Introduction

These are some notes on contributing to the gccgo frontend for GCC. For information on contributing to parts of Go other than gccgo, see Contributing to the Go project. For information on building gccgo for yourself, see Setting up and using gccgo.

Legal Prerequisites

You must follow the Go copyright rules for all changes to the gccgo frontend and the associated libgo library. Code that is part of GCC rather than gccgo must follow the general GCC contribution rules.

Code

The master sources for the gccgo frontend may be found at http://code.google.com/p/gofrontend. The master sources are not buildable by themselves, but only in conjunction with GCC (in the future, other compilers may be supported). Changes made to the gccgo frontend are also applied to the GCC source code repository hosted at gcc.gnu.org. In the gofrontend repository, the go directory is mirrored to the gcc/go/gofrontend directory in the GCC repository, and the gofrontend libgo directory is mirrored to the GCC libgo directory. In addition, the test directory from the main Go repository is mirrored to the gcc/testsuite/go.test/test directory in the GCC repository.

Changes to these directories always flow from the master sources to the GCC repository. The files should never be changed in the GCC repository except by changing them in the master sources and mirroring them.

The gccgo frontend is written in C++. It follows the GNU coding standards to the extent that they apply to C++. In writing code for the frontend, follow the formatting of the surrounding code. Although the frontend is currently tied to the rest of the GCC codebase, we plan to make it more independent. Eventually all GCC-specific code will migrate out of the frontend proper and into GCC proper. In the GCC sources this will generally mean moving code from gcc/go/gofrontend to gcc/go.

The run-time library for gccgo is mostly the same as the library in the main Go repository. The library code in the Go repository is periodically merged into the libgo/go directory of the gofrontend and then the GCC repositories, using the shell script libgo/merge.sh. Accordingly, most library changes should be made in the main Go repository. The files outside of libgo/go are gccgo-specific; that said, some of the files in libgo/runtime are based on files in src/pkg/runtime in the main Go repository.

Testing

All patches must be tested. A patch that introduces new failures is not acceptable.

To run the gccgo test suite, run make check-go in your build directory. This will run various tests under gcc/testsuite/go.* and will also run the libgo testsuite. This copy of the tests from the main Go repository is run using the DejaGNU script found in gcc/testsuite/go.test/go-test.exp.

Most new tests should be submitted to the main Go repository for later mirroring into the GCC repository. If there is a need for specific tests for gccgo, they should go in the gcc/testsuite/go.go-torture or gcc/testsuite/go.dg directories in the GCC repository.

Submitting Changes

Changes to the Go frontend should follow the same process as for the main Go repository, only for the gofrontend project and thegofrontend-dev@googlegroups.com mailing list rather than the go project and the golang-dev@googlegroups.com mailing list. Those changes will then be merged into the GCC sources.