Here's an example of the differences between "new abi, version 1"
and "new abi, version 2": suppose that a class has a virtual destructor,
but the user doesn't specify the virtual destructor, so the compiler
synthesizes it. With "new abi, version 1", the synthesized virtual
destructor appears in the vtable *before* the user's own virtual
methods. With "new abi, version 2", the synthesized virtual destructor
appears in the vtable *after* the user's own virtual methods.
There are about 5-10 tweaks like this in gcc 3.4.
So it's not "New New ABI", fortunately for us. It's just bug fixes
to "New ABI". It's the same mangling scheme and same data structures,
but gcc puts slightly different data into them. Different enough that
g++ 3.3.X and g++ 3.4.X are sometimes not link-compatible, but similar
enough that gdb will not need a new module.
gcc 3.4 has a flag "-fabi-version" to select between "New Abi,
version 1" and "New Abi, version 2". "New Abi, version 2" is the
default.