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* GCC 4.1 Status Report (2005-08-21)
@ 2005-08-22  5:28 Mark Mitchell
  2005-08-22 12:40 ` Andrew Pinski
  2005-08-22 18:49 ` Ian Lance Taylor
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Mark Mitchell @ 2005-08-22  5:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: gcc


I've reviewed all 311 bugs that were targeted at 4.0.2/4.1.0 and that
were marked as 4.1 regressions.

My first comment is that we had a lot of bugs targeted at 4.1.0 that
should never have been so targeted.  Please remember that bugs that do
not effect primary or secondary targets should not have a target
milestone.  There are several PRs that seem to have had target
milestones re-added after I removed them before, though it could also
be that I failed to remove the milestone, even though I added a
comment to that effect.  PR 17356 is an example of such a PR, though
in this case it looks like it was Andrew Pinski who removed the target
milestone.  PR 18190 is another example.  In fact, it almost looks
like someone went through and methodically re-added target milestones
to all the PRs for which they had been removed.  If that's the case,
please stop!

After removing target milestones for bugs that appeared to have been
spuriously marked, there are 271 bugs targeted at 4.1.  (I left a few
bugs that seemed to refer to languages/platforms that aren't
release-critical, on the grounds that the bugs seemed to reflect
generic problems, but I may remove even these as we move forward,
unless C/C++ examples are added that demonstrate the genericity.)

Of these, 91 are wrong-code (26), ice-on-valid, or rejects-valid.
That's not too bad.  There are a lot of C++ bugs -- but most are ICEs
or bad/missed error messages.  (Quite a few of the diagnostic messages
stem from the design decision to issue warnings from the
optimizers...)  There are a lot of missed-optimization bugs that
represent regressions.  There are the usual cast of bugs relating to
extensions, including things like supporting C99 features in C++.

Although, overall, I feel pretty good about the fact that the
*severity* of most of the open bugs is not too high, I'm not happy
with the overall *quantity* of bugs.  In the past, we've aimed for 100
open regressions before making the branch, and I don't think that's an
unreasonable target.  Therefore, as I hinted earlier, I think Stage 3
is going to have to slip.

However, if ten people commit to fixing a regression a day, we should
be able to reach 100 bugs in about three weeks, even allowing for some
new bugs popping up as we go -- which would put us at mid-September.
The most important thing is that people stop working on clean-ups and
new features -- and truly concentrate on fixing bugs.  I don't want to
be draconian about that, but let's get the bugs fixed.

--
Mark Mitchell
CodeSourcery, LLC
mark@codesourcery.com

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

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Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2005-08-22  5:28 GCC 4.1 Status Report (2005-08-21) Mark Mitchell
2005-08-22 12:40 ` Andrew Pinski
2005-08-22 14:35   ` Mark Mitchell
2005-08-22 18:49 ` Ian Lance Taylor
2005-08-22 22:30   ` Mark Mitchell

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