Date: Mon, 28 May 2012 16:02:18 -0700 From: Steve Kargl <sgk@troutmask.apl.washington.edu> To: Peter Jeremy <peter@rulingia.com> Cc: freebsd-current@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Use of C99 extra long double math functions after r236148 Message-ID: <20120528230218.GC76723@troutmask.apl.washington.edu> In-Reply-To: <20120528210507.GF2675@aspire.rulingia.com> References: <4FC30090.4070003@gwdg.de> <4D8CF7D2-CBEE-438E-A9E7-9C47A8892622@FreeBSD.org> <4FC36FE1.9080908@gwdg.de> <DFE44442-A1B1-40B3-9A79-874BD2BE45E7@FreeBSD.org> <4FC38B81.6000302@gwdg.de> <4FC3A154.8030702@missouri.edu> <20120528210507.GF2675@aspire.rulingia.com>
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On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 07:05:07AM +1000, Peter Jeremy wrote: > On 2012-May-28 11:01:24 -0500, Stephen Montgomery-Smith <stephen@missouri.edu> wrote: > >One thing that could be done is to have a "math/cephes" port that adds > >the extra C99 math functions. This is already done in the math/sage > >port, using a rather clever patch due to Peter Jeremy, that applies to > >the cephes code. > > > >What it would do is to create a /usr/local/lib/libm.so that would > >provide the extra functions not currently included in /lib/libm.so, and > >then link in /lib/libm.so as well. It would also create its own > >/usr/local/include/math.h and /usr/local/include/complex.h as well. > > Basically, as long as the compiler searches /usr/local/{include,lib} > before the base include/lib then <math.h>, <complex.h> and -lm give > the application a complete C99 math implementation by using base > functions where they exist and cephes functions where they don't. > > The patch I wrote for sage can be found at > http://trac.sagemath.org/sage_trac/ticket/9543 > If there's any interest, I could produce a port for this. > > Another option would be to import cephes into base and use it to > provide the missing C99 functions. Cephes includes copyright notices > but the closest I can find to a license is: > " Some software in this archive may be from the book _Methods and > Programs for Mathematical Functions_ (Prentice-Hall or Simon & Schuster > International, 1989) or from the Cephes Mathematical Library, a > commercial product. In either event, it is copyrighted by the author. > What you see here may be used freely but it comes with no support or > guarantee." Please talk to das@ (although I believe he's finishing up his dissertation). I recall that he's stated that he looked into using cephes, and concluded that it is not suitable for libm. Note there is also http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=kern/147599 which I've also objected to importing into libm. -- Steve
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