Free Pascal

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Template:Infobox Software Free Pascal (or FPK Pascal) is a portable, open source Pascal compiler.

Contents

Introduction

Free Pascal is a 32/64-bits multi-CPU architecture and multi-Operating System compiler. The compiler implements the Borland Pascal dialects (Turbo Pascal and Delphi) as well as some MacPascal constructs and is available for most common operating systems.

Free Pascal used to be known as FPK Pascal, since FPK are the initials of the author, Florian Paul Klämpfl. FPK Pascal never meant "Free Pascal Kompiler" though a lot of people thought so. Writing "Compiler" with K is uncommon in German anyway. At the end of 1997, the name of the project was changed into Free Pascal Compiler (FPC) to avoid this confusion and because more and more people did contribute.

FPC is a reasonably well documented project, with manuals having 1800 pages in total.

The visual parts of the Delphi libraries (the VCL) and the creation of a visual IDE and RAD are part of a separate project, Lazarus.

Free Pascal comes with a textmode IDE resembling Turbo Pascal's IDE. Though this IDE was in deterioration for some time because of a missing maintainer, in a common effort most bugs were fixed so it's in a pretty good shape now.

Like Turbo Pascal and Delphi, Free Pascal has excellent support for integration of assembly language in the Pascal code. FPC even supports multiple architectures and notations.

Language dialect

FPC adopted the de-facto standard dialects of Pascal programmers: the Borland dialects. (Specifically: Borland Pascal 7 and Delphi 2 for version 1.0.x, and for version 2.0.x - Delphi 6/7).

However the project has a compilation mode concept, and the team made clear that it would incorporate working patches for the ANSI/ISO standardised dialects to create a standards compliant mode.

Also, a small effort has been made to support some of the Apple Pascal syntax, to ease interfacing to Mac OS (X).

Missing Delphi functionality

  • Delegation using the "implements" keyword
  • Automatic COM IDispatch dual interfaces (dispinterfaces)
  • dispid in normal interfaces
  • packages (Lazarus implements packages)
  • set types can have different size.

History

The early years

Free Pascal emerged when Borland made clear there would be no Borland Pascal 8, and the next version would be a Windows-only product (which turned out to become Delphi later on), and a student (Florian Paul Klämpfl) started working on his own compiler. The compiler was written in the (Borland) Turbo Pascal dialect from the start and produced 32-Bit code for the go32v1 DOS extender used and developed by the DJGPP project at this time. Originally the compiler itself was a 16-bit Dos executable compiled by Turbo Pascal. After two years, the compiler was able to compile itself so it became 32-bit too.

Expansion

The initial 32-bit compiler was published on the net, and the first contributors joined the project. In the years after publishing on the Internet, a Linux port was made by Michael van Canneyt (a full 5 years before Kylix), the DOS port was adapted for use in OS/2 through the EMX extender. The DOS version also improved gradually, and migrated to the go32v2 extender. This culminated in the 0.99.5 release that was much more widely used than the versions before, and the last release aiming only for Turbo Pascal compliance: later releases would add a Delphi compatibility mode. 0.99.5 was also ported to systems using a 680x0 CPU.

In 0.99.8, the Win32 target was added, and a start was made with incorporating some Delphi features. Stabilising for a 1.0 release started, and this milestone was reached in July 2000. The 1.0.x series (and the bugfix/stabilisation releases that followed, last, 1.0.10 in July 2003) was widely used, both as an enterprise and educational tool. For the 1.0.x releases, the port to 680x0 CPUs was redone, and the compiler produces stable code for a number of 68k Unixes and AmigaOS.

The Next Generation

During the stabilisation of what would become 1.0.x, and specially when porting to the m68k systems, it was clear the design of the code generator was far too limited in many ways. The two most principal problems were that adding processors basically meant rewriting the code generator, and that the register allocation was based on a principle (always keep 3 free registers between building blocks) that was hard to maintain and inflexible.

For these reasons, FPC 1.1.x branched from the 1.0.x main branch in December 1999. At first, changes were mostly cleanups and rewrite/design to all parts of the compiler, and then the code generator and register allocator were rewritten. As a bonus, remaining missing Delphi compatibility was added.

The work on 1.1.x continued slowly but steadily, and in late 2003 the PowerPC port started working, followed by ARM and Sparc ports in summer/fall 2004. The AMD64 port followed in early 2004. The AMD64 port effectively made the compiler 32/64-bit.

In November 2003, a first beta release of the 1.1.x branch was packaged, and for the occasion, the version number was upped to 1.9.0. These were followed quickly by 1.9.2 and 1.9.4. 1.9.4 was special because it was the first version with Mac OS X support.

The work continued with 1.9.6 (Jan. 2005), 1.9.8 (late Feb. 2005), 2.0.0 (May 2005), and 2.0.2 (Dec. 2005).

The future

Road map for the short term (2.1.x)

  • create/improve the COM/OLE support. This has multiple facets:
    • COM compatible interfaces/vmt
    • Variants (needed for OLE)
    • implements style delegation
  • linking/debug/file formats related:
    • improve smart linking (get rid of .a files, less memory use)
    • improved "packages" and dynamic libraries (PIC!) support in general.
    • cross linking (2.0 is actually quite cross link capable already)
    • stabs->dwarf crossover.
    • Some form of Kylix compatible resources.(still under discussion)
  • Support for 64-bit (sized) native file types. (done)
  • Apple Pascal related
    • Being able to pass a subprocedure to a different proc as procvar.

Some of these target functionality (specially in the linking section) might require restructures related to

  • introduction of an internal linker for some core platforms (no more LD)
  • Rewrite of module (unit) handling

Targets

The FPC compiler's availability depends on the major version.

Version 2.0.x

The current stable version 2.0.2 supports the following

Processors:

Operating systems:

Version 1.0.x

The previous stable release 1.0.x was available for processors

and supported the following operating systems

and the beta platforms:

See also

  • Lazarus, a RAD (Rapid Application Development) IDE (Integrated Development Environment)

External links

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