Hello, Everyone. As you may have already noticed, 2.1 release is "really soon". Recently we found, that LLVM is somehow hard to use for end-users due to lack of "packages" for different distributions. It might not be convenient to compile LLVM from source, because of broken gcc's supplied in binary packages for many distributions (for example, many Ubuntu's still have gcc 4.1.2 and so on). So, in general, user should at first compile gcc, then - LLVM and llvm-gcc. This seems to be pretty much overkill. We're trying to provide as much possible binary packages as we can, but this is not enough. It will be pretty good, if there will be packages for. If you can build binary/source for your distribution, you'll help LLVM alot. -- With best regards, Anton Korobeynikov. Faculty of Mathematics & Mechanics, Saint Petersburg State University.
Hi Anton,> It might not be convenient to compile LLVM from source, because of > broken gcc's supplied in binary packages for many distributions (for > example, many Ubuntu's still have gcc 4.1.2 and so on).I never had any problems compiling LLVM/llvm-gcc using ubuntu's gcc 4.1. Ciao, Duncan.
On Thu, Sep 13, 2007 at 09:13:30PM +0400, Anton Korobeynikov wrote:> Hello, Everyone. > > As you may have already noticed, 2.1 release is "really soon". Recently > we found, that LLVM is somehow hard to use for end-users due to lack of > "packages" for different distributions.I'd like to announce that the FreeBSD ports devel/llvm and lang/llvm-gcc4 have now been updated to 2.1 Big thanks to Brooks Davis and Max Khon for committing the updates! --Emil
I'm just going to say that Arch linux users can get LLVM 2.1 from the AUR repository, which is basically an official place for packages that have not yet made it into the main repository. So one less distro to worry about. If enough Arch linux users want it they can vote for its inclusion into the main repository. Oh and btw, I'm maintaining the package ;) http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?do_Details=1&ID=11372 On 10/16/07, Emil Mikulic <emil at cs.rmit.edu.au> wrote:> On Thu, Sep 13, 2007 at 09:13:30PM +0400, Anton Korobeynikov wrote: > > Hello, Everyone. > > > > As you may have already noticed, 2.1 release is "really soon". Recently > > we found, that LLVM is somehow hard to use for end-users due to lack of > > "packages" for different distributions. > > I'd like to announce that the FreeBSD ports devel/llvm and > lang/llvm-gcc4 have now been updated to 2.1 > > Big thanks to Brooks Davis and Max Khon for committing the updates! > > --Emil > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev >
Hello Tomas,> Oh and btw, I'm maintaining the package ;)Added, thanks!> > I'd like to announce that the FreeBSD ports devel/llvm and > > lang/llvm-gcc4 have now been updated to 2.1And this too :) -- With best regards, Anton Korobeynikov. Faculty of Mathematics & Mechanics, Saint Petersburg State University.
Emil Mikulic wrote:> Big thanks to Brooks Davis and Max Khon for committing the updates!I realize this is a really late reply, but Brooks works for me at The Aerospace Corporation, where we're pretty big advocates of LLVM. -scooter
Possibly Parallel Threads
- [LLVMdev] Call for Packages
- [LLVMdev] 2.1 Pre-Release Available (testers needed)
- [LLVMdev] 2.0 Pre-release tarballs online
- [LLVMdev] updating the "Getting Started" page with more info about the gcc4 frontend
- [LLVMdev] libstdc++ as bytecode, and compiling C++ to C