The softfloat function floatx80_round_to_int incorrectly handles the
case of a pseudo-denormal where only the high bit of the significand
is set, ignoring that bit (treating the number as an exact zero)
rather than treating the number as an alternative representation of
+/- 2^-16382 (which may round to +/- 1 depending on the rounding mode)
as hardware does. Fix this check (simplifying the code in the
process).
Signed-off-by: Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
Message-Id: <alpine.DEB.2.21.2005042339420.22972@digraph.polyomino.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
The softfloat floatx80 comparisons fail to allow for pseudo-denormals,
which should compare equal to corresponding values with biased
exponent 1 rather than 0. Add an adjustment for that case when
comparing numbers with the same sign.
Signed-off-by: Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
Message-Id: <alpine.DEB.2.21.2005042338470.22972@digraph.polyomino.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
The softfloat function addFloatx80Sigs, used for addition of values
with the same sign and subtraction of values with opposite sign, fails
to handle the case where the two values both have biased exponent zero
and there is a carry resulting from adding the significands, which can
occur if one or both values are pseudo-denormals (biased exponent
zero, explicit integer bit 1). Add a check for that case, so making
the results match those seen on x86 hardware for pseudo-denormals.
Signed-off-by: Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
Message-Id: <alpine.DEB.2.21.2005042337570.22972@digraph.polyomino.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Conversions between IEEE floating-point formats should convert
signaling NaNs to quiet NaNs. Most of those in QEMU's softfloat code
do so, but those for floatx80 fail to. Fix those conversions to
silence signaling NaNs as well.
Signed-off-by: Joseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>
Message-Id: <alpine.DEB.2.21.2005042336170.22972@digraph.polyomino.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
All other calls to normalize*Subnormal detect zero input before
the call -- this is the only outlier. This case can happen with
+0.0 + +0.0 = +0.0 or -0.0 + -0.0 = -0.0, so return a zero of
the correct sign.
Reported-by: Coverity (CID 1421991)
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Message-Id: <20200327232042.10008-1-richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Message-Id: <20200403191150.863-8-alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reintroduce float32_to_float64 that was removed here:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2018-04/msg00455.html
- nbench test it not actually calling this function at all
- SPECS 2006 significat number of tests impoved their runtime, just
few of them showed small slowdown
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Matus Kysel <mkysel@tachyum.com>
Message-Id: <20191017142133.59439-1-mkysel@tachyum.com>
[rth: Add comment about impossible inexact exceptions.]
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
This is not a normal header and should only be included in the main
softfloat.c file to bring in the various target specific
specialisations. Indeed as it contains non-inlined C functions it is
not even a legal header. Rename it to match our included C convention.
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com>
In our quest to eliminate the home rolled LIT64 macro we fixup usage
inside the softfloat code. While we are at it we remove some of the
extraneous spaces to closer fit the house style.
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Remove some more use of LIT64 while making the meaning more clear. We
also avoid the need of casts as the results by definition fit into the
return type.
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
This also allows us to remove the extractFloat16exp/frac helpers. We
avoid using the floatXX_pack_raw functions as they are slight overkill
for masking out all but the top bit of the number. The generated code
is almost exactly the same as makes no difference to the
pre-conversion code.
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Before falling back to softfloat FMA, we do not restore the original
values of inputs A and C. Fix it.
This bug was caught by running gcc's testsuite on RISC-V qemu.
Note that this change gives a small perf increase for fp-bench:
Host: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-4790K CPU @ 4.00GHz
Command: perf stat -r 3 taskset -c 0 ./fp-bench -o mulAdd -p $prec
- $prec = single:
- before:
101.71 MFlops
102.18 MFlops
100.96 MFlops
- after:
103.63 MFlops
103.05 MFlops
102.96 MFlops
- $prec = double:
- before:
173.10 MFlops
173.93 MFlops
172.11 MFlops
- after:
178.49 MFlops
178.88 MFlops
178.66 MFlops
Signed-off-by: Kito Cheng <kito.cheng@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Message-Id: <20190322204320.17777-1-cota@braap.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Previously this was only supported for roundAndPackFloat64.
New support in round_canonical, round_to_int, float128_round_to_int,
roundAndPackFloat32, roundAndPackInt32, roundAndPackInt64,
roundAndPackUint64. This does not include any of the floatx80 routines,
as we do not have users for that rounding mode there.
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Message-Id: <20190215170225.15537-1-richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Tested-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
[AJB: add missing break]
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Handling it just like float128_to_uint32_round_to_zero, that hopefully
is free of bugs :)
Documentation basically copied from float128_to_uint64
Signed-off-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
The added branch to the FMA ops is marked as unlikely and therefore
its impact on performance (measured with fp-bench) is within noise range
when measured on an Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6142 CPU @ 2.60GHz.
Reported-by: Laurent Desnogues <laurent.desnogues@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Performance results for fp-bench:
Host: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-6700K CPU @ 4.00GHz
- before:
sqrt-single: 42.30 MFlops
sqrt-double: 22.97 MFlops
- after:
sqrt-single: 311.42 MFlops
sqrt-double: 311.08 MFlops
Here USE_FP makes a huge difference for f64's, with throughput
going from ~200 MFlops to ~300 MFlops.
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
The appended paves the way for leveraging the host FPU for a subset
of guest FP operations. For most guest workloads (e.g. FP flags
aren't ever cleared, inexact occurs often and rounding is set to the
default [to nearest]) this will yield sizable performance speedups.
The approach followed here avoids checking the FP exception flags register.
See the added comment for details.
This assumes that QEMU is running on an IEEE754-compliant FPU and
that the rounding is set to the default (to nearest). The
implementation-dependent specifics of the FPU should not matter; things
like tininess detection and snan representation are still dealt with in
soft-fp. However, this approach will break on most hosts if we compile
QEMU with flags that break IEEE compatibility. There is no way to detect
all of these flags at compilation time, but at least we check for
-ffast-math (which defines __FAST_MATH__) and disable hardfloat
(plus emit a #warning) when it is set.
This patch just adds common code. Some operations will be migrated
to hardfloat in subsequent patches to ease bisection.
Note: some architectures (at least PPC, there might be others) clear
the status flags passed to softfloat before most FP operations. This
precludes the use of hardfloat, so to avoid introducing a performance
regression for those targets, we add a flag to disable hardfloat.
In the long run though it would be good to fix the targets so that
at least the inexact flag passed to softfloat is indeed sticky.
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
glibc >= 2.25 defines canonicalize in commit eaf5ad0
(Add canonicalize, canonicalizef, canonicalizel., 2016-10-26).
Given that we'll be including <math.h> soon, prepare
for this by prefixing our canonicalize() with sf_ to avoid
clashing with the libc's canonicalize().
Reported-by: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Tested-by: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Older versions of Clang (before 3.5) and GCC (before 4.1) do not
support the "__attribute__((flatten))" yet. We don't care about
such old versions of GCC anymore, but since Clang 3.4 is still
used in EPEL for RHEL7 / CentOS 7, we should not use this attribute
directly but with a wrapper macro instead.
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>
The __udiv_qrnnd primitive that we nicked from gmp requires its
inputs to be normalized. We were not doing that. Because the
inputs are nearly normalized already, finishing that is trivial.
Replace div128to64 with a "proper" udiv_qrnnd, so that this
remains a reusable primitive.
Fixes: cf07323d49
Fixes: https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1793119
Tested-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Our minimum required compiler for compiling QEMU is GCC 4.1 these days,
so we can drop the support for compilers which do not provide the
__builtin_clz*() functions yet. Since the countLeadingZeros32/64 are
then identical to the clz32/64 functions, and we do not have to sync
the softloat 2 codebase with upstream anymore (softloat 3 is a complete
rewrite) we can simply replace the functions with our QEMU versions.
Suggested-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Acked-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>
Message-Id: <1538118095-7003-1-git-send-email-thuth@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
It has not had users since f83311e476 ("target-m68k: use floatx80
internally", 2017-06-21).
Note that no other bit-width has floatX_trunc_to_int.
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180814002653.12828-3-richard.henderson@linaro.org
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180814002653.12828-2-richard.henderson@linaro.org
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
For 0x1.0000000000003p+0 + 0x1.ffffffep+14 = 0x1.0001fffp+15
we dropped the sticky bit and so failed to raise inexact.
Reported-by: Laurent Desnogues <laurent.desnogues@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Laurent Desnogues <laurent.desnogues@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Laurent Desnogues <laurent.desnogues@gmail.com>
Message-id: 20180810193129.1556-7-richard.henderson@linaro.org
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Isolate the target-specific choice to 3 functions instead of 6.
The code in floatx80_default_nan tried to be over-general. There are
only two targets that support this format: x86 and m68k. Thus there
is no point in inventing a mechanism for snan_bit_is_one.
Move routines that no longer have ifdefs out of softfloat-specialize.h.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Isolate the target-specific choice to 2 functions instead of 6.
The code in float16_default_nan was only correct for ARM, MIPS, and X86.
Though float16 support is rare among our targets.
The code in float128_default_nan was arguably wrong for Sparc. While
QEMU supports the Sparc 128-bit insns, no real cpu enables it.
The code in floatx80_default_nan tried to be over-general. There are
only two targets that support this format: x86 and m68k. Thus there
is no point in inventing a value for snan_bit_is_one.
Move routines that no longer have ifdefs out of softfloat-specialize.h.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
For each operand, pass a single enumeration instead of a pair of booleans.
The commit also merges multiple different ifdef-selected implementations
of pickNaNMulAdd into a single function whose body is ifdef-selected.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
For each operand, pass a single enumeration instead of a pair of booleans.
The commit also merges multiple different ifdef-selected implementations
of pickNaN into a single function whose body is ifdef-selected.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
We will need these helpers within softfloat-specialize.h, so move
the definitions above the include. After specialization, they will
not always be used so mark them to avoid the Werror.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
This allows us to delete a lot of additional boilerplate
code which is no longer needed.
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
For float16 ARM supports an alternative half-precision format which
sacrifices the ability to represent NaN/Inf in return for a higher
dynamic range. The new FloatFmt flag, arm_althp, is then used to
modify the behaviour of canonicalize and round_canonical with respect
to representation and exception raising.
Usage of this new flag waits until we re-factor float-to-float conversions.
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
With a canonical representation of NaNs, we can silence an SNaN
immediately rather than delay until the final format is known.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
With a canonical representation of NaNs, we can return the
default nan directly rather than delay the expansion until
the final format is known.
Note one case where we uselessly assigned to a.sign, which was
overwritten/ignored later when expanding float_class_dnan.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Shift the NaN fraction to a canonical position, much like we
do for the fraction of normal numbers. This will facilitate
manipulation of NaNs within the shared code paths.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
We want to be able to specialize on the canonical representation.
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
The significand is passed to normalizeRoundAndPackFloat128() as high
first, low second. The current code passes the integer first, so the
result is incorrectly shifted left by 64 bits.
This bug affects the emulation of s390x instruction CXLGBR (convert
from logical 64-bit binary-integer operand to extended BFP result).
Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Petr Tesarik <ptesarik@suse.com>
Message-Id: <20180511071052.1443-1-ptesarik@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
In float-to-integer conversion, if the floating point input
converts exactly to the largest or smallest integer that
fits in to the result type, this is not an overflow.
In this situation we were producing the correct result value,
but were incorrectly setting the Invalid flag.
For example for Arm A64, "FCVTAS w0, d0" on an input of
0x41dfffffffc00000 should produce 0x7fffffff and set no flags.
Fix the boundary case to take the right half of the if()
statements.
This fixes a regression from 2.11 introduced by the softfloat
refactoring.
Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org
Fixes: ab52f973a5
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180510140141.12120-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
Reported by Coverity (CID1390635). We ensure this for uint_to_float
later on so we might as well mirror that.
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
It is implementation defined whether a multiply-add of
(0,inf,qnan) or (inf,0,qnan) raises InvalidaOperation or
not, so we let the target-specific pickNaNMulAdd function
handle this. This means that we must do the "return the
default NaN in default NaN mode" check after the call,
not before. Correct the ordering, and restore the comment
from the old propagateFloat64MulAddNaN() that warned about
this corner case.
This fixes a regression from 2.11 for Arm guests where we would
incorrectly fail to set the Invalid flag for these cases.
Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180504100547.14621-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
Without bounding the increment, we can overflow exp either here
in scalbn_decomposed or when adding the bias in round_canonical.
This can result in e.g. underflowing to 0 instead of overflowing
to infinity.
The old softfloat code did bound the increment.
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Tested-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
The re-factoring of div_floats changed the order of checking meaning
an operation like -inf/0 erroneously raises the divbyzero flag.
IEEE-754 (2008) specifies this should only occur for operations on
finite operands.
We fix this by moving the check on the dividend being Inf/0 to before
the divisor is zero check.
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180416135442.30606-1-alex.bennee@linaro.org
Cc: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Reviewed-by: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Tested-by: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
The re-factor broke the raising of INVALID when NaN/Inf is passed to
the float_to_int conversion functions. round_to_uint_and_pack got this
right for NaN but also missed out the Inf handling.
Fixes https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1759264
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Tested-by: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180413140334.26622-3-alex.bennee@linaro.org
Cc: Bastian Koppelmann <kbastian@mail.uni-paderborn.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Before 8936006 ("fpu/softfloat: re-factor minmax", 2018-02-21),
we used to return +Zero for maxnummag(-Zero,+Zero); after that
commit, we return -Zero.
Fix it by making {min,max}nummag consistent with {min,max}num,
deferring to the latter when the absolute value of the operands
is the same.
With this fix we now pass fp-test.
Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org>
Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180413140334.26622-2-alex.bennee@linaro.org
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
We incorrectly passed in the current rounding mode
instead of float_round_to_zero.
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180410055912.934-1-richard.henderson@linaro.org
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>