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Ban subnormals and NaNs in const {from,to}_bits
This commit is contained in:
parent
b200483412
commit
83581796b2
@ -623,6 +623,23 @@ impl f32 {
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}
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}
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// This operates on bits, and only bits, so it can ignore concerns about weird FPUs.
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// FIXME(jubilee): In a just world, this would be the entire impl for classify,
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// plus a transmute. We do not live in a just world, but we can make it more so.
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#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_float_classify", issue = "72505")]
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const fn classify_bits(b: u32) -> FpCategory {
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const EXP_MASK: u32 = 0x7f800000;
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const MAN_MASK: u32 = 0x007fffff;
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match (b & MAN_MASK, b & EXP_MASK) {
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(0, EXP_MASK) => FpCategory::Infinite,
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(_, EXP_MASK) => FpCategory::Nan,
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(0, 0) => FpCategory::Zero,
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(_, 0) => FpCategory::Subnormal,
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_ => FpCategory::Normal,
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}
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}
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/// Returns `true` if `self` has a positive sign, including `+0.0`, `NaN`s with
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/// positive sign bit and positive infinity.
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///
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@ -874,8 +891,59 @@ impl f32 {
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#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_float_bits_conv", issue = "72447")]
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#[inline]
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pub const fn to_bits(self) -> u32 {
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// SAFETY: `u32` is a plain old datatype so we can always transmute to it
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unsafe { mem::transmute(self) }
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// SAFETY: `u32` is a plain old datatype so we can always transmute to it.
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// ...sorta.
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//
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// It turns out that at runtime, it is possible for a floating point number
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// to be subject to a floating point mode that alters nonzero subnormal numbers
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// to zero on reads and writes, aka "denormals are zero" and "flush to zero".
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// This is not a problem per se, but at least one tier2 platform for Rust
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// actually exhibits this behavior by default.
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//
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// In addition, on x86 targets with SSE or SSE2 disabled and the x87 FPU enabled,
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// i.e. not soft-float, the way Rust does parameter passing can actually alter
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// a number that is "not infinity" to have the same exponent as infinity,
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// in a slightly unpredictable manner.
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//
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// And, of course evaluating to a NaN value is fairly nondeterministic.
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// More precisely: when NaN should be returned is knowable, but which NaN?
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// So far that's defined by a combination of LLVM and the CPU, not Rust.
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// This function, however, allows observing the bitstring of a NaN,
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// thus introspection on CTFE.
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//
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// In order to preserve, at least for the moment, const-to-runtime equivalence,
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// we reject any of these possible situations from happening.
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#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_float_bits_conv", issue = "72447")]
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const fn ct_f32_to_u32(ct: f32) -> u32 {
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match ct.classify() {
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FpCategory::Nan => {
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panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f32::to_bits on a NaN")
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}
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FpCategory::Subnormal => {
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panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f32::to_bits on a subnormal number")
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}
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FpCategory::Infinite =>
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// SAFETY: Infinity per se is fine
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unsafe { mem::transmute::<f32, u32>(ct) },
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FpCategory::Zero | FpCategory::Normal => {
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// SAFETY: We have a normal floating point number. Now we transmute, i.e. do a bitcopy.
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let bits: u32 = unsafe { mem::transmute::<f32, u32>(ct) };
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// Let's doublecheck to make sure it wasn't a weird float by truncating it.
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if bits >> 23 & 0xFF == 0xFF {
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panic!(
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"const-eval error: an unusually large x87 floating point value should not leak into const eval"
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)
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};
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bits
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}
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}
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}
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// SAFETY: `u32` is a plain old datatype so we can always... uh...
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// ...look, just pretend you forgot what you just read.
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// Stability concerns.
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let rt_f32_to_u32 = |rt| unsafe { mem::transmute::<f32, u32>(rt) };
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// SAFETY: We use internal implementations that either always work or fail at compile time.
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unsafe { intrinsics::const_eval_select((self,), ct_f32_to_u32, rt_f32_to_u32) }
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}
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/// Raw transmutation from `u32`.
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@ -919,9 +987,49 @@ impl f32 {
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#[must_use]
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#[inline]
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pub const fn from_bits(v: u32) -> Self {
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// SAFETY: `u32` is a plain old datatype so we can always transmute from it
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// It turns out the safety issues with sNaN were overblown! Hooray!
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unsafe { mem::transmute::<u32, f32>(v) }
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// SAFETY: `u32` is a plain old datatype so we can always transmute from it
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// ...sorta.
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//
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// It turns out that at runtime, it is possible for a floating point number
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// to be subject to a floating point mode that alters nonzero subnormal numbers
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// to zero on reads and writes, aka "denormals are zero" and "flush to zero".
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// This is not a problem usually, but at least one tier2 platform for Rust
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// actually exhibits this behavior by default: thumbv7neon
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// aka "the Neon FPU in AArch32 state"
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//
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// In addition, on x86 targets with SSE or SSE2 disabled and the x87 FPU enabled,
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// i.e. not soft-float, the way Rust does parameter passing can actually alter
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// a number that is "not infinity" to have the same exponent as infinity,
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// in a slightly unpredictable manner.
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//
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// And, of course evaluating to a NaN value is fairly nondeterministic.
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// More precisely: when NaN should be returned is knowable, but which NaN?
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// So far that's defined by a combination of LLVM and the CPU, not Rust.
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// This function, however, allows observing the bitstring of a NaN,
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// thus introspection on CTFE.
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//
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// In order to preserve, at least for the moment, const-to-runtime equivalence,
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// reject any of these possible situations from happening.
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#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_float_bits_conv", issue = "72447")]
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const fn ct_u32_to_f32(ct: u32) -> f32 {
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match f32::classify_bits(ct) {
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FpCategory::Subnormal => {
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panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f32::from_bits on a subnormal number");
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}
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FpCategory::Nan => {
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panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f32::from_bits on NaN");
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}
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// SAFETY: It's not a frumious number
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_ => unsafe { mem::transmute::<u32, f32>(ct) },
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}
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}
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// SAFETY: `u32` is a plain old datatype so we can always... uh...
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// ...look, just pretend you forgot what you just read.
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// Stability concerns.
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let rt_u32_to_f32 = |rt| unsafe { mem::transmute::<u32, f32>(rt) };
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// SAFETY: We use internal implementations that either always work or fail at compile time.
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unsafe { intrinsics::const_eval_select((v,), ct_u32_to_f32, rt_u32_to_f32) }
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}
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/// Return the memory representation of this floating point number as a byte array in
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@ -621,6 +621,23 @@ impl f64 {
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}
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}
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// This operates on bits, and only bits, so it can ignore concerns about weird FPUs.
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// FIXME(jubilee): In a just world, this would be the entire impl for classify,
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// plus a transmute. We do not live in a just world, but we can make it more so.
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#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_float_classify", issue = "72505")]
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const fn classify_bits(b: u64) -> FpCategory {
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const EXP_MASK: u64 = 0x7ff0000000000000;
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const MAN_MASK: u64 = 0x000fffffffffffff;
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match (b & MAN_MASK, b & EXP_MASK) {
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(0, EXP_MASK) => FpCategory::Infinite,
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(_, EXP_MASK) => FpCategory::Nan,
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(0, 0) => FpCategory::Zero,
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(_, 0) => FpCategory::Subnormal,
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_ => FpCategory::Normal,
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}
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}
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/// Returns `true` if `self` has a positive sign, including `+0.0`, `NaN`s with
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/// positive sign bit and positive infinity.
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///
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@ -891,8 +908,41 @@ impl f64 {
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#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_float_bits_conv", issue = "72447")]
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#[inline]
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pub const fn to_bits(self) -> u64 {
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// SAFETY: `u64` is a plain old datatype so we can always transmute to it
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unsafe { mem::transmute(self) }
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// SAFETY: `u64` is a plain old datatype so we can always transmute to it.
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// ...sorta.
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//
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// See the SAFETY comment in f64::from_bits for more.
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#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_float_bits_conv", issue = "72447")]
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const fn ct_f64_to_u64(ct: f64) -> u64 {
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match ct.classify() {
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FpCategory::Nan => {
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panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f64::to_bits on a NaN")
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}
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FpCategory::Subnormal => {
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panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f64::to_bits on a subnormal number")
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}
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FpCategory::Infinite =>
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// SAFETY: Infinity per se is fine
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unsafe { mem::transmute::<f64, u64>(ct) },
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FpCategory::Zero | FpCategory::Normal => {
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// SAFETY: We have a normal floating point number. Now we transmute, i.e. do a bitcopy.
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let bits: u64 = unsafe { mem::transmute::<f64, u64>(ct) };
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// Let's doublecheck to make sure it wasn't a weird float by truncating it.
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if (bits >> 52) & 0x7FF == 0x7FF {
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panic!(
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"const-eval error: an unusually large x87 floating point value should not leak into const eval"
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)
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};
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bits
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}
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}
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}
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// SAFETY: `u64` is a plain old datatype so we can always... uh...
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// ...look, just pretend you forgot what you just read.
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// Stability concerns.
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let rt_f64_to_u64 = |rt| unsafe { mem::transmute::<f64, u64>(rt) };
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// SAFETY: We use internal implementations that either always work or fail at compile time.
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unsafe { intrinsics::const_eval_select((self,), ct_f64_to_u64, rt_f64_to_u64) }
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}
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/// Raw transmutation from `u64`.
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@ -936,9 +986,54 @@ impl f64 {
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#[must_use]
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#[inline]
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pub const fn from_bits(v: u64) -> Self {
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// SAFETY: `u64` is a plain old datatype so we can always transmute from it
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// It turns out the safety issues with sNaN were overblown! Hooray!
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unsafe { mem::transmute::<u64, f64>(v) }
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// SAFETY: `u64` is a plain old datatype so we can always transmute from it
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// ...sorta.
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//
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// It turns out that at runtime, it is possible for a floating point number
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// to be subject to floating point modes that alters nonzero subnormal numbers
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// to zero on reads and writes, aka "denormals are zero" and "flush to zero".
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// This is not a problem usually, but at least one tier2 platform for Rust
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// actually exhibits an FTZ behavior kby default: thumbv7neon
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// aka "the Neon FPU in AArch32 state"
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//
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// Even with this, not all instructions exhibit the FTZ behaviors on thumbv7neon,
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// so this should load the same bits if LLVM emits the "correct" instructions,
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// but LLVM sometimes makes interesting choices about float optimization,
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// and other FPUs may do similar. Thus, it is wise to indulge luxuriously in caution.
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//
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// In addition, on x86 targets with SSE or SSE2 disabled and the x87 FPU enabled,
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// i.e. not soft-float, the way Rust does parameter passing can actually alter
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// a number that is "not infinity" to have the same exponent as infinity,
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// in a slightly unpredictable manner.
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//
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// And, of course evaluating to a NaN value is fairly nondeterministic.
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// More precisely: when NaN should be returned is knowable, but which NaN?
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// So far that's defined by a combination of LLVM and the CPU, not Rust.
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// This function, however, allows observing the bitstring of a NaN,
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// thus introspection on CTFE.
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//
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// In order to preserve, at least for the moment, const-to-runtime equivalence,
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// reject any of these possible situations from happening.
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#[rustc_const_unstable(feature = "const_float_bits_conv", issue = "72447")]
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const fn ct_u64_to_f64(ct: u64) -> f64 {
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match f64::classify_bits(ct) {
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FpCategory::Subnormal => {
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panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f64::from_bits on a subnormal number");
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}
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FpCategory::Nan => {
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panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f64::from_bits on NaN");
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}
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// SAFETY: It's not a frumious number
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_ => unsafe { mem::transmute::<u64, f64>(ct) },
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}
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}
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// SAFETY: `u64` is a plain old datatype so we can always... uh...
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// ...look, just pretend you forgot what you just read.
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// Stability concerns.
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let rt_u64_to_f64 = |rt| unsafe { mem::transmute::<u64, f64>(rt) };
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// SAFETY: We use internal implementations that either always work or fail at compile time.
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unsafe { intrinsics::const_eval_select((v,), ct_u64_to_f64, rt_u64_to_f64) }
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}
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/// Return the memory representation of this floating point number as a byte array in
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@ -37,22 +37,6 @@ fn f32() {
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(0x44a72000), 1337.0);
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const_assert!(f32::from_ne_bytes(0x44a72000u32.to_ne_bytes()), 1337.0);
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(0xc1640000), -14.25);
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// Check that NaNs roundtrip their bits regardless of signalingness
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// 0xA is 0b1010; 0x5 is 0b0101 -- so these two together clobbers all the mantissa bits
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const MASKED_NAN1: u32 = f32::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x002A_AAAA;
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const MASKED_NAN2: u32 = f32::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x0055_5555;
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).is_nan());
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).is_nan());
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// LLVM does not guarantee that loads and stores of NaNs preserve their exact bit pattern.
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// In practice, this seems to only cause a problem on x86, since the most widely used calling
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// convention mandates that floating point values are returned on the x87 FPU stack. See #73328.
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if !cfg!(target_arch = "x86") {
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).to_bits(), MASKED_NAN1);
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(MASKED_NAN2).to_bits(), MASKED_NAN2);
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}
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}
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fn f64() {
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@ -70,20 +54,6 @@ fn f64() {
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(0x4094e40000000000), 1337.0);
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const_assert!(f64::from_ne_bytes(0x4094e40000000000u64.to_ne_bytes()), 1337.0);
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(0xc02c800000000000), -14.25);
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// Check that NaNs roundtrip their bits regardless of signalingness
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// 0xA is 0b1010; 0x5 is 0b0101 -- so these two together clobbers all the mantissa bits
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const MASKED_NAN1: u64 = f64::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x000A_AAAA_AAAA_AAAA;
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const MASKED_NAN2: u64 = f64::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x0005_5555_5555_5555;
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).is_nan());
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).is_nan());
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// See comment above.
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if !cfg!(target_arch = "x86") {
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).to_bits(), MASKED_NAN1);
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(MASKED_NAN2).to_bits(), MASKED_NAN2);
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}
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}
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fn main() {
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62
src/test/ui/consts/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs
Normal file
62
src/test/ui/consts/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,62 @@
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// compile-flags: -Zmir-opt-level=0
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#![feature(const_float_bits_conv)]
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#![feature(const_float_classify)]
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// Don't promote
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const fn nop<T>(x: T) -> T { x }
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macro_rules! const_assert {
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($a:expr) => {
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{
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const _: () = assert!($a);
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assert!(nop($a));
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}
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};
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($a:expr, $b:expr) => {
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{
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const _: () = assert!($a == $b);
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assert_eq!(nop($a), nop($b));
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}
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};
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}
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fn f32() {
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// Check that NaNs roundtrip their bits regardless of signalingness
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// 0xA is 0b1010; 0x5 is 0b0101 -- so these two together clobbers all the mantissa bits
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// ...actually, let's just check that these break. :D
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const MASKED_NAN1: u32 = f32::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x002A_AAAA;
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const MASKED_NAN2: u32 = f32::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x0055_5555;
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).is_nan());
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).is_nan());
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// LLVM does not guarantee that loads and stores of NaNs preserve their exact bit pattern.
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// In practice, this seems to only cause a problem on x86, since the most widely used calling
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// convention mandates that floating point values are returned on the x87 FPU stack. See #73328.
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if !cfg!(target_arch = "x86") {
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).to_bits(), MASKED_NAN1);
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const_assert!(f32::from_bits(MASKED_NAN2).to_bits(), MASKED_NAN2);
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}
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}
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fn f64() {
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// Check that NaNs roundtrip their bits regardless of signalingness
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// 0xA is 0b1010; 0x5 is 0b0101 -- so these two together clobbers all the mantissa bits
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// ...actually, let's just check that these break. :D
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const MASKED_NAN1: u64 = f64::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x000A_AAAA_AAAA_AAAA;
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const MASKED_NAN2: u64 = f64::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x0005_5555_5555_5555;
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).is_nan());
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).is_nan());
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// See comment above.
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if !cfg!(target_arch = "x86") {
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(MASKED_NAN1).to_bits(), MASKED_NAN1);
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const_assert!(f64::from_bits(MASKED_NAN2).to_bits(), MASKED_NAN2);
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}
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}
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|
||||
fn main() {
|
||||
f32();
|
||||
f64();
|
||||
}
|
119
src/test/ui/consts/const-float-bits-reject-conv.stderr
Normal file
119
src/test/ui/consts/const-float-bits-reject-conv.stderr
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
|
||||
error[E0080]: evaluation of constant value failed
|
||||
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f32.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f32::to_bits on a NaN")
|
||||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| the evaluated program panicked at 'const-eval error: cannot use f32::to_bits on a NaN', $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f32.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
| inside `core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::ct_f32_to_u32` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/panic.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
...
|
||||
LL | unsafe { intrinsics::const_eval_select((self,), ct_f32_to_u32, rt_f32_to_u32) }
|
||||
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- inside `core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f32.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $SRC_DIR/core/src/ops/function.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | extern "rust-call" fn call_once(self, args: Args) -> Self::Output;
|
||||
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ inside `<fn(f32) -> u32 {core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::ct_f32_to_u32} as FnOnce<(f32,)>>::call_once - shim(fn(f32) -> u32 {core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::ct_f32_to_u32})` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ops/function.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $SRC_DIR/core/src/intrinsics.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | called_in_const.call_once(arg)
|
||||
| ------------------------------ inside `const_eval_select::<(f32,), fn(f32) -> u32 {core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::ct_f32_to_u32}, [closure@core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::{closure#0}], u32>` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/intrinsics.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $DIR/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs:27:30
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | const MASKED_NAN1: u32 = f32::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x002A_AAAA;
|
||||
| ------------------ inside `f32::MASKED_NAN1` at $DIR/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs:27:30
|
||||
|
|
||||
= note: this error originates in the macro `$crate::panic::panic_2021` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
|
||||
|
||||
error[E0080]: evaluation of constant value failed
|
||||
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f32.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f32::to_bits on a NaN")
|
||||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| the evaluated program panicked at 'const-eval error: cannot use f32::to_bits on a NaN', $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f32.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
| inside `core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::ct_f32_to_u32` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/panic.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
...
|
||||
LL | unsafe { intrinsics::const_eval_select((self,), ct_f32_to_u32, rt_f32_to_u32) }
|
||||
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- inside `core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f32.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $SRC_DIR/core/src/ops/function.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | extern "rust-call" fn call_once(self, args: Args) -> Self::Output;
|
||||
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ inside `<fn(f32) -> u32 {core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::ct_f32_to_u32} as FnOnce<(f32,)>>::call_once - shim(fn(f32) -> u32 {core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::ct_f32_to_u32})` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ops/function.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $SRC_DIR/core/src/intrinsics.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | called_in_const.call_once(arg)
|
||||
| ------------------------------ inside `const_eval_select::<(f32,), fn(f32) -> u32 {core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::ct_f32_to_u32}, [closure@core::f32::<impl f32>::to_bits::{closure#0}], u32>` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/intrinsics.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $DIR/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs:28:30
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | const MASKED_NAN2: u32 = f32::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x0055_5555;
|
||||
| ------------------ inside `f32::MASKED_NAN2` at $DIR/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs:28:30
|
||||
|
|
||||
= note: this error originates in the macro `$crate::panic::panic_2021` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
|
||||
|
||||
error[E0080]: evaluation of constant value failed
|
||||
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f64.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f64::to_bits on a NaN")
|
||||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| the evaluated program panicked at 'const-eval error: cannot use f64::to_bits on a NaN', $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f64.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
| inside `core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::ct_f64_to_u64` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/panic.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
...
|
||||
LL | unsafe { intrinsics::const_eval_select((self,), ct_f64_to_u64, rt_f64_to_u64) }
|
||||
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- inside `core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f64.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $SRC_DIR/core/src/ops/function.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | extern "rust-call" fn call_once(self, args: Args) -> Self::Output;
|
||||
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ inside `<fn(f64) -> u64 {core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::ct_f64_to_u64} as FnOnce<(f64,)>>::call_once - shim(fn(f64) -> u64 {core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::ct_f64_to_u64})` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ops/function.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $SRC_DIR/core/src/intrinsics.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | called_in_const.call_once(arg)
|
||||
| ------------------------------ inside `const_eval_select::<(f64,), fn(f64) -> u64 {core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::ct_f64_to_u64}, [closure@core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::{closure#0}], u64>` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/intrinsics.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $DIR/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs:46:30
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | const MASKED_NAN1: u64 = f64::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x000A_AAAA_AAAA_AAAA;
|
||||
| ------------------ inside `f64::MASKED_NAN1` at $DIR/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs:46:30
|
||||
|
|
||||
= note: this error originates in the macro `$crate::panic::panic_2021` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
|
||||
|
||||
error[E0080]: evaluation of constant value failed
|
||||
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f64.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | panic!("const-eval error: cannot use f64::to_bits on a NaN")
|
||||
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| the evaluated program panicked at 'const-eval error: cannot use f64::to_bits on a NaN', $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f64.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
| inside `core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::ct_f64_to_u64` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/panic.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
...
|
||||
LL | unsafe { intrinsics::const_eval_select((self,), ct_f64_to_u64, rt_f64_to_u64) }
|
||||
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- inside `core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/num/f64.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $SRC_DIR/core/src/ops/function.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | extern "rust-call" fn call_once(self, args: Args) -> Self::Output;
|
||||
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ inside `<fn(f64) -> u64 {core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::ct_f64_to_u64} as FnOnce<(f64,)>>::call_once - shim(fn(f64) -> u64 {core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::ct_f64_to_u64})` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ops/function.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $SRC_DIR/core/src/intrinsics.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | called_in_const.call_once(arg)
|
||||
| ------------------------------ inside `const_eval_select::<(f64,), fn(f64) -> u64 {core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::ct_f64_to_u64}, [closure@core::f64::<impl f64>::to_bits::{closure#0}], u64>` at $SRC_DIR/core/src/intrinsics.rs:LL:COL
|
||||
|
|
||||
::: $DIR/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs:47:30
|
||||
|
|
||||
LL | const MASKED_NAN2: u64 = f64::NAN.to_bits() ^ 0x0005_5555_5555_5555;
|
||||
| ------------------ inside `f64::MASKED_NAN2` at $DIR/const-float-bits-reject-conv.rs:47:30
|
||||
|
|
||||
= note: this error originates in the macro `$crate::panic::panic_2021` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
|
||||
|
||||
error: aborting due to 4 previous errors
|
||||
|
||||
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0080`.
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user