On 12/5/05, Thiago Macieira wrote: > Hmm... the gcc manual says gcc 3.2 and 3.3 share the same C++ ABI. Thanks for the correction. (There are some ABI fixes in 3.3, but only for non-x86 chips, I think.) Your current text about gcc's abi, >If the internal ABI-interface of the compiler changes, a library compiled with a >different version might no longer be possible. The following GCC-releases >are known to have a different ABI-interface for C++: > * GCC 2.95.x > * GCC 2.96.x (RedHat) > * GCC 3.0.x / 3.1.x > * GCC 3.2.x / 3.3.x (GCC ABI v1) > * GCC 3.4.x / 4.0.x / 4.1.x (GCC ABI v2) is good, but has three problems: 1) it doesn't mention the ABI standard that gcc is trying to comply with, 2) an ABI isn't an internal thing, 3) ABI-interface is redundant, as the I means interface already. How about: Binary compatibility depends on a stable ABI from the compiler. GCC's c++ ABI changed with each of the following releases: * GCC 2.95.x * GCC 2.96.x (RedHat) * GCC 3.0.x / 3.1.x * GCC 3.2.x / 3.3.x (GCC ABI v1) * GCC 3.4.x / 4.0.x / 4.1.x (GCC ABI v2) As of gcc-3.2, Gcc follows the [http://www.codesourcery.com/cxx-abi multivendor C++ abi], so binary compatibility is not determined by the version of the compiler, but by the version of the ABI it supports. -- Why can't Johnny run Linux? See http://kegel.com/linux/comfort >> Visit http://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-devel#unsub to unsubscribe <<