RE: ANNOUNCE: GHC 4.06 released

2000-01-31 Thread Simon Marlow


Matthias Kilian writes:
 I wonder what the cvs release naming strategy is. Ist 4.06 on 
 the main cvs
 branch, or is there a special tag for official releases, or what else?
 
 A `cvs up -dPA -r 4.06' in the fptools directory simply 
 removed everything
 (don't worry, I did make a copy before the update).

our current policy is:

- There's a branch for each major release, named
  ghc-x-xx-branch (eg. ghc-4-06-branch for 4.06)

- releases are tagged ghc-x-xx (eg. ghc-4-06 for
  4.06) or ghc-x-xx-x for patchlevels (eg.
  ghc-4-06-1 for a potential 4.06 patchlevel 1).

At the moment, the *whole repository* is branched and tagged, including all
the non-GHC stuff.  It turned out to be too much hassle to pick out the
relevant parts of the tree, but we might revisit this decision at some
point.

Cheers,
Simon



Re: ANNOUNCE: GHC 4.06 released -- Linux RPM now available

2000-01-30 Thread Manuel M. T. Chakravarty

Reuben Thomas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote,

The Glasgow Haskell Compiler -- version 4.06
   ==
 
 We are pleased to announce a new release of the Glasgow Haskell
 Compiler (GHC), version 4.06.  The source distribution is freely
 available via the World-Wide Web and through anon. FTP; details below.

The Linux rpm package is now available from

  ftp://ftp.cse.unsw.edu.au/pub/users/chak/jibunmaki/i386/ghc-4.06-1.i386.rpm

and the corresponding source package from

  ftp://ftp.cse.unsw.edu.au/pub/users/chak/jibunmaki/src/ghc-4.06-1.src.rpm

The binary was build on a RedHat 6.1 box (ie, with glibc
2.1) and should also work on similar Linux systems.  To put
an end to the `libgmp' problem, the rpm now includes a
dependency on the `gmp-devel' package (which RedHat users
will, eg, find on their RedHat CD).  As a result, the rpm
might have to be installed using the `--nodeps' option on
some other systems (eg, SuSE).

Technical note for package builders: Due to the lack of the
  `configure' script in `fptools/ghc/' in the original tar
  file, the source rpm will run `autoconf' when used to
  build a binary.  This, of course, requires that `autoconf'
  is installed on your system, which it probably is on most
  Linux machines.

Happy Hacking!

Manuel

PS: I recently moved to the University of New South Wales,
Sydney.  Thus, all rpms that were accessible from my old
server in Japan, are now located at

  ftp://ftp.cse.unsw.edu.au/pub/users/chak/jibunmaki/

Please update any bookmarks and links accordingly.



ANNOUNCE: GHC 4.06 released

2000-01-28 Thread Reuben Thomas

 The Glasgow Haskell Compiler -- version 4.06
==

We are pleased to announce a new release of the Glasgow Haskell
Compiler (GHC), version 4.06.  The source distribution is freely
available via the World-Wide Web and through anon. FTP; details below.

Haskell is "the" standard lazy functional programming language; the
current language version is Haskell 98, agreed in December 1998.
Haskell related information is available from the Haskell home page at

http://www.haskell.org/

GHC's Web page lives at

http://www.haskell.org/ghc/

+ What's new
=

This should be a stable release. We have not made major changes
since 4.04 to the core compiler, but we have fixed lots of bugs.
We believe that 4.06 is in a nice stable well-tested state.  (Ha!)

Apart from that, there are the following changes

   - Major library reorganisation.  All libraries, except the ones that
 are part of the Haskell 98 *language* specification, have moved to
 fptools/hslibs/.  The hslibs tree is independent of GHC, shared between
 GHC, Hugs, and (we hope) other Haskell implementations.  
 The idea is to make it easier for people to contribute and maintain 
 libraries.

 The hslibs/ tree is organised in a Java-like fashion.  Details in 
 the new Library guide:
 http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/4.06/hslibs/book1.html

 Existing programs that use the -syslib flag may need to change which
 syslibs they include.

   - Support for "foreign export dynamic".

   - Clean up of concurrent I/O system; in particular, I/O is now non-blocking,
 except (alas) on stdout/stderr for tiresome reasons.

   - Some refinements to the exceptions mechanism:
 http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/4.06/users_guide/release-4-06.html#exc-changes-406

   - More performance tuning: compiled programs now allocate 10% less memory
 than 4.04

For full details see the release notes:

http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/4.06/users_guide/release-4-06.html

+ Mailing lists


We run mailing lists for GHC users and bug reports; to subscribe, send
mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]; the msg body should be:

subscribe glasgow-haskell-which Your Name [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Please send bug reports about GHC to [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; GHC
users hang out on [EMAIL PROTECTED]


+ On-line GHC-related resources


Relevant URLs on the World-Wide Web:

GHC home page http://www.haskell.org/ghc/
Haskell home page http://www.haskell.org/
comp.lang.functional FAQ  http://www.cs.nott.ac.uk/Department/Staff/mpj/faq.html


+ How to get it


The easy way is to go to the WWW page, which should be
self-explanatory:

http://www.haskell.org/ghc/

Once you have the distribution, please follow the pointers in the
README file to find all of the documentation about this release.  NB:
preserve modification times when un-tarring the files (no `m' option
for tar, please)!


+ System requirements
==

To compile up this source-only release, you need a machine with 32+MB
memory, GNU C (`gcc'), `perl' plus a version of GHC installed (3.02 at
least).  This release is known to work on the following platforms:

  * i386-unknown-{linux,solaris2,freebsd,netbsd,cygwin32}
  * sparc-sun-{sunos4,solaris2}
  * hppa1.1-hp-hpux{9,10}

Ports to the following platforms should be relatively easy, but
haven't been tested due to lack of time/hardware:

  * alpha-dec-osf{2,3}
  * mips-sgi-irix{5,6}
  * {rs6000,powerpc}-ibm-aix

The builder's guide included in distribution gives a complete
run-down of what-ports-work; an on-line version can be found at

   http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/4.06/building_guide/installing.html




Re: ANNOUNCE: GHC 4.06 released

2000-01-28 Thread Matthias Kilian

Hi!

I wonder what the cvs release naming strategy is. Ist 4.06 on the main cvs
branch, or is there a special tag for official releases, or what else?

A `cvs up -dPA -r 4.06' in the fptools directory simply removed everything
(don't worry, I did make a copy before the update).

Bye,
Kili