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vectors of vectors break with -ftrapv



>Submitter-Id:	net
>Originator:	Ian Turner <vectro@pipeline.com>
>Organization:	The Debian Project
>Confidential:	no
>Synopsis:	
>Severity:	serious
>Priority:	medium
>Category:	c++
>Class:		sw-bug
>Release:	3.2.1 (Debian) (Debian unstable)
>Environment:
System: Debian GNU/Linux (unstable)
Architecture: i686

host: i386-linux
configured with: /mnt/data/gcc-3.1/gcc-3.1-3.1ds2/src/configure -v --enable-languages=c,c++,java,f77,proto,objc,ada --prefix=/usr --mandir=$\(prefix\)/share/man --infodir=$\(prefix\)/share/info --with-gxx-include-dir=$\(prefix\)/include/g++-v3-3.1 --enable-shared --with-system-zlib --enable-long-long --enable-nls --without-included-gettext --enable-clocale=gnu --enable-threads=posix --enable-java-gc=boehm --enable-objc-gc i386-linux
>Description:
[ Reported to the Debian BTS as report #169862.
  Please CC 169862@bugs.debian.org on replies.
  Log of report can be found at http://bugs.debian.org/169862 ]
	

rechecked with 3.2 branch 20021220 and 3.3 branch 20021227

Not sure if this is a problem with the CPU, the kernel, the compiler,  
or the library. But this seems the most likely candidate. Consider the sample  
program below. When compiled as 
 
g++ foo.cc -ftrapv -o foo
 
and run, the resultant binary immediately aborts. 

#include <vector> 
 
using namespace std; 
 
typedef vector<int> foo_t; 
 
int main() { 
  vector<foo_t> V(10, foo_t()); 
  return 0; 
} 

>How-To-Repeat:
	
>Fix:
	



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