Szabolcs Nagy | 6752e61 | 2018-04-25 10:05:07 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | /* |
| 2 | * rredf.c - trigonometric range reduction function |
| 3 | * |
Szabolcs Nagy | 11253b0 | 2018-11-12 11:10:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 4 | * Copyright (c) 2009-2018, Arm Limited. |
| 5 | * SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT |
Szabolcs Nagy | 6752e61 | 2018-04-25 10:05:07 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 6 | */ |
| 7 | |
| 8 | /* |
| 9 | * This code is intended to be used as the second half of a range |
| 10 | * reducer whose first half is an inline function defined in |
| 11 | * rredf.h. Each trig function performs range reduction by invoking |
| 12 | * that, which handles the quickest and most common cases inline |
| 13 | * before handing off to this function for everything else. Thus a |
| 14 | * reasonable compromise is struck between speed and space. (I |
| 15 | * hope.) In particular, this approach avoids a function call |
| 16 | * overhead in the common case. |
| 17 | */ |
| 18 | |
| 19 | #include "math_private.h" |
| 20 | |
| 21 | #ifdef __cplusplus |
| 22 | extern "C" { |
| 23 | #endif /* __cplusplus */ |
| 24 | |
| 25 | /* |
| 26 | * Input values to this function: |
| 27 | * - x is the original user input value, unchanged by the |
| 28 | * first-tier reducer in the case where it hands over to us. |
| 29 | * - q is still the place where the caller expects us to leave the |
| 30 | * quadrant code. |
| 31 | * - k is the IEEE bit pattern of x (which it would seem a shame to |
| 32 | * recompute given that the first-tier reducer already went to |
| 33 | * the effort of extracting it from the VFP). FIXME: in softfp, |
| 34 | * on the other hand, it's unconscionably wasteful to replicate |
| 35 | * this value into a second register and we should change the |
| 36 | * prototype! |
| 37 | */ |
Szabolcs Nagy | 0d51c04 | 2018-04-25 13:26:22 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 38 | float __mathlib_rredf2(float x, int *q, unsigned k) |
Szabolcs Nagy | 6752e61 | 2018-04-25 10:05:07 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 39 | { |
| 40 | /* |
| 41 | * First, weed out infinities and NaNs, and deal with them by |
| 42 | * returning a negative q. |
| 43 | */ |
| 44 | if ((k << 1) >= 0xFF000000) { |
| 45 | *q = -1; |
| 46 | return x; |
| 47 | } |
| 48 | /* |
| 49 | * We do general range reduction by multiplying by 2/pi, and |
| 50 | * retaining the bottom two bits of the integer part and an |
| 51 | * initial chunk of the fraction below that. The integer bits |
| 52 | * are directly output as *q; the fraction is then multiplied |
| 53 | * back up by pi/2 before returning it. |
| 54 | * |
| 55 | * To get this right, we don't have to multiply by the _whole_ |
| 56 | * of 2/pi right from the most significant bit downwards: |
| 57 | * instead we can discard any bit of 2/pi with a place value |
| 58 | * high enough that multiplying it by the LSB of x will yield a |
| 59 | * place value higher than 2. Thus we can bound the required |
| 60 | * work by a reasonably small constant regardless of the size of |
| 61 | * x (unlike, for instance, the IEEE remainder operation). |
| 62 | * |
| 63 | * At the other end, however, we must take more care: it isn't |
| 64 | * adequate just to acquire two integer bits and 24 fraction |
| 65 | * bits of (2/pi)x, because if a lot of those fraction bits are |
| 66 | * zero then we will suffer significance loss. So we must keep |
| 67 | * computing fraction bits as far down as 23 bits below the |
| 68 | * _highest set fraction bit_. |
| 69 | * |
| 70 | * The immediate question, therefore, is what the bound on this |
| 71 | * end of the job will be. In other words: what is the smallest |
| 72 | * difference between an integer multiple of pi/2 and a |
| 73 | * representable IEEE single precision number larger than the |
| 74 | * maximum size handled by rredf.h? |
| 75 | * |
| 76 | * The most difficult cases for each exponent can readily be |
| 77 | * found by Tim Peters's modular minimisation algorithm, and are |
| 78 | * tabulated in mathlib/tests/directed/rredf.tst. The single |
| 79 | * worst case is the IEEE single-precision number 0x6F79BE45, |
| 80 | * whose numerical value is in the region of 7.7*10^28; when |
| 81 | * reduced mod pi/2, it attains the value 0x30DDEEA9, or about |
| 82 | * 0.00000000161. The highest set bit of this value is the one |
| 83 | * with place value 2^-30; so its lowest is 2^-53. Hence, to be |
| 84 | * sure of having enough fraction bits to output at full single |
| 85 | * precision, we must be prepared to collect up to 53 bits of |
| 86 | * fraction in addition to our two bits of integer part. |
| 87 | * |
| 88 | * To begin with, this means we must store the value of 2/pi to |
| 89 | * a precision of 128+53 = 181 bits. That's six 32-bit words. |
| 90 | * (Hardly a chore, unlike the equivalent problem in double |
| 91 | * precision!) |
| 92 | */ |
| 93 | { |
| 94 | static const unsigned twooverpi[] = { |
| 95 | /* We start with a zero word, because that takes up less |
| 96 | * space than the array bounds checking and special-case |
| 97 | * handling that would have to occur in its absence. */ |
| 98 | 0, |
| 99 | /* 2/pi in hex is 0.a2f9836e... */ |
| 100 | 0xa2f9836e, 0x4e441529, 0xfc2757d1, |
| 101 | 0xf534ddc0, 0xdb629599, 0x3c439041, |
| 102 | /* Again, to avoid array bounds overrun, we store a spare |
| 103 | * word at the end. And it would be a shame to fill it |
| 104 | * with zeroes when we could use more bits of 2/pi... */ |
| 105 | 0xfe5163ab |
| 106 | }; |
| 107 | |
| 108 | /* |
| 109 | * Multiprecision multiplication of this nature is more |
| 110 | * readily done in integers than in VFP, since we can use |
| 111 | * UMULL (on CPUs that support it) to multiply 32 by 32 bits |
| 112 | * at a time whereas the VFP would only be able to do 12x12 |
| 113 | * without losing accuracy. |
| 114 | * |
| 115 | * So extract the mantissa of the input number as a 32-bit |
| 116 | * integer. |
| 117 | */ |
| 118 | unsigned mantissa = 0x80000000 | (k << 8); |
| 119 | |
| 120 | /* |
| 121 | * Now work out which part of our stored value of 2/pi we're |
| 122 | * supposed to be multiplying by. |
| 123 | * |
| 124 | * Let the IEEE exponent field of x be e. With its bias |
| 125 | * removed, (e-127) is the index of the set bit at the top |
| 126 | * of 'mantissa' (i.e. that set bit has real place value |
| 127 | * 2^(e-127)). So the lowest set bit in 'mantissa', 23 bits |
| 128 | * further down, must have place value 2^(e-150). |
| 129 | * |
| 130 | * We begin taking an interest in the value of 2/pi at the |
| 131 | * bit which multiplies by _that_ to give something with |
| 132 | * place value at most 2. In other words, the highest bit of |
| 133 | * 2/pi we're interested in is the one with place value |
| 134 | * 2/(2^(e-150)) = 2^(151-e). |
| 135 | * |
| 136 | * The bit at the top of the first (zero) word of the above |
| 137 | * array has place value 2^31. Hence, the bit we want to put |
| 138 | * at the top of the first word we extract from that array |
| 139 | * is the one at bit index n, where 31-n = 151-e and hence |
| 140 | * n=e-120. |
| 141 | */ |
| 142 | int topbitindex = ((k >> 23) & 0xFF) - 120; |
| 143 | int wordindex = topbitindex >> 5; |
| 144 | int shiftup = topbitindex & 31; |
| 145 | int shiftdown = 32 - shiftup; |
| 146 | unsigned word1, word2, word3; |
| 147 | if (shiftup) { |
| 148 | word1 = (twooverpi[wordindex] << shiftup) | (twooverpi[wordindex+1] >> shiftdown); |
| 149 | word2 = (twooverpi[wordindex+1] << shiftup) | (twooverpi[wordindex+2] >> shiftdown); |
| 150 | word3 = (twooverpi[wordindex+2] << shiftup) | (twooverpi[wordindex+3] >> shiftdown); |
| 151 | } else { |
| 152 | word1 = twooverpi[wordindex]; |
| 153 | word2 = twooverpi[wordindex+1]; |
| 154 | word3 = twooverpi[wordindex+2]; |
| 155 | } |
| 156 | |
| 157 | /* |
| 158 | * Do the multiplications, and add them together. |
| 159 | */ |
| 160 | unsigned long long mult1 = (unsigned long long)word1 * mantissa; |
| 161 | unsigned long long mult2 = (unsigned long long)word2 * mantissa; |
| 162 | unsigned long long mult3 = (unsigned long long)word3 * mantissa; |
| 163 | |
| 164 | unsigned /* bottom3 = (unsigned)mult3, */ top3 = (unsigned)(mult3 >> 32); |
| 165 | unsigned bottom2 = (unsigned)mult2, top2 = (unsigned)(mult2 >> 32); |
| 166 | unsigned bottom1 = (unsigned)mult1, top1 = (unsigned)(mult1 >> 32); |
| 167 | |
| 168 | unsigned out3, out2, out1, carry; |
| 169 | |
| 170 | out3 = top3 + bottom2; carry = (out3 < top3); |
| 171 | out2 = top2 + bottom1 + carry; carry = carry ? (out2 <= top2) : (out2 < top2); |
| 172 | out1 = top1 + carry; |
| 173 | |
| 174 | /* |
| 175 | * The two words we multiplied to get mult1 had their top |
| 176 | * bits at (respectively) place values 2^(151-e) and |
| 177 | * 2^(e-127). The value of those two bits multiplied |
| 178 | * together will have ended up in bit 62 (the |
| 179 | * topmost-but-one bit) of mult1, i.e. bit 30 of out1. |
| 180 | * Hence, that bit has place value 2^(151-e+e-127) = 2^24. |
| 181 | * So the integer value that we want to output as q, |
| 182 | * consisting of the bits with place values 2^1 and 2^0, |
| 183 | * must be 23 and 24 bits below that, i.e. in bits 7 and 6 |
| 184 | * of out1. |
| 185 | * |
| 186 | * Or, at least, it will be once we add 1/2, to round to the |
| 187 | * _nearest_ multiple of pi/2 rather than the next one down. |
| 188 | */ |
| 189 | *q = (out1 + (1<<5)) >> 6; |
| 190 | |
| 191 | /* |
| 192 | * Now we construct the output fraction, which is most |
| 193 | * simply done in the VFP. We just extract three consecutive |
| 194 | * bit strings from our chunk of binary data, convert them |
| 195 | * to integers, equip each with an appropriate FP exponent, |
| 196 | * add them together, and (don't forget) multiply back up by |
| 197 | * pi/2. That way we don't have to work out ourselves where |
| 198 | * the highest fraction bit ended up. |
| 199 | * |
| 200 | * Since our displacement from the nearest multiple of pi/2 |
| 201 | * can be positive or negative, the topmost of these three |
| 202 | * values must be arranged with its 2^-1 bit at the very top |
| 203 | * of the word, and then treated as a _signed_ integer. |
| 204 | */ |
| 205 | { |
| 206 | int i1 = (out1 << 26) | ((out2 >> 19) << 13); |
| 207 | unsigned i2 = out2 << 13; |
| 208 | unsigned i3 = out3; |
| 209 | float f1 = i1, f2 = i2 * (1.0f/524288.0f), f3 = i3 * (1.0f/524288.0f/524288.0f); |
| 210 | |
| 211 | /* |
| 212 | * Now f1+f2+f3 is a representation, potentially to |
| 213 | * twice double precision, of 2^32 times ((2/pi)*x minus |
| 214 | * some integer). So our remaining job is to multiply |
| 215 | * back down by (pi/2)*2^-32, and convert back to one |
| 216 | * single-precision output number. |
| 217 | */ |
| 218 | |
| 219 | /* Normalise to a prec-and-a-half representation... */ |
| 220 | float ftop = CLEARBOTTOMHALF(f1+f2+f3), fbot = f3-((ftop-f1)-f2); |
| 221 | |
| 222 | /* ... and multiply by a prec-and-a-half value of (pi/2)*2^-32. */ |
| 223 | float ret = (ftop * 0x1.92p-32F) + (ftop * 0x1.fb5444p-44F + fbot * 0x1.921fb6p-32F); |
| 224 | |
| 225 | /* Just before we return, take the input sign into account. */ |
| 226 | if (k & 0x80000000) { |
| 227 | *q = 0x10000000 - *q; |
| 228 | ret = -ret; |
| 229 | } |
| 230 | return ret; |
| 231 | } |
| 232 | } |
| 233 | } |
| 234 | |
| 235 | #ifdef __cplusplus |
| 236 | } /* end of extern "C" */ |
| 237 | #endif /* __cplusplus */ |
| 238 | |
| 239 | /* end of rredf.c */ |