| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| -- -- |
| -- GNAT COMPILER COMPONENTS -- |
| -- -- |
| -- S Y S T E M . F A T _ G E N -- |
| -- -- |
| -- S p e c -- |
| -- -- |
| -- Copyright (C) 1992-2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. -- |
| -- -- |
| -- GNAT is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under -- |
| -- terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Soft- -- |
| -- ware Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later ver- -- |
| -- sion. GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- -- |
| -- OUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY -- |
| -- or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License -- |
| -- for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General -- |
| -- Public License distributed with GNAT; see file COPYING. If not, write -- |
| -- to the Free Software Foundation, 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, -- |
| -- Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. -- |
| -- -- |
| -- As a special exception, if other files instantiate generics from this -- |
| -- unit, or you link this unit with other files to produce an executable, -- |
| -- this unit does not by itself cause the resulting executable to be -- |
| -- covered by the GNU General Public License. This exception does not -- |
| -- however invalidate any other reasons why the executable file might be -- |
| -- covered by the GNU Public License. -- |
| -- -- |
| -- GNAT was originally developed by the GNAT team at New York University. -- |
| -- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies Inc. -- |
| -- -- |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| -- This generic package provides a target independent implementation of the |
| -- floating-point attributes that denote functions. The implementations here |
| -- are portable, but very slow. The runtime contains a set of instantiations |
| -- of this package for all predefined floating-point types, and these should |
| -- be replaced by efficient assembly language code where possible. |
| |
| generic |
| type T is digits <>; |
| |
| package System.Fat_Gen is |
| pragma Pure; |
| |
| subtype UI is Integer; |
| -- The runtime representation of universal integer for the purposes of |
| -- this package is integer. The expander generates conversions for the |
| -- actual type used. For functions returning universal integer, there |
| -- is no problem, since the result always is in range of integer. For |
| -- input arguments, the expander has to do some special casing to deal |
| -- with the (very annoying!) cases of out of range values. If we used |
| -- Long_Long_Integer to represent universal, then there would be no |
| -- problem, but the resulting inefficiency would be annoying. |
| |
| function Adjacent (X, Towards : T) return T; |
| |
| function Ceiling (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Compose (Fraction : T; Exponent : UI) return T; |
| |
| function Copy_Sign (Value, Sign : T) return T; |
| |
| function Exponent (X : T) return UI; |
| |
| function Floor (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Fraction (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Leading_Part (X : T; Radix_Digits : UI) return T; |
| |
| function Machine (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Machine_Rounding (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Model (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Pred (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Remainder (X, Y : T) return T; |
| |
| function Rounding (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Scaling (X : T; Adjustment : UI) return T; |
| |
| function Succ (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Truncation (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Unbiased_Rounding (X : T) return T; |
| |
| function Valid (X : access T) return Boolean; |
| -- This function checks if the object of type T referenced by X |
| -- is valid, and returns True/False accordingly. The parameter is |
| -- passed by reference (access) here, as the object of type T may |
| -- be an abnormal value that cannot be passed in a floating-point |
| -- register, and the whole point of 'Valid is to prevent exceptions. |
| -- Note that the object of type T must have the natural alignment |
| -- for type T. See Unaligned_Valid for further discussion. |
| -- |
| -- Note: this routine does not work for Vax_Float ??? |
| |
| function Unaligned_Valid (A : System.Address) return Boolean; |
| -- This version of Valid is used if the floating-point value to |
| -- be checked is not known to be aligned (for example it appears |
| -- in a packed record). In this case, we cannot call Valid since |
| -- Valid assumes proper full alignment. Instead Unaligned_Valid |
| -- performs the same processing for a possibly unaligned float, |
| -- by first doing a copy and then calling Valid. One might think |
| -- that the front end could simply do a copy to an aligned temp, |
| -- but remember that we may have an abnormal value that cannot |
| -- be copied into a floating-point register, so things are a bit |
| -- trickier than one might expect. |
| -- |
| -- Note: Unaligned_Valid is never called for a target which does |
| -- not require strict alignment (e.g. the ia32/x86), since on a |
| -- target not requiring strict alignment, it is fine to pass a |
| -- non-aligned value to the standard Valid routine. |
| -- |
| -- Note: this routine does not work for Vax_Float ??? |
| |
| private |
| pragma Inline (Machine); |
| pragma Inline (Model); |
| |
| -- Note: previously the validity checking subprograms (Unaligned_Valid and |
| -- Valid) were also inlined, but this was changed since there were some |
| -- problems with this inlining in optimized mode, and in any case it seems |
| -- better to avoid this inlining (space and robustness considerations). |
| |
| end System.Fat_Gen; |