNU Emacs (as of Version 18.55) runs on many Unix systems: Alliant,
- Altos 3068, Amdahl (UTS), Apollo, AT&T (3B machines & 7300 PC), CCI 5/32
- & 6/32, Celerity, Convex, Digital (DECstation 3100; Vax running BSD or
- System V), Motorola Delta (running System V/68 release 3), Dual, Elxsi
- 6400, Encore (DPC, APC, & XPC), Gould, HP (9000 series 200, 300 or 800
- (Spectrum) but not series 500), HLH Orion 1/05, IBM (RT/PC running 4.2 &
- AIX; PS2 running AIX), Integrated Solutions (Optimum V with 68020 &
- VMEbus), Intel 80386 (BSD, System V, & Xenix; not MS-DOS), Iris (2500,
- 2500 Turbo, & 4D), LMI (Nu), Masscomp, Megatest, MIPS, NCR (Tower 32),
- Nixdorf Targon 31, Plexus, Prime, Pyramid, Sequent (Balance & Symmetry),
- SONY News, Stride (system release 2), Sun (1, 2, 3, 4, SparcStation, &
- 386i), Tahoe, Tektronix (NS32000 & 4300), Stardent 1500 or 3000, Titan
- P2 or P3, Pmax, Texas Instruments (Nu), & Whitechapel (MG1).<P>
- GNU Emacs is described by the <CITE>GNU Emacs Manual</CITE>, which comes with
- the software in Texinfo form. See "GNU Documentation" above. Also,
- since GDB is the only debugger that can debug Emacs without losing its
- mind, it is included on this tape as well as the Pre-Release
- Tape.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual</B>
- <P>
- We now include the Texinfo source to the <CITE>GNU Emacs Lisp Reference
- Manual</CITE> with Emacs. The manual describes the GNU Emacs Lisp programming
- language in detail and is for anyone who is interested in writing
- programs in GNU Emacs Lisp. See "GNUs Flashes" and "GNU
- Documentation" in this bulletin for more information.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Bison</B>
- <P>
- Bison is an upwardly compatible replacement for the parser generator
- Yacc, with additional features. It has been in use for several years.
- Bison is used for compiling GNU C, so it is included on the GNU
- Pre-Release tape as well. The <CITE>Bison Manual</CITE> comes with the
- software in Texinfo form (see "GNU Documentation" above).<P>
- <LI>
- <B>X Window System, V10R4</B>
- <P>
- We are no longer including a copy of X10 on our distribution tapes. It
- is no longer supported by MIT, so distributing it does not make sense.
- X Version 11 (currently release 4) is now pretty stable and available
- from us on two separate tapes. See "Contents of the X11
- Tapes."<P>
- <LI>
- <B>MIT Scheme</B>
- <P>
- Scheme is a simplified, lexically scoped dialect of Lisp. It was
- designed at MIT and other universities to teach students programming and
- to research new parallel programming constructs and compilation
- techniques. MIT Scheme is written in C and runs on many Unix systems.
- It now conforms to the {\sl Revised\/$^3$ Report On The Algorithmic
- Language Scheme\/} (MIT AI Lab Memo 848a), for which \TeX\ source is
- included in the distribution. Another good source of documentation for
- Scheme is {\sl Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs}, by
- Harold Abelson and Gerald J. Sussman with Julie Sussman, the MIT Press
- \& McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1985.
- <P>
- <LI>
- <B>Yale T</B>
- <P>
- A variant of Scheme developed at Yale University, T is intended for
- production use in program development. T contains a native-code
- optimizing compiler that produces code that runs at speeds comparable to
- the speeds of programs written in conventional languages. It runs on
- BSD Vaxes, 680x0 systems, SPARC workstations, MIPS R2000 workstations
- (including the Decstation 3100 PMAX), and NS32000 machines (including
- the Encore Multimax). T is written in itself and cannot be bootstrapped
- without a binary (included), but it is great if you can use it. Some
- documentation is included.<P>
- <LI>
- <B><CODE>texi2roff</CODE></B>
- <P>
- <CODE>texi2roff</CODE>, written by Beverly Erlebacher, translates GNU Texinfo
- files into a format that can be printed by the Unix [nt]roff programs
- utilizing the mm, ms or me macro packages. It is included on all UNIX
- tapes so people who don't have a copy of TeX can print out GNU
- documentation.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU Chess and NetHack</B>
- <P>
- GNU Chess is a chess program, now in its second major version. The
- first was written by Stuart Cracraft. The second was written and
- donated by John Stanback. If a successor is found that is
- significantly stronger, it could become the new GNU Chess. GNU Chess
- has text-only and X display interfaces.<P>
- NetHack is a display--oriented adventure game similar to Rogue.<P>
- </UL>
- <P>
- <H3><A NAME="SEC16" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC16">Contents of the Pre-Release Tape</A></H3>
- <P>
- The programs on this tape are becoming almost stable. The exception is
- Ghostscript, but which we are carrying on this tape as a convenience
- until January 1991, when we will distribute it only on the
- "Experimental" tape. As always, we solicit your comments and bug
- reports. This tape is also known as the Compiler tape, and used to be
- known as the "Beta" tape.<P>
- <UL>
- <LI>
- <B>GNU CC</B>
- <P>
- The GNU C compiler is a fairly portable optimizing compiler. It
- generates good code for the 32000, 680x0 (optionally with 68881/2),
- 80386, 860, 88000, Alliant, Convex, Tahoe, and Vax CPUs, and for these
- RISC CPUs: Pyramid, SPARC, and SPUR. The MIPS RISC CPU is also
- supported. Machines using these CPUs include 386 running AIX, Alliant
- FX/8, Altos 3068, Apollo 68000/68020 running Aegis, AT&T 3B1, Convex C1
- and C2, DECstation 3100, DEC VAX, Encore MultiMax (NS32000), Genix
- NS32000, Harris HCX-7 and HCX-9, HP-UX 68000/68020, HP running BSD, IBM
- PS/2 running AIX, Intel 386, Iris MIPS machine, ISI 68000/68020, MIPS,
- NeXT, Pyramid, Sequent Balance (NS32000), Sequent Symmetry (i386), SONY
- News, Sun 2, Sun 3 (optionally with FPA), Sun 4, SparcStation, and
- Sun386i. The current version is 1.37. It supports full ANSI C. Please
- refer to the "GNU Project Status Report" for more detail on
- GCC.<P>
- Included with the compiler are Bison (also on the Emacs release tape),
- and the perfect hash-table generating utility (Gperf), plus the Texinfo
- source of the <CITE>GCC Manual</CITE>. This manual describes how to run and
- install the GNU C compiler, and how to port it to new processors. It
- describes new features and incompatibilities of the compiler, but people
- not familiar with C will also need a good book on C.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Assembler and Object File Utilities</B>
- <P>
- The GNU assembler (GAS) is a fairly portable, one pass assembler that is
- almost twice as fast as Unix <CODE>as</CODE>. It is now at Version 1.35 and
- works for 32x32, 680x0, 80386, Sparc (Sun 4), and Vax.<P>
- We have free versions of <CODE>ar</CODE>, <CODE>ld</CODE>, <CODE>nm</CODE>, <CODE>size</CODE>,
- <CODE>gprof</CODE>, <CODE>strip</CODE>, and <CODE>ranlib</CODE>. The GNU linker <CODE>ld</CODE>
- runs significantly faster than the BSD version. Our <CODE>ld</CODE> is the
- only one that will give you source-line numbered error messages for
- multiply-defined symbols and undefined references.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>COFF Support</B>
- <P>
- It is possible to run the entire suite of GNU software tools on System
- V, replacing COFF entirely. The GNU tools can operate on BSD object
- files with a COFF header the System V kernel will accept.
- <CODE>robotussin</CODE> is supplied for converting standard libraries to this
- format.<P>
- <LI>
- <B><CODE>make</CODE></B>
- <P>
- GNU <CODE>make</CODE> includes almost all the features from the BSD, System V,
- and POSIX versions of make, as well many of our own extensions. These
- extensions include parallelism, conditional execution, and text
- manipulation. Version 3 of GNU make is fairly stable and we do not
- anticipate a Version 3 release after 3.59. Work on Version 4--which
- will include many functional improvements--will begin sometime this
- summer. Texinfo source for the GNU make manual is provided; see "GNU
- Documentation" above.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Debugger</B>
- <P>
- Version 3.<CODE>*</CODE> of GDB, the GNU debugger, runs under BSD 4.2 and 4.3
- on Vaxes and Suns (2, 3, and 4), Convex, HP 9000/300's under BSD, HP
- 9000/320's under HPUX, System V 386 machines (with either GNU or native
- object file format), ISI Optimum V, Merlin under Utek 2.1, SONY News,
- Gould NPL and PN machines, Pyramid, Sequent Symmetry (a 386 based
- machine), Altos, and Encores under Umax 4.2.<P>
- GDB features incremental reading of symbol tables (for fast startup and
- less memory use), command-line editing, the ability to call functions in
- the program being debugged, a value history, and user-defined commands.
- It can be used to debug C, C<CODE>++</CODE>, and FORTRAN programs.<P>
- GDB also provides for remote debugging over a serial line. Remote
- debugging is the most convenient way to develop software for systems
- which are too small to run a debugger; it allows you to have the
- features of GDB at your disposal even on such systems.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>BASH</B>
- <P>
- The GNU Shell, BASH (for Bourne Again SHell), provides compatibility
- with the Unix <CODE>sh</CODE> and provides many extensions found in <CODE>csh</CODE>
- and <CODE>ksh</CODE>. It has job control, <CODE>csh</CODE>-style command history,
- and command-line editing (with Emacs and vi modes built-in and the
- ability to rebind keys).<P>
- <LI>
- <B>GAWK, FLEX, and <CODE>tar</CODE></B>
- <P>
- GAWK is GNU's version of the Unix AWK utility; it comes with a Texinfo
- manual (see "GNU Documentation" above). FLEX is a mostly-compatible
- replacement for the Unix <CODE>lex</CODE> scanner generator written by Vern
- Paxson of the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. FLEX generates far more
- efficient scanners than <CODE>lex</CODE> does. GNU <CODE>tar</CODE> includes
- multivolume support, the ability to archive sparse files, automatic
- compression and decompression of archives, remote archives, and special
- features to allow <CODE>tar</CODE> to be used for incremental and full backups
- of file systems.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Freed Files from the U.C. Berkeley 4.3-tahoe Release</B>
- <P>
- These files have been declared by Berkeley to be free of AT&T code, and
- may be freely redistributed. They include complete sources for some
- utility programs, games, and library routines; and partial sources for
- many others.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>RCS and CVS</B>
- <P>
- The Revision Control System is used for version control and management
- of large software projects. This is the latest version (4.0).<P>
- CVS, the Concurrent Version System written by Brian Berliner, manages
- software revision and release control in a multi-developer,
- multi-directory, multi-group environment. It is designed to work on top
- of RCS Version 4, but will parse older RCS formats with the loss of
- CVS's fancier features. For further details, see Berliner, Brian,
- <CITE>CVS-II: Parallelizing Software Development,</CITE> Proceedings of the
- Winter 1990 USENIX Association Conference.<P>
- <LI>
- <B><CODE>diff</CODE> and <CODE>grep</CODE></B>
- <P>
- These programs are GNU's versions of the Unix programs of the same name.
- They are much faster than their Unix counterparts.<P>
- <LI>
- <B>Ghostscript and <CODE>gnuplot</CODE></B>
- <P>
- Ghostscript is GNU's graphics language that is almost fully compatible
- with PostScript. For more information on Ghostscript, please refer to
- the section on Ghostscript in the "GNU Project Status Report."<P>
- <CODE>gnuplot</CODE> is an interactive program for plotting mathematical
- expressions and data. Oddly enough, the program was neither done for
- nor named for the GNU Project--the name is a coincidence.<P>
- <LI>
- <B><CODE>g++</CODE>, <CODE>libg++</CODE>, and NIH Class Library</B>
- <P>
- G<CODE>++</CODE> is a set of changes for GCC that compiles C<CODE>++</CODE>, the
- well-known object-oriented language. This was the first compiler to
- compile C<CODE>++</CODE> directly instead of preprocessing it into C, with
- great benefits for debugging and efficiency. G<CODE>++</CODE> also was first
- with multiple inheritance and other new features later released by AT&T
- in <CODE>cfront 2.0</CODE>. Since G<CODE>++</CODE> depends on GCC, it must be used
- with the correspondingly numbered version of GCC. GDB Version
- 3.<CODE>*</CODE> includes support for debugging C<CODE>++</CODE> code, which merges
- in the functionality of the old program GDB<CODE>+</CODE>.<P>
- <CODE>libg++</CODE> (the GNU C<CODE>++</CODE> library) is an extensive and
- documented collection of C<CODE>++</CODE> classes and support tools for use
- with G<CODE>++</CODE>.<P>
- The NIH Class Library (formerly known as OOPS (Object-Oriented Program
- Support)) is a portable collection of classes similar to those in
- Smalltalk-80 that has been developed by Keith Gorlen of NIH, using the
- C<CODE>++</CODE> programming language.<P>
- Note that Interviews has been dropped from this tape since it appears on
- the "optional" X tape (See "Contents of the X11 Tapes"
- below).<P>
- <LI>
- <B>File Utilities and Miscellaneous</B>
- <P>
- The file utilities, which include the programs listed in the "GNU
- Status Report," are now included here. We also include
- <CODE>compress</CODE>, <CODE>perl</CODE> (Version 3.0), <CODE>c-perf</CODE> (Version 2.0),
- <CODE>f2c</CODE> (a FORTRAN to C translator), and GnuGo (the game of Go
- (Wei-Chi)) on this tape.<P>
- </UL>
- <P>
- <H3><A NAME="SEC17" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC17">Contents of the X11 Tapes</A></H3>
- <P>
- The two X11 tapes contain Version 11, Release 4 of the MIT X window
- system. X11 is more powerful than, but incompatible with, the
- no-longer-supported Version 10.<P>
- The first FSF tape contains the contents of both tape one and tape two
- from the MIT X Consortium: the core software and documentation, and the
- contributed clients. FSF refers to its first tape as the `required' X
- tape since it is necessary for running X or GNU Emacs under X. (The
- Consortium refers to its first two tapes as the `required/recommended'
- tapes.)<P>
- The second, `optional' FSF tape contains the contents of tapes three and
- four from the MIT X Consortium: contributed libraries and other
- toolkits, the Andrew software, games, etc. (The Consortium refers to
- its last two tapes as `optional' tapes.)<P>
- <H3><A NAME="SEC18" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC18">VMS Emacs and Compiler Tapes</A></H3>
- <P>
- We offer a VMS tape of the GNU Emacs editor, and a separate VMS tape
- containing the GNU C compiler. The VMS compiler tape also contains
- Bison (needed to compile GCC), GAS (needed to assemble GCC's output),
- and some library and include files. Both VMS tapes include executables
- that you can bootstrap from, because the DEC VMS C compiler has bugs and
- thus cannot compile GNU C.<P>
- Please don't ask us to devote effort to additional VMS support, because
- it is peripheral to the GNU Project.<P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC19" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC19">How to Get GNU Software</A></H1>
- <P>
- All the software and publications from the Free Software Foundation are
- distributed with permission to copy and redistribute. The easiest way
- to get GNU software is to copy it from someone else who has it.<P>
- If you have access to the Internet, you can get the latest software from
- the host <CODE>prep.ai.mit.edu</CODE>. For more information, read the
- file <TT>`/u/emacs/GETTING.GNU.SOFTWARE'</TT> on that host. Please note
- that the Internet address of <CODE>prep</CODE> is
- <CODE>18.71.0.38</CODE>.<P>
- If you cannot get the software from a friend or over the net, or if you
- would like to contribute some funds to our efforts and receive the
- latest versions, the Free Software Foundation distributes tapes for a
- copying and distribution fee. See the order form on the inside back
- cover.<P>
- There are also third party groups that distribute our software: they do
- not work with us, but have our software in other forms. For your
- convenience, some of them are listed below. Please note that the Free
- Software Foundation is <I>not</I> affiliated with them in any way, and is
- not responsible for either the currency of their versions or the
- swiftness of their responses.<P>
- These Internet sites provide GNU software via anonymous
- <CODE>ftp</CODE>:<P>
- <PRE>
- scam.berkeley.edu, itstd.sri.com, wuarchive.wustl.edu,
- wsmr-simtel20.army.mil (under <TT>`PD:<UNIX.GNU>'</TT>), bu.edu,
- louie.udel.edu, nic.nyser.net, ftp.cs.titech.ac.jp,
- funic.funet.fi, sunic.sunet.se, freja.diku.dk,
- gatekeeper.dec.com, mango.miami.edu (VMS G++),
- cc.utah.edu (VMS GNU Emacs), and uunet.uu.net.
- </PRE>
- <P>
- Those on the SPAN network can ask <TT>rdss::corbet</TT>.<P>
- Information on how to obtain some GNU programs using UUCP is available
- via electronic mail from the following people. Ohio State also posts
- their UUCP instructions regularly to newsgroup <CODE>comp.sources.d</CODE> on
- USENET.<P>
- <PRE>
- hao!scicom!qetzal!upba!ugn!nepa!denny, acornrc!bob,
- hqda-ai!merlin, uunet!hutch!barber, sun!nosun!illian!darylm,
- oli-stl!root, bigtex!james, postmaster@uunet.uu.net, and
- karl@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (or <CODE>osu-cis!karl)</CODE>.
- </PRE>
- <P>
- <H3><A NAME="SEC20" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC20">Freemacs, an Extensible Editor for MS-DOS</A></H3>
- <P>
- Freemacs, a copylefted MS-DOS editor, is one of the few editors for
- small machines with a full extension language. It is the only such
- editor that tries to be compatible with GNU Emacs. For more information
- contact: <CODE>nelson@clutx.clarkson.edu</CODE>, or: Russell Nelson, 11
- Grant St., Potsdam, NY, 13676. $15 sent to that address will get you a
- copy. It is also available for <CODE>ftp</CODE> on
- <CODE>sun.soe.clarkson.edu</CODE>. Note that the Free Software Foundation
- does not distribute Freemacs; please don't ask us about it.<P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC21" HREF="bull9_toc.html#SEC21">Thank GNUs</A></H1>
- <P>
- Thanks to all those mentioned in GNUs Flashes and the GNU Project Status
- Report.<P>
- Thanks to the <B>Japanese Unix Society</B> for their large gift.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Delta Microsystems</B> who just donated an Exabyte tape
- drive.<P>
- Thanks again to the <B>Open Software Foundation</B> for their continued
- support.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Digital Equipment Corporation</B> for their gift.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Bil Lewis</B>, <B>Dan LaLiberte</B>, and the volunteers
- who worked on the <CITE>Emacs Lisp Reference Manual</CITE>. Also thanks to
- <B>Warren A. Hunt, Jr.</B> and <B>Computational Logic, Inc.</B> for
- their support.<P>
- Thanks to the <B>MIT</B> <B>Artificial</B> <B>Intelligence</B>
- <B>Laboratory</B> & <B>MIT</B> <B>Laboratory</B> <B>for</B>
- <B>Computer</B> <B>Science</B> for their invaluable assistance of many
- kinds.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Chris Welty</B> as well as the <B>Computer</B>
- <B>Science</B> <B>Department</B> at <B>Rensselaer</B>
- <B>Polytechnic</B> <B>Institute</B> for splitting Dave Lawrence's
- salary with FSF and providing him computing facilities.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Prof. Christof Koch</B> of <B>Caltech</B> for his
- support of Brian Fox.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Prof. Paul Hilfinger</B> of the UCB CS Department for
- allowing Roland McGrath to use UCB resources.<P>
- Thanks to the <B>University</B> <B>of</B> <B>Minnesota</B>
- <B>Department</B> <B>of</B> <B>Computer</B> <B>Science</B> for
- allowing Mike Haertel to use their computers.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Cliff Lasser</B> of <B>Thinking Machines, Inc.</B> for
- the help with upgrading to SunOS 4.0.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Village Center Inc</B> and <B>Nikkei Business
- Publishing</B>, both of Japan, for their gifts.<P>
- Thanks to <B>Information Systems</B> and the <B>Whitaker</B>
- <B>College</B> <B>Computing</B> <B>Facility</B> at <B>MIT</B> for
- use of their machines to make our VMS master tapes.<P>
- Thanks go out to all those who have either lent or donated machines,
- including <B>Hewlett-Packard</B> for their donation of six 68030
- workstations, <B>Brewster Kahle</B> of Thinking Machines Corp.
- (TMC) for the Sun 4/110, <B>K. Richard Magill</B> for the AT&T Unix
- PC, <B>Doug Blewett</B> of AT&T Bell Labs for two Convergent
- Miniframes, CMU's <B>Mach Project</B> for the Sun 3/60, <B>Intel
- Corp.</B> for their 386/i860 workstation, <B>NeXT</B> for a NeXT
- workstation, the <B>MIT Media Laboratory</B> for the Hewlett-Packard
- 68020 machine, <B>SONY Corp.</B> and <B>Software Research
- Associates</B>, Inc., both of Tokyo, for three SONY News workstations, and
- the <B>MIT</B> <B>Laboratory</B> <B>of</B> <B>Computer</B>
- <B>Science</B> for the DEC Microvax.<P>
- Thanks to all those who have contributed ports and extensions, as well
- as those who have contributed other source code, documentation, and good
- bug reports. Thanks to those who sent money and offered help. Thanks
- also to those who support us by ordering manuals and distribution
- tapes.<P>
- <HR>
- <P>
- <PRE>
- -------
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- Cambridge, MA 02139 USA | here |
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- </PRE>
- <P>
- <HR>
- <P>
- Use rule at top of this page for page 1.
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