commit: ce14c54c36777aa0738b27f0828feddc869c1f6e Author: Austin English <wizardedit <AT> gentoo <DOT> org> AuthorDate: Mon Jun 27 08:54:29 2016 +0000 Commit: Austin English <wizardedit <AT> gentoo <DOT> org> CommitDate: Mon Jun 27 08:55:57 2016 +0000 URL: https://gitweb.gentoo.org/repo/gentoo.git/commit/?id=ce14c54c
sys-devel/{clang,llvm}: add myself as maintainer sys-devel/clang/metadata.xml | 4 ++++ sys-devel/llvm/metadata.xml | 4 ++++ 2 files changed, 8 insertions(+) diff --git a/sys-devel/clang/metadata.xml b/sys-devel/clang/metadata.xml index 326f12b..2165c0a 100644 --- a/sys-devel/clang/metadata.xml +++ b/sys-devel/clang/metadata.xml @@ -5,6 +5,10 @@ <email>mgo...@gentoo.org</email> <name>Michał Górny</name> </maintainer> + <maintainer type="person"> + <email>wizarde...@gentoo.org</email> + <name>Austin English</name> + </maintainer> <longdescription>The goal of the Clang project is to create a new C, C++, Objective C and Objective C++ front-end for the LLVM compiler. Features and Goals diff --git a/sys-devel/llvm/metadata.xml b/sys-devel/llvm/metadata.xml index 6d78a05..3a671d6 100644 --- a/sys-devel/llvm/metadata.xml +++ b/sys-devel/llvm/metadata.xml @@ -9,6 +9,10 @@ <email>willi...@gentoo.org</email> <name>William Hubbs</name> </maintainer> + <maintainer type="person"> + <email>wizarde...@gentoo.org</email> + <name>Austin English</name> + </maintainer> <longdescription>Low Level Virtual Machine (LLVM) is: 1. A compilation strategy designed to enable effective program optimization across the entire lifetime of a program. LLVM supports effective optimization at compile time, link-time (particularly interprocedural), run-time and offline (i.e., after software is installed), while remaining transparent to developers and maintaining compatibility with existing build scripts. 2. A virtual instruction set - LLVM is a low-level object code representation that uses simple RISC-like instructions, but provides rich, language-independent, type information and dataflow (SSA) information about operands. This combination enables sophisticated transformations on object code, while remaining light-weight enough to be attached to the executable. This combination is key to allowing link-time, run-time, and offline transformations.