On 10/7/2012 21:14, Tom Lane wrote:
John Marino<dr...@marino.st>  writes:
By the way, I also had to patch 9.1.6 in order to build it with gcc47:
http://pkgsrc.se/files.php?messageId=20121007102454.6e70d17...@cvs.netbsd.org

[ shrug... ]  I just tried 9.1.6 with gcc 4.7.0 and 4.7.2 on Fedora, and
saw nothing but a handful of cosmetic warnings.  I see the same on our
buildfarm member anchovy, which is running 4.7.1 on Arch Linux.

We generally don't bother to fix cosmetic warnings introduced by new
toolchains except in HEAD; it's just not worth the trouble.  gcc in
particular seems to move the goalposts constantly, and most of the
warnings they've introduced recently are pure pedantry anyway (IMO).

The comments attached to your patches suggest that you saw errors rather
than warnings, but if so you've got distro-specific compiler bugs to
deal with.  There is nothing even faintly non-legitimate about the code
chunks you changed.

                        regards, tom lane

Hi Tom,
Perhaps, you need to take a closer look at this. I guarantee that I didn't do this for cosmetic reasons. GCC behavior changed with GCC 4.5 on this topic.

From what I can tell, later version GCC does not consider these arrays declared with a constant expression. Apparently it runs afoul of C99 section 6.6:
http://c0x.coding-guidelines.com/6.6.html

Things like sizeof, offsetof, etc in cause problems.

I don't know why you didn't reproduce it in Fedora. I can speculate that Fedora has modified gcc from a stock vendor configuration or perhaps changes the internal specs. Surely this isn't the first time the topic has been brought up? I'm surprised.

The errors were coming something like, "variably modified at file scope". One was a warning, two were errors that broke the compilation.

John


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