Improve `__clzsi2` performance (#366)
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@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
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// Note: these functions happen to produce the correct `usize::leading_zeros(0)` value
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// without a explicit zero check. Zero is probably common enough that it could warrant
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// adding a zero check at the beginning, but `__clzsi2` has a precondition that `x != 0`.
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// Compilers will insert the check for zero in cases where it is needed.
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/// Returns the number of leading binary zeros in `x`.
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pub fn usize_leading_zeros_default(x: usize) -> usize {
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// The basic idea is to test if the higher bits of `x` are zero and bisect the number
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// of leading zeros. It is possible for all branches of the bisection to use the same
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// code path by conditionally shifting the higher parts down to let the next bisection
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// step work on the higher or lower parts of `x`. Instead of starting with `z == 0`
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// and adding to the number of zeros, it is slightly faster to start with
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// `z == usize::MAX.count_ones()` and subtract from the potential number of zeros,
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// because it simplifies the final bisection step.
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let mut x = x;
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// the number of potential leading zeros
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let mut z = usize::MAX.count_ones() as usize;
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// a temporary
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let mut t: usize;
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#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "64")]
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{
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t = x >> 32;
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if t != 0 {
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z -= 32;
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x = t;
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}
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}
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#[cfg(any(target_pointer_width = "32", target_pointer_width = "64"))]
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{
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t = x >> 16;
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if t != 0 {
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z -= 16;
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x = t;
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}
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}
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t = x >> 8;
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if t != 0 {
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z -= 8;
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x = t;
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}
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t = x >> 4;
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if t != 0 {
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z -= 4;
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x = t;
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}
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t = x >> 2;
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if t != 0 {
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z -= 2;
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x = t;
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}
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// the last two bisections are combined into one conditional
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t = x >> 1;
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if t != 0 {
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z - 2
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} else {
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z - x
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}
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// We could potentially save a few cycles by using the LUT trick from
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// "https://embeddedgurus.com/state-space/2014/09/
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// fast-deterministic-and-portable-counting-leading-zeros/".
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// However, 256 bytes for a LUT is too large for embedded use cases. We could remove
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// the last 3 bisections and use this 16 byte LUT for the rest of the work:
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//const LUT: [u8; 16] = [0, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4];
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//z -= LUT[x] as usize;
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//z
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// However, it ends up generating about the same number of instructions. When benchmarked
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// on x86_64, it is slightly faster to use the LUT, but this is probably because of OOO
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// execution effects. Changing to using a LUT and branching is risky for smaller cores.
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}
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// The above method does not compile well on RISC-V (because of the lack of predicated
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// instructions), producing code with many branches or using an excessively long
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// branchless solution. This method takes advantage of the set-if-less-than instruction on
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// RISC-V that allows `(x >= power-of-two) as usize` to be branchless.
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/// Returns the number of leading binary zeros in `x`.
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pub fn usize_leading_zeros_riscv(x: usize) -> usize {
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let mut x = x;
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// the number of potential leading zeros
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let mut z = usize::MAX.count_ones() as usize;
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// a temporary
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let mut t: usize;
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// RISC-V does not have a set-if-greater-than-or-equal instruction and
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// `(x >= power-of-two) as usize` will get compiled into two instructions, but this is
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// still the most optimal method. A conditional set can only be turned into a single
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// immediate instruction if `x` is compared with an immediate `imm` (that can fit into
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// 12 bits) like `x < imm` but not `imm < x` (because the immediate is always on the
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// right). If we try to save an instruction by using `x < imm` for each bisection, we
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// have to shift `x` left and compare with powers of two approaching `usize::MAX + 1`,
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// but the immediate will never fit into 12 bits and never save an instruction.
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#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "64")]
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{
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// If the upper 32 bits of `x` are not all 0, `t` is set to `1 << 5`, otherwise
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// `t` is set to 0.
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t = ((x >= (1 << 32)) as usize) << 5;
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// If `t` was set to `1 << 5`, then the upper 32 bits are shifted down for the
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// next step to process.
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x >>= t;
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// If `t` was set to `1 << 5`, then we subtract 32 from the number of potential
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// leading zeros
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z -= t;
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}
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#[cfg(any(target_pointer_width = "32", target_pointer_width = "64"))]
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{
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t = ((x >= (1 << 16)) as usize) << 4;
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x >>= t;
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z -= t;
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}
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t = ((x >= (1 << 8)) as usize) << 3;
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x >>= t;
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z -= t;
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t = ((x >= (1 << 4)) as usize) << 2;
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x >>= t;
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z -= t;
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t = ((x >= (1 << 2)) as usize) << 1;
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x >>= t;
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z -= t;
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t = (x >= (1 << 1)) as usize;
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x >>= t;
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z -= t;
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// All bits except the LSB are guaranteed to be zero for this final bisection step.
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// If `x != 0` then `x == 1` and subtracts one potential zero from `z`.
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z - x
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}
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intrinsics! {
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#[maybe_use_optimized_c_shim]
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#[cfg(any(
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target_pointer_width = "16",
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target_pointer_width = "32",
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target_pointer_width = "64"
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))]
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/// Returns the number of leading binary zeros in `x`.
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pub extern "C" fn __clzsi2(x: usize) -> usize {
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if cfg!(any(target_arch = "riscv32", target_arch = "riscv64")) {
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usize_leading_zeros_riscv(x)
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} else {
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usize_leading_zeros_default(x)
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}
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}
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}
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@ -13,11 +13,14 @@ macro_rules! os_ty {
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}
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pub mod addsub;
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pub mod leading_zeros;
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pub mod mul;
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pub mod sdiv;
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pub mod shift;
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pub mod udiv;
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pub use self::leading_zeros::__clzsi2;
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/// Trait for some basic operations on integers
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pub(crate) trait Int:
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Copy
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@ -300,69 +303,3 @@ macro_rules! impl_wide_int {
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impl_wide_int!(u32, u64, 32);
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impl_wide_int!(u64, u128, 64);
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intrinsics! {
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#[maybe_use_optimized_c_shim]
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#[cfg(any(
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target_pointer_width = "16",
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target_pointer_width = "32",
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target_pointer_width = "64"
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))]
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pub extern "C" fn __clzsi2(x: usize) -> usize {
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// TODO: const this? Would require const-if
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// Note(Lokathor): the `intrinsics!` macro can't process mut inputs
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let mut x = x;
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let mut y: usize;
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let mut n: usize = {
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#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "64")]
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{
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64
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}
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#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "32")]
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{
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32
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}
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#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "16")]
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{
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16
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}
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};
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#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "64")]
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{
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y = x >> 32;
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if y != 0 {
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n -= 32;
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x = y;
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}
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}
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#[cfg(any(target_pointer_width = "32", target_pointer_width = "64"))]
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{
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y = x >> 16;
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if y != 0 {
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n -= 16;
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x = y;
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}
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}
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y = x >> 8;
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if y != 0 {
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n -= 8;
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x = y;
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}
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y = x >> 4;
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if y != 0 {
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n -= 4;
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x = y;
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}
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y = x >> 2;
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if y != 0 {
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n -= 2;
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x = y;
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}
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y = x >> 1;
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if y != 0 {
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n - 2
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} else {
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n - x
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}
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}
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}
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@ -11,6 +11,12 @@ doctest = false
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[build-dependencies]
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rand = "0.7"
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[dev-dependencies]
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# For fuzzing tests we want a deterministic seedable RNG. We also eliminate potential
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# problems with system RNGs on the variety of platforms this crate is tested on.
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# `xoshiro128**` is used for its quality, size, and speed at generating `u32` shift amounts.
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rand_xoshiro = "0.4"
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[dependencies.compiler_builtins]
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path = ".."
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default-features = false
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@ -1,23 +0,0 @@
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extern crate compiler_builtins;
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use compiler_builtins::int::__clzsi2;
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#[test]
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fn __clzsi2_test() {
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let mut i: usize = core::usize::MAX;
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// Check all values above 0
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while i > 0 {
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assert_eq!(__clzsi2(i) as u32, i.leading_zeros());
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i >>= 1;
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}
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// check 0 also
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i = 0;
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assert_eq!(__clzsi2(i) as u32, i.leading_zeros());
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// double check for bit patterns that aren't just solid 1s
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i = 1;
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for _ in 0..63 {
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assert_eq!(__clzsi2(i) as u32, i.leading_zeros());
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i <<= 2;
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i += 1;
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}
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}
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@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
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use rand_xoshiro::rand_core::{RngCore, SeedableRng};
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use rand_xoshiro::Xoshiro128StarStar;
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use compiler_builtins::int::__clzsi2;
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use compiler_builtins::int::leading_zeros::{
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usize_leading_zeros_default, usize_leading_zeros_riscv,
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};
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#[test]
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fn __clzsi2_test() {
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// Binary fuzzer. We cannot just send a random number directly to `__clzsi2()`, because we need
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// large sequences of zeros to test. This XORs, ANDs, and ORs random length strings of 1s to
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// `x`. ORs insure sequences of ones, ANDs insures sequences of zeros, and XORs are not often
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// destructive but add entropy.
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let mut rng = Xoshiro128StarStar::seed_from_u64(0);
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let mut x = 0usize;
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// creates a mask for indexing the bits of the type
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let bit_indexing_mask = usize::MAX.count_ones() - 1;
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// 10000 iterations is enough to make sure edge cases like single set bits are tested and to go
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// through many paths.
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for _ in 0..10_000 {
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let r0 = bit_indexing_mask & rng.next_u32();
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// random length of ones
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let ones: usize = !0 >> r0;
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let r1 = bit_indexing_mask & rng.next_u32();
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// random circular shift
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let mask = ones.rotate_left(r1);
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match rng.next_u32() % 4 {
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0 => x |= mask,
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1 => x &= mask,
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// both 2 and 3 to make XORs as common as ORs and ANDs combined
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_ => x ^= mask,
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}
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let lz = x.leading_zeros() as usize;
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let lz0 = __clzsi2(x);
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let lz1 = usize_leading_zeros_default(x);
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let lz2 = usize_leading_zeros_riscv(x);
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if lz0 != lz {
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panic!("__clzsi2({}): expected: {}, found: {}", x, lz, lz0);
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}
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if lz1 != lz {
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panic!(
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"usize_leading_zeros_default({}): expected: {}, found: {}",
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x, lz, lz1
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);
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}
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if lz2 != lz {
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panic!(
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"usize_leading_zeros_riscv({}): expected: {}, found: {}",
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x, lz, lz2
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);
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}
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}
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}
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