On Mon, 18 Dec 2006, Andrew Pinski wrote: > On Tue, [EMAIL PROTECTED]:54 +0100, Ralf Wildenhues wrote: > > > Wheeeoo! That optimization is going to break a _lot_ of GNU > > > software. (Silently. Oh my.) > > Just like say strict aliasing? :)
I find an analogy with -ffast-math much less far-fetched than one with -fstrict-aliasing. Quoting from the GCC documentation: This option [-ffast-math] should never be turned on by any `-O' option since it can result in incorrect output for programs which depend on an exact implementation of IEEE or ISO rules/specifications for math functions. C89 did not refer to IEEE 754 / IEC 60559. Yet, as far as I am aware, -ffast-math or the implied optimizations have never been turned on by GCC unless explicitly requested. That was a wise decision. By the same token it would be wise to refrain from turning on any optimization that breaks programs which depend on wrapping signed integers. Silently breaking LIA-1 semantics is imprudent. -richy. -- Richard B. Kreckel <http://www.ginac.de/~kreckel/>