GCC 4.1.2 is from 2007, and Binutils 2.16 is a similar vintage. Clang 3.5 is
from 2014. Supporting toolchains this old is a massive development and
testing burden.
Set a minimum baseline of GCC 5.1 across the board, along with Binutils 2.25
which is the same age. These were chosen *3 years ago* as Linux's minimum
requirements because even back then, they were ubiquitous in distros. Choose
Clang/LLVM 11 as a baseline for similar reasons; the Linux commit making this
change two years ago cites a laudry list of code generation bugs.
This will allow us to retire a lot of compatiblity logic, and start using new
features previously unavailable because of no viable compatibility option.
Merge the ARM 32bit and 64bit sections now they're the same.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Cooper <andrew.cooper3@citrix.com>
Acked-by: Julien Grall <jgrall@amazon.com>
Acked-by: Roger Pau Monné <roger.pau@citrix.com>
* GNU Make v3.80 or later
* C compiler and linker:
- For x86:
- - GCC 4.1.2_20070115 or later
- - GNU Binutils 2.16.91.0.5 or later
+ - GCC 5.1 or later
+ - GNU Binutils 2.25 or later
or
- - Clang/LLVM 3.5 or later
- - For ARM 32-bit:
- - GCC 4.9 or later
- - GNU Binutils 2.24 or later
- - For ARM 64-bit:
+ - Clang/LLVM 11 or later
+ - For ARM:
- GCC 5.1 or later
- - GNU Binutils 2.24 or later
+ - GNU Binutils 2.25 or later
- For RISC-V 64-bit:
- GCC 12.2 or later
- GNU Binutils 2.39 or later