X-Git-Url: http://repo.macrolet.net/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=CREDITS;h=fe5c18c62a287b053a6ead2bd690eacf7ddfe731;hb=1fd80272bd0a0510113978a33066622e4fd506a7;hp=2a0a12b70c0ab9caa68670b20a866df4bb58cbcb;hpb=ffe8d65266ed7c2c67a0a6ce7ff0de633000037e;p=sbcl.git diff --git a/CREDITS b/CREDITS index 2a0a12b..fe5c18c 100644 --- a/CREDITS +++ b/CREDITS @@ -243,7 +243,7 @@ Also, Christopher Hoover and William Lott wrote compiler/generic/vm-macs.lisp to centralize information about machine-dependent macros and constants. Sean Hallgren is credited with most of the Alpha backend. Julian -Dolby created the CMU CL Alpha/linux port. Douglas Crosher added +Dolby created the CMU CL Alpha/Linux port. Douglas Crosher added complex-float support. The original PPC backend was the work of Gary Byers. Some bug fixes @@ -508,12 +508,13 @@ Martin Atzmueller: Daniel Barlow: He made SBCL play nicely with ILISP. He figured out how to get the CMU CL dynamic object file loading code to work under SBCL. He - ported CMU CL's support for Alpha and PPC CPUs to SBCL. He wrote - code (e.g. grovel_headers.c and stat_wrapper stuff) to handle - machine-dependence and OS-dependence automatically, reducing - the amount of hand-tweaking required to keep ports synchronized. - He's also provided support for SBCL (as well as for free - Common Lisp in general) through his CLiki website. + ported CMU CL's support for Alpha and PPC CPUs to SBCL, and then + continued to improve the ports. He wrote code (e.g. grovel_headers.c + and stat_wrapper stuff) to handle machine-dependence and + OS-dependence automatically, reducing the amount of hand-tweaking + required to keep ports synchronized. He's also provided support + for SBCL (as well as for free Common Lisp in general) through + his CLiki website. Cadabra, Inc. (later merged into GoTo.com): They hired Bill Newman to do some consulting for them, @@ -530,10 +531,10 @@ Douglas Crosher: Alexey Dejneka: He has fixed many, many bugs. There's no single summary theme, but - he's fixed about a dozen different bugs in LOOP alone, and it appears - that a lot of his fixes there and elsewhere reflect systematic - public-spiritedness, fixing bugs as they show up in sbcl-devel or as - archived in the BUGS file. + he's fixed about a dozen different bugs in LOOP alone, and more + in the compiler itself. It appears that a lot of his fixes there + and elsewhere reflect systematic public-spiritedness, fixing bugs + as they show up in sbcl-devel or as archived in the BUGS file. Nathan Froyd: He has fixed various bugs, and also done a lot of internal @@ -543,10 +544,15 @@ Nathan Froyd: read without being an expert in ancient languages and so that can delete a thousand lines of implement-ITERATE macrology.) +Matthias Hoelzl: + He reported and fixed COMPILE's misbehavior on macros. + +Espen S Johnsen: + He provided an ANSI-compliant version of CHANGE-CLASS for PCL. + Arthur Lemmens: - He found and fixed a number of SBCL bugs while partially porting SBCL - to bootstrap under . + He found and fixed a number of SBCL bugs while partially porting + SBCL to bootstrap under Lispworks for Windows Robert MacLachlan: He has continued to answer questions about, and contribute fixes to, @@ -554,6 +560,11 @@ Robert MacLachlan: problems, has been invaluable to the CMU CL project and, by porting, invaluable to the SBCL project as well. +Pierre Mai: + He has continued to work on CMU CL since the SBCL fork, and also + patched code to SBCL to enable dynamic loading of object files + under OpenBSD. + Dave McDonald: He made a lot of progress toward getting SBCL to be bootstrappable under CLISP. @@ -567,10 +578,11 @@ William ("Bill") Newman: rid of various functionality (e.g. the byte interpreter). Christophe Rhodes: - He has done various low-level work on SBCL, especially for the - SPARC port (and for CPU-architecture-neutral things motivated by - it, like *BACKEND-FEATURES*). He's also contributed miscellaneous - bug fixes. + He ported SBCL to SPARC, made various port-related and SPARC-related + changes (like *BACKEND-SUBFEATURES*), made many fixes and + improvements in the compiler's type system, has done a substantial + amount of work on bootstrapping SBCL under unrelated (non-SBCL, + non-CMU-CL) Common Lisps, and contributed in other ways as well. Stig Erik Sandoe: He showed how to convince the GNU toolchain to build SBCL in a way @@ -615,3 +627,4 @@ RAM Robert MacLachlan WHN William ("Bill") Newman CSR Christophe Rhodes PVE Peter Van Eynde +PW Paul Werkowski