6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bde
c553ad248f Add an alternative view of the bits in an 80-bit long double (64+16
instead of 32+32+15+1) on all arches that have such long doubles (amd64,
ia64 and i386).  Large objects should be be accessed in large units,
and the 32+32+15+1[+padding] decomposition asks for almost the opposite
of that, sometimes resulting in very slow accesses depending on how
well the compiler ignores what we ask for and converts to the best
units for the given machine.  E.g., on Athlons, there is a 10-20 cycle
penalty for accessing the middle 32-bit word immediately after an
80-bit store.

Whether actually using the alternative view is better is very machine-
dependent.  A 32+32+16 view is probably best with old 32-bit systems
and gcc through 4.2.1.  The compiler should mostly avoid the view and
generate best accesses, but gcc-4.2.1 is far from doing that.  I think
64+16 is best for now.  Similarly for doubles -- they should be using
64+0 especially on 64-bit machines, but fdlibm uses 32+32 extensively
for them.  Fortunately, in 64-bit mode for doubles, gcc already ignores
the 32+32-bit view and generates best accesses in many cases.
2008-01-17 16:39:07 +00:00
das
5bfaaf0464 Define LDBL_NBIT to be a mask indicating the position of the integer
bit in a long double.  For architectures that don't have such a bit,
LDBL_NBIT is 0.  This makes it possible to say `mantissa & ~LDBL_NBIT'
in places that previously used an #ifdef to select the right expression.
The optimizer should dispense with the extra arithmetic when LDBL_NBIT
is 0.
2005-03-07 04:55:22 +00:00
das
b45580b648 Update my email address. 2005-02-06 03:23:31 +00:00
das
daf3a2f509 Define LDBL_MANH_SIZE and LDBL_MANL_SIZE to be the sizes of the
high and low words of the mantissa in bits, respectively.
2004-01-18 07:57:02 +00:00
das
2d9148b622 Add __ldtoa(), a wrapper around gdtoa() to make it look like dtoa().
In support of this, add some MD macros to assist in converting long
doubles to the format expected by gdtoa().

Reviewed by:	silence on standards@
2003-04-05 22:10:13 +00:00
mike
b4e3f2f94a Implement fpclassify():
o Add a MD header private to libc called _fpmath.h; this header
  contains bitfield layouts of MD floating-point types.
o Add a MI header private to libc called fpmath.h; this header
  contains bitfield layouts of MI floating-point types.
o Add private libc variables to lib/libc/$arch/gen/infinity.c for
  storing NaN values.
o Add __double_t and __float_t to <machine/_types.h>, and provide
  double_t and float_t typedefs in <math.h>.
o Add some C99 manifest constants (FP_ILOGB0, FP_ILOGBNAN, HUGE_VALF,
  HUGE_VALL, INFINITY, NAN, and return values for fpclassify()) to
  <math.h> and others (FLT_EVAL_METHOD, DECIMAL_DIG) to <float.h> via
  <machine/float.h>.
o Add C99 macro fpclassify() which calls __fpclassify{d,f,l}() based
  on the size of its argument.  __fpclassifyl() is never called on
  alpha because (sizeof(long double) == sizeof(double)), which is good
  since __fpclassifyl() can't deal with such a small `long double'.

This was developed by David Schultz and myself with input from bde and
fenner.

PR:		23103
Submitted by:	David Schultz <dschultz@uclink.Berkeley.EDU>
		(significant portions)
Reviewed by:	bde, fenner (earlier versions)
2003-02-08 20:37:55 +00:00