On 08 Sep 2021 09:23, Andrew Burgess wrote: > I wonder what the policy is these days regarding how the top level > files are maintained, e.g. Makefile.def and configure.ac? > > I know once upon a time these files were maintained in the gcc > repository and then back-ported periodically to binutils-gdb, however, > as far as I can see the last attempt to sync from gcc was this commit: > > commit f948b2de97884bfb4e5fc11d40a6bea9e0b096ae > Date: Wed May 29 12:43:42 2019 +0100 > > Sync top level files with versions from gcc. > > Which was over 2 years ago. This commit was then quickly reverted: > > commit e3f56a99f66298bb505d0426950b9716a853a5df > Date: Thu May 30 11:17:19 2019 +0100 > > Revert "Sync top level files with versions from gcc." > > Since then there's been 30+ patches to the top level files. > > My question then, is what are peoples thoughts on how these files > should be managed? Are we going to try and get back in step with gcc? > Or are we happy to continue to diverging? afaik, it's still "gcc first". when i commit changes to the top-level files, it's the same git commit (using `git am`), not a blank "sync files". i think a bunch of the other ones are the same way. https://gcc.gnu.org/git/?p=gcc.git;a=commit;h=17af39e1c0e590f4cb13d672c9ee850e871164ab https://sourceware.org/git/?p=binutils-gdb.git;a=commit;h=9cc11ab5bf10c6f7494f6015769cf81b6988317f -mike