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Date:      Sun, 02 May 2010 00:25:22 -0700
From:      Yuri <yuri@rawbw.com>
To:        =?UTF-8?B?QW5kcml1cyBNb3JrxatuYXM=?= <hinokind@gmail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org, freebsd-ports@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: GSoC: Making ports work with clang
Message-ID:  <4BDD28E2.8010201@rawbw.com>
In-Reply-To: <op.vb0w1zrh43o42p@klevas>
References:  <op.vb0w1zrh43o42p@klevas>

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Andrius Morkūnas wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm Andrius Morkūnas from Lithuania. My Summer of Code proposal was 
> accepted
> this year and be working on my project, which is to make clang and 
> ports to
> be friendly with each other.
> My main goals are:
> * Create an easy way to set ports compiler to either clang or gcc (and 
> no,
>   CC=clang is not a good way to do that).
> * Write a tool to detect common problems with individual ports not 
> respecting
>   environment variables like CC/CXX or doing other horrible things 
> that break
>   compilation with clang.
> * Make Gnome, KDE, Xorg and other widely used things to work with clang.

Having tried clang++ I have a feeling that it's not quite ready to be a 
generic c++ compiler.
It crashes a lot, fails on many quite simple c++ patterns. Very immature.
Don't you feel it's too early to start project like you are going to 
given the state of clang with c++?
You will just keep stumbling upon various problems with various ports 
and maybe will make 30% of c++ ports build with it at best.

Yuri



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