Oracle Developer Studio, formerly named Oracle Solaris Studio, Sun Studio, Sun WorkShop, Forte Developer, and SunPro Compilers, is the Oracle Corporation's flagship software development product for the Solaris and Linuxoperating systems. It includes optimizing C, C++, and Fortran compilers, libraries, and performance analysis and debugging tools, for Solaris on SPARC and x86 platforms, and Linux on x86/x64 platforms, including multi-core systems.
Oracle Developer Studio is downloadable and usable at no charge; however, there are many security and functionality patch updates which are only available with a support contract from Oracle.[3]
Version 12.4 added partial support for the C++11 language standard.[4] All C++11 features are supported except for concurrency and atomic operations, and user-defined literals. Version 12.6 supports the C++14 language standard.[5]
A common optimizing backend is used for code generation.
A high-level intermediate representation called Sun IR is used, and high-level optimizations done in the iropt (intermediate representation optimizer) component are operated at the Sun IR level. Major optimizations include:
Tcov, a source code coverage analysis and statement-by-statement profiling tool, comes as a standard utility. Tcov generates exact counts of the number of times each statement in a program is executed and annotates source code to add instrumentation.
The tcov utility gives information on how often a program executes segments of code. It produces a copy of the source file, annotated with execution frequencies. The code can be annotated at the basic block level or the source line level. As the statements in a basic block are executed the same number of times, a count of basic block executions equals the number of times each statement in the block is executed. The tcov utility does not produce any time-based data.
GCCFSS
The GCC for SPARC Systems (GCCFSS) compiler uses GNU Compiler Collection's (GCC) front end with the Oracle Developer Studio compiler's code-generating back end. Thus, GCCFSS is able to handle GCC-specific compiler directives, while it is also able to take advantage of the compiler optimizations in the compiler's back end. This greatly facilitates the porting of GCC-based applications to SPARC systems.
GCCFSS 4.2 adds the ability to be used as a cross compiler; SPARC binaries can be generated on an x86 (or x64) machine running Solaris.[8]
Research platform
Before its cancellation, the Rock would have been the first general-purpose processor to support hardware transactional memory (HTM). The Oracle Developer Studio compiler is used by a number of research projects, including Hybrid Transactional Memory (HyTM)[9] and Phased Transactional Memory (PhTM),[10] to investigate support and possible HTM optimizations.
History
Product name
C/C++ compiler
Supported Operating Systems
Release date
SPARCworks 1.0
1.0
SunOS 4
1991
SPARCworks 2.0 (SPARCompiler)
2.0
Solaris 2.x, SunOS 4.1.x
June 1992
SunSoft Workshop 1.0
3.0
Solaris 2.x, SunOS 4.1.x
July 1994
SunSoft Workshop 2.0
4.0
Solaris 2.2 or later
March 1995
Sun Workshop 3.0 / 4.0
4.2
Solaris 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 7
January 1997
Sun Workshop 5.0
5.0
Solaris 2.5.1, 2.6, 7
December 1998
Forte Developer 6 (Sun WorkShop 6)
5.1
Solaris 2.6, 7, 8
May 2000
Forte Developer 6 update 1
5.2
Solaris 2.6, 7, 8
November 2000
Forte Developer 6 update 2
5.3
Solaris 2.6, 7, 8, 9
July 2001
Sun ONE Studio 7 (Forte Developer 7)
5.4
Solaris 7, 8, 9
May 2002
Sun ONE Studio 8 Compiler Collection
5.5
Solaris 7, 8, 9, 10
May 2003
Sun Studio 8
5.5
Solaris 7, 8, 9, 10
March 2004
Sun Studio 9
5.6
Solaris 8, 9, 10; Linux
July 2004
Sun Studio 10
5.7
Solaris 8, 9, 10; Linux
January 2005
Sun Studio 11
5.8
Solaris 8, 9, 10; Linux
November 2005
Sun Studio 12
5.9
Solaris 9, 10 1/06; Linux
June 2007
Sun Studio 12 Update 1
5.10
Solaris 10 1/06; OpenSolaris 2008.11, 2009.06; Linux