On May 3, 2020, at 4:26 PM, Clem Cole
<clemc(a)ccc.com> wrote:
Anyway back to compilers, Tru64 had a 'good enough' compiler based on
the MIPS code base to get us all going, but GEM's primary target was VMS
since one of the important features of GEM was the VAX->Alpha transpiler
technology. VMS was still heavily written in VAX Assembler at the time.
Plus, It actually was a little hairy because GEM had a new C/C++
front-end. So TLE's high order bit was VMS for the Alphas. GEM for
Tru64 was about 18 months later.
In the early days of Alpha, I was at DEC’s Cambridge Research Laboratory
(directed then by Vic Vyssotsky, having retired from Bell Labs). The lab
had various connections to Alpha projects, and we learned that there were
(I think) 7 different C compilers running on the early port of Ultrix. That
number, I think, did not include the port of gcc that DEC was funding
outside the company.
Andy Payne, a recent hire at the lab, had been an intern in DEC’s
semiconductor group, where he had worked on randomized testing for hardware
verification. With all the compilers available, he decided to hack up a
program to generate random small C programs with computable expected
outputs. His program then compiled the random code with each compiler and
tested the result. After finding a number of bugs this way, he got tired of
submitting the bug reports, and changed his program to write and submit the
bug reports automatically.
This caused a little bit of consternation with some of the compiler teams
at first.
Eventually, this led to some collaboration with the DEC languages and
tools team, and Bill McKeeman published a paper that line of work in the
Digital Technical Journal in 1998[1].
- Win
[1]
https://www.hpl.hp.com/hpjournal/dtj/vol10num1/vol10num1art9.pdf
Does this software still exist anywhere? The link to the download is long
gone,
did not preserve the download, and I had no success
finding the files on the web.
-Henry