News: 0001569138

  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

GCC Developers Discuss Dropping Poorly Supported, Niche CPU Architectures

([GNU] 6 Hours Ago GCC Compiler)


Following the discussion over [1]potentially obsoleting/deprecating the Itanium IA-64 support within the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC), developers are discussing similar treatment for some of the other poorly-maintained CPU ports.

GCC developers have begun discussing potentially deprecating some of the other CPU ports that rarely ever see new code activity. There are also known limitations with some of them, not supporting modern GCC features, and just rotting away without any active maintainership. The ports/architectures under discussion are:

The "epiphany" port for the Adapteva Epiphany architecture saw two fixes in 2024 but before that the prior change was all the way back in 2016 with a fix.

The "m32c" is another poorly maintained port with the last fix for this Renesas M32C 32-bit MCU port being done is all the way back in 2015.

The "rl78" port for the Renesas RL78 low-power 8-bit and 16-bit micro-controllers hasn't seen a fix since 2018.

These ports do not have any maintainer and see fixes rarely. There is also discussion over making GCC test suite test results done for each architecture a minimum of once per year to be considered maintained.

That discussion is now happening in [2]this GCC thread . It's likely we'll see all three of them end up being deprecated and then removed a release cycle later if no one steps up to maintain the code.



[1] https://www.phoronix.com/news/Itanium-IA-64-GCC-16-Obsolete

[2] https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc/2025-August/246502.html



JEBjames

Clippit Charged With Attempted Murder

Microsoft's Dancing Paper Clip turned violent last week and nearly killed
a university student testing a new Windows-based human-computer interface.
The victim is expected to make a full recovery, although psychiatrists
warn that the incident may scar him emotionally for life. "You can bet
this kid won't be using Windows or Office ever again," said one shrink.

The victim had been alpha-testing CHUG (Computer-Human Unencumbered
Groupware), a new interface in which the user controls the computer with
force-feedback gloves and voice activation.

"I was trying to write a term paper in Word," he said from his hospital
bed. "But then that damned Dancing Paper Clip came up and started annoying
me. I gave it the middle finger. It reacted by deleting my document, at
which point I screamed at it and threatened to pull the power cord. I
didn't get a chance; the force-feedback gloves started choking me."

"We told Clippit it had the right to remain silent, and so on," said a
campus police officer. "The paperclip responded, 'Hi, I'm Clippit, the
Office Assistant. Would you like to create a letter?' I said, 'Look here,
Mr. Paperclip. You're being charged with attempted murder.' At that point
the computer bluescreened."