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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 behavior is normally inherited from the system-dependent startup code, though some targets, such as the Alpha, have code generation options which change the behavior.
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 a GNU system using glibc 2.2 or newer:
#define _GNU_SOURCE 1 #include <fenv.h> static void __attribute__ ((constructor)) trapfpe () { /* Enable some exceptions. At startup all exceptions are masked. */ feenableexcept (FE_INVALID|FE_DIVBYZERO|FE_OVERFLOW); }
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.