Yes, I am sure. Here is evidence: http://information-technology.web.cern.ch/fr/services/lxplus-service "[The cluster computers] run SLC6 (Scientific Linux CERN 6)" SLC6 comes with gcc-4.4.7, which has bad support for C++11, see the question of a suffering user (most likely a CERN physicist): http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15975481/problems-with-c11-library-and-g-... Currently, I am a member of the IceCube experiment and we are also not allowed to use C++11 features. On 05/05/2016 06:51 PM, Mathias Gaunard wrote:
On 5 May 2016 at 16:39, Hans Dembinski
wrote: Some big names I can drop are CERN, the IceCube Experiment, Pierre Auger Observatory. Big experiments like these rely on support for old Linux distributions which are still running on many computing clusters. These old Linux distributions do not have modern compilers that support C++11.
Slight tangent here, but that seems surprising. Are you sure those don't have GCC 4.8 through RHEL DTS 2?
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