> Tatsuo Ishii <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > After further research, I remembered that we used to have "DB_MIN > > check" in configure back to 6.4.2: > > I don't know wht it was removed, > > Hmm. Digging in the CVS logs shows that it was removed by Bruce in > configure.in version 1.262, 1999/07/18, with the unedifying log message > "configure cleanup". > > A guess is that he took it out because it wasn't being used anywhere. > > > but I think we'd better to revive the checking and replace > > #if defined(linux) && defined(__powerpc__) > > with > > #ifdef HAVE_DBL_MIN_PROBLEM > > What do you think? > > I think that is a bad idea, since that code is guaranteed to fail on any > machine where the representation of double is at all different from a > PPC's. (Even if you are willing to assume that the entire world uses > IEEE floats these days, what of endianness?) > > We could revive the configure test and do > > #if defined(HAVE_DBL_MIN_PROBLEM) && defined(__powerpc__) > > However, I really wonder whether there is any point. It may be worth > noting that the original version of the patch read "#if ... defined(PPC)". > It's quite likely that the current test, "... defined(__powerpc__)", > doesn't even fire on the old compiler that the patch is intended for. > If so, this is dead code and has been since release 6.5. Ok, let's remove the code in datetime.c and see anybody would come up and complain... -- Tatsuo Ishii ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED])