Removal of ICC (intel compiler) bits from mk
Alexander Leidinger
Alexander at Leidinger.net
Thu Aug 19 07:01:39 UTC 2010
Quoting Gabor Kovesdan <gabor at FreeBSD.org> (from Wed, 18 Aug 2010
19:56:01 +0200):
> Em 2010.08.18. 19:37, Rui Paulo escreveu:
>> On 18 Aug 2010, at 18:18, Garrett Cooper wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 9:23 AM, Rui Paulo<rpaulo at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> Hi,
>>>> I've been chatting with the ICC ex-users and they seem to be ok
>>>> with the removal of the ICC bits from share/mk and other places.
>>>> The reason is that it doesn't work and no one has volunteered to
>>>> fix it for many years. This seems to indicate that the interest
>>>> in ICC is low.
>>>> If there's anyone against this, speak now or forever be silent. :-)
>>> Later versions of icc are more gcc compliant aren't they? If so,
>>> wouldn't this also be a non-issue to remove the bits, or are there
>>> still some incompatibilities between gcc and icc that are worth
>>> noting?
>> I really don't know how compatible is the latest icc because no one
>> ever updated the ports version. This is actually a hint that no one
>> really uses this anymore.
> IIRC, apart from the low interest, the problem was that because of
> ICC's license using ICC to test this mk stuff requires a commercial
> license because somehow it is considered a derivative work. It has
If we wanted to ship binaries, we would have to compile them with the
commercial license.
> also prevented us from providing better support. In 2006, I wanted
> to do some progress as part of my SoC project because that time
> there was more interest. Alexander (CC'd) may comment on this. I
> think he has a license for FreeBSD work but he is not allowed to
> give it out to a third party.
At some point I got a license (IIRC for 2-users) which could have been
installed in the cluster, but this would have meant to install a
license server somewhere. The license was also the only commercial
license I had which would have allowed to run the amd64... ehrm...
em64t version of icc. This was for icc 9.x and I have some doubts this
license will work with icc 11.x.
If someone would get icc 11.x up and runnig as a port (similar to what
we have for outdated icc version in the ports collection), I would
have a look if my contact at Intel is still working there in a
position which allows him to get a commercial license for us.
Bye,
Alexander.
--
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http://www.FreeBSD.org netchild @ FreeBSD.org : PGP ID = 72077137
The happiest time in any man's life is just after the first divorce.
-- J. K. Galbraith
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