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openSUSE Tumbleweed Jumps To The Newly-Released GCC 12 Compiler

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  • openSUSE Tumbleweed Jumps To The Newly-Released GCC 12 Compiler

    Phoronix: openSUSE Tumbleweed Jumps To The Newly-Released GCC 12 Compiler

    It was just last week that GCC 12.1 was released and already it's being used by the rolling-release openSUSE Tumbleweed distribution as of today's build...


  • #2
    Ha, that's why I got hit with 2,500+ updated packages today. The update itself went fine, even if it took ~1h. Mostly to download everything.

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    • #3
      Micheal Arch and so manjaro is already switch to gcc 21.1 about 1 week ago

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      • #4
        Originally posted by bug77 View Post
        Ha, that's why I got hit with 2,500+ updated packages today. The update itself went fine, even if it took ~1h. Mostly to download everything.
        Yeah, I think mine topped 3500. One of those "full" sort of updates.

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        • #5
          Does OpenSUSE recognize other OS's during the installation process with the latest releases?

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          • #6
            Rebuild my system with GCC 12.1 yesterday, only two packages failed, one was a separate issue (babl), the other was android-tools and I sent in a patch to get that sorted gentoo

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            • #7
              Originally posted by nist View Post
              Does OpenSUSE recognize other OS's during the installation process with the latest releases?
              It always has.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by alcalde View Post

                It always has.
                Sorry, no. Unless the user makes this thing manually first.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by nist View Post

                  Sorry, no. Unless the user makes this thing manually first.
                  I have no idea what you're talking about. I've been using OpenSUSE on a daily basis since July 18, 2010. On that install OpenSUSE could see the Windows partition and was capable of shrinking it and adding a Windows boot option to GRUB. "Detect other OSes" is one of the options in the boot/GRUB parameters before final install. Similarly, using the "guided" option for partitioning, some of the options are what to do with existing Linux and non-Linux partitions.

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