The `memset` function and bitwise manipulation only apply to POD types
that do not require initialization, otherwise resulting in UB. We currently
violate this in `ptrue` and `pzero`, we assume bitmasks for `pselect`, and
bitwise operations are applied byte-by-byte in the generic implementations.
This is causing issues for scalar types that do require initialization
or that contain non-POD info such as pointers (#2201). We either break
them, or force specializations of these functions for custom scalars,
even if they are not vectorized.
Here we modify these functions for scalars only - instead using only
scalar operations:
- `pzero`: `Scalar(0)` for all scalars.
- `ptrue`: `Scalar(1)` for non-trivial scalars, bitset to one bits for trivial scalars.
- `pselect`: ternary select comparing mask to `Scalar(0)` for all scalars
- `pand`, `por`, `pxor`, `pnot`: use operators `&`, `|`, `^`, `~` for all integer or non-trivial scalars, otherwise apply bytewise.
For non-scalar types, the original implementations are used to maintain
compatibility and minimize the number of changes.
Fixes#2201.
With !406, we accidentally broke arm 32-bit NEON builds, since
`vsqrt_f32` is only available for 64-bit.
Here we add back the `rsqrt` implementation for 32-bit, relying
on a `prsqrt` implementation with better handling of edge cases.
Note that several of the 32-bit NEON packet tests are currently
failing - either due to denormal handling (NEON versions flush
to zero, but scalar paths don't) or due to accuracy (e.g. sin/cos).
The previous implementations produced garbage values if the exponent did
not fit within the exponent bits. See #2131 for a complete discussion,
and !375 for other possible implementations.
Here we implement the 4-factor version. See `pldexp_impl` in
`GenericPacketMathFunctions.h` for a full description.
The SSE `pcmp*` methods were moved down since `pcmp_le<Packet4i>`
requires `por`.
Left as a "TODO" is to delegate to a faster version if we know the
exponent does fit within the exponent bits.
Fixes#2131.
Unfortunately `std::bit_and` and the like are host-only functions prior
to c++14 (since they are not `constexpr`). They also never exist in the
global namespace, so the current implementation always fails to compile via
NVCC - since `EIGEN_USING_STD` tries to import the symbol from the global
namespace on device.
To overcome these limitations, we implement these functionals here.
The recent addition of vectorized pow (!330) relies on `pfrexp` and
`pldexp`. This was missing for `Eigen::half` and `Eigen::bfloat16`.
Adding tests for these packet ops also exposed an issue with handling
negative values in `pfrexp`, returning an incorrect exponent.
Added the missing implementations, corrected the exponent in `pfrexp1`,
and added `packetmath` tests.
For these to exist we would need to define `_USE_MATH_DEFINES` before
`cmath` or `math.h` is first included. However, we don't
control the include order for projects outside Eigen, so even defining
the macro in `Eigen/Core` does not fix the issue for projects that
end up including `<cmath>` before Eigen does (explicitly or transitively).
To fix this, we define `EIGEN_LOG2E` and `EIGEN_LN2` ourselves.
The `half_float` test was failing with `-mcpu=cortex-a55` (native `__fp16`) due
to a bad NaN bit-pattern comparison (in the case of casting a float to `__fp16`,
the signaling `NaN` is quieted). There was also an inconsistency between
`numeric_limits<half>::quiet_NaN()` and `NumTraits::quiet_NaN()`. Here we
correct the inconsistency and compare NaNs according to the IEEE 754
definition.
Also modified the `bfloat16_float` test to match.
Tested with `cortex-a53` and `cortex-a55`.
The following commit seems to have introduced regressions in ROCm/HIP support.
183a208212
It causes some unit-tests to fail with the following error
```
...
Eigen/src/Core/GenericPacketMath.h:322:3: error: no member named 'bit_and' in the global namespace; did you mean 'std::bit_and'?
...
Eigen/src/Core/GenericPacketMath.h:329:3: error: no member named 'bit_or' in the global namespace; did you mean 'std::bit_or'?
...
Eigen/src/Core/GenericPacketMath.h:336:3: error: no member named 'bit_xor' in the global namespace; did you mean 'std::bit_xor'?
...
```
The error occurs because, when compiling the device code in HIP/CUDA, the compiler will pick up the some of the std functions (whose calls are prefixed by EIGEN_USING_STD) from the global namespace (i.e. use ::bit_xor instead of std::bit_xor). For this to work, those functions must be declared in the global namespace in the HIP/CUDA header files. The `bit_and`, `bit_or` and `bit_xor` routines are not declared in the HIP header file that contain the decls for the std math functions ( `math_functions.h` ), and this is the cause of the error above.
It seems that the newer HIP compilers do support the calling of `std::` math routines within device code, and the ideal fix here would have been to change all calls to std math functions in EIGEN to use the `std::` namespace (instead of the global namespace ), when compiling with HIP compiler. However it seems there was a recent commit to remove the EIGEN_USING_STD_MATH macro and collapse it uses into the EIGEN_USING_STD macro ( 4091f6b25c ).
Replacing all std math calls will essentially require re-surrecting the EIGEN_USING_STD_MATH macro, so not choosing that option.
Also HIP compilers only have support std math calls within device code, and not all std functions (specifically not for malloc/free which are prefixed via EIGEN_USING_STD). So modyfing EIGEN_USE_STD implementation to use std:: namspace for HIP will not work either.
Hence going for the ugly solution of special casing the three calls that breaking the HIP compile, to explicitly use the std:: namespace