gb, the project based build tool for Go
FSF binutils/gcc/gdb toolchain for ARM Cortex-M & Cortex-R
processors (Cortex-M0/M0+/M3/M4, Cortex-R4/R5/R7).
This port brings C and C++ compilers. Gloss and libc layer
are provided through newlib embedded C library.
This is complete package prepated by "GNU Tools for ARM Embedded
Processors" project (which is maintained by ARM company itself).
It includes:
binutils
gcc 5.3 with LTO and GRAPHITE support.
newlib optimized for speed
newlib-nano optimized for
two versions of libstdc++, optimized for speed and size.
gdb without sim.
All this is built with support for armv6-m, armv7-ar,
armv7-m and armv7e-m targets, armv7e-m with and without
FPU support and armv8-m too.
This port gives bit-to-bit compatibility with "official"
embedded ARM toolchain for MacOS X, Linux and Windows.
This application implements a leader election behavior modeled after
gen_server. This behavior intends to make it reasonably straightforward to
implement a fully distributed server with master-slave semantics.
TI & RedHat toolchain for TI's msp430 MCUs cross-development
This brings the gcc compiler for the Texas Instruments MSP430 16-bit
RISC-like family of microcontrollers.
The gccmakedep program creates dependencies in makefiles using
'gcc -M'.
Command line parsing module that uses a syntax similar to that of
GNU getopt.
GConf extends the concept of a configuration registry. It provides
a simple way for applications and administrators to store data;
often GConf is used to store preferences for applications.
Some of the features of GConf are:
* Documentation for each configuration key, so that administrators
can better modify the value.
* Notifications to interested applications when configuration data
is changed. The notification service works across networks,
affecting all login sessions for a single user.
* Proper locking so that configuration data doesn't get corrupted
when accessed by multiple applications at the same time.
This is a set of thin C++ wrappers for GConf v2 API library.
A set of C++ front-end for cvs distributed under GPL.
CvsGui features
WinCvs is written in C++ using the Microsoft MFC.
MacCvs is written in C++ using Metrowerks PowerPlant.
gCvs is written in C++ using GNU gtk+.
They are using the latest cvs source code.
They are making cvs easier for the novice.
They are increasing the power of cvs by providing an high-end interface.
The project is growing because it is supported and developed
by several cvs users.
GDB is a source-level debugger for Ada, C, C++, Objective-C, Pascal and
many other languages. GDB can target (i.e., debug programs running on)
more than a dozen different processor architectures, and GDB itself can
run on most popular GNU/Linux, Unix and Microsoft Windows variants.