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Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +01001// Copyright 2010 the V8 project authors. All rights reserved.
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3// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
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5//
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27
28#include <stdarg.h>
29#include <limits.h>
30
31#include "v8.h"
32
33#include "strtod.h"
Russell Brenner90bac252010-11-18 13:33:46 -080034#include "bignum.h"
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -070035#include "cached-powers.h"
36#include "double.h"
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +010037
38namespace v8 {
39namespace internal {
40
41// 2^53 = 9007199254740992.
42// Any integer with at most 15 decimal digits will hence fit into a double
43// (which has a 53bit significand) without loss of precision.
44static const int kMaxExactDoubleIntegerDecimalDigits = 15;
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -070045// 2^64 = 18446744073709551616 > 10^19
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +010046static const int kMaxUint64DecimalDigits = 19;
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -070047
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +010048// Max double: 1.7976931348623157 x 10^308
49// Min non-zero double: 4.9406564584124654 x 10^-324
50// Any x >= 10^309 is interpreted as +infinity.
51// Any x <= 10^-324 is interpreted as 0.
52// Note that 2.5e-324 (despite being smaller than the min double) will be read
53// as non-zero (equal to the min non-zero double).
54static const int kMaxDecimalPower = 309;
55static const int kMinDecimalPower = -324;
56
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -070057// 2^64 = 18446744073709551616
58static const uint64_t kMaxUint64 = V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0xFFFFFFFF, FFFFFFFF);
59
60
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +010061static const double exact_powers_of_ten[] = {
62 1.0, // 10^0
63 10.0,
64 100.0,
65 1000.0,
66 10000.0,
67 100000.0,
68 1000000.0,
69 10000000.0,
70 100000000.0,
71 1000000000.0,
72 10000000000.0, // 10^10
73 100000000000.0,
74 1000000000000.0,
75 10000000000000.0,
76 100000000000000.0,
77 1000000000000000.0,
78 10000000000000000.0,
79 100000000000000000.0,
80 1000000000000000000.0,
81 10000000000000000000.0,
82 100000000000000000000.0, // 10^20
83 1000000000000000000000.0,
84 // 10^22 = 0x21e19e0c9bab2400000 = 0x878678326eac9 * 2^22
85 10000000000000000000000.0
86};
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +010087static const int kExactPowersOfTenSize = ARRAY_SIZE(exact_powers_of_ten);
88
Russell Brenner90bac252010-11-18 13:33:46 -080089// Maximum number of significant digits in the decimal representation.
90// In fact the value is 772 (see conversions.cc), but to give us some margin
91// we round up to 780.
92static const int kMaxSignificantDecimalDigits = 780;
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +010093
94static Vector<const char> TrimLeadingZeros(Vector<const char> buffer) {
95 for (int i = 0; i < buffer.length(); i++) {
96 if (buffer[i] != '0') {
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -070097 return buffer.SubVector(i, buffer.length());
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +010098 }
99 }
100 return Vector<const char>(buffer.start(), 0);
101}
102
103
104static Vector<const char> TrimTrailingZeros(Vector<const char> buffer) {
105 for (int i = buffer.length() - 1; i >= 0; --i) {
106 if (buffer[i] != '0') {
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700107 return buffer.SubVector(0, i + 1);
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100108 }
109 }
110 return Vector<const char>(buffer.start(), 0);
111}
112
113
Russell Brenner90bac252010-11-18 13:33:46 -0800114static void TrimToMaxSignificantDigits(Vector<const char> buffer,
115 int exponent,
116 char* significant_buffer,
117 int* significant_exponent) {
118 for (int i = 0; i < kMaxSignificantDecimalDigits - 1; ++i) {
119 significant_buffer[i] = buffer[i];
120 }
121 // The input buffer has been trimmed. Therefore the last digit must be
122 // different from '0'.
123 ASSERT(buffer[buffer.length() - 1] != '0');
124 // Set the last digit to be non-zero. This is sufficient to guarantee
125 // correct rounding.
126 significant_buffer[kMaxSignificantDecimalDigits - 1] = '1';
127 *significant_exponent =
128 exponent + (buffer.length() - kMaxSignificantDecimalDigits);
129}
130
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700131// Reads digits from the buffer and converts them to a uint64.
132// Reads in as many digits as fit into a uint64.
133// When the string starts with "1844674407370955161" no further digit is read.
134// Since 2^64 = 18446744073709551616 it would still be possible read another
135// digit if it was less or equal than 6, but this would complicate the code.
136static uint64_t ReadUint64(Vector<const char> buffer,
137 int* number_of_read_digits) {
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100138 uint64_t result = 0;
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700139 int i = 0;
140 while (i < buffer.length() && result <= (kMaxUint64 / 10 - 1)) {
141 int digit = buffer[i++] - '0';
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100142 ASSERT(0 <= digit && digit <= 9);
143 result = 10 * result + digit;
144 }
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700145 *number_of_read_digits = i;
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100146 return result;
147}
148
149
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700150// Reads a DiyFp from the buffer.
151// The returned DiyFp is not necessarily normalized.
152// If remaining_decimals is zero then the returned DiyFp is accurate.
153// Otherwise it has been rounded and has error of at most 1/2 ulp.
154static void ReadDiyFp(Vector<const char> buffer,
155 DiyFp* result,
156 int* remaining_decimals) {
157 int read_digits;
158 uint64_t significand = ReadUint64(buffer, &read_digits);
159 if (buffer.length() == read_digits) {
160 *result = DiyFp(significand, 0);
161 *remaining_decimals = 0;
162 } else {
163 // Round the significand.
164 if (buffer[read_digits] >= '5') {
165 significand++;
166 }
167 // Compute the binary exponent.
168 int exponent = 0;
169 *result = DiyFp(significand, exponent);
170 *remaining_decimals = buffer.length() - read_digits;
171 }
172}
173
174
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100175static bool DoubleStrtod(Vector<const char> trimmed,
176 int exponent,
177 double* result) {
178#if (defined(V8_TARGET_ARCH_IA32) || defined(USE_SIMULATOR)) && !defined(WIN32)
179 // On x86 the floating-point stack can be 64 or 80 bits wide. If it is
180 // 80 bits wide (as is the case on Linux) then double-rounding occurs and the
181 // result is not accurate.
182 // We know that Windows32 uses 64 bits and is therefore accurate.
183 // Note that the ARM simulator is compiled for 32bits. It therefore exhibits
184 // the same problem.
185 return false;
186#endif
187 if (trimmed.length() <= kMaxExactDoubleIntegerDecimalDigits) {
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700188 int read_digits;
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100189 // The trimmed input fits into a double.
190 // If the 10^exponent (resp. 10^-exponent) fits into a double too then we
191 // can compute the result-double simply by multiplying (resp. dividing) the
192 // two numbers.
193 // This is possible because IEEE guarantees that floating-point operations
194 // return the best possible approximation.
195 if (exponent < 0 && -exponent < kExactPowersOfTenSize) {
196 // 10^-exponent fits into a double.
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700197 *result = static_cast<double>(ReadUint64(trimmed, &read_digits));
198 ASSERT(read_digits == trimmed.length());
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100199 *result /= exact_powers_of_ten[-exponent];
200 return true;
201 }
202 if (0 <= exponent && exponent < kExactPowersOfTenSize) {
203 // 10^exponent fits into a double.
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700204 *result = static_cast<double>(ReadUint64(trimmed, &read_digits));
205 ASSERT(read_digits == trimmed.length());
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100206 *result *= exact_powers_of_ten[exponent];
207 return true;
208 }
209 int remaining_digits =
210 kMaxExactDoubleIntegerDecimalDigits - trimmed.length();
211 if ((0 <= exponent) &&
212 (exponent - remaining_digits < kExactPowersOfTenSize)) {
213 // The trimmed string was short and we can multiply it with
214 // 10^remaining_digits. As a result the remaining exponent now fits
215 // into a double too.
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700216 *result = static_cast<double>(ReadUint64(trimmed, &read_digits));
217 ASSERT(read_digits == trimmed.length());
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100218 *result *= exact_powers_of_ten[remaining_digits];
219 *result *= exact_powers_of_ten[exponent - remaining_digits];
220 return true;
221 }
222 }
223 return false;
224}
225
226
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700227// Returns 10^exponent as an exact DiyFp.
228// The given exponent must be in the range [1; kDecimalExponentDistance[.
229static DiyFp AdjustmentPowerOfTen(int exponent) {
230 ASSERT(0 < exponent);
231 ASSERT(exponent < PowersOfTenCache::kDecimalExponentDistance);
232 // Simply hardcode the remaining powers for the given decimal exponent
233 // distance.
234 ASSERT(PowersOfTenCache::kDecimalExponentDistance == 8);
235 switch (exponent) {
236 case 1: return DiyFp(V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0xa0000000, 00000000), -60);
237 case 2: return DiyFp(V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0xc8000000, 00000000), -57);
238 case 3: return DiyFp(V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0xfa000000, 00000000), -54);
239 case 4: return DiyFp(V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0x9c400000, 00000000), -50);
240 case 5: return DiyFp(V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0xc3500000, 00000000), -47);
241 case 6: return DiyFp(V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0xf4240000, 00000000), -44);
242 case 7: return DiyFp(V8_2PART_UINT64_C(0x98968000, 00000000), -40);
243 default:
244 UNREACHABLE();
245 return DiyFp(0, 0);
246 }
247}
248
249
250// If the function returns true then the result is the correct double.
251// Otherwise it is either the correct double or the double that is just below
252// the correct double.
253static bool DiyFpStrtod(Vector<const char> buffer,
254 int exponent,
255 double* result) {
256 DiyFp input;
257 int remaining_decimals;
258 ReadDiyFp(buffer, &input, &remaining_decimals);
259 // Since we may have dropped some digits the input is not accurate.
260 // If remaining_decimals is different than 0 than the error is at most
261 // .5 ulp (unit in the last place).
262 // We don't want to deal with fractions and therefore keep a common
263 // denominator.
264 const int kDenominatorLog = 3;
265 const int kDenominator = 1 << kDenominatorLog;
266 // Move the remaining decimals into the exponent.
267 exponent += remaining_decimals;
268 int error = (remaining_decimals == 0 ? 0 : kDenominator / 2);
269
270 int old_e = input.e();
271 input.Normalize();
272 error <<= old_e - input.e();
273
274 ASSERT(exponent <= PowersOfTenCache::kMaxDecimalExponent);
275 if (exponent < PowersOfTenCache::kMinDecimalExponent) {
276 *result = 0.0;
277 return true;
278 }
279 DiyFp cached_power;
280 int cached_decimal_exponent;
281 PowersOfTenCache::GetCachedPowerForDecimalExponent(exponent,
282 &cached_power,
283 &cached_decimal_exponent);
284
285 if (cached_decimal_exponent != exponent) {
286 int adjustment_exponent = exponent - cached_decimal_exponent;
287 DiyFp adjustment_power = AdjustmentPowerOfTen(adjustment_exponent);
288 input.Multiply(adjustment_power);
289 if (kMaxUint64DecimalDigits - buffer.length() >= adjustment_exponent) {
290 // The product of input with the adjustment power fits into a 64 bit
291 // integer.
292 ASSERT(DiyFp::kSignificandSize == 64);
293 } else {
294 // The adjustment power is exact. There is hence only an error of 0.5.
295 error += kDenominator / 2;
296 }
297 }
298
299 input.Multiply(cached_power);
300 // The error introduced by a multiplication of a*b equals
301 // error_a + error_b + error_a*error_b/2^64 + 0.5
302 // Substituting a with 'input' and b with 'cached_power' we have
303 // error_b = 0.5 (all cached powers have an error of less than 0.5 ulp),
304 // error_ab = 0 or 1 / kDenominator > error_a*error_b/ 2^64
305 int error_b = kDenominator / 2;
306 int error_ab = (error == 0 ? 0 : 1); // We round up to 1.
307 int fixed_error = kDenominator / 2;
308 error += error_b + error_ab + fixed_error;
309
310 old_e = input.e();
311 input.Normalize();
312 error <<= old_e - input.e();
313
314 // See if the double's significand changes if we add/subtract the error.
315 int order_of_magnitude = DiyFp::kSignificandSize + input.e();
316 int effective_significand_size =
317 Double::SignificandSizeForOrderOfMagnitude(order_of_magnitude);
318 int precision_digits_count =
319 DiyFp::kSignificandSize - effective_significand_size;
320 if (precision_digits_count + kDenominatorLog >= DiyFp::kSignificandSize) {
321 // This can only happen for very small denormals. In this case the
322 // half-way multiplied by the denominator exceeds the range of an uint64.
323 // Simply shift everything to the right.
324 int shift_amount = (precision_digits_count + kDenominatorLog) -
325 DiyFp::kSignificandSize + 1;
326 input.set_f(input.f() >> shift_amount);
327 input.set_e(input.e() + shift_amount);
328 // We add 1 for the lost precision of error, and kDenominator for
329 // the lost precision of input.f().
330 error = (error >> shift_amount) + 1 + kDenominator;
331 precision_digits_count -= shift_amount;
332 }
333 // We use uint64_ts now. This only works if the DiyFp uses uint64_ts too.
334 ASSERT(DiyFp::kSignificandSize == 64);
335 ASSERT(precision_digits_count < 64);
336 uint64_t one64 = 1;
337 uint64_t precision_bits_mask = (one64 << precision_digits_count) - 1;
338 uint64_t precision_bits = input.f() & precision_bits_mask;
339 uint64_t half_way = one64 << (precision_digits_count - 1);
340 precision_bits *= kDenominator;
341 half_way *= kDenominator;
342 DiyFp rounded_input(input.f() >> precision_digits_count,
343 input.e() + precision_digits_count);
344 if (precision_bits >= half_way + error) {
345 rounded_input.set_f(rounded_input.f() + 1);
346 }
347 // If the last_bits are too close to the half-way case than we are too
348 // inaccurate and round down. In this case we return false so that we can
349 // fall back to a more precise algorithm.
350
351 *result = Double(rounded_input).value();
352 if (half_way - error < precision_bits && precision_bits < half_way + error) {
353 // Too imprecise. The caller will have to fall back to a slower version.
354 // However the returned number is guaranteed to be either the correct
355 // double, or the next-lower double.
356 return false;
357 } else {
358 return true;
359 }
360}
361
362
Russell Brenner90bac252010-11-18 13:33:46 -0800363// Returns the correct double for the buffer*10^exponent.
364// The variable guess should be a close guess that is either the correct double
365// or its lower neighbor (the nearest double less than the correct one).
366// Preconditions:
367// buffer.length() + exponent <= kMaxDecimalPower + 1
368// buffer.length() + exponent > kMinDecimalPower
369// buffer.length() <= kMaxDecimalSignificantDigits
370static double BignumStrtod(Vector<const char> buffer,
371 int exponent,
372 double guess) {
373 if (guess == V8_INFINITY) {
374 return guess;
375 }
376
377 DiyFp upper_boundary = Double(guess).UpperBoundary();
378
379 ASSERT(buffer.length() + exponent <= kMaxDecimalPower + 1);
380 ASSERT(buffer.length() + exponent > kMinDecimalPower);
381 ASSERT(buffer.length() <= kMaxSignificantDecimalDigits);
382 // Make sure that the Bignum will be able to hold all our numbers.
383 // Our Bignum implementation has a separate field for exponents. Shifts will
384 // consume at most one bigit (< 64 bits).
385 // ln(10) == 3.3219...
386 ASSERT(((kMaxDecimalPower + 1) * 333 / 100) < Bignum::kMaxSignificantBits);
387 Bignum input;
388 Bignum boundary;
389 input.AssignDecimalString(buffer);
390 boundary.AssignUInt64(upper_boundary.f());
391 if (exponent >= 0) {
392 input.MultiplyByPowerOfTen(exponent);
393 } else {
394 boundary.MultiplyByPowerOfTen(-exponent);
395 }
396 if (upper_boundary.e() > 0) {
397 boundary.ShiftLeft(upper_boundary.e());
398 } else {
399 input.ShiftLeft(-upper_boundary.e());
400 }
401 int comparison = Bignum::Compare(input, boundary);
402 if (comparison < 0) {
403 return guess;
404 } else if (comparison > 0) {
405 return Double(guess).NextDouble();
406 } else if ((Double(guess).Significand() & 1) == 0) {
407 // Round towards even.
408 return guess;
409 } else {
410 return Double(guess).NextDouble();
411 }
412}
413
414
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100415double Strtod(Vector<const char> buffer, int exponent) {
416 Vector<const char> left_trimmed = TrimLeadingZeros(buffer);
417 Vector<const char> trimmed = TrimTrailingZeros(left_trimmed);
418 exponent += left_trimmed.length() - trimmed.length();
419 if (trimmed.length() == 0) return 0.0;
Russell Brenner90bac252010-11-18 13:33:46 -0800420 if (trimmed.length() > kMaxSignificantDecimalDigits) {
421 char significant_buffer[kMaxSignificantDecimalDigits];
422 int significant_exponent;
423 TrimToMaxSignificantDigits(trimmed, exponent,
424 significant_buffer, &significant_exponent);
Shimeng (Simon) Wang8a31eba2010-12-06 19:01:33 -0800425 return Strtod(Vector<const char>(significant_buffer,
426 kMaxSignificantDecimalDigits),
427 significant_exponent);
Russell Brenner90bac252010-11-18 13:33:46 -0800428 }
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100429 if (exponent + trimmed.length() - 1 >= kMaxDecimalPower) return V8_INFINITY;
430 if (exponent + trimmed.length() <= kMinDecimalPower) return 0.0;
John Reck59135872010-11-02 12:39:01 -0700431
Russell Brenner90bac252010-11-18 13:33:46 -0800432 double guess;
433 if (DoubleStrtod(trimmed, exponent, &guess) ||
434 DiyFpStrtod(trimmed, exponent, &guess)) {
435 return guess;
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100436 }
Russell Brenner90bac252010-11-18 13:33:46 -0800437 return BignumStrtod(trimmed, exponent, guess);
Ben Murdochf87a2032010-10-22 12:50:53 +0100438}
439
440} } // namespace v8::internal