fedisableexcept(), and fegetexcept(). These two sets of routines
provide the same functionality. I implemented the former as an
undocumented internal interface to make the regression test easier to
write. However, fe(enable|disable|get)except() is already part of
glibc, and I would like to avoid gratuitous differences. The only
major flaw in the glibc API is that there's no good way to report
errors on processors that don't support all the unmasked exceptions.
particularly good reason to do this, except that __strong_reference
does type checking, whereas __weak_reference does not.
On Alpha, the compiler won't accept a 'long double' parameter in
place of a 'double' parameter even thought the two types are
identical.
an invalid exception and return an NaN.
- If a long double has 113 bits of precision, implement fma in terms
of simple long double arithmetic instead of complicated double arithmetic.
- If a long double is the same as a double, alias fma as fmal.
identical to scalbnf, which is now aliased as ldexpf. Note that the
old implementations made the mistake of setting errno and were the
only libm routines to do so.
- Add nexttoward{,f,l} and nextafterl. On all platforms,
nexttowardl is an alias for nextafterl.
- Add fmal.
- Add man pages for new routines: fmal, nextafterl,
nexttoward{,f,l}, scalb{,l}nl.
Note that on platforms where long double is the same as double, we
generally just alias the double versions of the routines, since doing
so avoids extra work on the source code level and redundant code in
the binary. In particular:
ldbl53 ldbl64/113
fmal s_fma.c s_fmal.c
ldexpl s_scalbn.c s_scalbnl.c
nextafterl s_nextafter.c s_nextafterl.c
nexttoward s_nextafter.c s_nexttoward.c
nexttowardf s_nexttowardf.c s_nexttowardf.c
nexttowardl s_nextafter.c s_nextafterl.c
scalbnl s_scalbn.c s_scalbnl.c
sparc64's 128-bit long doubles.
- Define FP_FAST_FMAL for ia64.
- Prototypes for fmal, frexpl, ldexpl, nextafterl, nexttoward{,f,l},
scalblnl, and scalbnl.
- In scalbln and scalblnf, check the bounds of the second argument.
This is probably unnecessary, but strictly speaking, we should
report an error if someone tries to compute scalbln(x, INT_MAX + 1ll).
nexttowardl. These are not needed on machines where long doubles
look like IEEE-754 doubles, so the implementation only supports
the usual long double formats with 15-bit exponents.
Anything bizarre, such as machines where floating-point and integer
data have different endianness, will cause problems. This is the case
with big endian ia64 according to libc/ia64/_fpmath.h. Please contact
me if you managed to get a machine running this way.
that are intended to raise underflow and inexact exceptions.
- On systems where long double is the same as double, nextafter
should be aliased as nexttoward, nexttowardl, and nextafterl.
Symptoms of the problem included assembler warnings and
nondeterministic runtime behavior when a fe*() call that affects the
fpsr is closely followed by a float point op.
The bug (at least, I think it's a bug) is that gcc does not insert a
break between a volatile asm and a dependent instruction if the
volatile asm came from an inlined function. Volatile asms seem to be
fine in other circumstances, even without -mvolatile-asm-stop, so
perhaps the compiler adds the stop bits before inlining takes place.
The problem does not occur at -O0 because inlining is disabled, and it
doesn't happen at -O2 because -fschedule-insns2 knows better.
inputs. The trouble with replacing two floats with a double is that
the latter has 6 extra bits of precision, which actually hurts
accuracy in many cases. All of the constants are optimal when float
arithmetic is used, and would need to be recomputed to do this right.
Noticed by: bde (ucbtest)
results in a performance gain on the order of 10% for amd64 (sledge),
ia64 (pluto1), i386+SSE (Pentium 4), and sparc64 (panther), and a
negligible improvement for i386 without SSE. (The i386 port still
uses the hardware instruction, though.)
manpages. They are not very related, so separating them makes it
easier to add meaningful cross-references and extend some of the
descriptions.
- Move the part of math(3) that discusses IEEE 754 to the ieee(3)
manpage.
- Rearrange the list of functions into categories.
- Remove the ulps column. It was appropriate for only some
of the functions in the list, and correct for even fewer
of them.
- Add some new paragraphs, and remove some old ones about
NaNs that may do more harm than good.
- Document precisions other than double-precision.
flags, so they are not pure. Remove the __pure2 annotation from them.
I believe that the following routines and their float and long double
counterparts are the only ones here that can be __pure2:
copysign is* fabs finite fmax fmin fpclassify ilogb nan signbit
When gcc supports FENV_ACCESS, perhaps there will be a new annotation
that allows the other functions to be considered pure when FENV_ACCESS
is off.
Discussed with: bde
basically support this, subject to gcc's lack of FENV_ACCESS support.
In any case, the previous setting of math_errhandling to 0 is not
allowed by POSIX.
registers as volatile. Instructions that *wrote* to FP state were
already marked volatile, but apparently gcc has license to move
non-volatile asms past volatile asms. This broke amd64's feupdateenv
at -O2 due to a WAR conflict between fnstsw and fldenv there.
- Make some minor rearrangements in the introduction.
- Mention the problem with argument reduction on i386.
- Add recently-implemented functions to the table.
- Un-document the error bounds that only apply to the old 4BSD math
library, and fill in the correct values where I know them. No
attempt has been made to document bounds lower than 1 ulp, although
smaller bounds are usually achievable in round-to-nearest mode.
/lib/{libm,libreadline}
/usr/lib/{libhistory,libopie,libpcap}
in preparation for doing the same thing to RELENG_5. HUGE amounts of
help for determining what to bump provided by kris.
Discussed on: freebsd-current
Approved by: re (not required for commit but something like this should be)
libc. The externally-visible effect of this is to add __isnanl() to
libm, which means that libm.so.2 can once again link against libc.so.4
when LD_BIND_NOW is set. This was broken by the addition of fdiml(),
which calls __isnanl().
- It was added to libc instead of libm. Hopefully no programs rely
on this mistake.
- It didn't work properly on large long doubles because its argument
was converted to type double, resulting in undefined behavior.
- Unlike the builtin relational operators, builtin floating-point
constants were not available until gcc 3.3, so account for this.[1]
- Apparently some versions of the Intel C Compiler fallaciously define
__GNUC__ without actually being compatible with the claimed gcc
version. Account for this, too.[2]
[1] Noticed by: Christian Hiris <4711@chello.at>
[2] Submitted by: Alexander Leidinger <Alexander@Leidinger.net>
isnormal() the hard way, rather than relying on fpclassify(). This is
a lose in the sense that we need a total of 12 functions, but it is
necessary for binary compatibility because we have never bumped libm's
major version number. In particular, isinf(), isnan(), and isnanf()
were BSD libc functions before they were C99 macros, so we can't
reimplement them in terms of fpclassify() without adding a dependency
on libc.so.5. I have tried to arrange things so that programs that
could be compiled in FreeBSD 4.X will generate the same external
references when compiled in 5.X. At the same time, the new macros
should remain C99-compliant.
The isinf() and isnan() functions remain in libc for historical
reasons; however, I have moved the functions that implement the macros
isfinite() and isnormal() to libm where they belong. Moreover,
half a dozen MD versions of isinf() and isnan() have been replaced
with MI versions that work equally well.
Prodded by: kris
builtins are available: HUGE_VAL, HUGE_VALF, HUGE_VALL, INFINITY,
and NAN. These macros now expand to floating-point constant
expressions rather than external references, as required by C99.
Other compilers will retain the historical behavior. Note that
it is not possible say, e.g.
#define HUGE_VAL 1.0e9999
because the above may result in diagnostics at translation time
and spurious exceptions at runtime. Hence the need for compiler
support for these features.
Also use builtins to implement the macros isgreater(),
isgreaterequal(), isless(), islessequal(), islessgreater(),
and isunordered() when such builtins are available.
Although the old macros are correct, the builtin versions
are much faster, and they avoid double-expansion problems.
These trivial implementations are about 25 times slower than
rint{,f}() on x86 due to the FP environment save/restore.
They should eventually be redone in terms of fegetround() and
bit fiddling.
These routines are specified in C99 for the sake of
architectures where an int isn't big enough to represent
the full range of floating-point exponents. However,
even the 128-bit long double format has an exponent smaller
than 15 bits, so for all practical purposes, scalbln() and
scalblnf() are aliases for scalbn() and scalbnf(), respectively.
kicking and screaming into the 1980's. This change converts most of
the markup from man(7) to mdoc(7) format, and I believe it removes or
updates everything that was flat out wrong. However, much work is
still needed to sanitize the markup, improve coverage, and reduce
overlap with other manpages. Some of the sections would better belong
in a philosophy_of_w_kahan.3 manpage, but they are informative and
remain at least as reminders of topics to cover.
Reviewed by: doc@, trhodes@
on all inputs of the form x.75, where x is an even integer and
log2(x) = 21. A similar problem occurred when rounding upward.
The bug involves the following snippet copied from rint():
i>>=1;
if((i0&i)!=0) i0 = (i0&(~i))|((0x100000)>>j0);
The constant 0x100000 should be 0x200000. Apparently this case was
never tested.
It turns out that the bit manipulation is completely superfluous
anyway, so remove it. (It tries to simulate 90% of the rounding
process that the FPU does anyway.) Also, the special case of +-0 is
handled twice (in different ways), so remove the second instance.
Throw in some related simplifications from bde:
- Work around a bug where gcc fails to clip to float precision by
declaring two float variables as volatile. Previously, we
tricked gcc into generating correct code by declaring some
float constants as doubles.
- Remove additional superfluous bit manipulation.
- Minor reorganization.
- Include <sys/types.h> explicitly.
Note that some of the equivalent lines in rint() also appear to be
unnecessary, but I'll defer to the numerical analysts who wrote it,
since I can't test all 2^64 cases.
Discussed with: bde
It does not appear to be possible to cross-build arm from i386 at the
moment, and I have no ARM hardware anyway. Thus, I'm sure there are
bugs. I will gladly fix these when the arm port is more mature.
Reviewed by: standards@
features appear to work, subject to the caveat that you tell gcc you
want standard rather than recklessly fast behavior
(-mieee-with-inexact -mfp-rounding-mode=d).
The non-standard feature of delivering a SIGFPE when an application
raises an unmasked exception does not work, presumably due to a kernel
bug. This isn't so bad given that floating-point exceptions on the
Alpha architecture are not precise, so making them useful in userland
requires a significant amount of wizardry.
Reviewed by: standards@
We approximate pi with more than float precision using pi_hi+pi_lo in
the usual way (pi_hi is actually spelled pi in the source code), and
expect (float)0.5*pi_lo to give the low part of the corresponding
approximation for pi/2. However, the high part for pi/2 (pi_o_2) is
rounded to nearest, which happens to round up, while the high part for
pi was rounded down. Thus pi_o_2+(float)0.5*pi (in infinite precision)
was a very bad approximation for pi/2 -- the low term has the wrong
sign and increases the error drom less than half an ULP to a full ULP.
This fix rounds up instead of down for pi_hi. Consistently rounding
down instead of up should work, and is the method used in e_acosf.c
and e_asinf.c. The reason for the difference is that we sometimes
want to return precisely pi/2 in e_atan2f.c, so it is convenient to
have a correctly rounded (to nearest) value for pi/2 in a variable.
a_acosf.c and e_asinf.c also differ in directly approximating pi/2
instead pi; they multiply by 2.0 instead of dividing by 0.5 to convert
the approximation.
These complications are not directly visible in the double precision
versions because rounding to nearest happens to round down.
and not tanf() because float type can't represent numbers large enough
to trigger the problem. However, there seems to be a precedent that
the float versions of the fdlibm routines should mirror their double
counterparts.
Also update to the FDLIBM 5.3 license.
Obtained from: FDLIBM
Reviewed by: exhaustive comparison
where the exponent is an odd integer and the base is negative).
Obtained from: fdlibm-5.3
Sun finally released a new version of fdlibm just a coupe of weeks
ago. It only fixes 3 bugs (this one, another one in pow() that we
already have (rev.1.9), and one in tan(). I've learned too much about
powf() lately, so this fix was easy to merge. The patch is not verbatim,
because our base version has many differences for portability and I
didn't like global renaming of an unrelated variable to keep it separate
from the sign variable. This patch uses a new variable named sn for
the sign.
[t=p_l+p_h High]. We multiply t by lg2_h, and want the result to be
exact. For the bogus float case of the high-low decomposition trick,
we normally discard the lowest 12 bits of the fraction for the high
part, keeping 12 bits of precision. That was used for t here, but it
doesnt't work because for some reason we only discard the lowest 9
bits in the fraction for lg2_h. Discard another 3 bits of the fraction
for t to compensate.
This bug gave wrong results like:
powf(0.9999999, -2.9999995) = 1.0000002 (should be 1.0000001)
hex values: 3F7FFFFF C03FFFFE 3F800002 3F800001
As explained in the log for the previous commit, the bug is normally
masked by doing float calculations in extra precision on i386's, but
is easily detected by ucbtest on systems that don't have accidental
extra precision.
This completes fixing all the bugs in powf() that were routinely found
by ucbtest.
(1) The bit for the 1.0 part of bp[k] was right shifted by 4. This seems
to have been caused by a typo in converting e_pow.c to e_powf.c.
(2) The lower 12 bits of ax+bp[k] were not discarded, so t_h was actually
plain ax+bp[k]. This seems to have been caused by a logic error in
the conversion.
These bugs gave wrong results like:
powf(-1.1, 101.0) = -15158.703 (should be -15158.707)
hex values: BF8CCCCD 42CA0000 C66CDAD0 C66CDAD4
Fixing (1) gives a result wrong in the opposite direction (hex C66CDAD8),
and fixing (2) gives the correct result.
ucbtest has been reporting this particular wrong result on i386 systems
with unpatched libraries for 9 years. I finally figured out the extent
of the bugs. On i386's they are normally hidden by extra precision.
We use the trick of representing floats as a sum of 2 floats (one much
smaller) to get extra precision in intermediate calculations without
explicitly using more than float precision. This trick is just a
pessimization when extra precision is available naturally (as it always
is when dealing with IEEE single precision, so the float precision part
of the library is mostly misimplemented). (1) and (2) break the trick
in different ways, except on i386's it turns out that the intermediate
calculations are done in enough precision to mask both the bugs and
the limited precision of the float variables (as far as ucbtest can
check).
ucbtest detects the bugs because it forces float precision, but this
is not a normal mode of operation so the bug normally has little effect
on i386's.
On systems that do float arithmetic in float precision, e.g., amd64's,
there is no accidental extra precision and the bugs just give wrong
results.
constants the wrong way on the VAX. Instead, use C99 hexadecimal
floating-point constants, which are guaranteed to be exact on binary
IEEE machines. (The correct hexadecimal values were already provided
in the source, but not used.) Also, convert the constants to
lowercase to work around a gcc bug that wasn't fixed until gcc 3.4.0.
Prompted by: stefanf
namespaces are visible. Previously, math.h failed to hide some C99-,
XSI-, and BSD-specific symbols in certain compilation environments.
The referenced PR has a nice listing of the appropriate conditions for
making symbols visible in math.h. The only non-stylistic difference
between the patch in the PR and this commit is that I superfluously
test for __BSD_VISIBLE in a few places to be more explicit about which
symbols have historically been part of the FreeBSD environment.
PR: 65939
Submitted by: Stefan Farfeleder <stefan@fafoe.narf.at>
MATH_ERREXCEPTION and math_errhandling, so that C99 applications at
least have the possibility of determining that errno is not set for
math functions. Set math_errhandling to the non-standard-conforming
value of 0 for now to indicate that we don't support either method
of reporting errors. We intentionally don't support MATH_ERRNO
because errno is a mistake, and we are missing support for
MATH_ERREXCEPTION (<fenv.h>, compiler support for <fenv.h>, and
actually setting the exception flags correctly).
that are only in libc.so.5. This broke some 4.X applications linked
to libm and run under 5.X.
Background:
In C99, isinf() and isnan() cannot be implemented as regular
functions. We use macros that call libc functions in 5.X, but for
libm-internal use, we need to use the old versions until the next
time libm's major version number is bumped.
Submitted by: bde
Reported by: imp, kris
documented naming scheme (unfortunately the documentation isn't in the
tree as far as I can tell); no repocopy is required as there is no
history to preserve.
- replace simple and almost-correct implementation with slightly hackish
but definitely correct implementation (tested on i386, alpha, sparc64)
which requires pulling in fpmath.h and the MD _fpmath.h from libc.
- try not to make a mess of the Makefile in the process.
- enterprising minds are encouraged to implement more C99 long double
functions.
binaries in /bin and /sbin installed in /lib. Only the versioned files
reside in /lib, the .so symlink continues to live /usr/lib so the
toolchain doesn't need to be modified.
do not also provide a __generic_XXX version as well. This is how we
used to runtime select the generic vs i387 versions on the i386 platform.
This saves a pile of #defines in the src/math_private.h file to undo the
__generic_XXX renames in some of the *.c files.
fp emulator, stop doing the runtime selection of hardware or emulated
floating point operations on i386. Note that I have not suppressed the
duplicate compiles yet.
While here, fix the alpha. It has provided specific copysign/copysignf
functions since the beginning of time, but they have never been used.
in math.h; the consensus here was that __BSD_VISIBLE was correct instead.
- gamma_r, lgamma_r, gammaf_r, and lgammaf_r had no documentation in the
lgamma(3) manpage.
Reviewed by: standards@
Submitted by: Ben Mesander
isnormal(). The current isinf() and isnan() are perserved for
binary compatibility with 5.0, but new programs will use the macros.
o Implement C99 comparison macros isgreater(), isgreaterequal(),
isless(), islessequal(), islessgreater(), isunordered().
Submitted by: David Schultz <dschultz@uclink.Berkeley.EDU>
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)
HUGE_VAL is not properly aligned on some architectures. The previous
fix now works because the two versions of 'math.h' (include/math.h
and lib/msun/src/math.h) have since been merged into one.
PR: bin/43544
one into the latter and removed the former.
This works around the bug that some broken Makefiles add -I.../src/include
to CFLAGS, resulting in the old math.h being preferred and differences
between the headers possibly being fatal.
The merge mainly involves declaring some functions as __pure2 although
they are not yet all strictly free of side effects.
PR: 43544
Fixed pow(x, y) when x is very close to -1.0 and y is a very large odd
integer. E.g., pow(-1.0 - pow(2.0, -52.0), 1.0 + pow(2.0, 52.0)) was
0.0 instead of being very close to -exp(1.0).
PR: 39236
Submitted by: Stephen L Moshier <steve@moshier.net>
e_powf.c:
Apply the same patch although it is just cosmetic because odd integers
large enough to cause the problem are too large to be precisely represented
as floats.
MFC after: 1 week
- float ynf(int n, float x) /* wrapper ynf */
+float
+ynf(int n, float x) /* wrapper ynf */
This is because the __STDC__ stuff was indented.
Reviewed by: md5
via INCS. Implemented INCSLINKS (equivalent to SYMLINKS) to
handle symlinking include files. Allow for multiple groups of
include files to be installed, with the powerful INCSGROUPS knob.
Documentation to follow.
Added standard `includes' and `incsinstall' targets, use them
in Makefile.inc1. Headers from the following makefiles were
not installed before (during `includes' in Makefile.inc1):
kerberos5/lib/libtelnet/Makefile
lib/libbz2/Makefile
lib/libdevinfo/Makefile
lib/libform/Makefile
lib/libisc/Makefile
lib/libmenu/Makefile
lib/libmilter/Makefile
lib/libpanel/Makefile
Replaced all `beforeinstall' targets for installing includes
with the INCS stuff.
Renamed INCDIR to INCSDIR, for consistency with FILES and SCRIPTS,
and for compatibility with NetBSD. Similarly for INCOWN, INCGRP,
and INCMODE.
Consistently use INCLUDEDIR instead of /usr/include.
gnu/lib/libstdc++/Makefile and gnu/lib/libsupc++/Makefile changes
were only lightly tested due to the missing contrib/libstdc++-v3.
I fully tested the pre-WIP_GCC31 version of this patch with the
contrib/libstdc++.295 stuff.
These changes have been tested on i386 with the -DNO_WERROR "make
world" and "make release".
page and add an historical note explaining this. This patch is
based on Stephen's.
We still need someone to implement tgamma.
PR: 28972, 31764
Submitted by: Stephen Montgomery-Smith <stephen@math.missouri.edu>
describing these operators in English. This completes the fix in rev.1.3
(rev.1.2 got this wrong by describing wrong operators in English).
Fixed bitrot and improved English in the DESCRIPTION section.
to fix the "-nostdinc WARNS=X" breakage caused by broken prototypes
for cabs() and cabsl() in <math.h>.
Reimplemented cabs() and cabsl() using new complex numbers types and
moved prototypes from <math.h> to <complex.h>.
to be the same as -ragged in the current implementation) to
-ragged. With mdocNG, -filled displays produce the correct
output, formatted and justified to both margins.
#include <ieeefp.h>
to access these functions instead of the i386 specific
#include <machine/floatingpoint.h>
Submitted by: Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
and small values:
hypotf(2.3819765e+38, 2.0416943e+38) was NaN instead of 3.1372484e+38
hypotf(-3.4028235e+38, 3.3886450e+38) was NaN instead of Inf
hypotf(-2.8025969e-45, -2.8025969e-45) was 0 instead of 4.2038954e-45
Found by: ucbtest
avoid easily avoidable loss of precision when |x| is nearly 1.
Extended (64-bit) precision only moves the meaning of "nearly" here.
This probably could be done better by splitting up the range into
|x| <= 0.5 and |x| > 0.5 like the C version. However, ucbtest
does't report any errors in this version. Perhaps the C version
should be used anyway. It's only 25% slower now on a P5, provided
the C version of sqrt() isn't used, and the C version could be
optimized better.
Errors checked by: ucbtest
at runtime.
etc/make.conf:
Nuked HAVE_FPU option.
lib/msun/Makefile:
Always build the i387 objects. Copy the i387 source files at build
time so that the i387 objects have different names. This is simpler
than renaming the files in the cvs repository or repeating half of
bsd.lib.mk to add explicit rules.
lib/msun/src/*.c:
Renamed all functions that have an i387-specific version by adding
`__generic_' to their names.
lib/msun/src/get_hw_float.c:
New file for getting machdep.hw_float from the kernel.
sys/i386/include/asmacros.h:
Abuse the ENTRY() macro to generate jump vectors and associated code.
This works much like PIC PLT dynamic initialization. The PIC case is
messy. The old i387 entry points are renamed. Renaming is easier
here because the names are given by macro expansions.
This defeats the point of log1p(). ucbtest reports errors of +-5e+15
ULPs. A correct version would use the i387 fyl2xp1 instruction for
small x and maybe scale to small x. The C version does the scaling
reasonably efficiently, and fyl2px1 is slow (at least on P5s), so not
much is lost by always using the C version (only 25% for small x even
with the broken i387 version; 50% for large x).
This will make a number of things easier in the future, as well as (finally!)
avoiding the Id-smashing problem which has plagued developers for so long.
Boy, I'm glad we're not using sup anymore. This update would have been
insane otherwise.
was compiled with -O) by the precision bug in the i386 version of
gcc (assignments and casts don't clip the precision). E.g.,
rintf(12.3456789) was 12.125.
Avoid the same bug in rint(). It was only broken for the unusual
case when the i387 precision is 64 bits. FreeBSD defaults to 53
bit precision to avoid problems like this, but the standard math
emulator always uses 64 bit precision.
Corrected some bogus cross references to man pages that we don't/won't
have and either deleted them, or found a more appropriate man page
that we do have. Various other minor changes to silence manck.
Manck is currently down to about 200 lines of errors, down from
the 500 - 600+ when I started all this.
Also corrected a few minor formatting errors, file location and cross
references in some of the section 3 man pages.
This shuts up a lot of the output from "manck" for section 3.
Fixed description of domain of y*().
Fixed description of error domain. (This description is still half
redundant and half wrong, as in many other math man pages. fdlibm
doesn't support the VAX or Tahoe.)
Fixed capitalization of `Bessel'.
Second part of update to fdlibm 5.2: speed up argument reduction for trig
functions in the case pi/4 < |x| < 3pi/4.
Remove unused static constants ("one").
The fyl2xp1 instruction has such a limited range:
-(1 - (sqrt(2) / 2)) <= x <= sqrt(2) - 1
it's not worth trying to use it.
Also, I'm not sure fyl2xp1's extra precision will
matter once the result is converted from extended
real (80 bits) back to double real (64 bits).
Reviewed by: jkh
Submitted by: jtc
-- Begin comments from J.T. Conklin:
The most significant improvement is the addition of "float" versions
of the math functions that take float arguments, return floats, and do
all operations in floating point. This doesn't help (performance)
much on the i386, but they are still nice to have.
The float versions were orginally done by Cygnus' Ian Taylor when
fdlibm was integrated into the libm we support for embedded systems.
I gave Ian a copy of my libm as a starting point since I had already
fixed a lot of bugs & problems in Sun's original code. After he was
done, I cleaned it up a bit and integrated the changes back into my
libm.
-- End comments
Reviewed by: jkh
Submitted by: jtc