> Am 01.05.2022 um 13:42 schrieb Jakub Jelinek via Gcc <gcc@gcc.gnu.org>:
> 
> On Sun, May 01, 2022 at 11:02:29AM +0100, Iain Sandoe wrote:
>> All of these show new fails (presumably because checking is off):
>> 
>> XPASS: c-c++-common/goacc/kernels-decompose-pr100400-1-2.c  -std=c++98 
>> (internal compiler error)
>> FAIL: c-c++-common/goacc/kernels-decompose-pr100400-1-2.c  -std=c++98 (test 
>> for excess errors)
>> XPASS: c-c++-common/goacc/kernels-decompose-pr100400-1-2.c  -std=c++14 
>> (internal compiler error)
>> FAIL: c-c++-common/goacc/kernels-decompose-pr100400-1-2.c  -std=c++14 (test 
>> for excess errors)
>> XPASS: c-c++-common/goacc/kernels-decompose-pr100400-1-2.c  -std=c++17 
>> (internal compiler error)
>> FAIL: c-c++-common/goacc/kernels-decompose-pr100400-1-2.c  -std=c++17 (test 
>> for excess errors)
>> XPASS: c-c++-common/goacc/kernels-decompose-pr100400-1-2.c  -std=c++20 
>> (internal compiler error)
>> FAIL: c-c++-common/goacc/kernels-decompose-pr100400-1-2.c  -std=c++20 (test 
>> for excess errors)
> 
> We can live with that for 12.1.
> 
>> earlier x86 darwin is particularly noisy test-wise because there seem to be 
>> a lot of newer AVX512 tests
>> that do not check for support from the assembler etc.
> 
> That would be nice to fix for 12.2, can you file a PR with a list?
> 
>> However from Darwin12+ (macOS 10.8) we expect to be able to bootstrap with 
>> the host clang, but:
>> 
>> Not OK:
>> x86_64-darwin{12..15} FAIL to bootstrap with host clang, this is a 
>> regression.
>> 
>> the reason is that "gcc/analyzer/region-model.cc” uses initializer_lists, 
>> and it seems that <initializer_list>
>> is not transitively included by any used headers for _LIBCPP_VERSION < 4000. 
>>  I fixed that locally by
>> adding initializer_list into system.h (and adding INCLUDE_INITIALIZER_LIST 
>> to the top of 
>> gcc/analyzer/region-model.cc)
>> - with that change those versions do bootstrap and test OK***
> 
> From what I can see, with libstdc++ it works because <utility> which is
> included by system.h includes <initializer_list>.
> If I rename initializer_list in analyzer/region-model.ii to 
> initializer_listx, I
> also get:
> ../../gcc/analyzer/region-model.cc: In function ‘void 
> ana::selftest::test_binop_svalue_folding()’:
> ../../gcc/analyzer/region-model.cc:4966:48: error: deducing from 
> brace-enclosed initializer list requires ‘#include <initializer_list>’
> 4508 | 
>  +++ |+#include <initializer_list>
> 4509 | static void
> ......
> 4966 |     for (auto op : {BIT_IOR_EXPR, TRUTH_OR_EXPR})
>      |                                                ^
> ../../gcc/analyzer/region-model.cc:4978:49: error: deducing from 
> brace-enclosed initializer list requires ‘#include <initializer_list>’
> 4978 |     for (auto op : {BIT_AND_EXPR, TRUTH_AND_EXPR})
>      |                                                 ^
> 
> I think we have 2 options, one is do what you wrote above,
> INCLUDE_INITIALIZER_LIST defined before system.h to get #include 
> <initializer_list>.
> The other option is just to include that unconditionally, it is a very small
> header.  For libstdc++ it will make no difference as it is included anyway
> and the header is really small there, libc++ includes <cstddef> which isn't
> normally included and system.h includes <stddef.h> instead.

I’d say unconditionally would be OK. I suppose the chance that any host C++ is 
good enough to build GCC as-is but fails to provide <initializer_list> is zero?

I’d be OK to do this change without a new RC even.

Richard.

> 
>    Jakub
> 

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