_Note:_ This file is automatically generated from the files `bugs0.texi' and `bugs.texi'. `BUGS' is _not_ a source file, although it is normally included within source distributions. This file lists known bugs in the GCC-3.1 version of the GNU Fortran compiler. Copyright (C) 1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. You may copy, distribute, and modify it freely as long as you preserve this copyright notice and permission notice. Known Bugs In GNU Fortran ************************* This section identifies bugs that `g77' _users_ might run into in the GCC-3.1 version of `g77'. This includes bugs that are actually in the `gcc' back end (GBE) or in `libf2c', because those sets of code are at least somewhat under the control of (and necessarily intertwined with) `g77', so it isn't worth separating them out. For information on bugs in _other_ versions of `g77', see `gcc/gcc/f/NEWS'. There, lists of bugs fixed in various versions of `g77' can help determine what bugs existed in prior versions. _Warning:_ The information below is still under development, and might not accurately reflect the `g77' code base of which it is a part. Efforts are made to keep it somewhat up-to-date, but they are particularly concentrated on any version of this information that is distributed as part of a _released_ `g77'. In particular, while this information is intended to apply to the GCC-3.1 version of `g77', only an official _release_ of that version is expected to contain documentation that is most consistent with the `g77' product in that version. An online, "live" version of this document (derived directly from the mainline, development version of `g77' within `gcc') is available via `http://www.gnu.org/software/gcc/onlinedocs/g77_bugs.html'. Follow the "Known Bugs" link. For information on bugs that might afflict people who configure, port, build, and install `g77', see "Problems Installing" in `gcc/gcc/f/INSTALL'. The following information was last updated on 2000-11-05: * `g77' fails to warn about use of a "live" iterative-DO variable as an implied-DO variable in a `WRITE' or `PRINT' statement (although it does warn about this in a `READ' statement). * Something about `g77''s straightforward handling of label references and definitions sometimes prevents the GBE from unrolling loops. Until this is solved, try inserting or removing `CONTINUE' statements as the terminal statement, using the `END DO' form instead, and so on. * Some confusion in diagnostics concerning failing `INCLUDE' statements from within `INCLUDE''d or `#include''d files. * `g77' assumes that `INTEGER(KIND=1)' constants range from `-2**31' to `2**31-1' (the range for two's-complement 32-bit values), instead of determining their range from the actual range of the type for the configuration (and, someday, for the constant). Further, it generally doesn't implement the handling of constants very well in that it makes assumptions about the configuration that it no longer makes regarding variables (types). Included with this item is the fact that `g77' doesn't recognize that, on IEEE-754/854-compliant systems, `0./0.' should produce a NaN and no warning instead of the value `0.' and a warning. This is to be fixed in version 0.6, when `g77' will use the `gcc' back end's constant-handling mechanisms to replace its own. * `g77' uses way too much memory and CPU time to process large aggregate areas having any initialized elements. For example, `REAL A(1000000)' followed by `DATA A(1)/1/' takes up way too much time and space, including the size of the generated assembler file. This is to be mitigated somewhat in version 0.6. Version 0.5.18 improves cases like this--specifically, cases of _sparse_ initialization that leave large, contiguous areas uninitialized--significantly. However, even with the improvements, these cases still require too much memory and CPU time. (Version 0.5.18 also improves cases where the initial values are zero to a much greater degree, so if the above example ends with `DATA A(1)/0/', the compile-time performance will be about as good as it will ever get, aside from unrelated improvements to the compiler.) Note that `g77' does display a warning message to notify the user before the compiler appears to hang. * Previous versions of `g77' didn't emit information on variable and array members of common blocks and equivalences for use with a debugger (the `-g' command-line option). As of the version of `g77' shipped with version 3.0 of `GCC', this is corrected. As of Version 0.5.19, a temporary kludge solution is provided whereby some rudimentary information on a member is written as a string that is the member's value as a character string. * When debugging, after starting up the debugger but before being able to see the source code for the main program unit, the user must currently set a breakpoint at `MAIN__' (or `MAIN___' or `MAIN_' if `MAIN__' doesn't exist) and run the program until it hits the breakpoint. At that point, the main program unit is activated and about to execute its first executable statement, but that's the state in which the debugger should start up, as is the case for languages like C. * Debugging `g77'-compiled code using debuggers other than `gdb' is likely not to work. Getting `g77' and `gdb' to work together is a known problem--getting `g77' to work properly with other debuggers, for which source code often is unavailable to `g77' developers, seems like a much larger, unknown problem, and is a lower priority than making `g77' and `gdb' work together properly. On the other hand, information about problems other debuggers have with `g77' output might make it easier to properly fix `g77', and perhaps even improve `gdb', so it is definitely welcome. Such information might even lead to all relevant products working together properly sooner. * `g77' doesn't work perfectly on 64-bit configurations such as the Digital Semiconductor ("DEC") Alpha. This problem is largely resolved as of version 0.5.23. Version 0.6 should solve most or all remaining problems (such as cross-compiling involving 64-bit machines). * `g77' currently inserts needless padding for things like `COMMON A,IPAD' where `A' is `CHARACTER*1' and `IPAD' is `INTEGER(KIND=1)' on machines like x86, because the back end insists that `IPAD' be aligned to a 4-byte boundary, but the processor has no such requirement (though it is usually good for performance). The `gcc' back end needs to provide a wider array of specifications of alignment requirements and preferences for targets, and front ends like `g77' should take advantage of this when it becomes available. * The `libf2c' routines that perform some run-time arithmetic on `COMPLEX' operands were modified circa version 0.5.20 of `g77' to work properly even in the presence of aliased operands. While the `g77' and `netlib' versions of `libf2c' differ on how this is accomplished, the main differences are that we believe the `g77' version works properly even in the presence of _partially_ aliased operands. However, these modifications have reduced performance on targets such as x86, due to the extra copies of operands involved.