On 21.01.2016 15:03, Chris Pavlina wrote: > Hm, is this really something we want to get into? Nice to remove the > dependency, but when something breaks in the future, do we have any/many > developers who can support x86 assembly code? >
Concerning the support: I can do that, but there is absolutely nothing to support. This library does just context switching and nothing else and it contains no original code. In fact, it's generated from boost::context by a script. It will never need an update unless: - We decide to support a completely new HW platform. Porting anything that boost::context already supports is trivial. I didn't include MIPS/PPC/Sparc/ARM platform files because I couldn't test if they work. - We change the compiler to something else than Clang/GCC. - Intel changes the instruction set of their CPUs. > I really think that if we're going to have to support this, it should be > something conceptually simpler, like an emulation of coroutines using a > set of threads and locks. Have a look at the discussion between Lorenzo, Kristian and Torsten. Emulating coroutines with threads can only bring more problems. Cheers, Tom > > On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 02:42:05PM +0100, Tomasz Wlostowski wrote: >> Hi, >> >> This patch replaces boost::context with a small library called >> libcontext (derived from boost::context sources). It drops the >> dependency on boost for the cost of one additional header file and cpp >> file (taking inspiration from ClipperLib). >> >> I've tested the new context switching code on Linux, OSX (El Capitan) & >> Windows (all OS 32-bit and 64-bit Intel). Supported compilers are GCC >> and Clang. >> >> Let me know if Kicad builds and works correctly on your platforms... >> >> Cheers, >> Tom _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~kicad-developers Post to : [email protected] Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~kicad-developers More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

