+2017-01-02 Gerald Pfeifer <gerald@pfeifer.com>
+
+ * doc/cfg.texi (Edges): Remove reference to Java.
+ (Maintaining the CFG): Ditto.
+
2017-01-01 Jan Hubicka <hubicka@ucw.cz>
PR middle-end/77674
Exception handling edges represent possible control transfers from a
trapping instruction to an exception handler. The definition of
``trapping'' varies. In C++, only function calls can throw, but for
-Java and Ada, exceptions like division by zero or segmentation fault are
+Ada exceptions like division by zero or segmentation fault are
defined and thus each instruction possibly throwing this kind of
exception needs to be handled as control flow instruction. Exception
edges have the @code{EDGE_ABNORMAL} and @code{EDGE_EH} flags set.
Usually a code manipulating pass simplifies the instruction stream and
the flow of control, possibly eliminating some edges. This may for
example happen when a conditional jump is replaced with an
-unconditional jump, but also when simplifying possibly trapping
-instruction to non-trapping while compiling Java. Updating of edges
+unconditional jump. Updating of edges
is not transparent and each optimization pass is required to do so
manually. However only few cases occur in practice. The pass may
call @code{purge_dead_edges} on a given basic block to remove