On Thu, Oct 31, 2019 at 09:42:07AM -0700, Steve Kargl wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 31, 2019 at 05:12:39PM +0100, Tobias Burnus wrote:
> > At some point, 'call abort()' was changed to 'stop'; this works fine as 
> > long as exit status is != 0. At least on my Linux system, this works 
> > until 255. (Which matches POSIX, which requires 8 bits.) For "stop 256", 
> > I get an exit status == 0.
> >
> > I am not sure whether other systems break earlier, but I assume most 
> > support 0 to 255. Currently, gcc/testsuite/*fortran* has those maximal 
> > 'stop' counts:
> 
> FreeBSD's manpage for exit(3) (and _Exit()) states
> 
>      Both functions make the low-order eight bits of the status
>      argument available to a parent process which has called a
>      wait(2)-family function.
> 
> I suspect the other BSDs also follow posix.  I wonder if gfortran
> should either apply a mask to the stop code or simply map nonzero
> values to one of EXIT_FAILURE, SIGQUIT, or SIGABRT.  Perhaps,

I think being able to supply the exact code to shell is useful,
perhaps we should just use
  exit (code > 255 ? 255 : code);
or similar?

        Jakub

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