On Thu, Oct 13, 2022 at 08:38:02PM +0200, Florian Weimer wrote: > * Mark Brown: > > On Thu, Oct 13, 2022 at 10:37:21AM -0600, Jason A. Donenfeld wrote: > > I was looking at your suggestion there - as a Debian user that feels a > > touch enthusiastic (though practically probably not actually a problem) > > since it's not too far off the release cadence, current Debian is at GCC > > 10 and we're not due for another release till sometime next year which > > will be right on the three years. > Debian also has Clang 13, presumably for building Rust and Firefox. Ah, so it does - nice! > > There does also seem to be a contingent of people running enterprise > > distros managed by an IT department or whatever who may take a while > > to get round to pushing out new versions so for example might still > > for example be running Ubuntu 20.04 rather than 22.04 (never mind the > > people I know are sitting on 18.04 but that's another thing). > The enterprise distributions have toolchain modules or toolsets that you > can install, all nicely integrated. You'd probably consider those > versions too new. 8-/ I expect it's mostly an education issue, raising > awareness of what's available from vendors. (glibc versions are a > different matter, but I don't think dropping support for historic > versions on build hosts is on the table, so that should be relevant.) Yeah, I found the ones for SLES easily enough but not the ones for RHEL or Ubuntu. Perfectly prepared to believe they're there though, it does seem like sometihng users might want.