The float implementation is almost a direct port from the amd-builtins,
but instead of just having a scalar and float4 implementation, it has
a scalar and arbitrary width vector implementation.
The double scalar is also a direct port from AMD's builtin release.
The double vector implementation copies the logic in the float vector
implementation using the values from the double scalar version.
Both have been tested in piglit using tests sent to that project's
mailing list.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jan Vesely <jan.vesely@rutgers.edu>
llvm-svn: 260114
The spec says (section 6.12.3, CL version 1.2):
The macro names given in the following list must use the values
specified. The values shall all be constant expressions suitable
for use in #if preprocessing directives.
This commit addresses the second part of that statement.
Reviewed-by: Jan Vesely <jan.vesely@rutgers.edu>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <tom@stellard.net>
CC: Moritz Pflanzer <moritz.pflanzer14@imperial.ac.uk>
CC: Serge Martin <edb+libclc@sigluy.net>
llvm-svn: 249445
The values for the char/short/integer/long minimums were declared with
their actual values, not the definitions from the CL spec (v1.1). As
a result, (-2147483648) was actually being treated as a long by the
compiler, not an int, which caused issues when trying to add/subtract
that value from a vector.
Update the definitions to use the values declared by the spec, and also
add explicit casts for the char/short/int minimums so that the compiler
actually treats them as shorts/chars. Without those casts, they
actually end up stored as integers, and the compiler may end up storing
the INT_MIN as a long.
The compiler can sign extend the values if it needs to convert the
char->short, short->int, or int->long
v2: Add explicit cast for INT_MIN and fix some type-o's and wrapping
in the commit message.
Reported-by: Moritz Pflanzer <moritz.pflanzer14@imperial.ac.uk>
CC: Moritz Pflanzer <moritz.pflanzer14@imperial.ac.uk>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Aaron Watry <awatry@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 247661
Use the implementation was ported from the AMD builtin library rather
than LLVM Intrinsics.
This has been tested with piglit, OpenCV, and the ocl conformance tests.
llvm-svn: 243131
Passing values less than 0 to the llvm.sqrt() intrinsic results in
undefined behavior, so we need to check the input and return NaN if
is is less than 0.
v2:
- Fix build failures.
llvm-svn: 241906
Using exp2(x * M_LOG2E_F) does not give us accurate enough results for
OpenCL. If you look at the new exp implementation you'll see that
it does multiply the input by M_LOG2E_F, but it still uses the original
input in part of the calculation.
This exp implementation was ported from the AMD builtin library
and has been tested with piglit, OpenCV, and the ocl conformance tests.
llvm-svn: 237229
Not all targets support the intrinsic, so it's better to have a
generic implementation which does not use it.
This exp2 implementation was ported from the AMD builtin library
and has been tested with piglit, OpenCV, and the ocl conformance tests.
llvm-svn: 237228
This implementation was ported from the AMD builtin library
and has been tested with piglit, OpenCV, and the ocl conformance tests.
v2:
- Remove f suffix from constant in double implementations.
- Consolidate implementations using the .cl/.inc approach.
v3:
- Use __CLC_FPSIZE instead of __CLC_FP{32,64}
v4 (Jan Vesely):
- Limit to single precision.
llvm-svn: 236920
This is a generic implementation which just calls rsqrt.
Targets should override this if they want a faster implementation.
v2:
- Alphabettize SOURCES
v3 (Jan Vesely):
Limit to single precision types.
llvm-svn: 236915
Ported from AMD builtin library, passes piglit on Turks.
Signed-off-by: Jan Vesely <jan.vesely@rutgers.edu>
Reviewed-by: Tom Stellard <thomas.stellard@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 236647
The new implementation was ported from the AMD builtin library
and has been tested with piglit, OpenCV, and the ocl conformance tests.
llvm-svn: 236608
This makes it possible for runtime implementations to disable
subnormal handling at runtime.
When this flag is enabled, decisions about how to handle subnormals
in the library will be controlled by an external variable called
__CLC_SUBNORMAL_DISABLE.
Function implementations should use these new helpers for querying subnormal
support:
__clc_fp16_subnormals_supported();
__clc_fp32_subnormals_supported();
__clc_fp64_subnormals_supported();
In order for the library to link correctly with this feature,
users will be required to either:
1. Insert this variable into the module (if using the LLVM/Clang C++/C APIs).
2. Pass either subnormal_disable.bc or subnormal_use_default.bc to the
linker. These files are distributed with liblclc and installed to
$(installdir). e.g.:
llvm-link -o kernel-out.bc kernel.bc builtins-nosubnormal.bc subnormal_disable.bc
or
llvm-link -o kernel-out.bc kernel.bc builtins-nosubnormal.bc subnormal_use_default.bc
If you do not supply the --enable-runtime-subnormal then the library
behaves the same as it did before this commit.
In addition to these changes, the patch adds helper functions that
should be used when implementing library functions that need
special handling for denormals:
__clc_fp16_subnormals_supported();
__clc_fp32_subnormals_supported();
__clc_fp64_subnormals_supported();
llvm-svn: 235329