Time for some updates

Yuri yvoinov at gmail.com
Sat Jan 4 23:26:57 CET 2025


I built GCC 6.5 from source on Solaris 10 (latest release update 1/13) 
just a couple of months ago. It builds without any problems with the 
latest libraries from OpenCSW and on the first try. Version 6.5 already 
supports C++17 (partially) with an explicit specification of the 
standard (-std=c++17). I studied the issue and found out that it is 
possible to build GCC up to version 9.5 on Solaris 10 and the only 
reason why I did not do this was compatibility with already built 
packages on my setups. At the moment, native compatibility with C++14 is 
enough for me.

Unfortunately, I was unable to compile Perl version 5.40 as easily and 
effortlessly due to a stupid error with the UTF8 locale. I have not yet 
found and written a comprehensive guide to this build. Unlike GCC.You 
could say that this is also a hobby for me (albeit a forced one). True, 
my hardware is somewhat younger, it is only fourteen years old )

By the way, I haven't looked into the issue in depth, but I heard that 
GCC has returned support for SPARC processors to compilers of versions 
later than 9. However, I'm not entirely sure about full compatibility 
with Solaris 10 libC, as Solaris 10 support was declared to be 
discontinued _after_ version 9. However, version 9.5 should be supported 
and I hope, if I have some free time, to run a test build on my build 
environment - just for show.

AFAIK, GCC 9 is fully compatible with C11/C++17.

04.01.2025 23:29, Jonathan Cox via users пишет:
> By the way, I invested quite a bit of time recently building new 
> packages for Solaris 10 SPARC, including Python, SDL, Numpy, Geany and 
> many others. I took detailed notes and had a fair amount of success, 
> although I wasn't able to figure out how to build newer versions of 
> GCC. This became a limiting factor because many open source projects, 
> especially anything GNU, have moved to C++17 and even newer versions 
> (for no apparent reason, as far as I can tell).
>
> I did inquire about releasing my builds in the OpenCSW repository, but 
> I never got a response.
>
> I am interested in how to compile GCC 9 for Solaris 10, as well as 
> generating these updated packages on OpenCSW.
>
> It's really a hobby, I'm not doing this because I'm constrained to 25 
> year old hardware...
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> *From:* users <users-bounces+joncox=alum.mit.edu at lists.opencsw.org> on 
> behalf of Ben Walton via users <users at lists.opencsw.org>
> *Sent:* Saturday, January 4, 2025 9:33:43 AM
> *To:* Questions and discussions <users at lists.opencsw.org>
> *Cc:* Ben Walton <bwalton at opencsw.org>
> *Subject:* Re: Time for some updates
>
>
> On Sat 4 Jan 2025, 14:58 Yuri via users, <users at lists.opencsw.org> wrote:
>
>     Gentlemen, don't you think it's time for some updates?
>
>     For example, Perl. It's too old, 14 years is a bit too much to run
>     most of the CPAN modules. Or GCC. I'd like to see at least 6.5 in
>     2024. Or openvpn. The current version is outdated.
>
>     Redis is generally archaic, given that 5.0.14 is built from
>     sources on Solaris 10 without any problems.
>
>     I understand that the problem of maintainers has not gone away and
>     in general - if you want something, build it yourself.
>
>     But let's at least refresh Perl and GCC a little, okay? They are
>     hopelessly ancient. If I can build a compiler from sources myself,
>     whichever I like, then I couldn't build Perl. Not with any attempt.
>
> I think you already understand the problem here. The people that were 
> investing their time in this aren't doing that much anymore because 
> they've moved on. It's been a long time since I logged into any 
> Solaris machine at this point and it's unlikely I will in the future. 
> If I do, it's very unlikely to be building software on it. I think 
> many other folks are in a similar position because they are scratching 
> different itches in different technical contexts. Not everyone has 
> moved on, but those still here seemingly don't have a need to update 
> these packages.
>
> If you need these, I suggest you roll up your sleeves. Dago can still 
> get you access to the build farm where you'd have a pretty straight 
> forward path to building the updated packages you want.
>
> I know this doesn't actually help you, but at least it confirms your 
> suspicion.
>
> Thanks
> -Ben
>
>     Maybe there are newer versions posted somewhere and I just don't
>     see them? For example, in unstable or testing?
>
>     WBR, Yuri
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.opencsw.org/pipermail/users/attachments/20250105/c4eaabcf/attachment-0001.html>


More information about the users mailing list