Hi!

TL;DR:

CLANG is used to compile *.bc files during postgresql build. Is it OK to have a 
different compiler for the rest of the build? gcc, or even another version of 
clang?

--

Slightly longer version:

I'm packaging postgresql for FreeBSD and as you probably know, in that OS clang 
is the default compiler.

At present, depending on OS version, it is clang version 13, 14 or even 16. 
That version of cc (clang) is always present.

LLVM is an optional add-on, a package. The default version is 15, and it also 
installs the clang15 binary for the corresponding clang version 15.

As I understand, you're "better off" compiling the LLVM stuff in PostgreSQL 
with the same version clang compiler as the LLVM version you're using. Hence, 
with LLVM 15, set the environment variable CLANG=/path/to/clang15 when running 
configure. If the .bc files will get compiled by the base system clang 
compiler, this can lead to a ThinLTO link error, if the base system compiler is 
a newer version of llvm.

The question is if it is a bad idea to use the base compiler, say clang13, to 
build postgresql, but set CLANG=clang15 to match the LLVM version. Am I better 
off using clang15 for everything then?

Cheers,
Palle



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