1 /* Test of rounding towards negative infinity.
2 Copyright (C) 2007-2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
5 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
6 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
7 (at your option) any later version.
9 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
10 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
11 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
12 GNU General Public License for more details.
14 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
15 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
17 /* Written by Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>, 2007. */
29 #include "isnanf-nolibm.h"
31 #define ASSERT(expr) \
36 fprintf (stderr, "%s:%d: assertion failed\n", __FILE__, __LINE__); \
44 /* The reference implementation, taken from lib/floor.c. */
47 #define MANT_DIG FLT_MANT_DIG
48 #define L_(literal) literal##f
51 static const DOUBLE TWO_MANT_DIG =
52 /* Assume MANT_DIG <= 5 * 31.
54 n = floor(n/5) + floor((n+1)/5) + ... + floor((n+4)/5). */
55 (DOUBLE) (1U << ((MANT_DIG - 1) / 5))
56 * (DOUBLE) (1U << ((MANT_DIG - 1 + 1) / 5))
57 * (DOUBLE) (1U << ((MANT_DIG - 1 + 2) / 5))
58 * (DOUBLE) (1U << ((MANT_DIG - 1 + 3) / 5))
59 * (DOUBLE) (1U << ((MANT_DIG - 1 + 4) / 5));
62 floorf_reference (DOUBLE x)
64 /* The use of 'volatile' guarantees that excess precision bits are dropped
65 at each addition step and before the following comparison at the caller's
66 site. It is necessary on x86 systems where double-floats are not IEEE
67 compliant by default, to avoid that the results become platform and compiler
68 option dependent. 'volatile' is a portable alternative to gcc's
69 -ffloat-store option. */
70 volatile DOUBLE y = x;
71 volatile DOUBLE z = y;
75 /* Avoid rounding errors for values near 2^k, where k >= MANT_DIG-1. */
78 /* Round to the next integer (nearest or up or down, doesn't matter). */
81 /* Enforce rounding down. */
88 /* Avoid rounding errors for values near -2^k, where k >= MANT_DIG-1. */
89 if (z > - TWO_MANT_DIG)
91 /* Round to the next integer (nearest or up or down, doesn't matter). */
94 /* Enforce rounding down. */
103 /* Test for equality. */
105 equal (DOUBLE x, DOUBLE y)
107 return (isnanf (x) ? isnanf (y) : x == y);
110 /* Test whether the result for a given argument is correct. */
112 correct_result_p (DOUBLE x, DOUBLE result)
115 (x < 0 && x >= -1 ? result == - L_(1.0) :
116 x - 1 < x ? result <= x && result >= x - 1 && x - result < 1 :
120 /* Test the function for a given argument. */
124 /* If the reference implementation is incorrect, bail out immediately. */
125 float reference = floorf_reference (x);
126 ASSERT (correct_result_p (x, reference));
127 /* If the actual implementation is wrong, return an error code. */
129 float result = floorf (x);
130 if (correct_result_p (x, result))
134 fprintf (stderr, "floorf %g(%a) = %g(%a) or %g(%a)?\n",
135 x, x, reference, reference, result, result);
141 #define NUM_HIGHBITS 12
142 #define NUM_LOWBITS 4
147 unsigned int highbits;
148 unsigned int lowbits;
150 for (highbits = 0; highbits < (1 << NUM_HIGHBITS); highbits++)
151 for (lowbits = 0; lowbits < (1 << NUM_LOWBITS); lowbits++)
153 /* Combine highbits and lowbits into a floating-point number,
154 sign-extending the lowbits to 32-NUM_HIGHBITS bits. */
155 union { float f; uint32_t i; } janus;
156 janus.i = ((uint32_t) highbits << (32 - NUM_HIGHBITS))
157 | ((uint32_t) ((int32_t) ((uint32_t) lowbits << (32 - NUM_LOWBITS))
158 >> (32 - NUM_LOWBITS - NUM_HIGHBITS))
160 error |= check (janus.f);
162 return (error ? 1 : 0);