Staticize two tables thare are not visible in <resolv.h>
and which are also local in Solaris' libresolv.
Remove two functions that are not referenced in libc nor
anywhere else I can find, not visible in <resolv.h> and
which are also local in Solaris libresolv.
but then sizes the containing data structure at run-time to make room
for per-cpu cache data. Modify libmemstat to separately allocate a
buffer to hold per-cpu cache data, sized based on the run-time mp_maxid
variable when using libkvm to access UMA data. This avoids reading
invalid cache data from beyond the end of the uma_zone data structure
on the stack, which can result in invalid statistics and/or reads from
invalid kernel addresses.
Foot target practice by: ps
MFC after: 3 days
return a KVM error rather than an out of memory error, so that the caller
reports the KVM error state. This replaces a misleading error message
with a more accurate although equally confusing one.
MFC after: 3 days
cpu mask before looking at the cache entries for the CPU. For systems
with sparse CPU id arrays, this skips otherwise uninitialized cache
structures.
MFC after: 3 days
Remove the block of code that tries to use delayed regions in LIFO order,
since from a policy perspective, it conflicts with LRU caching of newly
coalesced regions in arena_undelay(). There are numerous policy
alternatives, and it isn't readily obvious which (if any) is superior;
this change at least has the virtue of being consistent with policy.
Add %M{essage} extension which prints an errno value as the
corresponding string if possible or numerically otherwise.
It is not currently possible to do the syslog(3) like %m extension
because errno would need to get capatured on entry to the first
function in the printf family, so %M requires you to supply errno
as an argument.
Add %Q{uote} extension which will print a string in double quotes with
appropriate back-slash escapes (only) if necessary.
fit regions are available, use the delayed regions in LIFO order, in order
to increase locality of reference. We might expect this to cause delayed
regions to be removed from the delay ring buffer more often (since we're
now re-using more recently buffered regions), but numerous tests indicate
that the overall impact on memory usage tends to be good (reduced
fragmentation).
Re-work arena_frag_reg_alloc() so that when large free regions are
exhausted, it uses small regions in a way that favors contiguous allocation
of sequentially allocated small regions. Use arena_frag_reg_alloc() in
this capacity, rather than directly attempting over-fitting of small
requests when no large regions are available.
Remove the bin overfit statistic, since it is no longer relevant due to
the arena_frag_reg_alloc() changes.
Do not specify arena_frag_reg_alloc() as an inline function. It is too
large to benefit much from being inlined, and it is also called in two
places, only one of which is in the critical path (the other call bloated
arena_reg_alloc()).
Call arena_coalesce() for a region before caching it with
arena_mru_cache().
Add assertions that detect the attempted caching of adjacent free regions,
so that we notice this problem when it is first created, rather than in
arena_coalesce(), when it's too late to know how the problem arose.
Reported by: Hans Blancke
behaviour of returning EINVAL when ".." is passed as either argument
has been restored.
rmdir("..") now returns EINVAL instead of EPERM. Document the
previously undocumented behaviour of rmdir(".") returning EINVAL
as required by POSIX and SUSv3. Bump the man page change date.
undelete("..") now returns EINVAL instead of EPERM. Bump the man
page change date.
MFC after: 3 days
problems in cases where regions are faked up for the purposes of red-black
tree searches, since those faked region headers reside on the stack, rather
than in a malloc chunk.
allowing the error to be fatal.
Move a label in order to make sure to properly handle errors in malloc(0).
Reported by: Alastair D'Silva, Saneto Takanori
routine fails or the first read fails), invoke the client close
routine immediately so the client can clean up. Also, don't store the
client pointers in this case, so that the client close routine can't
accidentally get called more than once.
A minor style fix to archive_read_open_fd.c while I'm here.
PR: 86453
Thanks to: Andrew Turner for reporting this and suggesting a fix.
archiver for Fourth Edition through Sixth Edition Unix; it was
replaced by tar in Seventh Edition. (First Edition through
Third Edition used "tap.")
Unfortunately, tp was not so very standard; there were a
few different variants. The code here attempts to support
what I believe were the most common variants.
tp support is not yet enabled by archive_read_support_format_all(),
as I'm not yet entirely comfortable with the detection
heuristics. People interested in experimenting can
add archive_read_support_format_tp() just after any calls
to archive_read_support_format_all() in bsdtar to see how
well this works.
TODO: tp format is roughly similar in structure to dump/restore
archive formats used by many systems. It should be possible
to generalize this code to handle many dump/restore variants.
Format detection heuristics are going to be rough, though.
Thanks to: Warren Toomey, whose very basic tp extraction programs
and documentation made this possible.
there is never any need to recursively call the main allocation functions.
Remove recursive spinlock support, since it is no longer needed.
Allow chunks to be as small as the page size.
Correctly propagate OOM errors from arena_new().
from /etc/login.conf, or an unterminated string buffer could result.
Probably, login_times.c should reject excessively long time strings as
unparseable, rather than truncating, which might render an invalid
string valid.
Found with: Coverity Prevent (tm)
Reviewed by: csjp
MFC after: 3 days
list, which could cause problems for multi-threaded applications
using libmemstat to monitor UMA in more than one thread
simultaneously.
MFC after: 3 days
broken for non-threaded shared processes in that __tls_get_addr()
assumes the thread pointer is always initialized. This is not the
case. When arenas_map is referenced in choose_arena() and it is
defined as a thread-local variable, it will result in a SIGSEGV.
PR: ia64/91846 (describes the TLS/ia64 bug).
had been replied, the reply was always delivered to the originator
synchronously.
With introduction of netgraph item callbacks and a wait channel with
mutex in ng_socket(4), we have fixed the problem with ngctl(8) returning
earlier than the command has been proceeded by target node. But still
ngctl(8) can return prior to the reply has arrived to its node.
To fix this:
- Introduce a new flag for netgraph(4) messages - NGM_HASREPLY.
This flag is or'ed with message like NGM_READONLY.
- In netgraph userland library if we have sent a message with
NGM_HASREPLY flag, then select(2) until reply comes.
- Mark appropriate generic commands with NGM_HASREPLY flag,
gathering them into one enum {}. Bump generic cookie.
* Add posix_memalign().
* Move calloc() from calloc.c to malloc.c. Add a calloc() implementation in
rtld-elf in order to make the loader happy (even though calloc() isn't
used in rtld-elf).
* Add _malloc_prefork() and _malloc_postfork(), and use them instead of
directly manipulating __malloc_lock.
Approved by: phk, markm (mentor)
While we don't use the NC_BROADCAST value of nc_flag anywhere in the
RPC code, it is parseable by getnetconfigent(3) from /etc/netconfig.
o Clean up some "see below"'s that were cut and pasted from netconfig.h.
operation, the caller is blocked util target threads are really
suspended, also avoid suspending a thread when it is holding a
critical lock.
Fix a bug in _thr_ref_delete which tests a never set flag.
commit broke the 2**24 cases where |x| > DBL_MAX/2. There are exponent
range problems not just for denormals (underflow) but for large values
(overflow). Doubles have more than enough exponent range to avoid the
problems, but I forgot to convert enough terms to double, so there was
an x+x term which was sometimes evaluated in float precision.
Unfortunately, this is a pessimization with some combinations of systems
and compilers (it makes no difference on Athlon XP's, but on Athlon64's
it gives a 5% pessimization with gcc-3.4 but not with gcc-3.3).
Exlain the problem better in comments.
algorithm for the second step significantly to also get a perfectly
rounded result in round-to-nearest mode. The resulting optimization
is about 25% on Athlon64's and 30% on Athlon XP's (about 25 cycles
out of 100 on the former).
Using extra precision, we don't need to do anything special to avoid
large rounding errors in the third step (Newton's method), so we can
regroup terms to avoid a division, increase clarity, and increase
opportunities for parallelism. Rearrangement for parallelism loses
the increase in clarity. We end up with the same number of operations
but with a division reduced to a multiplication.
Using specifically double precision, there is enough extra precision
for the third step to give enough precision for perfect rounding to
float precision provided the previous steps are accurate to 16 bits.
(They were accurate to 12 bits, which was almost minimal for imperfect
rounding in the old version but would be more than enough for imperfect
rounding in this version (9 bits would be enough now).) I couldn't
find any significant time optimizations from optimizing the previous
steps, so I decided to optimize for accuracy instead. The second step
needed a division although a previous commit optimized it to use a
polynomial approximation for its main detail, and this division dominated
the time for the second step. Use the same Newton's method for the
second step as for the third step since this is insignificantly slower
than the division plus the polynomial (now that Newton's method only
needs 1 division), significantly more accurate, and simpler. Single
precision would be precise enough for the second step, but doesn't
have enough exponent range to handle denormals without the special
grouping of terms (as in previous versions) that requires another
division, so we use double precision for both the second and third
steps.
functions in the child after a fork() from a threaded process,
use __sys_setprocmask() rather than setprocmask() to keep our
signal handling sane. Without this fix, signals are essentially
ignored in said child and things such as protection violations
result in an endless busy loop.
Reviewed by: deischen
similar the the Solaris implementation. Repackage the krb5 GSS mechanism
as a plugin library for the new implementation. This also includes a
comprehensive set of manpages for the GSS-API functions with text mostly
taken from the RFC.
Reviewed by: Love Hörnquist Åstrand <lha@it.su.se>, ru (build system), des (openssh parts)
between a 32-bit integer and a radix-64 ASCII string. The l64a_r() function
is a NetBSD addition.
PR: 51209 (based on submission, but very different)
Reviewed by: bde, ru
distributed non-large args, this saves about 14 of 134 cycles for
Athlon64s and about 5 of 199 cycles for AthlonXPs.
Moved the check for x == 0 inside the check for subnormals. With
gcc-3.4 on uniformly distributed non-large args, this saves another
5 cycles on Athlon64s and loses 1 cycle on AthlonXPs.
Use INSERT_WORDS() and not SET_HIGH_WORD() when converting the first
approximation from bits to double. With gcc-3.4 on uniformly distributed
non-large args, this saves another 4 cycles on both Athlon64s and and
AthlonXPs.
Accessing doubles as 2 words may be an optimization on old CPUs, but on
current CPUs it tends to cause extra operations and pipeline stalls,
especially for writes, even when only 1 of the words needs to be accessed.
Removed an unused variable.
function approximation for the second step. The polynomial has degree
2 for cbrtf() and 4 for cbrt(). These degrees are minimal for the final
accuracy to be essentially the same as before (slightly smaller).
Adjust the rounding between steps 2 and 3 to match. Unfortunately,
for cbrt(), this breaks the claimed accuracy slightly although incorrect
rounding doesn't. Claim less accuracy since its not worth pessimizing
the polynomial or relying on exhaustive testing to get insignificantly
more accuracy.
This saves about 30 cycles on Athlons (mainly by avoiding 2 divisions)
so it gives an overall optimization in the 10-25% range (a larger
percentage for float precision, especially in 32-bit mode, since other
overheads are more dominant for double precision, surprisingly more
in 32-bit mode).
- in preparing for the third approximation, actually make t larger in
magnitude than cbrt(x). After chopping, t must be incremented by 2
ulps to make it larger, not 1 ulp since chopping can reduce it by
almost 1 ulp and it might already be up to half a different-sized-ulp
smaller than cbrt(x). I have not found any cases where this is
essential, but the think-time error bound depends on it. The relative
smallness of the different-sized-ulp limited the bug. If there are
cases where this is essential, then the final error bound would be
5/6+epsilon instead of of 4/6+epsilon ulps (still < 1).
- in preparing for the third approximation, round more carefully (but
still sloppily to avoid branches) so that the claimed error bound of
0.667 ulps is satisfied in all cases tested for cbrt() and remains
satisfied in all cases for cbrtf(). There isn't enough spare precision
for very sloppy rounding to work:
- in cbrt(), even with the inadequate increment, the actual error was
0.6685 in some cases, and correcting the increment increased this
a little. The fix uses sloppy rounding to 25 bits instead of very
sloppy rounding to 21 bits, and starts using uint64_t instead of 2
words for bit manipulation so that rounding more bits is not much
costly.
- in cbrtf(), the 0.667 bound was already satisfied even with the
inadequate increment, but change the code to almost match cbrt()
anyway. There is not enough spare precision in the Newton
approximation to double the inadequate increment without exceeding
the 0.667 bound, and no spare precision to avoid this problem as
in cbrt(). The fix is to round using an increment of 2 smaller-ulps
before chopping so that an increment of 1 ulp is enough. In cbrt(),
we essentially do the same, but move the chop point so that the
increment of 1 is not needed.
Fixed comments to match code:
- in cbrt(), the second approximation is good to 25 bits, not quite 26 bits.
- in cbrt(), don't claim that the second approximation may be implemented
in single precision. Single precision cannot handle the full exponent
range without minor but pessimal changes to renormalize, and although
single precision is enough, 25 bit precision is now claimed and used.
Added comments about some of the magic for the error bound 4/6+epsilon.
I still don't understand why it is 4/6+ and not 6/6+ ulps.
Indent comments at the right of code more consistently.
to be compatible with symbol versioning support as implemented by
GNU libc and documented by http://people.redhat.com/~drepper/symbol-versioning
and LSB 3.0.
Implement dlvsym() function to allow lookups for a specific version of
a given symbol.
means:
o Remove Elf64_Quarter,
o Redefine Elf64_Half to be 16-bit,
o Redefine Elf64_Word to be 32-bit,
o Add Elf64_Xword and Elf64_Sxword for 64-bit entities,
o Use Elf_Size in MI code to abstract the difference between
Elf32_Word and Elf64_Word.
o Add Elf_Ssize as the signed counterpart of Elf_Size.
MFC after: 2 weeks
on probationary terms: it may go away again if it transpires it is
a bad idea.
This extensible printf version will only be used if either
environment variable USE_XPRINTF is defined
or
one of the extension functions are called.
or
the global variable __use_xprintf is set greater than zero.
In all other cases our traditional printf implementation will
be used.
The extensible version is slower than the default printf, mostly
because less opportunity for combining I/O operation exists when
faced with extensions. The default printf on the other hand
is a bad case of spaghetti code.
The extension API has a GLIBC compatible part and a FreeBSD version
of same. The FreeBSD version exists because the GLIBC version may
run afoul of our FILE * locking in multithreaded programs and it
even further eliminate the opportunities for combining I/O operations.
Include three demo extensions which can be enabled if desired: time
(%T), hexdump (%H) and strvis (%V).
%T can format time_t (%T), struct timeval (%lT) and struct timespec (%llT)
in one of two human readable duration formats:
"%.3llT" -> "20349.245"
"%#.3llT" -> "5h39m9.245"
%H will hexdump a sequence of bytes and takes a pointer and a length
argument. The width specifies number of bytes per line.
"%4H" -> "65 72 20 65"
"%+4H" -> "0000 65 72 20 65"
"%#4H" -> "65 72 20 65 |er e|"
"%+#4H" -> "0000 65 72 20 65 |er e|"
%V will dump a string in strvis format.
"%V" -> "Hello\tWor\377ld" (C-style)
"%0V" -> "Hello\011Wor\377ld" (octal)
"%+V" -> "Hello%09Wor%FFld" (http-style)
Tests, comments, bugreports etc are most welcome.
allocate a memory block. sscanf calls __svfscanf which in turn calls
fread, fread triggers mutex initialization but the mutex is not
destroyed in sscanf, this leads to memory leak. To avoid the memory
leak and performance issue, we create a none MT-safe version of fread:
__fread, and instead let __svfscanf call __fread.
PR: threads/90392
Patch submitted by: dhartmei
MFC after: 7 days
the second step of approximating cbrt(x). It turns out to be neither
very magic not nor very good. It is just the (2,2) Pade approximation
to 1/cbrt(r) at r = 1, arranged in a strange way to use fewer operations
at a cost of replacing 4 multiplications by 1 division, which is an
especially bad tradeoff on machines where some of the multiplications
can be done in parallel. A Remez rational approximation would give
at least 2 more bits of accuracy, but the (2,2) Pade approximation
already gives 6 more bits than needed. (Changed the comment which
essentially says that it gives 3 more bits.)
Lower order Pade approximations are not quite accurate enough for
double precision but are plenty for float precision. A lower order
Remez rational approximation might be enough for double precision too.
However, rational approximations inherently require an extra division,
and polynomial approximations work well for 1/cbrt(r) at r = 1, so I
plan to switch to using the latter. There are some technical
complications that tend to cost a division in another way.
This gives an optimization of between 9 and 22% on Athlons (largest
for cbrt() on amd64 -- from 205 to 159 cycles).
We extracted the sign bit and worked with |x|, and restored the sign
bit as the last step. We avoided branches to a fault by using accesses
to FP values as bits to clear and restore the sign bit. Avoiding
branches is usually good, but the bit access macros are not so good
(especially for setting FP values), and here they always caused pipeline
stalls on Athlons. Even using branches would be faster except on args
that give perfect branch misprediction, since only mispredicted branches
cause stalls, but it possible to avoid touching the sign bit in FP
values at all (except to preserve it in conversions from bits to FP
not related to the sign bit). Do this. The results are identical
except in 2 of the 3 unsupported rounding modes, since all the
approximations use odd rational functions so they work right on strictly
negative values, and the special case of -0 doesn't use an approximation.
For some denormalized long double values, a bug in __hldtoa() (called
from *printf()'s %A format) results in a base 16 digit being rounded
up from 0xf to 0x10.
When this digit is subsequently converted to string format, an index
of 10 reaches past the end of the uppper-case hex/char array, picking
up whatever the code segment happen to contain at that address.
This mostly seem to be some character from the upper half of the
byte range.
When using the %a format instead of %A, the first character past
the end of the lowercase hex/char table happens to be index 0 in
the uppercase hex/char table hextable and therefore the string
representation features a '0', which is supposedly correct.
This leads me to belive that the proper fix _may_ be as simple as
masking all but the lower four bits off after incrementing a hex-digit
in libc/gdtoa/_hdtoa.c:roundup(). I worry however that the upper
bit in 0x10 indicates a carry not carried.
Until das@ or bde@ finds time to visit this issue, extend the
hexdigit arrays with a 17th index containing '?' so that we get a
invalid but consistent and printable output in both %a and %A formats
whenever this bug strikes.
This unmasks the bug in the %a format therefore solving the real
issue may both become easier and more urgent.
Possibly related to: PR 85080
With help by: bde@
<cbrt(x) in bits> ~= <x in bits>/3 + BIAS.
Keep the large comments only in the double version as usual.
Fixed some style bugs (mainly grammar and spelling errors in comments).
It was because I forgot to translate the part of the double precision
algorithm that chops t so that t*t is exact. Now the maximum error
is the same as for double precision (almost exactly 2.0/3 ulps).
The maximum error was 3.56 ulps.
The bug was another translation error. The double precision version
has a comment saying "new cbrt to 23 bits, may be implemented in
precision". This means exactly what it says -- that the 23 bit second
approximation for the double precision cbrt() may be implemented in
single (i.e., float) precision. It doesn't mean what the translation
assumed -- that this approximation, when implemented in float precision,
is good enough for the the final approximation in float precision.
First, float precision needs a 24 bit approximation. The "23 bit"
approximation is actually good to 24 bits on float precision args, but
only if it is evaluated in double precision. Second, the algorithm
requires a cleanup step to ensure its error bound.
In float precision, any reasonable algorithm works for the cleanup
step. Use the same algorithm as for double precision, although this
is much more than enough and is a significant pessimization, and don't
optimize or simplify anything using double precision to implement the
float case, so that the whole double precision algorithm can be verified
in float precision. A maximum error of 0.667 ulps is claimed for cbrt()
and the max for cbrtf() using the same algorithm shouldn't be different,
but the actual max for cbrtf() on amd64 is now 0.9834 ulps. (On i386
-O1 the max is 0.5006 (down from < 0.7) due to extra precision.)
The threshold for not being tiny was too small. Use the usual 2**-12
threshold. As for sinhf, use a different method (now the same as for
sinhf) to set the inexact flag for tiny nonzero x so that the larger
threshold works, although this method is imperfect. As for sinhf,
this change is not just an optimization, since the general code that
we fell into has accuracy problems even for tiny x. On amd64, avoiding
it fixes tanhf on 2*13495596 args with errors of between 1 and 1.3
ulps and thus reduces the total number of args with errors of >= 1 ulp
from 37533748 to 5271278; the maximum error is unchanged at 2.2 ulps.
The magic number 22 is log(DBL_MAX)/2 plus slop. This is bogus for
float precision. Use 9 (log(FLT_MAX)/2 plus less slop than for
double precision). Unlike for coshf and tanhf, this is just an
optimization, and MAX isn't misspelled EPSILON in the commit log.
I started testing with nonstandard rounding modes, and verified that
the chosen thresholds work for all modes modulo problems not related
to thresholds. The best thresholds are not very dependent on the mode,
at least for tanhf.
shares its low half with pio2_hi. pio2_hi is rounded down although
rounding to nearest would be a tiny bit better, so pio4_hi must be
rounded down too. It was rounded to nearest, which happens to be
different in float precision but the same in double precision.
This fixes about 13.5 million errors of more than 1 ulp in asinf().
The largest error was 2.81 ulps on amd64 and 2.57 ulps on i386 -O1.
Now the largest error is 0.93 ulps on amd65 and 0.67 ulps on i386 -O1.
sqrt(2)/2-1. For log1p(), fixed the approximation to sqrt(2)/2-1.
The end result is to fix an error of 1.293 ulps in
log1pf(0.41421395540 (hex 0x3ed413da))
and an error of 1.783 ulps in
log1p(-0.292893409729003961761) (hex 0x12bec4 00000001)).
The former was the only error of > 1 ulp for log1pf() and the latter
is the only such error that I know of for log1p().
The approximations don't need to be very accurate, but the last 2 need
to be related to the first and be rounded up a little (even more than
1 ulp for sqrt(2)/2-1) for the following implementation-detail reason:
when the arg (x) is not between (the approximations to) sqrt(2)/2-1
and sqrt(2)-1, we commit to using a correction term, but we only
actually use it if 1+x is between sqrt(2)/2 and sqrt(2) according to
the first approximation. Thus we must ensure that
!(sqrt(2)/2-1 < x < sqrt(2)-1) implies !(sqrt(2)/2 < x+1 < sqrt(2)),
where all the sqrt(2)'s are really slightly different approximations
to sqrt(2) and some of the "<"'s are really "<="'s. This was not done.
In log1pf(), the last 2 approximations were rounded up by about 6 ulps
more than needed relative to a good approximation to sqrt(2), but the
actual approximation to sqrt(2) was off by 3 ulps. The approximation
to sqrt(2)-1 ended up being 4 ulps too small, so the algoritm was
broken in 4 cases. The result happened to be broken in 1 case. This
is fixed by using a natural approximation to sqrt(2) and derived
approximations for the others.
In logf(), all the approximations made sense, but the approximation
to sqrt(2)/2-1 was 2 ulps too small (a tiny amount, since we compare
with a granularity of 2**32 ulps), so the algorithm was broken in 2
cases. The result was broken in 1 case. This is fixed by rounding
up the approximation to sqrt(2)/2-1 by 2**32 ulps, so 2**32 cases are
now handled a little differently (still correctly according to my
assertion that the approximations don't need to be very accurate, but
this has not been checked).
through the history in sh.
| Refresh bug reported by Julien Torres:
|
| going from:
| activate -verbose
| to:
| reset -activation
| results in:
| reset -activationverbose"
| instead of:
| reset -activation
|
| This is because we choose to insert "reset -" before the current line,
| and the delete "e -" and insert "ion" in the appropriate place. The
| cleareol code did not handle this case properly; we now cleareol to
| the maximum number of characters of the first difference, the second
| difference and the difference in line length.
on assignment.
Extra precision on i386's broke hi+lo decomposition in the usual way.
It caused all except 1 of the 62343 errors of more than 1 ulp for
log1pf() on i386's with gcc -O [-fno-float-store].
according to the highest nonzero bit in a denormal was missing.
fdlibm ilogbf() and ilogb() have always had the adjustment, but only
use a small part of their method for handling denormals; use the
normalization method in log[f]() for the main part.
It was lost in rev.1.9. The log message for rev.1.9 says that the
special case of +-0 is handled twice, but it was only handled once,
so it became unhandled, and this happened to break half of the cases
that return +-0:
- round-towards-minus-infinity: 0 < x < 1: result was -0 not 0
- round-to-nearest: -0.5 <= x < 0: result was 0 not -0
- round-towards-plus-infinity: -1 < x < 0: result was 0 not -0
- round-towards-zero: -1 < x < 0: result was 0 not -0
TWO52[sx] to trick gcc into correctly converting TWO52[sx]+x to double
on assignment to "double w", force a correct assignment by assigning
to *(double *)&w. This is cleaner and avoids the double rounding
problem on machines that evaluate double expressions in double
precision. It is not necessary to convert w-TWO52[sx] to double
precision on return as implied in the comment in rev.1.3, since
the difference is exact.
(1) In round-to-nearest mode, on all machines, fdlibm rint() never
worked for |x| = n+0.75 where n is an even integer between 262144
and 524286 inclusive (2*131072 cases). To avoid double rounding
on some machines, we begin by adjusting x to a value with the 0.25
bit not set, essentially by moving the 0.25 bit to a lower bit
where it works well enough as a guard, but we botched the adjustment
when log2(|x|) == 18 (2*2**52 cases) and ended up just clearing
the 0.25 bit then. Most subcases still worked accidentally since
another lower bit serves as a guard. The case of odd n worked
accidentally because the rounding goes the right way then. However,
for even n, after mangling n+0.75 to 0.5, rounding gives n but the
correct result is n+1.
(2) In round-towards-minus-infinity mode, on all machines, fdlibm rint()
never for x = n+0.25 where n is any integer between -524287 and
-262144 inclusive (262144 cases). In these cases, after mangling
n+0.25 to n, rounding gives n but the correct result is n-1.
(3) In round-towards-plus-infinity mode, on all machines, fdlibm rint()
never for x = n+0.25 where n is any integer between 262144 and
524287 inclusive (262144 cases). In these cases, after mangling
n+0.25 to n, rounding gives n but the correct result is n+1.
A variant of this bug was fixed for the float case in rev.1.9 of s_rintf.c,
but the analysis there is incomplete (it only mentions (1)) and the fix
is buggy.
Example of the problem with double rounding: rint(1.375) on a machine
which evaluates double expressions with just 1 bit of extra precision
and is in round-to-nearest mode. We evaluate the result using
(double)(2**52 + 1.375) - 2**52. Evaluating 2**52 + 1.375 in (53+1) bit
prcision gives 2**52 + 1.5 (first rounding). (Second) rounding of this
to double gives 2**52 + 2.0. Subtracting 2**52 from this gives 2.0 but
we want 1.0. Evaluating 2**52 + 1.375 in double precision would have
given the desired intermediate result of 2**52 + 1.0.
The double rounding problem is relatively rare, so the botched adjustment
can be fixed for most machines by removing the entire adjustment. This
would be a wrong fix (using it is 1 of the bugs in rev.1.9 of s_rintf.c)
since fdlibm is supposed to be generic, but it works in the following cases:
- on all machines that evaluate double expressions in double precision,
provided either long double has the same precision as double (alpha,
and i386's with precision forced to double) or my earlier fix to use
a long double 2**52 is modified to avoid using long double precision.
- on all machines that evaluate double expressions in many more than 11
bits of extra precision. The 1 bit of extra precision in the example
is the worst case. With N bits of extra precision, it sufices to
adjust the bit N bits below the 0.5 bit. For N >= about 52 there is
no such bit so the adjustment is both impossible and unnecessary. The
fix in rev.1.9 of s_rintf.c apparently depends on corresponding magic
in float precision: on all supported machines N is either 0 or >= 24,
so double rounding doesn't occur in practice.
- on all machines that don't use fdlibm rint*() (i386's).
So under FreeBSD, the double rounding problem only affects amd64 now, but
should only affect i386 in future (when double expressions are evaluated
in long double precision).
Switch strncpy to strlcpy suggested by gad and issue found by pjd.
Add to uname(3) man page describing:
UNAME_s
UNAME_r
UNAME_v
UNAME_m
Add to getosreldate(3) man page describing:
OSVERSION
Submitted by: ru, pjd/gad
Reviewed by: ru (man pages)
- in round-towards-minus-infinity mode, on all machines, roundf(x) never
worked for 0 < |x| < 0.5 (2*0x3effffff cases in all, or almost half of
float space). It was -0 for 0 < x < 0.5 and 0 for -0.5 < x < 0, but
should be 0 and -0, respectively. This is because t = ceilf(|x|) = 1
for these args, and when we adjust t from 1 to 0 by subtracting 1, we
get -0 in this rounding mode, but we want and expected to get 0.
- in round-towards-minus-infinity, round towards zero and round-to-nearest
modes, on machines that evaluate float expressions in float precision
(most machines except i386's), roundf(x) never worked for |x| =
<float value immediately below 0.5> (2 cases in all). It was +-1 but
should have been +-0. This is because t = ceilf(|x|) = 1 for these
args, and when we try to classify |x| by subtracting it from 1 we
get an unexpected rounding error -- the result is 0.5 after rounding
to float in all 3 rounding modes, so we we have forgotten the
difference between |x| and 0.5 and end up returning the same value
as for +-0.5.
The fix is to use floorf() instead of ceilf() and to add 1 instead of
-1 in the adjustment. With floorf() all the expressions used are
always evaluated exactly so there are no rounding problems, and with
adjustments of +1 we don't go near -0 when adjusting.
Attempted to fix round() and roundl() by cloning the fix for roundf().
This has only been tested for round(), only on args representable as
floats. Double expressions are evaluated in double precision even on
i386's, so round(0.5-epsilon) was broken even on i386's. roundl()
must be completely broken on i386's since long double precision is not
really supported. There seem to be no other dependencies on the
precision.
FreeBSD machine. To do this add the man 1 uname changes to __xuname.c
so we can override the settings it reports. Add OSVERSION override
to getosreldate. Finally which Makefile.inc1 to use uname -m instead
of sysctl -n hw.machine_arch to get the arch. type.
With these change you can put a complete FreeBSD OS image into a
chroot set:
UNAME_s=FreeBSD
UNAME_r=4.7-RELEASE
UNAME_v="FreeBSD $UNAME_r #1: Fri Jul 22 20:32:52 PDT 2005 fake@fake:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/FAKE"
UNAME_m=i386
UNAME_p=i386
OSVERSION=470000
on an amd64 or i386 and it just work including building ports and using
pkg_add -r etc. The caveat for this example is that these patches
have to be applied to FreeBSD 4.7 and the uname(1) changes need to
be merged. This also addresses issue with libtool.
This is usefull for when a build machine has been trashed for an
old release and we want to do a build on a new machine that FreeBSD
4.7 won't run on ...
other systems it prevents a tty from becoming a controlling tty on the
open. O_SYNC is the POSIX name for O_FSYNC.
The Markup Police may need to tweak my references to standards.
k_tanf.c but with different details.
The polynomial is odd with degree 13 for tanf() and odd with degree
9 for sinf(), so the details are not very different for sinf() -- the
term with the x**11 and x**13 coefficients goes awaym and (mysteriously)
it helps to do the evaluation of w = z*z early although moving it later
was a key optimization for tanf(). The details are different but simpler
for cosf() because the polynomial is even and of lower degree.
On Athlons, for uniformly distributed args in [-2pi, 2pi], this gives
an optimization of about 4 cycles (10%) in most cases (13% for sinf()
on AXP, but 0% for cosf() with gcc-3.3 -O1 on AXP). The best case
(sinf() with gcc-3.4 -O1 -fcaller-saves on A64) now takes 33-39 cycles
(was 37-45 cycles). Hardware sinf takes 74-129 cycles. Despite
being fine tuned for Athlons, the optimization is even larger on
some other arches (about 15% on ia64 (pluto2) and 20% on alpha (beast)
with gcc -O2 -fomit-frame-pointer).
cosf(x) is supposed to return something like x when x is a NaN, and
we actually fairly consistently return x-x which is normally very like
x (on i386 and and it is x if x is a quiet NaN and x with the quiet bit
set if x is a signaling NaN. Rev.1.10 broke this by normalising x to
fabsf(x). It's not clear if fabsf(x) is should preserve x if x is a NaN,
but it actually clears the sign bit, and other parts of the code depended
on this.
The bugs can be fixed by saving x before normalizing it, and using the
saved x only for NaNs, and using uint32_t instead of int32_t for ix
so that negative NaNs are not misclassified even if fabsf() doesn't
clear their sign bit, but gcc pessimizes the saving very well, especially
on Athlon XPs (it generates extra loads and stores, and mixes use of
the SSE and i387, and this somehow messes up pipelines). Normalizing
x is not a very good optimization anyway, so stop doing it. (It adds
latency to the FPU pipelines, but in previous versions it helped except
for |x| <= 3pi/4 by simplifying the integer pipelines.) Use the same
organization as in s_sinf.c and s_tanf.c with some branches reordered.
These changes combined recover most of the performance of the unfixed
version on A64 but still lose 10% on AXP with gcc-3.4 -O1 but not with
gcc-3.3 -O1.
that was used doesn't work normally here, since we want to be able to
multiply `hi' by the exponent of x _exactly_, and the exponent of x has
more than 7 significant bits for most denormal x's, so the multiplication
was not always exact despite a cloned comment claiming that it was. (The
comment is correct in the double precision case -- with the normal 33+53
bit decomposition the exponent can have 20 significant bits and the extra
bit for denormals is only the 11th.)
Fixing this had little or no effect for denormals (I think because
more precision is inherently lost for denormals than is lost by roundoff
errors in the multiplication).
The fix is to reduce the precision of the decomposition to 16+24 bits.
Due to 2 bugs in the old deomposition and numerical accidents, reducing
the precision actually increased the precision of hi+lo. The old hi+lo
had about 39 bits instead of at least 41 like it should have had.
There were off-by-1-bit errors in each of hi and lo, apparently due
to mistranslation from the double precision hi and lo. The correct
16 bit hi happens to give about 19 bits of precision, so the correct
hi+lo gives about 43 bits instead of at least 40. The end result is
that expf() is now perfectly rounded (to nearest) except in 52561 cases
instead of except in 67027 cases, and the maximum error is 0.5013 ulps
instead of 0.5023 ulps.
rather than forcing the state to LOOK. If we are in the middle of parsing
a line when we have to do a FILL we would have lost any token we were in
the middle of parsing and would have treated the next character as being
at the start of a new line instead.
PR: kern/89181
Submitted by: Antony Mawer gnats at mawer dot org
MFC after: 1 week
Instead of echoing the code in a comment, try to describe why we split
up the evaluation in a special way.
The new optimization is mostly to move the evaluation of w = z*z later
so that everything else (except z = x*x) doesn't have to wait for w.
On Athlons, FP multiplication has a latency of 4 cycles so this
optimization saves 4 cycles per call provided no new dependencies are
introduced. Tweaking the other terms in to reduce dependencies saves
a couple more cycles in some cases (more on AXP than on A64; up to 8
cycles out of 56 altogether in some cases). The previous version had
a similar optimization for s = z*x. Special optimizations like these
probably have a larger effect than the simple 2-way vectorization
permitted (but not activated by gcc) in the old version, since 2-way
vectorization is not enough and the polynomial's degree is so small
in the float case that non-vectorizable dependencies dominate.
On an AXP, tanf() on uniformly distributed args in [-2pi, 2pi] now
takes 34-55 cycles (was 39-59 cycles).
of between 1.0 and 1.8509 ulps for lgammaf(x) with x between -2**-21 and
-2**-70.
As usual, the cutoff for tiny args was not correctly translated to
float precision. It was 2**-70 but 2**-21 works. Not as usual, having
a too-small threshold was worse than a pessimization. It was just a
pessimization for (positive) args between 2**-70 and 2**-21, but for
the first ~50 million (negative) args below -2**-70, the general code
overflowed and gave a result of infinity instead of correct (finite)
results near 70*log(2). For the remaining ~361 million negative args
above -2**21, the general code gave almost-acceptable errors (lgamma[f]()
is not very accurate in general) but the pessimization was larger than
for misclassified tiny positive args.
Now the max error for lgammaf(x) with |x| < 2**-21 is 0.7885 ulps, and
speed and accuracy are almost the same for positive and negative args
in this range. The maximum error overall is still infinity ulps.
A cutoff of 2**-70 is probably wastefully small for the double precision
case. Smaller cutoffs can be used to reduce the max error to nearly
0.5 ulps for tiny args, but this is useless since the general algrorithm
for nearly-tiny args is not nearly that accurate -- it has a max error of
about 1 ulp.
gives a tiny but hopefully always free optimization in the 2 quadrants
to which it applies. On Athlons, it reduces maximum latency by 4 cycles
in these quadrants but has usually has a smaller effect on total time
(typically ~2 cycles (~5%), but sometimes 8 cycles when the compiler
generates poor code).
of the function name.
Added my (non-)copyright.
In k_tanf.c, added the first set of redundant parentheses to control
grouping which was claimed to be added in the previous commit.
returning float). The functions are renamed from __kernel_{cos,sin}f()
to __kernel_{cos,sin}df() so that misuses of them will cause link errors
and not crashes.
This version is an almost-routine translation with no special optimizations
for accuracy or efficiency. The not-quite-routine part is that in
__kernel_cosf(), regenerating the minimax polynomial with double
precision coefficients gives a coefficient for the x**2 term that is
not quite -0.5, so the literal 0.5 in the code and the related `hz'
variable need to be modified; also, the special code for reducing the
error in 1.0-x**2*0.5 is no longer needed, so it is convenient to
adjust all the logic for the x**2 term a little. Note that without
extra precision, it would be very bad to use a coefficient of other
than -0.5 for the x**2 term -- the old version depends on multiplication
by -0.5 being infinitely precise so as not to need even more special
code for reducing the error in 1-x**2*0.5.
This gives an unimportant increase in accuracy, from ~0.8 to ~0.501
ulps. Almost all of the error is from the final rounding step, since
the choice of the minimax polynomials so that their contribution to the
error is a bit less than 0.5 ulps just happens to give contributions that
are significantly less (~.001 ulps).
An Athlons, for uniformly distributed args in [-2pi, 2pi], this gives
overall speed increases in the 10-20% range, despite giving a speed
decrease of typically 19% (from 31 cycles up to 37) for sinf() on args
in [-pi/4, pi/4].
libarchive doesn't make malloc(0) requests, so the autoconf
checks aren't needed and the autoconf workarounds for
broken malloc(0) just create problems.
Thanks to: Dan Nelson, who reports that this fixes libarchive on AIX 5.2
- Remove dead code that I forgot to remove in the previous commit.
- Calculate the sum of the lower terms of the polynomial (divided by
x**5) in a single expression (sum of odd terms) + (sum of even terms)
with parentheses to control grouping. This is clearer and happens to
give better instruction scheduling for a tiny optimization (an
average of about ~0.5 cycles/call on Athlons).
- Calculate the final sum in a single expression with parentheses to
control grouping too. Change the grouping from
first_term + (second_term + sum_of_lower_terms) to
(first_term + second_term) + sum_of_lower_terms. Normally the first
grouping must be used for accuracy, but extra precision makes any
grouping give a correct result so we can group for efficiency. This
is a larger optimization (average 3-4 cycles/call or 5%).
- Use parentheses to indicate that the C order of left to right evaluation
is what is wanted (for efficiency) in a multiplication too.
The old fdlibm code has several optimizations related to these. 2
involve doing an extra operation that can be done almost in parallel
on some superscalar machines but are pessimizations on sequential
machines. Others involve statement ordering or expression grouping.
All of these except the ordering for the combining the sums of the odd
and even terms seem to be ideal for Athlons, but parallelism is still
limited so all of these optimizations combined together with the ones
in this commit save only ~6-8 cycles (~10%).
On an AXP, tanf() on uniformly distributed args in [-2pi, 2pi] now
takes 39-59 cycles. I don't know of any more optimizations for tanf()
short of writing it all in asm with very MD instruction scheduling.
Hardware fsin takes 122-138 cycles. Most of the optimizations for
tanf() don't work very well for tan[l](). fdlibm tan() now takes
145-365 cycles.
A single polynomial approximation for tan(x) works in infinite precision
up to |x| < pi/2, but in finite precision, to restrict the accumulated
roundoff error to < 1 ulp, |x| must be restricted to less than about
sqrt(0.5/((1.5+1.5)/3)) ~= 0.707. We restricted it a bit more to
give a safety margin including some slop for optimizations. Now that
we use double precision for the calculations, the accumulated roundoff
error is in double-precision ulps so it can easily be made almost 2**29
times smaller than a single-precision ulp. Near x = pi/4 its maximum
is about 0.5+(1.5+1.5)*x**2/3 ~= 1.117 double-precision ulps.
The minimax polynomial needs to be different to work for the larger
interval. I didn't increase its degree the old degree is just large
enough to keep the final error less than 1 ulp and increasing the
degree would be a pessimization. The maximum error is now ~0.80
ulps instead of ~0.53 ulps.
The speedup from this optimization for uniformly distributed args in
[-2pi, 2pi] is 28-43% on athlons, depending on how badly gcc selected
and scheduled the instructions in the old version. The old version
has some int-to-float conversions that are apparently difficult to schedule
well, but gcc-3.3 somehow did everything ~10 cycles or ~10% faster than
gcc-3.4, with the difference especially large on AXPs. On A64s, the
problem seems to be related to documented penalties for moving single
precision data to undead xmm registers. With this version, the speed
is cycles is almost independent of the athlon and gcc version despite
the large differences in instruction selection to use the FPU on AXPs
and SSE on A64s.
This is a minor interface change. The function is renamed from
__kernel_tanf() to __kernel_tandf() so that misues of it will cause
link errors and not crashes.
This version is a routine translation with no special optimizations
for accuracy or efficiency. It gives an unimportant increase in
accuracy, from ~0.9 ulps to 0.5285 ulps. Almost all of the error is
from the minimax polynomial (~0.03 ulps and the final rounding step
(< 0.5 ulps). It gives strange differences in efficiency in the -5
to +10% range, with -O1 fairly consistently becoming faster and -O2
slower on AXP and A64 with gcc-3.3 and gcc-3.4.
arg to __kernel_rem_pio2() gives 53-bit (double) precision, not single
precision and/or the array dimension like I thought. prec == 2 is
used in e_rem_pio2.c for double precision although it is documented
to be for 64-bit (extended) precision, and I just reduced it by 1
thinking that this would give the value suitable for 24-bit (float)
precision. Reducing it 1 more to the documented value for float
precision doesn't actually work (it gives errors of ~0.75 ulps in the
reduced arg, but errors of much less than 0.5 ulps are needed; the bug
seems to be in kernel_rem_pio2.c). Keep using a value 1 larger than
the documented value but supply an array large enough hold the extra
unused result from this.
The bug can also be fixed quickly by increasing init_jk[0] in
k_rem_pio2.c from 2 to 3. This gives behaviour identical to using
prec == 1 except it doesn't create the extra result. It isn't clear
how the precision bug affects higher precisions. 113-bit (quad) is
the largest precision, so there is no way to use a large precision
to fix it.
they can be #included in other .c files to give inline functions, and
use them to inline the functions in most callers (not in e_lgammaf_r.c).
__kernel_tanf() is too large and complicated for gcc to inline very well.
An athlons, this gives a speed increase under favourable pipeline
conditions of about 10% overall (larger for AXP, smaller for A64).
E.g., on AXP, sinf() on uniformly distributed args in [-2Pi, 2Pi]
now takes 30-56 cycles; it used to take 45-61 cycles; hardware fsin
takes 65-129.
On athlons, this gives a speedup of 10-20% for tanf() on uniformly
distributed args in [-2Pi, 2Pi]. (It only directly applies for 43%
of the args and gives a 16-20% speedup for these (more for AXP than
A64) and this gives an overall speedup of 10-12% which is all that it
should; however, it gives an overall speedup of 17-20% with gcc-3.3
on AXP-A64 by mysteriously effected cases where it isn't executed.)
I originally intended to use double precision for all internals of
float trig functions and will probably still do this, but benchmarking
showed that converting to double precision and back is a pessimization
in cases where a simple float precision calculation works, so it may
be optimal to switch precisions only when using extra precision is
much simpler.
__ieee754_rem_pio2f() to its 3 callers and manually inline them.
On Athlons, with favourable compiler flags and optimizations and
favourable pipeline conditions, this gives a speedup of 30-40 cycles
for cosf(), sinf() and tanf() on the range pi/4 < |x| <= 9pi/4, so
thes functions are now signifcantly faster than the hardware trig
functions in many cases. E.g., in a benchmark with uniformly distributed
x in [-2pi, 2pi], A64 hardware fcos took 72-129 cycles and cosf() took
37-55 cycles. Out-of-order execution is needed to get both of these
times. The optimizations in this commit apparently work more by
removing 1 serialization point than by reducing latency.
s_cosf.c and s_sinf.c:
Use a non-bogus magic constant for the threshold of pi/4. It was 2 ulps
smaller than pi/4 rounded down, but its value is not critical so it should
be the result of natural rounding.
s_cosf.c and s_tanf.c:
Use a literal 0.0 instead of an unnecessary variable initialized to
[(float)]0.0. Let the function prototype convert to 0.0F.
Improved wording in some comments.
Attempted to improve indentation of comments.
number of branches.
Use a non-bogus magic constant for the threshold of pi/4. It was 2 ulps
smaller than pi/4 rounded down, but its value is not critical so it should
be the result of natural rounding. Use "<=" comparisons with rounded-
down thresholds for all small multiples of pi/4.
Cleaned up previous commit:
- use static const variables instead of expressions for multiples of pi/2
to ensure that they are evaluated at compile time. gcc currently
evaluates them at compile time but C99 compilers are not required
to do so. We want compile time evaluation for optimization and don't
care about side effects.
- use M_PI_2 instead of a magic constant for pi/2. We need magic constants
related to pi/2 elsewhere but not here since we just want pi/2 rounded
to double and even prefer it to be rounded in the default rounding mode.
We can depend on the cmpiler being C99ish enough to round M_PI_2 correctly
just as much as we depended on it handling hex constants correctly. This
also fixes a harmless rounding error in the hex constant.
- keep using expressions n*<value for pi/2> in the initializers for the
static const variables. 2*M_PI_2 and 4*M_PI_2 are obviously rounded in
the same way as the corresponding infinite precision expressions for
multiples of pi/2, and 3*M_PI_2 happens to be rounded like this, so we
don't need magic constants for the multiples.
- fixed and/or updated some comments.
define also, but res_config.h was not included into libc/net/name6.c.
So getipnodebyaddr() ignored the multiple PTRs.
PR: kern/88241
Submitted by: Dan Lukes <dan__at__obluda.cz>
MFC after: 3 days
The threshold for not being tiny was too small. Use the usual 2**-12
threshold. This change is not just an optimization, since the general
code that we fell into has accuracy problems even for tiny x. Avoiding
it fixes 2*1366 args with errors of more than 1 ulp, with a maximum
error of 1.167 ulps.
The magic number 22 is log(DBL_EPSILON)/2 plus slop. This is bogus
for float precision. Use 9 (~log(FLT_EPSILON)/2 plus less slop than
for double precision). The code for handling the interval
[2**-28, 9_was_22] has accuracy problems even for [9, 22], so this
change happens to fix errors of more than 1 ulp in about 2*17000
cases. It leaves such errors in about 2*1074000 cases, with a max
error of 1.242 ulps.
The threshold for switching from returning exp(x)/2 to returning
exp(x/2)^2/2 was a little smaller than necessary. As for coshf(),
This was not quite harmless since the exp(x/2)^2/2 case is inaccurate,
and fixing it avoids accuracy problems in 2*6 cases, leaving problems
in 2*19997 cases.
Fixed naming errors in pseudo-code in comments.
The threshold for not being tiny was confusing and too small. Use the
usual 2**-12 threshold and simplify the algorithm slightly so that
this threshold works (now use the threshold for sinhf() instead of one
for 1+expm1()). This is just a small optimization.
The magic number 22 is log(DBL_EPSILON)/2 plus slop. This is bogus
for float precision. Use 9 (~log(FLT_EPSILON)/2 plus less slop than
for double precision).
The threshold for switching from returning exp(x)/2 to returning
exp(x/2)^2/2 was a little smaller than necessary. This was not quite
harmless since the exp(x/2)^2/2 case is inaccurate. Fixing it happens
to avoid accuracy problems for 2*6 of the 2*151 args that were handled
by the exp(x)/2 case. This leaves accuracy problems for about 2*19997
args near the overflow threshold (~89); the maximum error there is
2.5029 ulps.
There are also accuracy probles for args in +-[0.5*ln2, 9] -- 2*188885
args with errors of more than 1 ulp, with a maximum error of 1.384 ulps.
Fixed a syntax error and naming errors in pseudo-code in comments.
specialized for float precision. The new polynomial has degree 8
instead of 14, and a maximum error of 2**-34.34 (absolute) instead of
2**-30.66. This doesn't affect the final error significantly; the
maximum error was and is about 0.8879 ulps on amd64 -01.
The fdlibm expf() is not used on i386's (the "optimized" asm version
is used), but probably should be since it was already significantly
faster than the asm version on athlons. The asm version has the
advantage of being more accurate, so keep using it for now.