+2005-02-08 Martin
+ - Doxygenification of all GRAS. gtk-doc-tools is dead in SG now.
+ - Automatically extract all existing logging categories, and add the list
+ to the documentation (long standing one, to say the less)
+
+2005-02-04 Martin
+ - Reenable GRAS/RL; keep GRAS/SG disabled for now
+ - Various cleanups to the autotools stuff
+ - Begin to move Gras examples to examples/gras/
+ - Let make distcheck work again (yeah!)
+
+2005-01-31 Arnaud
+ Version 2.90: "the long awaited one"
+ - Finished rewriting and debugging MSG. Rewrote the documentation.
+ - disable GRAS for now since it needs to be ported to the newest SG
+
+2004-12-16 Martin
+ - Finish the port to windows (using mingw32 for cross-compile)
+
+2004-11-28 Arnaud
+ - Main loop and datastructures of SURF. A cpu resource object is
+ functionnal. Surf can thus be used to create cpu's with variable
+ performance on which you can execute some actions.
+
+2004-11-15 Martin Quinson
+ - Port to ARM. Simply added the alignment and size descriptions. Should
+ work, but the ARM machines are so slow that I didn't had the opportunity
+ to 'make check' overthere yet.
+
+2004-11-15 Arnaud Legrand
+ - Trace manager now written. It uses a heap structure and is therefore
+ expected to be efficient. It may however be speeded up (particularly
+ when many events occur at the same date) by using red and black
+ trees. One day maybe...
+ - Max-min linear system solver written. It uses a sparse matrix
+ structure taking advantage of its expected use. Most operations are
+ O(1) and free/calloc are called as few as possible. The computation of
+ the minimum could however be improved by using a red and black tree
+ (again ! ;).
+
2004-11-03 Arnaud Legrand
- Rename every gras_* function that was in xbt/ to its xbt_
counterpart.
so I assume that the patch is correct. I do not know however if things
run effectively faster than before now. :)
+ Inclusion of the SimGrid tree in the GRAS one. The archive is renamed to
+ SimGrid, and the version number is bumped to 2.x
+
2004-10-29 Martin Quinson
- Introduction of the remote errors.
They are the result of a RMI/RPC on the remote machine.