Subject: moving g77 to the ports system
To: None <tech-userlevel@netbsd.org>
From: Igor Sobrado <sobrado@string1.ciencias.uniovi.es>
List: tech-userlevel
Date: 01/02/2003 15:44:10
A second PR (standards/19640). Again, I am sending a copy of it to the
right place, the tech-userlevel mailing list, for discussion. I really
appreciate any comments on this proposal.
Proposal: Moving g77 to the ports
The GNU FORTRAN compiler has stayed in release 0.5.x since mid-90.
I propose moving it to the ports system. I will try to outline
the reasons for this proposal.
1. g77 stays in release 0.5.x since mid-90.
That is not a bad thing! All of us like software that is stable,
we are running BSDs for this reason, amongst other things. But
when a package has serious problems and it is not fixed, stability
is bad.
2. Even GNU is dropping it.
GNU is developing a new FORTRAN compiler. g77 is not the best
compiler in the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) suite.
3. It is something between a FORTRAN 77 and a FORTRAN 90 compiler.
It does not follow standards, it is a FORTRAN 77 compiler
that supports "some FORTRAN 90 extensions". I think that it
is not as good as other GNU developments, and it does not
follow standards in the right way. I think that it has not
the quality level required to be a part of a BSD system.
On the other hand, gcc and g++ are high-quality products.
4. It is not being widely used.
It is not a required component of a BSD system and it is not
used when build a BSD system from the source code. Moving
it to the ports collection is not bad. Those changes from
the base system to the ports collection happened with other
packages (like most of the a.out stuff) on some BSD systems.
Most people that wants a FORTRAN compiler for serious work
runs other products. For example, the Condensed Matter group
at the Physics Department of our University runs a commercial
product in the Linux cluster. The dropped g77 in 1996.
Same about new compilers provided in the GCC suite, that are being
provided in the latest releases of the Compiler Collection. Those
compilers (e.g. java) can be provided too as ports.
Thanks again!
Igor.
--
Igor Sobrado, UK34436 - sobrado@acm.org