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Date:      Sun, 4 Jul 2004 13:56:48 -0700
From:      "David O'Brien" <obrien@FreeBSD.ORG>
To:        Kris Kennaway <kris@obsecurity.org>
Cc:        Dag-Erling Smorgrav <des@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: cvs commit: src/share/examples/etc make.conf
Message-ID:  <20040704205648.GA1617@dragon.nuxi.com>
In-Reply-To: <20040704051607.GA78676@xor.obsecurity.org>
References:  <200407030941.i639fwt8078389@repoman.freebsd.org> <20040704032139.GA93138@VARK.homeunix.com> <20040704051607.GA78676@xor.obsecurity.org>

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On Sat, Jul 03, 2004 at 10:16:07PM -0700, Kris Kennaway wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 03, 2004 at 08:21:39PM -0700, David Schultz wrote:
> > FWIW, I've been compiling most things with -O2 for a while (to
> > find -O2 bugs, not for speed) and haven't noticed many problems.
> > The only significant one I know of is that -O2 breaks
> > floating-point exceptions in libm because gcc doesn't support the
> > FENV_ACCESS pragma.  I think for some routines like rint(3), it
> > may even give the wrong answer due to incorrect optimizations, but
> > I'd have to check that again.
> > 
> > AFAIK, the necessary functionality to make gcc's optimizer treat
> > floating-point code in a sane manner isn't on the horizon, so
> > maybe -O2 should be automatically turned off while compiling libm
> > (and perhaps libalias as well).  That would make it more
> > easily justifiable to make -O2 the default at some future point.
> 
> I don't think we can ever make it the default since there's likely to
> be a lot of software in ports that would be broken too.

99% of the ports that "may break" build with -O2 on Linux (as -O2 is
their default).  What is different about us vs. Linux for these ports?

-- 
-- David  (obrien@FreeBSD.org)



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