C99/C++11 have floating point control functions (e.g. fetestexcept) and defined flags (including FE_UNDERFLOW) that should let you detect floating point underflow reasonably portably (i.e., with any compiler/library that supports these).
Though they're not as portable, gcc has an feenableexcept that will let you set floating point exceptions that are trapped. When one of the exceptions you've enabled fires, your program will receive a SIGFPE signal.
At least on most hardware, there's no equivalent for integer operations -- an underflow simply produces a 2's complement (or whatever) result and (for example) sets the the flags (e.g., carry and sign bits) to signal what happened. C99/C++11 do have some flags for things like integer overflow, but I don't believe they're nearly as widely supported.