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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-11 08:17:27 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-11 08:17:27 +0000 |
commit | f215e02bf85f68d3a6106c2a1f4f7f063f819064 (patch) | |
tree | 6bb5b92c046312c4e95ac2620b10ddf482d3fa8b /src/VBox/Runtime/common/math/sincore.asm | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | virtualbox-f215e02bf85f68d3a6106c2a1f4f7f063f819064.tar.xz virtualbox-f215e02bf85f68d3a6106c2a1f4f7f063f819064.zip |
Adding upstream version 7.0.14-dfsg.upstream/7.0.14-dfsg
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/VBox/Runtime/common/math/sincore.asm')
-rw-r--r-- | src/VBox/Runtime/common/math/sincore.asm | 352 |
1 files changed, 352 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/VBox/Runtime/common/math/sincore.asm b/src/VBox/Runtime/common/math/sincore.asm new file mode 100644 index 00000000..50493cbf --- /dev/null +++ b/src/VBox/Runtime/common/math/sincore.asm @@ -0,0 +1,352 @@ +; $Id: sincore.asm $ +;; @file +; IPRT - No-CRT common sin & cos - AMD64 & X86. +; + +; +; Copyright (C) 2022-2023 Oracle and/or its affiliates. +; +; This file is part of VirtualBox base platform packages, as +; available from https://www.virtualbox.org. +; +; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or +; modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License +; as published by the Free Software Foundation, in version 3 of the +; License. +; +; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but +; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU +; General Public License for more details. +; +; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +; along with this program; if not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses>. +; +; The contents of this file may alternatively be used under the terms +; of the Common Development and Distribution License Version 1.0 +; (CDDL), a copy of it is provided in the "COPYING.CDDL" file included +; in the VirtualBox distribution, in which case the provisions of the +; CDDL are applicable instead of those of the GPL. +; +; You may elect to license modified versions of this file under the +; terms and conditions of either the GPL or the CDDL or both. +; +; SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-only OR CDDL-1.0 +; + + +%define RT_ASM_WITH_SEH64 +%include "iprt/asmdefs.mac" +%include "iprt/x86.mac" + + +BEGINCODE + +;; +; Internal sine and cosine worker that calculates the sine of st0 returning +; it in st0. +; +; When called by a sine function, fabs(st0) >= pi/2. +; When called by a cosine function, fabs(original input value) >= 3pi/8. +; +; That the input isn't a tiny number close to zero, means that we can do a bit +; cruder rounding when operating close to a pi/2 boundrary. The value in the +; ecx register indicates the input precision and controls the crudeness of the +; rounding. +; +; @returns st0 = sine +; @param st0 A finite number to calucate sine of. +; @param ecx Set to 0 if original input was a 32-bit float. +; Set to 1 if original input was a 64-bit double. +; set to 2 if original input was a 80-bit long double. +; +BEGINPROC rtNoCrtMathSinCore + push xBP + SEH64_PUSH_xBP + mov xBP, xSP + SEH64_SET_FRAME_xBP 0 + SEH64_END_PROLOGUE + + ; + ; Load the pointer to the rounding crudeness factor into xDX. + ; + lea xDX, [.s_ar64NearZero xWrtRIP] + lea xDX, [xDX + xCX * xCB] + + ; + ; Finite number. We want it in the range [0,2pi] and will preform + ; a remainder division if it isn't. + ; + fcom qword [.s_r64Max xWrtRIP] ; compares st0 and 2*pi + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C3 | X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C2 ; C3 := st0 == mem; C0 := st0 < mem; C2 := unordered (should be the case); + jz .reduce_st0 ; Jump if st0 > mem + + fcom qword [.s_r64Min xWrtRIP] ; compares st0 and 0.0 + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C3 | X86_FSW_C0 + jnz .reduce_st0 ; Jump if st0 <= mem + + ; + ; We get here if st0 is in the [0,2pi] range. + ; + ; Now, FSIN is documented to be reasonably accurate for the range + ; -3pi/4 to +3pi/4, so we have to make some more effort to calculate + ; in that range only. + ; +.in_range: + ; if (st0 < pi) + fldpi + fcom st1 ; compares st0 (pi) with st1 (the normalized value) + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 ; st1 > pi + jnz .larger_than_pi + test ax, X86_FSW_C3 + jnz .equals_pi + + ; + ; input in the range [0,pi[ + ; +.smaller_than_pi: + fdiv qword [.s_r64Two xWrtRIP] ; st0 = pi/2 + + ; if (st0 < pi/2) + fcom st1 ; compares st0 (pi/2) with st1 + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 ; st1 > pi + jnz .between_half_pi_and_pi + test ax, X86_FSW_C3 + jnz .equals_half_pi + + ; + ; The value is between zero and half pi, including the zero value. + ; + ; This is in range where FSIN works reasonably reliably. So drop the + ; half pi in st0 and do the calculation. + ; +.between_zero_and_half_pi: + ; Check if we're so close to pi/2 that it makes no difference. + fsub st0, st1 ; st0 = pi/2 - st1 + fcom qword [xDX] + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C3 ; st0 <= very small positive number. + jnz .equals_half_pi + ffreep st0 + + ; Check if we're so close to zero that it makes no difference given the + ; internal accuracy of the FPU. + fcom qword [xDX] + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C3 ; st0 <= very small positive number. + jnz .equals_zero_popped_one + + ; Ok, calculate sine. + fsin + jmp .return + + ; + ; The value is in the range ]pi/2,pi[ + ; + ; This is outside the comfortable FSIN range, but if we subtract PI and + ; move to the ]-pi/2,0[ range we just have to change the sign to get + ; the value we want. + ; +.between_half_pi_and_pi: + ; Check if we're so close to pi/2 that it makes no difference. + fsubr st0, st1 ; st0 = st1 - st0 + fcom qword [xDX] + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C3 ; st0 <= very small positive number. + jnz .equals_half_pi + ffreep st0 + + ; Check if we're so close to pi that it makes no difference. + fldpi + fsub st0, st1 ; st0 = st0 - st1 + fcom qword [xDX] + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C3 ; st0 <= very small positive number. + jnz .equals_pi + ffreep st0 + + ; Ok, transform the value and calculate sine. + fldpi + fsubp st1, st0 + + fsin + fchs + jmp .return + + ; + ; input in the range ]pi,2pi[ + ; +.larger_than_pi: + fsub st1, st0 ; st1 -= pi + fdiv qword [.s_r64Two xWrtRIP] ; st0 = pi/2 + + ; if (st0 < pi/2) + fcom st1 ; compares st0 (pi/2) with reduced st1 + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 ; st1 > pi + jnz .between_3_half_pi_and_2pi + test ax, X86_FSW_C3 + jnz .equals_3_half_pi + + ; + ; The value is in the the range: ]pi,3pi/2[ + ; + ; The actual st0 is in the range ]pi,pi/2[ where FSIN is performing okay + ; and we can get the desired result by changing the sign (-FSIN). + ; +.between_pi_and_3_half_pi: + ; Check if we're so close to pi/2 that it makes no difference. + fsub st0, st1 ; st0 = pi/2 - st1 + fcom qword [xDX] + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C3 ; st0 <= very small positive number. + jnz .equals_3_half_pi + ffreep st0 + + ; Check if we're so close to zero that it makes no difference given the + ; internal accuracy of the FPU. + fcom qword [xDX] + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C3 ; st0 <= very small positive number. + jnz .equals_pi_popped + + ; Ok, calculate sine and flip the sign. + fsin + fchs + jmp .return + + ; + ; The value is in the last pi/2 of the range: ]3pi/2,2pi[ + ; + ; Since FSIN should work reasonably well for ]-pi/2,pi], we can just + ; subtract pi again (we subtracted pi at .larger_than_pi above) and + ; run FSIN on it. (st1 is currently in the range ]pi/2,pi[.) + ; +.between_3_half_pi_and_2pi: + ; Check if we're so close to pi/2 that it makes no difference. + fsubr st0, st1 ; st0 = st1 - st0 + fcom qword [xDX] + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C3 ; st0 <= very small positive number. + jnz .equals_3_half_pi + ffreep st0 + + ; Check if we're so close to pi that it makes no difference. + fldpi + fsub st0, st1 ; st0 = st0 - st1 + fcom qword [xDX] + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C0 | X86_FSW_C3 ; st0 <= very small positive number. + jnz .equals_2pi + ffreep st0 + + ; Ok, adjust input and calculate sine. + fldpi + fsubp st1, st0 + fsin + jmp .return + + ; + ; sin(0) = 0 + ; sin(pi) = 0 + ; +.equals_zero: +.equals_pi: +.equals_2pi: + ffreep st0 +.equals_zero_popped_one: +.equals_pi_popped: + ffreep st0 + fldz + jmp .return + + ; + ; sin(pi/2) = 1 + ; +.equals_half_pi: + ffreep st0 + ffreep st0 + fld1 + jmp .return + + ; + ; sin(3*pi/2) = -1 + ; +.equals_3_half_pi: + ffreep st0 + ffreep st0 + fld1 + fchs + jmp .return + + ; + ; Return. + ; +.return: + leave + ret + + ; + ; Reduce st0 by reminder division by PI*2. The result should be positive here. + ; + ;; @todo this is one of our weak spots (really any calculation involving PI is). +.reduce_st0: + fldpi + fadd st0, st0 + fxch st1 ; st0=input (dividend) st1=2pi (divisor) +.again: + fprem1 + fnstsw ax + test ah, (X86_FSW_C2 >> 8) ; C2 is set if partial result. + jnz .again ; Loop till C2 == 0 and we have a final result. + + ; + ; Make sure the result is positive. + ; + fxam + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C1 ; The sign bit + jz .reduced_to_positive + + fadd st0, st1 ; st0 += 2pi, which should make it positive + +%ifdef RT_STRICT + fxam + fnstsw ax + test ax, X86_FSW_C1 + jz .reduced_to_positive + int3 +%endif + +.reduced_to_positive: + fstp st1 ; Get rid of the 2pi value. + jmp .in_range + +ALIGNCODE(8) +.s_r64Max: + dq +6.28318530717958647692 ; 2*pi +.s_r64Min: + dq 0.0 +.s_r64Two: + dq 2.0 + ;; + ; Close to 2/pi rounding limits for 32-bit, 64-bit and 80-bit floating point operations. + ; Given that the original input is at least +/-3pi/8 (1.178) and that precision of the + ; PI constant used during reduction/whatever, I think we can round to a whole pi/2 + ; step when we get close enough. + ; + ; Look to RTFLOAT64U for the format details, but 52 is the shift for the exponent field + ; and 1023 is the exponent bias. Since the format uses an implied 1 in the mantissa, + ; we only have to set the exponent to get a valid number. + ; +.s_ar64NearZero: +;; @todo check how sensible these really are... + dq (-18 + 1023) << 52 ; float / 32-bit / single precision input + dq (-40 + 1023) << 52 ; double / 64-bit / double precision input + dq (-52 + 1023) << 52 ; long double / 80-bit / extended precision input +ENDPROC rtNoCrtMathSinCore + |