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Let's take the following program:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <fenv.h>

int main (void)
{
  fenv_t e;

  printf ("%d\n", fegetexcept () & FE_INVALID ? 1 : 0);
  feenableexcept (FE_INVALID);
  printf ("%d\n", fegetexcept () & FE_INVALID ? 1 : 0);
  fegetenv (&e);
  printf ("%d\n", fegetexcept () & FE_INVALID ? 1 : 0);
  fesetenv (&e);
  printf ("%d\n", fegetexcept () & FE_INVALID ? 1 : 0);
}

I expect it to output “0 1 1 1”: i.e., once I enable the FE_INVALID exception, a call to fegetenv, or fesetenv with the same environment, should not modify it.

This works as expected on i386-linux, but on x86_64-linux (in 64-bit mode), I get “0 1 0 1”. That is, the call to fegetenv clears the exceptions mask.

I don't see anywhere that it is documented, or even allowed behavior under C99. I can confirm it under glibc-2.5 and glib-2.13.

Can someone test it on a recent glibc? Am I right in thinking it's a bug?

1 Answer 1

1

Well, I've filed a bug in the glibc bug database, which has been confirmed by one of the developers. I guess that's proof enough that it is, indeed, a bug in glibc.

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