Nico Weber via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 13:09 UTC
[llvm-dev] [cfe-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
FWIW I'm a fan of using open-source stuff for open-source projects. Discourse looks open source, but Discord doesn't as far as I can tell (?). On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 3:15 AM Chandler Carruth via cfe-dev < cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Hello folks, > > I sent the message quoted below to llvm-dev@ just now, but it applies to > the whole community so sending an FYI here. Probably best to follow up w/ > discussion on llvm-dev. > > The archive link for reference is here: > http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-November/136880.html > > On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:48 PM Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hello everyone, >> >> >> *Short version:*I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat >> (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email >> lists): >> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >> >> Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up >> and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to >> this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both >> services have dedicated feedback channels. >> >> Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not >> to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists >> and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with >> are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse >> doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. >> >> >> *Longer version & more details:*During this year's Women in Compilers >> and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication >> systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to >> find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and >> mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and >> often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and >> resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was >> compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means >> I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] >> >> We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and >> the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for >> longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord >> and Discourse server. You can find them here: >> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >> >> There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks >> to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, >> and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and >> Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to >> these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set >> up. Some specific things we're already working on: >> >> - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. >> - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one >> place, etc. >> - See the plan here: >> https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 >> - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. >> - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a >> similarly email-focused workflow. >> >> >> We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try >> using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the >> bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have >> had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of >> spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very >> powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously >> consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. >> >> I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for >> giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these >> kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to >> people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a >> lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also >> helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to >> Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this >> message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set >> up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around >> Discord bots. >> >> -Chandler >> > _______________________________________________ > cfe-dev mailing list > cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/429b6b35/attachment.html>
Ryan Taylor via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 13:40 UTC
[llvm-dev] [cfe-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Are the barriers to newcomers really the tools and not just the community's general attitude toward newcomers? On Mon, Nov 18, 2019, 8:11 AM Nico Weber via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> FWIW I'm a fan of using open-source stuff for open-source projects. > Discourse looks open source, but Discord doesn't as far as I can tell (?). > > On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 3:15 AM Chandler Carruth via cfe-dev < > cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >> Hello folks, >> >> I sent the message quoted below to llvm-dev@ just now, but it applies to >> the whole community so sending an FYI here. Probably best to follow up w/ >> discussion on llvm-dev. >> >> The archive link for reference is here: >> http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-November/136880.html >> >> On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:48 PM Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>> Hello everyone, >>> >>> >>> *Short version:*I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat >>> (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email >>> lists): >>> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >>> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >>> >>> Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up >>> and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to >>> this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both >>> services have dedicated feedback channels. >>> >>> Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try >>> not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the >>> lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion >>> with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse >>> doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. >>> >>> >>> *Longer version & more details:*During this year's Women in Compilers >>> and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication >>> systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to >>> find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and >>> mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and >>> often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and >>> resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was >>> compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means >>> I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] >>> >>> We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and >>> the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for >>> longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord >>> and Discourse server. You can find them here: >>> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >>> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >>> >>> There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for >>> folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in >>> Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both >>> Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of >>> improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we >>> can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: >>> >>> - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. >>> - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one >>> place, etc. >>> - See the plan here: >>> https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 >>> - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. >>> - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a >>> similarly email-focused workflow. >>> >>> >>> We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try >>> using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the >>> bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have >>> had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of >>> spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very >>> powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously >>> consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. >>> >>> I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for >>> giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these >>> kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to >>> people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a >>> lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also >>> helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to >>> Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this >>> message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set >>> up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around >>> Discord bots. >>> >>> -Chandler >>> >> _______________________________________________ >> cfe-dev mailing list >> cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org >> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev >> > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/4501ac62/attachment.html>
Roman Lebedev via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 15:06 UTC
[llvm-dev] [cfe-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 4:10 PM Nico Weber via cfe-dev <cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > FWIW I'm a fan of using open-source stuff for open-source projects. Discourse looks open source, but Discord doesn't as far as I can tell (?).+1. I don't believe this decision was well thought-through. The Discord's ToS, lack of open-source clients (if you can even call the situation like that, feels like ICQ/Skype all over again), centralization, etc; are pretty 'major' regressions. As a general, not really LLVM-specific remark, I find it worrying that the noble goal of usability improvement/entry barrier lowering is being applied with only said endgoal in mind and no real assessment of the approach taken, the effect produced by such approach and the cost it incurs on the existing ecosystem/community/etc. But this is very much the norm in nowadays world :/ Roman.> On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 3:15 AM Chandler Carruth via cfe-dev <cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >> >> Hello folks, >> >> I sent the message quoted below to llvm-dev@ just now, but it applies to the whole community so sending an FYI here. Probably best to follow up w/ discussion on llvm-dev. >> >> The archive link for reference is here: >> http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-November/136880.html >> >> On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:48 PM Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> Hello everyone, >>> >>> Short version: >>> I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): >>> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >>> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >>> >>> Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. >>> >>> Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. >>> >>> Longer version & more details: >>> During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] >>> >>> We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: >>> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >>> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >>> >>> There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: >>> >>> Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. >>> Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. >>> >>> See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 >>> >>> Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. >>> Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. >>> >>> >>> We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. >>> >>> I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. >>> >>> -Chandler >> >> _______________________________________________ >> cfe-dev mailing list >> cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org >> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev > > _______________________________________________ > cfe-dev mailing list > cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev
David Truby via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 17:47 UTC
[llvm-dev] [cfe-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Hi all,> On Mon, 2019-11-18 at 08:09 -0500, Nico Weber via llvm-dev wrote:FWIW > I'm a fan of using open-source stuff for open-source projects. > Discourse looks open source, but Discord doesn't as far as I can tell > (?).As regards this, I wonder if Matrix (matrix.org) has been considered at all? It's an open standard protocol with a number of open source clients that behaves very similarly to Slack/Discord. A number of other open source communities I follow are using this already. David Truby
Matthew Hodgson via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-19 01:17 UTC
[llvm-dev] [cfe-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On 18/11/2019 17:47, David Truby via llvm-dev wrote:> Hi all, > >> On Mon, 2019-11-18 at 08:09 -0500, Nico Weber via llvm-dev wrote:FWIW >> I'm a fan of using open-source stuff for open-source projects. >> Discourse looks open source, but Discord doesn't as far as I can tell >> (?). > > As regards this, I wonder if Matrix (matrix.org) has been considered at > all? It's an open standard protocol with a number of open source > clients that behaves very similarly to Slack/Discord. A number of other > open source communities I follow are using this already.[ Disclaimer: I'm the project lead for Matrix.org, so am hardly impartial on this. (That said, we keep up with LLVM given we lean on it hard via emscripten when compiling our end-to-end encryption implementation (https://gitlab.matrix.org/matrix-org/olm) down to WASM and JS, so I have some tenuous claim to be lurking here ;) ] We built Matrix to be an entirely open network and open standard chat protocol, with the intention of combining the good bits of IRC (the community; the openness; the standardisation; the relative ease of dev; open source servers & clients) with clients which provide an accessible UX of similar quality to Discord/Slack. Riot.im is the most advanced client, and while it's still not quite as glossy as Discord, the gap is closing, and we're moving faster than they are. I get why some open source projects (e.g. bits of Rust) have moved to Discord out of pragmatism for having the smoothest possible UX to ensure the widest audience, but it comes at a cost. The main tradeoffs are: * As others have pointed out, Discord's monetisation model is that they own your data. In Matrix, all participating servers share responsibility for conversations, and users can pick whichever server they happen to trust. The ones we run as Matrix.org have these policies (https://github.com/vector-im/policies/tree/master/docs/matrix-org), but you can use whichever you like. Additionally, Matrix is managed by the non-profit Matrix.org Foundation (https://matrix.org/foundation), to protect the protocol's users from conflicting commercial interests. * Discord locks you into a proprietary service. It's the chat equivalent of using MSVC Express just because it happens to be free and glossy. Discord explicitly forbids 3rd party clients and bridging, and you're not exactly going to have the freedom to tweak and extend the server - which is after all what open source is all about. In contrast, https://matrix.org/docs/spec is the Spec we publish that forms the core of the Matrix protocol, and https://matrix.org/docs/projects/try-matrix-now/ is an overview of all the implementations (servers, clients, bots, bridges etc) of it. * Discord traps you in a proprietary silo. You can talk to anyone you like... as long as they're on Discord. If you want to collaborate directly with other projects on IRC, Slack, XMPP or wherever you're screwed. Matrix provides increasingly decent bridges to IRC, Discord, Slack, etc so even if folks aren't natively on Matrix, you can talk to them anyway. (And if LLVM does end up on Discord, we'll go ahead and bridge the Discord channels into Matrix anyway :P) * You don't have any end-to-end encryption. If you ever found yourself discussing something sensitive (e.g. security vuln coordination) and don't want eavesdroppers in or around the server from following along, you're out of luck. Matrix however implements Signal-style Double Ratchet as required. I could go on, but I think the best datapoint I can think of is Mozilla's recent trial where they stood up Matrix/Riot, Slack, MatterMost & Rocket.chat side by side for a month-long comparison. (Discord was dismissed out of hand due to their dubious privacy policies). They haven't announced the final winner yet, but you a sample of the feedback they gathered can be found at https://discourse.mozilla.org/t/synchronous-messaging-at-mozilla-trial-servers-feedback/44871. And empirically, by the end of the trial, almost all the community chatter was happening on Matrix rather than the other instances, which were a bit dead (at least in the public channels). It also spurred a *lot* of development - for instance, we went from having some of the worst accessibility to being one of the best, c.f. https://toot.cafe/@marcozehe/102998816933348357. TL;DR: please don't pick a chat solution based purely on its current shininess and UX. The FOSS options are evolving very rapidly (much more so than the Slacks & Discords), but we will only be able to grow if we're given the opportunity, rather than being dismissed due to being FOSS or "not mainstream" - much like LLVM in the early days needed champions to spur forward development. Matthew P.S. and even if some of Rust are lost on Discord, others ended up on Matrix, c.f. https://github.com/rust-embedded/wg/issues/357#issuecomment-504793602 -- Matthew Hodgson Matrix.org
Whisperity via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-20 08:43 UTC
[llvm-dev] [cfe-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
There *are* open-source Discord clients, 3rd party tools and the like. The corporation behind Discord is just not authorising you legally to use any of those tools at hand. There are rarely any technical barriers or countermeasures, though. Roman Lebedev via cfe-dev <cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> ezt írta (időpont: 2019. nov. 18., H, 16:08):> On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 4:10 PM Nico Weber via cfe-dev > <cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > > > FWIW I'm a fan of using open-source stuff for open-source projects. > Discourse looks open source, but Discord doesn't as far as I can tell (?). > +1. I don't believe this decision was well thought-through. > The Discord's ToS, lack of open-source clients (if you can even call > the situation like that, > feels like ICQ/Skype all over again), centralization, etc; are pretty > 'major' regressions. > > As a general, not really LLVM-specific remark, > I find it worrying that the noble goal of usability improvement/entry > barrier lowering is being applied with only said endgoal in mind > and no real assessment of the approach taken, the effect produced > by such approach and the cost it incurs on the existing > ecosystem/community/etc. > But this is very much the norm in nowadays world :/ > > > Roman. > > > On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 3:15 AM Chandler Carruth via cfe-dev < > cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >> > >> Hello folks, > >> > >> I sent the message quoted below to llvm-dev@ just now, but it applies > to the whole community so sending an FYI here. Probably best to follow up > w/ discussion on llvm-dev. > >> > >> The archive link for reference is here: > >> http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-November/136880.html > >> > >> On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:48 PM Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com> > wrote: > >>> > >>> Hello everyone, > >>> > >>> Short version: > >>> I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) > and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > >>> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > >>> https://llvm.discourse.group/ > >>> > >>> Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up > and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to > this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > >>> > >>> Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try > not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the > lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion > with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > >>> > >>> Longer version & more details: > >>> During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks > expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial > amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or > contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form > discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for > newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these > areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us > as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious > IRC. ;] > >>> > >>> We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and > the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for > longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord > and Discourse server. You can find them here: > >>> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > >>> https://llvm.discourse.group/ > >>> > >>> There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for > folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in > Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both > Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of > improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we > can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > >>> > >>> Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > >>> Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, > etc. > >>> > >>> See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > >>> > >>> Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > >>> Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > >>> > >>> > >>> We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > >>> > >>> I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for > giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these > kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to > people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a > lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also > helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to > Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this > message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set > up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around > Discord bots. > >>> > >>> -Chandler > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> cfe-dev mailing list > >> cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org > >> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev > > > > _______________________________________________ > > cfe-dev mailing list > > cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org > > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev > _______________________________________________ > cfe-dev mailing list > cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191120/a6cebdd3/attachment.html>
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