Subject: Re: should we replace the shell?
To: None <mycroft@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
From: David S. Miller <davem@nadzieja.rutgers.edu>
List: tech-userlevel
Date: 12/07/1994 17:57:19
   Date: Wed, 7 Dec 1994 17:10:55 -0500
   From: "Charles M. Hannum" <mycroft@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
   Cc: jtc@cygnus.com, tech-userlevel@netbsd.org

   I'm not sure what you mean by that.  The existing GCC maintainers seem
   to do an adequate job of `improving' GCC on the whole.  When I'm being
   bitten by a bug and I don't feel like it's being dealt with fast
   enough, I usually fix it myself.

True, very true...

      Ala the Linux
      GCC team, perhaps it would be a good idea for a netbsd effort of a
      similar style to emerge?

   Why is that necessary or even a good idea?  I absolutely will NOT
   allow the GCC in our source tree to be updated every time a new
   version is released by the FSF.  Doing so would be completely
   gratuitous, and would needlessly introduce bugs that we don't need.

   We do not develop GCC.  Other people do.

Of course that is a bad idea. The Linux-gcc maintainers refuse to 
make a packaged release to the public until gcc is deemed stable 
enough based upton various regression tests, etc.  All I was
suggesting was that there are probably a couple avid netbsd users out
there (in fact I know there are) that hack gcc on a regular basis and
if their efforts were put togeather then all netbsd users could
benefit.

Later,
David S. Miller
davem@nadzieja.rutgers.edu