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The value of PI is never exactly PI in any floating point representation, and the value of PI/2 is never PI/2. It is wrong to expect cos(M_PI_2l) to return 0, instead it will return an answer that is non-zero because M_PI_2l doesn't round to exactly PI/2 in the type used. That is to say that the correct answer is to do the following: * Take PI or PI/2. * Round to the floating point representation. * Take the rounded value and compute an infinite precision cos or sin. * Use the rounded result of the infinite precision cos or sin as the answer to the test. I used printf to do the type rounding, and Wolfram's Alpha to do the infinite precision cos calculations. The following changes bring x86-64 and x86 to 1/2 ulp for two tests. It shows that the x86 cos implementation is quite good, and that our test are flawed. Unfortunately given that the rounding errors are type dependent we need to fix this for each type. No regressions on x86-64 or x86. --- 2013-04-11 Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com> * math/libm-test.inc (cos_test): Fix PI/2 test. (sincos_test): Likewise. * sysdeps/x86_64/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Regenerate. * sysdeps/i386/fpu/libm-test-ulps: Regenerate.
README for libm-test math test suite ==================================== The libm-test math test suite tests a number of function points of math functions in the GNU C library. The following sections contain a brief overview. Please note that the test drivers and the Perl script "gen-libm-test.pl" have some options. A full list of options is available with --help (for the test drivers) and -h for "gen-libm-test.pl". What is tested? =============== The tests just evaluate the functions at specified points and compare the results with precomputed values and the requirements of the ISO C99 standard. Besides testing the special values mandated by IEEE 754 (infinities, NaNs and minus zero), some more or less random values are tested. Files that are part of libm-test ================================ The main file is "libm-test.inc". It is platform and floating point format independent. The file must be preprocessed by the Perl script "gen-libm-test.pl". The results are "libm-test.c" and a file "libm-test-ulps.h" with platform specific deltas. The test drivers test-double.c, test-float.c, test-ldouble.c test the normal double, float and long double implementation of libm. The test drivers with an i in it (test-idouble.c, test-ifloat.c, test-ildoubl.c) test the corresponding inline functions (where available - otherwise they also test the real functions in libm). "gen-libm-test.pl" needs a platform specific files with ULPs (Units of Last Precision). The file is called "libm-test-ulps" and lives in platform specific sysdep directory. How can I generate "libm-test-ulps"? ==================================== To automatically generate a new "libm-test-ulps" run "make regen-ulps". This generates the file "math/NewUlps" in the build directory. The file contains the sorted results of all the tests. You can use the "NewUlps" file as the machine's updated "libm-test-ulps" file. Copy "NewUlps" to "libm-test-ulps" in the appropriate machine sysdep directory. Verify the changes, post your patch, and check it in after review. To manually generate a new "libm-test-ulps" file, first remove "ULPs" file in the current directory, then you can execute for example: ./testrun.sh math/test-double -u --ignore-max-ulp=yes This generates a file "ULPs" with all double ULPs in it, ignoring any previously calculated ULPs, and running with the newly built dynamic loader and math library (assumes you didn't install your build). Now generate the ULPs for all other formats, the tests will be appending the data to the "ULPs" file. As final step run "gen-libm-test.pl" with the file as input and ask to generate a pretty printed output in the file "NewUlps": gen-libm-test.pl -u ULPs -n Copy "NewUlps" to "libm-test-ulps" in the appropriate machine sysdep directory. Note that the test drivers have an option "-u" to output an unsorted list of all epsilons that the functions have. The output can be read in directly but it's better to pretty print it first. "gen-libm-test.pl" has an option to generate a pretty-printed and sorted new ULPs file from the output of the test drivers. Contents of libm-test-ulps ========================== Since libm-test-ulps can be generated automatically, just a few notes. The file contains lines for single tests, like: Test "cos (pi/2) == 0": float: 1 and lines for maximal errors of single functions, like: Function "yn": idouble: 6.0000 The keywords are float, ifloat, double, idouble, ldouble and ildouble (the prefix i stands for inline). You can also specify known failures, e.g.: Test "cos (pi/2) == 0": float: 1 float: fail Adding tests to libm-test.inc ============================= The tests are evaluated by a set of special test macros. The macros start with "TEST_" followed by a specification the input values, an underscore and a specification of the output values. As an example, the test macro for a function with input of type FLOAT (FLOAT is either float, double, long double) and output of type FLOAT is "TEST_f_f". The macro's parameter are the name of the function, the input parameter, output parameter and optionally one exception parameter. The accepted parameter types are: - "f" for FLOAT - "b" for boolean - just tests if the output parameter evaluates to 0 or 1 (only for output). - "c" for complex. This parameter needs two values, first the real, then the imaginary part. - "i" for int. - "l" for long int. - "L" for long long int. - "F" for the address of a FLOAT (only as input parameter) - "I" for the address of an int (only as input parameter) Some functions need special handling. For example gamma sets the global variable signgam and frexp takes an argument to &int. This special treatment is coded in "gen-libm-test.pl" and used while parsing "libm-test.inc".