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[Fsuk-manchester] Reminder: MFS Meeting. Tue, 18 Mar. Talk: "The GNU Com


From: Michael Dorrington
Subject: [Fsuk-manchester] Reminder: MFS Meeting. Tue, 18 Mar. Talk: "The GNU Compiler Collection: How to Use, Port and Upstream the World's Most Widely Used Tool Chain"
Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2014 07:17:07 +0000
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686 on x86_64; rv:17.0) Gecko/20131104 Icedove/17.0.10

A reminder that this event is this evening.

On 26/02/14 19:42, Michael Dorrington wrote:
> Please feel free to forward this to those that would welcome it.
> 
> * Event: Manchester Free Software's March Meeting
> * Talk: The GNU Compiler Collection:
>           How to Use, Port and Upstream the World's
>           Most Widely Used Tool Chain
> * Speaker: Dr Jeremy Bennett (Embecosm)
>            (and Joern Rennecke (Embecosm) for Q&A)
> 
> * Date: Tuesday, 18th March 2014 (3rd Tuesday of the month)
> * Start time: 19:00
> * Finish time: 20:30 (and then on for drinks)
> 
> * Location: Madlab. (Manchester Digital Laboratory).
>   - http://madlab.org.uk/
> * Address: 36-40 Edge Street, Manchester. M4 1HN.
>   - Opposite "Common" on Edge Street, Northern Quarter.
>   - http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=19/53.48413/-2.23639
> 
> Details
> -------
> The purpose of Manchester Free Software is to promote the Free Software
> philosophy.
> 
> This meeting will be a talk with Q&A.
> 
> "The GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) is 28 years old this year.
> Originally a C compiler, it now handles many languages (8 in the
> official distribution) and has been ported to many architectures (nearly
> 50 in the official distribution).  Alongside the compiler are low level
> binary utilities (assembler, disassembler, linker, profiler, etc.) and a
> source level debugger (GDB).  At 5 million lines of code, GCC is the
> third largest program in any GNU/Linux system.
> 
> In this talk we'll look at how to best use the tool chain.  Starting
> with official distributions, we'll look at what is needed to build your
> own version from source code.  We'll then explore what it takes to
> modify the tool chain, to port it to a new architecture, to test it, and
> ultimately to have your code accepted into the official FSF distribution.
> 
> We'll also look at some of the more unusual uses of the tool chain.  Its
> porting to new chips during the design phase to test the hardware design
> before spinning silicon.  How approaches such as iterative compilation
> and genetic algorithms can double performance compared to -O3.  And
> finally how compilers can use machine learning to work out the best
> optimizations for your program and even optimize for energy efficiency.
> 
> Throughout the talks we'll use practical examples from both native
> compilers (for Intel and ARM) and for cross compilers (such as Atmel AVR
> and Adapteva Epiphany).  We'll also demonstrate the low cost free
> hardware energy measurement board used to optimize for energy efficiency."
> 
> Speakers
> --------
> "Dr Jeremy Bennett is Chief Executive of Embecosm, an free/libre and
> open source software consultancy specializing in tool chain development
> and silicon chip modelling.  A former academic he is author of
> "Introduction to Compiling Techniques" (McGraw-Hill 1990, 1995, 2003).
> 
> Joern Rennecke, who leads GCC development for Embecosm, will take
> questions at the end of the talk.  Joern is one of the leading
> developers of GCC, a project to which he has been contributing for
> nearly 20 years.  He has been responsible for the Renesas SH, OpenRISC
> 1000, Synopsys ARC ports and most recently has been developing the Atmel
> AVR and Adapteva Epiphany implementations.
> 
> Embecosm are currently hiring both trainee and experienced compiler
> developers.  Details at http://www.embecosm.com/careers/.";
> 
> After-meeting
> -------------
> The meeting will be followed by informal discussion and socialising in
> the bar opposite, Common <http://www.aplacecalledcommon.co.uk/>.  There
> are soft drinks available and there is no pressure to consume alcohol.
> 
> Location
> --------
> The meeting will take place at the usual venue of Madlab, details above.
>  Ring the bell beside the door to be let in.  The venue provides wifi.
> 
> Parking
> -------
> Around the venue there are parking meter bays that become zero cost
> after 8pm on Tuesday so you will have to pay up until then and the
> maximum stay is 2 hours BUT MAKE SURE YOU VERIFY ALL THIS on parking.
> 
> There are paid parking lots around the venue, they are marked by a blue
> P in this OpenStreetMap centred on Madlab
> <http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=15/53.4843/-2.2365>.  Most of those
> parking lots are owned by NCP <http://www.ncp.co.uk/>.
> 
> If you can’t decide otherwise then park in Manchester Arndale
> <http://www.manchesterarndale.com/directions.aspx>.
> 
> Public Transport
> ----------------
> Manchester Victoria (MCV) train station, Shudehill tram and bus station,
> and Manchester Piccadilly bus station are all fairly close to Madlab,see
> OpenStreetMap centred on Madlab
> <http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=15/53.4843/-2.2365>.
> 
> Manchester Piccadilly (MAN) train station and Manchester Central Coach
> Station are not too far away either.
> 
> More Information
> ----------------
> Information about Manchester Free Software can be found on the
> Manchester Free Software pages on LibrePlanet
> <http://libreplanet.org/wiki/Manchester>.
> 
> Regards,
> Mike.
> 


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