summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/content/bootstrapGcc
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'content/bootstrapGcc')
-rw-r--r--content/bootstrapGcc/09_mes_tcc_official_release.md83
1 files changed, 83 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/content/bootstrapGcc/09_mes_tcc_official_release.md b/content/bootstrapGcc/09_mes_tcc_official_release.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..13ac0d5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/content/bootstrapGcc/09_mes_tcc_official_release.md
@@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
+Title: Mes released and bootstrappable TCC merged
+Date: 2023-11-16
+Category:
+Tags: Bootstrapping GCC in RISC-V
+Slug: bootstrapGcc9
+Lang: en
+Summary:
+ Some merging and releasing has been done. So here we are.
+
+So, some merging and releasing has been done so we need to update a little bit
+on what we talked about in the previous blog post.
+
+### Mes
+
+We spent some time more testing what we shared in the previous post with you
+and now we can proudly say our work has been merged in Mes, and has been
+released with it in GNU Mes 0.25.
+
+You can read the GNU Mes 0.25 release notes in Janneke's blog in the following
+link:
+
+<http://joyofsource.com/gnu-mes-025-released.html>
+
+### Bootstrappable TinyCC
+
+We are also very happy to announce that our changes to the bootstrappable
+TinyCC have been merged to Janneke's repository that is used for the official
+Guix bootstrapping process. You can see the changes[^changes] being included here:
+
+<https://gitlab.com/janneke/tinycc/-/tree/mes-0.25?ref_type=heads>
+
+[^changes]: The commits we had have been reordered and squashed as the changes
+ were split in around 40 different commits that were done as we found the
+ errors. I managed to rearrange them in a few commits that have way more
+ sense. I say it just in case you start looking for the independent commits:
+ they are gone. My repository is still keeping the branches and tags we
+ mentioned before so you can still go there to find the changes the way we
+ did them.
+
+### Some words about it
+
+All of us are of course very happy about this, and this didn't make us relax,
+as we continued to push fixes and test all this in more ways, looking always
+for the next challenge.
+
+We should enjoy this moment a little bit more, and that's why I am posting
+this.
+
+I want also to thank again the people that took part in this, specially Andrius
+for his help, for all the hours of sleep he lost during the process and for
+giving a second life to this effort, when I thought I was too tired to
+continue; and Janneke, who very patiently reviewed every single contribution
+and has been pushing me since the very early beginning of this adventure, when
+I was thinking about accepting the challenge or continue with my life. I'm glad
+I chose the adventure.
+
+Of course, this is a cool milestone for all of us, we worked hard to make this
+but specially for me it means a lot. I've been working on this for almost two
+years now, and since I my changes on the bootstrappable TinyCC have been
+sitting in my repository since the last year, when I finished the previous
+NlNet grant. In fact, all that I did in that grant was sitting there, nothing
+was merged in the actual Guix bootstrap, as what I did were very specific parts
+of the chain, but they lacked the connection with other steps.
+
+When you work in a project like that there's almost no satisfaction. No
+releases, no upstreaming and, in my case, almost no help and no company.
+Everything that I did could be sitting there in my repos forever.
+
+At the time when I did the backport of TinyCC I was unsure of what I did and I
+was exhausted after all the work I did with GCC. When we started this second
+round I thought everything was going to be broken. And it was, but it was much
+better than I thought!
+
+Now, being part of the official Bootstrappable TinyCC means I can finally close
+that chapter, which was full of uncertainty, and actually have some interesting
+feedback of all that work I did that it seemed useless at the time when I did
+it.
+
+It happened to be useful after all.
+
+Now let's see if GCC happens to be as useful as this was.
+
+Cheers, dear reader. We deserve to celebrate.