diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/INSTALL wfdb-10.1.1/INSTALL
--- wfdb-10.1.0/INSTALL	Wed Dec 31 19:00:00 1969
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/INSTALL	Sun Jan 30 03:53:29 2000
@@ -0,0 +1,87 @@
+file: INSTALL			G. Moody	30 January 2000
+
+WFDB Software Package installation notes
+_______________________________________________________________________________
+
+Under UNIX or Linux:
+
+1. Install the World Wide Web Consortium's libwww library (you will need both
+   the library itself and the developer's package;  download them from
+   http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/libwww/, or from the W3C's web site
+   at http://www.w3.org/Library).  You may skip this step if you don't want
+   support for reading input files from remote web and FTP servers.  See
+   README.NETFILES for further information about this option.
+
+2. Install the XView library (see http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/xview/)
+   if you want to use WAVE, and be sure that the directory that contains the
+   XView application 'textedit' (usually /usr/openwin/bin) is in your PATH.
+   For information about WAVE, see the WAVE User's Guide,
+   http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/wug/.
+
+   WAVE uses Netscape (or another web browser, if you've made the appropriate
+   changes in waverc/Makefile) for some of its on-line help.  Copy the
+   contents of http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/wug/ into
+   /usr/local/help/html/wug if you wish to read the help from local files;
+   otherwise, edit wave/wave.info and change all occurrences of
+   '/usr/local/help/html/' into 'http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/wug/'.
+   (The utility 'wget' -- which you can find with a web search -- can be
+   helpful if you wish to copy an entire directory of a web site, as suggested
+   here.)
+
+3. In this directory, type:
+	./configure
+	make install
+   You will need root permissions to run 'make install', unless you change
+   WFDBROOT in 'Makefile' so that the files are installed in a directory
+   that you own.
+
+_______________________________________________________________________________
+
+Under MS-DOS or MS-Windows:
+
+If possible, use djgpp (DJ Delorie's MS-DOS port of gcc, free from
+http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/) or cygwin (Cygnus Software's MS-Windows port of
+gcc, free from http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/).  Both of these include
+many of the GNU utilities, including GNU make.  In this directory, type:
+	make -f Makefile-dos-gcc
+
+If you are using an older version of MS-DOS that cannot handle long filenames,
+you will need to rename the 'Makefile-dos-gcc' files here and in each of the
+subdirectories, and then you will need to edit the one in this directory to
+change each reference to 'Makefile-dos-gcc' appropriately.
+
+If you use cygwin, please try to download and install the libwww package, from
+http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/libwww/, or from the W3C's web site at
+http://www.w3.org/Library), and modify lib/Makefile-dos-gcc so that libwww will
+be linked together with the WFDB library.  Instructions for compiling libwww
+with cygwin are provided in the sources and at http://www.w3.org/INSTALL.html.
+This should work but has not yet been tested; please let me know what changes
+are needed.  (Details will be posted on PhysioNet once they are available.)
+
+The 'Makefile.dos' files in each of the subdirectories of this one (except for
+wave, wave-doc, and waverc, which are for UNIX only) can be used with the
+'make' utilities provided with most commercial C compilers, although you may
+need to customize them for your compiler; your feedback is appreciated.  A
+version of libwww for MSVC++ 5.0 is available from PhysioNet and from the W3C
+web site.  If you don't have a 'make' utility, try djgpp or cygwin.
+
+_______________________________________________________________________________
+
+Under MacOS or other operating systems
+
+Sorry, but you are on your own here.  Previous versions of the WFDB library
+and some of the applications have been compiled successfully by Macintosh
+users (and on VMS, among other environments).  The sources are written in
+highly portable C and should not be difficult to port to any environment where
+an ANSI/ISO or K&R C compiler and the standard C library are available.
+
+If you find that changes are necessary in order to compile this software
+successfully, please send details to the author (george@mit.edu) so that
+others can benefit from your experience.  Contributions of working binaries
+are welcome, but please write first before sending them to me. Thanks!
+
+_______________________________________________________________________________
+
+Once you have successfully compiled and installed the WFDB Software Package,
+you will find a great deal of information about using it on PhysioNet;  begin
+looking in http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/wfdb-books.shtml.
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/Makefile wfdb-10.1.1/Makefile
--- wfdb-10.1.0/Makefile	Tue Jan 11 14:40:02 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/Makefile	Sun Jan 30 17:43:54 2000
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
 # file: Makefile	G. Moody	5 September 1990
-#			Last revised:    11 January 2000	Version 10.1.1
+#			Last revised:    30 January 2000	Version 10.1.1
 # UNIX 'make' description file for the WFDB software package
 #
 # -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@
    RESDIR=$(WFDBROOT)/lib/X11/app-defaults
 
 # 'make' or 'make install': compile and install the WFDB software package
-install:	install-slib
+install:	config.cache install-slib
 	cd wave;     $(MAKE) $(WFDBDIRS)
 	cd waverc;   $(MAKE) $(WFDBDIRS)
 	cd app;      $(MAKE) $(WFDBDIRS)
@@ -110,7 +110,11 @@
 	cd wave-doc; $(MAKE) clean
 	cd waverc;   $(MAKE) clean
 	cd wview;    $(MAKE) -f clean
-	rm -f *~
+	rm -f *~ lib/makefile wave/makefile config.cache
+
+# 'make config.cache': check configuration
+config.cache:
+	sh ./configure
 
 # 'make test-lib': compile the dynamically-linked WFDB library without
 # installing it
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/README wfdb-10.1.1/README
--- wfdb-10.1.0/README	Fri Oct 22 12:41:17 1999
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/README	Sun Jan 30 01:50:57 2000
@@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
 file: README			G. Moody	5 May 1999
 				Last revised: 22 October 1999
 
+For installation instructions, see `INSTALL' in this directory.
 _______________________________________________________________________________
 WFDB Software Package:  software for working with annotated signals
 Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
@@ -60,36 +61,3 @@
 benefit the community that has given them to you.  You do not have to give away
 your improvements; but you may not distribute them at all unless you are
 willing to play by the rules spelled out by the GPL.
-
-_______________________________________________________________________________
-
-Notes on compiling this software:
-
-You may need to set OS-specific variables in */Makefile before compiling.
- Use 'make' in this directory to compile and install everything.
-
-WAVE uses Netscape (or another browser, if you've made the appropriate
-changes in waverc/Makefile) for some of its on-line help.  Copy the
-contents of http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/wug/ into
-/usr/local/help/html/wug if you wish to read the help from local files;
-otherwise, edit wave/wave.info and change all occurrences of
-'/usr/local/help/html/' into 'http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/wug/'.
-(The utility 'wget' -- which you can find with a web search -- can be helpful
-if you wish to copy an entire directory of a web site, as suggested here.)
-
-The WFDB library can (optionally) use the freely available libwww libraries
-developed by the World Wide Web consortium to allow any application to read
-input from HTTP and FTP servers as well as from local disk files, without the
-use of a browser and in most cases without the need to download an entire
-file in order to examine a portion of it.  For further information, see
-README.NETFILES in this directory.  The libwww libraries are usable under
-UNIX (including Linux), MS-DOS/Windows, and (with some work) MacOS;  see
-http://www.w3.org/Library/ for details.  Sources and Linux x86 binaries
-can be downloaded from http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/libwww/ (and
-elsewhere).
-
-WAVE requires the (Sun-developed, but freely available) XView libraries and
-header files.  These are available from Sun for SunOS and Solaris; from various
-commercial sources for AIX, HP-UX, and other Unices; and as a part of some
-Linux distributions.  Sources and Linux x86 binaries can be downloaded from
-http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/xview (and elsewhere).
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/configure wfdb-10.1.1/configure
--- wfdb-10.1.0/configure	Wed Dec 31 19:00:00 1969
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/configure	Sun Jan 30 17:42:02 2000
@@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
+#! /bin/sh
+if ( which libwww-config 2>&1 | grep "no " >/dev/null )
+then
+    echo "The WFDB software will be compiled without NETFILES access, because"
+    echo "libwww does not appear to be installed on this system."
+    echo "To add NETFILES access, install libwww and run ./configure again."
+    rm -f lib/makefile
+    echo "NETFILES=0" >config.cache
+else
+    echo "The WFDB software will be compiled with NETFILES access."
+    cp lib/netmake lib/makefile
+    echo "NETFILES=1" >config.cache
+fi
+
+if ( which textedit 2>&1 | grep "no " >/dev/null )
+then
+    echo "WAVE will not be compiled, because the XView libraries do not"
+    echo "appear to be installed on this system."
+    echo "To compile WAVE, install XView, add the directory containing the"
+    echo "XView textedit application to your PATH, and run ./configure again."
+    cp wave/nomake wave/makefile
+    echo "WAVE=0" >>config.cache
+else
+    echo "WAVE will be compiled."
+    rm -f wave/makefile
+    echo "WAVE=1" >>config.cache
+fi
+
+
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/doc/dbu.tex wfdb-10.1.1/doc/dbu.tex
--- wfdb-10.1.0/doc/dbu.tex	Thu Jan 13 21:42:05 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/doc/dbu.tex	Sun Jan 30 04:36:50 2000
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
 @sp 5
 @center @titlefont{WFDB Programmer's Guide}
 @sp 4
-@center Tenth Edition (revised and with additions for WFDB library version 10.1.0)
+@center Tenth Edition (revised and with additions for WFDB library version 10.1.1)
 @center @today
 @sp 5
 @center George B. Moody
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@
 @end display
 
 An HTML version of this guide is available;  point your web browser to
-@code{http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/dbpg/} to view it.
+@code{http://@-www.@-physio@-net.@-org/@-physio@-tools/@-dbpg/} to view it.
 Additional printed copies of this guide are available for US$10 each
 (including shipping by surface mail) by writing to the address above.
 Please make checks payable to ``Beth Israel Hospital Biomedical
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@
 This guide documents the Waveform Database interface library (the WFDB
 library).  This file contains the text of the Tenth Edition of
 the @cite{WFDB Programmer's Guide} (January, 2000), with
-additional material for release 10.1.0 of the WFDB library.
+additional material for release 10.1.1 of the WFDB library.
 @end ifinfo
 
 @menu
@@ -334,46 +334,43 @@
 @node     Guide, , Applications, Overview
 @unnumberedsec About this Guide
 
-You should have a good grasp of the C language in order to make the best
-use of this guide.  If ANSI C prototypes, used here to document the WFDB
-library functions, are unfamiliar to you, see pp. 217--218 in the second
-edition of @cite{The C Programming Language} by Kernighan and Ritchie,
-Prentice Hall, 1988.  (This is the famous @cite{K&R}; all @cite{K&R}
-references in this guide include page numbers for the second edition.
-Newcomers to C should have a copy for ready reference while reading this
-guide.)  It may also be helpful to have a copy of a database
-directory, such as the @cite{MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database Directory}.
-If the entire WFDB Software Package is available, the @cite{WFDB
-Applications Guide} will be useful as a reference for existing WFDB
-library-based applications;  if you have only a CD-ROM with MS-DOS
-binaries, refer to @file{bin.doc} (in the @file{bin} directory of your
-CD-ROM) for information on the available applications.
+You should have a good grasp of the C language in order to make the best use of
+this guide.  If ANSI C prototypes, used here to document the WFDB library
+functions, are unfamiliar to you, see pp. 217--218 in the second edition of
+@cite{The C Programming Language} by Kernighan and Ritchie, Prentice Hall,
+1988.  (This is the famous @cite{K&R}; all @cite{K&R} references in this guide
+include page numbers for the second edition.  Newcomers to C should have a copy
+for ready reference while reading this guide.)  It may also be helpful to have
+a copy of a database directory, such as the @cite{MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database
+Directory}.  The @cite{WFDB Applications Guide} will be useful as a reference
+for existing WFDB library-based applications (available from PhysioNet,
+@code{http://@-www.@-physio@-net.@-org/}).
 
 You should have access to a computer that has the WFDB library and at
-least one or two database records on-line.  (If you are installing the
-WFDB library on a new computer for the first time, please read the
-installation notes supplied with the WFDB library first, or
+least one or two database records on-line, or access to the World Wide Web,
+where database records can be obtained from PhysioNet and other sources.  (If
+you are installing the WFDB library on a new computer for the first time,
+please read the installation notes supplied with the WFDB library first, or
 @pxref{Installation, , Installing the WFDB Software Package}, then return
 here.)  You should know how to create a C source file using your
 favorite editor, and you should know how to compile it and how to run
 the resulting executable program.
 
-Resist all temptation to plunge into the esoteric details of file
-formats.  (Those who find such details irresistible will find them in
-Section 5 of the @cite{WFDB Applications Guide}; note, however,
-that support for new file formats is added to the WFDB library from time
-to time, so that the information you find there may be incomplete.)  The
-WFDB library provides an efficient means of reading and writing files in
-many formats; it is not a trivial task to duplicate it, and time spent
-doing so is time that could be spent doing something useful, enjoyable,
-or possibly both.  If you really think you need to understand the file
-formats in order to translate them into whatever the ECGWhizz Model 666
-needs, consider instead writing a format translator using the WFDB library
-to read the files; then you will at least have a program that requires
-only recompilation with a new version of the WFDB library when file
+Resist all temptation to plunge into the esoteric details of file formats.
+(Those who find such details irresistible will find them in Section 5 of the
+@cite{WFDB Applications Guide}; note, however, that support for new file
+formats is added to the WFDB library from time to time, so that the information
+you find there may be incomplete.)  The WFDB library provides an efficient
+means of reading and writing files in many formats; it is not a trivial task to
+duplicate it, and time spent doing so is time that could be spent doing
+something useful, enjoyable, or possibly both.  If you really think you need to
+understand the file formats in order to translate them into whatever the
+ECGWhizz Model 666 needs, consider instead writing a format translator using
+the WFDB library to read the files; then you will at least have a program that
+requires only recompilation with a new version of the WFDB library when file
 formats change.  @emph{In extremis}, use @file{rdann} and @file{rdsamp} ---
-MS-DOS executables of which are included on all CD-ROM databases of ECGs ---
-to translate files into text format.
+MS-DOS executables of which are available from PhysioNet and included on all
+CD-ROM databases of ECGs --- to translate files into text format.
 
 Chapter 1 of this guide begins with a simple example program that reads
 a few samples from a database record.  This example should help you
@@ -408,18 +405,7 @@
 Linux, AIX, AUX, SCO, Coherent, and more), MS-DOS, MS-Windows, VMS, and
 the Macintosh OS.  This guide was written for UNIX users (with notes for
 MS-DOS users where differences exist), but others should find only minor
-differences.  One obvious difference between MS-DOS and other versions
-of the WFDB library is the file-naming convention: since record names can
-be longer than the three characters permitted in MS-DOS file name
-``extensions'', MS-DOS names for WFDB files @emph{begin} with the record
-name and @emph{end} with a file type specifier (@file{hea} instead of
-@file{header}, @file{atr} instead of @file{atruth}, etc.), rather than
-the other way around.  This difference is not particularly significant,
-however, since WFDB file names @emph{per se} are never needed as WFDB
-library function arguments.  So that database files on CD-ROMs may be
-read on all supported systems, the MS-DOS convention for naming WFDB files
-is recognized in addition to the ``native'' convention under UNIX, VMS,
-and on the Macintosh.
+differences.
 
 Another appendix discusses porting the WFDB library to new machines or
 operating systems, and includes notes on adding support for new file
@@ -427,16 +413,17 @@
 At the end of the guide is a list of sources for databases and other
 materials that may be useful to readers (@pxref{Sources}).
 
-Many friends have contributed to the development of the WFDB library.
-Thanks to Paul Albrecht, Ted Baker, Phil Devlin, Scott Greenwald, David
-Israel, Roger Mark, Joe Mietus, Warren Muldrow, and especially to Paul
-Schluter, whose elegant 8080 assembly language functions inspired these
-(long live @code{getann}!).  Pat Hamilton and Bob Farrell contributed
-ports, to the Macintosh and the MS 32-bit Windows environments,
-respectively.  Thanks also to the many readers of earlier versions of
-this guide; if this edition answers your questions, it is because
-someone else has already asked them, and hounded the author until he
-produced comprehensible answers.
+Many friends have contributed to the development of the WFDB library.  Thanks
+to Paul Albrecht, Ted Baker, Phil Devlin, Scott Greenwald, David Israel, Roger
+Mark, Joe Mietus, Warren Muldrow, and especially to Paul Schluter, whose
+elegant 8080 assembly language functions inspired these (long live
+@code{getann}!).  Pat Hamilton and Bob Farrell contributed ports, to the
+Macintosh and the MS 32-bit Windows environments, respectively.  Jose Garcia
+Moros and Salvador Olmos contributed Matlab/Octave reimplementations of a
+useful subset of the WFDB library.  Thanks also to the many readers of earlier
+versions of this guide; if this edition answers your questions, it is because
+someone else has already asked them, and hounded the author until he produced
+comprehensible answers.
 
 Before May, 1999, and the release of version 10.0.0 of the library, the
 WFDB library was known as the DB library, and this guide was the @cite{ECG
@@ -460,7 +447,7 @@
 Cambridge, MA 02139
 USA
 
-(e-mail: george@@mit.edu)
+(e-mail: @code{george@@mit.edu})
 @end display
 
 @iftex
@@ -478,7 +465,7 @@
 
 An HTML version of this guide, suitable for viewing using any web browser,
 is included with the WFDB Software Package.  The latest version may always be
-viewed at @code{http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/dbpg/} using your web
+viewed at @code{http://@-www.@-physio@-net.@-org/@-physio@-tools/@-dbpg/} using your web
 browser.
 
 @ifinfo
@@ -495,12 +482,25 @@
 @comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
 @unnumberedsec Recent changes
 
-This node contains a brief summary of changes to the WFDB library and to this
-guide since the first printing of the ninth edition of this guide in July,
-1995.  See @file{NEWS.TXT} and @file{NEWNEWS.TXT}, in the top-level
-directory of the WFDB Software Package distribution, for details on these
-changes, and for information on any more recent changes that may not be
-described here.
+This section contains a brief summary of changes to the WFDB library and to
+this guide since the first printing of the ninth edition of this guide in July,
+1995.  See @file{NEWS.TXT} and @file{NEWNEWS.TXT}, in the top-level directory
+of the WFDB Software Package distribution, for details on these changes, and
+for information on any more recent changes that may not be described here.
+
+@unnumberedsubsec Changes in version 10.1.1
+
+Record names may contain (absolute or relative) path information as a prefix,
+and if (as a result) an input file is found in a location that does not appear
+explicitly in the WFDB path, that location is appended to the end of the WFDB
+path.  For example, if the WFDB path is
+@file{. http://@-www.@-physio@-net.@-org/@-physio@-bank/@-data@-base}, and the
+record name @file{mitdb/100} is supplied to @code{wfdbinit}, the WFDB library
+will find the header file at
+@code{http://@-www.@-physio@-net.@-org/@-physio@-bank/@-data@-base/@-mitdb/@-100.hea},
+and will then add @code{http://@-www.@-physio@-net.@-org/@-physio@-bank/data@-base/@-mitdb/} to
+the end of the WFDB path so that the signal file (specified as @file{100.dat}
+in the header file) can be found.
 
 @unnumberedsubsec Changes in version 10.1.0
 
@@ -540,7 +540,7 @@
 separators.
 
 Previous versions of the WFDB library that were compiled for environments other
-than MS-DOS used file names in the format @var{TYPE.RECORD}.  This file
+than MS-DOS used file names in the format @var{type.record}.  This file
 name format is no longer supported.
 
 @unnumberedsubsec Changes in version 10.0.0
@@ -721,10 +721,8 @@
 
 Suppose we wish to print the first ten samples of record @file{100s}.
 (Record @file{100s} is the first minute of MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database
-record @file{100}, supplied as a sample with all source distributions of the
-WFDB Software Package.  If you have only the MS-DOS binary version of the
-WFDB library on a CD-ROM, substitute the name of one of the records on
-your CD-ROM for @file{100s} in the program below.)  We might begin by
+record @file{100}, supplied as a sample in the @code{data} directory of all
+source distributions of the WFDB Software Package.)  We might begin by
 creating a source file called @file{psamples.c} that contains:
 
 @example
@@ -841,6 +839,17 @@
 in this guide; for further information, refer to @file{fortran/readme.doc}
 in the WFDB Software Package (included in version 9.4 and later versions).
 
+@cindex Matlab bindings
+@cindex Octave bindings
+@cindex wrappers for Matlab or Octave
+It should be possible to write a similar set of wrapper functions for use with
+Matlab or Octave (a freely available open-source language that is compatible
+with Matlab, available from @code{http://www.che.wisc.edu/octave/}).  At this
+time, such wrappers are not available, but a reimplementation of a useful
+subset of the WFDB library in native m-code (contributed by Jose Garcia Moros
+and Salvador Olmos) is available from
+@code{http://www.physionet.org/physiotools/matlab/}.
+
 @node     WFDB path, running example, other languages, Usage
 @comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
 @section The Database Path
@@ -872,9 +881,11 @@
 
 Alternatively, components of the WFDB path may be separated by
 whitespace (under any operating system), and the WFDB path may contain
-@code{http://} and @code{ftp://} URL prefixes.  If @code{NETFILES}
+@code{http://} and @code{ftp://} URL prefixes (other schema, such as
+@code{file://} and @code{https://}, may also be supported if they are
+supported by your version of @code{libwww}).  If @code{NETFILES}
 support is not compiled into the WFDB library, any WFDB path components
-beginning with @code{http://} or @code{ftp://} are ignored.  (These
+containing @file{://} are ignored.  (These
 features were first introduced in WFDB library version 10.1.0.)
 
 When WFDB applications @emph{write} database files, these files are
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/lib/Makefile wfdb-10.1.1/lib/Makefile
--- wfdb-10.1.0/lib/Makefile	Thu Jan  6 10:59:03 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/lib/Makefile	Sun Jan 30 04:33:23 2000
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
 # file: Makefile	G. Moody	 6 July 1983
-#			Last revised:  6 January 2000		Version 10.1.0
-# UNIX 'make' description file for compiling the WFDB library with NETFILES
+#			Last revised:  19 January 2000		Version 10.1.1
+# UNIX 'make' description file for compiling the WFDB library
 #
 # _____________________________________________________________________________
 # wfdb: a library for reading and writing annotated waveforms(time series data)
@@ -32,13 +32,13 @@
 # install the alternate WFDB library (not available on all systems), type
 # `make slib'.
 
-# Note:  This version contains experimental NETFILES support, which requires
-# that you have previously installed libwww (see http://www.w3.org/Library/);
-# if not, you must change the definitions of SCFLAGS and SBUILDLIB below.
-# As is, this Makefile is preconfigured for Linux and requires minor changes
-# for other supported operating systems.  It builds a static version of the
-# library without NETFILES support, and a shared (dynamically loadable) version
-# of the library with NETFILES support.
+# If used as is, this Makefile compiles the WFDB library without NETFILES
+# support.  The simplest way to compile with NETFILES support (which requires
+# that you have previously installed libwww, see http://www.w3.org/Library/),
+# is to copy 'netmake' to 'makefile' before running 'make' in this directory.
+# (If you do this, the definitions in the renamed file take precedence over
+# those below.)  As is, this Makefile is preconfigured for Linux and requires
+# minor changes for other supported operating systems.
 
 # NETFILES support is known to work well under Linux (with both 2.0 and 2.2
 # series kernels and glibc 2.0 and 2.1) provided that the library is compiled
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@
 # Makefile (in the parent of this directory) for details.
 MAJOR = 10
 MINOR = 1
-RELEASE = 0
+RELEASE = 1
 VERSION = $(MAJOR).$(MINOR).$(RELEASE)
 
 # Historical note:  Versions earlier than 10.0.0, released between 1981 and
@@ -208,9 +208,9 @@
 # For Solaris or SVR4 `cc', uncomment the next line.
 # SCFLAGS = -K PIC -O $(CCDEFS)
 # For `gcc', uncomment the next line.
-# SCFLAGS = -fpic -g -O $(CCDEFS)
+SCFLAGS = -fpic -g -O $(CCDEFS)
 # For `gcc' with NETFILES, uncomment the next line.
-SCFLAGS = -fpic -g -O $(CCDEFS) -DNETFILES `libwww-config --cflags`
+# SCFLAGS = -fpic -g -O $(CCDEFS) -DNETFILES `libwww-config --cflags`
 # See comments on CFLAGS (above).  If you don't have `gdb', you won't be able
 # to debug the shared library, so you might want to remove the `-g' option in
 # that case.
@@ -252,12 +252,12 @@
 # For (at least some versions of) HP/UX, uncomment the next line instead.
 # SBUILDLIB = ld -b -o $(SWFDBLIB) $(SLIBOBJS)
 # For Linux without NETFILES (see above), uncomment the next line instead.
-# SBUILDLIB = gcc -shared -Wl,-soname,$(SWFDBLIB_SONAME) -o $(SWFDBLIB) \
-#  $(SLIBOBJS)
+SBUILDLIB = gcc -shared -Wl,-soname,$(SWFDBLIB_SONAME) -o $(SWFDBLIB) \
+  $(SLIBOBJS)
 # For Linux with NETFILES (see above), add -DNETFILES to CCDEFS and uncomment
 # the next line instead.
-SBUILDLIB = gcc -shared -Wl,-soname,$(SWFDBLIB_SONAME) \
-  `libwww-config --libs` -o $(SWFDBLIB) $(SLIBOBJS)
+# SBUILDLIB = gcc -shared -Wl,-soname,$(SWFDBLIB_SONAME) \
+#  `libwww-config --libs` -o $(SWFDBLIB) $(SLIBOBJS)
 
 # SRANLIB is the name of the program used to index the alternate library.
 # Shared libraries are not generally indexed.
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/lib/Makefile-dos-gcc wfdb-10.1.1/lib/Makefile-dos-gcc
--- wfdb-10.1.0/lib/Makefile-dos-gcc	Thu Jan  6 10:59:03 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/lib/Makefile-dos-gcc	Sun Jan 30 04:13:20 2000
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 # file: Makefile-dos-gcc	G. Moody	23 April 1997
-#				Last revised:	29 April 1998	Version 10.0.0
+#				Last revised: 21 January 2000	Version 10.1.1
 # GCC-DOS 'make' description file for compiling the WFDB library
 
 # _____________________________________________________________________________
 # wfdb: a library for reading and writing annotated waveforms(time series data)
-# Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
+# Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
 #
 # This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
 # the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free
@@ -39,8 +39,8 @@
 # the top-level Makefile for the WFDB Software Package).  See the top-level
 # Makefile (in the parent of this directory) for details.
 MAJOR = 10
-MINOR = 0
-RELEASE = 0
+MINOR = 1
+RELEASE = 1
 VERSION = $(MAJOR).$(MINOR).$(RELEASE)
 
 # Site-specific variables
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/lib/Makefile.dos wfdb-10.1.1/lib/Makefile.dos
--- wfdb-10.1.0/lib/Makefile.dos	Thu Jan  6 10:59:03 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/lib/Makefile.dos	Sun Jan 30 04:13:20 2000
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 # file: Makefile.dos	G. Moody	2 November 1989
-#			Last revised:	29 April 1999		wfdblib 10.0.0
+#			Last revised:	21 January 2000		wfdblib 10.1.1
 # MSDOS `make' description file template for compiling the WFDB library
 #
 # _____________________________________________________________________________
 # wfdb: a library for reading and writing annotated waveforms(time series data)
-# Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
+# Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
 #
 # This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
 # the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/lib/netmake wfdb-10.1.1/lib/netmake
--- wfdb-10.1.0/lib/netmake	Wed Dec 31 19:00:00 1969
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/lib/netmake	Sun Jan 30 17:06:53 2000
@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
+# file: netmake			G. Moody		30 January 2000
+#
+# Redefine make variables to compile a NETFILES-enabled WFDB library
+#
+# _____________________________________________________________________________
+# wfdb: a library for reading and writing annotated waveforms(time series data)
+# Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
+#
+# This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
+# the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free
+# Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any
+# later version.
+#
+# This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
+# ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
+# FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU Library General Public License for
+# more details.
+#
+# You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License
+# along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
+# 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+#
+# You may contact the author by e-mail (george@mit.edu) or postal mail
+# (MIT Room E25-505A, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA).  For updates to this software,
+# please visit PhysioNet (http://www.physionet.org/).
+# _____________________________________________________________________________
+#
+# This is a 'make' description file intended to be used if you wish to compile
+# the WFDB library with support for reading remote files via HTTP and FTP
+# (a capability called NETFILES support in the documentation of the WFDB library).
+# In order to do this successfully, you must have previously installed the World
+# Wide Web Consortium's libwww library, which may be downloaded freely from
+# http://www.w3.org/Library/,
+#
+# The standard 'make' description file provided in this directory, 'Makefile',
+# does not include NETFILES support.  Rather than duplicate all of the common
+# definitions in 'Makefile', this file simply redefines those that must differ
+# when compiling with NETFILES support, and then invokes another instance of
+# 'make' on the standard 'Makefile', but with the new definitions overriding
+# the old ones.  If this file is renamed 'makefile', 'make' will read it
+# first (before 'Makefile') and all of this will happen automagically.  The
+# script 'configure' (in the directory above this one) renames this file
+# if libwww has been installed, so that a simple 'make' in that directory is
+# all that is required.
+#
+# NETFILES support is known to work well under Linux (with both 2.0 and 2.2
+# series kernels and glibc 2.0 and 2.1) provided that the library is compiled
+# as a shared (dynamically loadable) library.  The library does not compile
+# properly as a static library under Linux if NETFILES is enabled (apparently
+# because of redefinitions in the libwww include files).
+#
+# For further information about NETFILES, see README.NETFILES in the top-level
+# directory of the WFDB software package.
+
+# These should exactly match the values in Makefile.  They are needed here because
+# other variables are constructed using these.
+MAJOR = 10
+MINOR = 1
+RELEASE = 1
+CCDEFS = -DWFDB_MAJOR=$(MAJOR) -DWFDB_MINOR=$(MINOR) -DWFDB_RELEASE=$(RELEASE)
+SWFDBLIB_BASENAME = libwfdb.so
+SWFDBLIB_SONAME = $(SWFDBLIB_BASENAME).$(MAJOR)
+SWFDBLIB = $(SWFDBLIB_SONAME).$(MINOR)
+SLIBOBJS = wfdbinit.o annot.o signal.o calib.o wfdbio.o
+
+# SCFLAGS is the set of C compiler options used when compiling the shared library.
+SCFLAGS = -fpic -g -O $(CCDEFS) -DNETFILES `libwww-config --cflags`
+
+# SBUILDLIB is the command that creates the alternate library once its
+# components have been compiled separately.  This version has been tested on Linux
+# and should work on other versions of UNIX where gcc is available.
+SBUILDLIB = gcc -shared -Wl,-soname,$(SWFDBLIB_SONAME) \
+  `libwww-config --libs` -o $(SWFDBLIB) $(SLIBOBJS)
+
+# This command causes the 'make' processes spawned from this one to use the
+# standard Makefile after incorporating the definitions above.
+MAKE = make -f Makefile
+
+# 'make' targets:  Each target in 'Makefile' should have an identically named
+# target here.
+
+install:
+	$(MAKE) "SBUILDLIB=$(SBUILDLIB)" "SCFLAGS=$(SCFLAGS)" install
+
+compat:
+	$(MAKE) compat
+
+slib-test:
+	$(MAKE) "SBUILDLIB=$(SBUILDLIB)" "SCFLAGS=$(SCFLAGS)" slib-test
+
+slib:
+	$(MAKE) "SBUILDLIB=$(SBUILDLIB)" "SCFLAGS=$(SCFLAGS)" slib
+
+lib:
+	$(MAKE) "SBUILDLIB=$(SBUILDLIB)" "SCFLAGS=$(SCFLAGS)" lib
+
+tidy:
+	$(MAKE) tidy
+
+clean:
+	$(MAKE) clean
+
+TAGS:
+	$(MAKE) TAGS
+
+listing:
+	$(MAKE) listing
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/lib/signal.c wfdb-10.1.1/lib/signal.c
--- wfdb-10.1.0/lib/signal.c	Thu Jan  6 10:59:04 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/lib/signal.c	Sun Jan 30 04:13:20 2000
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 /* file: signal.c	G. Moody	13 April 1989
-			Last revised:  14 October 1999		wfdblib 10.1.0
+			Last revised:  19 January 2000		wfdblib 10.1.1
 WFDB library functions for signals
 
 _______________________________________________________________________________
 wfdb: a library for reading and writing annotated waveforms (time series data)
-Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
+Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
 
 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
 the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free
@@ -429,10 +429,6 @@
 		    return (-2);
 		}
 		(void)strcpy(siarray[s].fname, p);
-		/* If the file name includes a directory name which is not
-		   already in the WFDB path, add that directory to the end of
-		   the WFDB path. */
-		wfdb_addtopath(p);
 	    }
 	    /* If the file names of the current and previous signals match,
 	       they are assigned the same group number and share a copy of the
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/lib/wfdb.h wfdb-10.1.1/lib/wfdb.h
--- wfdb-10.1.0/lib/wfdb.h	Thu Jan  6 10:59:04 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/lib/wfdb.h	Sun Jan 30 04:13:20 2000
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 /* file: wfdb.h		G. Moody	13 June 1983
-			Last revised: 1 October 1999		wfdblib 10.1.0
+			Last revised: 19 January 2000		wfdblib 10.1.1
 WFDB library type, constant, structure, and function interface definitions
 
 _______________________________________________________________________________
 wfdb: a library for reading and writing annotated waveforms (time series data)
-Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
+Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
 
 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
 the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@
 /* WFDB library version. */
 #define WFDB_MAJOR   10
 #define WFDB_MINOR   1
-#define WFDB_RELEASE 0
+#define WFDB_RELEASE 1
 
 /* Determine what type of compiler is being used. */
 #ifdef __STDC__		/* true for ANSI C compilers only */
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/lib/wfdbio.c wfdb-10.1.1/lib/wfdbio.c
--- wfdb-10.1.0/lib/wfdbio.c	Thu Jan  6 10:59:04 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/lib/wfdbio.c	Sun Jan 30 17:35:01 2000
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 /* file: wfdbio.c	G. Moody	18 November 1988
-			Last revised:	14 November 1999	wfdblib 10.1.0
+			Last revised:	19 January 2000		wfdblib 10.1.1
 Low-level I/O functions for the WFDB library
 
 _______________________________________________________________________________
 wfdb: a library for reading and writing annotated waveforms (time series data)
-Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
+Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
 
 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
 the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free
@@ -165,12 +165,32 @@
 
     if (wfdbpath == NULL) {
 	wfdbpath = getenv("WFDB");
-	if (wfdbpath == NULL) wfdbpath = DEFWFDBP;
+	if (wfdbpath == NULL) {
+#ifdef HAS_PUTENV
+	    static char *p;
+	    if (p == NULL) p = (char *)malloc(strlen(DEFWFDBP)+6);
+	    if (p) {
+		sprintf(p, "WFDB=%s", DEFWFDBP);
+		putenv(p);
+	    }
+#endif
+	    wfdbpath = DEFWFDBP;
+	}
     }
     getiwfdb_count = 0;
     while (*wfdbpath == '@')
 	wfdb_getiwfdb();
     wfdb_parse_path(wfdbpath);
+#ifdef HAS_PUTENV
+    if (getenv("WFDBCAL") == NULL) {
+	static char *p;
+	if (p == NULL) p = malloc(strlen(DEFWFDBC)+9);
+	if (p) {
+	    sprintf(p, "WFDBCAL=%s", DEFWFDBC);
+	    putenv(p);
+	}
+    }
+#endif
     return (wfdbpath);
 }
 
@@ -786,9 +806,7 @@
     }
 
     /* If the file is to be opened for input, prepare to search the database
-       directories.  The string obtained from getwfdb() is constructed in the
-       same manner as PATH, with colons separating its components.  An
-       empty component is interpreted as the current directory. */
+       directories. */
 
     if (wfdb_path_list == NULL) (void)getwfdb();
 
@@ -844,14 +862,20 @@
 	if (p + strlen(record) + (s ? strlen(s) : 0) > wfdb_filename + MFNLEN-5)
 	    continue;	/* name too long -- skip */
 	spr1(p, record, s);
-	if ((ifile = wfdb_fopen(wfdb_filename, RB)) != NULL) return (ifile);
-	/* If this file can be opened for input, return its file pointer;
-	   otherwise, try opening it using an alternate form of the name,
+	if ((ifile = wfdb_fopen(wfdb_filename, RB)) != NULL) {
+	    /* Found it! Add its path info to the WFDB path. */
+	    wfdb_addtopath(wfdb_filename);
+	    return (ifile);
+	}
+	/* Not found -- try again, using an alternate form of the name,
 	   provided that that form is distinct. */
 	strcpy(long_filename, wfdb_filename);
 	spr2(p, record, s);
 	if (strcmp(wfdb_filename, long_filename) && 
-	    (ifile = wfdb_fopen(wfdb_filename, RB)) != NULL) return (ifile);
+	    (ifile = wfdb_fopen(wfdb_filename, RB)) != NULL) {
+	    wfdb_addtopath(wfdb_filename);
+	    return (ifile);
+	}
     }
     /* If the file was not found in any of the directories listed in wfdb,
        return a null file pointer to indicate failure. */
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/lib/wfdblib.h wfdb-10.1.1/lib/wfdblib.h
--- wfdb-10.1.0/lib/wfdblib.h	Thu Jan  6 10:59:04 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/lib/wfdblib.h	Sun Jan 30 13:03:59 2000
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 /* file: wfdblib.h	G. Moody	13 April 1989
-                        Last revised: 15 September 1999         wfdblib 10.1.0
+                        Last revised: 30 January 2000         wfdblib 10.1.1
 External definitions for WFDB library private functions
 
 _______________________________________________________________________________
 wfdb: a library for reading and writing annotated waveforms (time series data)
-Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
+Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
 
 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
 the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free
@@ -39,15 +39,24 @@
 symbol _WINDOWS instead of _WINDLL. */
 /* #define _WINDLL */
 
-#if defined(_WINDLL)
-#if !defined(_WINDOWS)
+#if defined(_WINDLL) && !defined(_WINDOWS)
 #define _WINDOWS
 #endif
-#define WFDBNOSORT
+
+#if defined(_WIN16) && !defined(_WINDOWS)
+#define _WINDOWS
 #endif
 
-#if defined(_WINDOWS) && !defined(MSDOS)
-#define MSDOS
+#if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(_WINDOWS)
+#define _WINDOWS
+#endif
+
+#if defined(_WINDOWS) && !defined (_WIN16) && !defined(_WIN32)
+#define _WIN16
+#endif
+
+#if defined(_WINDLL)
+#define WFDBNOSORT
 #endif
 
 /* Define the symbol MSDOS if this library is to be used under MS-DOS or MS
@@ -62,14 +71,18 @@
 /* #define FIXISOCD */
 
 /* DEFWFDBP is the default value of the WFDB path if the WFDB environment
-variable is not set.  In most cases, it is sufficient to use an empty string
+variable is not set.  In most cases, it is sufficient to use the string "."
 for this purpose (thus restricting the search for DB files to the current
-directory).  DEFWFDBP must not be NULL, however.  The default given below for
-the Macintosh specifies that the WFDB path is to be read from the file
-udb/dbpath.mac on the third edition of the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database CD-ROM
-(which has a volume name of `MITADB3'); you may prefer to use a file on a
-writable disk for this purpose to make reconfiguration possible.  See getwfdb()
-in wfdbio.c for further information. */
+directory).  If NETFILES support is enabled, the setting below adds the
+web-accessible PhysioBank databases to the default path;  you may wish to
+change this to use a nearby PhysioNet mirror (for a list of mirrors, see
+http://www.physionet.org/mirrors/).   DEFWFDBP must not be NULL, however.
+The default given below for the Macintosh specifies that the WFDB path is to
+be read from the file udb/dbpath.mac on the third edition of the MIT-BIH
+Arrhythmia Database CD-ROM (which has a volume name of `MITADB3'); you may
+prefer to use a file on a writable disk for this purpose to make
+reconfiguration possible.  See getwfdb() in wfdbio.c for further information.
+*/
 #ifdef MAC
 # ifdef FIXISOCD
 #  define DEFWFDBP	"@MITADB3:UDB:DBPATH.MAC;1"
@@ -78,7 +91,11 @@
 # define __STDC__
 # endif
 #else
-# define DEFWFDBP	""
+# ifdef NETFILES
+#  define DEFWFDBP	". http://www.physionet.org/physiobank/database"
+# else
+#  define DEFWFDBP	"."
+# endif
 #endif
 
 /* DEFWFDBC is the name of the default WFDB calibration file, used if the
@@ -88,7 +105,19 @@
 supplied on the various CD-ROM databases.  DEFWFDBC may be NULL if you prefer
 not to have a default calibration file.  See calopen() in calib.c for further
 information. */
-#define DEFWFDBC "dbcal"
+#define DEFWFDBC "wfdbcal"
+
+/* putenv() is available in POSIX, SVID, and BSD Unices and in MS-DOS and
+32-bit MS Windows, but not under 16-bit MS Windows or under MacOS.  If it is
+available, getwfdb() (in wfdbio.c) detects when the environment variables WFDB
+or WFDBCAL are not set, and sets them according to DEFWFDBP or DEFWFDBC as
+needed using putenv().  This feature is useful mainly for programs such as
+WAVE, where WFDB or WFDBCAL are set interactively and it is useful to show
+their default values to the user;  setwfdb() and getwfdb() do not depend on it.
+*/
+#if !defined(_WIN16) && !defined(MAC)
+#define HAS_PUTENV
+#endif
 
 #ifndef FILE
 #include <stdio.h>
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/wave/Makefile wfdb-10.1.1/wave/Makefile
--- wfdb-10.1.0/wave/Makefile	Thu Jan  6 10:59:27 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/wave/Makefile	Sun Jan 30 04:34:02 2000
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 # file: Makefile	G. Moody	 1 May 1990
-#			Last revised: 22 November 1999		WAVE 6.3
+#			Last revised: 29 January 2000		WAVE 6.3
 # `make' description file for WAVE
 #
 # -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 # WAVE: Waveform analyzer, viewer, and editor
-# Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
+# Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
 #
 # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
 # the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
@@ -230,7 +230,7 @@
 	$(CC) -o wave $(OFILES) $(LDFLAGS)
 
 wave-static:	$(OFILES)
-	$(CC) -o wave $(OFILES) -static $(LDFLAGS)
+	$(CC) -o wave-static $(OFILES) -static $(LDFLAGS)
 
 soelim:		soelim.c
 	$(CC) -o soelim -O soelim.c
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/wave/nomake wfdb-10.1.1/wave/nomake
--- wfdb-10.1.0/wave/nomake	Wed Dec 31 19:00:00 1969
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/wave/nomake	Sun Jan 30 02:47:08 2000
@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
+# file: nomake		G. Moody	30 January 2000
+#
+# If renamed as 'makefile', this file prevents WAVE from being compiled
+# on systems that don't have XView installed.
+
+install:
+	@echo "Skipping installation of WAVE (XView required)."
+
+wave:
+	@echo "Skipping compilation of WAVE (XView required)."
+
+clean:
+	make -f Makefile clean
\ No newline at end of file
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/wave/wave.h wfdb-10.1.1/wave/wave.h
--- wfdb-10.1.0/wave/wave.h	Thu Jan  6 10:59:29 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/wave/wave.h	Sun Jan 30 04:13:21 2000
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
 /* file: wave.h		G. Moody	26 April 1990
-			Last revised:    4 May 1999
+			Last revised:  21 January 2000
 Constants, macros, global variables, and function prototypes for WAVE
 
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 WAVE: Waveform analyzer, viewer, and editor
-Copyright (C) 1999 George B. Moody
+Copyright (C) 2000 George B. Moody
 
 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
@@ -59,12 +59,12 @@
 #define END_ANALYSIS	(ACMAX+3)
 #define REF_MARK	(ACMAX+4)
 
-/* These can be increased harmlessly.  Since annotator names and log file
+/* These can be increased harmlessly.  Since record names and log file
    names can include path information, it is probably best not to decrease
    ANLMAX or LNLMAX. */
-#define ANLMAX	79	/* length of longest permissible annotator name */
+#define ANLMAX	39	/* length of longest permissible annotator name */
 #define LNLMAX	79	/* length of longest permissible log file name */
-#define RNLMAX	19	/* length of longest permissible record name */
+#define RNLMAX	79	/* length of longest permissible record name */
 #define DSLMAX	80	/* length of longest permissible description in log */
 
 /* Default array indices for scale settings (see modepan.c and xvwave.c). */
diff -Naur wfdb-10.1.0/wave-doc/guide/cover.wug wfdb-10.1.1/wave-doc/guide/cover.wug
--- wfdb-10.1.0/wave-doc/guide/cover.wug	Tue Jan 11 16:52:25 2000
+++ wfdb-10.1.1/wave-doc/guide/cover.wug	Sun Jan 30 04:13:25 2000
@@ -46,4 +46,25 @@
 
 
 JANUARY 2000
+.bp
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
 
