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authorRichard Henderson <rth@twiddle.net>2010-01-04 14:27:23 -0800
committerAurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net>2010-02-28 17:45:07 +0100
commitf24518b502802a128ca627a746a8bcb8d9e306af (patch)
tree14f74bb71be574e9d130c1aa99a14381efba2631 /target-alpha/op_helper.c
parent6c7123212223eb7f281230e9852f011255d73582 (diff)
downloadqemu-f24518b502802a128ca627a746a8bcb8d9e306af.tar.gz
target-alpha: Implement IEEE FP qualifiers.
IEEE FP instructions are split up so that the rounding mode coming from the instruction and exceptions (both masking and delivery) are handled external to the base FP operation. FP exceptions are properly raised for non-finite inputs to instructions that do not indicate software completion. A shortcut is applied if CONFIG_SOFTFLOAT_INLINE is defined at the top of translate.c: data is loaded and stored into FP_STATUS directly instead of using the functional interface defined by "softfloat.h". Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <rth@twiddle.net> Signed-off-by: Aurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'target-alpha/op_helper.c')
-rw-r--r--target-alpha/op_helper.c261
1 files changed, 237 insertions, 24 deletions
diff --git a/target-alpha/op_helper.c b/target-alpha/op_helper.c
index 8bb5d55a23..4d2c2ee58e 100644
--- a/target-alpha/op_helper.c
+++ b/target-alpha/op_helper.c
@@ -370,6 +370,130 @@ uint64_t helper_unpkbw (uint64_t op1)
/* Floating point helpers */
+void helper_setroundmode (uint32_t val)
+{
+ set_float_rounding_mode(val, &FP_STATUS);
+}
+
+void helper_setflushzero (uint32_t val)
+{
+ set_flush_to_zero(val, &FP_STATUS);
+}
+
+void helper_fp_exc_clear (void)
+{
+ set_float_exception_flags(0, &FP_STATUS);
+}
+
+uint32_t helper_fp_exc_get (void)
+{
+ return get_float_exception_flags(&FP_STATUS);
+}
+
+/* Raise exceptions for ieee fp insns without software completion.
+ In that case there are no exceptions that don't trap; the mask
+ doesn't apply. */
+void helper_fp_exc_raise(uint32_t exc, uint32_t regno)
+{
+ if (exc) {
+ uint32_t hw_exc = 0;
+
+ env->ipr[IPR_EXC_MASK] |= 1ull << regno;
+
+ if (exc & float_flag_invalid) {
+ hw_exc |= EXC_M_INV;
+ }
+ if (exc & float_flag_divbyzero) {
+ hw_exc |= EXC_M_DZE;
+ }
+ if (exc & float_flag_overflow) {
+ hw_exc |= EXC_M_FOV;
+ }
+ if (exc & float_flag_underflow) {
+ hw_exc |= EXC_M_UNF;
+ }
+ if (exc & float_flag_inexact) {
+ hw_exc |= EXC_M_INE;
+ }
+ helper_excp(EXCP_ARITH, hw_exc);
+ }
+}
+
+/* Raise exceptions for ieee fp insns with software completion. */
+void helper_fp_exc_raise_s(uint32_t exc, uint32_t regno)
+{
+ if (exc) {
+ env->fpcr_exc_status |= exc;
+
+ exc &= ~env->fpcr_exc_mask;
+ if (exc) {
+ helper_fp_exc_raise(exc, regno);
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+/* Input remapping without software completion. Handle denormal-map-to-zero
+ and trap for all other non-finite numbers. */
+uint64_t helper_ieee_input(uint64_t val)
+{
+ uint32_t exp = (uint32_t)(val >> 52) & 0x7ff;
+ uint64_t frac = val & 0xfffffffffffffull;
+
+ if (exp == 0) {
+ if (frac != 0) {
+ /* If DNZ is set flush denormals to zero on input. */
+ if (env->fpcr_dnz) {
+ val &= 1ull << 63;
+ } else {
+ helper_excp(EXCP_ARITH, EXC_M_UNF);
+ }
+ }
+ } else if (exp == 0x7ff) {
+ /* Infinity or NaN. */
+ /* ??? I'm not sure these exception bit flags are correct. I do
+ know that the Linux kernel, at least, doesn't rely on them and
+ just emulates the insn to figure out what exception to use. */
+ helper_excp(EXCP_ARITH, frac ? EXC_M_INV : EXC_M_FOV);
+ }
+ return val;
+}
+
+/* Similar, but does not trap for infinities. Used for comparisons. */
+uint64_t helper_ieee_input_cmp(uint64_t val)
+{
+ uint32_t exp = (uint32_t)(val >> 52) & 0x7ff;
+ uint64_t frac = val & 0xfffffffffffffull;
+
+ if (exp == 0) {
+ if (frac != 0) {
+ /* If DNZ is set flush denormals to zero on input. */
+ if (env->fpcr_dnz) {
+ val &= 1ull << 63;
+ } else {
+ helper_excp(EXCP_ARITH, EXC_M_UNF);
+ }
+ }
+ } else if (exp == 0x7ff && frac) {
+ /* NaN. */
+ helper_excp(EXCP_ARITH, EXC_M_INV);
+ }
+ return val;
+}
+
+/* Input remapping with software completion enabled. All we have to do
+ is handle denormal-map-to-zero; all other inputs get exceptions as
+ needed from the actual operation. */
+uint64_t helper_ieee_input_s(uint64_t val)
+{
+ if (env->fpcr_dnz) {
+ uint32_t exp = (uint32_t)(val >> 52) & 0x7ff;
+ if (exp == 0) {
+ val &= 1ull << 63;
+ }
+ }
+ return val;
+}
+
/* F floating (VAX) */
static inline uint64_t float32_to_f(float32 fa)
{
@@ -447,6 +571,9 @@ uint64_t helper_memory_to_f (uint32_t a)
return r;
}
+/* ??? Emulating VAX arithmetic with IEEE arithmetic is wrong. We should
+ either implement VAX arithmetic properly or just signal invalid opcode. */
+
uint64_t helper_addf (uint64_t a, uint64_t b)
{
float32 fa, fb, fr;
@@ -931,10 +1058,107 @@ uint64_t helper_cvtqs (uint64_t a)
return float32_to_s(fr);
}
-uint64_t helper_cvttq (uint64_t a)
+/* Implement float64 to uint64 conversion without saturation -- we must
+ supply the truncated result. This behaviour is used by the compiler
+ to get unsigned conversion for free with the same instruction.
+
+ The VI flag is set when overflow or inexact exceptions should be raised. */
+
+static inline uint64_t helper_cvttq_internal(uint64_t a, int roundmode, int VI)
{
- float64 fa = t_to_float64(a);
- return float64_to_int64_round_to_zero(fa, &FP_STATUS);
+ uint64_t frac, ret = 0;
+ uint32_t exp, sign, exc = 0;
+ int shift;
+
+ sign = (a >> 63);
+ exp = (uint32_t)(a >> 52) & 0x7ff;
+ frac = a & 0xfffffffffffffull;
+
+ if (exp == 0) {
+ if (unlikely(frac != 0)) {
+ goto do_underflow;
+ }
+ } else if (exp == 0x7ff) {
+ exc = (frac ? float_flag_invalid : VI ? float_flag_overflow : 0);
+ } else {
+ /* Restore implicit bit. */
+ frac |= 0x10000000000000ull;
+
+ shift = exp - 1023 - 52;
+ if (shift >= 0) {
+ /* In this case the number is so large that we must shift
+ the fraction left. There is no rounding to do. */
+ if (shift < 63) {
+ ret = frac << shift;
+ if (VI && (ret >> shift) != frac) {
+ exc = float_flag_overflow;
+ }
+ }
+ } else {
+ uint64_t round;
+
+ /* In this case the number is smaller than the fraction as
+ represented by the 52 bit number. Here we must think
+ about rounding the result. Handle this by shifting the
+ fractional part of the number into the high bits of ROUND.
+ This will let us efficiently handle round-to-nearest. */
+ shift = -shift;
+ if (shift < 63) {
+ ret = frac >> shift;
+ round = frac << (64 - shift);
+ } else {
+ /* The exponent is so small we shift out everything.
+ Leave a sticky bit for proper rounding below. */
+ do_underflow:
+ round = 1;
+ }
+
+ if (round) {
+ exc = (VI ? float_flag_inexact : 0);
+ switch (roundmode) {
+ case float_round_nearest_even:
+ if (round == (1ull << 63)) {
+ /* Fraction is exactly 0.5; round to even. */
+ ret += (ret & 1);
+ } else if (round > (1ull << 63)) {
+ ret += 1;
+ }
+ break;
+ case float_round_to_zero:
+ break;
+ case float_round_up:
+ ret += 1 - sign;
+ break;
+ case float_round_down:
+ ret += sign;
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ if (sign) {
+ ret = -ret;
+ }
+ }
+ if (unlikely(exc)) {
+ float_raise(exc, &FP_STATUS);
+ }
+
+ return ret;
+}
+
+uint64_t helper_cvttq(uint64_t a)
+{
+ return helper_cvttq_internal(a, FP_STATUS.float_rounding_mode, 1);
+}
+
+uint64_t helper_cvttq_c(uint64_t a)
+{
+ return helper_cvttq_internal(a, float_round_to_zero, 0);
+}
+
+uint64_t helper_cvttq_svic(uint64_t a)
+{
+ return helper_cvttq_internal(a, float_round_to_zero, 1);
}
uint64_t helper_cvtqt (uint64_t a)
@@ -979,35 +1203,24 @@ uint64_t helper_cvtlq (uint64_t a)
return (lo & 0x3FFFFFFF) | (hi & 0xc0000000);
}
-static inline uint64_t __helper_cvtql(uint64_t a, int s, int v)
-{
- uint64_t r;
-
- r = ((uint64_t)(a & 0xC0000000)) << 32;
- r |= ((uint64_t)(a & 0x7FFFFFFF)) << 29;
-
- if (v && (int64_t)((int32_t)r) != (int64_t)r) {
- helper_excp(EXCP_ARITH, EXC_M_IOV);
- }
- if (s) {
- /* TODO */
- }
- return r;
-}
-
uint64_t helper_cvtql (uint64_t a)
{
- return __helper_cvtql(a, 0, 0);
+ return ((a & 0xC0000000) << 32) | ((a & 0x7FFFFFFF) << 29);
}
-uint64_t helper_cvtqlv (uint64_t a)
+uint64_t helper_cvtql_v (uint64_t a)
{
- return __helper_cvtql(a, 0, 1);
+ if ((int32_t)a != (int64_t)a)
+ helper_excp(EXCP_ARITH, EXC_M_IOV);
+ return helper_cvtql(a);
}
-uint64_t helper_cvtqlsv (uint64_t a)
+uint64_t helper_cvtql_sv (uint64_t a)
{
- return __helper_cvtql(a, 1, 1);
+ /* ??? I'm pretty sure there's nothing that /sv needs to do that /v
+ doesn't do. The only thing I can think is that /sv is a valid
+ instruction merely for completeness in the ISA. */
+ return helper_cvtql_v(a);
}
/* PALcode support special instructions */