Add the fact that Clang too is planning to start using C++11 (in some
limited ways) after the next release. See the lengthy discussions (which
are on-going) and the corresponding commit to LLVM's release notes.
Nothing is actually changing at this point, this is just further
spreading the plan.

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@194184 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
diff --git a/docs/ReleaseNotes.rst b/docs/ReleaseNotes.rst
index 67b834a..4a1f240 100644
--- a/docs/ReleaseNotes.rst
+++ b/docs/ReleaseNotes.rst
@@ -44,6 +44,22 @@
 infrastructure are described first, followed by language-specific
 sections with improvements to Clang's support for those languages.
 
+Last release which will build as C++98
+--------------------------------------
+
+This is expected to be the last release of Clang which compiles using a C++98
+toolchain. We expect to start using some C++11 features in Clang starting after
+this release. That said, we are committed to supporting a reasonable set of
+modern C++ toolchains as the host compiler on all of the platforms. This will
+at least include Visual Studio 2012 on Windows, and Clang 3.1 or GCC 4.7.x on
+Mac and Linux. The final set of compilers (and the C++11 features they support)
+is not set in stone, but we wanted users of Clang to have a heads up that the
+next release will involve a substantial change in the host toolchain
+requirements.
+
+Note that this change is part of a change for the entire LLVM project, not just
+Clang.
+
 Major New Features
 ------------------