Mirror of the gdb mailing list
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
From: "Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb" <gdb@sourceware.org>
To: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Cc: gdb@sourceware.org
Subject: Re: gdb and ancient GNU autotools
Date: Sat, 24 Feb 2024 18:30:42 +0000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <CABB28Cw3r4n2o9HRfEYTbT+BrWF+8bF8=AKEg1tdJcapQ8Tnpw@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <87o7c56ale.fsf@gentoo.org>

On Sat, 24 Feb 2024 at 17:22, Sam James <sam@gentoo.org> wrote:

> Again, I actually agree with needing to move to 2.72. But you've misread
> my previous message.
>

Yep. My fault.
Sorry.

Also note that while autoconf-2.69 is old, it took a long time for
> autoconf-2.7{0,1} to be released, so it's not quite a fair comparison.
>

Latest one is 2.72 .. released +3 months ago (which in the context of GNU
projects still is cadence below Palnck time).

Generally the issue is that maintaining anything placed on gnu.org is like
dropping something into a black hole. For observers from outside of
that hole stuff moves but slower and slower.
This is partially in context of gcc/binutils/gdb as well. Just check any OS
distro source packages and in each of these distros you can find tenths if
not sometimes hundreds of patches taken from random places fixing different
JFDI issues.
Additionally main git repos all of those projects on
https://sourceware.org/git/ are served from http server which (time to
time) throttles the number of requests/s which sometimes blocks
completely automatic downloading of the patches from exact commits over
https:// interface during automated builds.

Why those repos are not moved yet to github or even own instance of the
gitlab to provide OOTB proper cross refs between commits, discussions
MRs/PRs, issue tickets and commit comments for me is kind of a mystery ..
(IMO change that would allow move saved paid man/h resources from
maintaining that platform to something more productive like review tickets)

All tooling around constantly improves allowing speeding up of the
development processes of many projects and sticking with old platforms is
nothing more than just discouraging to even try to touch something trivial.
Sorry for maybe a few bitter words but just please look at LLVM stack.
Thay have a lot of problems but at least from that angle it is
squeaky clean.
(just please do not comment above because it is kind of rhetorical part and
focus on gdb subject)

Going back to the subject: someone at least started thinking about starting
doing something to move away from those ancient GNU autotools versions
(probably kicking a few as*ess on integrating properly some
libtool changes) or move to meson/cmake?
IMO move to meson/cmake has that advantage that would allow to stop
worrying about proper build automation features/shape necessary for
gdb/gcc/binutils as those projects have enough robust maintainers.

Someone at least made the strategic decision what should happen in that
area?🤔
And/or who has any partial work done going towards that target?
And/or where are those changes maintained/available?🤔

kloczek
-- 
Tomasz Kłoczko | inkedIn: http://lnkd.in/FXPWxH

  reply	other threads:[~2024-02-24 18:32 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 29+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2024-02-24 16:28 Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-24 16:51 ` Sam James via Gdb
2024-02-24 17:15   ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-24 17:21     ` Sam James via Gdb
2024-02-24 18:30       ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb [this message]
2024-02-24 19:31         ` Mark Wielaard
2024-02-25  0:22           ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-25  7:56             ` Mark Wielaard
2024-02-25  8:05             ` Eli Schwartz via Gdb
2024-02-25 10:40               ` Mark Wielaard
2024-02-25 21:19                 ` Eli Schwartz via Gdb
2024-02-25 21:50                   ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-25 22:20                     ` Andreas Schwab
2024-02-25 23:32                     ` Mark Wielaard
2024-02-26  0:29                       ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-26  0:46                         ` Eli Schwartz via Gdb
2024-02-26  0:55                           ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-26 11:44                         ` Mark Wielaard
2024-02-26 12:13                           ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-26  0:26                     ` Eli Schwartz via Gdb
2024-02-27 15:25         ` Tom Tromey
2024-02-27 16:37         ` Simon Marchi via Gdb
2024-02-27 17:33           ` Joseph Myers via Gdb
2024-02-27 17:42             ` Tom Tromey
2024-02-27 20:44             ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-27 20:57               ` Tomasz Kłoczko via Gdb
2024-02-27 20:59               ` Sam James via Gdb
2024-02-26  0:58 ` Andrew Pinski via Gdb
2024-02-27 15:27   ` Tom Tromey

Reply instructions:

You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:

* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
  and reply-to-all from there: mbox

  Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style

* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
  switches of git-send-email(1):

  git send-email \
    --in-reply-to='CABB28Cw3r4n2o9HRfEYTbT+BrWF+8bF8=AKEg1tdJcapQ8Tnpw@mail.gmail.com' \
    --to=gdb@sourceware.org \
    --cc=kloczko.tomasz@gmail.com \
    --cc=sam@gentoo.org \
    /path/to/YOUR_REPLY

  https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html

* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
  via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox