On Tue, May 31, 2005 at 09:53:05PM +0200, Vincent Lefevre wrote: > On 2005-05-31 11:39:39 -0700, Mike Stump wrote: > > On May 31, 2005, at 10:25 AM, Vincent Lefevre wrote: > > >Well, there is no extended precision with GCC under Linux/PPC. > > > > Hum, I do wonder about even that; why do: > > > > 2004-02-07 Alan Modra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > > * config/rs6000/t-linux64 (LIB2FUNCS_EXTRA): Add darwin- > > ldouble.c. > > > > powerpc64-*-linux*) > > Hmm... this is powerpc64.
Yes. powerpc64-linux uses IBM extended precision long doubles. > Under the 32-bit version, there's no extended precision. No. powerpc-linux has 128-bit IEEE soft-float long double. $ cat > fadd.c <<\EOF long double fadd (long double a, long double b) { return a + b; } EOF $ gcc -m32 -mlong-double-128 -c fadd.c $ nm fadd.o 00000000 T fadd U _q_add Now all you need is a library that supplies _q_add and similar. Let's see, glibc is a likely place.. ./sysdeps/powerpc/soft-fp/Makefile:powerpc-quad-routines := q_add q_cmp q_cmpe q_div q_dtoq q_feq q_fge \ ./sysdeps/powerpc/soft-fp/Versions: _q_add; _q_cmp; _q_cmpe; _q_div; _q_dtoq; _q_feq; _q_fge; _q_fgt; ./sysdeps/powerpc/soft-fp/q_add.c:long double _q_add(const long double a, const long double b) Then of course, you need to convince glibc to build them for you. -- Alan Modra IBM OzLabs - Linux Technology Centre