Larry McVoy said ...
> On Wed, Oct 04, 2000 at 04:28:41AM +0000, John Anthony Kazos Jr. wrote:
> > What does everyone have against gcc 2.95 on this list? I've been
> > compiling kernels successfully (read: not one single (ever) error
> > in compilation) with gcc 2.95.2 for more than a year now. What's the
> > big deal?
> 
> [Fix your mail program to put in carriage returns at 72 columns, please]

(kettle calling pot black)  Look at your own signature line, Larry :-)

> I hate it because it compiles much more slowly than 2.72 and for
> my purposes, at least, the resulting code is not any faster on
> any of the following platforms: x86, SPARC, MIPS, PA-RISC, and Alpha.

So your sole basis for disliking 2.95 is that the *compiler* is slower??
Not the code it generates, not the error messages it spits out or the
strictness (or lack there of) of type inforcement??  Just the speed??
Hmm... well, I guess everyone's gotta have something to hate...

All right, then just what *is* a good version to use?  No, better yet,
what is a good version to use when porting to a new processor (actually
an old processor)?  I've pulled the source to gcc (2.95.2) and binutils
(2.10) in prep for a port to a new/old machine.  If these versions aren't
good to start from, what versions are and where can I find them?

> ---
> Larry McVoy                    lm at bitmover.com           
>http://www.bitmover.com/lm 

-- 
Peter A. Castro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> or <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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