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On 20 Aug 2015 16:36, Joseph Myers wrote: > On Thu, 20 Aug 2015, Mike Frysinger wrote: > > On 20 Aug 2015 13:51, Joseph Myers wrote: > > > For glibc 2.21 we increased the minimum GCC version for building glibc to > > > 4.6. There's one major GCC release a year, so the correspondingly old > > > version for glibc 2.23 would be GCC 4.7. What do people think about > > > increasing the minimum version requirement? > > > > i'd like to see the diff (not exact, but at least get an idea). > > The idea is that the dead code is cleaned up incrementally after the main > diff does nothing beyond the version increases, not to prepare in advance > diffs that may or may not be needed.... i'm aware of basic truisms (if we don't support X, then it means less work). i don't think that's relevant to the discussion. when someone says "i want to drop feature X", then imo they really need to provide concrete examples of what dropping that gains us. > > > * Being able to assume __atomic_* are supported by the compiler if > > > desired. > > > > do we actually get that ? not all arches expand these as insns but > > to external calls to libatomic. unless we're ok with libc/libpthread > > linking against libatomic ? > > We get that for architectures where it's expanded inline, if we wish to > use it on those architectures (maybe through architectures choosing to > include a generic file after defining some macros to configure it). so as a general point, this isn't actually that useful. instead it would be written as: * Being able to assume __atomic_* are supported by the compiler for some arches and some builtins iff the builtin expands into insns > The version increase would fix at least one known bug (17404, for mips16) > by removing the case where __sync_* are used but don't have sufficient > barriers (though for non-mips16 MIPS __atomic_* are best used only with > 4.8 and later). i'm not sure why that bug couldn't be fixed now for 4.7+ with a __GNUC_PREREQ check. that would make finding examples for dropping 4.6 support easier to locate. > > > * When using pragmas to disable -Wmaybe-uninitialized warnings, no need to > > > have conditionals to disable -Wuninitialized instead for 4.6 > > > (-Wmaybe-uninitialized was added in 4.7). > > > > we could use -Wno-error for gcc-4.6 too ... > > We're trying to move away from global -Wno- options.... yes, but as we've already seen & agreed upon, trying to support warning-free builds is not an exact science, and is generally best effort. if we can replace a lot of sprinkled pragmas/macros in the source with a global -W flag for older versions, that sounds like a fine trade off to me. > > > * More C11 support, so we no longer need to XFAIL some conform/ tests and > > > could use the new features in glibc if desired. > > > > shouldn't we already be handling this and not XFAIL-ing when the compiler > > is new enough ? > > Although such configure tests would be possible, they'd seem like > overkill. i'm not suggesting feature tests. we're already testing & have access to the compiler version which means it should be possible to leverage that data. -mike
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