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159 lines
5.8 KiB
Rust
159 lines
5.8 KiB
Rust
//! IEEE 754 floating point compliance tests
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//!
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//! To understand IEEE 754's requirements on a programming language, one must understand that the
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//! requirements of IEEE 754 rest on the total programming environment, and not entirely on any
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//! one component. That means the hardware, language, and even libraries are considered part of
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//! conforming floating point support in a programming environment.
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//!
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//! A programming language's duty, accordingly, is:
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//! 1. offer access to the hardware where the hardware offers support
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//! 2. provide operations that fulfill the remaining requirements of the standard
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//! 3. provide the ability to write additional software that can fulfill those requirements
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//!
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//! This may be fulfilled in any combination that the language sees fit. However, to claim that
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//! a language supports IEEE 754 is to suggest that it has fulfilled requirements 1 and 2, without
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//! deferring minimum requirements to libraries. This is because support for IEEE 754 is defined
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//! as complete support for at least one specified floating point type as an "arithmetic" and
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//! "interchange" format, plus specified type conversions to "external character sequences" and
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//! integer types.
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//!
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//! For our purposes,
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//! "interchange format" => f32, f64
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//! "arithmetic format" => f32, f64, and any "soft floats"
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//! "external character sequence" => str from any float
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//! "integer format" => {i,u}{8,16,32,64,128}
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//!
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//! None of these tests are against Rust's own implementation. They are only tests against the
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//! standard. That is why they accept wildly diverse inputs or may seem to duplicate other tests.
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//! Please consider this carefully when adding, removing, or reorganizing these tests. They are
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//! here so that it is clear what tests are required by the standard and what can be changed.
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use ::core::str::FromStr;
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// IEEE 754 for many tests is applied to specific bit patterns.
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// These generally are not applicable to NaN, however.
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macro_rules! assert_biteq {
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($lhs:expr, $rhs:expr) => {
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assert_eq!($lhs.to_bits(), $rhs.to_bits())
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};
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}
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// ToString uses the default fmt::Display impl without special concerns, and bypasses other parts
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// of the formatting infrastructure, which makes it ideal for testing here.
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#[allow(unused_macros)]
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macro_rules! roundtrip {
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($f:expr => $t:ty) => {
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($f).to_string().parse::<$t>().unwrap()
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};
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}
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macro_rules! assert_floats_roundtrip {
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($f:ident) => {
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assert_biteq!(f32::$f, roundtrip!(f32::$f => f32));
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assert_biteq!(f64::$f, roundtrip!(f64::$f => f64));
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};
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($f:expr) => {
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assert_biteq!($f as f32, roundtrip!($f => f32));
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assert_biteq!($f as f64, roundtrip!($f => f64));
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}
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}
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macro_rules! assert_floats_bitne {
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($lhs:ident, $rhs:ident) => {
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assert_ne!(f32::$lhs.to_bits(), f32::$rhs.to_bits());
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assert_ne!(f64::$lhs.to_bits(), f64::$rhs.to_bits());
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};
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($lhs:expr, $rhs:expr) => {
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assert_ne!(f32::to_bits($lhs), f32::to_bits($rhs));
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assert_ne!(f64::to_bits($lhs), f64::to_bits($rhs));
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};
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}
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// We must preserve signs on all numbers. That includes zero.
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// -0 and 0 are == normally, so test bit equality.
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#[test]
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fn preserve_signed_zero() {
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assert_floats_roundtrip!(-0.0);
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assert_floats_roundtrip!(0.0);
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assert_floats_bitne!(0.0, -0.0);
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}
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#[test]
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fn preserve_signed_infinity() {
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assert_floats_roundtrip!(INFINITY);
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assert_floats_roundtrip!(NEG_INFINITY);
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assert_floats_bitne!(INFINITY, NEG_INFINITY);
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}
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#[test]
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fn infinity_to_str() {
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assert!(match f32::INFINITY.to_string().to_lowercase().as_str() {
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"+infinity" | "infinity" => true,
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"+inf" | "inf" => true,
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_ => false,
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});
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assert!(
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match f64::INFINITY.to_string().to_lowercase().as_str() {
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"+infinity" | "infinity" => true,
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"+inf" | "inf" => true,
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_ => false,
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},
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"Infinity must write to a string as some casing of inf or infinity, with an optional +."
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);
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}
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#[test]
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fn neg_infinity_to_str() {
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assert!(match f32::NEG_INFINITY.to_string().to_lowercase().as_str() {
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"-infinity" | "-inf" => true,
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_ => false,
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});
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assert!(
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match f64::NEG_INFINITY.to_string().to_lowercase().as_str() {
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"-infinity" | "-inf" => true,
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_ => false,
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},
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"Negative Infinity must write to a string as some casing of -inf or -infinity"
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)
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}
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#[test]
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fn nan_to_str() {
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assert!(
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match f32::NAN.to_string().to_lowercase().as_str() {
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"nan" | "+nan" | "-nan" => true,
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_ => false,
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},
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"NaNs must write to a string as some casing of nan."
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)
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}
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// "+"?("inf"|"infinity") in any case => Infinity
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#[test]
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fn infinity_from_str() {
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assert_biteq!(f32::INFINITY, f32::from_str("infinity").unwrap());
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assert_biteq!(f32::INFINITY, f32::from_str("inf").unwrap());
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assert_biteq!(f32::INFINITY, f32::from_str("+infinity").unwrap());
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assert_biteq!(f32::INFINITY, f32::from_str("+inf").unwrap());
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// yes! this means you are weLcOmE tO mY iNfInItElY tWiStEd MiNd
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assert_biteq!(f32::INFINITY, f32::from_str("+iNfInItY").unwrap());
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}
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// "-inf"|"-infinity" in any case => Negative Infinity
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#[test]
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fn neg_infinity_from_str() {
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assert_biteq!(f32::NEG_INFINITY, f32::from_str("-infinity").unwrap());
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assert_biteq!(f32::NEG_INFINITY, f32::from_str("-inf").unwrap());
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assert_biteq!(f32::NEG_INFINITY, f32::from_str("-INF").unwrap());
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assert_biteq!(f32::NEG_INFINITY, f32::from_str("-INFinity").unwrap());
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}
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// ("+"|"-"")?"s"?"nan" in any case => qNaN
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#[test]
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fn qnan_from_str() {
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assert!("nan".parse::<f32>().unwrap().is_nan());
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assert!("-nan".parse::<f32>().unwrap().is_nan());
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assert!("+nan".parse::<f32>().unwrap().is_nan());
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assert!("+NAN".parse::<f32>().unwrap().is_nan());
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assert!("-NaN".parse::<f32>().unwrap().is_nan());
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}
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