Jump to content United States-English
HP.com Home Products and Services Support and Drivers Solutions How to Buy
» Contact HP
More options
HP.com home
HP-UX Floating-Point Guide: HP 9000 Computers > Chapter 2 Floating-Point Principles and the IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic

Exception Processing

» 

Technical documentation

Complete book in PDF
» Feedback
Content starts here

 » Table of Contents

 » Glossary

 » Index

Exception processing refers to the sequence of events that takes place when any of the IEEE exception conditions occur. The standard states that a programmer should be able to enable or disable the trapping of any of the exception conditions. The standard also defines default results for all disabled exceptions. For example, Table 2-11 “Overflow Results Based on Rounding Mode” shows how a default result is formulated when an overflow occurs and overflow traps are disabled.

The standard also states that a programmer should be able to define a trap handler for each exception condition. The trap handler (also called a signal handler) is a routine that is invoked whenever the particular exception condition is detected, assuming that trapping for the exception is enabled. If a program enables trapping but provides no trap handler, a default handler will be invoked that prints an error message and causes the process to terminate.

As we noted in “Exception Conditions”, all traps are disabled by default on HP-UX systems. You can use the fesettrapenable function, described in “Run-Time Mode Control: The fenv(5) Suite”, to enable any traps you want to handle. You can also enable traps through compiler options, which we discuss in “Command-Line Mode Control: The +FP Compiler Option”.

On HP-UX systems, the methods for establishing trap handlers for the IEEE-754 exceptions are the sigaction(2) routine for C programs and the ON statement for Fortran programs. See “Math Library Basics” and “Handling Traps” for more information.

Printable version
Privacy statement Using this site means you accept its terms Feedback to webmaster
© 1997 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.