Dear all, I have the following question with respect to the usage of IEEE handlers in cygwin using either g77 or gcc: Is it possible to catch the floating point exceptions and continue with intentional underflow in CYGWIN ? For your info, I attach a two paragraphs from the g77 info pages: 1. ______________________________________________________________________ 17.4.10 Floating-point precision If your program depends on exact IEEE 754 floating-point handling it may help on some systems--specifically x86 or m68k hardware--to use the `-ffloat-store' option or to reset the precision flag on the floating-point unit. See section 7.7 Options That Control Optimization. However, it might be better simply to put the FPU into double precision mode and not take the performance hit of `-ffloat-store'. On x86 and m68k GNU systems you can do this with a technique similar to that for turning on floating-point exceptions (see section 18.3.29 Floating-point Exception Handling). The control word could be set to double precision by replacing the __setfpucw call with one like this: __setfpucw ((_FPU_DEFAULT & ~_FPU_EXTENDED) | _FPU_DOUBLE); (It is not clear whether this has any effect on the operation of the GNU maths library, but we have no evidence of it causing trouble.) Some targets (such as the Alpha) may need special options for full IEEE conformance. See section `Hardware Models and Configurations' in Using and Porting GNU CC. 2. _____________________________________________________________________ and the paragraph 18.3.29 Floating-point Exception Handling The gcc backend and, consequently, g77, currently provides no general control over whether or not floating-point exceptions are trapped or ignored. (Ignoring them typically results in NaN values being propagated in systems that conform to IEEE 754.) The behaviour is normally inherited from the system-dependent startup code, though some targets, such as the Alpha, have code generation options which change the behaviour. Most systems provide some C-callable mechanism to change this; this can be invoked at startup using gcc's constructor attribute. For example, just compiling and linking the following C code with your program will turn on exception trapping for the "common" exceptions on an x86-based GNU system: #include <fpu_control.h> static void __attribute__ ((constructor)) trapfpe () { __setfpucw (_FPU_DEFAULT & ~(_FPU_MASK_IM | _FPU_MASK_ZM | _FPU_MASK_OM)); } A convenient trick is to compile this something like: gcc -o libtrapfpe.a trapfpe.c and then use it by adding `-trapfpe' to the g77 command line when linking. ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Unfortunately, al the above seem to be O.K for LINUX users and not for CYGWIN users since fpu_nontrol.h is not there. I understand that this has to do with the difficulty of compilig the glibc under cygwin. I have seen the efforts of Fabrice, Robert, Mumit and Earnie and I have been through the last weeks with lots of reading on floating point arithmetics but finally is there a way in cygwin to have sth like the very friendly ieee_hndler call under solaris ? My best regards to all the cygwin users. PS. I have just joined your group - and I remain. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------ From: Kiriakopoulos Michael Address: National Aerospace Lab. E-Mail - [EMAIL PROTECTED] Voorsterweg 31 8316 PR Marknesse Phone (+31)527 - 248792 (The Netherlands) telefax (+31)527 - 248210 ------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Want to unsubscribe from this list? Check out: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple