#include "mupdf/fitz.h" #include #include #include #ifndef INFINITY #define INFINITY (DBL_MAX+DBL_MAX) #endif #ifndef NAN #define NAN (INFINITY-INFINITY) #endif /* We use "Algorithm D" from "Contributions to a Proposed Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic" by Jerome Coonen (1984). The implementation uses a self-made floating point type, 'strtof_fp_t', with a 32-bit significand. The steps of the algorithm are INPUT: Up to 9 decimal digits d1 , ... d9 and an exponent dexp. OUTPUT: A float corresponding to the number d1 ... d9 * 10^dexp. 1) Convert the integer d1 ... d9 to an strtof_fp_t x. 2) Lookup the strtof_fp_t power = 10 ^ |dexp|. 3) If dexp is positive set x = x * power, else set x = x / power. Use rounding mode 'round to odd'. 4) Round x to a float using rounding mode 'to even'. Step 1) is always lossless as the strtof_fp_t's significand can hold a 9-digit integer. In the case |dexp| <= 13 the cached power is exact and the algorithm returns the exactly rounded result (with rounding mode 'to even'). There is no double-rounding in 3), 4) as the multiply/divide uses 'round to odd'. For |dexp| > 13 the maximum error is bounded by (1/2 + 1/256) ulp. This is small enough to ensure that binary to decimal to binary conversion is the identity if the decimal format uses 9 correctly rounded significant digits. */ typedef struct strtof_fp_t { uint32_t f; int e; } strtof_fp_t; /* Multiply/Divide x by y with 'round to odd'. Assume that x and y are normalized. */ static strtof_fp_t strtof_multiply(strtof_fp_t x, strtof_fp_t y) { uint64_t tmp; strtof_fp_t res; assert(x.f & y.f & 0x80000000); res.e = x.e + y.e + 32; tmp = (uint64_t) x.f * y.f; /* Normalize. */ if ((tmp < ((uint64_t) 1 << 63))) { tmp <<= 1; --res.e; } res.f = tmp >> 32; /* Set the last bit of the significand to 1 if the result is inexact. */ if (tmp & 0xffffffff) res.f |= 1; return res; } static strtof_fp_t divide(strtof_fp_t x, strtof_fp_t y) { uint64_t product, quotient; uint32_t remainder; strtof_fp_t res; res.e = x.e - y.e - 32; product = (uint64_t) x.f << 32; quotient = product / y.f; remainder = product % y.f; /* 2^31 <= quotient <= 2^33 - 2. */ if (quotient <= 0xffffffff) res.f = quotient; else { ++res.e; /* If quotient % 2 != 0 we have remainder != 0. */ res.f = quotient >> 1; } if (remainder) res.f |= 1; return res; } /* From 10^0 to 10^54. Generated with GNU MPFR. */ static const uint32_t strtof_powers_ten[55] = { 0x80000000, 0xa0000000, 0xc8000000, 0xfa000000, 0x9c400000, 0xc3500000, 0xf4240000, 0x98968000, 0xbebc2000, 0xee6b2800, 0x9502f900, 0xba43b740, 0xe8d4a510, 0x9184e72a, 0xb5e620f4, 0xe35fa932, 0x8e1bc9bf, 0xb1a2bc2f, 0xde0b6b3a, 0x8ac72305, 0xad78ebc6, 0xd8d726b7, 0x87867832, 0xa968163f, 0xd3c21bcf, 0x84595161, 0xa56fa5ba, 0xcecb8f28, 0x813f3979, 0xa18f07d7, 0xc9f2c9cd, 0xfc6f7c40, 0x9dc5ada8, 0xc5371912, 0xf684df57, 0x9a130b96, 0xc097ce7c, 0xf0bdc21b, 0x96769951, 0xbc143fa5, 0xeb194f8e, 0x92efd1b9, 0xb7abc627, 0xe596b7b1, 0x8f7e32ce, 0xb35dbf82, 0xe0352f63, 0x8c213d9e, 0xaf298d05, 0xdaf3f046, 0x88d8762c, 0xab0e93b7, 0xd5d238a5, 0x85a36367, 0xa70c3c41 }; static const int strtof_powers_ten_e[55] = { -31, -28, -25, -22, -18, -15, -12, -8, -5, -2, 2, 5, 8, 12, 15, 18, 22, 25, 28, 32, 35, 38, 42, 45, 48, 52, 55, 58, 62, 65, 68, 71, 75, 78, 81, 85, 88, 91, 95, 98, 101, 105, 108, 111, 115, 118, 121, 125, 128, 131, 135, 138, 141, 145, 148 }; static strtof_fp_t strtof_cached_power(int i) { strtof_fp_t result; assert (i >= 0 && i <= 54); result.f = strtof_powers_ten[i]; result.e = strtof_powers_ten_e[i]; return result; } /* Find number of leading zero bits in an uint32_t. Derived from the "Bit Twiddling Hacks" at graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html. */ static unsigned char clz_table[256] = { 8, 7, 6, 6, 5, 5, 5, 5, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, # define sixteen_times(N) N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, N, sixteen_times (3) sixteen_times (2) sixteen_times (2) sixteen_times (1) sixteen_times (1) sixteen_times (1) sixteen_times (1) /* Zero for the rest. */ }; static unsigned leading_zeros (uint32_t x) { unsigned tmp1, tmp2; tmp1 = x >> 16; if (tmp1) { tmp2 = tmp1 >> 8; if (tmp2) return clz_table[tmp2]; else return 8 + clz_table[tmp1]; } else { tmp1 = x >> 8; if (tmp1) return 16 + clz_table[tmp1]; else return 24 + clz_table[x]; } } static strtof_fp_t uint32_to_diy (uint32_t x) { strtof_fp_t result = {x, 0}; unsigned shift = leading_zeros(x); result.f <<= shift; result.e -= shift; return result; } #define SP_SIGNIFICAND_SIZE 23 #define SP_EXPONENT_BIAS (127 + SP_SIGNIFICAND_SIZE) #define SP_MIN_EXPONENT (-SP_EXPONENT_BIAS) #define SP_EXPONENT_MASK 0x7f800000 #define SP_SIGNIFICAND_MASK 0x7fffff #define SP_HIDDEN_BIT 0x800000 /* 2^23 */ /* Convert normalized strtof_fp_t to IEEE-754 single with 'round to even'. See "Implementing IEEE 754-2008 Rounding" in the "Handbook of Floating-Point Arithmetik". */ static float diy_to_float(strtof_fp_t x, int negative) { uint32_t result; union { float f; uint32_t n; } tmp; assert(x.f & 0x80000000); /* We have 2^32 - 2^7 = 0xffffff80. */ if (x.e > 96 || (x.e == 96 && x.f >= 0xffffff80)) { /* Overflow. Set result to infinity. */ errno = ERANGE; result = 0xff << SP_SIGNIFICAND_SIZE; } /* We have 2^32 - 2^8 = 0xffffff00. */ else if (x.e > -158) { /* x is greater or equal to FLT_MAX. So we get a normalized number. */ result = (uint32_t) (x.e + 158) << SP_SIGNIFICAND_SIZE; result |= (x.f >> 8) & SP_SIGNIFICAND_MASK; if (x.f & 0x80) { /* Round-bit is set. */ if (x.f & 0x7f) /* Sticky-bit is set. */ ++result; else if (x.f & 0x100) /* Significand is odd. */ ++result; } } else if (x.e == -158 && x.f >= 0xffffff00) { /* x is in the range (2^32, 2^32 - 2^8] * 2^-158, so its smaller than FLT_MIN but still rounds to it. */ result = 1U << SP_SIGNIFICAND_SIZE; } else if (x.e > -181) { /* Non-zero Denormal. */ int shift = -149 - x.e; /* 9 <= shift <= 31. */ result = x.f >> shift; if (x.f & (1U << (shift - 1))) /* Round-bit is set. */ { if (x.f & ((1U << (shift - 1)) - 1)) /* Sticky-bit is set. */ ++result; else if (x.f & 1U << shift) /* Significand is odd. */ ++result; } } else if (x.e == -181 && x.f > 0x80000000) { /* x is in the range (0.5,1) * 2^-149 so it rounds to the smallest denormal. Can't handle this in the previous case as shifting a uint32_t 32 bits to the right is undefined behaviour. */ result = 1; } else { /* Underflow. */ errno = ERANGE; result = 0; } if (negative) result |= 0x80000000; tmp.n = result; return tmp.f; } static float scale_integer_to_float(uint32_t M, int N, int negative) { strtof_fp_t result, x, power; if (M == 0) return negative ? -0.f : 0.f; if (N > 38) { /* Overflow. */ errno = ERANGE; return negative ? -INFINITY : INFINITY; } if (N < -54) { /* Underflow. */ errno = ERANGE; return negative ? -0.f : 0.f; } /* If N is in the range {-13, ..., 13} the conversion is exact. Try to scale N into this region. */ while (N > 13 && M <= 0xffffffff / 10) { M *= 10; --N; } while (N < -13 && M % 10 == 0) { M /= 10; ++N; } x = uint32_to_diy (M); if (N >= 0) { power = strtof_cached_power(N); result = strtof_multiply(x, power); } else { power = strtof_cached_power(-N); result = divide(x, power); } return diy_to_float(result, negative); } /* Return non-zero if *s starts with string (must be uppercase), ignoring case, and increment *s by its length. */ static int starts_with(const char **s, const char *string) { const char *x = *s, *y = string; while (*x && *y && (*x == *y || *x == *y + 32)) ++x, ++y; if (*y == 0) { /* Match. */ *s = x; return 1; } else return 0; } #define SET_TAILPTR(tailptr, s) \ do \ if (tailptr) \ *tailptr = (char *) s; \ while (0) float fz_strtof(const char *string, char **tailptr) { /* FIXME: error (1/2 + 1/256) ulp */ const char *s; uint32_t M = 0; int N = 0; /* If decimal_digits gets 9 we truncate all following digits. */ int decimal_digits = 0; int negative = 0; const char *number_start = 0; /* Skip leading whitespace (isspace in "C" locale). */ s = string; while (*s == ' ' || *s == '\f' || *s == '\n' || *s == '\r' || *s == '\t' || *s == '\v') ++s; /* Parse sign. */ if (*s == '+') ++s; if (*s == '-') { negative = 1; ++s; } number_start = s; /* Parse digits before decimal point. */ while (*s >= '0' && *s <= '9') { if (decimal_digits) { if (decimal_digits < 9) { ++decimal_digits; M = M * 10 + *s - '0'; } /* Really arcane strings might overflow N. */ else if (N < 1000) ++N; } else if (*s > '0') { M = *s - '0'; ++decimal_digits; } ++s; } /* Parse decimal point. */ if (*s == '.') ++s; /* Parse digits after decimal point. */ while (*s >= '0' && *s <= '9') { if (decimal_digits < 9) { if (decimal_digits || *s > '0') { ++decimal_digits; M = M * 10 + *s - '0'; } --N; } ++s; } if ((s == number_start + 1 && *number_start == '.') || number_start == s) { /* No Number. Check for INF and NAN strings. */ s = number_start; if (starts_with(&s, "INFINITY") || starts_with(&s, "INF")) { errno = ERANGE; SET_TAILPTR(tailptr, s); return negative ? -INFINITY : +INFINITY; } else if (starts_with(&s, "NAN")) { SET_TAILPTR(tailptr, s); return (float)NAN; } else { SET_TAILPTR(tailptr, string); return 0.f; } } /* Parse exponent. */ if (*s == 'e' || *s == 'E') { int exp_negative = 0; int exp = 0; const char *int_start; const char *exp_start = s; ++s; if (*s == '+') ++s; else if (*s == '-') { ++s; exp_negative = 1; } int_start = s; /* Parse integer. */ while (*s >= '0' && *s <= '9') { /* Make sure exp does not get overflowed. */ if (exp < 100) exp = exp * 10 + *s - '0'; ++s; } if (exp_negative) exp = -exp; if (s == int_start) /* No Number. */ s = exp_start; else N += exp; } SET_TAILPTR(tailptr, s); return scale_integer_to_float(M, N, negative); }