typo: s/My complaining/Much complaining/ sigh.. dyslex-r-me ᐧ On Tue, Jan 3, 2023 at 4:47 PM Clem Cole wrote: > > Bring this back to TUHS relevance... > > On Tue, Jan 3, 2023 at 2:43 PM Warner Losh wrote: > >> The one caveat here is that people must understand the warning and that >> any change makes things better. There is nothing worse than just tossing a >> cast in to brute force it, only to later discover it's the wrong cast or >> you needed a different semantic change. >> > Most certainly -- It's why I >>loved<< Gimpel's flex-e-lint product and > as Paul pointed out, Judy Ward's messages from the DEC Gem compiler - both > were the two best I ever ran into in giving you real information about what > was happening. > > I also tell a story from my DEC time. After the GEM compiler was > released and before most other vendors were 64-bits, the ISVs were first > starting to do their ports to Alpha. My complaining ensued. We would discover > from numerous ISVs that after the Alpha port was complete, their bug count > dropped - why because the ISV's code has been kinda nasty and the older > compilers had been silent about it they had assumed the ILP32 model. > Alphas, using LP64, could not be. Judy would find things and say -- what > a minute -- you want me to do what with that and issued a fairly detailed > warning (which was the key - she explained what the issue was). Often > the 32 to 64-bit nature forced the programmers at the ISV's to rethink > how there were actually declaring things to make the code clearer, > simpler, better, *etc*. The classic rewrite never happens unless you > are forced too. > > I remember going to a Supercomputer conference and talking with the > developers at one the ISVs who I will not name. He thanks me. He said his > team has been arguing with their management for years to redo the UNIX > support library. The Tru64 port was what finally allowed them to do it. > But it took 9 months which pissed off his boss. But when it was completed, > and pass all the tests on the Alpha, it just recompiled on Solaris, AIX, > and HP-UX - which had never happened before. He could not believe what a > great compiler we had. > > I've always said the Alpha was the greatest gift to Sun and Intel in the > commercial SW world because it forced the ISV to clean up their act before > they ever saw those processors and Sun/Intel ports were piece of cake. It > was not that porting to Alpha was difficult -- it was cleaning up your own > mess. > > Remember we had already gone through this in the PDP-11 ILP16 to Vax > ILP32 transition but it is funny how history repeated itself. > ᐧ >