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r37/lisp/csl/cslbase/arith09.c
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/* arith09.c Copyright (C) 1989-2002 Codemist Ltd */ /* * Arithmetic functions. * GCD and some boolean operations * */ /* * This code may be used and modified, and redistributed in binary * or source form, subject to the "CCL Public License", which should * accompany it. This license is a variant on the BSD license, and thus * permits use of code derived from this in either open and commercial * projects: but it does require that updates to this code be made * available back to the originators of the package. * Before merging other code in with this or linking this code * with other packages or libraries please check that the license terms * of the other material are compatible with those of this. */ /* Signature: 00dff15f 08-Apr-2002 */ #include <stdarg.h> #include <string.h> #include <ctype.h> #include <math.h> #include "machine.h" #include "tags.h" #include "cslerror.h" #include "externs.h" #include "arith.h" #ifdef TIMEOUT #include "timeout.h" #endif #define topdigit(a) ((int32)bignum_digits(a)[(bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4-1]) static Lisp_Object absb(Lisp_Object a) /* * take absolute value of a bignum */ { int32 len = (bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4; if ((int32)bignum_digits(a)[len-1] < 0) return negateb(a); else return a; } /* * The next two functions help with bignum GCDs */ static void next_gcd_step(unsigned32 a0, unsigned32 a1, unsigned32 b0, unsigned32 b1, int32 *axp, int32 *ayp, int32 *bxp, int32*byp) /* * This function takes the two leading digits (a0,a1) and (b0,b1) of * a pair of numbers A and B and performs an extended GCD process to * find values ax, bx, ay and by with a view to letting * A' = ax*A + ay*B * B' = bx*A + by*B * and gcd(A', B') will be the same as gcd(A, B), but A' and B' will * be smaller than A and B by a factor of (up to, about) 2^30. On entry * A must be at least as big as B and B must be nonzero. If A/B is * bigger than about 0x40000000 the code will return early without doing * much - this must be detected and handled by the caller. The case where * no progress has been made will be signalled because the values ax, ay, * bx and by will be returned as ((1, 0), (0, 1)). Note that through the * body of this code axy and bxy hold ax+ay and bx+by */ { int32 ax = 1, axy = 1, bx = 0, bxy = 1; unsigned32 q; int n = 0; /* * I will keep A and B as double-precision values with a view to getting * the most progress out of this that I can. Also I round B up, so that * the quotient (A/B) is guaranteed to be an under-estimate for the true * result. Note that A was rounded down just by the process of keeping * only the two leading digits. */ #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE term_printf("a0=%.8x a1=%.8x b0=%.8x b1=%.8x\n", a0, a1, b0, b1); #endif b1++; if ((int32)b1 < 0) { b0++; b1 = 0; /* carry if necessary */ } /* * If b0 overflowed here then both A and B must have started off as * 0x7fffffff:0x7fffffff (since B was like that to overflow when incremented, * and A>=B). I return as if this code was invalid, and the fall-back * case will do one step and tidy up a bit. A jolly uncommon case! */ if ((int)b0 >= 0) { for (;;) { unsigned32 c0, c1; /* * If A/B would overflow I break. This includes the special case where B * has reduced to zero. I compute q = (a0,a1)/(b0,b1) */ if (b0 == 0) { unsigned32 qt; if (a0 >= b1) break; /* Overflow exit */ Ddivide(a1, qt, a0, a1, b1); a0 = 0; /* Leave the remainder in A */ q = qt; /* Accurate quotient here */ } else /* * I expect that the quotient here will be quite small, so I compute it in * a way optimised for such cases. This is just a simple shift-and-subtract * bit of division code, but for small quotients the number of loops executed * will be small. This naturally leaves the remainder in A. */ { unsigned32 qt = 1; q = 0; /* * This code uses B (it shifts it left a few bits to start with) but at the * end B has been put back in its original state. */ while (b0 < a0) /* Shift B left until >= A */ { b0 = b0 << 1; b1 = b1 << 1; if ((int32)b1 < 0) { b0++; b1 &= 0x7fffffff; } qt = qt << 1; /* qt marks a bit position */ } for (;;) /* Shift/subtract loop to get quotient */ { if (b0 < a0 || (b0 == a0 && b1 <= a1)) { q |= qt; a0 -= b0; a1 -= b1; if ((int32)a1 < 0) { a0--; a1 &= 0x7fffffff; } } qt = qt >> 1; if (qt == 0) break; b1 = b1 >> 1; if ((b0 & 1) != 0) b1 |= 0x40000000; b0 = b0 >> 1; } } /* * Now A hold the next remainder onwards, so flip A and B */ c0 = a0; c1 = a1; a0 = b0; a1 = b1; b0 = c0; b1 = c1; /* * If either of the next re-calculations of bx, bxy overflow then I ought * to exit before updating ax, bx, axy and bxy. Things are arranged so that * all values remain positive at this stage. */ { unsigned32 cx, cxy; Dmultiply(cx, cxy, bxy, q, axy); if (cx != 0) break; /* * cxy will be >= cx, so if cxy did not overflow then cx can not. Thus it * is safe to use regular (not double-length) multiplication here. */ cx = bx*q + ax; axy = bxy; bxy = cxy; ax = bx; bx = cx; n++; } /* * I update A and B in such a way that they alternate between the * sequences for under- and over-estimates of the true ratio. This is done * so that the partial quotients I compute always tend to be underestimates. */ a1 = a1 - axy; if ((int32)a1 < 0) { a1 &= 0x7fffffff; a0--; } b1 = b1 + bxy; if ((int32)b1 < 0) { b1 &= 0x7fffffff; b0++; } if (b0 > a0 || (b0 == a0 && b1 >= a1)) break; } } /* This is the end of the block testing the initial quotient */ { int32 ay = axy - ax, by = bxy - bx; /* * Use of this route would involve computing A*x+B*y and C*x+D*y, * which is 4 multiplications. Simple division would be just A-q*B at * one division. To account for this I pretend that I made no progress * at all if I would simulate less than 3 regular remainder steps. This is * 3 rather than 4 because (maybe) the Lehmer code bundles up more work for * the overhead that it spends. */ if (n < 3) ax = 1, ay = 0, bx = 0, by = 1; else if ((n & 1) != 0) { ax = -ax; by = -by; } else { ay = -ay; bx = -bx; } /* * Copy results into the places where they are wanted. */ *axp = ax; *ayp = ay; *bxp = bx; *byp = by; return; } } static int32 huge_gcd(unsigned32 *a, int32 lena, unsigned32 *b, int32 lenb) /* * A and B are vectors of unsigned integers, representing numbers with * radix 2^31. lena and lenb indicate how many digits are present. The * numbers are unsigned. This will use the vectors as workspace and * compute the GCD of the two integers. The result handed back will * really consist of two parts. The first is a flag (held in the top * bit) that indicates whether A and B were swopped. The remaining bits * hold the length (remaining) of A. */ { unsigned32 a0, a1, a2, b0, b1; int flipped = 0; /* * The next two lines adjust for an oddity in my bignum representation - the * if the leading digit would have its 0x40000000 bit set then I stick on * a leading zero. This gives me a bit more in hand wrt signed values. */ if (a[lena] == 0) lena--; if (b[lenb] == 0) lenb--; #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE { int i; term_printf("a:"); for (i=0; i<=lena; i++) term_printf(" %.8x", a[i]); term_printf("\n"); term_printf("b:"); for (i=0; i<=lenb; i++) term_printf(" %.8x", b[i]); term_printf("\n"); } #endif for (;;) { unsigned32 q; int32 lenr; /* * I will perform reductions until the smaller of my two bignums has been * reduced to a single-precision value. After that the tidying up to * obtain the true GCD will be fairly easy. * If one number is MUCH bigger than the other I will do (part of) a * regular remainder calculation to reduce it. If the two numbers are * about the same size then I will combine several big-number operations * into one - the clever part of this entire program. */ if (lena < lenb) { unsigned32 *c = a; int32 lenc = lena; a = b; lena = lenb; b = c; lenb = lenc; flipped ^= 1; } if (lenb == 0) break; /* B (at least) is now single precision */ else if (lena == lenb) { while (lenb >= 0 && a[lenb] == b[lenb]) lenb--; /* * Here I want to ensure that A is really at least as big as B. While * so doing I may happen to discover that they are actually the same value. * If I do that I set things so that B looks like a single precision zero * and exit from the loop. The result will be that A gets returned as the * GCD. */ if (lenb < 0) { b[0] = 0; lenb = 0; break; } if (a[lenb] < b[lenb]) { unsigned32 *c = a; /* NB do not swop lena, lenb here */ a = b; /* since lenb has been used as scratch */ b = c; /* and both numbers are lena long */ flipped ^= 1; } #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE { int i; term_printf("a:"); for (i=0; i<=lena; i++) term_printf(" %.8x", a[i]); term_printf("\n"); term_printf("b:"); for (i=0; i<=lena; i++) term_printf(" %.8x", b[i]); term_printf("\n"); } #endif /* * Since the shorter number was double-length (at least) it is OK to * grab the first two digits of each. */ a0 = a[lena]; a1 = a[lena-1]; b0 = b[lena]; b1 = b[lena-1]; lenb = lena; goto lehmer; } else if (lena == lenb+1) { a0 = a[lena]; a1 = a[lenb]; b0 = 0; b1 = b[lenb]; /* * If one number has one more digit than the other but the quotient will * still be small I may be able to use the Lehmer code. */ if (a0 < b1) goto lehmer; } /* * Here I need to do one step towards reduction by division. A is * at leat as long as B, and B has at least two digits. */ reduce_by_division: a0 = a[lena]; a1 = a[lena-1]; b0 = b[lenb]; b1 = b[lenb-1]; if (lena > 1) a2 = a[lena-2]; else a2 = 0; /* * Now I intend to estimate A/B by computing (a0,a1,a2)/(b0,b1). To do * this I will first shift the leading digits of A and B right until b0 * vanishes, then I will just need to compute (a0,a1,a2)/b1. If this * would overflow, I compute (a0,a1)/b1 instead. */ #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE term_printf("a0 = %.8x a1 = %.8x a2 = %.8x\n", a0, a1, a2); term_printf("b0 = %.8x b1 = %.8x\n", b0, b1); #endif while (b0 != 0) { b1 = b1 >> 1; if ((b0 & 1) != 0) b1 |= 0x40000000; b0 = b0 >> 1; a2 = a2 >> 1; if ((a1 & 1) != 0) a2 |= 0x40000000; a1 = a1 >> 1; if ((a0 & 1) != 0) a1 |= 0x40000000; a0 = a0 >> 1; } #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE term_printf("a0 = %.8x a1 = %.8x a2 = %.8x\n", a0, a1, a2); term_printf("b0 = %.8x b1 = %.8x\n", b0, b1); #endif lenr = lena; if (b1 == 0x7fffffff) /* * I make b1 = 0x7fffffff a special case because (a) then B is as well- * normalised as it possibly can be and so maybe my estimated quotient * should be quite accurate and (b) I want to ensure that the estimate * for q that I obtain here is an UNDER-estimate (if anything), and I * will achieve this by knowing that A has been rounded down a bit and by * rounding B up. This rounding will mean that in general each reduction * step here will be able to remove 29 or 30 bits from the difference * between the lengths of A and B. I hope that getting q more accurate * would not justify the extra effort. My worry is that regard is that * maybe a couple of bits of error on one step will over-often lead to * the very next q having to be just 1 or 2 in value, which would represent * not very much progress in the step. My main justification for taking * a relaxed view is that except for the very first step in the remainder * sequence it will be very uncommon for this code to be activated. */ { if (a0 != 0) q = a0; else if (lena == lenb) q = 1; else q = a1, lenr--; } else { unsigned32 rtemp, qtemp; b1++; /* To achieve rounding down of q */ if (a0 != 0 || a1 >= b1) Ddivide(rtemp, qtemp, a0, a1, b1); /* * The following line indicates a special case needed when this division * is almost done - up to almost the end I can afford to approximate a * true quotient (1,0,...) as (0,ffffffff,...), but eventually I must * grit my teeth and get things right. Since I have carefully tested and * ensured that A>B I KNOW that the true quotient is at least 1, so when * lena==lenb I can force this is if I was in danger of estimating a lower * value. */ else if (lena == lenb) qtemp = 1; else { Ddivide(rtemp, qtemp, a1, a2, b1); lenr--; } q = qtemp; } /* * Now q is an approximation to the leading digit of the quotient. * I now want to replace a by a - q*b*r^(lenr-lenb). */ #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE term_printf("q = %.8x\n", q); #endif { unsigned32 carry = 0, carry1 = 1; int32 i, j; for (i=0, j=lenr-lenb; i<=lenb; i++, j++) { unsigned32 mlow, w; Dmultiply(carry, mlow, b[i], q, carry); w = a[j] + clear_top_bit(~mlow) + carry1; if ((int32)w < 0) { w = clear_top_bit(w); carry1 = 1; } else carry1 = 0; a[j] = w; } a[j] = a[j] + (~carry) + carry1; } while (lena > 0 && a[lena]==0) lena--; continue; lehmer: { int32 ax, ay, bx, by, i; { int32 axt, ayt, bxt, byt; unsigned32 b00 = b0; /* * If the numbers have 3 digits available and if the leading digits are * small I do some (minor) normalisation by shifting up by 16 bits. This * should increase the number of steps that can be taken at once (slightly). */ if (a0 < (int32)0x8000U && lena > 2) { a0 = (a0 << 16) | (a1 >> 15); a1 = ((a1 << 16) | (a[lena-2] >> 15)) & 0x7fffffff; b00 = (b00 << 16) | (b1 >> 15); b1 = ((b1 << 16) | (b[lena-2] >> 15)) & 0x7fffffff; } next_gcd_step(a0, a1, b00, b1, &axt, &ayt, &bxt, &byt); ax = axt; ay = ayt; bx = bxt; by = byt; if (ay == 0) goto reduce_by_division; } /* * Now we should be able to arrange * [ ax ay ] = [ >0 <= 0 ] * [ bx by ] [ <= 0 > 0 ] * and I swop the rows to ensure that this is so. */ if (ax < 0 || by < 0) { int32 cx = ax, cy = ay; ax = bx; ay = by; bx = cx; by = cy; } ay = -ay; bx = -bx; /* Now all variables are positive */ /* * Now I want to compute ax*a - ay*b * and by*b - bx*a * and use these values for the new a and b. Remember that at present * a and b are just about the same length, and provided that I use b0 * for the leading digit of b I can treat both as having length lena */ { unsigned32 carryax = 0, carryay = 0, carrybx = 0, carryby = 0, borrowa = 1, borrowb = 1, aix, aiy, bix, biy, aa, bb; for (i=0; i<lena; i++) { Dmultiply(carryax, aix, a[i], ax, carryax); Dmultiply(carryay, aiy, b[i], ay, carryay); Dmultiply(carrybx, bix, a[i], bx, carrybx); Dmultiply(carryby, biy, b[i], by, carryby); aa = aix + clear_top_bit(~aiy) + borrowa; bb = biy + clear_top_bit(~bix) + borrowb; borrowa = aa >> 31; borrowb = bb >> 31; a[i] = clear_top_bit(aa); b[i] = clear_top_bit(bb); } /* * I do the top digit by hand to cope with a possible virtual zero digit at * the head of B. */ Dmultiply(carryax, aix, a[lena], ax, carryax); Dmultiply(carryay, aiy, b0, ay, carryay); Dmultiply(carrybx, bix, a[lena], bx, carrybx); Dmultiply(carryby, biy, b0, by, carryby); aa = aix + clear_top_bit(~aiy) + borrowa; bb = biy + clear_top_bit(~bix) + borrowb; borrowa = aa >> 31; borrowb = bb >> 31; aa = clear_top_bit(aa); bb = clear_top_bit(bb); a[lena] = aa; if (b0 != 0) b[lena] = bb; lenb = lena; if (b0 == 0) lenb--; /* * The following test is here as a provisional measure - it caught a number of * bugs etc while I was developing this code. My only worry is that maybe * the carries and borrows could (correctly) combine to leave zero * upper digits here without the exact equalities tested here happening. * I will remove this test after a decent interval. */ if (carryax - carryay + borrowa != 1 || carryby - carrybx + borrowb != 1) { err_printf("Carries %d \"%s\" %ld %ld %ld %ld %ld %ld\n", __LINE__, __FILE__, (long)carryax, (long)carryay, (long)carrybx, (long)carryby, (long)borrowa, (long)borrowb); my_exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } while (lena > 0 && a[lena] == 0) lena--; while (lenb > 0 && b[lenb] == 0) lenb--; } } continue; } if (flipped) lena |= ~0x7fffffff; return lena; } Lisp_Object gcd(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { int32 p, q; if (is_fixnum(a)) { if (!is_fixnum(b)) { if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) { if (a == fixnum_of_int(0)) return absb(b); else b = rembi(b, a); /* * a is a fixnum here, so did not need to be stacked over the * call to rembi() */ } else return aerror2("bad arg for gcd", a, b); } } else if (is_numbers(a) && is_bignum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) { if (b == fixnum_of_int(0)) return absb(a); else a = rembi(a, b); } else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) { Lisp_Object nil; /* * Now I have a case that maybe I hope is not too common, but which may * count as the interesting one - the GCD of two bignums. First I ensure * that the inputs have been made positive and also that I have made copies * of them - this latter condition is so that it will be proper for me * to perform remaindering operations on them in-place, thereby reducing the * total turn-over of memory that I incur. */ #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE trace_printf("GCD of 2 bignums %x %x\n", topdigit(a), topdigit(b)); trace_printf("signs %d %d\n", bignum_minusp(a), bignum_minusp(b)); #endif push(b); if (bignum_minusp(a)) a = negateb(a); else a = copyb(a); pop(b); errexit(); push(a); if (bignum_minusp(b)) b = negateb(b); else b = copyb(b); pop(a); errexit(); #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE trace_printf("GCD of 2 positive bignums %x %x\n", topdigit(a), topdigit(b)); trace_printf("signs %d %d\n", bignum_minusp(a), bignum_minusp(b)); #endif /* * Note that negating a NEGATIVE bignum may sometimes make it grow by one * word, but can never cause it to shrink - and in particular never shrink to * a smallnum. Of course negating a positive bignum can (in just one case!) * give a fixnum - but that can not occur here. Thus I know that I still * have two bignums to worry about! */ { int32 lena, lenb, new_lena; unsigned32 b0; /* * I apply two ideas here. The first is to perform all my arithmetic * in-place, since I have ensured that the numbers I am working with are * fresh copies. The second is to defer true bignum operations for as * long as I can by starting a remainder sequence using just the leading * digits of the inputs. */ lena = (bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4 - 1; lenb = (bignum_length(b)-CELL)/4 - 1; #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE trace_printf("lena = %d lenb = %d\n", lena, lenb); #endif new_lena = huge_gcd(&bignum_digits(a)[0], lena, &bignum_digits(b)[0], lenb); /* * The result handed back (new_lena here) contains not only the revised * length of a, but also a flag bit (handed back in its sign bit) to * indicate whether A and B have been swopped. */ #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE trace_printf("new_lena = %d = %.8x\n", new_lena, new_lena); #endif if (new_lena < 0) { Lisp_Object c = a; a = b; b = c; new_lena = clear_top_bit(new_lena); } /* * By this stage I have reduced A and B so that B is a single-precision * bignum (i.e. its value is at most 0x7fffffff). A special case will be * when B==0. To complete the GCD process I need to do a single remainder * operation (A%B) after which I have just machine arithmetic to do to * complete the job. */ b0 = bignum_digits(b)[0]; #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE printf("b0 = %d = %x\n", b0, b0); #endif if (b0 == 0) { int32 a0 = bignum_digits(a)[new_lena]; /* * The leading digit of a bignum is in effect one bit shorter than the * others (to allow for the fact that it is signed). In huge_gcd I did * not worry about that, but here (before I return) I need to restore a * proper state. Note that since the GCD is no larger than either original * number I am guaranteed to have space to put the padding zero I may need * to stick onto the number... */ #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE trace_printf("a0 = %d = %x\n", a0, a0); #endif if ((a0 & 0x40000000) != 0) bignum_digits(a)[++new_lena] = 0; lena = (bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4 - 1; #ifdef DEBUG_GCD_CODE trace_printf("lena = %d\n", lena); #endif numhdr(a) = make_bighdr(new_lena+CELL/4+1); #ifdef ADDRESS_64 lena |= 1; new_lena |= 1; #else lena = (lena + 1) & 0xfffffffeU; new_lena = (new_lena + 1) & 0xfffffffeU; #endif if (new_lena != lena) bignum_digits(a)[new_lena+1] = make_bighdr(lena - new_lena); return a; } /* * Another special case is if we have just discovered that the numbers were * co-prime. */ else if (b0 == 1) return fixnum_of_int(1); p = bignum_digits(b)[0]; if (new_lena == 0) q = bignum_digits(a)[0]; else { q = bignum_digits(a)[new_lena] % p; while (new_lena > 0) { unsigned32 qtemp; Ddivide(q, qtemp, q, bignum_digits(a)[--new_lena], p); } } if (p < q) { int32 r = p; p = q; q = r; } goto gcd_using_machine_arithmetic; } /* * The next 4 lines seem to be orphan code, no longer reachable. if (b == fixnum_of_int(0)) return a; a = rembi(a, b); errexit(); */ } else return aerror2("bad arg for gcd", a, b); } else return aerror2("bad arg for gcd", a, b); /* * If I drop out of the above IF statement I have reduced a and b to * fixnums, which I can compute with directly using C native arithmetic. */ p = int_of_fixnum(a); q = int_of_fixnum(b); if (p < 0) p = -p; if (q < 0) q = -q; gcd_using_machine_arithmetic: #ifndef FAST_DIVISION /* * If your computer has a slow implementation of the C remainder * operation (p % q) but fast shifts then it may be worthwhile * implementing integer GCD thusly... On an ARM where division is * done in software my time tests showed the shift-and-subtract GCD * code over twice as fast as the version using the remainder operator. * Somewhat to my amazement, most other targets (at least when I use -O * to optimise this code) show this version faster than the more * obvious code. See also the discussion in Knuth vol II. */ if (p == 0) p = q; else if (q != 0) { int twos = 0; /* * I shift p and q right until both are odd numbers, counting the * power of two that was needed for the GCD. * The contorted code here tries to avoid redundant tests on the * bottom bits of p and q. */ for (;;) { if ((p & 1) == 0) { if ((q & 1) == 0) { p = p >> 1; q = q >> 1; twos++; continue; } do p = p >> 1; while ((p & 1) == 0); break; } while ((q & 1) == 0) q = q >> 1; break; } /* * Now p and q are both odd, so if I subtract one from the other * I get an even number that can properly be shifted right (because * multiples of 2 have already all be taken care of). On some RISC * architectures this test-and-subtract loop will run only a bit slower * than just one division operation, especially if the two numbers p and * q are small. */ while (p != q) { if (p > q) { p = p - q; do p = p >> 1; while ((p & 1) == 0); } else { q = q - p; do q = q >> 1; while ((q & 1) == 0); } } /* * Finally I must re-instate the power of two that was taken out * earlier. */ p = p << twos; } #else /* FAST_DIVISION */ if (p < q) { int32 t = p; p = q; q = t; } while (q != 0) { int32 t = p % q; p = q; q = t; } #endif /* FAST_DIVISION */ /* * In some cases the result will be a bignum. Even with fixnum inputs * gcd(-0x08000000, -0x08000000) == 0x08000000 which is a bignum. Yuk! * What is worse, in the case that I get here out of the gcd(big,big) code * I can end up with a value that needs to be a 2-word bignum - that happens * when the result is of the form #b01xx... */ if ((p & 0x40000000) != 0) return make_two_word_bignum(0, p); else if (p >= 0x08000000) return make_one_word_bignum(p); else return fixnum_of_int(p); } Lisp_Object lcm(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { Lisp_Object g, nil = C_nil; if (a == fixnum_of_int(0) || b == fixnum_of_int(0)) return fixnum_of_int(0); stackcheck2(0, a, b); push2(a, b); g = gcd(a, b); errexitn(2); pop(b); b = quot2(b, g); errexitn(1); /* * b has already been through quot2(), so minusp can not fail... */ if (minusp(b)) b = negate(b); pop(a); errexit(); if (minusp(a)) /* can not fail */ { push(b); a = negate(a); pop(b); } errexit(); return times2(a, b); } Lisp_Object lognot(Lisp_Object a) { /* * bitwise negation can never cause a fixnum to need to grow into * a bignum. For bignums I implement ~a as -(a+1). */ if (is_fixnum(a)) return (Lisp_Object)((int32)a ^ ((-1) << 4)); else if (is_numbers(a) && is_bignum(a)) { Lisp_Object nil; a = plus2(a, fixnum_of_int(1)); errexit(); return negate(a); } else return aerror1("Bad arg for xxx", a); } #ifdef __powerc /* If you have trouble compiling this just comment it out, please */ #pragma options(!global_optimizer) #endif Lisp_Object ash(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) /* * Shift A left if B is positive, or right if B is negative. Right shifts * are arithmetic, i.e. as if 2s-complement values are used with negative * values having an infinite number of leading '1' bits. */ { int32 bb; if (!is_fixnum(b)) return aerror2("bad arg for lshift", a, b); bb = int_of_fixnum(b); if (bb == 0) return a; /* Shifting by zero has no effect */ if (is_fixnum(a)) { int32 aa = int_of_fixnum(a); if (aa == 0) return a; /* Shifting zero leaves it unaltered */ if (bb < 0) { bb = -bb; /* * Fixnums have only 28 data bits in them, and so right shifts by more than * that will lead to a result that is all 1s or all 0s. If I assume that * I am working with 32 bit words I can let a shift by 30 bits achieve this * effect. */ if (bb > 30) bb = 30; #ifdef SIGNED_SHIFTS_ARE_LOGICAL /* * ANSI C (oh bother it) permits an implementation to have right shifts * on signed values as logical (ie. shifting in zeros into the vacated * positions. In that case since I really want an arithmetic shift here * I need to insert '1' bits by hand. */ if (aa < 0) { aa = aa >> bb; aa |= (((int32)-1) << (32 - bb)); } else #endif aa = aa >> bb; return fixnum_of_int(aa); } else if (bb < 31) { int32 ah = aa >> (31 - bb); #ifdef SIGNED_SHIFTS_ARE_LOGICAL if (aa < 0) ah |= (((int32)-1) << (bb+1)); #endif aa = aa << bb; /* * Here (ah,aa) is a double-precision representation of the left-shifted * value. Note that this has just 31 valid bits in aa (but I have not * yet masked the top bit down to zero). Because a fixnum has only 28 bits * this can be at worst a 2-word bignum. But it may be a 1-word bignum or * a fixnum, and I can spend much effort deciding which! */ if (ah == 0 && aa >= 0 && aa < 0x40000000) { if (aa < 0x08000000) return fixnum_of_int(aa); else return make_one_word_bignum(aa); } else if (ah == -1 && aa < 0 && aa >= -0x40000000) { if (aa >= -0x08000000) return fixnum_of_int(aa); else return make_one_word_bignum(aa); } return make_two_word_bignum(ah, clear_top_bit(aa)); } else { Lisp_Object nil; /* * I drop through to here for a left-shift that will need to give a * bignum result, since the shift will be by at least 31 and the value * being shifted was non-zero. I deal with this by making the input into * bignum representation (though it would not generally be valid as one), * and dropping through to the general bignum shift code. */ a = make_one_word_bignum(aa); errexit(); /* * DROP THROUGH from here and pick up the general bignum shift code */ } } else if (!is_numbers(a) || !is_bignum(a)) return aerror2("bad arg for lshift", a, b); /* * Bignum case here */ if (bb > 0) { int32 lena = (bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4 - 1; int32 words = bb / 31; /* words to shift left by */ int32 bits = bb % 31; /* bits to shift left by */ int32 msd = bignum_digits(a)[lena]; int32 d0 = msd >> (31 - bits); int32 d1 = clear_top_bit(msd << bits); int32 i, lenc = lena + words; CSLbool longer = NO; Lisp_Object c, nil; #ifdef SIGNED_SHIFTS_ARE_LOGICAL if (msd < 0) d0 |= (((int32)-1) << (bits+1)); #endif if (!((d0 == 0 && (d1 & 0x40000000) == 0) || (d0 == -1 && (d1 & 0x40000000) != 0))) lenc++, longer = YES; push(a); c = getvector(TAG_NUMBERS, TYPE_BIGNUM, CELL+4*(lenc+1)); pop(a); errexit(); /* * Before I do anything else I will fill the result-vector with zero, so that * the parts that do not get A copied in will end up in a proper state. This * should include the word that pads the vector out to an even number of * words. */ for (i=0; i<=lenc; i++) bignum_digits(c)[i] = 0; if ((lenc & 1) != 0) bignum_digits(c)[i] = 0; /* The spare word */ d0 = 0; for (i=0; i<=lena; i++) { d1 = bignum_digits(a)[i]; /* * The value of d0 here is positive, so there are no nasty issues of * logical vs arithmetic shifts to bother me. */ bignum_digits(c)[words + i] = (d0 >> (31 - bits)) | clear_top_bit(d1 << bits); d0 = d1; } if (longer) { bignum_digits(c)[words+i] = d0 >> (31 - bits); #ifdef SIGNED_SHIFTS_ARE_LOGICAL if (d0 < 0) bignum_digits(c)[words+i] |= (((int32)-1) << (bits+1)); #endif } else if (msd < 0) bignum_digits(c)[words+i-1] |= ~0x7fffffff; return c; } else /* * Here for bignum right-shifts. */ { int32 lena = (bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4 - 1; int32 words = (-bb) / 31; /* words to shift right by */ int32 bits = (-bb) % 31; /* bits to shift right by */ int32 msd = bignum_digits(a)[lena]; int32 d0 = msd >> bits; int32 d1 = clear_top_bit(msd << (31 - bits)); int32 i, lenc = lena - words; CSLbool shorter = NO; Lisp_Object c, nil; #ifdef SIGNED_SHIFTS_ARE_LOGICAL if (msd < 0) d0 |= (((int32)-1) << (31 - bits)); #endif if (bits != 0 && ((d0 == 0 && (d1 & 0x40000000) == 0) || (d0 == -1 && (d1 & 0x40000000) != 0))) lenc--, shorter = YES; /* * Maybe at this stage I can tell that the result will be zero (or -1). * If the result will be a single-precision value I will nevertheless * build it in a one-word bignum and then (if appropriate) extract the * fixnum value. This is slightly wasteful, but I do not (at present) * view right-shifting a bignum to get a fixnum as super speed-critical. */ if (lenc < 0) return fixnum_of_int(msd < 0 ? -1 : 0); push(a); c = getvector(TAG_NUMBERS, TYPE_BIGNUM, CELL+4*(lenc+1)); pop(a); errexit(); if ((lenc & 1) != 0) bignum_digits(c)[lenc+1] = 0;/* The spare word */ d0 = bignum_digits(a)[words]; for (i=0; i<lenc; i++) { d1 = bignum_digits(a)[words+i+1]; bignum_digits(c)[i] = (d0 >> bits) | clear_top_bit(d1 << (31 - bits)); d0 = d1; } d1 = shorter ? msd : (msd < 0 ? -1 : 0); bignum_digits(c)[i] = (d0 >> bits) | (d1 << (31 - bits)); /* * Now I see if the result ought to be represented as a fixnum. */ if (lenc == 0) { d0 = bignum_digits(c)[0]; d1 = d0 & (-0x08000000); if (d1 == 0 || d1 == -0x08000000) return fixnum_of_int(d0); } /* * Drop through if a genuine bignum result is needed. */ return c; } } #ifdef __powerc /* If you have trouble compiling this just comment it out, please */ #pragma options(global_optimizer) #endif Lisp_Object shrink_bignum(Lisp_Object a, int32 lena) { int32 msd = bignum_digits(a)[lena]; int32 olen = lena; if (msd == 0) { while (lena > 0) { lena--; msd = bignum_digits(a)[lena]; if (msd != 0) break; } if ((msd & 0x40000000) != 0) lena++; } else if (msd == -1) { while (lena > 0) { lena--; msd = bignum_digits(a)[lena]; if (msd != 0x7fffffff) break; } if ((msd & 0x40000000) == 0) lena++; } if (lena == 0) { int32 w = msd & 0x78000000; if (w == 0 || w == 0x78000000) return fixnum_of_int(msd); } if (lena == olen) return a; /* * Here I had allocated too much space, so I have to trim it off and * put a dummy vector in to pad out the heap. */ numhdr(a) -= pack_hdrlength(olen-lena); msd = bignum_digits(a)[lena]; if ((msd & 0x40000000) != 0) bignum_digits(a)[lena] = msd | ~0x7fffffff; if ((lena & 1) != 0) bignum_digits(a)[++lena] = 0; lena++; olen = (olen+1)|1; if (lena == olen) return a; *(Header *)&bignum_digits(a)[lena]=make_bighdr(olen-lena); return a; } static Lisp_Object logiorbb(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { Lisp_Object nil; int32 lena, lenb, i, msd; errexit(); /* failure in make_one_word_bignum()? */ lena = (bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4 - 1; lenb = (bignum_length(b)-CELL)/4 - 1; if (lena > lenb) { Lisp_Object c = a; int32 lenc = lena; a = b; lena = lenb; b = c; lenb = lenc; } /* Now b is at least as long as a */ msd = bignum_digits(a)[lena]; if (msd < 0) { push(b); a = copyb(a); pop(b); errexit(); for (i=0; i<=lena; i++) bignum_digits(a)[i] |= bignum_digits(b)[i]; } else { push(a); b = copyb(b); pop(a); errexit(); for (i=0; i<=lena; i++) bignum_digits(b)[i] |= bignum_digits(a)[i]; if (lena != lenb) return b; a = b; } return shrink_bignum(a, lena); } static Lisp_Object logiorib(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { push(b); a = make_one_word_bignum(int_of_fixnum(a)); pop(b); return logiorbb(a, b); } Lisp_Object logior2(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { if (is_fixnum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) return (Lisp_Object)((int32)a | (int32)b); else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) return logiorib(a, b); else return aerror2("bad arg for logior", a, b); } else if (is_numbers(a) && is_bignum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) return logiorib(b, a); else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) return logiorbb(a, b); else return aerror2("bad arg for logior", a, b); } else return aerror2("bad arg for logior", a, b); } static Lisp_Object logxorbb(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { Lisp_Object nil; int32 lena, lenb, i; unsigned32 w; errexit(); /* failure in make_one_word_bignum()? */ lena = (bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4 - 1; lenb = (bignum_length(b)-CELL)/4 - 1; if (lena > lenb) { Lisp_Object c = a; int32 lenc = lena; a = b; lena = lenb; b = c; lenb = lenc; } /* Now b is at least as long as a */ push(a); b = copyb(b); pop(a); errexit(); for (i=0; i<lena; i++) bignum_digits(b)[i] ^= bignum_digits(a)[i]; w = bignum_digits(a)[i]; if (lena == lenb) bignum_digits(b)[i] ^= w; else { bignum_digits(b)[i] ^= clear_top_bit(w); if ((w & 0x80000000U) != 0) { for(i++; i<lenb; i++) bignum_digits(b)[i] = clear_top_bit(~bignum_digits(b)[i]); bignum_digits(b)[i] = ~bignum_digits(b)[i]; } } return shrink_bignum(b, lenb); } static Lisp_Object logxorib(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { push(b); a = make_one_word_bignum(int_of_fixnum(a)); pop(b); return logxorbb(a, b); } Lisp_Object logxor2(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { if (is_fixnum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) return (Lisp_Object)(((int32)a ^ (int32)b) + TAG_FIXNUM); else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) return logxorib(a, b); else return aerror2("bad arg for logxor", a, b); } else if (is_numbers(a) && is_bignum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) return logxorib(b, a); else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) return logxorbb(a, b); else return aerror2("bad arg for logxor", a, b); } else return aerror2("bad arg for logxor", a, b); } Lisp_Object logeqv2(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { if (is_fixnum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) return (Lisp_Object)((int32)a ^ (int32)b ^ (int32)fixnum_of_int(-1)); else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) { push(b); a = make_one_word_bignum(~int_of_fixnum(a)); pop(b); return logxorbb(a, b); } else return aerror2("bad arg for logeqv", a, b); } else if (is_numbers(a) && is_bignum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) { push(a); b = make_one_word_bignum(~int_of_fixnum(b)); pop(a); return logxorbb(b, a); } else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) { Lisp_Object nil; push(a); b = lognot(b); pop(a); errexit(); return logxorbb(a, b); } else return aerror2("bad arg for logeqv", a, b); } else return aerror2("bad arg for logeqv", a, b); } static Lisp_Object logandbb(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { Lisp_Object nil; int32 lena, lenb, i, msd; errexit(); /* failure in make_one_word_bignum()? */ lena = (bignum_length(a)-CELL)/4 - 1; lenb = (bignum_length(b)-CELL)/4 - 1; if (lena > lenb) { Lisp_Object c = a; int32 lenc = lena; a = b; lena = lenb; b = c; lenb = lenc; } /* Now b is at least as long as a */ msd = bignum_digits(a)[lena]; if (msd >= 0) { push(b); a = copyb(a); pop(b); errexit(); for (i=0; i<=lena; i++) bignum_digits(a)[i] &= bignum_digits(b)[i]; } else { push(a); b = copyb(b); pop(a); errexit(); for (i=0; i<=lena; i++) bignum_digits(b)[i] &= bignum_digits(a)[i]; if (lena != lenb) return b; a = b; } return shrink_bignum(a, lena); } static Lisp_Object logandib(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { push(b); a = make_one_word_bignum(int_of_fixnum(a)); pop(b); return logandbb(a, b); } Lisp_Object logand2(Lisp_Object a, Lisp_Object b) { if (is_fixnum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) return (Lisp_Object)((int32)a & (int32)b); else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) return logandib(a, b); else return aerror2("bad arg for logand", a, b); } else if (is_numbers(a) && is_bignum(a)) { if (is_fixnum(b)) return logandib(b, a); else if (is_numbers(b) && is_bignum(b)) return logandbb(a, b); else return aerror2("bad arg for logand", a, b); } else return aerror2("bad arg for logand", a, b); } /* end of arith09.c */