gnu_bulletin_9401_20.html 52 KB

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  1. <TITLE> - GNU Software Available Now</TITLE>
  2. <P>Go to the <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_19.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_21.html">next</A> chapter.<P>
  3. <H1><A NAME="SEC37" HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_toc.html#SEC37">GNU Software Available Now</A></H1>
  4. <P>
  5. We offer:
  6. <P>
  7. <UL>
  8. <P>
  9. <LI>
  10. Source Code CD-ROM (see "Source Code CD-ROM")
  11. <P>
  12. <LI>
  13. Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM (see "Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM")
  14. <P>
  15. <LI>
  16. MS-DOS Diskettes with some GNU software (see "MS-DOS Distribution")
  17. <P>
  18. <LI>
  19. VMS tapes (which include sources and executables) for GNU Emacs and the
  20. GNU C compiler (see "VMS Emacs and VMS Compiler Tapes")
  21. <P>
  22. </UL>
  23. <P>
  24. We also offer Unix software source distributions tapes in <CODE>tar</CODE> format
  25. on the following media:
  26. <P>
  27. <UL>
  28. <P>
  29. <LI>
  30. 4mm DAT cartridges
  31. <P>
  32. <LI>
  33. 8mm Exabyte cartridges
  34. <P>
  35. <LI>
  36. Sun QIC-24 cartridges (readable on some other systems)
  37. <P>
  38. <LI>
  39. Hewlett-Packard 16-track cartridges
  40. <P>
  41. <LI>
  42. IBM RS/6000 QIC-150 cartridges (readable on some other systems) (the
  43. RS/6000 Emacs tape has an Emacs binary as well)
  44. <P>
  45. <LI>
  46. 1600bpi 9-track reel tape
  47. <P>
  48. </UL>
  49. <P>
  50. The contents of the reel and various cartridge tapes for Unix systems
  51. are the same (except for the RS/6000 Emacs tape, which also has executables
  52. for Emacs); only the media are different (see the "Free Software
  53. Foundation Order Form"). Source code for the manuals is included in Texinfo
  54. format. We welcome all bug reports sent to the appropriate electronic
  55. mailing list (see "Free Software Support").
  56. <P>
  57. Some of the files on the tapes may be compressed with <CODE>gzip</CODE> to
  58. make them fit. Refer to the top-level <TT>`README'</TT> file at the
  59. beginning of each tape for instructions on uncompressing them.
  60. <CODE>uncompress</CODE> and <CODE>unpack</CODE> <EM>do not work</EM>!
  61. <P>
  62. Version numbers listed after program names, in the articles describing the
  63. contents of each media, were current at the time this Bulletin was
  64. published. When you order a distribution tape or diskette, some of the
  65. programs might be newer, and therefore the version number higher.
  66. <P>
  67. Key to cross reference:
  68. <P>
  69. GNU software currently available (see "Project GNU Status
  70. Report" for what's new features and programs are coming):
  71. <P>
  72. <UL>
  73. <P>
  74. <LI><CODE>acm</CODE> (SrcCD, UtilT)
  75. <P>
  76. <CODE>acm</CODE> is a LAN-oriented, multiplayer aerial combat simulation that
  77. runs under the X Window System. Players engage in air to air combat
  78. against one another using heat seeking missiles and cannons. Eventually we
  79. hope to turn this into a more general purpose flight simulator.
  80. <P>
  81. <LI><B>Autoconf</B> (SrcCD, UtilT)
  82. <P>
  83. Autoconf produces shell scripts which automatically configure source code
  84. packages. These scripts adapt the packages to many kinds of Unix-like
  85. systems without manual user intervention. Autoconf creates a script for a
  86. package from a template file which lists the operating system features
  87. which the package can use, in the form of <CODE>m4</CODE> macro calls. Most GNU
  88. programs now use Autoconf--generated configure scripts.
  89. <P>
  90. <LI><B>BASH</B> (SrcCD, UtilT)
  91. <P>
  92. The GNU shell, BASH (<B>B</B>ourne <B>A</B>gain <B>SH</B>ell), is compatible with
  93. the Unix <CODE>sh</CODE> and offers many extensions found in <CODE>csh</CODE> and
  94. <CODE>ksh</CODE>. BASH has job control, <CODE>csh</CODE>-style command history, and
  95. command-line editing (with Emacs and <CODE>vi</CODE> modes built-in and the
  96. ability to rebind keys) via the <B>readline</B> library.
  97. <P>
  98. <LI><B><CODE>bc</B></CODE> (SrcCD, UtilT)
  99. <P>
  100. <CODE>bc</CODE> is an interactive algebraic language with arbitrary precision.
  101. GNU <CODE>bc</CODE> follows the POSIX 1003.2
  102. draft
  103. standard, with several extensions including multi-character variable names,
  104. an <CODE>else</CODE> statement and full Boolean expressions.
  105. <P>
  106. <LI><B>BFD</B> (BinCD, LangT, SrcCD)
  107. <P>
  108. The Binary File Descriptor library allows a program which operates on
  109. object files (e.g. <CODE>ld</CODE> or GDB) to support many different formats
  110. in a clean way. BFD provides a portable interface, so that only BFD needs
  111. to know the actual details of a particular format. One consequence of this
  112. design is that all programs using BFD will support formats such as a.out,
  113. COFF, ELF &#38; OSF-Rose. BFD comes with Texinfo documentation.
  114. <P>
  115. Presently BFD is not distributed separately but is included with packages
  116. that use it, because it is not yet completely stable.
  117. <P>
  118. <LI><B>Binutils</B> (BinCD, LangT, SrcCD)
  119. <P>
  120. The Binutils includes the programs:
  121. <CODE>ar</CODE>,
  122. <CODE>c<TT>++</CODE>filt</TT>,
  123. <CODE>demangle</CODE>,
  124. <CODE>gprof</CODE>,
  125. <CODE>ld</CODE>,
  126. <CODE>nlmconv</CODE>,
  127. <CODE>nm</CODE>,
  128. <CODE>objcopy</CODE>,
  129. <CODE>objdump</CODE>,
  130. <CODE>ranlib</CODE>,
  131. <CODE>size</CODE>,
  132. <CODE>strings</CODE>,
  133. &#38;
  134. <CODE>strip</CODE>.
  135. <P>
  136. Binutils Version 2 is completely rewritten to use the BFD library.
  137. The GNU linker <CODE>ld</CODE> emits source-line numbered error messages for
  138. multiply-defined symbols and undefined references.
  139. <CODE>nlmconv</CODE> converts object files into Novell NetWare Loadable Modules.
  140. The <CODE>objdump</CODE> program can disassemble code for a29k, ALPHA, H8/300,
  141. H8/500, HP-PA, i386, i960, m68k, m88k, MIPS, SH, SPARC, &#38; Z8000
  142. processors, and can display other data such as symbols and relocations from
  143. any file format understood by BFD. Also see "Project GNU Status Report".
  144. <P>
  145. <LI><B>Bison</B> (BinCD, LangT, SrcCD, VMSCompT)
  146. <P>
  147. Bison is an upwardly compatible replacement for the parser generator
  148. <CODE>yacc</CODE>. Sources for the <CITE>Bison Manual</CITE> and reference card are
  149. included.
  150. <P>
  151. <LI><B>GNU C Library</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  152. <P>
  153. The library supports ANSI C-1989 and POSIX 1003.1-1990 and has most of the
  154. functions specified in POSIX 1003.2 draft 11.2. It is upward compatible
  155. with 4.4 BSD and includes many System V functions, plus GNU extensions.
  156. <P>
  157. Version 1.07 uses a standard GNU <CODE>configure</CODE> script. It runs on Sun-3
  158. (SunOS 4.1), Sun-4 (SunOS 4.1 &#38; Solaris 2), HP 9000/300 (4.3 BSD), SONY
  159. News 800 (NewsOS 3 or 4), MIPS DECstation (Ultrix 4), DEC Alpha (OSF/1),
  160. i386/i486 (System V, SVR4, BSD, SCO 3.2 &#38; SCO ODT 2.0) &#38; Sequent Symmetry
  161. i386 (Dynix 3). Texinfo source for the <CITE>GNU C Library Reference Manual</CITE> is
  162. included. Also see "Project GNU Status Report".
  163. <P>
  164. <LI><B>Calc</B> (EmcsT, SrcCD)
  165. <P>
  166. Calc (written by Dave Gillespie in Emacs Lisp) is an extensible,
  167. advanced desk calculator and mathematical tool that runs as part of GNU
  168. Emacs. It comes with source for the <CITE>Calc Manual</CITE> and reference
  169. card, which serves as a tutorial and reference. If you wish, you can
  170. use Calc just as a simple four-function calculator, but it provides
  171. additional features including choice of algebraic or RPN (stack-based)
  172. entry, logarithmic functions, trigonometric and financial functions,
  173. arbitrary precision, complex numbers, vectors, matrices, dates, times,
  174. infinities, sets, algebraic simplification, differentiation, and
  175. integration. Calc also outputs to <CODE>gnuplot</CODE>.
  176. <P>
  177. <LI><B>GNU Chess</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  178. <P>
  179. GNU Chess is a program that plays chess with you. It is written
  180. entirely in the C language and has been ported to the PC, the Cray-2 &#38;
  181. numerous other machines. It has also been ported to other operating
  182. systems, including Microsoft Windows and MS-DOS, though these versions are
  183. not supported by the maintainer. There are both text and X display
  184. interfaces.
  185. <P>
  186. GNU Chess implements many specialized features including the null move
  187. heuristic, a hash table with aging, the history heuristic (another form of
  188. the earlier killer heuristic), caching of static evaluations, and a
  189. sophisticated database which lets it play the first several moves in the
  190. game quickly.
  191. <P>
  192. GNU Chess won the Uniform Platform event held in August 1992 in London,
  193. England. Nine programs competed, running on identical hardware.
  194. <P>
  195. GNU Chess is primarily supported by Stuart Cracraft on behalf of
  196. FSF.
  197. <P>
  198. <PRE>
  199. Stuart Cracraft <CODE>cracraft@ai.mit.edu</CODE>
  200. P.O. Box 2841
  201. Laguna Hills, CA 92653 USA Phone: (714) 770-8532
  202. </PRE>
  203. <P>
  204. <LI><B>CLISP</B> (EmcsT, SrcCD)
  205. <P>
  206. CLISP is a Common Lisp implementation by Bruno Haible and Michael Stoll.
  207. It mostly supports the Common Lisp described by <CITE>Common LISP: The
  208. Language (1st edition)</CITE>. CLISP includes an interpreter, a byte-compiler
  209. and, for some machines, a screen editor. CLISP needs only 1.5 MB of
  210. memory and runs on many microcomputers (including the Atari ST, Amiga
  211. 500-2000, most MS-DOS systems &#38; OS/2) &#38; on some Unix workstations
  212. (Linux, SunOS (SPARC), Sun-386i, HP-UX (HP 9000/800) &#38; others).
  213. <P>
  214. <LI><B><CODE>cpio</B></CODE> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  215. <P>
  216. <CODE>cpio</CODE> is an alternative archive program with all the features of SVR4
  217. <CODE>cpio</CODE>, including support for the final POSIX 1003.1 <CITE>ustar</CITE>
  218. standard. <CODE>mt</CODE> a program to position magnetic tapes is included with
  219. <CODE>cpio</CODE>.
  220. <P>
  221. <LI><B>CVS</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  222. <P>
  223. CVS, the Concurrent Version System, manages software revision and release
  224. control in a multi-developer, multi-directory, multi-group environment. It
  225. works best in conjunction with RCS versions 4 and above, but will parse
  226. older RCS formats with the loss of CVS's fancier features. See Berliner,
  227. Brian, "CVS-II: Parallelizing Software Development," <CITE>Proceedings of
  228. the Winter 1990 USENIX Association Conference</CITE>.
  229. <P>
  230. <LI><B><CODE>dc</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  231. <P>
  232. <CODE>dc</CODE> is an RPN calculator. GNU <CODE>bc</CODE> does not require a separate
  233. <CODE>dc</CODE> program to run. This version of <CODE>dc</CODE> will eventually be
  234. merged with GNU <CODE>bc</CODE>.
  235. <P>
  236. <LI><B>DejaGnu</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  237. <P>
  238. DejaGnu is a framework for testing other programs that provides a single
  239. front end for all tests. The flexibility and consistency of the DejaGnu
  240. framework make it easy to write tests for any program. DejaGnu comes with
  241. <CODE>expect</CODE> and Tcl.
  242. <P>
  243. <LI><B>Diffutils</B> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  244. <P>
  245. GNU <CODE>diff</CODE> compares files showing line-by-line changes in several
  246. flexible formats. It is much faster than traditional Unix versions.
  247. The Diffutils distribution contains <CODE>diff</CODE>, <CODE>diff3</CODE>,
  248. <CODE>sdiff</CODE>, and <CODE>cmp</CODE>.
  249. <P>
  250. <LI><B>DJGPP</B> (BinCD, DjgppD)
  251. <P>
  252. DJ Delorie has ported GCC/G<TT>++</TT> 2.5.7 to the i386 MS-DOS platform. The
  253. DJGPP package also contains a 32-bit 80386 DOS extender with symbolic
  254. debugger; development libraries; and ports of Bison, <CODE>flex</CODE>, GAS, and
  255. the GNU binary utilities. Full source code is provided.
  256. <P>
  257. DJGPP supports SVGA (up to 1024x768),
  258. XMS &#38; VDISK memory allocation,
  259. <CODE>himem.sys</CODE>,
  260. VCPI (e.g. QEMM, DESQview, &#38; 386MAX), and
  261. DPMI (e.g. Windows 3.x, OS/2, QEMM, &#38; QDPMI).
  262. <P>
  263. It is available via FTP from
  264. <CODE>ftp.clarkson.edu</CODE> in <TT>`/pub/msdos/djgpp'</TT>. You can
  265. subscribe to a mailing list on DJGPP by sending your e-mail address to
  266. <CODE>djgpp-request@sun.soe.clarkson.edu</CODE>. In addition, the FSF
  267. distributes it on floppy disks and on the Compiler Tools Binaries CD-ROM.
  268. <P>
  269. See the description for GCC in this section for more information.
  270. <P>
  271. <LI><B><CODE>dld</B></CODE> (LangT, SrcCD)
  272. <P>
  273. <CODE>dld</CODE> is a dynamic linker written by W. Wilson Ho. Linking your
  274. program with the <CODE>dld</CODE> library allows you to dynamically load object
  275. files into the running binary. Currently supported are VAX (Ultrix), Sun 3
  276. (SunOS 3.4 and 4.0), SPARC (SunOS 4.0), Sequent Symmetry (Dynix), and Atari ST.
  277. <P>
  278. <LI><B><CODE>doschk</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  279. <P>
  280. This program is intended as a utility to help software developers ensure
  281. that their source file names are distinguishable on System V platforms with
  282. 14-character filenames and on MS-DOS with 11 character filenames.
  283. <P>
  284. <LI><B><CODE>ecc</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  285. <P>
  286. <CODE>ecc</CODE> is a Reed-Solomon error correction checking program, which can
  287. correct three byte errors in a block of 255 bytes and detect more severe
  288. errors.
  289. <P>
  290. <LI><B>Elib</B> (EmcsT, SrcCD)
  291. <P>
  292. This is a small library of Emacs Lisp functions, including routines for
  293. using AVL trees and doubly-linked lists.
  294. <P>
  295. <LI><B><CODE>elvis</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  296. <P>
  297. <CODE>elvis</CODE> is a clone of the <CODE>vi</CODE>/<CODE>ex</CODE> Unix editor. It
  298. supports nearly all of the <CODE>vi</CODE>/<CODE>ex</CODE> commands in both visual and
  299. line mode. <CODE>elvis</CODE> runs under BSD, System V, Xenix, Minix, MS-DOS &#38;
  300. Atari TOS, and should be easy to port to many other systems.
  301. <P>
  302. <LI><B>GNU Emacs 18</B> (DemcsD, EmcsT, SrcCD, VMSEmcsT)
  303. <P>
  304. In 1975, Richard Stallman developed the first Emacs, an extensible,
  305. customizable real-time display editor. GNU Emacs is his second
  306. implementation. It offers true Lisp--smoothly integrated into the
  307. editor--for writing extensions, and provides an interface to MIT's X
  308. Window System. In addition to its powerful native command set, extensions
  309. which emulate other popular editors are distributed: vi, EDT (DEC's VMS
  310. editor) and Gosling (aka Unipress) Emacs. It has many other features which
  311. make it a full computing support environment. It is described by the
  312. <CITE>GNU Emacs Manual</CITE>, the <CITE>GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual</CITE> and a
  313. reference card. Source for all three come with the software.
  314. <P>
  315. GNU Emacs 18.59 runs on many Unix systems (in hardware order): Alliant
  316. FX/80 &#38; FX/2800, Altos 3068, Amdahl (UTS), Apollo, AT&#38;T (3Bs &#38; 7300 PC), DG
  317. Aviion, Bull DPX/2 (2nn &#38; 3nn) CCI 5/32 &#38; 6/32, Celerity, Convex, Digital
  318. (DECstation 3100 &#38; 5000 (PMAXes), Mips, VAX (BSD, SysV &#38; VMS)),
  319. Motorola Delta 147 &#38; 187 Dual, Elxsi 6400, Encore (DPC, APC &#38; XPC), Gould,
  320. HP (9000 series 200, 300, 700 &#38; 800, but not 500), HLH Orion
  321. (original &#38; 1/05), IBM (RS/6000 (AIX), RT/PC (4.2 &#38; AIX) &#38; PS/2 (AIX (386
  322. only))), ISI (Optimum V, 80386), Intel 860 &#38; 80386 (BSD, Esix, SVR3, SVR4,
  323. SCO, ISC, IX, AIX &#38; others (see "MS-DOS Distribution" &#38; "Free
  324. Software for Microcomputers")), Iris (2500, 2500 Turbo &#38; 4D), Masscomp,
  325. MIPS, National Semiconductor 32000, NeXT (Mach), NCR Tower 32 (SVR2 &#38;
  326. SVR3), Nixdorf Targon 31, Nu (TI &#38; LMI), pfa50, Plexus, Prime EXL, Pyramid
  327. (original &#38; MIPS), Sequent (Balance &#38; Symmetry), SONY News (m68k &#38; MIPS),
  328. Stride (system release 2), all Suns including 386i (all SunOS &#38; some
  329. Solaris vers.), Tadpole, Tahoe, Tandem Integrity S2, Tektronix (16000 &#38;
  330. 4300), Triton 88, Ustation E30 (SS5E), Whitechapel (MG1) &#38; Wicat.
  331. <P>
  332. In operating system order: AIX (RS/6000, RT/PC, 386-PS/2), BSD (vers. 4.1,
  333. 4.2, 4.3), DomainOS, Esix (386), HP-UX (HP 9000 series 200, 300, 700, 800
  334. but not 500), ISC (386), IX (386), Mach, Microport, NewsOS (Sony m68k &#38;
  335. MIPS) SCO (386), SVR0 (Vax, AT&#38;T 3Bs), SVR2, SVR3, SVR4, Solaris 2.0,
  336. SunOS, UTS (Amdahl), Ultrix (vers. 3.0, 4,1), Uniplus 5.2 (Dual machines),
  337. VMS (vers. 4.0, 4.2, 4.4, 5.5) &#38; Xenix (386).
  338. <P>
  339. <LI><B>GNU Emacs 19</B> (EmcsT, SrcCD)
  340. <P>
  341. Unlike some other recent derivations of Emacs,
  342. GNU Emacs 19 continues to
  343. work on character-only terminals as well as under the X Window System. New
  344. features in Emacs 19 include:
  345. multiple X windows ("frames" to Emacs), with a separate X window
  346. for the minibuffer or with a minibuffer attached to each X window;
  347. property lists associated with regions of text in a buffer;
  348. multiple fonts and colors defined by those properties;
  349. simplified and improved processing of function keys, mouse clicks
  350. and mouse movement;
  351. X selection processing, including clipboard selections;
  352. hooks to be run if point or mouse moves outside a certain range;
  353. menu bars and popup menus defined by keymaps;
  354. scrollbars;
  355. before and after change hooks;
  356. source-level debugging of Emacs Lisp programs;
  357. European character sets support;
  358. floating point numbers;
  359. improved buffer allocation, using a new mechanism capable of
  360. returning storage to the system when a buffer is killed;
  361. interfacing with the X resource manager;
  362. GNU configuration scheme support;
  363. good RCS support;
  364. &#38;
  365. many updated libraries.
  366. <P>
  367. GNU Emacs 19.22 is known to work on (in hardware order):
  368. Bull DPX/2 2nn &#38; 3nn (SVR3) &#38; sps7 (SVR2);
  369. Clipper;
  370. Cubix QBx (SysV);
  371. DEC MIPS (Ultrix 4.2 &#38; OSF/1, not VMS);
  372. Motorola Delta 147 &#38; 187 (SVR3, SVR4, &#38; m88kbcs);
  373. Elxsi 6400 (SysV);
  374. Gould Power Node &#38; NP1 (BSD 4.2 &#38; 4.3);
  375. Honeywell XPS100 (SysV);
  376. HP9000 series 200, 300, 700, 800 (BSD 4.3 or HP-UX 7, 8, 9);
  377. i386 &#38; i486 (386BSD, AIX, BSDI/386, FreeBSD, Esix, ISC, Linux, NetBSD, SCO3.2v4 with ODT, SysV, Xenix);
  378. RS6000 (AIX 3.2);
  379. RT/PC (AIX or BSD);
  380. Iris 4D (Irix 4.x &#38; 5.x);
  381. National Semiconductor 32K (Genix);
  382. NeXT (BSD or Mach 2 w/ NeXTStep 3.0);
  383. Prime EXL (SysV);
  384. Pyramid (BSD);
  385. Sequent Symmetry (BSD);
  386. Sun 3 &#38; 4, SPARC 1, 1<TT>+</TT>, 2, 10 &#38; Classic (SunOS 4.0, 4.1, Solaris 2);
  387. Tadpole 68k (SysV);
  388. Tektronix XD88 (SVR3) &#38; 4300 (BSD); &#38;
  389. Titan P2 &#38; P3 (SysV).
  390. <P>
  391. In operating system order:
  392. AIX (i386, RS6000, RT/PC);
  393. BSD 4.1, 4.2, 4.3 (i386, Gould Power Node &#38; NP1, HP9000 series 300, NeXT, Pyramid, Symmetry, Tektronix 4300, RT/PC);
  394. Esix (i386);
  395. Genix (ns32k);
  396. HP-UX 7, 8, 9 (HP 9000 series 200, 300, 700, 800, but not 500);
  397. Irix 4 &#38; 5 (Iris 4D);
  398. ISC (i386);
  399. Linux (i386);
  400. NetBSD (i386, HP9000 series 300);
  401. Mach 2 &#38; 3 (i386, NeXT);
  402. SCO 3.2v4 (i386);
  403. SVR2 (Bull sps7);
  404. SVR3 (Bull DPX/2 2nn &#38; 3nn, Motorola Delta 147 &#38; 187, Tektronix XD88);
  405. SVR4 (Motorola Delta 147 &#38; 187);
  406. Solaris 2 (SPARC 1, 1<TT>+</TT>, 2, 10, Classic);
  407. SunOS 4.0, 4.1 (Sun 3 &#38; 4, SPARC 1, 1<TT>+</TT>, 2, 10 &#38; Classic);
  408. Ultrix 4.2 (DEC MIPS); &#38;
  409. Xenix (i386).
  410. <P>
  411. Other configurations supported by Emacs 18 should work with few
  412. changes; as users tell us more about their experiences with different
  413. systems, we will augment the list. Also see "Project GNU Status Report".
  414. <P>
  415. <LI><B><CODE>es</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  416. <P>
  417. This is an extensible shell based on <CODE>rc</CODE> that has
  418. first class functions, lexical scope, an exception system, and
  419. rich return values (i.e. functions can return values other than just
  420. numbers). Like <CODE>rc</CODE>, it is great for both interactive use and for
  421. scripting, particularly because its quoting rules are much less baroque
  422. than the C or Bourne shells.
  423. <P>
  424. <LI><B><CODE>expect</B></CODE> (LangT, SrcCD)
  425. <P>
  426. <CODE>expect</CODE> runs scripts to conduct dialogs with programs. It is
  427. distributed along with Tcl and DejaGnu.
  428. <P>
  429. <LI><B><CODE>f2c</B></CODE> (LangT, SrcCD)
  430. <P>
  431. <CODE>f2c</CODE> converts Fortran-77 source files into C or C<TT>++</TT>, which can
  432. then be compiled with GCC.
  433. <P>
  434. <LI><B>Fax</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  435. <P>
  436. Fax is the freely-available MIT AI Lab fax spooling system, which provides
  437. Group 3 fax transmission and reception services for a networked Unix
  438. system. It requires a faxmodem which conforms to the new EIA-592
  439. Asynchronous Facsimile DCE Control Standard, Service Class 2.
  440. <P>
  441. <LI><B>Fileutils</B> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  442. <P>
  443. Fileutils work on files:
  444. <CODE>chgrp</CODE>,
  445. <CODE>chmod</CODE>,
  446. <CODE>chown</CODE>,
  447. <CODE>cp</CODE>,
  448. <CODE>dd</CODE>,
  449. <CODE>df</CODE>,
  450. <CODE>dir</CODE>,
  451. <CODE>du</CODE>,
  452. <CODE>install</CODE>,
  453. <CODE>ln</CODE>,
  454. <CODE>ls</CODE>,
  455. <CODE>mkdir</CODE>,
  456. <CODE>mkfifo</CODE>,
  457. <CODE>mknod</CODE>,
  458. <CODE>mv</CODE>,
  459. <CODE>mvdir</CODE>,
  460. <CODE>rm</CODE>,
  461. <CODE>rmdir</CODE>,
  462. <CODE>touch</CODE>,
  463. &#38;
  464. <CODE>vdir</CODE>.
  465. Only some of these are on the Selected Utilities diskettes.
  466. <P>
  467. <LI><B><CODE>find</B></CODE> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  468. <P>
  469. <CODE>find</CODE> is frequently used both interactively and in shell scripts to
  470. find files which match certain criteria and perform arbitrary operations on
  471. them. <CODE>xargs</CODE> and <CODE>locate</CODE> are also included.
  472. <P>
  473. <LI><B><CODE>finger</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  474. <P>
  475. GNU Finger, which serves as a direct replacement for existing finger
  476. programs, solves this problem. For sites with many hosts, a single host
  477. may be designated as the finger <DFN>server</DFN> host. This host collects
  478. information about who is logged in to other hosts at that site. If a user
  479. at site A wants to know about users logged on at site B, a single
  480. query to any machine at the site will return complete information.
  481. <P>
  482. <LI><B><CODE>flex</B></CODE> (LangT, UtilD, SrcCD)
  483. <P>
  484. <CODE>flex</CODE> is a mostly-compatible replacement for the <CODE>lex</CODE> scanner
  485. generator, written by Vern Paxson of the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
  486. <CODE>flex</CODE> generates far more efficient scanners than <CODE>lex</CODE> does.
  487. Sources for the <CITE>Flex Manual</CITE> and reference card are included.
  488. <P>
  489. <LI><B>Fontutils</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  490. <P>
  491. The Fontutils can create fonts for use with Ghostscript or TeX, starting
  492. with a scanned type image and converting the bitmaps to outlines. They
  493. also contain general conversion programs and other utilities.
  494. <P>
  495. <LI><B>GAS</B> (BinCD, LangT, SrcCD)
  496. <P>
  497. The GNU assembler has been rewritten to use the BFD library.
  498. Native assembly works for:
  499. Sun 3, 4, &#38; SPARC (SunOS 4.1 or Solaris 2);
  500. i386 (AIX, 386BSD, BSDI/386, Linux);
  501. m68k (BSD, HP-UX, Convergent Technologies SysV);
  502. MIPS (Ultrix, Irix);
  503. Hitachi H8/500; &#38;
  504. VAX (BSD, Ultrix, VMS).
  505. <P>
  506. Cross assembling can be done for:
  507. i386 (SCO, go32 MS-DOS/DJGPP);
  508. ebmon29k;
  509. Hitachi H8/300;
  510. i960 (COFF);
  511. MIPS ECOFF (Ultrix, Iris, MIPS Magnum);
  512. Nindy 960;
  513. vxworks (68k or 960); &#38;
  514. Zilog Z8000.
  515. <P>
  516. <LI><B>GAWK</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  517. <P>
  518. GAWK is upwardly compatible with the System V Release 4 version of
  519. <CODE>awk</CODE>. Texinfo source for the <CITE>GAWK Manual</CITE> comes with the
  520. software.
  521. <P>
  522. <LI><B>GCC</B> (BinCD, DjgppD, LangT, SrcCD)
  523. <P>
  524. Version 2 of the GNU C compiler supports three languages: C, C<TT>++</TT> and
  525. Objective C; the source file name suffix or a compiler option selects
  526. the language. The front end support for Objective C was donated by NeXT.
  527. The runtime support needed to run Objective C programs is now distributed
  528. with GCC (this does not include any Objective C classes aside from
  529. <CODE>object</CODE>). As much as possible, G<TT>++</TT> is kept compatible with the
  530. evolving draft ANSI standard, but not with <CODE>cfront</CODE> (AT&#38;T's
  531. compiler), which has been diverging from ANSI.
  532. <P>
  533. The GNU C compiler is a fairly portable optimizing compiler which performs
  534. automatic register allocation, common sub-expression elimination, invariant
  535. code motion from loops, induction variable optimizations, constant
  536. propagation and copy propagation, delayed popping of function call
  537. arguments, tail recursion elimination, integration of inline functions and
  538. frame pointer elimination, instruction scheduling, loop unrolling, filling
  539. of delay slots, leaf function optimization, optimized multiplication by
  540. constants, a certain amount of common subexpression elimination (CSE)
  541. between basic blocks (though not all of the supported machine descriptions
  542. provide for scheduling or delay slots), a feature for assigning attributes
  543. to instructions, and many local optimizations that are automatically
  544. deduced from the machine description. Function-wide CSE has been written,
  545. but needs to be cleaned up before it can be installed.
  546. Position-independent code is supported on the 68k, i386, Hitachi Slt,
  547. Hitachi H8/300, Clipper, 88k, SPARC &#38; SPARClite.
  548. <P>
  549. GCC can open-code most arithmetic on 64-bit values (type <CODE>long long
  550. int</CODE>). It supports extended floating point (type <CODE>long double</CODE>) on
  551. the 68k; other machines will follow.
  552. <P>
  553. GCC supports full ANSI C, traditional C and GNU C extensions. GNU C has
  554. been extended to support nested functions, nonlocal gotos, and taking the
  555. address of a label.
  556. <P>
  557. GCC can generate a.out, COFF, ELF &#38; OSF-Rose files when used with a
  558. suitable assembler. It can produce debugging information in these
  559. formats: BSD stabs, COFF, ECOFF, ECOFF with stabs, &#38; DWARF.
  560. <P>
  561. GCC generates code for: a29k, Alpha, ARM, Convex cN, Clipper, Elxsi,
  562. H8300, HP-PA (1.0 and 1.1) i370, i386, i486, i860, i960, m68k, m68020, m88k,
  563. MIPS, ns32k, Pyramid, ROMP, RS6000, SH, SPARC, SPARClite, VAX, and we32k.
  564. <P>
  565. Operating systems supported include: AIX, ACIS, AOS, BSD, Clix, Ctix,
  566. DG/UX, Dynix, Genix, HP-UX, ISC, Irix, Linux, Luna, LynxOS, Mach, Minix,
  567. NeWSOS, OSF, OSF-Rose, RISCOS, SCO, Solaris 2, SunOS 4, SysV, Ultrix, Unos,
  568. &#38; VMS.
  569. <P>
  570. The old (version 1) machine descriptions for the Alliant, Tahoe and Spur
  571. (as well as a new port for the Tron) do not work, but are still included in
  572. the distribution in case someone wants to work on them.
  573. <P>
  574. Using the configuration scheme for GCC, building a cross-compiler is as
  575. easy as building a compiler for the same target machine. Version 2
  576. supports more general calling conventions: it can pass arguments "by
  577. reference" and can preallocate the space for stack arguments. GCC 2 on
  578. the SPARC uses the SPARC conventions for structure arguments and return
  579. values.
  580. <P>
  581. Source for the GCC manual, <CITE>Using and Porting GNU CC</CITE>, is included
  582. with the compiler. The manual describes how to run and install the GNU C
  583. compiler, and how to port it to new systems. It describes new features and
  584. incompatibilities of the compiler, but people not familiar with C will also
  585. need a good reference on the C programming language. Also see "Project
  586. GNU Status Report".
  587. <P>
  588. <LI><B>GDB</B> (BinCD, LangT, SrcCD)
  589. <P>
  590. In GDB, object files and symbol tables are now read via the BFD library,
  591. which allows a single copy of GDB to debug programs of multiple object file
  592. formats such as a.out and COFF. Other new features include command
  593. language improvements, remote debugging over serial lines or TCP/IP, and
  594. watchpoints (breakpoints triggered when the value of an expression
  595. changes). Exception handling, SunOS shared libraries and C<TT>++</TT> multiple
  596. inheritance are only supported when used with GCC version 2.
  597. <P>
  598. Both X and GNU Emacs user interfaces to GDB are available, in addition to
  599. its command line interpreter.
  600. <P>
  601. GDB uses a standard remote interface to a simulator library which (so far)
  602. contains simulators for the Zilog Z8001/2, the Hitachi H8/300, H8/500 &#38; Super-H.
  603. <P>
  604. GDB can perform cross-debugging. To say that GDB <EM>targets</EM> a platform
  605. means that it can perform native or cross-debugging for it. To say that
  606. GDB can <EM>host</EM> a given platform means that it can be built on it, but
  607. cannot necessarily debug native programs. GDB can:
  608. <P>
  609. <UL>
  610. <P>
  611. <LI><EM>target</EM> &#38; <EM>host</EM>: DEC Alpha (OSF/1), Amiga 3000 (Amix),
  612. DECstation 3100 &#38; 5000 (Ultrix), HP 9000/300 (BSD), IBM RS/6000 (AIX), i386
  613. (BSD, SCO, Linux, LynxOS), Motorola Delta m88k (System V), NCR 3000 (SVR4),
  614. SGI Iris (MIPS running Irix V3 &#38; V4), SONY News (NewsOS 3.x), Sun-3 &#38; SPARC
  615. (SunOS 4.1, Solaris 2.0) &#38; Ultracomputer (29K running Sym1).
  616. <P>
  617. <LI><EM>target</EM>, but not <EM>host</EM>: i960 Nindy, AMD
  618. 29000 (COFF &#38; a.out), Fujitsu SPARClite, Hitachi H8/300, m68k &#38; m68332.
  619. <P>
  620. <LI><EM>host</EM>, but not <EM>target</EM>: Intel 386 (Mach), IBM
  621. RT/PC (AIX) &#38; HP/Apollo 68k (BSD).
  622. <P>
  623. </UL>
  624. <P>
  625. In addition, GDB can use the symbol tables emitted by the compilers
  626. supplied by most vendors of MIPS-based machines, including DEC. (These
  627. symbol tables are in a format which almost nobody else uses.) Source for
  628. the manual <CITE>Debugging with GDB</CITE> and a reference card are included.
  629. <P>
  630. <LI><B><CODE>gdbm</B></CODE> (LangT, UtilD, SrcCD)
  631. <P>
  632. The <CODE>gdbm</CODE> library is the GNU replacement for the traditional
  633. <CODE>dbm</CODE> and <CODE>ndbm</CODE> libraries. It implements a database using quick
  634. lookup by hashing. <CODE>gdbm</CODE> does not need sparse file formats
  635. (unlike its Unix counterparts).
  636. <P>
  637. <LI><B>Ghostscript</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  638. <P>
  639. Ghostscript is GNU's graphics language which is almost fully compatible
  640. with Postscript (see "Project GNU Status Report").
  641. <P>
  642. <LI><B>Ghostview</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  643. <P>
  644. Ghostview provides an X11 user interface for the Ghostscript interpreter.
  645. Ghostview and Ghostscript function as two cooperating programs; Ghostview
  646. creates a viewing window and Ghostscript draws in it. There is a port for
  647. Ghostview to MS-Windows.
  648. <P>
  649. <LI><B><CODE>gmp</B></CODE> (LangT, SrcCD)
  650. <P>
  651. GNU MP is a library for arbitrary precision arithmetic on signed integers
  652. and rational numbers. It has a rich set of functions with a regular
  653. interface.
  654. <P>
  655. <LI><B>GNATS</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  656. <P>
  657. Gnats (<B>GN</B>ats: <B>A</B> <B>T</B>racking <B>S</B>ystem) is a bug-tracking system.
  658. It is based upon the paradigm of a central site or organization which
  659. receives problem reports and negotiates their resolution by electronic
  660. mail. Although it's been used primarily as a software bug-tracking system
  661. so far, it is sufficiently generalized so that it could be used for
  662. handling system administration issues, project management or any number of
  663. other applications.
  664. <P>
  665. <LI><B><CODE>gnuplot</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  666. <P>
  667. <CODE>gnuplot</CODE> is an interactive program for plotting mathematical
  668. expressions and data. It handles both curves (2 dimensions) and surfaces
  669. (3 dimensions). Curiously, the program was neither written nor named for
  670. the GNU Project; the name is a coincidence.
  671. <P>
  672. <LI><B>GnuGo</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  673. <P>
  674. GnuGo plays the game of Go (Wei-Chi); it is not yet very sophisticated.
  675. <P>
  676. <LI><B><CODE>gperf</B></CODE> (LangT, SrcCD)
  677. <P>
  678. <CODE>gperf</CODE> is a "perfect" hash-table generation utility. There are
  679. actually two implementations of <CODE>gperf</CODE>, one written in C and one in
  680. C<TT>++</TT>. Both will produce hash functions in either C or C<TT>++</TT>.
  681. <P>
  682. <LI><B>GNU Graphics</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  683. <P>
  684. GNU Graphics is a set of programs which produce plots from ASCII or binary
  685. data. It supports output to Tektronix 4010, Postscript, and the X Window
  686. System or compatible devices. Features include support for output in ln03
  687. and TekniCAD TDA file formats; a replacement for the <CODE>spline</CODE> program;
  688. examples of shell scripts using <CODE>graph</CODE> and <CODE>plot</CODE>; a statistics
  689. toolkit; and the use of <CODE>configure</CODE> for installation.
  690. <P>
  691. Existing ports need retesting. Contact Rich Murphey,
  692. <CODE>Rich@rice.edu</CODE>, if you can help test/port it to anything beyond
  693. a SPARCstation.
  694. <P>
  695. <LI><B><CODE>grep</B></CODE>/<B><CODE>egrep</B></CODE>/<B><CODE>fgrep</B></CODE> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  696. <P>
  697. The <CODE>[ef]grep</CODE> programs are GNU's versions of the Unix programs of the
  698. same name. They are much faster than the traditional Unix versions.
  699. <P>
  700. <LI><B><CODE>groff</B></CODE> and <B><CODE>mgm</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  701. <P>
  702. <CODE>groff</CODE> is a document formatting system, which includes
  703. implementations of <CODE>troff</CODE>, <CODE>pic</CODE>, <CODE>eqn</CODE>, <CODE>tbl</CODE>,
  704. <CODE>refer</CODE>, the <CODE>man</CODE>, <CODE>ms</CODE> and <CODE>mm</CODE> macros,
  705. as well as drivers for Postscript, TeX dvi format, and typewriter-like
  706. devices. Also included is a modified version of the Berkeley <CODE>me</CODE>
  707. macros and an enhanced version of the X11 <CODE>xditview</CODE> previewer.
  708. <P>
  709. <CODE>mgm</CODE> is a macro package for <CODE>groff</CODE>. It is almost compatible
  710. with the DWB <CODE>mm</CODE> macros and has several extensions.
  711. Also see "Project GNU Status Report".
  712. <P>
  713. <LI><B><CODE>gzip</B></CODE> (DjgppD, EmcsT, LangT, SrcCD, UtilT)
  714. <P>
  715. Some of the contents of our tape and FTP distributions are compressed. We
  716. have software on our tapes and FTP sites to uncompress these files. Due to
  717. patent troubles with <CODE>compress</CODE>, we have switched to another
  718. compression program, <CODE>gzip</CODE>. <CODE>gzip</CODE> can expand LZW-compressed
  719. files but uses a different algorithm for compression which generally
  720. produces better results. It also uncompresses files compressed with System
  721. V's <CODE>pack</CODE> program.
  722. <P>
  723. <LI><B><CODE>hello</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  724. <P>
  725. The GNU <CODE>hello</CODE> program produces a familiar, friendly greeting. It
  726. allows non-programmers to use a classic computer science tool which would
  727. otherwise be unavailable to them. Because it is protected by the GNU
  728. General Public License, users are free to share and change it.
  729. <P>
  730. Like any truly useful program, <CODE>hello</CODE> provides a built-in mail
  731. reader.
  732. <P>
  733. <LI><B><CODE>hp2xx</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  734. <P>
  735. GNU hp2xx reads HP-GL files, decomposes all drawing commands into
  736. elementary vectors, and converts them into a variety of vector and raster
  737. output formats. It is also an HP-GL previewer. Currently supported vector
  738. formats include encapsulated Postscript, Uniplex RGIP, Metafont and various
  739. special TeX-related formats, and simplified HP-GL (line drawing only)
  740. for imports. Raster formats supported include IMG, PBM, PCX, &#38; HP-PCL
  741. (including Deskjet &#38; DJ5xxC support). Previewers work under X11 (Unix),
  742. OS/2 (PM &#38; full screen), MS-DOS (SVGA, VGA, &#38; HGC).
  743. <P>
  744. <LI><CODE>indent</CODE> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  745. <P>
  746. GNU <CODE>indent</CODE> is a modified version of the freely-redistributable BSD
  747. program of the same name. It formats C source according to GNU coding
  748. standards by default, though the BSD default and other formats are
  749. available as options. Also see "Project GNU Status Report".
  750. <P>
  751. <LI><CODE>ispell</CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  752. <P>
  753. Ispell is an interactive spell checker that suggests "near misses" as
  754. replacements for unrecognized words. System and user-maintained
  755. dictionaries can be used. Standalone and GNU Emacs interfaces are
  756. available.
  757. <P>
  758. <LI>JACAL <EM>Not available from the FSF</EM>
  759. <P>
  760. JACAL is a symbolic mathematics system for the simplification and
  761. manipulation of equations and single and multiple--valued algebraic
  762. expressions constructed of numbers, variables, radicals, and algebraic
  763. functions, differential operators and holonomic functions. In addition,
  764. vectors and matrices of the above objects are included.
  765. <P>
  766. JACAL was written in Scheme by Aubrey Jaffer. It comes with an IEEE
  767. P1178 and R4RS compliant version of Scheme ("SCM") written in C. SCM
  768. runs on Amiga, Atari-ST, MS-DOS, NOS/VE, VMS, Unix and similar systems.
  769. SLIB is a portable Scheme library used by JACAL. Get JACAL, SLIB, and
  770. SCM sources via anonymous FTP from either <CODE>nexus.yorku.ca</CODE> in
  771. <TT>`/pub/scheme/new'</TT>,
  772. or
  773. <CODE>altdorf.ai.mit.edu</CODE> in <TT>`/archive/scm'</TT> or
  774. <CODE>prep.ai.mit.edu</CODE> in <TT>`/pub/gnu/jacal'</TT>.
  775. <P>
  776. The FSF is not distributing JACAL on any media. To receive an IBM PC
  777. floppy disk with the source and executable files, send $99.00 to:
  778. <P>
  779. <PRE>
  780. Aubrey Jaffer, 84 Pleasant Street, Wakefield, MA 01880 USA
  781. </PRE>
  782. <P>
  783. <LI><CODE>less</CODE> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  784. <P>
  785. <CODE>less</CODE> is a display paginator similar to <CODE>more</CODE> and <CODE>pg</CODE> but
  786. with various features (such as the ability to scroll backwards) that most
  787. pagers lack.
  788. <P>
  789. <LI><B>libg<TT>++</B></TT> (BinCD, LangT, SrcCD)
  790. <P>
  791. The GNU C<TT>++</TT> library is an extensive collection of C<TT>++</TT> <CITE>forest</CITE>
  792. classes, a new IOStream library for input/output routines, and support
  793. tools for use with G<TT>++</TT>. Among the classes supported are Obstacks,
  794. multiple-precision Integers and Rationals, Complex numbers, arbitrary
  795. length Strings, BitSets, and BitStrings. There is also a set of
  796. pseudo-generic prototype files available for generating common container
  797. classes. Partial documentation in Texinfo format is included (not yet
  798. published on paper).
  799. <P>
  800. <LI><B><CODE>m4</B></CODE> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  801. <P>
  802. GNU <CODE>m4</CODE> is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro processor.
  803. It is mostly SVR4 compatible, although it has some extensions (for example,
  804. handling more than 9 positional parameters to macros). <CODE>m4</CODE> also has
  805. built-in functions for including files, running shell commands, doing
  806. arithmetic, etc.
  807. <P>
  808. <LI><B><CODE>make</B></CODE> (BinCD, EmcsT, LangT, UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  809. <P>
  810. GNU <CODE>make</CODE> supports POSIX 1003.2 and has all but a few obscure
  811. features of the BSD and System V versions of <CODE>make</CODE>, as well as many
  812. of our own extensions. GNU extensions include long options, parallel
  813. compilation, conditional execution and functions for text manipulation.
  814. Texinfo source for the <CITE>Make Manual</CITE> comes with the program.
  815. <P>
  816. GNU <CODE>make</CODE> is on several of our tapes because some native
  817. <CODE>make</CODE> programs lack the <CODE>VPATH</CODE> feature essential for using
  818. the GNU configure system to its full extent. A shell script is included to
  819. build GNU <CODE>make</CODE> on such systems. Also see "Project GNU Status
  820. Report".
  821. <P>
  822. <LI><B>MandelSpawn</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  823. <P>
  824. A parallel Mandelbrot generation program for the MIT X Window System.
  825. <P>
  826. <LI><B>mtools</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  827. <P>
  828. mtools is a set of public domain programs to allow Unix systems to read,
  829. write and manipulate files on an MS-DOS file system (usually a diskette).
  830. <P>
  831. <LI><B>MULE</B> (SrcCD)
  832. <P>
  833. MULE is a MULtilingual Enhancement to GNU Emacs 18. It can handle many
  834. character sets at once including Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese,
  835. Thai, Greek, the ISO Latin-1 through Latin-5 character sets, Ukrainian,
  836. Russian, and other Cyrillic alphabets. A text buffer in MULE can contain a
  837. mixture of characters from these languages. To input any of these
  838. characters, you can use various input methods provided by MULE itself. In
  839. addition, if you use MULE under some terminal emulator (kterm, cxterm, or
  840. exterm), you can use its input methods.
  841. <P>
  842. <LI><B>NetHack</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  843. <P>
  844. NetHack is a display-oriented adventure game similar to Rogue.
  845. Both ASCII and X displays are supported.
  846. <P>
  847. <LI><B>NIH Class Library</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  848. <P>
  849. The NIH Class Library (formerly known as "OOPS", Object-Oriented Program
  850. Support) is a portable collection of G<TT>++</TT> classes, similar to those in
  851. Smalltalk-80, which has been developed by Keith Gorlen of the National
  852. Institutes of Health (NIH), using the C<TT>++</TT> programming language.
  853. <P>
  854. <LI>Octave (LangT)
  855. <P>
  856. Octave is a high-level language, primarily intended for numerical
  857. computations. It provides a convenient command line interface for solving
  858. linear and nonlinear problems numerically.
  859. <P>
  860. Octave can do arithmetic for real and complex scalars and matrices, solve
  861. sets of nonlinear algebraic equations, integrate functions over finite and
  862. infinite intervals, and integrate systems of ordinary differential and
  863. differential-algebraic equations.
  864. <P>
  865. Octave is available via anonymous ftp from <CODE>ftp.che.utexas.edu</CODE> in
  866. the directory <TT>`/pub/octave'</TT>. The files are in gzipped tar format
  867. (see the file <TT>`README'</TT> on <CODE>prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu</CODE>).
  868. <P>
  869. The Octave distribution includes a 150+ page Texinfo manual.
  870. <P>
  871. <LI><B>Oleo</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  872. <P>
  873. Oleo is a spreadsheet program (better for you than the more expensive
  874. spreadsheets). It supports the X Window System and character-based
  875. terminals, and can output Embedded Postscript renditions of spreadsheets.
  876. Keybindings should be familiar to Emacs users and are configurable. Under
  877. X and in Postscript output, Oleo supports multiple, variable width fonts.
  878. Also see "Project GNU Status Report".
  879. <P>
  880. <LI><B><CODE>p2c</B></CODE> (LangT, SrcCD)
  881. <P>
  882. <CODE>p2c</CODE> is a Pascal-to-C translator written by Dave Gillespie. It is
  883. intended primarily for use on 32-bit machines, though porting it to convert
  884. code to work on 16-bit machines may be possible.
  885. <P>
  886. <LI><B><CODE>patch</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  887. <P>
  888. <CODE>patch</CODE> is our version of Larry Wall's program to take <CODE>diff</CODE>'s
  889. output and apply those differences to an original file to generate the
  890. modified version.
  891. <P>
  892. <LI><B>PCL</B> (EmcsT, SrcCD)
  893. <P>
  894. PCL is a free implementation of a large subset of CLOS, the Common Lisp
  895. Object System. PCL was written by Xerox Corporation.
  896. <P>
  897. <LI><B><CODE>perl</B></CODE> (LangT, SrcCD)
  898. <P>
  899. Larry Wall's <CODE>perl</CODE> combines the features and capabilities of
  900. <CODE>sed</CODE>, <CODE>awk</CODE>, <CODE>sh</CODE> and C, as well as interfaces to all the
  901. system calls and many C library routines. Perl Mode for editing
  902. <CODE>perl</CODE> code comes with GNU Emacs 19.
  903. <P>
  904. <LI><B><CODE>ptx</B></CODE> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  905. <P>
  906. <CODE>ptx</CODE> is the GNU version of <CODE>ptx</CODE>, a permuted index generator.
  907. Among other things, it produces readable "KWIC" (KeyWords In Context)
  908. indexes without the need of <CODE>nroff</CODE>. There is an option to output
  909. TeX code.
  910. <P>
  911. <LI><B><CODE>rc</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  912. <P>
  913. <CODE>rc</CODE> is a shell that features a C-like syntax (much more so than
  914. <CODE>csh</CODE>) and far cleaner quoting rules than the C or Bourne shells.
  915. It's intended to be used interactively, but is also great for writing
  916. scripts. It inspired the shell <CODE>es</CODE>.
  917. <P>
  918. <LI><B>RCS</B> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  919. <P>
  920. The Revision Control System, RCS, is used for version control and
  921. management of software projects. When used with GNU <CODE>diff</CODE>, RCS can
  922. handle binary files (executables, object files, 8-bit data, etc).
  923. Also see the entry for "CVS".
  924. <P>
  925. <LI><B><CODE>recode</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  926. <P>
  927. <CODE>recode</CODE> converts files between character sets and usages. When exact
  928. transliterations are not possible, it may get rid of the offending
  929. characters or fall back on approximations. This program recognizes or
  930. produces nearly 150 different character sets and is able to transliterate
  931. files between almost any pair. Most RFC 1345 character sets are supported.
  932. <P>
  933. <LI><B>regex</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  934. <P>
  935. The GNU regular expression library supports POSIX.2, except for
  936. internationalization features. In the past, it has been included in many
  937. GNU programs which use regex routines. Now it is finally available
  938. separately.
  939. <P>
  940. <LI>Scheme (SchmT, SrcCD)
  941. <P>
  942. For information about Scheme, see "Contents of the Scheme Tape". The
  943. version on the Source Code CD-ROM only works under MS-DOS.
  944. <P>
  945. <LI><B><CODE>screen</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  946. <P>
  947. <CODE>screen</CODE> is a terminal multiplexor that runs several separate
  948. "screens" (ttys) on a single physical terminal. Each virtual terminal
  949. emulates a DEC VT100 plus several ANSI X3.64 and ISO 2022 functions.
  950. <CODE>screen</CODE> sessions can be detached and resumed later on a different
  951. terminal.
  952. <P>
  953. <LI><B><CODE>sed</B></CODE> (UtilD, UtilT, SrcCD)
  954. <P>
  955. <CODE>sed</CODE> is a stream-oriented version of <CODE>ed</CODE>. It is used copiously
  956. in shell scripts. GNU sed comes with the rx library, which is a faster
  957. version of regex.
  958. <P>
  959. <LI><B>Shellutils</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  960. <P>
  961. Shellutils are used interactively or in shell scripts:
  962. <CODE>basename</CODE>,
  963. <CODE>date</CODE>,
  964. <CODE>dirname</CODE>,
  965. <CODE>echo</CODE>,
  966. <CODE>env</CODE>,
  967. <CODE>expr</CODE>,
  968. <CODE>false</CODE>,
  969. <CODE>groups</CODE>,
  970. <CODE>id</CODE>,
  971. <CODE>nice</CODE>,
  972. <CODE>nohup</CODE>,
  973. <CODE>printenv</CODE>,
  974. <CODE>printf</CODE>,
  975. <CODE>sleep</CODE>,
  976. <CODE>stty</CODE>,
  977. <CODE>su</CODE>,
  978. <CODE>tee</CODE>,
  979. <CODE>test</CODE>,
  980. <CODE>true</CODE>,
  981. <CODE>tty</CODE>,
  982. <CODE>uname</CODE>,
  983. <CODE>who</CODE>,
  984. <CODE>whoami</CODE>,
  985. &#38;
  986. <CODE>yes</CODE>.
  987. <P>
  988. <LI><B>GNU Shogi</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  989. <P>
  990. Shogi is a Japanese game similar to Chess; a major difference is that
  991. captured pieces can be returned into play.
  992. <P>
  993. GNU Shogi has been created by modifying GNU Chess; GNU Shogi implements
  994. the same features as GNU Chess and uses similar heuristics. As a new
  995. feature, sequences of partial board patterns can be introduced in order to
  996. help the program play a good order of moves towards specific opening
  997. patterns. There is both a text and X
  998. display interface.
  999. <P>
  1000. GNU Shogi is primarily supported by Matthias Mutz on behalf of FSF.
  1001. <P>
  1002. <PRE>
  1003. Matthias Mutz, Universitaet Passau, FMI, 94030 Passau Germany
  1004. E-mail: <CODE>mutz@kirk.fmi.uni-passau.de</CODE>
  1005. </PRE>
  1006. <P>
  1007. <LI><B>Smalltalk</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  1008. <P>
  1009. GNU Smalltalk is an interpreted object-oriented programming language system
  1010. written in portable C. Features include an incremental garbage collector,
  1011. a binary image save capability, the ability to invoke user-written C code
  1012. and pass parameters to it, a GNU Emacs editing mode, optional byte-code
  1013. compilation tracing and byte-code execution tracing, and automatically
  1014. loaded per-user initialization files.
  1015. Also see "Project GNU Status Report".
  1016. <P>
  1017. <LI><B>superopt</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  1018. <P>
  1019. Superopt is a function sequence generator that uses an exhaustive
  1020. generate-and-test approach to find the shortest instruction sequence for a
  1021. given function. You provide the GNU superoptimizer a function, a CPU to
  1022. generate code for, and how many instructions you can accept. Its
  1023. application in GCC is described in the <CITE>ACM SIGPLAN PLDI'92</CITE>
  1024. proceedings. Superopt supports: SPARC, m68k, m68020, m88k, IBM RS/6000,
  1025. AMD 29000, Intel 80x86, Pyramid, DEC Alpha, &#38; HP-PA.
  1026. <P>
  1027. <LI><B><CODE>tar</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  1028. <P>
  1029. GNU <CODE>tar</CODE> includes multivolume support, the ability to archive sparse
  1030. files, automatic archive compression/decompression, remote archives and
  1031. special features that allow <CODE>tar</CODE> to be used for incremental and full
  1032. backups. Unfortunately GNU <CODE>tar</CODE> implements an early draft of the
  1033. POSIX 1003.1 <CITE>ustar</CITE> standard which is different from the final
  1034. standard. Adding support for the new changes in a backward-compatible
  1035. fashion is not trivial.
  1036. <P>
  1037. <LI><B>Termcap Library</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  1038. <P>
  1039. The GNU Termcap library is a drop-in replacement for <TT>`libtermcap.a'</TT> on
  1040. any system. It does not place an arbitrary limit on the size of Termcap
  1041. entries, unlike most other Termcap libraries. Included is source for the
  1042. <CITE>Termcap Manual</CITE> in Texinfo format.
  1043. <P>
  1044. <LI><B>TeX</B> <EM>Not available from the FSF</EM>
  1045. <P>
  1046. TeX is document formatting system that handles complicated typesetting,
  1047. including mathematics.
  1048. It is the standard formatter for the GNU system.
  1049. <P>
  1050. We do not distribute TeX because you can get it from the University of
  1051. Washington, who serve as the center for maintenance of the Unix
  1052. version of TeX.
  1053. <P>
  1054. To order a full distribution written in <CODE>tar</CODE> on either a 1/4-inch
  1055. 4-track QIC-24 cartridge or a 4mm DAT cartridge, send $210.00 to:
  1056. <P>
  1057. <PRE>
  1058. Northwest Computing Support Center DR-10, Thomson Hall 35 E-mail: <CODE>unixtex@u.washington.edu</CODE>
  1059. University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195 Phone: (206) 543-6259
  1060. </PRE>
  1061. <P>
  1062. Please make checks payable to the University of Washington.
  1063. Checks must be in U.S. Dollars, drawn on a U.S. bank.
  1064. Prepaid orders are preferred but purchase orders are acceptable;
  1065. however, purchase orders carry an extra charge of $10.00 to pay for
  1066. invoice processing.
  1067. Overseas sites: please add to the base cost $20.00 for shipment via
  1068. air parcel post, or $30.00 for shipment via courier.
  1069. Please check with the above for current prices and formats.
  1070. <P>
  1071. <LI><B>Texinfo</B> (EmcsT, LangT, SrcCD, UtilD, UtilT)
  1072. <P>
  1073. Texinfo is a set of utilities which generate printed manuals and online
  1074. hypertext-style documentation (called "Info"), and provide means for
  1075. reading the online versions. Version 3 contains both GNU Emacs Lisp and
  1076. standalone C programs, as well as source for the <CITE>Texinfo Manual</CITE>.
  1077. Also see "Project GNU Status Report".
  1078. <P>
  1079. <LI><B>Textutils</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  1080. <P>
  1081. The Textutils programs manipulate textual data:
  1082. <CODE>cat</CODE>,
  1083. <CODE>cksum</CODE>,
  1084. <CODE>comm</CODE>,
  1085. <CODE>csplit</CODE>,
  1086. <CODE>cut</CODE>,
  1087. <CODE>expand</CODE>,
  1088. <CODE>fold</CODE>,
  1089. <CODE>head</CODE>,
  1090. <CODE>join</CODE>,
  1091. <CODE>nl</CODE>,
  1092. <CODE>od</CODE>,
  1093. <CODE>paste</CODE>,
  1094. <CODE>pr</CODE>,
  1095. <CODE>sort</CODE>,
  1096. <CODE>split</CODE>,
  1097. <CODE>sum</CODE>,
  1098. <CODE>tac</CODE>,
  1099. <CODE>tail</CODE>,
  1100. <CODE>tr</CODE>,
  1101. <CODE>unexpand</CODE>,
  1102. <CODE>uniq</CODE>,
  1103. &#38;
  1104. <CODE>wc</CODE>.
  1105. <P>
  1106. <LI><B>Tcl</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  1107. <P>
  1108. Tcl is an embeddable tool command language.
  1109. <CODE>expect</CODE> and DejaGnu work with and use Tcl.
  1110. <P>
  1111. <LI><B>Tile Forth</B> (LangT, SrcCD)
  1112. <P>
  1113. Tile Forth is a 32-bit implementation of the Forth--83 standard written in
  1114. C, allowing it to be easily moved between different computers
  1115. (traditionally, Forth implementations are written in assembler to use
  1116. the underlying hardware as optimally as possible, but this also makes
  1117. them less portable).
  1118. <P>
  1119. <LI><B><CODE>time</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  1120. <P>
  1121. <CODE>time</CODE> is used to report statistics (usually from a shell) about the
  1122. amount of user, system and real time used by a process.
  1123. <P>
  1124. <LI><B><CODE>tput</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  1125. <P>
  1126. <CODE>tput</CODE> is a portable way to allow shell scripts to use special
  1127. terminal capabilities. GNU <CODE>tput</CODE> uses the Termcap database, rather
  1128. than Terminfo as most implementations do.
  1129. <P>
  1130. <LI><B>UUCP</B> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  1131. <P>
  1132. This version of UUCP was written by Ian Lance Taylor, and is the standard
  1133. UUCP system for GNU. It currently supports the <CODE>f</CODE>, <CODE>g</CODE> (in all
  1134. window and packet sizes), <CODE>G</CODE>, <CODE>t</CODE> and <CODE>e</CODE> protocols, as
  1135. well a Zmodem protocol and two new bidirectional protocols. If you have a
  1136. Berkeley sockets library, it can make TCP connections. If you have TLI
  1137. libraries, it can make TLI connections.
  1138. <P>
  1139. <LI><B><CODE>uuencode</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  1140. <P>
  1141. Uuencode and uudecode are used to transmit binary files over
  1142. transmission mediums that do not support other than simple ASCII data.
  1143. <P>
  1144. <LI><B><CODE>wdiff</B></CODE> (UtilT, SrcCD)
  1145. <P>
  1146. <CODE>wdiff</CODE> compares two files, finding which words have been deleted or
  1147. added to the first in order to obtain the second. We hope eventually to
  1148. integrate it, as well as some ideas from a similar program called
  1149. <CODE>spiff</CODE>, into future releases of GNU <CODE>diff</CODE>.
  1150. <P>
  1151. </UL>
  1152. <P>
  1153. <H3><A NAME="SEC38" HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_toc.html#SEC38">Contents of the Emacs Tape</A></H3>
  1154. <P>
  1155. This tape contains a Common Lisp implementation, GNU Emacs, assorted
  1156. extensions that work with GNU Emacs, and a few other important utilities.
  1157. <P>
  1158. <H3><A NAME="SEC39" HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_toc.html#SEC39">Contents of the Languages Tape</A></H3>
  1159. <P>
  1160. This tape contains programming tools: compilers, interpreters, and related
  1161. programs (parsers, conversion programs, debuggers, etc.).
  1162. <P>
  1163. <H3><A NAME="SEC40" HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_toc.html#SEC40">Contents of the Utilities Tape</A></H3>
  1164. <P>
  1165. This tape consists mostly of smaller utilities and miscellaneous
  1166. applications not available on the other GNU tapes.
  1167. <P>
  1168. <H3><A NAME="SEC41" HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_toc.html#SEC41">Contents of the Scheme Tape</A></H3>
  1169. <P>
  1170. Scheme is a simplified, lexically-scoped dialect of Lisp. It was designed
  1171. at MIT and other universities to teach students the art of programming, and
  1172. to research new parallel programming constructs and compilation techniques.
  1173. <P>
  1174. This tape contains MIT Scheme 7.1, which conforms to the
  1175. (MIT AI Lab Memo 848b), for which TeX source is included.
  1176. It is written partly in C, but is presently hard to bootstrap.
  1177. Binaries which can be used to bootstrap Scheme are available for the
  1178. following systems:
  1179. <P>
  1180. <UL>
  1181. <LI>HP 9000 series 300, 400, 700 &#38; 800 running HP-UX 7.0 or 8.0
  1182. <LI>NeXT running NeXT OS 1.0 or 2.0
  1183. <LI>Sun-3 or Sun-4 running SunOS 4.1
  1184. <LI>DECstation 3100/5100 running Ultrix 4.0
  1185. <LI>Sony NWS-3250 running NEWS OS 5.01
  1186. <LI>Vax running 4.3 BSD
  1187. </UL>
  1188. <P>
  1189. If your system is not on this list and you don't enjoy the bootstrap
  1190. challenge, see the "JACAL" entry in the "GNU Software Available Now."
  1191. <P>
  1192. <H3><A NAME="SEC42" HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_toc.html#SEC42">Contents of the X11 Tapes</A></H3>
  1193. <P>
  1194. The two X11 tapes contain Version 11, Release 5 of the MIT X Window System.
  1195. The first FSF tape contains all of the core software, documentation and
  1196. some contributed clients. We call this the "required" X tape since it is
  1197. necessary for running X or running GNU Emacs under X. The second,
  1198. "optional", FSF tape contains contributed libraries and other toolkits,
  1199. the Andrew User Interface System, games, and other programs.
  1200. <P>
  1201. The X11 Required tape also contains all fixes and patches released to date.
  1202. We update this tape as new fixes and patches are released.
  1203. <P>
  1204. <H3><A NAME="SEC43" HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_toc.html#SEC43">Berkeley Networking 2 Tape</A></H3>
  1205. <P>
  1206. The Berkeley "Net2" release contains the second 4.3 BSD distribution and
  1207. is newer than both 4.3 BSD-Tahoe and 4.3 BSD-Reno. It includes most of the
  1208. BSD software system except for a few utilities, some parts of the kernel
  1209. and some library routines which your own C library is likely to provide (we
  1210. have replacements on other tapes for many of the missing programs). This
  1211. release also contains third party software including Kerberos and some GNU
  1212. software.
  1213. <P>
  1214. <H3><A NAME="SEC44" HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_toc.html#SEC44">VMS Emacs and VMS Compiler Tapes</A></H3>
  1215. <P>
  1216. We offer two VMS tapes. One has just the GNU Emacs editor. The other has
  1217. the GNU C compiler, Bison (to compile GCC), GAS (to assemble GCC's output)
  1218. and some library and include files. We are not aware of a GDB port for
  1219. VMS. Both VMS tapes have executables from which you can bootstrap, as the
  1220. DEC VMS C compiler cannot compile GCC. Please do not ask us to devote
  1221. effort to VMS support, because it is peripheral to the GNU Project.
  1222. <P>
  1223. <P>Go to the <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_19.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_9401_21.html">next</A> chapter.<P>