# OpenLibm [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/JuliaLang/openlibm.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/JuliaLang/openlibm) [OpenLibm](http://www.openlibm.org) is an effort to have a high quality, portable, standalone C mathematical library ([`libm`](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/libm)). It can be used standalone in applications and programming language implementations. The project was born out of a need to have a good `libm` for the [Julia programming langage](http://www.julialang.org) that worked consistently across compilers and operating systems, and in 32-bit and 64-bit environments. ## Platform support OpenLibm builds on Linux, Mac OS X, Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and DragonFly BSD. It builds with both GCC and clang. Although largely tested and widely used on x86 architectures, openlibm also supports ARM and powerPC. ## Build instructions 1. Use `make` to build OpenLibm. 2. Use `make USEGCC=1` to build with GCC. This is the default on Linux and Windows. 3. Use `make USECLANG=1` to build with clang. This is the default on OS X and FreeBSD. 4. Architectures are auto-detected. Use `make ARCH=i386` to force a build for i386. Other supported architectures are i486, i586, and i686. GCC 4.8 is the minimum requirement for correct codegen on older 32-bit architectures. 5. On OpenBSD, you need to install GNU Make (port name: `gmake`) and a recent version of `gcc` (tested: 4.9.2), as the default version provided by OpenBSD is too old (4.2.1). If you use OpenBSD's port system for this (port name: `gcc`), run `make CC=egcc` to force Make to use the newer `gcc`. ## Acknowledgements PowerPC support for openlibm was graciously sponsored by IBM.