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(This file is under construction.) -*- text -*-If you've contributed to gas and your name isn't listed here, it isnot meant as a slight. I just don't know about it. Email me,nickc@redhat.com and I'll correct the situation.This file will eventually be deleted: The general info will go intothe documentation, and info on specific files will go into an AUTHORSfile, as requested by the FSF.++++++++++++++++Dean Elsner wrote the original gas for vax. [more details?]Jay Fenlason maintained gas for a while, adding support forgdb-specific debug information and the 68k series machines, most ofthe preprocessing pass, and extensive changes in messages.c,input-file.c, write.c.K. Richard Pixley maintained gas for a while, adding variousenhancements and many bug fixes, including merging support for severalprocessors, breaking gas up to handle multiple object file formatbackends (including heavy rewrite, testing, an integration of the coffand b.out backends), adding configuration including heavy testing andverification of cross assemblers and file splits and renaming,converted gas to strictly ansi C including full prototypes, addedsupport for m680[34]0 & cpu32, considerable work on i960 including acoff port (including considerable amounts of reverse engineering), asparc opcode file rewrite, decstation, rs6000, and hp300hpux hostports, updated "know" assertions and made them work, much otherreorganization, cleanup, and lint.Ken Raeburn wrote the high-level BFD interface code to replace most ofthe code in format-specific I/O modules.The original Vax-VMS support was contributed by David L. Kashtan.Eric Youngdale and Pat Rankin have done much work with it since.The Intel 80386 machine description was written by Eliot Dresselhaus.Minh Tran-Le at IntelliCorp contributed some AIX 386 support.The Motorola 88k machine description was contributed by Devon Bowen ofBuffalo University and Torbjorn Granlund of the Swedish Institute ofComputer Science.Keith Knowles at the Open Software Foundation wrote the original MIPSback end (tc-mips.c, tc-mips.h), and contributed Rose format supportthat hasn't been merged in yet. Ralph Campbell worked with the MIPScode to support a.out format.Support for the Zilog Z8k and Hitachi H8/300, H8/500 and SH processors(tc-z8k, tc-h8300, tc-h8500, tc-sh), and IEEE 695 object file format(obj-ieee), was written by Steve Chamberlain of Cygnus Solutions.Steve also modified the COFF back end (obj-coffbfd) to use BFD forsome low-level operations, for use with the Hitachi, 29k and Zilogtargets.John Gilmore built the AMD 29000 support, added .include support, andsimplified the configuration of which versions accept whichpseudo-ops. He updated the 68k machine description so that Motorola'sopcodes always produced fixed-size instructions (e.g. jsr), whilesynthetic instructions remained shrinkable (jbsr). John fixed manybugs, including true tested cross-compilation support, and one bug inrelaxation that took a week and required the proverbial one-bit fix.Ian Lance Taylor of Cygnus Solutions merged the Motorola and MITsyntaxes for the 68k, completed support for some COFF targets (68k,i386 SVR3, and SCO Unix), wrote the ECOFF support based on MichaelMeissner's mips-tfile program, wrote the PowerPC and RS/6000 support,and made a few other minor patches. He handled the binutils releasesfor versions 2.7 through 2.9.David Edelsohn contributed fixes for the PowerPC and AIX support.Steve Chamberlain made gas able to generate listings.Support for the HP9000/300 was contributed by Glenn Engel of HP.Support for ELF format files has been worked on by Mark Eichin ofCygnus Solutions (original, incomplete implementation), PeteHoogenboom at the University of Utah (HPPA mainly), Michael Meissnerof the Open Software Foundation (i386 mainly), and Ken Raeburn ofCygnus Solutions (sparc, initial 64-bit support).Several engineers at Cygnus Solutions have also provided many smallbug fixes and configuration enhancements.The initial Alpha support was contributed by Carnegie-MellonUniversity. Additional work was done by Ken Raeburn of CygnusSolutions. Richard Henderson then rewrote much of the Alpha support.Ian Dall updated the support code for the National Semiconductor 32000series, and added support for Mach 3 and NetBSD running on the PC532.Klaus Kaempf ported the assembler and the binutils to openVMS/Alpha.Steve Haworth contributed the support for the Texas Instruction c30(tms320c30).H.J. Lu has contributed many patches and much testing.Alan Modra reworked much of the i386 backend, improving the errorchecking, updating the code, and improving the 16 bit support, usingpatches from the work of Martynas Kunigelis and H.J. Lu.Many others have contributed large or small bugfixes and enhancements. Ifyou've contributed significant work and are not mentioned on this list, andwant to be, let us know. Some of the history has been lost; we aren'tintentionally leaving anyone out.
