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diff --git a/winsup/doc/who.texinfo b/winsup/doc/who.texinfo deleted file mode 100644 index cc93ceaa1..000000000 --- a/winsup/doc/who.texinfo +++ /dev/null @@ -1,88 +0,0 @@ -@chapter Who's behind the project? - -@strong{(Please note that if you have cygwin-specific questions, all of these -people will appreciate it if you use the cygwin mailing lists rather than -sending personal email.)} - -Chris Faylor is behind many of the recent changes in Cygwin. Prior to -joining Cygnus, he contributed significant fixes to the process control -and environ code, reworked the strace mechanism, and rewrote the -signal-related code from scratch as a Net contributor. In addition to -continuing to make technical contributions, Chris is also currently the -group's manager. - -Corinna Vinschen has contributed several useful fixes to the path -handling code, console support, improved security handling, and raw -device support. Corinna is currently employed by Red Hat as a -GDB/Cygwin engineer. - -DJ Delorie has done important work in profiling Cygwin, -worked on the Dejagnu automated testing framework, merged the dlltool -functionality into ld, wrote a good deal of the Cygwin Users' Guide, -authored the cygcheck utility, and made automated snapshots available -from our project WWW page. DJ is currently employed by Red Hat as -a GCC engineer. - -Egor Duda has contributed many useful fixes. He is responsible for -Cygwin's ability to start a debugger on detection of a fatal error -as well as produce core dumps. - -Robert Collins has contributed many improvements to thread handling -as well as generic fixes to cygwin itself. - -Kazuhiro Fujieda has contributed many bug fixes and bug reports. - -Earnie Boyd has contributed many bug fixes and is the mingw and w32api -maintainer. - -David Starks-Browning is our dedicated FAQ maintainer. - -Geoffrey Noer took over the Cygwin project from its initial author Steve -Chamberlain in mid-1996. As maintainer, he produced Net releases beta -16 through 20; made the development snapshots; worked with Net -contributors to fix bugs; made many various code improvements himself; -wrote a paper on Cygwin for the 1998 Usenix NT Symposium; authored the -project WWW pages, FAQ, README; etc. Geoffrey is not currently employed -by Red Hat. - -Steve Chamberlain designed and implemented -Cygwin in 1995-1996 while working for Cygnus. He worked with the Net -to improve the technology, ported/integrated many of the user tools -for the first time to Cygwin, and produced all of the releases up to -beta 14. Steve is not currently employed by Red Hat. - -Marco Fuykschot and Peter Boncz of Data Distilleries contributed nearly -all of the changes required to make Cygwin thread-safe. They also -provided the pthreads interface. - -Sergey Okhapkin has been an invaluable Net contributor. He implemented -the tty/pty support, has played a significant role in revamping signal -and exception handling, and has made countless contributions throughout -the library. He also provided binaries of the development snapshots to -the Net after the beta 19 release. - -Mumit Khan has been most helpful on the EGCS end of things, providing -quite a large number of stabilizing patches to the compiler tools for -the B20 release. - -Philippe Giacinti contributed the implementation of dlopen, dlclose, -dlsym, dlfork, and dlerror in Cygwin. - -Ian Lance Taylor did a much-needed rework of the path handling code for -beta 18, and has made many assorted fixes throughout the code. Jeremy -Allison made significant contributions in the area of file handling and -process control, and rewrote select from scratch. Doug Evans rewrote -the path-handling code in beta 16, among other things. Kim Knuttila and -Michael Meissner put in many long hours working on the now-defunct -PowerPC port. Jason Molenda and Mark Eichin have also made important -contributions. - -Please note that all of us working on Cygwin try to -be as responsive as possible and deal with patches and questions as we -get them, but realistically we don't have time to answer all of the -email that is sent to the main mailing list. Making Net releases of the -Win32 tools and helping people on the Net out is not our primary job -function, so some email will have to go unanswered. - -Many thanks to everyone using the tools for their many contributions in -the form of advice, bug reports, and code fixes. Keep them coming! |