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  61. <a name="Contributors"></a>
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  63. <p>
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  65. </div>
  66. <hr>
  67. <a name="Contributors-to-GCC"></a>
  68. <h2 class="unnumbered">Contributors to GCC</h2>
  69. <a name="index-contributors"></a>
  70. <p>The GCC project would like to thank its many contributors. Without them the
  71. project would not have been nearly as successful as it has been. Any omissions
  72. in this list are accidental. Feel free to contact
  73. <a href="mailto:law@redhat.com">law@redhat.com</a> or <a href="mailto:gerald@pfeifer.com">gerald@pfeifer.com</a> if you have been left
  74. out or some of your contributions are not listed. Please keep this list in
  75. alphabetical order.
  76. </p>
  77. <ul>
  78. <li> Analog Devices helped implement the support for complex data types
  79. and iterators.
  80. </li><li> John David Anglin for threading-related fixes and improvements to
  81. libstdc++-v3, and the HP-UX port.
  82. </li><li> James van Artsdalen wrote the code that makes efficient use of
  83. the Intel 80387 register stack.
  84. </li><li> Abramo and Roberto Bagnara for the SysV68 Motorola 3300 Delta Series
  85. port.
  86. </li><li> Alasdair Baird for various bug fixes.
  87. </li><li> Giovanni Bajo for analyzing lots of complicated C++ problem reports.
  88. </li><li> Peter Barada for his work to improve code generation for new
  89. ColdFire cores.
  90. </li><li> Gerald Baumgartner added the signature extension to the C++ front end.
  91. </li><li> Godmar Back for his Java improvements and encouragement.
  92. </li><li> Scott Bambrough for help porting the Java compiler.
  93. </li><li> Wolfgang Bangerth for processing tons of bug reports.
  94. </li><li> Jon Beniston for his Microsoft Windows port of Java and port to Lattice Mico32.
  95. </li><li> Daniel Berlin for better DWARF 2 support, faster/better optimizations,
  96. improved alias analysis, plus migrating GCC to Bugzilla.
  97. </li><li> Geoff Berry for his Java object serialization work and various patches.
  98. </li><li> David Binderman tests weekly snapshots of GCC trunk against Fedora Rawhide
  99. for several architectures.
  100. </li><li> Laurynas Biveinis for memory management work and DJGPP port fixes.
  101. </li><li> Uros Bizjak for the implementation of x87 math built-in functions and
  102. for various middle end and i386 back end improvements and bug fixes.
  103. </li><li> Eric Blake for helping to make GCJ and libgcj conform to the
  104. specifications.
  105. </li><li> Janne Blomqvist for contributions to GNU Fortran.
  106. </li><li> Hans-J. Boehm for his garbage collector, IA-64 libffi port, and other
  107. Java work.
  108. </li><li> Segher Boessenkool for helping maintain the PowerPC port and the
  109. instruction combiner plus various contributions to the middle end.
  110. </li><li> Neil Booth for work on cpplib, lang hooks, debug hooks and other
  111. miscellaneous clean-ups.
  112. </li><li> Steven Bosscher for integrating the GNU Fortran front end into GCC and for
  113. contributing to the tree-ssa branch.
  114. </li><li> Eric Botcazou for fixing middle- and backend bugs left and right.
  115. </li><li> Per Bothner for his direction via the steering committee and various
  116. improvements to the infrastructure for supporting new languages. Chill
  117. front end implementation. Initial implementations of
  118. cpplib, fix-header, config.guess, libio, and past C++ library (libg++)
  119. maintainer. Dreaming up, designing and implementing much of GCJ.
  120. </li><li> Devon Bowen helped port GCC to the Tahoe.
  121. </li><li> Don Bowman for mips-vxworks contributions.
  122. </li><li> James Bowman for the FT32 port.
  123. </li><li> Dave Brolley for work on cpplib and Chill.
  124. </li><li> Paul Brook for work on the ARM architecture and maintaining GNU Fortran.
  125. </li><li> Robert Brown implemented the support for Encore 32000 systems.
  126. </li><li> Christian Bruel for improvements to local store elimination.
  127. </li><li> Herman A.J. ten Brugge for various fixes.
  128. </li><li> Joerg Brunsmann for Java compiler hacking and help with the GCJ FAQ.
  129. </li><li> Joe Buck for his direction via the steering committee from its creation
  130. to 2013.
  131. </li><li> Iain Buclaw for the D frontend.
  132. </li><li> Craig Burley for leadership of the G77 Fortran effort.
  133. </li><li> Tobias Burnus for contributions to GNU Fortran.
  134. </li><li> Stephan Buys for contributing Doxygen notes for libstdc++.
  135. </li><li> Paolo Carlini for libstdc++ work: lots of efficiency improvements to
  136. the C++ strings, streambufs and formatted I/O, hard detective work on
  137. the frustrating localization issues, and keeping up with the problem reports.
  138. </li><li> John Carr for his alias work, SPARC hacking, infrastructure improvements,
  139. previous contributions to the steering committee, loop optimizations, etc.
  140. </li><li> Stephane Carrez for 68HC11 and 68HC12 ports.
  141. </li><li> Steve Chamberlain for support for the Renesas SH and H8 processors
  142. and the PicoJava processor, and for GCJ config fixes.
  143. </li><li> Glenn Chambers for help with the GCJ FAQ.
  144. </li><li> John-Marc Chandonia for various libgcj patches.
  145. </li><li> Denis Chertykov for contributing and maintaining the AVR port, the first GCC port
  146. for an 8-bit architecture.
  147. </li><li> Kito Cheng for his work on the RISC-V port, including bringing up the test
  148. suite and maintenance.
  149. </li><li> Scott Christley for his Objective-C contributions.
  150. </li><li> Eric Christopher for his Java porting help and clean-ups.
  151. </li><li> Branko Cibej for more warning contributions.
  152. </li><li> The <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/classpath/">GNU Classpath project</a>
  153. for all of their merged runtime code.
  154. </li><li> Nick Clifton for arm, mcore, fr30, v850, m32r, msp430 rx work,
  155. <samp>--help</samp>, and other random hacking.
  156. </li><li> Michael Cook for libstdc++ cleanup patches to reduce warnings.
  157. </li><li> R. Kelley Cook for making GCC buildable from a read-only directory as
  158. well as other miscellaneous build process and documentation clean-ups.
  159. </li><li> Ralf Corsepius for SH testing and minor bug fixing.
  160. </li><li> Fran&ccedil;ois-Xavier Coudert for contributions to GNU Fortran.
  161. </li><li> Stan Cox for care and feeding of the x86 port and lots of behind
  162. the scenes hacking.
  163. </li><li> Alex Crain provided changes for the 3b1.
  164. </li><li> Ian Dall for major improvements to the NS32k port.
  165. </li><li> Paul Dale for his work to add uClinux platform support to the
  166. m68k backend.
  167. </li><li> Palmer Dabbelt for his work maintaining the RISC-V port.
  168. </li><li> Dario Dariol contributed the four varieties of sample programs
  169. that print a copy of their source.
  170. </li><li> Russell Davidson for fstream and stringstream fixes in libstdc++.
  171. </li><li> Bud Davis for work on the G77 and GNU Fortran compilers.
  172. </li><li> Mo DeJong for GCJ and libgcj bug fixes.
  173. </li><li> Jerry DeLisle for contributions to GNU Fortran.
  174. </li><li> DJ Delorie for the DJGPP port, build and libiberty maintenance,
  175. various bug fixes, and the M32C, MeP, MSP430, and RL78 ports.
  176. </li><li> Arnaud Desitter for helping to debug GNU Fortran.
  177. </li><li> Gabriel Dos Reis for contributions to G++, contributions and
  178. maintenance of GCC diagnostics infrastructure, libstdc++-v3,
  179. including <code>valarray&lt;&gt;</code>, <code>complex&lt;&gt;</code>, maintaining the numerics library
  180. (including that pesky <code>&lt;limits&gt;</code> :-) and keeping up-to-date anything
  181. to do with numbers.
  182. </li><li> Ulrich Drepper for his work on glibc, testing of GCC using glibc, ISO C99
  183. support, CFG dumping support, etc., plus support of the C++ runtime
  184. libraries including for all kinds of C interface issues, contributing and
  185. maintaining <code>complex&lt;&gt;</code>, sanity checking and disbursement, configuration
  186. architecture, libio maintenance, and early math work.
  187. </li><li> Fran&ccedil;ois Dumont for his work on libstdc++-v3, especially maintaining and
  188. improving <code>debug-mode</code> and associative and unordered containers.
  189. </li><li> Zdenek Dvorak for a new loop unroller and various fixes.
  190. </li><li> Michael Eager for his work on the Xilinx MicroBlaze port.
  191. </li><li> Richard Earnshaw for his ongoing work with the ARM.
  192. </li><li> David Edelsohn for his direction via the steering committee, ongoing work
  193. with the RS6000/PowerPC port, help cleaning up Haifa loop changes,
  194. doing the entire AIX port of libstdc++ with his bare hands, and for
  195. ensuring GCC properly keeps working on AIX.
  196. </li><li> Kevin Ediger for the floating point formatting of num_put::do_put in
  197. libstdc++.
  198. </li><li> Phil Edwards for libstdc++ work including configuration hackery,
  199. documentation maintainer, chief breaker of the web pages, the occasional
  200. iostream bug fix, and work on shared library symbol versioning.
  201. </li><li> Paul Eggert for random hacking all over GCC.
  202. </li><li> Mark Elbrecht for various DJGPP improvements, and for libstdc++
  203. configuration support for locales and fstream-related fixes.
  204. </li><li> Vadim Egorov for libstdc++ fixes in strings, streambufs, and iostreams.
  205. </li><li> Christian Ehrhardt for dealing with bug reports.
  206. </li><li> Ben Elliston for his work to move the Objective-C runtime into its
  207. own subdirectory and for his work on autoconf.
  208. </li><li> Revital Eres for work on the PowerPC 750CL port.
  209. </li><li> Marc Espie for OpenBSD support.
  210. </li><li> Doug Evans for much of the global optimization framework, arc, m32r,
  211. and SPARC work.
  212. </li><li> Christopher Faylor for his work on the Cygwin port and for caring and
  213. feeding the gcc.gnu.org box and saving its users tons of spam.
  214. </li><li> Fred Fish for BeOS support and Ada fixes.
  215. </li><li> Ivan Fontes Garcia for the Portuguese translation of the GCJ FAQ.
  216. </li><li> Peter Gerwinski for various bug fixes and the Pascal front end.
  217. </li><li> Kaveh R. Ghazi for his direction via the steering committee, amazing
  218. work to make &lsquo;<samp>-W -Wall -W* -Werror</samp>&rsquo; useful, and
  219. testing GCC on a plethora of platforms. Kaveh extends his gratitude to
  220. the CAIP Center at Rutgers University for providing him with computing
  221. resources to work on Free Software from the late 1980s to 2010.
  222. </li><li> John Gilmore for a donation to the FSF earmarked improving GNU Java.
  223. </li><li> Judy Goldberg for c++ contributions.
  224. </li><li> Torbjorn Granlund for various fixes and the c-torture testsuite,
  225. multiply- and divide-by-constant optimization, improved long long
  226. support, improved leaf function register allocation, and his direction
  227. via the steering committee.
  228. </li><li> Jonny Grant for improvements to <code>collect2's</code> <samp>--help</samp> documentation.
  229. </li><li> Anthony Green for his <samp>-Os</samp> contributions, the moxie port, and
  230. Java front end work.
  231. </li><li> Stu Grossman for gdb hacking, allowing GCJ developers to debug Java code.
  232. </li><li> Michael K. Gschwind contributed the port to the PDP-11.
  233. </li><li> Richard Biener for his ongoing middle-end contributions and bug fixes
  234. and for release management.
  235. </li><li> Ron Guilmette implemented the <code>protoize</code> and <code>unprotoize</code>
  236. tools, the support for DWARF 1 symbolic debugging information, and much of
  237. the support for System V Release 4. He has also worked heavily on the
  238. Intel 386 and 860 support.
  239. </li><li> Sumanth Gundapaneni for contributing the CR16 port.
  240. </li><li> Mostafa Hagog for Swing Modulo Scheduling (SMS) and post reload GCSE.
  241. </li><li> Bruno Haible for improvements in the runtime overhead for EH, new
  242. warnings and assorted bug fixes.
  243. </li><li> Andrew Haley for his amazing Java compiler and library efforts.
  244. </li><li> Chris Hanson assisted in making GCC work on HP-UX for the 9000 series 300.
  245. </li><li> Michael Hayes for various thankless work he&rsquo;s done trying to get
  246. the c30/c40 ports functional. Lots of loop and unroll improvements and
  247. fixes.
  248. </li><li> Dara Hazeghi for wading through myriads of target-specific bug reports.
  249. </li><li> Kate Hedstrom for staking the G77 folks with an initial testsuite.
  250. </li><li> Richard Henderson for his ongoing SPARC, alpha, ia32, and ia64 work, loop
  251. opts, and generally fixing lots of old problems we&rsquo;ve ignored for
  252. years, flow rewrite and lots of further stuff, including reviewing
  253. tons of patches.
  254. </li><li> Aldy Hernandez for working on the PowerPC port, SIMD support, and
  255. various fixes.
  256. </li><li> Nobuyuki Hikichi of Software Research Associates, Tokyo, contributed
  257. the support for the Sony NEWS machine.
  258. </li><li> Kazu Hirata for caring and feeding the Renesas H8/300 port and various fixes.
  259. </li><li> Katherine Holcomb for work on GNU Fortran.
  260. </li><li> Manfred Hollstein for his ongoing work to keep the m88k alive, lots
  261. of testing and bug fixing, particularly of GCC configury code.
  262. </li><li> Steve Holmgren for MachTen patches.
  263. </li><li> Mat Hostetter for work on the TILE-Gx and TILEPro ports.
  264. </li><li> Jan Hubicka for his x86 port improvements.
  265. </li><li> Falk Hueffner for working on C and optimization bug reports.
  266. </li><li> Bernardo Innocenti for his m68k work, including merging of
  267. ColdFire improvements and uClinux support.
  268. </li><li> Christian Iseli for various bug fixes.
  269. </li><li> Kamil Iskra for general m68k hacking.
  270. </li><li> Lee Iverson for random fixes and MIPS testing.
  271. </li><li> Balaji V. Iyer for Cilk+ development and merging.
  272. </li><li> Andreas Jaeger for testing and benchmarking of GCC and various bug fixes.
  273. </li><li> Martin Jambor for his work on inter-procedural optimizations, the
  274. switch conversion pass, and scalar replacement of aggregates.
  275. </li><li> Jakub Jelinek for his SPARC work and sibling call optimizations as well
  276. as lots of bug fixes and test cases, and for improving the Java build
  277. system.
  278. </li><li> Janis Johnson for ia64 testing and fixes, her quality improvement
  279. sidetracks, and web page maintenance.
  280. </li><li> Kean Johnston for SCO OpenServer support and various fixes.
  281. </li><li> Tim Josling for the sample language treelang based originally on Richard
  282. Kenner&rsquo;s &ldquo;toy&rdquo; language.
  283. </li><li> Nicolai Josuttis for additional libstdc++ documentation.
  284. </li><li> Klaus Kaempf for his ongoing work to make alpha-vms a viable target.
  285. </li><li> Steven G. Kargl for work on GNU Fortran.
  286. </li><li> David Kashtan of SRI adapted GCC to VMS.
  287. </li><li> Ryszard Kabatek for many, many libstdc++ bug fixes and optimizations of
  288. strings, especially member functions, and for auto_ptr fixes.
  289. </li><li> Geoffrey Keating for his ongoing work to make the PPC work for GNU/Linux
  290. and his automatic regression tester.
  291. </li><li> Brendan Kehoe for his ongoing work with G++ and for a lot of early work
  292. in just about every part of libstdc++.
  293. </li><li> Oliver M. Kellogg of Deutsche Aerospace contributed the port to the
  294. MIL-STD-1750A.
  295. </li><li> Richard Kenner of the New York University Ultracomputer Research
  296. Laboratory wrote the machine descriptions for the AMD 29000, the DEC
  297. Alpha, the IBM RT PC, and the IBM RS/6000 as well as the support for
  298. instruction attributes. He also made changes to better support RISC
  299. processors including changes to common subexpression elimination,
  300. strength reduction, function calling sequence handling, and condition
  301. code support, in addition to generalizing the code for frame pointer
  302. elimination and delay slot scheduling. Richard Kenner was also the
  303. head maintainer of GCC for several years.
  304. </li><li> Mumit Khan for various contributions to the Cygwin and Mingw32 ports and
  305. maintaining binary releases for Microsoft Windows hosts, and for massive libstdc++
  306. porting work to Cygwin/Mingw32.
  307. </li><li> Robin Kirkham for cpu32 support.
  308. </li><li> Mark Klein for PA improvements.
  309. </li><li> Thomas Koenig for various bug fixes.
  310. </li><li> Bruce Korb for the new and improved fixincludes code.
  311. </li><li> Benjamin Kosnik for his G++ work and for leading the libstdc++-v3 effort.
  312. </li><li> Maxim Kuvyrkov for contributions to the instruction scheduler, the Android
  313. and m68k/Coldfire ports, and optimizations.
  314. </li><li> Charles LaBrec contributed the support for the Integrated Solutions
  315. 68020 system.
  316. </li><li> Asher Langton and Mike Kumbera for contributing Cray pointer support
  317. to GNU Fortran, and for other GNU Fortran improvements.
  318. </li><li> Jeff Law for his direction via the steering committee, coordinating the
  319. entire egcs project and GCC 2.95, rolling out snapshots and releases,
  320. handling merges from GCC2, reviewing tons of patches that might have
  321. fallen through the cracks else, and random but extensive hacking.
  322. </li><li> Walter Lee for work on the TILE-Gx and TILEPro ports.
  323. </li><li> Marc Lehmann for his direction via the steering committee and helping
  324. with analysis and improvements of x86 performance.
  325. </li><li> Victor Leikehman for work on GNU Fortran.
  326. </li><li> Ted Lemon wrote parts of the RTL reader and printer.
  327. </li><li> Kriang Lerdsuwanakij for C++ improvements including template as template
  328. parameter support, and many C++ fixes.
  329. </li><li> Warren Levy for tremendous work on libgcj (Java Runtime Library) and
  330. random work on the Java front end.
  331. </li><li> Alain Lichnewsky ported GCC to the MIPS CPU.
  332. </li><li> Oskar Liljeblad for hacking on AWT and his many Java bug reports and
  333. patches.
  334. </li><li> Robert Lipe for OpenServer support, new testsuites, testing, etc.
  335. </li><li> Chen Liqin for various S+core related fixes/improvement, and for
  336. maintaining the S+core port.
  337. </li><li> Martin Liska for his work on identical code folding, the sanitizers,
  338. HSA, general bug fixing and for running automated regression testing of GCC
  339. and reporting numerous bugs.
  340. </li><li> Weiwen Liu for testing and various bug fixes.
  341. </li><li> Manuel L&oacute;pez-Ib&aacute;&ntilde;ez for improving <samp>-Wconversion</samp> and
  342. many other diagnostics fixes and improvements.
  343. </li><li> Dave Love for his ongoing work with the Fortran front end and
  344. runtime libraries.
  345. </li><li> Martin von L&ouml;wis for internal consistency checking infrastructure,
  346. various C++ improvements including namespace support, and tons of
  347. assistance with libstdc++/compiler merges.
  348. </li><li> H.J. Lu for his previous contributions to the steering committee, many x86
  349. bug reports, prototype patches, and keeping the GNU/Linux ports working.
  350. </li><li> Greg McGary for random fixes and (someday) bounded pointers.
  351. </li><li> Andrew MacLeod for his ongoing work in building a real EH system,
  352. various code generation improvements, work on the global optimizer, etc.
  353. </li><li> Vladimir Makarov for hacking some ugly i960 problems, PowerPC hacking
  354. improvements to compile-time performance, overall knowledge and
  355. direction in the area of instruction scheduling, design and
  356. implementation of the automaton based instruction scheduler and
  357. design and implementation of the integrated and local register allocators.
  358. </li><li> David Malcolm for his work on improving GCC diagnostics, JIT, self-tests
  359. and unit testing.
  360. </li><li> Bob Manson for his behind the scenes work on dejagnu.
  361. </li><li> John Marino for contributing the DragonFly BSD port.
  362. </li><li> Philip Martin for lots of libstdc++ string and vector iterator fixes and
  363. improvements, and string clean up and testsuites.
  364. </li><li> Michael Matz for his work on dominance tree discovery, the x86-64 port,
  365. link-time optimization framework and general optimization improvements.
  366. </li><li> All of the Mauve project contributors for Java test code.
  367. </li><li> Bryce McKinlay for numerous GCJ and libgcj fixes and improvements.
  368. </li><li> Adam Megacz for his work on the Microsoft Windows port of GCJ.
  369. </li><li> Michael Meissner for LRS framework, ia32, m32r, v850, m88k, MIPS,
  370. powerpc, haifa, ECOFF debug support, and other assorted hacking.
  371. </li><li> Jason Merrill for his direction via the steering committee and leading
  372. the G++ effort.
  373. </li><li> Martin Michlmayr for testing GCC on several architectures using the
  374. entire Debian archive.
  375. </li><li> David Miller for his direction via the steering committee, lots of
  376. SPARC work, improvements in jump.c and interfacing with the Linux kernel
  377. developers.
  378. </li><li> Gary Miller ported GCC to Charles River Data Systems machines.
  379. </li><li> Alfred Minarik for libstdc++ string and ios bug fixes, and turning the
  380. entire libstdc++ testsuite namespace-compatible.
  381. </li><li> Mark Mitchell for his direction via the steering committee, mountains of
  382. C++ work, load/store hoisting out of loops, alias analysis improvements,
  383. ISO C <code>restrict</code> support, and serving as release manager from 2000
  384. to 2011.
  385. </li><li> Alan Modra for various GNU/Linux bits and testing.
  386. </li><li> Toon Moene for his direction via the steering committee, Fortran
  387. maintenance, and his ongoing work to make us make Fortran run fast.
  388. </li><li> Jason Molenda for major help in the care and feeding of all the services
  389. on the gcc.gnu.org (formerly egcs.cygnus.com) machine&mdash;mail, web
  390. services, ftp services, etc etc. Doing all this work on scrap paper and
  391. the backs of envelopes would have been&hellip; difficult.
  392. </li><li> Catherine Moore for fixing various ugly problems we have sent her
  393. way, including the haifa bug which was killing the Alpha &amp; PowerPC
  394. Linux kernels.
  395. </li><li> Mike Moreton for his various Java patches.
  396. </li><li> David Mosberger-Tang for various Alpha improvements, and for the initial
  397. IA-64 port.
  398. </li><li> Stephen Moshier contributed the floating point emulator that assists in
  399. cross-compilation and permits support for floating point numbers wider
  400. than 64 bits and for ISO C99 support.
  401. </li><li> Bill Moyer for his behind the scenes work on various issues.
  402. </li><li> Philippe De Muyter for his work on the m68k port.
  403. </li><li> Joseph S. Myers for his work on the PDP-11 port, format checking and ISO
  404. C99 support, and continuous emphasis on (and contributions to) documentation.
  405. </li><li> Nathan Myers for his work on libstdc++-v3: architecture and authorship
  406. through the first three snapshots, including implementation of locale
  407. infrastructure, string, shadow C headers, and the initial project
  408. documentation (DESIGN, CHECKLIST, and so forth). Later, more work on
  409. MT-safe string and shadow headers.
  410. </li><li> Felix Natter for documentation on porting libstdc++.
  411. </li><li> Nathanael Nerode for cleaning up the configuration/build process.
  412. </li><li> NeXT, Inc. donated the front end that supports the Objective-C
  413. language.
  414. </li><li> Hans-Peter Nilsson for the CRIS and MMIX ports, improvements to the search
  415. engine setup, various documentation fixes and other small fixes.
  416. </li><li> Geoff Noer for his work on getting cygwin native builds working.
  417. </li><li> Vegard Nossum for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  418. numerous bugs.
  419. </li><li> Diego Novillo for his work on Tree SSA, OpenMP, SPEC performance
  420. tracking web pages, GIMPLE tuples, and assorted fixes.
  421. </li><li> David O&rsquo;Brien for the FreeBSD/alpha, FreeBSD/AMD x86-64, FreeBSD/ARM,
  422. FreeBSD/PowerPC, and FreeBSD/SPARC64 ports and related infrastructure
  423. improvements.
  424. </li><li> Alexandre Oliva for various build infrastructure improvements, scripts and
  425. amazing testing work, including keeping libtool issues sane and happy.
  426. </li><li> Stefan Olsson for work on mt_alloc.
  427. </li><li> Melissa O&rsquo;Neill for various NeXT fixes.
  428. </li><li> Rainer Orth for random MIPS work, including improvements to GCC&rsquo;s o32
  429. ABI support, improvements to dejagnu&rsquo;s MIPS support, Java configuration
  430. clean-ups and porting work, and maintaining the IRIX, Solaris 2, and
  431. Tru64 UNIX ports.
  432. </li><li> Steven Pemberton for his contribution of <samp>enquire</samp> which allowed GCC to
  433. determine various properties of the floating point unit and generate
  434. <samp>float.h</samp> in older versions of GCC.
  435. </li><li> Hartmut Penner for work on the s390 port.
  436. </li><li> Paul Petersen wrote the machine description for the Alliant FX/8.
  437. </li><li> Alexandre Petit-Bianco for implementing much of the Java compiler and
  438. continued Java maintainership.
  439. </li><li> Matthias Pfaller for major improvements to the NS32k port.
  440. </li><li> Gerald Pfeifer for his direction via the steering committee, pointing
  441. out lots of problems we need to solve, maintenance of the web pages, and
  442. taking care of documentation maintenance in general.
  443. </li><li> Marek Polacek for his work on the C front end, the sanitizers and general
  444. bug fixing.
  445. </li><li> Andrew Pinski for processing bug reports by the dozen.
  446. </li><li> Ovidiu Predescu for his work on the Objective-C front end and runtime
  447. libraries.
  448. </li><li> Jerry Quinn for major performance improvements in C++ formatted I/O.
  449. </li><li> Ken Raeburn for various improvements to checker, MIPS ports and various
  450. cleanups in the compiler.
  451. </li><li> Rolf W. Rasmussen for hacking on AWT.
  452. </li><li> David Reese of Sun Microsystems contributed to the Solaris on PowerPC
  453. port.
  454. </li><li> John Regehr for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  455. numerous bugs.
  456. </li><li> Volker Reichelt for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  457. numerous bugs and for keeping up with the problem reports.
  458. </li><li> Joern Rennecke for maintaining the sh port, loop, regmove &amp; reload
  459. hacking and developing and maintaining the Epiphany port.
  460. </li><li> Loren J. Rittle for improvements to libstdc++-v3 including the FreeBSD
  461. port, threading fixes, thread-related configury changes, critical
  462. threading documentation, and solutions to really tricky I/O problems,
  463. as well as keeping GCC properly working on FreeBSD and continuous testing.
  464. </li><li> Craig Rodrigues for processing tons of bug reports.
  465. </li><li> Ola R&ouml;nnerup for work on mt_alloc.
  466. </li><li> Gavin Romig-Koch for lots of behind the scenes MIPS work.
  467. </li><li> David Ronis inspired and encouraged Craig to rewrite the G77
  468. documentation in texinfo format by contributing a first pass at a
  469. translation of the old <samp>g77-0.5.16/f/DOC</samp> file.
  470. </li><li> Ken Rose for fixes to GCC&rsquo;s delay slot filling code.
  471. </li><li> Ira Rosen for her contributions to the auto-vectorizer.
  472. </li><li> Paul Rubin wrote most of the preprocessor.
  473. </li><li> P&eacute;tur Run&oacute;lfsson for major performance improvements in C++ formatted I/O and
  474. large file support in C++ filebuf.
  475. </li><li> Chip Salzenberg for libstdc++ patches and improvements to locales, traits,
  476. Makefiles, libio, libtool hackery, and &ldquo;long long&rdquo; support.
  477. </li><li> Juha Sarlin for improvements to the H8 code generator.
  478. </li><li> Greg Satz assisted in making GCC work on HP-UX for the 9000 series 300.
  479. </li><li> Roger Sayle for improvements to constant folding and GCC&rsquo;s RTL optimizers
  480. as well as for fixing numerous bugs.
  481. </li><li> Bradley Schatz for his work on the GCJ FAQ.
  482. </li><li> Peter Schauer wrote the code to allow debugging to work on the Alpha.
  483. </li><li> William Schelter did most of the work on the Intel 80386 support.
  484. </li><li> Tobias Schl&uuml;ter for work on GNU Fortran.
  485. </li><li> Bernd Schmidt for various code generation improvements and major
  486. work in the reload pass, serving as release manager for
  487. GCC 2.95.3, and work on the Blackfin and C6X ports.
  488. </li><li> Peter Schmid for constant testing of libstdc++&mdash;especially application
  489. testing, going above and beyond what was requested for the release
  490. criteria&mdash;and libstdc++ header file tweaks.
  491. </li><li> Jason Schroeder for jcf-dump patches.
  492. </li><li> Andreas Schwab for his work on the m68k port.
  493. </li><li> Lars Segerlund for work on GNU Fortran.
  494. </li><li> Dodji Seketeli for numerous C++ bug fixes and debug info improvements.
  495. </li><li> Tim Shen for major work on <code>&lt;regex&gt;</code>.
  496. </li><li> Joel Sherrill for his direction via the steering committee, RTEMS
  497. contributions and RTEMS testing.
  498. </li><li> Nathan Sidwell for many C++ fixes/improvements.
  499. </li><li> Jeffrey Siegal for helping RMS with the original design of GCC, some
  500. code which handles the parse tree and RTL data structures, constant
  501. folding and help with the original VAX &amp; m68k ports.
  502. </li><li> Kenny Simpson for prompting libstdc++ fixes due to defect reports from
  503. the LWG (thereby keeping GCC in line with updates from the ISO).
  504. </li><li> Franz Sirl for his ongoing work with making the PPC port stable
  505. for GNU/Linux.
  506. </li><li> Andrey Slepuhin for assorted AIX hacking.
  507. </li><li> Trevor Smigiel for contributing the SPU port.
  508. </li><li> Christopher Smith did the port for Convex machines.
  509. </li><li> Danny Smith for his major efforts on the Mingw (and Cygwin) ports.
  510. Retired from GCC maintainership August 2010, having mentored two
  511. new maintainers into the role.
  512. </li><li> Randy Smith finished the Sun FPA support.
  513. </li><li> Ed Smith-Rowland for his continuous work on libstdc++-v3, special functions,
  514. <code>&lt;random&gt;</code>, and various improvements to C++11 features.
  515. </li><li> Scott Snyder for queue, iterator, istream, and string fixes and libstdc++
  516. testsuite entries. Also for providing the patch to G77 to add
  517. rudimentary support for <code>INTEGER*1</code>, <code>INTEGER*2</code>, and
  518. <code>LOGICAL*1</code>.
  519. </li><li> Zdenek Sojka for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  520. numerous bugs.
  521. </li><li> Arseny Solokha for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  522. numerous bugs.
  523. </li><li> Jayant Sonar for contributing the CR16 port.
  524. </li><li> Brad Spencer for contributions to the GLIBCPP_FORCE_NEW technique.
  525. </li><li> Richard Stallman, for writing the original GCC and launching the GNU project.
  526. </li><li> Jan Stein of the Chalmers Computer Society provided support for
  527. Genix, as well as part of the 32000 machine description.
  528. </li><li> Gerhard Steinmetz for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  529. numerous bugs.
  530. </li><li> Nigel Stephens for various mips16 related fixes/improvements.
  531. </li><li> Jonathan Stone wrote the machine description for the Pyramid computer.
  532. </li><li> Graham Stott for various infrastructure improvements.
  533. </li><li> John Stracke for his Java HTTP protocol fixes.
  534. </li><li> Mike Stump for his Elxsi port, G++ contributions over the years and more
  535. recently his vxworks contributions
  536. </li><li> Jeff Sturm for Java porting help, bug fixes, and encouragement.
  537. </li><li> Zhendong Su for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  538. numerous bugs.
  539. </li><li> Chengnian Sun for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  540. numerous bugs.
  541. </li><li> Shigeya Suzuki for this fixes for the bsdi platforms.
  542. </li><li> Ian Lance Taylor for the Go frontend, the initial mips16 and mips64
  543. support, general configury hacking, fixincludes, etc.
  544. </li><li> Holger Teutsch provided the support for the Clipper CPU.
  545. </li><li> Gary Thomas for his ongoing work to make the PPC work for GNU/Linux.
  546. </li><li> Paul Thomas for contributions to GNU Fortran.
  547. </li><li> Philipp Thomas for random bug fixes throughout the compiler
  548. </li><li> Jason Thorpe for thread support in libstdc++ on NetBSD.
  549. </li><li> Kresten Krab Thorup wrote the run time support for the Objective-C
  550. language and the fantastic Java bytecode interpreter.
  551. </li><li> Michael Tiemann for random bug fixes, the first instruction scheduler,
  552. initial C++ support, function integration, NS32k, SPARC and M88k
  553. machine description work, delay slot scheduling.
  554. </li><li> Andreas Tobler for his work porting libgcj to Darwin.
  555. </li><li> Teemu Torma for thread safe exception handling support.
  556. </li><li> Leonard Tower wrote parts of the parser, RTL generator, and RTL
  557. definitions, and of the VAX machine description.
  558. </li><li> Daniel Towner and Hariharan Sandanagobalane contributed and
  559. maintain the picoChip port.
  560. </li><li> Tom Tromey for internationalization support and for his many Java
  561. contributions and libgcj maintainership.
  562. </li><li> Lassi Tuura for improvements to config.guess to determine HP processor
  563. types.
  564. </li><li> Petter Urkedal for libstdc++ CXXFLAGS, math, and algorithms fixes.
  565. </li><li> Andy Vaught for the design and initial implementation of the GNU Fortran
  566. front end.
  567. </li><li> Brent Verner for work with the libstdc++ cshadow files and their
  568. associated configure steps.
  569. </li><li> Todd Vierling for contributions for NetBSD ports.
  570. </li><li> Andrew Waterman for contributing the RISC-V port, as well as maintaining it.
  571. </li><li> Jonathan Wakely for contributing libstdc++ Doxygen notes and XHTML
  572. guidance and maintaining libstdc++.
  573. </li><li> Dean Wakerley for converting the install documentation from HTML to texinfo
  574. in time for GCC 3.0.
  575. </li><li> Krister Walfridsson for random bug fixes.
  576. </li><li> Feng Wang for contributions to GNU Fortran.
  577. </li><li> Stephen M. Webb for time and effort on making libstdc++ shadow files
  578. work with the tricky Solaris 8+ headers, and for pushing the build-time
  579. header tree. Also, for starting and driving the <code>&lt;regex&gt;</code> effort.
  580. </li><li> John Wehle for various improvements for the x86 code generator,
  581. related infrastructure improvements to help x86 code generation,
  582. value range propagation and other work, WE32k port.
  583. </li><li> Ulrich Weigand for work on the s390 port.
  584. </li><li> Janus Weil for contributions to GNU Fortran.
  585. </li><li> Zack Weinberg for major work on cpplib and various other bug fixes.
  586. </li><li> Matt Welsh for help with Linux Threads support in GCJ.
  587. </li><li> Urban Widmark for help fixing java.io.
  588. </li><li> Mark Wielaard for new Java library code and his work integrating with
  589. Classpath.
  590. </li><li> Dale Wiles helped port GCC to the Tahoe.
  591. </li><li> Bob Wilson from Tensilica, Inc. for the Xtensa port.
  592. </li><li> Jim Wilson for his direction via the steering committee, tackling hard
  593. problems in various places that nobody else wanted to work on, strength
  594. reduction and other loop optimizations.
  595. </li><li> Paul Woegerer and Tal Agmon for the CRX port.
  596. </li><li> Carlo Wood for various fixes.
  597. </li><li> Tom Wood for work on the m88k port.
  598. </li><li> Chung-Ju Wu for his work on the Andes NDS32 port.
  599. </li><li> Canqun Yang for work on GNU Fortran.
  600. </li><li> Masanobu Yuhara of Fujitsu Laboratories implemented the machine
  601. description for the Tron architecture (specifically, the Gmicro).
  602. </li><li> Kevin Zachmann helped port GCC to the Tahoe.
  603. </li><li> Ayal Zaks for Swing Modulo Scheduling (SMS).
  604. </li><li> Qirun Zhang for running automated regression testing of GCC and reporting
  605. numerous bugs.
  606. </li><li> Xiaoqiang Zhang for work on GNU Fortran.
  607. </li><li> Gilles Zunino for help porting Java to Irix.
  608. </li></ul>
  609. <p>The following people are recognized for their contributions to GNAT,
  610. the Ada front end of GCC:
  611. </p><ul>
  612. <li> Bernard Banner
  613. </li><li> Romain Berrendonner
  614. </li><li> Geert Bosch
  615. </li><li> Emmanuel Briot
  616. </li><li> Joel Brobecker
  617. </li><li> Ben Brosgol
  618. </li><li> Vincent Celier
  619. </li><li> Arnaud Charlet
  620. </li><li> Chien Chieng
  621. </li><li> Cyrille Comar
  622. </li><li> Cyrille Crozes
  623. </li><li> Robert Dewar
  624. </li><li> Gary Dismukes
  625. </li><li> Robert Duff
  626. </li><li> Ed Falis
  627. </li><li> Ramon Fernandez
  628. </li><li> Sam Figueroa
  629. </li><li> Vasiliy Fofanov
  630. </li><li> Michael Friess
  631. </li><li> Franco Gasperoni
  632. </li><li> Ted Giering
  633. </li><li> Matthew Gingell
  634. </li><li> Laurent Guerby
  635. </li><li> Jerome Guitton
  636. </li><li> Olivier Hainque
  637. </li><li> Jerome Hugues
  638. </li><li> Hristian Kirtchev
  639. </li><li> Jerome Lambourg
  640. </li><li> Bruno Leclerc
  641. </li><li> Albert Lee
  642. </li><li> Sean McNeil
  643. </li><li> Javier Miranda
  644. </li><li> Laurent Nana
  645. </li><li> Pascal Obry
  646. </li><li> Dong-Ik Oh
  647. </li><li> Laurent Pautet
  648. </li><li> Brett Porter
  649. </li><li> Thomas Quinot
  650. </li><li> Nicolas Roche
  651. </li><li> Pat Rogers
  652. </li><li> Jose Ruiz
  653. </li><li> Douglas Rupp
  654. </li><li> Sergey Rybin
  655. </li><li> Gail Schenker
  656. </li><li> Ed Schonberg
  657. </li><li> Nicolas Setton
  658. </li><li> Samuel Tardieu
  659. </li></ul>
  660. <p>The following people are recognized for their contributions of new
  661. features, bug reports, testing and integration of classpath/libgcj for
  662. GCC version 4.1:
  663. </p><ul>
  664. <li> Lillian Angel for <code>JTree</code> implementation and lots Free Swing
  665. additions and bug fixes.
  666. </li><li> Wolfgang Baer for <code>GapContent</code> bug fixes.
  667. </li><li> Anthony Balkissoon for <code>JList</code>, Free Swing 1.5 updates and mouse event
  668. fixes, lots of Free Swing work including <code>JTable</code> editing.
  669. </li><li> Stuart Ballard for RMI constant fixes.
  670. </li><li> Goffredo Baroncelli for <code>HTTPURLConnection</code> fixes.
  671. </li><li> Gary Benson for <code>MessageFormat</code> fixes.
  672. </li><li> Daniel Bonniot for <code>Serialization</code> fixes.
  673. </li><li> Chris Burdess for lots of gnu.xml and http protocol fixes, <code>StAX</code>
  674. and <code>DOM xml:id</code> support.
  675. </li><li> Ka-Hing Cheung for <code>TreePath</code> and <code>TreeSelection</code> fixes.
  676. </li><li> Archie Cobbs for build fixes, VM interface updates,
  677. <code>URLClassLoader</code> updates.
  678. </li><li> Kelley Cook for build fixes.
  679. </li><li> Martin Cordova for Suggestions for better <code>SocketTimeoutException</code>.
  680. </li><li> David Daney for <code>BitSet</code> bug fixes, <code>HttpURLConnection</code>
  681. rewrite and improvements.
  682. </li><li> Thomas Fitzsimmons for lots of upgrades to the gtk+ AWT and Cairo 2D
  683. support. Lots of imageio framework additions, lots of AWT and Free
  684. Swing bug fixes.
  685. </li><li> Jeroen Frijters for <code>ClassLoader</code> and nio cleanups, serialization fixes,
  686. better <code>Proxy</code> support, bug fixes and IKVM integration.
  687. </li><li> Santiago Gala for <code>AccessControlContext</code> fixes.
  688. </li><li> Nicolas Geoffray for <code>VMClassLoader</code> and <code>AccessController</code>
  689. improvements.
  690. </li><li> David Gilbert for <code>basic</code> and <code>metal</code> icon and plaf support
  691. and lots of documenting, Lots of Free Swing and metal theme
  692. additions. <code>MetalIconFactory</code> implementation.
  693. </li><li> Anthony Green for <code>MIDI</code> framework, <code>ALSA</code> and <code>DSSI</code>
  694. providers.
  695. </li><li> Andrew Haley for <code>Serialization</code> and <code>URLClassLoader</code> fixes,
  696. gcj build speedups.
  697. </li><li> Kim Ho for <code>JFileChooser</code> implementation.
  698. </li><li> Andrew John Hughes for <code>Locale</code> and net fixes, URI RFC2986
  699. updates, <code>Serialization</code> fixes, <code>Properties</code> XML support and
  700. generic branch work, VMIntegration guide update.
  701. </li><li> Bastiaan Huisman for <code>TimeZone</code> bug fixing.
  702. </li><li> Andreas Jaeger for mprec updates.
  703. </li><li> Paul Jenner for better <samp>-Werror</samp> support.
  704. </li><li> Ito Kazumitsu for <code>NetworkInterface</code> implementation and updates.
  705. </li><li> Roman Kennke for <code>BoxLayout</code>, <code>GrayFilter</code> and
  706. <code>SplitPane</code>, plus bug fixes all over. Lots of Free Swing work
  707. including styled text.
  708. </li><li> Simon Kitching for <code>String</code> cleanups and optimization suggestions.
  709. </li><li> Michael Koch for configuration fixes, <code>Locale</code> updates, bug and
  710. build fixes.
  711. </li><li> Guilhem Lavaux for configuration, thread and channel fixes and Kaffe
  712. integration. JCL native <code>Pointer</code> updates. Logger bug fixes.
  713. </li><li> David Lichteblau for JCL support library global/local reference
  714. cleanups.
  715. </li><li> Aaron Luchko for JDWP updates and documentation fixes.
  716. </li><li> Ziga Mahkovec for <code>Graphics2D</code> upgraded to Cairo 0.5 and new regex
  717. features.
  718. </li><li> Sven de Marothy for BMP imageio support, CSS and <code>TextLayout</code>
  719. fixes. <code>GtkImage</code> rewrite, 2D, awt, free swing and date/time fixes and
  720. implementing the Qt4 peers.
  721. </li><li> Casey Marshall for crypto algorithm fixes, <code>FileChannel</code> lock,
  722. <code>SystemLogger</code> and <code>FileHandler</code> rotate implementations, NIO
  723. <code>FileChannel.map</code> support, security and policy updates.
  724. </li><li> Bryce McKinlay for RMI work.
  725. </li><li> Audrius Meskauskas for lots of Free Corba, RMI and HTML work plus
  726. testing and documenting.
  727. </li><li> Kalle Olavi Niemitalo for build fixes.
  728. </li><li> Rainer Orth for build fixes.
  729. </li><li> Andrew Overholt for <code>File</code> locking fixes.
  730. </li><li> Ingo Proetel for <code>Image</code>, <code>Logger</code> and <code>URLClassLoader</code>
  731. updates.
  732. </li><li> Olga Rodimina for <code>MenuSelectionManager</code> implementation.
  733. </li><li> Jan Roehrich for <code>BasicTreeUI</code> and <code>JTree</code> fixes.
  734. </li><li> Julian Scheid for documentation updates and gjdoc support.
  735. </li><li> Christian Schlichtherle for zip fixes and cleanups.
  736. </li><li> Robert Schuster for documentation updates and beans fixes,
  737. <code>TreeNode</code> enumerations and <code>ActionCommand</code> and various
  738. fixes, XML and URL, AWT and Free Swing bug fixes.
  739. </li><li> Keith Seitz for lots of JDWP work.
  740. </li><li> Christian Thalinger for 64-bit cleanups, Configuration and VM
  741. interface fixes and <code>CACAO</code> integration, <code>fdlibm</code> updates.
  742. </li><li> Gael Thomas for <code>VMClassLoader</code> boot packages support suggestions.
  743. </li><li> Andreas Tobler for Darwin and Solaris testing and fixing, <code>Qt4</code>
  744. support for Darwin/OS X, <code>Graphics2D</code> support, <code>gtk+</code>
  745. updates.
  746. </li><li> Dalibor Topic for better <code>DEBUG</code> support, build cleanups and
  747. Kaffe integration. <code>Qt4</code> build infrastructure, <code>SHA1PRNG</code>
  748. and <code>GdkPixbugDecoder</code> updates.
  749. </li><li> Tom Tromey for Eclipse integration, generics work, lots of bug fixes
  750. and gcj integration including coordinating The Big Merge.
  751. </li><li> Mark Wielaard for bug fixes, packaging and release management,
  752. <code>Clipboard</code> implementation, system call interrupts and network
  753. timeouts and <code>GdkPixpufDecoder</code> fixes.
  754. </li></ul>
  755. <p>In addition to the above, all of which also contributed time and energy in
  756. testing GCC, we would like to thank the following for their contributions
  757. to testing:
  758. </p>
  759. <ul>
  760. <li> Michael Abd-El-Malek
  761. </li><li> Thomas Arend
  762. </li><li> Bonzo Armstrong
  763. </li><li> Steven Ashe
  764. </li><li> Chris Baldwin
  765. </li><li> David Billinghurst
  766. </li><li> Jim Blandy
  767. </li><li> Stephane Bortzmeyer
  768. </li><li> Horst von Brand
  769. </li><li> Frank Braun
  770. </li><li> Rodney Brown
  771. </li><li> Sidney Cadot
  772. </li><li> Bradford Castalia
  773. </li><li> Robert Clark
  774. </li><li> Jonathan Corbet
  775. </li><li> Ralph Doncaster
  776. </li><li> Richard Emberson
  777. </li><li> Levente Farkas
  778. </li><li> Graham Fawcett
  779. </li><li> Mark Fernyhough
  780. </li><li> Robert A. French
  781. </li><li> J&ouml;rgen Freyh
  782. </li><li> Mark K. Gardner
  783. </li><li> Charles-Antoine Gauthier
  784. </li><li> Yung Shing Gene
  785. </li><li> David Gilbert
  786. </li><li> Simon Gornall
  787. </li><li> Fred Gray
  788. </li><li> John Griffin
  789. </li><li> Patrik Hagglund
  790. </li><li> Phil Hargett
  791. </li><li> Amancio Hasty
  792. </li><li> Takafumi Hayashi
  793. </li><li> Bryan W. Headley
  794. </li><li> Kevin B. Hendricks
  795. </li><li> Joep Jansen
  796. </li><li> Christian Joensson
  797. </li><li> Michel Kern
  798. </li><li> David Kidd
  799. </li><li> Tobias Kuipers
  800. </li><li> Anand Krishnaswamy
  801. </li><li> A. O. V. Le Blanc
  802. </li><li> llewelly
  803. </li><li> Damon Love
  804. </li><li> Brad Lucier
  805. </li><li> Matthias Klose
  806. </li><li> Martin Knoblauch
  807. </li><li> Rick Lutowski
  808. </li><li> Jesse Macnish
  809. </li><li> Stefan Morrell
  810. </li><li> Anon A. Mous
  811. </li><li> Matthias Mueller
  812. </li><li> Pekka Nikander
  813. </li><li> Rick Niles
  814. </li><li> Jon Olson
  815. </li><li> Magnus Persson
  816. </li><li> Chris Pollard
  817. </li><li> Richard Polton
  818. </li><li> Derk Reefman
  819. </li><li> David Rees
  820. </li><li> Paul Reilly
  821. </li><li> Tom Reilly
  822. </li><li> Torsten Rueger
  823. </li><li> Danny Sadinoff
  824. </li><li> Marc Schifer
  825. </li><li> Erik Schnetter
  826. </li><li> Wayne K. Schroll
  827. </li><li> David Schuler
  828. </li><li> Vin Shelton
  829. </li><li> Tim Souder
  830. </li><li> Adam Sulmicki
  831. </li><li> Bill Thorson
  832. </li><li> George Talbot
  833. </li><li> Pedro A. M. Vazquez
  834. </li><li> Gregory Warnes
  835. </li><li> Ian Watson
  836. </li><li> David E. Young
  837. </li><li> And many others
  838. </li></ul>
  839. <p>And finally we&rsquo;d like to thank everyone who uses the compiler, provides
  840. feedback and generally reminds us why we&rsquo;re doing this work in the first
  841. place.
  842. </p>
  843. <hr>
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