long double (GCC specific) and __float128

空扰寡人 提交于 2019-11-27 06:54:31
Caladan

Ad 1.

Those types are designed to work with numbers with huge dynamic range. The long double is implemented in a native way in the x87 FPU. The 128b double I suspect would be implemented in software mode on modern x86s, as there's no hardware to do the computations in hardware.

The funny thing is that it's quite common to do many floating point operations in a row and the intermediate results are not actually stored in declared variables but rather stored in FPU registers taking advantage of full precision. That's why comparison:

double x = sin(0); if (x == sin(0)) printf("Equal!");

Is not safe and cannot be guaranteed to work (without additional switches).

Ad. 3.

There's an impact on the speed depending what precision you use. You can change used the precision of the FPU by using:

void 
set_fpu (unsigned int mode)
{
  asm ("fldcw %0" : : "m" (*&mode));
}

It will be faster for shorter variables, slower for longer. 128bit doubles will be probably done in software so will be much slower.

It's not only about RAM memory wasted, it's about cache being wasted. Going to 80 bit double from 64b double will waste from 33% (32b) to almost 50% (64b) of the memory (including cache).

Ad 4.

On the other hand, I understand that the long double type is mutually exclusive with -mfpmath=sse, as there is no such thing as "extended precision" in SSE. __float128, on the other hand, should work just perfectly fine with SSE math (though in absence of quad precision instructions certainly not on a 1:1 instruction base). Am I right under these assumptions?

The FPU and SSE units are totally separate. You can write code using FPU at the same time as SSE. The question is what will the compiler generate if you constrain it to use only SSE? Will it try to use FPU anyway? I've been doing some programming with SSE and GCC will generate only single SISD on its own. You have to help it to use SIMD versions. __float128 will probably work on every machine, even the 8-bit AVR uC. It's just fiddling with bits after all.

The 80 bit in hex representation is actually 20 hex digits. Maybe the bits which are not used are from some old operation? On my machine, I compiled your code and only 20 bits change in long mode: 66b4e0d2-ec09c1d5-00007ffe-deadbeef

The 128-bit version has all the bits changing. Looking at the objdump it looks as if it was using software emulation, there are almost no FPU instructions.

Further, LDBL_MAX, seems to work as +inf for both long double and __float128. Adding or subtracting a number like 1.0E100 or 1.0E2000 to/from LDBL_MAX results in the same bit pattern. Up to now, it was my belief that the foo_MAX constants were to hold the largest representable number that is not +inf (apparently that isn't the case?).

This seems to be strange...

I'm also not quite sure how an 80-bit number could conceivably act as +inf for a 128-bit value... maybe I'm just too tired at the end of the day and have done something wrong.

It's probably being extended. The pattern which is recognized to be +inf in 80-bit is translated to +inf in 128-bit float too.

IEEE-754 defined 32 and 64 floating-point representations for the purpose of efficient data storage, and an 80-bit representation for the purpose of efficient computation. The intention was that given float f1,f2; double d1,d2; a statement like d1=f1+f2+d2; would be executed by converting the arguments to 80-bit floating-point values, adding them, and converting the result back to a 64-bit floating-point type. This would offer three advantages compared with performing operations on other floating-point types directly:

  1. While separate code or circuitry would be required for conversions to/from 32-bit types and 64-bit types, it would only be necessary to have only one "add" implementation, one "multiply" implementation, one "square root" implementation, etc.

  2. Although in rare cases using an 80-bit computational type could yield results that were very slightly less accurate than using other types directly (worst-case rounding error is 513/1024ulp in cases where computations on other types would yield an error of 511/1024ulp), chained computations using 80-bit types would frequently be more accurate--sometimes much more accurate--than computations using other types.

  3. On a system without a FPU, separating a double into a separate exponent and mantissa before performing computations, normalizing a mantissa, and converting a separate mantissa and exponent into a double, are somewhat time consuming. If the result of one computation will be used as input to another and discarded, using an unpacked 80-bit type will allow these steps to be omitted.

In order for this approach to floating-point math to be useful, however, it is imperative that it be possible for code to store intermediate results with the same precision as would be used in computation, such that temp = d1+d2; d4=temp+d3; will yield the same result as d4=d1+d2+d3;. From what I can tell, the purpose of long double was to be that type. Unfortunately, even though K&R designed C so that all floating-point values would be passed to variadic methods the same way, ANSI C broke that. In C as originally designed, given the code float v1,v2; ... printf("%12.6f", v1+v2);, the printf method wouldn't have to worry about whether v1+v2 would yield a float or a double, since the result would get coerced to a known type regardless. Further, even if the type of v1 or v2 changed to double, the printf statement wouldn't have to change.

ANSI C, however, requires that code which calls printf must know which arguments are double and which are long double; a lot of code--if not a majority--of code which uses long double but was written on platforms where it's synonymous with double fails to use the correct format specifiers for long double values. Rather than having long double be an 80-bit type except when passed as a variadic method argument, in which case it would be coerced to 64 bits, many compilers decided to make long double be synonymous with double and not offer any means of storing the results of intermediate computations. Since using an extended precision type for computation is only good if that type is made available to the programmer, many people came to conclude regard extended precision as evil even though it was only ANSI C's failure to handle variadic arguments sensibly that made it problematic.

PS--The intended purpose of long double would have benefited if there had also been a long float which was defined as the type to which float arguments could be most efficiently promoted; on many machines without floating-point units that would probably be a 48-bit type, but the optimal size could range anywhere from 32 bits (on machines with an FPU that does 32-bit math directly) up to 80 (on machines which use the design envisioned by IEEE-754). Too late now, though.

R Telkman

It boils down to the difference between 4.9999999999999999999 and 5.0.

  1. Although the range is the main difference, it is precision that is important.
  2. These type of data will be needed in great circle calculations or coordinate mathematics that is likely to be used with GPS systems.
  3. As the precision is much better than normal double, it means you can retain typically 18 significant digits without loosing accuracy in calculations.
  4. Extended precision I believe uses 80 bits (used mostly in maths processors), so 128 bits will be much more accurate.

C99 and C++11 added types float_t and double_t which are aliases for built-in floating-point types. Roughly, float_t is the type of the result of doing arithmetic among values of type float, and double_t is the type of the result of doing arithmetic among values of type double.

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