[G95-develop] Should g77 accept file extensions .f90 and .f95 ?
Zack Weinberg
zack@wolery.cumb.org
Wed Sep 6 19:30:00 GMT 2000
On Wed, Sep 06, 2000 at 11:20:18PM +0200, Toon Moene wrote:
> Zack Weinberg wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 06, 2000 at 12:28:25AM -0700, Andrew Vaught wrote:
> > > I think that (3) is the way to go. Every now and then I hear someone
> > > talk about g95 "replacing" g77, but I think that g77 and g95 should
> > > complement one another.
>
> > Speaking only for myself: yes, the g95 *implementation* should
> > completely replace the g77 *implementation*. Sure, people will want
> > to continue using Fortran 77, but I very much hope they can be served
> > by a backward-compatibility mode in g95.
>
> So far, I agree - although for most of the language g77 compiles you
> wouldn't need a backward-compatibility switch on g95 (ironically, g77
> doesn't offer many extensions over Standard Fortran 77 - and is often
> chastized for that - and most of the ones it *does* offer are in Fortran
> 95).
I thought I saw a list of features removed between F77 and F9[05] go
by. Obscure features, perhaps, but this _is_ Fortran... :)
> > 1. The present g77 implementation is close to incomprehensible for
> > anyone other than the original author, who has left the project.
> > Fixing bugs - and there are plenty of bugs - is painful. Look at
> > how long some of the Fortran tests have been failing without anyone
> > even looking at them...
>
> I think you overlook some things here. The C, C++ and Java crowd has
> *paid* developers to chase bugs and improve frontends. The one and only
> reason I managed to fix fold-const.c's extract_muldiv problem was that I
> did it during my *holidays* - normally I do not have several contiguous
> hours to chase bugs in the GNU Compiler Collection.
Well, yes, but I think some of those paid developers, and some of the
random-bug-fix volunteers, would be willing to look at Fortran bugs if
the front end were comprehensible; particularly bugs that are
front/back end interaction problems. I know I would.
> > 3. Carrying around two completely different front ends for similar
> > languages will be a maintenance headache. We already have oodles
> > of problems with divergence between C and C++ front ends. (My
> > integrated preprocessor patch, for instance, would be about 3x
> > shorter if they shared more code.)
>
> Agreed.
>
> > Note that (3) is independent of (1). Even if g77 were a pleasure to
> > maintain, you would still have to find and fix the same bug in both
> > front ends on a regular basis.
>
> This is hard to imagine. The frontends are completely different and
> independently developed - it is next to impossible to believe they would
> have similar bugs.
I'm thinking specifically of bugs due to changes in the backend
interface. For instance:
2000-05-06 Zack Weinberg <zack@wolery.cumb.org>
* com.c (ffecom_overlap_): Set source_offset to
bitsize_zero_node.
(ffecom_tree_canonize_ptr_): Use size_binop. Convert to
bitsizetype before multiplying by TYPE_SIZE.
(ffecom_tree_canonize_ref_) [case ARRAY_REF]: Break up offset
calculation. Convert to bitsizetype before multiplying by
TYPE_SIZE.
This was fallout from all the sizetype/bitsizetype changes Richard
Kenner made back in April. Changes like that require updating every
front end. The more there are, the more work that is.
zw
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