cvs commit: src/share/man/man3 Makefile src/lib/libc/alpha/gen
Makefile.inc fpsetsticky.c src/lib/libc/amd64/gen Makefile.inc
fpsetsticky.c src/lib/libc/powerpc/gen Makefile.inc fpsetsticky.c
src/lib/libc/softfloat Makefile.inc src/lib/libc/sparc64/gen ...
Steve Kargl
sgk at troutmask.apl.washington.edu
Tue Mar 15 20:21:23 PST 2005
On Wed, Mar 16, 2005 at 01:46:52PM +1100, Bruce Evans wrote:
> On Tue, 15 Mar 2005, David Schultz wrote:
>
> >On Tue, Mar 15, 2005, David O'Brien wrote:
> >>On Tue, Mar 15, 2005 at 10:11:27AM -0800, Steve Kargl wrote:
> >>>On Tue, Mar 15, 2005 at 03:53:39PM +0000, David Schultz wrote:
> >>>> Log:
> >>>> Remove fpsetsticky().
> >>>
> >>>Library version bump? It took several years to live through
> >>>the libm.so.2 fiasco, and I would hate to relive it. I haven't
> >>>verified it yet, but you may have just broken NAGWare's Fortran
> >>>95 compiler without the version bump.
> >>
> >>We've already bumped libm.so for 6-CURRENT [to .3 from .2].
> >>This change certainly cannot be MFC'ed though.
> >>
> >>How would bumping libm.so not break NAGWare Fortran?
> >
> >It turns out that fpsetsticky() was misplaced in libc, and libc
> >has already been bumped for 6.X. But as you point out, the bump
> >probably wouldn't fix NAGWare Fortran if this change broke it.
> >However, my change doesn't seem to have broken the demo version
> >available on the NAG website. But if I did break anything, please
> >let me know.
>
> It isn't even in libc for i386's (since it is inline and not backed
> by a function). So removing it can't affect binary compatibility on
> i386's.
>
Odd, I haven't seen David's or David's replies.
If you re-read what I wrote, you see "I haven't verified it yet,
but you may have just broken NAGWare ...". Note the speculation
in the quoted passage. In NAGWare's f95.h, there is a function
with a name similar to _NAG_IEEE_fpsetsticky(), which suggests
that NAG uses fpsetsticky(). I'll also admit I completely
miss that das changed libc not libm. Das is the only person
who regularly commits to libm source, so I naturally assumed
that fpsetsticky() was in libm.
--
Steve
More information about the cvs-src
mailing list