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1990-06-18
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FILE NAME: read.me2
February 1, 1990
Please read the read.me file on RED disk 1 as well as this file.
REWARD
A reward of $5.12 is cheerfully paid to the first person who finds any bug in
RED's code. Typo's in the code or in the documentation are worth $1.28.
AUTHOR
All programs on this disk were written by:
Edward K. Ream
1617 Monroe Street
Madison, WI 53711
(608) 257-0802
PUBLIC DOMAIN SOFTWARE
The sole author and owner of RED, Edward K. Ream hereby puts RED and all
other files on this disk in the public domain.
DISCLAIMER
With respect to the programs and documentation contained on this disk,
Edward K. Ream specifically disclaims all warranties, express or implied,
including but not limited to implied warranties of merchantability and fitness
for a particular purpose. In no event shall Ream be liable for any loss of
profit or commercial damage, including but not limited to special, incidental,
consequential or other damages.
USING SHERLOCK TO EXPLORE RED
This disk contains documentation for the Sherlock(TM) debugging system, along
with reddb.exe, an executable version of RED that contains Sherlock macros
compiled in. You may use these Sherlock macros to trace the execution of RED.
The file sherlock.doc contains an introduction to Sherlock, the Sherlock User's
Guide and Reference Guide, as well as documentation for several tools supplied
with the Sherlock system: SPP, SDEL and SDIF.
Sherlock macros lie dormant until unabled from the command line. All output
from Sherlock macros is sent to a file called trace. To enable a list of
statistics gathered during RED's execution, invoke RED as follows:
c>REDDB ++dump
Check the source code for RED for the names of the tracepoints to enable, or
simply look through the dump of statistics produced using ++dump.
You may recompile RED without actually removing the Sherlock macros even if you
do not own Sherlock. Simply rename the file sldummy.h to sl.h. The file
sldummy.h contains do-nothing macro definitions for all Sherlock macros.