[TUHS] Lost Origins of the Plan 9 C Compiler

Rob Pike robpike at gmail.com
Fri Jan 5 21:33:52 AEST 2024


You shouldn't dismiss so lightly. The cited document answers the question
of the first target, which was the National 32000. It ran on a Sequent
multiprocessor, a machine we were thinking about using for other work.

So no, it was not created on Research Unix, or at least not for it. We
wanted a faster compiler for a number of reasons, and Ken had ideas about
that. Because of its architecture, it was easy to port to other RISC
architectures, such as the MIPS and SPARC, although both those machines had
wrinkles that needed ironing out.

-rob


On Fri, Jan 5, 2024 at 10:05 PM Aram Hăvărneanu <aram.h at mgk.ro> wrote:

> > I think this may be what you are looking for:
> > http://doc.cat-v.org/bell_labs/new_c_compilers/
>
> Since I have worked on a derivative of the Plan 9 C compiler, I
> assure you I have read all the available papers and documentation
> about it and they answer none of the questions raised above.
>
> --
> Aram Hăvărneanu
>
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