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This directory contains the f2c library packaged for use with g77 to configure
and build automatically (in principle!) as part of the top-level configure and
make steps. This depends on the makefile and configure fragments in ../f.
Some small changes have been made to the f2c distributions of lib[FI]77 which
come from and are maintained (excellently) by
David M. Gay . See the Notice files for copyright
information. I'll try to get the changes rolled into the f2c distribution.
Files that come directly from netlib are either maintained in the
gcc/f/runtime/ directory under their original names or, if they
are not pertinent for g77's version of libf2c, under their original
names with `.netlib' appended. For example, gcc/f/runtime/permissions.netlib
is a copy of f2c's top-level`permissions' file in the netlib distribution.
In this case, it applies only to the relevant portions of the libF77/ and
libI77/ directories; it does not apply to the libU77/ directory, which is
distributed under different licensing arrangements. Similarly,
the `makefile.netlib' files in libF77/ and libI77/ are copies of
the respective `makefile' files in the netlib distribution, but
are not used when building g77's version of libf2c.
The `README.netlib' files in libF77/ and libI77/ thus might be
interesting, but should not be taken as guidelines for how to
configure and build libf2c in g77's distribution.
The packaging for auto-configuration was done by Dave Love .
Minor changes have been made by James Craig Burley ,
who probably broke things Dave had working. :-)
Among the user-visible changes (choices) g77 makes in its
version of libf2c:
- f2c.h configured to default to padding unformatted direct reads
(#define Pad_UDread), because that's the behavior most users
expect.
- f2c.h configured to default to outputting leading zeros before
decimal points in formatted and list-directed output, to be compatible
with many other compilers (#define WANT_LEAD_0). Either way is
standard-conforming, however, and you should try to avoid writing
code that assumes one format or another.
- dtime_() and etime_() are from Dave Love's libU77, not from
netlib's libF77.