He creates binary packages of SBCL releases for Red Hat and other
(which?) platforms.
+Andreas Fuchs:
+ He provides infrastructure for monitoring build and performance
+ regressions of SBCL. He assisted with the integration of the
+ Unicode work.
+
Nathan Froyd:
He has fixed various bugs, and also done a lot of internal
cleanup, not visible at the user level but important for
Teemu Kalvas:
He worked on Unicode support for SBCL, including parsing the Unicode
- character database.
+ character database, restoring the FAST-READ-CHAR optimization and
+ developing external format support.
Frederik Kuivinen:
He showed how to implement the DEBUG-RETURN functionality.
Some of his fixes to CMU CL since the SBCL fork have been ported
to SBCL. He also maintains the cl-benchmark package, which gives
us some idea of how our performance changes compared to earlier
- releases and to other implementations.
+ releases and to other implementations. He assisted in development
+ of Unicode support for SBCL.
Antonio Martinez-Shotton:
He has contributed a number of bug fixes and bug reports to SBCL.
string extractor that keeps function documentation in the manual
current.
+Julian Squires:
+ He worked on Unicode support for the PowerPC platform.
+
Nikodemus Siivola:
He provided build fixes, in particular to tame the SunOS toolchain,
implemented package locks, ported the linkage-table code from CMUCL,
Brian Spilsbury:
He wrote Unicode-capable versions of SBCL's character, string, and
- stream types and operations on them.
+ stream types and operations on them. (These versions did not end up
+ in the system, but did to a large extent influence the support which
+ finally did get merged.)
Raymond Toy:
He continued to work on CMU CL after the SBCL fork, especially on