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  •  RHIDE  - http://rhide.com/
     IDE for DJGPP and other GCC-based systems, by Robert Hoehne, Salvador Eduardo Tropea. Runs on DOS, Linux, looks like old Borland DOS IDE. Has project management, frontend to GCC C/C++, syntax highlighting, integrated debugger. [Open Source, GPL]
  •  GCC: GNU Compiler Collection  - http://gcc.gnu.org/
     Developed by GNU project as free compiler for GNU system. Front ends: C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, Ada; libraries for libstdc++, and libgcj. Mission, mail lists, timeline, contributors, committee, instructions, manual, FAQ, downloads, plans, bug reports. [Open Source, GPL]
  •  GHDL  - http://ghdl.free.fr/
     A written in Ada95 GCC front-end. It is a VHDL simulator and implements nearly all VHDL87 and some features of VHDL93.
  •  MinGW: Minimalist GNU for Windows  - http://www.mingw.org/
     Compiler system uses GCC to produce Windows programs. Win32 ports of GCC, GDB, binutils to build native Win32 programs that rely on no 3rd party DLLs.
  •  GNUDE: GNU Development Environment  - http://gnude.sourceforge.net/
     Suite of GNU C/C++, Fortran, Java cross compilers, and Insight/GDB debugger hosted on Windows NT/2K/XP for embedded ARM7/9, XScale CPU program development. Assembler, compilers, linker, header files, STL, libraries, documents.
  •  distcc  - http://distcc.samba.org/
     A gcc wrapper that speeds compilation by transparently distributing work across several machines. [Open source, GPL]
  •  G++ FAQ  - http://www.jcu.edu.au/docs/gnu/g++FAQ.html
     List of Frequently Asked Questions for G++ users.
  •  EGCS: Experimental GNU Compiler System  - http://www.gnu.org/software/gcc/egcs-1.1/
     Project fused work on GNU C, C++, Objective-C, Ada, Fortran compilers, and libc++, to speed up work to improve GCC. In April 1999 was merged into general GCC effort under control of GCC steering committee. Descriptions, a few links.
  •  GNU Objective-C runtime features  - http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-2.95.3/objc-features_toc.html
     Some notes about garbage collection and type information strings in the GNU Objective-C runtime (2.95.3 GCC version).
  •  GCC6809  - http://www7.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/~msdoerfe/6809/
     GCC for the Motorola 6809.
  •  GCC FAQ  - http://gcc.gnu.org/fom_serv/cache/1.html
     Frequently asked questions about GNU Compiler Collection.
  •  Pentium Compiler Group  - http://www.goof.com/pcg/
     Founded late 1995 to enhance and support Pentium optimizing in GCC. GCC optimizes well, but the new x86 architecture needed different optimizing strategies. Descriptions, FAQs, downloads (source, binary), mirrors, links.
  •  Optimizing GCC  - http://www.linuxgazette.com/issue88/piszcz.html
     How much faster can GCC compile a Linux kernel if GCC is optimized? Doing the compiler alone ups speed 33%. Description, benchmark times. [Linux Gazette]
  •  GCC Myths and Facts  - http://freshmeat.net/articles/view/730/
     Optimizing GCC mostly for x86 CPU and C/C++, but parts can apply to all supported CPUs and languages. Many useful forum comments. [freshmeat.net]
  •  OpenCOBOL  - http://www.open-cobol.org/gcc.html
     An experimental implementation of a COBOL frontend for GCC.
  •  First Annual GCC Developers' Summit  - http://www.gccsummit.org/2003/
     An opportunity for the core developers of all parts of the GNU Compiler Collection to get together with those from other portions of the Development tools community. May 25-27, 2003.
  •  PL/1 for GCC  - http://pl1gcc.sourceforge.net/
     A PL/1 front-end for GNU Compiler Collection. It based on the syntax from IBM OS PL/I Version 2.
  •  LWN: GCC gets a new Optimizer Framework  - http://lwn.net/Articles/84888/
     Artciel by Steven Bosscher and Diego Novillo. The first bits a major compiler internals overhaul have been merged into the development mainline of the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) for inclusion in the next release.
  •  An Introduction to GCC  - http://www.network-theory.co.uk/gcc/intro/
     A printed tutorial for new users of GCC, published under the GNU Free Documentation License.
  •  GCC & GNU Toolchain Developers' Summit  - http://www.gccsummit.org/
     Brings together the core development team of the GNU Compiler Collection with those working on the other toolchain components to discuss the state of the art.
  •  Migrating to gcc-3.4  - http://kegel.com/gcc/gcc3.4.html
     A collection of migration guides to help programmers updating their code to be gcc-3.4 compatible.
  •  GCC Wiki  - http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/
     GCC info, structure, improvements quicklinks, people, history and links.
  •  D Front End for GCC  - http://home.earthlink.net/~dvdfrdmn/d/
     For GCC 3.3.x, 3.4.x versions supporting FreeBSD, Linux, Mac OS X, Cygwin. Description, build instructions, downloads, links, contact. [Open source]
  •  Benchmarking Intel C++ Against GNU GCC on Linux  - http://www.coyotegulch.com/reviews/intel_comp/intel_gcc_bench2.html
     Medium long review compares 2 compilers, some useful tables. GCC holds it own against Intel C++, wins some benchmarks it lost before. Intel still wins some. Differences are less. [Coyote Gulch Productions]
  •  Pinapa  - http://greensocs.sourceforge.net/pinapa/
     An open source SystemC front-end. It relies on GCC to parse the C++, and on the SystemC library itself to extract the architecture of the platform to analyze.