On Tue, Apr 03, 2018 at 11:06:58AM -0700, Matthias Kaehlcke wrote: > Yes, Chrome OS R67 (currently dev, soon beta) will ship a kernel built > with Clang for multiple x86 Chromebooks.
But there are still _known_ miscompilations.... > Given that it takes time for distributions to roll out new compiler > versions I would like to ask for a longer period of 'exemption' from > asm-goto for Clang, at least if it isn't an actual burden for the > kernel, like preventing important features from being added. An ideal > time would be after the next-next LTS version, if this is considered > too far out, after the next LTS version would be the second best time > IMO. Let me be clear, this is *not* to delay the implementation of > asm-goto, but to facilitate the use of Clang-built kernels by other > projects and distributions, as well as automated builds of upstream > kernels with Clang, without requiring necessarily the very latest > version of Clang or extra patches. I don't think that's sane or realistic, given that the very latest clang is _known_ to miscompile the kernel. How can you want to support older compilers that are therefore also known to not work correctly. Next LTS is still a fair way out, if we take LTS release to be every ~5 releases, the next one would be ~.19, that's still 3 releases hence. That's a _long_ time. I don't see the point in waiting that long for a compiler that doesn't work even without asm-goto.