>>>>> Giovanni Bajo writes: Giovanni> This is a little unfair, though. So now the burden on enforcing the policy is Giovanni> not on the maintainers that prepare the patches? The people involved in this Giovanni> change have been working on GCC much longer than those who (later) objected. Giovanni> They should have known our rules much better, and they should have asked a Giovanni> buy-in from SC before starting this work, instead of silently forcing it in, Giovanni> and then see if they could shut up the people who object (if any).
This is an unfair characterization. Target-specific changes have been committed to GCC close to a release ever since I started working on GCC over fifteen years ago. Every Release Manager has tried to accomodate port maintainers. I also do not see anyone trying to prevent people from objecting. I do see a few people repeatedly raising the same objections without constructive suggestions, despite public replies responding to the concerns. That type of discussion is not productive. I am sorry that you and others are upset. I think everyone would have appreciated greater communication and earlier notice. That does not change the current situation. I do not see any reason to penalize the targets who are trying to work within the current constraints to achieve functional GCC and GLIBC releases. Giovanni> I won't buy the argument "I won't hold up the release for this" as well, since Giovanni> it misses the point that many important resources in GCC are being used in Giovanni> fixing and testing this new feature, instead of putting GCC in shape for the Giovanni> release. So the release has been already delayed because of this, and will be Giovanni> even more. That's something which already happened. You seem to be redirecting your frustration about the release onto the long-double-128 work as a scapegoat. Neither you nor the GCC Release Manager nor the GCC SC can force any GCC developer to work on any particular project. If the resources were not directed at long-double-128, there is no guarantee that they would be directed as the GCC 4.1 release or bugfixes or patch review or any other particular project that you want. I am sorry that your particular priorities are not progressing as quickly as you wish, but lashing out at other developers and their work will not solve that problem. David