--------------------------------------------------- NOTE: the following text file was automatically generated from a document that is best read in HTML format. To read it in the preferred format, point your web browser at any of these 3 locations: (1) http://www.spec.org/cpu2000/docs (2) The docs directory of your SPEC CPU2000 CD - for example: /cdrom/docs/ (Unix) E:\docs\ (NT) (3) The docs directory on the system where you have installed SPEC CPU2000 - for example /usr/mydir/cpu2000/docs/ (Unix) C:\My Directory$lcsuite\docs\ (NT) --------------------------------------------------- SPEC CPU2000: Changes in V1.2 Last updated: 30-Oct-2001 jh (To check for possible updates to this document, please see http://www.spec.org/cpu2000/docs/ ) New systems supported With this release of SPEC CPU2000, new support is added for: * MacOS X * Intel Itanium, using HP-UX * Intel Itanium, using Windows Advanced Server. Notice that: * Support for Windows Advanced Server required source code changes for several benchmarks. These changes are selected by setting the compiler option -DSPEC_CPU2000_P64 * When installing the CPU2000 kit under Windows Advanced Server, you should set the CPU variable to "i386", as is pointed out in the updated install_guide_nt.html. ----------------------------------------------------------- Note: links to SPEC CPU2000 documents on this web page assume that you are reading the page from a directory that also contains the other SPEC CPU2000 documents. If by some chance you are reading this web page from a location where the links do not work, try accessing the referenced documents at one of the following locations: * www.spec.org/cpu2000/docs/ * The $SPEC/docs/ directory on a Unix system where SPEC CPU2000 has been installed. * The %spec%\docs.nt\ directory on a Windows/NT system where SPEC CPU2000 has been installed. * The docs/ or docs.nt\ directory on your SPEC CPU2000 distribution cdrom. ----------------------------------------------------------- Documentation Updates Many of the documents have been moved to HTML format, in hopes that this will make them both easier to read and easier to navigate through. The HTML-format documents include: * runrules.html, which specify the rules for producing a valid SPEC CPU2000 result. * runspec.html, the document that describes the primary tool in the CPU2000 suite. * config.html, which describes how to write a config file. Config files are used by runspec. * system_requirements.html, which states the hardware and software prerequisites for SPEC CPU2000 * install_guide_nt.html and install_guide_unix.html, which specify installation procedures * utility.html, which points out various useful utilities for advanced users Run rule updates Several run rules have been newly adopted or clarified, including a rule on Fair Use. For additional details, see the Edit History at the top of runrules.html. Tools updates The tools make several attempts to record additional information to log files and build directories, for example logging elapsed compile time even if the compile fails, logging the build type (base or peak), and logging the use of src.alt directories. Changes to benchmarks In addition to the Windows Advanced Server changes mentioned above, the following benchmark changes were made in V1.2: * 186.crafty: Fixed a dangling comment delimiter * 252.eon: Improved standards compliance by fixing a source error * 253.perlbmk: added defines for Linux/S390 (32- and 64- bit); remove certain #undefs in spec_config.h, to allow portability defines; add some defines for glibc 2.2+ in spec_config.h and pp_sys.c. Tools new features Two new styles of line continuation are now supported in config files: line can be continued with either a single backslash (\) or with a double backslash (\\). * When a single backslash is used, the field is recorded with an embedded new line. * When a double backslash is used, the field is recorded with no new line, but with the second line appended to the first. The following example illustrates both features: OPTIMIZE = -verbose -feedback=compile_time \\ -optimize_level=aggressive notes100 = \\ Crafty is compiled with both the compile-time \ feedback option and the aggressive optmization \ option. The above example creates a single line for OPTIMIZE, with all three switches (-verbose, -feedback, -optimize_level). Also in the example, notes100 is defined as three lines of text.