First rule of (efficient) engineering: <<if it is not broken, do not try to fix it>>
for the record: gcc-3.3-x is *fine* and *most* stable, not just on windows. It's still my reference compiler even for linux kernels. Why do you feel it's necessary to upgrade? Because gcc people do? There's *no* speed improvement, as far as I can see (well, it crashes faster :)) This is not a C++ based project. Now that for the first time on win XP hosts we get decent speed, unless patches are really a must, I do not intend personnally to upgrade at every snapshot my current version of qemu. And testing does not mean using the latest only. We're talking stability/reliability now that we have kqemu in the picture (taking care of speed improvement). I believe reporting each pb is a team effort. Fabrice never reports any pb, he fixes them efficiently at his own pace. In short: there is a team out there. Or this mailing list would be dead. Christian _______________________________________________ Qemu-devel mailing list Qemu-devel@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel