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g77 has been in alpha testing since September of
1992, and in public beta testing since February of 1995.
Alpha testing was done by a small number of people worldwide on a fairly
wide variety of machines, involving self-compilation in most or
all cases.
Beta testing has been done primarily via self-compilation,
but in more and more cases, cross-compilation (and "criss-cross
compilation", where a version of a compiler is built on one machine
to run on a second and generate code that runs on a third) has
been tried and has succeeded, to varying extents.
Generally, g77 can be ported to any configuration to which
gcc, f2c, and libf2c can be ported and made
to work together, aside from the known problems described in this
manual.
If you want to port g77 to a particular configuration,
you should first make sure gcc and libf2c can be
ported to that configuration before focusing on g77, because
g77 is so dependent on them.
Even for cases where gcc and libf2c work,
you might run into problems with cross-compilation on certain machines,
for several reasons.
g77 as a cross-compiler in some cases,
though there are assumptions made during
configuration that probably make doing non-self-hosting builds
a hassle, requiring manual intervention.
gcc might still have some trouble being configured
for certain combinations of machines.
For example, it might not know how to handle floating-point
constants.
libg2c is built could make
building g77 as a cross-compiler easier--for example,
passing and using `$(LD)' and `$(AR)' in the appropriate
ways.
libg2c) for a target
system, depending on the systems involved in the configuration.
(This is a general problem with cross-compilation, and with
gcc in particular.)
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