1 1.9 isaki /* $NetBSD: fpu_mul.c,v 1.9 2016/12/06 06:41:14 isaki Exp $ */ 2 1.1 briggs 3 1.1 briggs /* 4 1.1 briggs * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993 5 1.1 briggs * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 6 1.1 briggs * 7 1.1 briggs * This software was developed by the Computer Systems Engineering group 8 1.1 briggs * at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory under DARPA contract BG 91-66 and 9 1.1 briggs * contributed to Berkeley. 10 1.1 briggs * 11 1.1 briggs * All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software 12 1.1 briggs * must display the following acknowledgement: 13 1.1 briggs * This product includes software developed by the University of 14 1.1 briggs * California, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. 15 1.1 briggs * 16 1.1 briggs * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 17 1.1 briggs * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 18 1.1 briggs * are met: 19 1.1 briggs * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 20 1.1 briggs * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 21 1.1 briggs * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 22 1.1 briggs * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 23 1.1 briggs * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 24 1.4 agc * 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 25 1.1 briggs * may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 26 1.1 briggs * without specific prior written permission. 27 1.1 briggs * 28 1.1 briggs * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 29 1.1 briggs * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 30 1.1 briggs * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 31 1.1 briggs * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 32 1.1 briggs * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 33 1.1 briggs * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 34 1.1 briggs * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 35 1.1 briggs * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 36 1.1 briggs * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 37 1.1 briggs * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 38 1.1 briggs * SUCH DAMAGE. 39 1.1 briggs * 40 1.1 briggs * @(#)fpu_mul.c 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/11/93 41 1.1 briggs */ 42 1.1 briggs 43 1.1 briggs /* 44 1.1 briggs * Perform an FPU multiply (return x * y). 45 1.1 briggs */ 46 1.3 lukem 47 1.3 lukem #include <sys/cdefs.h> 48 1.9 isaki __KERNEL_RCSID(0, "$NetBSD: fpu_mul.c,v 1.9 2016/12/06 06:41:14 isaki Exp $"); 49 1.1 briggs 50 1.1 briggs #include <sys/types.h> 51 1.1 briggs 52 1.1 briggs #include <machine/reg.h> 53 1.1 briggs 54 1.1 briggs #include "fpu_arith.h" 55 1.1 briggs #include "fpu_emulate.h" 56 1.1 briggs 57 1.1 briggs /* 58 1.1 briggs * The multiplication algorithm for normal numbers is as follows: 59 1.1 briggs * 60 1.1 briggs * The fraction of the product is built in the usual stepwise fashion. 61 1.1 briggs * Each step consists of shifting the accumulator right one bit 62 1.1 briggs * (maintaining any guard bits) and, if the next bit in y is set, 63 1.1 briggs * adding the multiplicand (x) to the accumulator. Then, in any case, 64 1.1 briggs * we advance one bit leftward in y. Algorithmically: 65 1.1 briggs * 66 1.1 briggs * A = 0; 67 1.1 briggs * for (bit = 0; bit < FP_NMANT; bit++) { 68 1.1 briggs * sticky |= A & 1, A >>= 1; 69 1.1 briggs * if (Y & (1 << bit)) 70 1.1 briggs * A += X; 71 1.1 briggs * } 72 1.1 briggs * 73 1.1 briggs * (X and Y here represent the mantissas of x and y respectively.) 74 1.1 briggs * The resultant accumulator (A) is the product's mantissa. It may 75 1.1 briggs * be as large as 11.11111... in binary and hence may need to be 76 1.1 briggs * shifted right, but at most one bit. 77 1.1 briggs * 78 1.1 briggs * Since we do not have efficient multiword arithmetic, we code the 79 1.1 briggs * accumulator as four separate words, just like any other mantissa. 80 1.1 briggs * 81 1.1 briggs * In the algorithm above, the bits in y are inspected one at a time. 82 1.1 briggs * We will pick them up 32 at a time and then deal with those 32, one 83 1.1 briggs * at a time. Note, however, that we know several things about y: 84 1.1 briggs * 85 1.1 briggs * - the guard and round bits at the bottom are sure to be zero; 86 1.1 briggs * 87 1.1 briggs * - often many low bits are zero (y is often from a single or double 88 1.1 briggs * precision source); 89 1.1 briggs * 90 1.1 briggs * - bit FP_NMANT-1 is set, and FP_1*2 fits in a word. 91 1.1 briggs * 92 1.1 briggs * We can also test for 32-zero-bits swiftly. In this case, the center 93 1.1 briggs * part of the loop---setting sticky, shifting A, and not adding---will 94 1.1 briggs * run 32 times without adding X to A. We can do a 32-bit shift faster 95 1.1 briggs * by simply moving words. Since zeros are common, we optimize this case. 96 1.1 briggs * Furthermore, since A is initially zero, we can omit the shift as well 97 1.1 briggs * until we reach a nonzero word. 98 1.1 briggs */ 99 1.1 briggs struct fpn * 100 1.7 isaki fpu_mul(struct fpemu *fe) 101 1.1 briggs { 102 1.7 isaki struct fpn *x = &fe->fe_f1, *y = &fe->fe_f2; 103 1.8 isaki uint32_t a2, a1, a0, x2, x1, x0, bit, m; 104 1.7 isaki int sticky; 105 1.1 briggs FPU_DECL_CARRY 106 1.1 briggs 107 1.1 briggs /* 108 1.1 briggs * Put the `heavier' operand on the right (see fpu_emu.h). 109 1.1 briggs * Then we will have one of the following cases, taken in the 110 1.1 briggs * following order: 111 1.1 briggs * 112 1.1 briggs * - y = NaN. Implied: if only one is a signalling NaN, y is. 113 1.1 briggs * The result is y. 114 1.1 briggs * - y = Inf. Implied: x != NaN (is 0, number, or Inf: the NaN 115 1.1 briggs * case was taken care of earlier). 116 1.1 briggs * If x = 0, the result is NaN. Otherwise the result 117 1.1 briggs * is y, with its sign reversed if x is negative. 118 1.1 briggs * - x = 0. Implied: y is 0 or number. 119 1.1 briggs * The result is 0 (with XORed sign as usual). 120 1.1 briggs * - other. Implied: both x and y are numbers. 121 1.1 briggs * The result is x * y (XOR sign, multiply bits, add exponents). 122 1.1 briggs */ 123 1.1 briggs ORDER(x, y); 124 1.1 briggs if (ISNAN(y)) { 125 1.1 briggs return (y); 126 1.1 briggs } 127 1.1 briggs if (ISINF(y)) { 128 1.1 briggs if (ISZERO(x)) 129 1.1 briggs return (fpu_newnan(fe)); 130 1.1 briggs y->fp_sign ^= x->fp_sign; 131 1.1 briggs return (y); 132 1.1 briggs } 133 1.1 briggs if (ISZERO(x)) { 134 1.1 briggs x->fp_sign ^= y->fp_sign; 135 1.1 briggs return (x); 136 1.1 briggs } 137 1.1 briggs 138 1.1 briggs /* 139 1.1 briggs * Setup. In the code below, the mask `m' will hold the current 140 1.1 briggs * mantissa byte from y. The variable `bit' denotes the bit 141 1.1 briggs * within m. We also define some macros to deal with everything. 142 1.1 briggs */ 143 1.1 briggs x2 = x->fp_mant[2]; 144 1.1 briggs x1 = x->fp_mant[1]; 145 1.1 briggs x0 = x->fp_mant[0]; 146 1.2 briggs sticky = a2 = a1 = a0 = 0; 147 1.1 briggs 148 1.1 briggs #define ADD /* A += X */ \ 149 1.2 briggs FPU_ADDS(a2, a2, x2); \ 150 1.1 briggs FPU_ADDCS(a1, a1, x1); \ 151 1.1 briggs FPU_ADDC(a0, a0, x0) 152 1.1 briggs 153 1.1 briggs #define SHR1 /* A >>= 1, with sticky */ \ 154 1.2 briggs sticky |= a2 & 1, \ 155 1.1 briggs a2 = (a2 >> 1) | (a1 << 31), a1 = (a1 >> 1) | (a0 << 31), a0 >>= 1 156 1.1 briggs 157 1.1 briggs #define SHR32 /* A >>= 32, with sticky */ \ 158 1.2 briggs sticky |= a2, a2 = a1, a1 = a0, a0 = 0 159 1.1 briggs 160 1.1 briggs #define STEP /* each 1-bit step of the multiplication */ \ 161 1.1 briggs SHR1; if (bit & m) { ADD; }; bit <<= 1 162 1.1 briggs 163 1.1 briggs /* 164 1.1 briggs * We are ready to begin. The multiply loop runs once for each 165 1.1 briggs * of the four 32-bit words. Some words, however, are special. 166 1.1 briggs * As noted above, the low order bits of Y are often zero. Even 167 1.1 briggs * if not, the first loop can certainly skip the guard bits. 168 1.1 briggs * The last word of y has its highest 1-bit in position FP_NMANT-1, 169 1.1 briggs * so we stop the loop when we move past that bit. 170 1.1 briggs */ 171 1.2 briggs if ((m = y->fp_mant[2]) == 0) { 172 1.1 briggs /* SHR32; */ /* unneeded since A==0 */ 173 1.1 briggs } else { 174 1.1 briggs bit = 1 << FP_NG; 175 1.1 briggs do { 176 1.1 briggs STEP; 177 1.1 briggs } while (bit != 0); 178 1.1 briggs } 179 1.1 briggs if ((m = y->fp_mant[1]) == 0) { 180 1.1 briggs SHR32; 181 1.1 briggs } else { 182 1.1 briggs bit = 1; 183 1.1 briggs do { 184 1.1 briggs STEP; 185 1.1 briggs } while (bit != 0); 186 1.1 briggs } 187 1.1 briggs m = y->fp_mant[0]; /* definitely != 0 */ 188 1.1 briggs bit = 1; 189 1.1 briggs do { 190 1.1 briggs STEP; 191 1.1 briggs } while (bit <= m); 192 1.1 briggs 193 1.1 briggs /* 194 1.1 briggs * Done with mantissa calculation. Get exponent and handle 195 1.1 briggs * 11.111...1 case, then put result in place. We reuse x since 196 1.1 briggs * it already has the right class (FP_NUM). 197 1.1 briggs */ 198 1.1 briggs m = x->fp_exp + y->fp_exp; 199 1.1 briggs if (a0 >= FP_2) { 200 1.1 briggs SHR1; 201 1.1 briggs m++; 202 1.1 briggs } 203 1.1 briggs x->fp_sign ^= y->fp_sign; 204 1.1 briggs x->fp_exp = m; 205 1.1 briggs x->fp_sticky = sticky; 206 1.1 briggs x->fp_mant[2] = a2; 207 1.1 briggs x->fp_mant[1] = a1; 208 1.1 briggs x->fp_mant[0] = a0; 209 1.1 briggs return (x); 210 1.1 briggs } 211