| This is gmp.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.6 from gmp.texi. |
| |
| This manual describes how to install and use the GNU multiple precision |
| arithmetic library, version 6.2.0. |
| |
| Copyright 1991, 1993-2016, 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document |
| under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or |
| any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no |
| Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being "A GNU Manual", and |
| with the Back-Cover Texts being "You have freedom to copy and modify |
| this GNU Manual, like GNU software". A copy of the license is included |
| in *note GNU Free Documentation License::. |
| INFO-DIR-SECTION GNU libraries |
| START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY |
| * gmp: (gmp). GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic Library. |
| END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Top, Next: Copying, Prev: (dir), Up: (dir) |
| |
| GNU MP |
| ****** |
| |
| This manual describes how to install and use the GNU multiple precision |
| arithmetic library, version 6.2.0. |
| |
| Copyright 1991, 1993-2016, 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document |
| under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or |
| any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no |
| Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being "A GNU Manual", and |
| with the Back-Cover Texts being "You have freedom to copy and modify |
| this GNU Manual, like GNU software". A copy of the license is included |
| in *note GNU Free Documentation License::. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Copying:: GMP Copying Conditions (LGPL). |
| * Introduction to GMP:: Brief introduction to GNU MP. |
| * Installing GMP:: How to configure and compile the GMP library. |
| * GMP Basics:: What every GMP user should know. |
| * Reporting Bugs:: How to usefully report bugs. |
| * Integer Functions:: Functions for arithmetic on signed integers. |
| * Rational Number Functions:: Functions for arithmetic on rational numbers. |
| * Floating-point Functions:: Functions for arithmetic on floats. |
| * Low-level Functions:: Fast functions for natural numbers. |
| * Random Number Functions:: Functions for generating random numbers. |
| * Formatted Output:: 'printf' style output. |
| * Formatted Input:: 'scanf' style input. |
| * C++ Class Interface:: Class wrappers around GMP types. |
| * Custom Allocation:: How to customize the internal allocation. |
| * Language Bindings:: Using GMP from other languages. |
| * Algorithms:: What happens behind the scenes. |
| * Internals:: How values are represented behind the scenes. |
| |
| * Contributors:: Who brings you this library? |
| * References:: Some useful papers and books to read. |
| * GNU Free Documentation License:: |
| * Concept Index:: |
| * Function Index:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Copying, Next: Introduction to GMP, Prev: Top, Up: Top |
| |
| GNU MP Copying Conditions |
| ************************* |
| |
| This library is "free"; this means that everyone is free to use it and |
| free to redistribute it on a free basis. The library is not in the |
| public domain; it is copyrighted and there are restrictions on its |
| distribution, but these restrictions are designed to permit everything |
| that a good cooperating citizen would want to do. What is not allowed |
| is to try to prevent others from further sharing any version of this |
| library that they might get from you. |
| |
| Specifically, we want to make sure that you have the right to give |
| away copies of the library, that you receive source code or else can get |
| it if you want it, that you can change this library or use pieces of it |
| in new free programs, and that you know you can do these things. |
| |
| To make sure that everyone has such rights, we have to forbid you to |
| deprive anyone else of these rights. For example, if you distribute |
| copies of the GNU MP library, you must give the recipients all the |
| rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can |
| get the source code. And you must tell them their rights. |
| |
| Also, for our own protection, we must make certain that everyone |
| finds out that there is no warranty for the GNU MP library. If it is |
| modified by someone else and passed on, we want their recipients to know |
| that what they have is not what we distributed, so that any problems |
| introduced by others will not reflect on our reputation. |
| |
| More precisely, the GNU MP library is dual licensed, under the |
| conditions of the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 (see |
| 'COPYING.LESSERv3'), or the GNU General Public License version 2 (see |
| 'COPYINGv2'). This is the recipient's choice, and the recipient also |
| has the additional option of applying later versions of these licenses. |
| (The reason for this dual licensing is to make it possible to use the |
| library with programs which are licensed under GPL version 2, but which |
| for historical or other reasons do not allow use under later versions of |
| the GPL). |
| |
| Programs which are not part of the library itself, such as |
| demonstration programs and the GMP testsuite, are licensed under the |
| terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 (see 'COPYINGv3'), or |
| any later version. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Introduction to GMP, Next: Installing GMP, Prev: Copying, Up: Top |
| |
| 1 Introduction to GNU MP |
| ************************ |
| |
| GNU MP is a portable library written in C for arbitrary precision |
| arithmetic on integers, rational numbers, and floating-point numbers. |
| It aims to provide the fastest possible arithmetic for all applications |
| that need higher precision than is directly supported by the basic C |
| types. |
| |
| Many applications use just a few hundred bits of precision; but some |
| applications may need thousands or even millions of bits. GMP is |
| designed to give good performance for both, by choosing algorithms based |
| on the sizes of the operands, and by carefully keeping the overhead at a |
| minimum. |
| |
| The speed of GMP is achieved by using fullwords as the basic |
| arithmetic type, by using sophisticated algorithms, by including |
| carefully optimized assembly code for the most common inner loops for |
| many different CPUs, and by a general emphasis on speed (as opposed to |
| simplicity or elegance). |
| |
| There is assembly code for these CPUs: ARM Cortex-A9, Cortex-A15, and |
| generic ARM, DEC Alpha 21064, 21164, and 21264, AMD K8 and K10 (sold |
| under many brands, e.g. Athlon64, Phenom, Opteron) Bulldozer, and |
| Bobcat, Intel Pentium, Pentium Pro/II/III, Pentium 4, Core2, Nehalem, |
| Sandy bridge, Haswell, generic x86, Intel IA-64, Motorola/IBM PowerPC 32 |
| and 64 such as POWER970, POWER5, POWER6, and POWER7, MIPS 32-bit and |
| 64-bit, SPARC 32-bit ad 64-bit with special support for all UltraSPARC |
| models. There is also assembly code for many obsolete CPUs. |
| |
| For up-to-date information on GMP, please see the GMP web pages at |
| |
| <https://gmplib.org/> |
| |
| The latest version of the library is available at |
| |
| <https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gmp/> |
| |
| Many sites around the world mirror 'ftp.gnu.org', please use a mirror |
| near you, see <https://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html> for a full list. |
| |
| There are three public mailing lists of interest. One for release |
| announcements, one for general questions and discussions about usage of |
| the GMP library and one for bug reports. For more information, see |
| |
| <https://gmplib.org/mailman/listinfo/>. |
| |
| The proper place for bug reports is <gmp-bugs@gmplib.org>. See *note |
| Reporting Bugs:: for information about reporting bugs. |
| |
| |
| 1.1 How to use this Manual |
| ========================== |
| |
| Everyone should read *note GMP Basics::. If you need to install the |
| library yourself, then read *note Installing GMP::. If you have a |
| system with multiple ABIs, then read *note ABI and ISA::, for the |
| compiler options that must be used on applications. |
| |
| The rest of the manual can be used for later reference, although it |
| is probably a good idea to glance through it. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Installing GMP, Next: GMP Basics, Prev: Introduction to GMP, Up: Top |
| |
| 2 Installing GMP |
| **************** |
| |
| GMP has an autoconf/automake/libtool based configuration system. On a |
| Unix-like system a basic build can be done with |
| |
| ./configure |
| make |
| |
| Some self-tests can be run with |
| |
| make check |
| |
| And you can install (under '/usr/local' by default) with |
| |
| make install |
| |
| If you experience problems, please report them to |
| <gmp-bugs@gmplib.org>. See *note Reporting Bugs::, for information on |
| what to include in useful bug reports. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Build Options:: |
| * ABI and ISA:: |
| * Notes for Package Builds:: |
| * Notes for Particular Systems:: |
| * Known Build Problems:: |
| * Performance optimization:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Build Options, Next: ABI and ISA, Prev: Installing GMP, Up: Installing GMP |
| |
| 2.1 Build Options |
| ================= |
| |
| All the usual autoconf configure options are available, run './configure |
| --help' for a summary. The file 'INSTALL.autoconf' has some generic |
| installation information too. |
| |
| Tools |
| 'configure' requires various Unix-like tools. See *note Notes for |
| Particular Systems::, for some options on non-Unix systems. |
| |
| It might be possible to build without the help of 'configure', |
| certainly all the code is there, but unfortunately you'll be on |
| your own. |
| |
| Build Directory |
| To compile in a separate build directory, 'cd' to that directory, |
| and prefix the configure command with the path to the GMP source |
| directory. For example |
| |
| cd /my/build/dir |
| /my/sources/gmp-6.2.0/configure |
| |
| Not all 'make' programs have the necessary features ('VPATH') to |
| support this. In particular, SunOS and Slowaris 'make' have bugs |
| that make them unable to build in a separate directory. Use GNU |
| 'make' instead. |
| |
| '--prefix' and '--exec-prefix' |
| The '--prefix' option can be used in the normal way to direct GMP |
| to install under a particular tree. The default is '/usr/local'. |
| |
| '--exec-prefix' can be used to direct architecture-dependent files |
| like 'libgmp.a' to a different location. This can be used to share |
| architecture-independent parts like the documentation, but separate |
| the dependent parts. Note however that 'gmp.h' is |
| architecture-dependent since it encodes certain aspects of |
| 'libgmp', so it will be necessary to ensure both '$prefix/include' |
| and '$exec_prefix/include' are available to the compiler. |
| |
| '--disable-shared', '--disable-static' |
| By default both shared and static libraries are built (where |
| possible), but one or other can be disabled. Shared libraries |
| result in smaller executables and permit code sharing between |
| separate running processes, but on some CPUs are slightly slower, |
| having a small cost on each function call. |
| |
| Native Compilation, '--build=CPU-VENDOR-OS' |
| For normal native compilation, the system can be specified with |
| '--build'. By default './configure' uses the output from running |
| './config.guess'. On some systems './config.guess' can determine |
| the exact CPU type, on others it will be necessary to give it |
| explicitly. For example, |
| |
| ./configure --build=ultrasparc-sun-solaris2.7 |
| |
| In all cases the 'OS' part is important, since it controls how |
| libtool generates shared libraries. Running './config.guess' is |
| the simplest way to see what it should be, if you don't know |
| already. |
| |
| Cross Compilation, '--host=CPU-VENDOR-OS' |
| When cross-compiling, the system used for compiling is given by |
| '--build' and the system where the library will run is given by |
| '--host'. For example when using a FreeBSD Athlon system to build |
| GNU/Linux m68k binaries, |
| |
| ./configure --build=athlon-pc-freebsd3.5 --host=m68k-mac-linux-gnu |
| |
| Compiler tools are sought first with the host system type as a |
| prefix. For example 'm68k-mac-linux-gnu-ranlib' is tried, then |
| plain 'ranlib'. This makes it possible for a set of |
| cross-compiling tools to co-exist with native tools. The prefix is |
| the argument to '--host', and this can be an alias, such as |
| 'm68k-linux'. But note that tools don't have to be setup this way, |
| it's enough to just have a 'PATH' with a suitable cross-compiling |
| 'cc' etc. |
| |
| Compiling for a different CPU in the same family as the build |
| system is a form of cross-compilation, though very possibly this |
| would merely be special options on a native compiler. In any case |
| './configure' avoids depending on being able to run code on the |
| build system, which is important when creating binaries for a newer |
| CPU since they very possibly won't run on the build system. |
| |
| In all cases the compiler must be able to produce an executable (of |
| whatever format) from a standard C 'main'. Although only object |
| files will go to make up 'libgmp', './configure' uses linking tests |
| for various purposes, such as determining what functions are |
| available on the host system. |
| |
| Currently a warning is given unless an explicit '--build' is used |
| when cross-compiling, because it may not be possible to correctly |
| guess the build system type if the 'PATH' has only a |
| cross-compiling 'cc'. |
| |
| Note that the '--target' option is not appropriate for GMP. It's |
| for use when building compiler tools, with '--host' being where |
| they will run, and '--target' what they'll produce code for. |
| Ordinary programs or libraries like GMP are only interested in the |
| '--host' part, being where they'll run. (Some past versions of GMP |
| used '--target' incorrectly.) |
| |
| CPU types |
| In general, if you want a library that runs as fast as possible, |
| you should configure GMP for the exact CPU type your system uses. |
| However, this may mean the binaries won't run on older members of |
| the family, and might run slower on other members, older or newer. |
| The best idea is always to build GMP for the exact machine type you |
| intend to run it on. |
| |
| The following CPUs have specific support. See 'configure.ac' for |
| details of what code and compiler options they select. |
| |
| * Alpha: alpha, alphaev5, alphaev56, alphapca56, alphapca57, |
| alphaev6, alphaev67, alphaev68 alphaev7 |
| |
| * Cray: c90, j90, t90, sv1 |
| |
| * HPPA: hppa1.0, hppa1.1, hppa2.0, hppa2.0n, hppa2.0w, hppa64 |
| |
| * IA-64: ia64, itanium, itanium2 |
| |
| * MIPS: mips, mips3, mips64 |
| |
| * Motorola: m68k, m68000, m68010, m68020, m68030, m68040, |
| m68060, m68302, m68360, m88k, m88110 |
| |
| * POWER: power, power1, power2, power2sc |
| |
| * PowerPC: powerpc, powerpc64, powerpc401, powerpc403, |
| powerpc405, powerpc505, powerpc601, powerpc602, powerpc603, |
| powerpc603e, powerpc604, powerpc604e, powerpc620, powerpc630, |
| powerpc740, powerpc7400, powerpc7450, powerpc750, powerpc801, |
| powerpc821, powerpc823, powerpc860, powerpc970 |
| |
| * SPARC: sparc, sparcv8, microsparc, supersparc, sparcv9, |
| ultrasparc, ultrasparc2, ultrasparc2i, ultrasparc3, sparc64 |
| |
| * x86 family: i386, i486, i586, pentium, pentiummmx, pentiumpro, |
| pentium2, pentium3, pentium4, k6, k62, k63, athlon, amd64, |
| viac3, viac32 |
| |
| * Other: arm, sh, sh2, vax, |
| |
| CPUs not listed will use generic C code. |
| |
| Generic C Build |
| If some of the assembly code causes problems, or if otherwise |
| desired, the generic C code can be selected with the configure |
| '--disable-assembly'. |
| |
| Note that this will run quite slowly, but it should be portable and |
| should at least make it possible to get something running if all |
| else fails. |
| |
| Fat binary, '--enable-fat' |
| Using '--enable-fat' selects a "fat binary" build on x86, where |
| optimized low level subroutines are chosen at runtime according to |
| the CPU detected. This means more code, but gives good performance |
| on all x86 chips. (This option might become available for more |
| architectures in the future.) |
| |
| 'ABI' |
| On some systems GMP supports multiple ABIs (application binary |
| interfaces), meaning data type sizes and calling conventions. By |
| default GMP chooses the best ABI available, but a particular ABI |
| can be selected. For example |
| |
| ./configure --host=mips64-sgi-irix6 ABI=n32 |
| |
| See *note ABI and ISA::, for the available choices on relevant |
| CPUs, and what applications need to do. |
| |
| 'CC', 'CFLAGS' |
| By default the C compiler used is chosen from among some likely |
| candidates, with 'gcc' normally preferred if it's present. The |
| usual 'CC=whatever' can be passed to './configure' to choose |
| something different. |
| |
| For various systems, default compiler flags are set based on the |
| CPU and compiler. The usual 'CFLAGS="-whatever"' can be passed to |
| './configure' to use something different or to set good flags for |
| systems GMP doesn't otherwise know. |
| |
| The 'CC' and 'CFLAGS' used are printed during './configure', and |
| can be found in each generated 'Makefile'. This is the easiest way |
| to check the defaults when considering changing or adding |
| something. |
| |
| Note that when 'CC' and 'CFLAGS' are specified on a system |
| supporting multiple ABIs it's important to give an explicit |
| 'ABI=whatever', since GMP can't determine the ABI just from the |
| flags and won't be able to select the correct assembly code. |
| |
| If just 'CC' is selected then normal default 'CFLAGS' for that |
| compiler will be used (if GMP recognises it). For example 'CC=gcc' |
| can be used to force the use of GCC, with default flags (and |
| default ABI). |
| |
| 'CPPFLAGS' |
| Any flags like '-D' defines or '-I' includes required by the |
| preprocessor should be set in 'CPPFLAGS' rather than 'CFLAGS'. |
| Compiling is done with both 'CPPFLAGS' and 'CFLAGS', but |
| preprocessing uses just 'CPPFLAGS'. This distinction is because |
| most preprocessors won't accept all the flags the compiler does. |
| Preprocessing is done separately in some configure tests. |
| |
| 'CC_FOR_BUILD' |
| Some build-time programs are compiled and run to generate |
| host-specific data tables. 'CC_FOR_BUILD' is the compiler used for |
| this. It doesn't need to be in any particular ABI or mode, it |
| merely needs to generate executables that can run. The default is |
| to try the selected 'CC' and some likely candidates such as 'cc' |
| and 'gcc', looking for something that works. |
| |
| No flags are used with 'CC_FOR_BUILD' because a simple invocation |
| like 'cc foo.c' should be enough. If some particular options are |
| required they can be included as for instance 'CC_FOR_BUILD="cc |
| -whatever"'. |
| |
| C++ Support, '--enable-cxx' |
| C++ support in GMP can be enabled with '--enable-cxx', in which |
| case a C++ compiler will be required. As a convenience |
| '--enable-cxx=detect' can be used to enable C++ support only if a |
| compiler can be found. The C++ support consists of a library |
| 'libgmpxx.la' and header file 'gmpxx.h' (*note Headers and |
| Libraries::). |
| |
| A separate 'libgmpxx.la' has been adopted rather than having C++ |
| objects within 'libgmp.la' in order to ensure dynamic linked C |
| programs aren't bloated by a dependency on the C++ standard |
| library, and to avoid any chance that the C++ compiler could be |
| required when linking plain C programs. |
| |
| 'libgmpxx.la' will use certain internals from 'libgmp.la' and can |
| only be expected to work with 'libgmp.la' from the same GMP |
| version. Future changes to the relevant internals will be |
| accompanied by renaming, so a mismatch will cause unresolved |
| symbols rather than perhaps mysterious misbehaviour. |
| |
| In general 'libgmpxx.la' will be usable only with the C++ compiler |
| that built it, since name mangling and runtime support are usually |
| incompatible between different compilers. |
| |
| 'CXX', 'CXXFLAGS' |
| When C++ support is enabled, the C++ compiler and its flags can be |
| set with variables 'CXX' and 'CXXFLAGS' in the usual way. The |
| default for 'CXX' is the first compiler that works from a list of |
| likely candidates, with 'g++' normally preferred when available. |
| The default for 'CXXFLAGS' is to try 'CFLAGS', 'CFLAGS' without |
| '-g', then for 'g++' either '-g -O2' or '-O2', or for other |
| compilers '-g' or nothing. Trying 'CFLAGS' this way is convenient |
| when using 'gcc' and 'g++' together, since the flags for 'gcc' will |
| usually suit 'g++'. |
| |
| It's important that the C and C++ compilers match, meaning their |
| startup and runtime support routines are compatible and that they |
| generate code in the same ABI (if there's a choice of ABIs on the |
| system). './configure' isn't currently able to check these things |
| very well itself, so for that reason '--disable-cxx' is the |
| default, to avoid a build failure due to a compiler mismatch. |
| Perhaps this will change in the future. |
| |
| Incidentally, it's normally not good enough to set 'CXX' to the |
| same as 'CC'. Although 'gcc' for instance recognises 'foo.cc' as |
| C++ code, only 'g++' will invoke the linker the right way when |
| building an executable or shared library from C++ object files. |
| |
| Temporary Memory, '--enable-alloca=<choice>' |
| GMP allocates temporary workspace using one of the following three |
| methods, which can be selected with for instance |
| '--enable-alloca=malloc-reentrant'. |
| |
| * 'alloca' - C library or compiler builtin. |
| * 'malloc-reentrant' - the heap, in a re-entrant fashion. |
| * 'malloc-notreentrant' - the heap, with global variables. |
| |
| For convenience, the following choices are also available. |
| '--disable-alloca' is the same as 'no'. |
| |
| * 'yes' - a synonym for 'alloca'. |
| * 'no' - a synonym for 'malloc-reentrant'. |
| * 'reentrant' - 'alloca' if available, otherwise |
| 'malloc-reentrant'. This is the default. |
| * 'notreentrant' - 'alloca' if available, otherwise |
| 'malloc-notreentrant'. |
| |
| 'alloca' is reentrant and fast, and is recommended. It actually |
| allocates just small blocks on the stack; larger ones use |
| malloc-reentrant. |
| |
| 'malloc-reentrant' is, as the name suggests, reentrant and thread |
| safe, but 'malloc-notreentrant' is faster and should be used if |
| reentrancy is not required. |
| |
| The two malloc methods in fact use the memory allocation functions |
| selected by 'mp_set_memory_functions', these being 'malloc' and |
| friends by default. *Note Custom Allocation::. |
| |
| An additional choice '--enable-alloca=debug' is available, to help |
| when debugging memory related problems (*note Debugging::). |
| |
| FFT Multiplication, '--disable-fft' |
| By default multiplications are done using Karatsuba, 3-way Toom, |
| higher degree Toom, and Fermat FFT. The FFT is only used on large |
| to very large operands and can be disabled to save code size if |
| desired. |
| |
| Assertion Checking, '--enable-assert' |
| This option enables some consistency checking within the library. |
| This can be of use while debugging, *note Debugging::. |
| |
| Execution Profiling, '--enable-profiling=prof/gprof/instrument' |
| Enable profiling support, in one of various styles, *note |
| Profiling::. |
| |
| 'MPN_PATH' |
| Various assembly versions of each mpn subroutines are provided. |
| For a given CPU, a search is made though a path to choose a version |
| of each. For example 'sparcv8' has |
| |
| MPN_PATH="sparc32/v8 sparc32 generic" |
| |
| which means look first for v8 code, then plain sparc32 (which is |
| v7), and finally fall back on generic C. Knowledgeable users with |
| special requirements can specify a different path. Normally this |
| is completely unnecessary. |
| |
| Documentation |
| The source for the document you're now reading is 'doc/gmp.texi', |
| in Texinfo format, see *note Texinfo: (texinfo)Top. |
| |
| Info format 'doc/gmp.info' is included in the distribution. The |
| usual automake targets are available to make PostScript, DVI, PDF |
| and HTML (these will require various TeX and Texinfo tools). |
| |
| DocBook and XML can be generated by the Texinfo 'makeinfo' program |
| too, see *note Options for 'makeinfo': (texinfo)makeinfo options. |
| |
| Some supplementary notes can also be found in the 'doc' |
| subdirectory. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: ABI and ISA, Next: Notes for Package Builds, Prev: Build Options, Up: Installing GMP |
| |
| 2.2 ABI and ISA |
| =============== |
| |
| ABI (Application Binary Interface) refers to the calling conventions |
| between functions, meaning what registers are used and what sizes the |
| various C data types are. ISA (Instruction Set Architecture) refers to |
| the instructions and registers a CPU has available. |
| |
| Some 64-bit ISA CPUs have both a 64-bit ABI and a 32-bit ABI defined, |
| the latter for compatibility with older CPUs in the family. GMP |
| supports some CPUs like this in both ABIs. In fact within GMP 'ABI' |
| means a combination of chip ABI, plus how GMP chooses to use it. For |
| example in some 32-bit ABIs, GMP may support a limb as either a 32-bit |
| 'long' or a 64-bit 'long long'. |
| |
| By default GMP chooses the best ABI available for a given system, and |
| this generally gives significantly greater speed. But an ABI can be |
| chosen explicitly to make GMP compatible with other libraries, or |
| particular application requirements. For example, |
| |
| ./configure ABI=32 |
| |
| In all cases it's vital that all object code used in a given program |
| is compiled for the same ABI. |
| |
| Usually a limb is implemented as a 'long'. When a 'long long' limb |
| is used this is encoded in the generated 'gmp.h'. This is convenient |
| for applications, but it does mean that 'gmp.h' will vary, and can't be |
| just copied around. 'gmp.h' remains compiler independent though, since |
| all compilers for a particular ABI will be expected to use the same limb |
| type. |
| |
| Currently no attempt is made to follow whatever conventions a system |
| has for installing library or header files built for a particular ABI. |
| This will probably only matter when installing multiple builds of GMP, |
| and it might be as simple as configuring with a special 'libdir', or it |
| might require more than that. Note that builds for different ABIs need |
| to done separately, with a fresh './configure' and 'make' each. |
| |
| |
| AMD64 ('x86_64') |
| On AMD64 systems supporting both 32-bit and 64-bit modes for |
| applications, the following ABI choices are available. |
| |
| 'ABI=64' |
| The 64-bit ABI uses 64-bit limbs and pointers and makes full |
| use of the chip architecture. This is the default. |
| Applications will usually not need special compiler flags, but |
| for reference the option is |
| |
| gcc -m64 |
| |
| 'ABI=32' |
| The 32-bit ABI is the usual i386 conventions. This will be |
| slower, and is not recommended except for inter-operating with |
| other code not yet 64-bit capable. Applications must be |
| compiled with |
| |
| gcc -m32 |
| |
| (In GCC 2.95 and earlier there's no '-m32' option, it's the |
| only mode.) |
| |
| 'ABI=x32' |
| The x32 ABI uses 64-bit limbs but 32-bit pointers. Like the |
| 64-bit ABI, it makes full use of the chip's arithmetic |
| capabilities. This ABI is not supported by all operating |
| systems. |
| |
| gcc -mx32 |
| |
| |
| HPPA 2.0 ('hppa2.0*', 'hppa64') |
| 'ABI=2.0w' |
| The 2.0w ABI uses 64-bit limbs and pointers and is available |
| on HP-UX 11 or up. Applications must be compiled with |
| |
| gcc [built for 2.0w] |
| cc +DD64 |
| |
| 'ABI=2.0n' |
| The 2.0n ABI means the 32-bit HPPA 1.0 ABI and all its normal |
| calling conventions, but with 64-bit instructions permitted |
| within functions. GMP uses a 64-bit 'long long' for a limb. |
| This ABI is available on hppa64 GNU/Linux and on HP-UX 10 or |
| higher. Applications must be compiled with |
| |
| gcc [built for 2.0n] |
| cc +DA2.0 +e |
| |
| Note that current versions of GCC (eg. 3.2) don't generate |
| 64-bit instructions for 'long long' operations and so may be |
| slower than for 2.0w. (The GMP assembly code is the same |
| though.) |
| |
| 'ABI=1.0' |
| HPPA 2.0 CPUs can run all HPPA 1.0 and 1.1 code in the 32-bit |
| HPPA 1.0 ABI. No special compiler options are needed for |
| applications. |
| |
| All three ABIs are available for CPU types 'hppa2.0w', 'hppa2.0' |
| and 'hppa64', but for CPU type 'hppa2.0n' only 2.0n or 1.0 are |
| considered. |
| |
| Note that GCC on HP-UX has no options to choose between 2.0n and |
| 2.0w modes, unlike HP 'cc'. Instead it must be built for one or |
| the other ABI. GMP will detect how it was built, and skip to the |
| corresponding 'ABI'. |
| |
| |
| IA-64 under HP-UX ('ia64*-*-hpux*', 'itanium*-*-hpux*') |
| HP-UX supports two ABIs for IA-64. GMP performance is the same in |
| both. |
| |
| 'ABI=32' |
| In the 32-bit ABI, pointers, 'int's and 'long's are 32 bits |
| and GMP uses a 64 bit 'long long' for a limb. Applications |
| can be compiled without any special flags since this ABI is |
| the default in both HP C and GCC, but for reference the flags |
| are |
| |
| gcc -milp32 |
| cc +DD32 |
| |
| 'ABI=64' |
| In the 64-bit ABI, 'long's and pointers are 64 bits and GMP |
| uses a 'long' for a limb. Applications must be compiled with |
| |
| gcc -mlp64 |
| cc +DD64 |
| |
| On other IA-64 systems, GNU/Linux for instance, 'ABI=64' is the |
| only choice. |
| |
| |
| MIPS under IRIX 6 ('mips*-*-irix[6789]') |
| IRIX 6 always has a 64-bit MIPS 3 or better CPU, and supports ABIs |
| o32, n32, and 64. n32 or 64 are recommended, and GMP performance |
| will be the same in each. The default is n32. |
| |
| 'ABI=o32' |
| The o32 ABI is 32-bit pointers and integers, and no 64-bit |
| operations. GMP will be slower than in n32 or 64, this option |
| only exists to support old compilers, eg. GCC 2.7.2. |
| Applications can be compiled with no special flags on an old |
| compiler, or on a newer compiler with |
| |
| gcc -mabi=32 |
| cc -32 |
| |
| 'ABI=n32' |
| The n32 ABI is 32-bit pointers and integers, but with a 64-bit |
| limb using a 'long long'. Applications must be compiled with |
| |
| gcc -mabi=n32 |
| cc -n32 |
| |
| 'ABI=64' |
| The 64-bit ABI is 64-bit pointers and integers. Applications |
| must be compiled with |
| |
| gcc -mabi=64 |
| cc -64 |
| |
| Note that MIPS GNU/Linux, as of kernel version 2.2, doesn't have |
| the necessary support for n32 or 64 and so only gets a 32-bit limb |
| and the MIPS 2 code. |
| |
| |
| PowerPC 64 ('powerpc64', 'powerpc620', 'powerpc630', 'powerpc970', 'power4', 'power5') |
| 'ABI=mode64' |
| The AIX 64 ABI uses 64-bit limbs and pointers and is the |
| default on PowerPC 64 '*-*-aix*' systems. Applications must |
| be compiled with |
| |
| gcc -maix64 |
| xlc -q64 |
| |
| On 64-bit GNU/Linux, BSD, and Mac OS X/Darwin systems, the |
| applications must be compiled with |
| |
| gcc -m64 |
| |
| 'ABI=mode32' |
| The 'mode32' ABI uses a 64-bit 'long long' limb but with the |
| chip still in 32-bit mode and using 32-bit calling |
| conventions. This is the default for systems where the true |
| 64-bit ABI is unavailable. No special compiler options are |
| typically needed for applications. This ABI is not available |
| under AIX. |
| |
| 'ABI=32' |
| This is the basic 32-bit PowerPC ABI, with a 32-bit limb. No |
| special compiler options are needed for applications. |
| |
| GMP's speed is greatest for the 'mode64' ABI, the 'mode32' ABI is |
| 2nd best. In 'ABI=32' only the 32-bit ISA is used and this doesn't |
| make full use of a 64-bit chip. |
| |
| |
| Sparc V9 ('sparc64', 'sparcv9', 'ultrasparc*') |
| 'ABI=64' |
| The 64-bit V9 ABI is available on the various BSD sparc64 |
| ports, recent versions of Sparc64 GNU/Linux, and Solaris 2.7 |
| and up (when the kernel is in 64-bit mode). GCC 3.2 or |
| higher, or Sun 'cc' is required. On GNU/Linux, depending on |
| the default 'gcc' mode, applications must be compiled with |
| |
| gcc -m64 |
| |
| On Solaris applications must be compiled with |
| |
| gcc -m64 -mptr64 -Wa,-xarch=v9 -mcpu=v9 |
| cc -xarch=v9 |
| |
| On the BSD sparc64 systems no special options are required, |
| since 64-bits is the only ABI available. |
| |
| 'ABI=32' |
| For the basic 32-bit ABI, GMP still uses as much of the V9 ISA |
| as it can. In the Sun documentation this combination is known |
| as "v8plus". On GNU/Linux, depending on the default 'gcc' |
| mode, applications may need to be compiled with |
| |
| gcc -m32 |
| |
| On Solaris, no special compiler options are required for |
| applications, though using something like the following is |
| recommended. ('gcc' 2.8 and earlier only support '-mv8' |
| though.) |
| |
| gcc -mv8plus |
| cc -xarch=v8plus |
| |
| GMP speed is greatest in 'ABI=64', so it's the default where |
| available. The speed is partly because there are extra registers |
| available and partly because 64-bits is considered the more |
| important case and has therefore had better code written for it. |
| |
| Don't be confused by the names of the '-m' and '-x' compiler |
| options, they're called 'arch' but effectively control both ABI and |
| ISA. |
| |
| On Solaris 2.6 and earlier, only 'ABI=32' is available since the |
| kernel doesn't save all registers. |
| |
| On Solaris 2.7 with the kernel in 32-bit mode, a normal native |
| build will reject 'ABI=64' because the resulting executables won't |
| run. 'ABI=64' can still be built if desired by making it look like |
| a cross-compile, for example |
| |
| ./configure --build=none --host=sparcv9-sun-solaris2.7 ABI=64 |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Notes for Package Builds, Next: Notes for Particular Systems, Prev: ABI and ISA, Up: Installing GMP |
| |
| 2.3 Notes for Package Builds |
| ============================ |
| |
| GMP should present no great difficulties for packaging in a binary |
| distribution. |
| |
| Libtool is used to build the library and '-version-info' is set |
| appropriately, having started from '3:0:0' in GMP 3.0 (*note Library |
| interface versions: (libtool)Versioning.). |
| |
| The GMP 4 series will be upwardly binary compatible in each release |
| and will be upwardly binary compatible with all of the GMP 3 series. |
| Additional function interfaces may be added in each release, so on |
| systems where libtool versioning is not fully checked by the loader an |
| auxiliary mechanism may be needed to express that a dynamic linked |
| application depends on a new enough GMP. |
| |
| An auxiliary mechanism may also be needed to express that |
| 'libgmpxx.la' (from '--enable-cxx', *note Build Options::) requires |
| 'libgmp.la' from the same GMP version, since this is not done by the |
| libtool versioning, nor otherwise. A mismatch will result in unresolved |
| symbols from the linker, or perhaps the loader. |
| |
| When building a package for a CPU family, care should be taken to use |
| '--host' (or '--build') to choose the least common denominator among the |
| CPUs which might use the package. For example this might mean plain |
| 'sparc' (meaning V7) for SPARCs. |
| |
| For x86s, '--enable-fat' sets things up for a fat binary build, |
| making a runtime selection of optimized low level routines. This is a |
| good choice for packaging to run on a range of x86 chips. |
| |
| Users who care about speed will want GMP built for their exact CPU |
| type, to make best use of the available optimizations. Providing a way |
| to suitably rebuild a package may be useful. This could be as simple as |
| making it possible for a user to omit '--build' (and '--host') so |
| './config.guess' will detect the CPU. But a way to manually specify a |
| '--build' will be wanted for systems where './config.guess' is inexact. |
| |
| On systems with multiple ABIs, a packaged build will need to decide |
| which among the choices is to be provided, see *note ABI and ISA::. A |
| given run of './configure' etc will only build one ABI. If a second ABI |
| is also required then a second run of './configure' etc must be made, |
| starting from a clean directory tree ('make distclean'). |
| |
| As noted under "ABI and ISA", currently no attempt is made to follow |
| system conventions for install locations that vary with ABI, such as |
| '/usr/lib/sparcv9' for 'ABI=64' as opposed to '/usr/lib' for 'ABI=32'. |
| A package build can override 'libdir' and other standard variables as |
| necessary. |
| |
| Note that 'gmp.h' is a generated file, and will be architecture and |
| ABI dependent. When attempting to install two ABIs simultaneously it |
| will be important that an application compile gets the correct 'gmp.h' |
| for its desired ABI. If compiler include paths don't vary with ABI |
| options then it might be necessary to create a '/usr/include/gmp.h' |
| which tests preprocessor symbols and chooses the correct actual 'gmp.h'. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Notes for Particular Systems, Next: Known Build Problems, Prev: Notes for Package Builds, Up: Installing GMP |
| |
| 2.4 Notes for Particular Systems |
| ================================ |
| |
| AIX 3 and 4 |
| On systems '*-*-aix[34]*' shared libraries are disabled by default, |
| since some versions of the native 'ar' fail on the convenience |
| libraries used. A shared build can be attempted with |
| |
| ./configure --enable-shared --disable-static |
| |
| Note that the '--disable-static' is necessary because in a shared |
| build libtool makes 'libgmp.a' a symlink to 'libgmp.so', apparently |
| for the benefit of old versions of 'ld' which only recognise '.a', |
| but unfortunately this is done even if a fully functional 'ld' is |
| available. |
| |
| ARM |
| On systems 'arm*-*-*', versions of GCC up to and including 2.95.3 |
| have a bug in unsigned division, giving wrong results for some |
| operands. GMP './configure' will demand GCC 2.95.4 or later. |
| |
| Compaq C++ |
| Compaq C++ on OSF 5.1 has two flavours of 'iostream', a standard |
| one and an old pre-standard one (see 'man iostream_intro'). GMP |
| can only use the standard one, which unfortunately is not the |
| default but must be selected by defining '__USE_STD_IOSTREAM'. |
| Configure with for instance |
| |
| ./configure --enable-cxx CPPFLAGS=-D__USE_STD_IOSTREAM |
| |
| Floating Point Mode |
| On some systems, the hardware floating point has a control mode |
| which can set all operations to be done in a particular precision, |
| for instance single, double or extended on x86 systems (x87 |
| floating point). The GMP functions involving a 'double' cannot be |
| expected to operate to their full precision when the hardware is in |
| single precision mode. Of course this affects all code, including |
| application code, not just GMP. |
| |
| FreeBSD 7.x, 8.x, 9.0, 9.1, 9.2 |
| 'm4' in these releases of FreeBSD has an eval function which |
| ignores its 2nd and 3rd arguments, which makes it unsuitable for |
| '.asm' file processing. './configure' will detect the problem and |
| either abort or choose another m4 in the 'PATH'. The bug is fixed |
| in FreeBSD 9.3 and 10.0, so either upgrade or use GNU m4. Note |
| that the FreeBSD package system installs GNU m4 under the name |
| 'gm4', which GMP cannot guess. |
| |
| FreeBSD 7.x, 8.x, 9.x |
| GMP releases starting with 6.0 do not support 'ABI=32' on |
| FreeBSD/amd64 prior to release 10.0 of the system. The cause is a |
| broken 'limits.h', which GMP no longer works around. |
| |
| MS-DOS and MS Windows |
| On an MS-DOS system DJGPP can be used to build GMP, and on an MS |
| Windows system Cygwin, DJGPP and MINGW can be used. All three are |
| excellent ports of GCC and the various GNU tools. |
| |
| <https://www.cygwin.com/> |
| <http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/> |
| <http://www.mingw.org/> |
| |
| Microsoft also publishes an Interix "Services for Unix" which can |
| be used to build GMP on Windows (with a normal './configure'), but |
| it's not free software. |
| |
| MS Windows DLLs |
| On systems '*-*-cygwin*', '*-*-mingw*' and '*-*-pw32*' by default |
| GMP builds only a static library, but a DLL can be built instead |
| using |
| |
| ./configure --disable-static --enable-shared |
| |
| Static and DLL libraries can't both be built, since certain export |
| directives in 'gmp.h' must be different. |
| |
| A MINGW DLL build of GMP can be used with Microsoft C. Libtool |
| doesn't install a '.lib' format import library, but it can be |
| created with MS 'lib' as follows, and copied to the install |
| directory. Similarly for 'libmp' and 'libgmpxx'. |
| |
| cd .libs |
| lib /def:libgmp-3.dll.def /out:libgmp-3.lib |
| |
| MINGW uses the C runtime library 'msvcrt.dll' for I/O, so |
| applications wanting to use the GMP I/O routines must be compiled |
| with 'cl /MD' to do the same. If one of the other C runtime |
| library choices provided by MS C is desired then the suggestion is |
| to use the GMP string functions and confine I/O to the application. |
| |
| Motorola 68k CPU Types |
| 'm68k' is taken to mean 68000. 'm68020' or higher will give a |
| performance boost on applicable CPUs. 'm68360' can be used for |
| CPU32 series chips. 'm68302' can be used for "Dragonball" series |
| chips, though this is merely a synonym for 'm68000'. |
| |
| NetBSD 5.x |
| 'm4' in these releases of NetBSD has an eval function which ignores |
| its 2nd and 3rd arguments, which makes it unsuitable for '.asm' |
| file processing. './configure' will detect the problem and either |
| abort or choose another m4 in the 'PATH'. The bug is fixed in |
| NetBSD 6, so either upgrade or use GNU m4. Note that the NetBSD |
| package system installs GNU m4 under the name 'gm4', which GMP |
| cannot guess. |
| |
| OpenBSD 2.6 |
| 'm4' in this release of OpenBSD has a bug in 'eval' that makes it |
| unsuitable for '.asm' file processing. './configure' will detect |
| the problem and either abort or choose another m4 in the 'PATH'. |
| The bug is fixed in OpenBSD 2.7, so either upgrade or use GNU m4. |
| |
| Power CPU Types |
| In GMP, CPU types 'power*' and 'powerpc*' will each use |
| instructions not available on the other, so it's important to |
| choose the right one for the CPU that will be used. Currently GMP |
| has no assembly code support for using just the common instruction |
| subset. To get executables that run on both, the current |
| suggestion is to use the generic C code ('--disable-assembly'), |
| possibly with appropriate compiler options (like '-mcpu=common' for |
| 'gcc'). CPU 'rs6000' (which is not a CPU but a family of |
| workstations) is accepted by 'config.sub', but is currently |
| equivalent to '--disable-assembly'. |
| |
| Sparc CPU Types |
| 'sparcv8' or 'supersparc' on relevant systems will give a |
| significant performance increase over the V7 code selected by plain |
| 'sparc'. |
| |
| Sparc App Regs |
| The GMP assembly code for both 32-bit and 64-bit Sparc clobbers the |
| "application registers" 'g2', 'g3' and 'g4', the same way that the |
| GCC default '-mapp-regs' does (*note SPARC Options: (gcc)SPARC |
| Options.). |
| |
| This makes that code unsuitable for use with the special V9 |
| '-mcmodel=embmedany' (which uses 'g4' as a data segment pointer), |
| and for applications wanting to use those registers for special |
| purposes. In these cases the only suggestion currently is to build |
| GMP with '--disable-assembly' to avoid the assembly code. |
| |
| SunOS 4 |
| '/usr/bin/m4' lacks various features needed to process '.asm' |
| files, and instead './configure' will automatically use |
| '/usr/5bin/m4', which we believe is always available (if not then |
| use GNU m4). |
| |
| x86 CPU Types |
| 'i586', 'pentium' or 'pentiummmx' code is good for its intended P5 |
| Pentium chips, but quite slow when run on Intel P6 class chips |
| (PPro, P-II, P-III). 'i386' is a better choice when making |
| binaries that must run on both. |
| |
| x86 MMX and SSE2 Code |
| If the CPU selected has MMX code but the assembler doesn't support |
| it, a warning is given and non-MMX code is used instead. This will |
| be an inferior build, since the MMX code that's present is there |
| because it's faster than the corresponding plain integer code. The |
| same applies to SSE2. |
| |
| Old versions of 'gas' don't support MMX instructions, in particular |
| version 1.92.3 that comes with FreeBSD 2.2.8 or the more recent |
| OpenBSD 3.1 doesn't. |
| |
| Solaris 2.6 and 2.7 'as' generate incorrect object code for |
| register to register 'movq' instructions, and so can't be used for |
| MMX code. Install a recent 'gas' if MMX code is wanted on these |
| systems. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Known Build Problems, Next: Performance optimization, Prev: Notes for Particular Systems, Up: Installing GMP |
| |
| 2.5 Known Build Problems |
| ======================== |
| |
| You might find more up-to-date information at <https://gmplib.org/>. |
| |
| Compiler link options |
| The version of libtool currently in use rather aggressively strips |
| compiler options when linking a shared library. This will |
| hopefully be relaxed in the future, but for now if this is a |
| problem the suggestion is to create a little script to hide them, |
| and for instance configure with |
| |
| ./configure CC=gcc-with-my-options |
| |
| DJGPP ('*-*-msdosdjgpp*') |
| The DJGPP port of 'bash' 2.03 is unable to run the 'configure' |
| script, it exits silently, having died writing a preamble to |
| 'config.log'. Use 'bash' 2.04 or higher. |
| |
| 'make all' was found to run out of memory during the final |
| 'libgmp.la' link on one system tested, despite having 64Mb |
| available. Running 'make libgmp.la' directly helped, perhaps |
| recursing into the various subdirectories uses up memory. |
| |
| GNU binutils 'strip' prior to 2.12 |
| 'strip' from GNU binutils 2.11 and earlier should not be used on |
| the static libraries 'libgmp.a' and 'libmp.a' since it will discard |
| all but the last of multiple archive members with the same name, |
| like the three versions of 'init.o' in 'libgmp.a'. Binutils 2.12 |
| or higher can be used successfully. |
| |
| The shared libraries 'libgmp.so' and 'libmp.so' are not affected by |
| this and any version of 'strip' can be used on them. |
| |
| 'make' syntax error |
| On certain versions of SCO OpenServer 5 and IRIX 6.5 the native |
| 'make' is unable to handle the long dependencies list for |
| 'libgmp.la'. The symptom is a "syntax error" on the following line |
| of the top-level 'Makefile'. |
| |
| libgmp.la: $(libgmp_la_OBJECTS) $(libgmp_la_DEPENDENCIES) |
| |
| Either use GNU Make, or as a workaround remove |
| '$(libgmp_la_DEPENDENCIES)' from that line (which will make the |
| initial build work, but if any recompiling is done 'libgmp.la' |
| might not be rebuilt). |
| |
| MacOS X ('*-*-darwin*') |
| Libtool currently only knows how to create shared libraries on |
| MacOS X using the native 'cc' (which is a modified GCC), not a |
| plain GCC. A static-only build should work though |
| ('--disable-shared'). |
| |
| NeXT prior to 3.3 |
| The system compiler on old versions of NeXT was a massacred and old |
| GCC, even if it called itself 'cc'. This compiler cannot be used |
| to build GMP, you need to get a real GCC, and install that. (NeXT |
| may have fixed this in release 3.3 of their system.) |
| |
| POWER and PowerPC |
| Bugs in GCC 2.7.2 (and 2.6.3) mean it can't be used to compile GMP |
| on POWER or PowerPC. If you want to use GCC for these machines, |
| get GCC 2.7.2.1 (or later). |
| |
| Sequent Symmetry |
| Use the GNU assembler instead of the system assembler, since the |
| latter has serious bugs. |
| |
| Solaris 2.6 |
| The system 'sed' prints an error "Output line too long" when |
| libtool builds 'libgmp.la'. This doesn't seem to cause any obvious |
| ill effects, but GNU 'sed' is recommended, to avoid any doubt. |
| |
| Sparc Solaris 2.7 with gcc 2.95.2 in 'ABI=32' |
| A shared library build of GMP seems to fail in this combination, it |
| builds but then fails the tests, apparently due to some incorrect |
| data relocations within 'gmp_randinit_lc_2exp_size'. The exact |
| cause is unknown, '--disable-shared' is recommended. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Performance optimization, Prev: Known Build Problems, Up: Installing GMP |
| |
| 2.6 Performance optimization |
| ============================ |
| |
| For optimal performance, build GMP for the exact CPU type of the target |
| computer, see *note Build Options::. |
| |
| Unlike what is the case for most other programs, the compiler |
| typically doesn't matter much, since GMP uses assembly language for the |
| most critical operation. |
| |
| In particular for long-running GMP applications, and applications |
| demanding extremely large numbers, building and running the 'tuneup' |
| program in the 'tune' subdirectory, can be important. For example, |
| |
| cd tune |
| make tuneup |
| ./tuneup |
| |
| will generate better contents for the 'gmp-mparam.h' parameter file. |
| |
| To use the results, put the output in the file indicated in the |
| 'Parameters for ...' header. Then recompile from scratch. |
| |
| The 'tuneup' program takes one useful parameter, '-f NNN', which |
| instructs the program how long to check FFT multiply parameters. If |
| you're going to use GMP for extremely large numbers, you may want to run |
| 'tuneup' with a large NNN value. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: GMP Basics, Next: Reporting Bugs, Prev: Installing GMP, Up: Top |
| |
| 3 GMP Basics |
| ************ |
| |
| *Using functions, macros, data types, etc. not documented in this manual |
| is strongly discouraged. If you do so your application is guaranteed to |
| be incompatible with future versions of GMP.* |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Headers and Libraries:: |
| * Nomenclature and Types:: |
| * Function Classes:: |
| * Variable Conventions:: |
| * Parameter Conventions:: |
| * Memory Management:: |
| * Reentrancy:: |
| * Useful Macros and Constants:: |
| * Compatibility with older versions:: |
| * Demonstration Programs:: |
| * Efficiency:: |
| * Debugging:: |
| * Profiling:: |
| * Autoconf:: |
| * Emacs:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Headers and Libraries, Next: Nomenclature and Types, Prev: GMP Basics, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.1 Headers and Libraries |
| ========================= |
| |
| All declarations needed to use GMP are collected in the include file |
| 'gmp.h'. It is designed to work with both C and C++ compilers. |
| |
| #include <gmp.h> |
| |
| Note however that prototypes for GMP functions with 'FILE *' |
| parameters are only provided if '<stdio.h>' is included too. |
| |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #include <gmp.h> |
| |
| Likewise '<stdarg.h>' is required for prototypes with 'va_list' |
| parameters, such as 'gmp_vprintf'. And '<obstack.h>' for prototypes |
| with 'struct obstack' parameters, such as 'gmp_obstack_printf', when |
| available. |
| |
| All programs using GMP must link against the 'libgmp' library. On a |
| typical Unix-like system this can be done with '-lgmp', for example |
| |
| gcc myprogram.c -lgmp |
| |
| GMP C++ functions are in a separate 'libgmpxx' library. This is |
| built and installed if C++ support has been enabled (*note Build |
| Options::). For example, |
| |
| g++ mycxxprog.cc -lgmpxx -lgmp |
| |
| GMP is built using Libtool and an application can use that to link if |
| desired, *note GNU Libtool: (libtool)Top. |
| |
| If GMP has been installed to a non-standard location then it may be |
| necessary to use '-I' and '-L' compiler options to point to the right |
| directories, and some sort of run-time path for a shared library. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Nomenclature and Types, Next: Function Classes, Prev: Headers and Libraries, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.2 Nomenclature and Types |
| ========================== |
| |
| In this manual, "integer" usually means a multiple precision integer, as |
| defined by the GMP library. The C data type for such integers is |
| 'mpz_t'. Here are some examples of how to declare such integers: |
| |
| mpz_t sum; |
| |
| struct foo { mpz_t x, y; }; |
| |
| mpz_t vec[20]; |
| |
| "Rational number" means a multiple precision fraction. The C data |
| type for these fractions is 'mpq_t'. For example: |
| |
| mpq_t quotient; |
| |
| "Floating point number" or "Float" for short, is an arbitrary |
| precision mantissa with a limited precision exponent. The C data type |
| for such objects is 'mpf_t'. For example: |
| |
| mpf_t fp; |
| |
| The floating point functions accept and return exponents in the C |
| type 'mp_exp_t'. Currently this is usually a 'long', but on some |
| systems it's an 'int' for efficiency. |
| |
| A "limb" means the part of a multi-precision number that fits in a |
| single machine word. (We chose this word because a limb of the human |
| body is analogous to a digit, only larger, and containing several |
| digits.) Normally a limb is 32 or 64 bits. The C data type for a limb |
| is 'mp_limb_t'. |
| |
| Counts of limbs of a multi-precision number represented in the C type |
| 'mp_size_t'. Currently this is normally a 'long', but on some systems |
| it's an 'int' for efficiency, and on some systems it will be 'long long' |
| in the future. |
| |
| Counts of bits of a multi-precision number are represented in the C |
| type 'mp_bitcnt_t'. Currently this is always an 'unsigned long', but on |
| some systems it will be an 'unsigned long long' in the future. |
| |
| "Random state" means an algorithm selection and current state data. |
| The C data type for such objects is 'gmp_randstate_t'. For example: |
| |
| gmp_randstate_t rstate; |
| |
| Also, in general 'mp_bitcnt_t' is used for bit counts and ranges, and |
| 'size_t' is used for byte or character counts. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Function Classes, Next: Variable Conventions, Prev: Nomenclature and Types, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.3 Function Classes |
| ==================== |
| |
| There are six classes of functions in the GMP library: |
| |
| 1. Functions for signed integer arithmetic, with names beginning with |
| 'mpz_'. The associated type is 'mpz_t'. There are about 150 |
| functions in this class. (*note Integer Functions::) |
| |
| 2. Functions for rational number arithmetic, with names beginning with |
| 'mpq_'. The associated type is 'mpq_t'. There are about 35 |
| functions in this class, but the integer functions can be used for |
| arithmetic on the numerator and denominator separately. (*note |
| Rational Number Functions::) |
| |
| 3. Functions for floating-point arithmetic, with names beginning with |
| 'mpf_'. The associated type is 'mpf_t'. There are about 70 |
| functions is this class. (*note Floating-point Functions::) |
| |
| 4. Fast low-level functions that operate on natural numbers. These |
| are used by the functions in the preceding groups, and you can also |
| call them directly from very time-critical user programs. These |
| functions' names begin with 'mpn_'. The associated type is array |
| of 'mp_limb_t'. There are about 60 (hard-to-use) functions in this |
| class. (*note Low-level Functions::) |
| |
| 5. Miscellaneous functions. Functions for setting up custom |
| allocation and functions for generating random numbers. (*note |
| Custom Allocation::, and *note Random Number Functions::) |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Variable Conventions, Next: Parameter Conventions, Prev: Function Classes, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.4 Variable Conventions |
| ======================== |
| |
| GMP functions generally have output arguments before input arguments. |
| This notation is by analogy with the assignment operator. |
| |
| GMP lets you use the same variable for both input and output in one |
| call. For example, the main function for integer multiplication, |
| 'mpz_mul', can be used to square 'x' and put the result back in 'x' with |
| |
| mpz_mul (x, x, x); |
| |
| Before you can assign to a GMP variable, you need to initialize it by |
| calling one of the special initialization functions. When you're done |
| with a variable, you need to clear it out, using one of the functions |
| for that purpose. Which function to use depends on the type of |
| variable. See the chapters on integer functions, rational number |
| functions, and floating-point functions for details. |
| |
| A variable should only be initialized once, or at least cleared |
| between each initialization. After a variable has been initialized, it |
| may be assigned to any number of times. |
| |
| For efficiency reasons, avoid excessive initializing and clearing. |
| In general, initialize near the start of a function and clear near the |
| end. For example, |
| |
| void |
| foo (void) |
| { |
| mpz_t n; |
| int i; |
| mpz_init (n); |
| for (i = 1; i < 100; i++) |
| { |
| mpz_mul (n, ...); |
| mpz_fdiv_q (n, ...); |
| ... |
| } |
| mpz_clear (n); |
| } |
| |
| GMP types like 'mpz_t' are implemented as one-element arrays of |
| certain structures. Declaring a variable creates an object with the |
| fields GMP needs, but variables are normally manipulated by using the |
| pointer to the object. For both behavior and efficiency reasons, it is |
| discouraged to make copies of the GMP object itself (either directly or |
| via aggregate objects containing such GMP objects). If copies are done, |
| all of them must be used read-only; using a copy as the output of some |
| function will invalidate all the other copies. Note that the actual |
| fields in each 'mpz_t' etc are for internal use only and should not be |
| accessed directly by code that expects to be compatible with future GMP |
| releases. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Parameter Conventions, Next: Memory Management, Prev: Variable Conventions, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.5 Parameter Conventions |
| ========================= |
| |
| When a GMP variable is used as a function parameter, it's effectively a |
| call-by-reference, meaning that when the function stores a value there |
| it will change the original in the caller. Parameters which are |
| input-only can be designated 'const' to provoke a compiler error or |
| warning on attempting to modify them. |
| |
| When a function is going to return a GMP result, it should designate |
| a parameter that it sets, like the library functions do. More than one |
| value can be returned by having more than one output parameter, again |
| like the library functions. A 'return' of an 'mpz_t' etc doesn't return |
| the object, only a pointer, and this is almost certainly not what's |
| wanted. |
| |
| Here's an example accepting an 'mpz_t' parameter, doing a |
| calculation, and storing the result to the indicated parameter. |
| |
| void |
| foo (mpz_t result, const mpz_t param, unsigned long n) |
| { |
| unsigned long i; |
| mpz_mul_ui (result, param, n); |
| for (i = 1; i < n; i++) |
| mpz_add_ui (result, result, i*7); |
| } |
| |
| int |
| main (void) |
| { |
| mpz_t r, n; |
| mpz_init (r); |
| mpz_init_set_str (n, "123456", 0); |
| foo (r, n, 20L); |
| gmp_printf ("%Zd\n", r); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| Our function 'foo' works even if its caller passes the same variable |
| for 'param' and 'result', just like the library functions. But |
| sometimes it's tricky to make that work, and an application might not |
| want to bother supporting that sort of thing. |
| |
| Since GMP types are implemented as one-element arrays, using a GMP |
| variable as a parameter passes a pointer to the object. Hence the |
| call-by-reference. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Memory Management, Next: Reentrancy, Prev: Parameter Conventions, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.6 Memory Management |
| ===================== |
| |
| The GMP types like 'mpz_t' are small, containing only a couple of sizes, |
| and pointers to allocated data. Once a variable is initialized, GMP |
| takes care of all space allocation. Additional space is allocated |
| whenever a variable doesn't have enough. |
| |
| 'mpz_t' and 'mpq_t' variables never reduce their allocated space. |
| Normally this is the best policy, since it avoids frequent reallocation. |
| Applications that need to return memory to the heap at some particular |
| point can use 'mpz_realloc2', or clear variables no longer needed. |
| |
| 'mpf_t' variables, in the current implementation, use a fixed amount |
| of space, determined by the chosen precision and allocated at |
| initialization, so their size doesn't change. |
| |
| All memory is allocated using 'malloc' and friends by default, but |
| this can be changed, see *note Custom Allocation::. Temporary memory on |
| the stack is also used (via 'alloca'), but this can be changed at |
| build-time if desired, see *note Build Options::. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Reentrancy, Next: Useful Macros and Constants, Prev: Memory Management, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.7 Reentrancy |
| ============== |
| |
| GMP is reentrant and thread-safe, with some exceptions: |
| |
| * If configured with '--enable-alloca=malloc-notreentrant' (or with |
| '--enable-alloca=notreentrant' when 'alloca' is not available), |
| then naturally GMP is not reentrant. |
| |
| * 'mpf_set_default_prec' and 'mpf_init' use a global variable for the |
| selected precision. 'mpf_init2' can be used instead, and in the |
| C++ interface an explicit precision to the 'mpf_class' constructor. |
| |
| * 'mpz_random' and the other old random number functions use a global |
| random state and are hence not reentrant. The newer random number |
| functions that accept a 'gmp_randstate_t' parameter can be used |
| instead. |
| |
| * 'gmp_randinit' (obsolete) returns an error indication through a |
| global variable, which is not thread safe. Applications are |
| advised to use 'gmp_randinit_default' or 'gmp_randinit_lc_2exp' |
| instead. |
| |
| * 'mp_set_memory_functions' uses global variables to store the |
| selected memory allocation functions. |
| |
| * If the memory allocation functions set by a call to |
| 'mp_set_memory_functions' (or 'malloc' and friends by default) are |
| not reentrant, then GMP will not be reentrant either. |
| |
| * If the standard I/O functions such as 'fwrite' are not reentrant |
| then the GMP I/O functions using them will not be reentrant either. |
| |
| * It's safe for two threads to read from the same GMP variable |
| simultaneously, but it's not safe for one to read while another |
| might be writing, nor for two threads to write simultaneously. |
| It's not safe for two threads to generate a random number from the |
| same 'gmp_randstate_t' simultaneously, since this involves an |
| update of that variable. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Useful Macros and Constants, Next: Compatibility with older versions, Prev: Reentrancy, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.8 Useful Macros and Constants |
| =============================== |
| |
| -- Global Constant: const int mp_bits_per_limb |
| The number of bits per limb. |
| |
| -- Macro: __GNU_MP_VERSION |
| -- Macro: __GNU_MP_VERSION_MINOR |
| -- Macro: __GNU_MP_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL |
| The major and minor GMP version, and patch level, respectively, as |
| integers. For GMP i.j, these numbers will be i, j, and 0, |
| respectively. For GMP i.j.k, these numbers will be i, j, and k, |
| respectively. |
| |
| -- Global Constant: const char * const gmp_version |
| The GMP version number, as a null-terminated string, in the form |
| "i.j.k". This release is "6.2.0". Note that the format "i.j" was |
| used, before version 4.3.0, when k was zero. |
| |
| -- Macro: __GMP_CC |
| -- Macro: __GMP_CFLAGS |
| The compiler and compiler flags, respectively, used when compiling |
| GMP, as strings. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Compatibility with older versions, Next: Demonstration Programs, Prev: Useful Macros and Constants, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.9 Compatibility with older versions |
| ===================================== |
| |
| This version of GMP is upwardly binary compatible with all 5.x, 4.x, and |
| 3.x versions, and upwardly compatible at the source level with all 2.x |
| versions, with the following exceptions. |
| |
| * 'mpn_gcd' had its source arguments swapped as of GMP 3.0, for |
| consistency with other 'mpn' functions. |
| |
| * 'mpf_get_prec' counted precision slightly differently in GMP 3.0 |
| and 3.0.1, but in 3.1 reverted to the 2.x style. |
| |
| * 'mpn_bdivmod', documented as preliminary in GMP 4, has been |
| removed. |
| |
| There are a number of compatibility issues between GMP 1 and GMP 2 |
| that of course also apply when porting applications from GMP 1 to GMP 5. |
| Please see the GMP 2 manual for details. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Demonstration Programs, Next: Efficiency, Prev: Compatibility with older versions, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.10 Demonstration programs |
| =========================== |
| |
| The 'demos' subdirectory has some sample programs using GMP. These |
| aren't built or installed, but there's a 'Makefile' with rules for them. |
| For instance, |
| |
| make pexpr |
| ./pexpr 68^975+10 |
| |
| The following programs are provided |
| |
| * 'pexpr' is an expression evaluator, the program used on the GMP web |
| page. |
| * The 'calc' subdirectory has a similar but simpler evaluator using |
| 'lex' and 'yacc'. |
| * The 'expr' subdirectory is yet another expression evaluator, a |
| library designed for ease of use within a C program. See |
| 'demos/expr/README' for more information. |
| * 'factorize' is a Pollard-Rho factorization program. |
| * 'isprime' is a command-line interface to the 'mpz_probab_prime_p' |
| function. |
| * 'primes' counts or lists primes in an interval, using a sieve. |
| * 'qcn' is an example use of 'mpz_kronecker_ui' to estimate quadratic |
| class numbers. |
| * The 'perl' subdirectory is a comprehensive perl interface to GMP. |
| See 'demos/perl/INSTALL' for more information. Documentation is in |
| POD format in 'demos/perl/GMP.pm'. |
| |
| As an aside, consideration has been given at various times to some |
| sort of expression evaluation within the main GMP library. Going beyond |
| something minimal quickly leads to matters like user-defined functions, |
| looping, fixnums for control variables, etc, which are considered |
| outside the scope of GMP (much closer to language interpreters or |
| compilers, *Note Language Bindings::.) Something simple for program |
| input convenience may yet be a possibility, a combination of the 'expr' |
| demo and the 'pexpr' tree back-end perhaps. But for now the above |
| evaluators are offered as illustrations. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Efficiency, Next: Debugging, Prev: Demonstration Programs, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.11 Efficiency |
| =============== |
| |
| Small Operands |
| On small operands, the time for function call overheads and memory |
| allocation can be significant in comparison to actual calculation. |
| This is unavoidable in a general purpose variable precision |
| library, although GMP attempts to be as efficient as it can on both |
| large and small operands. |
| |
| Static Linking |
| On some CPUs, in particular the x86s, the static 'libgmp.a' should |
| be used for maximum speed, since the PIC code in the shared |
| 'libgmp.so' will have a small overhead on each function call and |
| global data address. For many programs this will be insignificant, |
| but for long calculations there's a gain to be had. |
| |
| Initializing and Clearing |
| Avoid excessive initializing and clearing of variables, since this |
| can be quite time consuming, especially in comparison to otherwise |
| fast operations like addition. |
| |
| A language interpreter might want to keep a free list or stack of |
| initialized variables ready for use. It should be possible to |
| integrate something like that with a garbage collector too. |
| |
| Reallocations |
| An 'mpz_t' or 'mpq_t' variable used to hold successively increasing |
| values will have its memory repeatedly 'realloc'ed, which could be |
| quite slow or could fragment memory, depending on the C library. |
| If an application can estimate the final size then 'mpz_init2' or |
| 'mpz_realloc2' can be called to allocate the necessary space from |
| the beginning (*note Initializing Integers::). |
| |
| It doesn't matter if a size set with 'mpz_init2' or 'mpz_realloc2' |
| is too small, since all functions will do a further reallocation if |
| necessary. Badly overestimating memory required will waste space |
| though. |
| |
| '2exp' Functions |
| It's up to an application to call functions like 'mpz_mul_2exp' |
| when appropriate. General purpose functions like 'mpz_mul' make no |
| attempt to identify powers of two or other special forms, because |
| such inputs will usually be very rare and testing every time would |
| be wasteful. |
| |
| 'ui' and 'si' Functions |
| The 'ui' functions and the small number of 'si' functions exist for |
| convenience and should be used where applicable. But if for |
| example an 'mpz_t' contains a value that fits in an 'unsigned long' |
| there's no need extract it and call a 'ui' function, just use the |
| regular 'mpz' function. |
| |
| In-Place Operations |
| 'mpz_abs', 'mpq_abs', 'mpf_abs', 'mpz_neg', 'mpq_neg' and 'mpf_neg' |
| are fast when used for in-place operations like 'mpz_abs(x,x)', |
| since in the current implementation only a single field of 'x' |
| needs changing. On suitable compilers (GCC for instance) this is |
| inlined too. |
| |
| 'mpz_add_ui', 'mpz_sub_ui', 'mpf_add_ui' and 'mpf_sub_ui' benefit |
| from an in-place operation like 'mpz_add_ui(x,x,y)', since usually |
| only one or two limbs of 'x' will need to be changed. The same |
| applies to the full precision 'mpz_add' etc if 'y' is small. If |
| 'y' is big then cache locality may be helped, but that's all. |
| |
| 'mpz_mul' is currently the opposite, a separate destination is |
| slightly better. A call like 'mpz_mul(x,x,y)' will, unless 'y' is |
| only one limb, make a temporary copy of 'x' before forming the |
| result. Normally that copying will only be a tiny fraction of the |
| time for the multiply, so this is not a particularly important |
| consideration. |
| |
| 'mpz_set', 'mpq_set', 'mpq_set_num', 'mpf_set', etc, make no |
| attempt to recognise a copy of something to itself, so a call like |
| 'mpz_set(x,x)' will be wasteful. Naturally that would never be |
| written deliberately, but if it might arise from two pointers to |
| the same object then a test to avoid it might be desirable. |
| |
| if (x != y) |
| mpz_set (x, y); |
| |
| Note that it's never worth introducing extra 'mpz_set' calls just |
| to get in-place operations. If a result should go to a particular |
| variable then just direct it there and let GMP take care of data |
| movement. |
| |
| Divisibility Testing (Small Integers) |
| 'mpz_divisible_ui_p' and 'mpz_congruent_ui_p' are the best |
| functions for testing whether an 'mpz_t' is divisible by an |
| individual small integer. They use an algorithm which is faster |
| than 'mpz_tdiv_ui', but which gives no useful information about the |
| actual remainder, only whether it's zero (or a particular value). |
| |
| However when testing divisibility by several small integers, it's |
| best to take a remainder modulo their product, to save |
| multi-precision operations. For instance to test whether a number |
| is divisible by any of 23, 29 or 31 take a remainder modulo |
| 23*29*31 = 20677 and then test that. |
| |
| The division functions like 'mpz_tdiv_q_ui' which give a quotient |
| as well as a remainder are generally a little slower than the |
| remainder-only functions like 'mpz_tdiv_ui'. If the quotient is |
| only rarely wanted then it's probably best to just take a remainder |
| and then go back and calculate the quotient if and when it's wanted |
| ('mpz_divexact_ui' can be used if the remainder is zero). |
| |
| Rational Arithmetic |
| The 'mpq' functions operate on 'mpq_t' values with no common |
| factors in the numerator and denominator. Common factors are |
| checked-for and cast out as necessary. In general, cancelling |
| factors every time is the best approach since it minimizes the |
| sizes for subsequent operations. |
| |
| However, applications that know something about the factorization |
| of the values they're working with might be able to avoid some of |
| the GCDs used for canonicalization, or swap them for divisions. |
| For example when multiplying by a prime it's enough to check for |
| factors of it in the denominator instead of doing a full GCD. Or |
| when forming a big product it might be known that very little |
| cancellation will be possible, and so canonicalization can be left |
| to the end. |
| |
| The 'mpq_numref' and 'mpq_denref' macros give access to the |
| numerator and denominator to do things outside the scope of the |
| supplied 'mpq' functions. *Note Applying Integer Functions::. |
| |
| The canonical form for rationals allows mixed-type 'mpq_t' and |
| integer additions or subtractions to be done directly with |
| multiples of the denominator. This will be somewhat faster than |
| 'mpq_add'. For example, |
| |
| /* mpq increment */ |
| mpz_add (mpq_numref(q), mpq_numref(q), mpq_denref(q)); |
| |
| /* mpq += unsigned long */ |
| mpz_addmul_ui (mpq_numref(q), mpq_denref(q), 123UL); |
| |
| /* mpq -= mpz */ |
| mpz_submul (mpq_numref(q), mpq_denref(q), z); |
| |
| Number Sequences |
| Functions like 'mpz_fac_ui', 'mpz_fib_ui' and 'mpz_bin_uiui' are |
| designed for calculating isolated values. If a range of values is |
| wanted it's probably best to call to get a starting point and |
| iterate from there. |
| |
| Text Input/Output |
| Hexadecimal or octal are suggested for input or output in text |
| form. Power-of-2 bases like these can be converted much more |
| efficiently than other bases, like decimal. For big numbers |
| there's usually nothing of particular interest to be seen in the |
| digits, so the base doesn't matter much. |
| |
| Maybe we can hope octal will one day become the normal base for |
| everyday use, as proposed by King Charles XII of Sweden and later |
| reformers. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Debugging, Next: Profiling, Prev: Efficiency, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.12 Debugging |
| ============== |
| |
| Stack Overflow |
| Depending on the system, a segmentation violation or bus error |
| might be the only indication of stack overflow. See |
| '--enable-alloca' choices in *note Build Options::, for how to |
| address this. |
| |
| In new enough versions of GCC, '-fstack-check' may be able to |
| ensure an overflow is recognised by the system before too much |
| damage is done, or '-fstack-limit-symbol' or |
| '-fstack-limit-register' may be able to add checking if the system |
| itself doesn't do any (*note Options for Code Generation: (gcc)Code |
| Gen Options.). These options must be added to the 'CFLAGS' used in |
| the GMP build (*note Build Options::), adding them just to an |
| application will have no effect. Note also they're a slowdown, |
| adding overhead to each function call and each stack allocation. |
| |
| Heap Problems |
| The most likely cause of application problems with GMP is heap |
| corruption. Failing to 'init' GMP variables will have |
| unpredictable effects, and corruption arising elsewhere in a |
| program may well affect GMP. Initializing GMP variables more than |
| once or failing to clear them will cause memory leaks. |
| |
| In all such cases a 'malloc' debugger is recommended. On a GNU or |
| BSD system the standard C library 'malloc' has some diagnostic |
| facilities, see *note Allocation Debugging: (libc)Allocation |
| Debugging, or 'man 3 malloc'. Other possibilities, in no |
| particular order, include |
| |
| <http://cs.ecs.baylor.edu/~donahoo/tools/ccmalloc/> |
| <http://dmalloc.com/> |
| <https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/MemProf> |
| |
| The GMP default allocation routines in 'memory.c' also have a |
| simple sentinel scheme which can be enabled with '#define DEBUG' in |
| that file. This is mainly designed for detecting buffer overruns |
| during GMP development, but might find other uses. |
| |
| Stack Backtraces |
| On some systems the compiler options GMP uses by default can |
| interfere with debugging. In particular on x86 and 68k systems |
| '-fomit-frame-pointer' is used and this generally inhibits stack |
| backtracing. Recompiling without such options may help while |
| debugging, though the usual caveats about it potentially moving a |
| memory problem or hiding a compiler bug will apply. |
| |
| GDB, the GNU Debugger |
| A sample '.gdbinit' is included in the distribution, showing how to |
| call some undocumented dump functions to print GMP variables from |
| within GDB. Note that these functions shouldn't be used in final |
| application code since they're undocumented and may be subject to |
| incompatible changes in future versions of GMP. |
| |
| Source File Paths |
| GMP has multiple source files with the same name, in different |
| directories. For example 'mpz', 'mpq' and 'mpf' each have an |
| 'init.c'. If the debugger can't already determine the right one it |
| may help to build with absolute paths on each C file. One way to |
| do that is to use a separate object directory with an absolute path |
| to the source directory. |
| |
| cd /my/build/dir |
| /my/source/dir/gmp-6.2.0/configure |
| |
| This works via 'VPATH', and might require GNU 'make'. Alternately |
| it might be possible to change the '.c.lo' rules appropriately. |
| |
| Assertion Checking |
| The build option '--enable-assert' is available to add some |
| consistency checks to the library (see *note Build Options::). |
| These are likely to be of limited value to most applications. |
| Assertion failures are just as likely to indicate memory corruption |
| as a library or compiler bug. |
| |
| Applications using the low-level 'mpn' functions, however, will |
| benefit from '--enable-assert' since it adds checks on the |
| parameters of most such functions, many of which have subtle |
| restrictions on their usage. Note however that only the generic C |
| code has checks, not the assembly code, so '--disable-assembly' |
| should be used for maximum checking. |
| |
| Temporary Memory Checking |
| The build option '--enable-alloca=debug' arranges that each block |
| of temporary memory in GMP is allocated with a separate call to |
| 'malloc' (or the allocation function set with |
| 'mp_set_memory_functions'). |
| |
| This can help a malloc debugger detect accesses outside the |
| intended bounds, or detect memory not released. In a normal build, |
| on the other hand, temporary memory is allocated in blocks which |
| GMP divides up for its own use, or may be allocated with a compiler |
| builtin 'alloca' which will go nowhere near any malloc debugger |
| hooks. |
| |
| Maximum Debuggability |
| To summarize the above, a GMP build for maximum debuggability would |
| be |
| |
| ./configure --disable-shared --enable-assert \ |
| --enable-alloca=debug --disable-assembly CFLAGS=-g |
| |
| For C++, add '--enable-cxx CXXFLAGS=-g'. |
| |
| Checker |
| The GCC checker (<https://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/checker/>) |
| can be used with GMP. It contains a stub library which means GMP |
| applications compiled with checker can use a normal GMP build. |
| |
| A build of GMP with checking within GMP itself can be made. This |
| will run very very slowly. On GNU/Linux for example, |
| |
| ./configure --disable-assembly CC=checkergcc |
| |
| '--disable-assembly' must be used, since the GMP assembly code |
| doesn't support the checking scheme. The GMP C++ features cannot |
| be used, since current versions of checker (0.9.9.1) don't yet |
| support the standard C++ library. |
| |
| Valgrind |
| Valgrind (<http://valgrind.org/>) is a memory checker for x86, ARM, |
| MIPS, PowerPC, and S/390. It translates and emulates machine |
| instructions to do strong checks for uninitialized data (at the |
| level of individual bits), memory accesses through bad pointers, |
| and memory leaks. |
| |
| Valgrind does not always support every possible instruction, in |
| particular ones recently added to an ISA. Valgrind might therefore |
| be incompatible with a recent GMP or even a less recent GMP which |
| is compiled using a recent GCC. |
| |
| GMP's assembly code sometimes promotes a read of the limbs to some |
| larger size, for efficiency. GMP will do this even at the start |
| and end of a multilimb operand, using naturally aligned operations |
| on the larger type. This may lead to benign reads outside of |
| allocated areas, triggering complaints from Valgrind. Valgrind's |
| option '--partial-loads-ok=yes' should help. |
| |
| Other Problems |
| Any suspected bug in GMP itself should be isolated to make sure |
| it's not an application problem, see *note Reporting Bugs::. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Profiling, Next: Autoconf, Prev: Debugging, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.13 Profiling |
| ============== |
| |
| Running a program under a profiler is a good way to find where it's |
| spending most time and where improvements can be best sought. The |
| profiling choices for a GMP build are as follows. |
| |
| '--disable-profiling' |
| The default is to add nothing special for profiling. |
| |
| It should be possible to just compile the mainline of a program |
| with '-p' and use 'prof' to get a profile consisting of timer-based |
| sampling of the program counter. Most of the GMP assembly code has |
| the necessary symbol information. |
| |
| This approach has the advantage of minimizing interference with |
| normal program operation, but on most systems the resolution of the |
| sampling is quite low (10 milliseconds for instance), requiring |
| long runs to get accurate information. |
| |
| '--enable-profiling=prof' |
| Build with support for the system 'prof', which means '-p' added to |
| the 'CFLAGS'. |
| |
| This provides call counting in addition to program counter |
| sampling, which allows the most frequently called routines to be |
| identified, and an average time spent in each routine to be |
| determined. |
| |
| The x86 assembly code has support for this option, but on other |
| processors the assembly routines will be as if compiled without |
| '-p' and therefore won't appear in the call counts. |
| |
| On some systems, such as GNU/Linux, '-p' in fact means '-pg' and in |
| this case '--enable-profiling=gprof' described below should be used |
| instead. |
| |
| '--enable-profiling=gprof' |
| Build with support for 'gprof', which means '-pg' added to the |
| 'CFLAGS'. |
| |
| This provides call graph construction in addition to call counting |
| and program counter sampling, which makes it possible to count |
| calls coming from different locations. For example the number of |
| calls to 'mpn_mul' from 'mpz_mul' versus the number from 'mpf_mul'. |
| The program counter sampling is still flat though, so only a total |
| time in 'mpn_mul' would be accumulated, not a separate amount for |
| each call site. |
| |
| The x86 assembly code has support for this option, but on other |
| processors the assembly routines will be as if compiled without |
| '-pg' and therefore not be included in the call counts. |
| |
| On x86 and m68k systems '-pg' and '-fomit-frame-pointer' are |
| incompatible, so the latter is omitted from the default flags in |
| that case, which might result in poorer code generation. |
| |
| Incidentally, it should be possible to use the 'gprof' program with |
| a plain '--enable-profiling=prof' build. But in that case only the |
| 'gprof -p' flat profile and call counts can be expected to be |
| valid, not the 'gprof -q' call graph. |
| |
| '--enable-profiling=instrument' |
| Build with the GCC option '-finstrument-functions' added to the |
| 'CFLAGS' (*note Options for Code Generation: (gcc)Code Gen |
| Options.). |
| |
| This inserts special instrumenting calls at the start and end of |
| each function, allowing exact timing and full call graph |
| construction. |
| |
| This instrumenting is not normally a standard system feature and |
| will require support from an external library, such as |
| |
| <https://sourceforge.net/projects/fnccheck/> |
| |
| This should be included in 'LIBS' during the GMP configure so that |
| test programs will link. For example, |
| |
| ./configure --enable-profiling=instrument LIBS=-lfc |
| |
| On a GNU system the C library provides dummy instrumenting |
| functions, so programs compiled with this option will link. In |
| this case it's only necessary to ensure the correct library is |
| added when linking an application. |
| |
| The x86 assembly code supports this option, but on other processors |
| the assembly routines will be as if compiled without |
| '-finstrument-functions' meaning time spent in them will |
| effectively be attributed to their caller. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Autoconf, Next: Emacs, Prev: Profiling, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.14 Autoconf |
| ============= |
| |
| Autoconf based applications can easily check whether GMP is installed. |
| The only thing to be noted is that GMP library symbols from version 3 |
| onwards have prefixes like '__gmpz'. The following therefore would be a |
| simple test, |
| |
| AC_CHECK_LIB(gmp, __gmpz_init) |
| |
| This just uses the default 'AC_CHECK_LIB' actions for found or not |
| found, but an application that must have GMP would want to generate an |
| error if not found. For example, |
| |
| AC_CHECK_LIB(gmp, __gmpz_init, , |
| [AC_MSG_ERROR([GNU MP not found, see https://gmplib.org/])]) |
| |
| If functions added in some particular version of GMP are required, |
| then one of those can be used when checking. For example 'mpz_mul_si' |
| was added in GMP 3.1, |
| |
| AC_CHECK_LIB(gmp, __gmpz_mul_si, , |
| [AC_MSG_ERROR( |
| [GNU MP not found, or not 3.1 or up, see https://gmplib.org/])]) |
| |
| An alternative would be to test the version number in 'gmp.h' using |
| say 'AC_EGREP_CPP'. That would make it possible to test the exact |
| version, if some particular sub-minor release is known to be necessary. |
| |
| In general it's recommended that applications should simply demand a |
| new enough GMP rather than trying to provide supplements for features |
| not available in past versions. |
| |
| Occasionally an application will need or want to know the size of a |
| type at configuration or preprocessing time, not just with 'sizeof' in |
| the code. This can be done in the normal way with 'mp_limb_t' etc, but |
| GMP 4.0 or up is best for this, since prior versions needed certain '-D' |
| defines on systems using a 'long long' limb. The following would suit |
| Autoconf 2.50 or up, |
| |
| AC_CHECK_SIZEOF(mp_limb_t, , [#include <gmp.h>]) |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Emacs, Prev: Autoconf, Up: GMP Basics |
| |
| 3.15 Emacs |
| ========== |
| |
| <C-h C-i> ('info-lookup-symbol') is a good way to find documentation on |
| C functions while editing (*note Info Documentation Lookup: (emacs)Info |
| Lookup.). |
| |
| The GMP manual can be included in such lookups by putting the |
| following in your '.emacs', |
| |
| (eval-after-load "info-look" |
| '(let ((mode-value (assoc 'c-mode (assoc 'symbol info-lookup-alist)))) |
| (setcar (nthcdr 3 mode-value) |
| (cons '("(gmp)Function Index" nil "^ -.* " "\\>") |
| (nth 3 mode-value))))) |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Reporting Bugs, Next: Integer Functions, Prev: GMP Basics, Up: Top |
| |
| 4 Reporting Bugs |
| **************** |
| |
| If you think you have found a bug in the GMP library, please investigate |
| it and report it. We have made this library available to you, and it is |
| not too much to ask you to report the bugs you find. |
| |
| Before you report a bug, check it's not already addressed in *note |
| Known Build Problems::, or perhaps *note Notes for Particular Systems::. |
| You may also want to check <https://gmplib.org/> for patches for this |
| release. |
| |
| Please include the following in any report, |
| |
| * The GMP version number, and if pre-packaged or patched then say so. |
| |
| * A test program that makes it possible for us to reproduce the bug. |
| Include instructions on how to run the program. |
| |
| * A description of what is wrong. If the results are incorrect, in |
| what way. If you get a crash, say so. |
| |
| * If you get a crash, include a stack backtrace from the debugger if |
| it's informative ('where' in 'gdb', or '$C' in 'adb'). |
| |
| * Please do not send core dumps, executables or 'strace's. |
| |
| * The 'configure' options you used when building GMP, if any. |
| |
| * The output from 'configure', as printed to stdout, with any options |
| used. |
| |
| * The name of the compiler and its version. For 'gcc', get the |
| version with 'gcc -v', otherwise perhaps 'what `which cc`', or |
| similar. |
| |
| * The output from running 'uname -a'. |
| |
| * The output from running './config.guess', and from running |
| './configfsf.guess' (might be the same). |
| |
| * If the bug is related to 'configure', then the compressed contents |
| of 'config.log'. |
| |
| * If the bug is related to an 'asm' file not assembling, then the |
| contents of 'config.m4' and the offending line or lines from the |
| temporary 'mpn/tmp-<file>.s'. |
| |
| Please make an effort to produce a self-contained report, with |
| something definite that can be tested or debugged. Vague queries or |
| piecemeal messages are difficult to act on and don't help the |
| development effort. |
| |
| It is not uncommon that an observed problem is actually due to a bug |
| in the compiler; the GMP code tends to explore interesting corners in |
| compilers. |
| |
| If your bug report is good, we will do our best to help you get a |
| corrected version of the library; if the bug report is poor, we won't do |
| anything about it (except maybe ask you to send a better report). |
| |
| Send your report to: <gmp-bugs@gmplib.org>. |
| |
| If you think something in this manual is unclear, or downright |
| incorrect, or if the language needs to be improved, please send a note |
| to the same address. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Functions, Next: Rational Number Functions, Prev: Reporting Bugs, Up: Top |
| |
| 5 Integer Functions |
| ******************* |
| |
| This chapter describes the GMP functions for performing integer |
| arithmetic. These functions start with the prefix 'mpz_'. |
| |
| GMP integers are stored in objects of type 'mpz_t'. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Initializing Integers:: |
| * Assigning Integers:: |
| * Simultaneous Integer Init & Assign:: |
| * Converting Integers:: |
| * Integer Arithmetic:: |
| * Integer Division:: |
| * Integer Exponentiation:: |
| * Integer Roots:: |
| * Number Theoretic Functions:: |
| * Integer Comparisons:: |
| * Integer Logic and Bit Fiddling:: |
| * I/O of Integers:: |
| * Integer Random Numbers:: |
| * Integer Import and Export:: |
| * Miscellaneous Integer Functions:: |
| * Integer Special Functions:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Initializing Integers, Next: Assigning Integers, Prev: Integer Functions, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.1 Initialization Functions |
| ============================ |
| |
| The functions for integer arithmetic assume that all integer objects are |
| initialized. You do that by calling the function 'mpz_init'. For |
| example, |
| |
| { |
| mpz_t integ; |
| mpz_init (integ); |
| ... |
| mpz_add (integ, ...); |
| ... |
| mpz_sub (integ, ...); |
| |
| /* Unless the program is about to exit, do ... */ |
| mpz_clear (integ); |
| } |
| |
| As you can see, you can store new values any number of times, once an |
| object is initialized. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_init (mpz_t X) |
| Initialize X, and set its value to 0. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_inits (mpz_t X, ...) |
| Initialize a NULL-terminated list of 'mpz_t' variables, and set |
| their values to 0. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_init2 (mpz_t X, mp_bitcnt_t N) |
| Initialize X, with space for N-bit numbers, and set its value to 0. |
| Calling this function instead of 'mpz_init' or 'mpz_inits' is never |
| necessary; reallocation is handled automatically by GMP when |
| needed. |
| |
| While N defines the initial space, X will grow automatically in the |
| normal way, if necessary, for subsequent values stored. |
| 'mpz_init2' makes it possible to avoid such reallocations if a |
| maximum size is known in advance. |
| |
| In preparation for an operation, GMP often allocates one limb more |
| than ultimately needed. To make sure GMP will not perform |
| reallocation for X, you need to add the number of bits in |
| 'mp_limb_t' to N. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_clear (mpz_t X) |
| Free the space occupied by X. Call this function for all 'mpz_t' |
| variables when you are done with them. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_clears (mpz_t X, ...) |
| Free the space occupied by a NULL-terminated list of 'mpz_t' |
| variables. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_realloc2 (mpz_t X, mp_bitcnt_t N) |
| Change the space allocated for X to N bits. The value in X is |
| preserved if it fits, or is set to 0 if not. |
| |
| Calling this function is never necessary; reallocation is handled |
| automatically by GMP when needed. But this function can be used to |
| increase the space for a variable in order to avoid repeated |
| automatic reallocations, or to decrease it to give memory back to |
| the heap. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Assigning Integers, Next: Simultaneous Integer Init & Assign, Prev: Initializing Integers, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.2 Assignment Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| These functions assign new values to already initialized integers (*note |
| Initializing Integers::). |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_set (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_set_ui (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int OP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_set_si (mpz_t ROP, signed long int OP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_set_d (mpz_t ROP, double OP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_set_q (mpz_t ROP, const mpq_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_set_f (mpz_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| Set the value of ROP from OP. |
| |
| 'mpz_set_d', 'mpz_set_q' and 'mpz_set_f' truncate OP to make it an |
| integer. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_set_str (mpz_t ROP, const char *STR, int BASE) |
| Set the value of ROP from STR, a null-terminated C string in base |
| BASE. White space is allowed in the string, and is simply ignored. |
| |
| The BASE may vary from 2 to 62, or if BASE is 0, then the leading |
| characters are used: '0x' and '0X' for hexadecimal, '0b' and '0B' |
| for binary, '0' for octal, or decimal otherwise. |
| |
| For bases up to 36, case is ignored; upper-case and lower-case |
| letters have the same value. For bases 37 to 62, upper-case letter |
| represent the usual 10..35 while lower-case letter represent |
| 36..61. |
| |
| This function returns 0 if the entire string is a valid number in |
| base BASE. Otherwise it returns -1. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_swap (mpz_t ROP1, mpz_t ROP2) |
| Swap the values ROP1 and ROP2 efficiently. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Simultaneous Integer Init & Assign, Next: Converting Integers, Prev: Assigning Integers, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.3 Combined Initialization and Assignment Functions |
| ==================================================== |
| |
| For convenience, GMP provides a parallel series of initialize-and-set |
| functions which initialize the output and then store the value there. |
| These functions' names have the form 'mpz_init_set...' |
| |
| Here is an example of using one: |
| |
| { |
| mpz_t pie; |
| mpz_init_set_str (pie, "3141592653589793238462643383279502884", 10); |
| ... |
| mpz_sub (pie, ...); |
| ... |
| mpz_clear (pie); |
| } |
| |
| Once the integer has been initialized by any of the 'mpz_init_set...' |
| functions, it can be used as the source or destination operand for the |
| ordinary integer functions. Don't use an initialize-and-set function on |
| a variable already initialized! |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_init_set (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_init_set_ui (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int OP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_init_set_si (mpz_t ROP, signed long int OP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_init_set_d (mpz_t ROP, double OP) |
| Initialize ROP with limb space and set the initial numeric value |
| from OP. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_init_set_str (mpz_t ROP, const char *STR, int |
| BASE) |
| Initialize ROP and set its value like 'mpz_set_str' (see its |
| documentation above for details). |
| |
| If the string is a correct base BASE number, the function returns |
| 0; if an error occurs it returns -1. ROP is initialized even if an |
| error occurs. (I.e., you have to call 'mpz_clear' for it.) |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Converting Integers, Next: Integer Arithmetic, Prev: Simultaneous Integer Init & Assign, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.4 Conversion Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| This section describes functions for converting GMP integers to standard |
| C types. Functions for converting _to_ GMP integers are described in |
| *note Assigning Integers:: and *note I/O of Integers::. |
| |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_get_ui (const mpz_t OP) |
| Return the value of OP as an 'unsigned long'. |
| |
| If OP is too big to fit an 'unsigned long' then just the least |
| significant bits that do fit are returned. The sign of OP is |
| ignored, only the absolute value is used. |
| |
| -- Function: signed long int mpz_get_si (const mpz_t OP) |
| If OP fits into a 'signed long int' return the value of OP. |
| Otherwise return the least significant part of OP, with the same |
| sign as OP. |
| |
| If OP is too big to fit in a 'signed long int', the returned result |
| is probably not very useful. To find out if the value will fit, |
| use the function 'mpz_fits_slong_p'. |
| |
| -- Function: double mpz_get_d (const mpz_t OP) |
| Convert OP to a 'double', truncating if necessary (i.e. rounding |
| towards zero). |
| |
| If the exponent from the conversion is too big, the result is |
| system dependent. An infinity is returned where available. A |
| hardware overflow trap may or may not occur. |
| |
| -- Function: double mpz_get_d_2exp (signed long int *EXP, const mpz_t |
| OP) |
| Convert OP to a 'double', truncating if necessary (i.e. rounding |
| towards zero), and returning the exponent separately. |
| |
| The return value is in the range 0.5<=abs(D)<1 and the exponent is |
| stored to '*EXP'. D * 2^EXP is the (truncated) OP value. If OP is |
| zero, the return is 0.0 and 0 is stored to '*EXP'. |
| |
| This is similar to the standard C 'frexp' function (*note |
| (libc)Normalization Functions::). |
| |
| -- Function: char * mpz_get_str (char *STR, int BASE, const mpz_t OP) |
| Convert OP to a string of digits in base BASE. The base argument |
| may vary from 2 to 62 or from -2 to -36. |
| |
| For BASE in the range 2..36, digits and lower-case letters are |
| used; for -2..-36, digits and upper-case letters are used; for |
| 37..62, digits, upper-case letters, and lower-case letters (in that |
| significance order) are used. |
| |
| If STR is 'NULL', the result string is allocated using the current |
| allocation function (*note Custom Allocation::). The block will be |
| 'strlen(str)+1' bytes, that being exactly enough for the string and |
| null-terminator. |
| |
| If STR is not 'NULL', it should point to a block of storage large |
| enough for the result, that being 'mpz_sizeinbase (OP, BASE) + 2'. |
| The two extra bytes are for a possible minus sign, and the |
| null-terminator. |
| |
| A pointer to the result string is returned, being either the |
| allocated block, or the given STR. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Arithmetic, Next: Integer Division, Prev: Converting Integers, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.5 Arithmetic Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_add (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpz_add_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, unsigned long |
| int OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 + OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_sub (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpz_sub_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, unsigned long |
| int OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpz_ui_sub (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int OP1, const |
| mpz_t OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 - OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_mul (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpz_mul_si (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, long int OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpz_mul_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, unsigned long |
| int OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 times OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_addmul (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t |
| OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpz_addmul_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, unsigned |
| long int OP2) |
| Set ROP to ROP + OP1 times OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_submul (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t |
| OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpz_submul_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, unsigned |
| long int OP2) |
| Set ROP to ROP - OP1 times OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_mul_2exp (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, mp_bitcnt_t |
| OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 times 2 raised to OP2. This operation can also be |
| defined as a left shift by OP2 bits. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_neg (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| Set ROP to -OP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_abs (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| Set ROP to the absolute value of OP. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Division, Next: Integer Exponentiation, Prev: Integer Arithmetic, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.6 Division Functions |
| ====================== |
| |
| Division is undefined if the divisor is zero. Passing a zero divisor to |
| the division or modulo functions (including the modular powering |
| functions 'mpz_powm' and 'mpz_powm_ui'), will cause an intentional |
| division by zero. This lets a program handle arithmetic exceptions in |
| these functions the same way as for normal C 'int' arithmetic. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_cdiv_q (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: void mpz_cdiv_r (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: void mpz_cdiv_qr (mpz_t Q, mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, const |
| mpz_t D) |
| |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_cdiv_q_ui (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_cdiv_r_ui (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_cdiv_qr_ui (mpz_t Q, mpz_t R, |
| const mpz_t N, unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_cdiv_ui (const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_cdiv_q_2exp (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, |
| mp_bitcnt_t B) |
| -- Function: void mpz_cdiv_r_2exp (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, |
| mp_bitcnt_t B) |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_fdiv_q (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: void mpz_fdiv_r (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: void mpz_fdiv_qr (mpz_t Q, mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, const |
| mpz_t D) |
| |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_fdiv_q_ui (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_fdiv_r_ui (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_fdiv_qr_ui (mpz_t Q, mpz_t R, |
| const mpz_t N, unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_fdiv_ui (const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_fdiv_q_2exp (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, |
| mp_bitcnt_t B) |
| -- Function: void mpz_fdiv_r_2exp (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, |
| mp_bitcnt_t B) |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_tdiv_q (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: void mpz_tdiv_r (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: void mpz_tdiv_qr (mpz_t Q, mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, const |
| mpz_t D) |
| |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_tdiv_q_ui (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_tdiv_r_ui (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_tdiv_qr_ui (mpz_t Q, mpz_t R, |
| const mpz_t N, unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_tdiv_ui (const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_tdiv_q_2exp (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, |
| mp_bitcnt_t B) |
| -- Function: void mpz_tdiv_r_2exp (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, |
| mp_bitcnt_t B) |
| |
| |
| Divide N by D, forming a quotient Q and/or remainder R. For the |
| '2exp' functions, D=2^B. The rounding is in three styles, each |
| suiting different applications. |
| |
| * 'cdiv' rounds Q up towards +infinity, and R will have the |
| opposite sign to D. The 'c' stands for "ceil". |
| |
| * 'fdiv' rounds Q down towards -infinity, and R will have the |
| same sign as D. The 'f' stands for "floor". |
| |
| * 'tdiv' rounds Q towards zero, and R will have the same sign as |
| N. The 't' stands for "truncate". |
| |
| In all cases Q and R will satisfy N=Q*D+R, and R will satisfy |
| 0<=abs(R)<abs(D). |
| |
| The 'q' functions calculate only the quotient, the 'r' functions |
| only the remainder, and the 'qr' functions calculate both. Note |
| that for 'qr' the same variable cannot be passed for both Q and R, |
| or results will be unpredictable. |
| |
| For the 'ui' variants the return value is the remainder, and in |
| fact returning the remainder is all the 'div_ui' functions do. For |
| 'tdiv' and 'cdiv' the remainder can be negative, so for those the |
| return value is the absolute value of the remainder. |
| |
| For the '2exp' variants the divisor is 2^B. These functions are |
| implemented as right shifts and bit masks, but of course they round |
| the same as the other functions. |
| |
| For positive N both 'mpz_fdiv_q_2exp' and 'mpz_tdiv_q_2exp' are |
| simple bitwise right shifts. For negative N, 'mpz_fdiv_q_2exp' is |
| effectively an arithmetic right shift treating N as twos complement |
| the same as the bitwise logical functions do, whereas |
| 'mpz_tdiv_q_2exp' effectively treats N as sign and magnitude. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_mod (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_mod_ui (mpz_t R, const mpz_t N, |
| unsigned long int D) |
| Set R to N 'mod' D. The sign of the divisor is ignored; the result |
| is always non-negative. |
| |
| 'mpz_mod_ui' is identical to 'mpz_fdiv_r_ui' above, returning the |
| remainder as well as setting R. See 'mpz_fdiv_ui' above if only |
| the return value is wanted. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_divexact (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: void mpz_divexact_ui (mpz_t Q, const mpz_t N, unsigned |
| long D) |
| Set Q to N/D. These functions produce correct results only when it |
| is known in advance that D divides N. |
| |
| These routines are much faster than the other division functions, |
| and are the best choice when exact division is known to occur, for |
| example reducing a rational to lowest terms. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_divisible_p (const mpz_t N, const mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: int mpz_divisible_ui_p (const mpz_t N, unsigned long int |
| D) |
| -- Function: int mpz_divisible_2exp_p (const mpz_t N, mp_bitcnt_t B) |
| Return non-zero if N is exactly divisible by D, or in the case of |
| 'mpz_divisible_2exp_p' by 2^B. |
| |
| N is divisible by D if there exists an integer Q satisfying N = |
| Q*D. Unlike the other division functions, D=0 is accepted and |
| following the rule it can be seen that only 0 is considered |
| divisible by 0. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_congruent_p (const mpz_t N, const mpz_t C, const |
| mpz_t D) |
| -- Function: int mpz_congruent_ui_p (const mpz_t N, unsigned long int |
| C, unsigned long int D) |
| -- Function: int mpz_congruent_2exp_p (const mpz_t N, const mpz_t C, |
| mp_bitcnt_t B) |
| Return non-zero if N is congruent to C modulo D, or in the case of |
| 'mpz_congruent_2exp_p' modulo 2^B. |
| |
| N is congruent to C mod D if there exists an integer Q satisfying N |
| = C + Q*D. Unlike the other division functions, D=0 is accepted |
| and following the rule it can be seen that N and C are considered |
| congruent mod 0 only when exactly equal. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Exponentiation, Next: Integer Roots, Prev: Integer Division, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.7 Exponentiation Functions |
| ============================ |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_powm (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t BASE, const mpz_t |
| EXP, const mpz_t MOD) |
| -- Function: void mpz_powm_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t BASE, unsigned |
| long int EXP, const mpz_t MOD) |
| Set ROP to (BASE raised to EXP) modulo MOD. |
| |
| Negative EXP is supported if the inverse BASE^(-1) mod MOD exists |
| (see 'mpz_invert' in *note Number Theoretic Functions::). If an |
| inverse doesn't exist then a divide by zero is raised. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_powm_sec (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t BASE, const |
| mpz_t EXP, const mpz_t MOD) |
| Set ROP to (BASE raised to EXP) modulo MOD. |
| |
| It is required that EXP > 0 and that MOD is odd. |
| |
| This function is designed to take the same time and have the same |
| cache access patterns for any two same-size arguments, assuming |
| that function arguments are placed at the same position and that |
| the machine state is identical upon function entry. This function |
| is intended for cryptographic purposes, where resilience to |
| side-channel attacks is desired. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_pow_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t BASE, unsigned |
| long int EXP) |
| -- Function: void mpz_ui_pow_ui (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int BASE, |
| unsigned long int EXP) |
| Set ROP to BASE raised to EXP. The case 0^0 yields 1. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Roots, Next: Number Theoretic Functions, Prev: Integer Exponentiation, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.8 Root Extraction Functions |
| ============================= |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_root (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP, unsigned long int |
| N) |
| Set ROP to the truncated integer part of the Nth root of OP. |
| Return non-zero if the computation was exact, i.e., if OP is ROP to |
| the Nth power. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_rootrem (mpz_t ROOT, mpz_t REM, const mpz_t U, |
| unsigned long int N) |
| Set ROOT to the truncated integer part of the Nth root of U. Set |
| REM to the remainder, U-ROOT**N. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_sqrt (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| Set ROP to the truncated integer part of the square root of OP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_sqrtrem (mpz_t ROP1, mpz_t ROP2, const mpz_t OP) |
| Set ROP1 to the truncated integer part of the square root of OP, |
| like 'mpz_sqrt'. Set ROP2 to the remainder OP-ROP1*ROP1, which |
| will be zero if OP is a perfect square. |
| |
| If ROP1 and ROP2 are the same variable, the results are undefined. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_perfect_power_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| Return non-zero if OP is a perfect power, i.e., if there exist |
| integers A and B, with B>1, such that OP equals A raised to the |
| power B. |
| |
| Under this definition both 0 and 1 are considered to be perfect |
| powers. Negative values of OP are accepted, but of course can only |
| be odd perfect powers. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_perfect_square_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| Return non-zero if OP is a perfect square, i.e., if the square root |
| of OP is an integer. Under this definition both 0 and 1 are |
| considered to be perfect squares. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Number Theoretic Functions, Next: Integer Comparisons, Prev: Integer Roots, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.9 Number Theoretic Functions |
| ============================== |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_probab_prime_p (const mpz_t N, int REPS) |
| Determine whether N is prime. Return 2 if N is definitely prime, |
| return 1 if N is probably prime (without being certain), or return |
| 0 if N is definitely non-prime. |
| |
| This function performs some trial divisions, a Baillie-PSW probable |
| prime test, then REPS-24 Miller-Rabin probabilistic primality |
| tests. A higher REPS value will reduce the chances of a non-prime |
| being identified as "probably prime". A composite number will be |
| identified as a prime with an asymptotic probability of less than |
| 4^(-REPS). Reasonable values of REPS are between 15 and 50. |
| |
| GMP versions up to and including 6.1.2 did not use the Baillie-PSW |
| primality test. In those older versions of GMP, this function |
| performed REPS Miller-Rabin tests. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_nextprime (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| Set ROP to the next prime greater than OP. |
| |
| This function uses a probabilistic algorithm to identify primes. |
| For practical purposes it's adequate, the chance of a composite |
| passing will be extremely small. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_gcd (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| Set ROP to the greatest common divisor of OP1 and OP2. The result |
| is always positive even if one or both input operands are negative. |
| Except if both inputs are zero; then this function defines gcd(0,0) |
| = 0. |
| |
| -- Function: unsigned long int mpz_gcd_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, |
| unsigned long int OP2) |
| Compute the greatest common divisor of OP1 and OP2. If ROP is not |
| 'NULL', store the result there. |
| |
| If the result is small enough to fit in an 'unsigned long int', it |
| is returned. If the result does not fit, 0 is returned, and the |
| result is equal to the argument OP1. Note that the result will |
| always fit if OP2 is non-zero. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_gcdext (mpz_t G, mpz_t S, mpz_t T, const mpz_t A, |
| const mpz_t B) |
| Set G to the greatest common divisor of A and B, and in addition |
| set S and T to coefficients satisfying A*S + B*T = G. The value in |
| G is always positive, even if one or both of A and B are negative |
| (or zero if both inputs are zero). The values in S and T are |
| chosen such that normally, abs(S) < abs(B) / (2 G) and abs(T) < |
| abs(A) / (2 G), and these relations define S and T uniquely. There |
| are a few exceptional cases: |
| |
| If abs(A) = abs(B), then S = 0, T = sgn(B). |
| |
| Otherwise, S = sgn(A) if B = 0 or abs(B) = 2 G, and T = sgn(B) if A |
| = 0 or abs(A) = 2 G. |
| |
| In all cases, S = 0 if and only if G = abs(B), i.e., if B divides A |
| or A = B = 0. |
| |
| If T or G is 'NULL' then that value is not computed. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_lcm (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpz_lcm_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, unsigned long |
| OP2) |
| Set ROP to the least common multiple of OP1 and OP2. ROP is always |
| positive, irrespective of the signs of OP1 and OP2. ROP will be |
| zero if either OP1 or OP2 is zero. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_invert (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t |
| OP2) |
| Compute the inverse of OP1 modulo OP2 and put the result in ROP. |
| If the inverse exists, the return value is non-zero and ROP will |
| satisfy 0 <= ROP < abs(OP2) (with ROP = 0 possible only when |
| abs(OP2) = 1, i.e., in the somewhat degenerate zero ring). If an |
| inverse doesn't exist the return value is zero and ROP is |
| undefined. The behaviour of this function is undefined when OP2 is |
| zero. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_jacobi (const mpz_t A, const mpz_t B) |
| Calculate the Jacobi symbol (A/B). This is defined only for B odd. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_legendre (const mpz_t A, const mpz_t P) |
| Calculate the Legendre symbol (A/P). This is defined only for P an |
| odd positive prime, and for such P it's identical to the Jacobi |
| symbol. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_kronecker (const mpz_t A, const mpz_t B) |
| -- Function: int mpz_kronecker_si (const mpz_t A, long B) |
| -- Function: int mpz_kronecker_ui (const mpz_t A, unsigned long B) |
| -- Function: int mpz_si_kronecker (long A, const mpz_t B) |
| -- Function: int mpz_ui_kronecker (unsigned long A, const mpz_t B) |
| Calculate the Jacobi symbol (A/B) with the Kronecker extension |
| (a/2)=(2/a) when a odd, or (a/2)=0 when a even. |
| |
| When B is odd the Jacobi symbol and Kronecker symbol are identical, |
| so 'mpz_kronecker_ui' etc can be used for mixed precision Jacobi |
| symbols too. |
| |
| For more information see Henri Cohen section 1.4.2 (*note |
| References::), or any number theory textbook. See also the example |
| program 'demos/qcn.c' which uses 'mpz_kronecker_ui'. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpz_remove (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP, const |
| mpz_t F) |
| Remove all occurrences of the factor F from OP and store the result |
| in ROP. The return value is how many such occurrences were |
| removed. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_fac_ui (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int N) |
| -- Function: void mpz_2fac_ui (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int N) |
| -- Function: void mpz_mfac_uiui (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int N, |
| unsigned long int M) |
| Set ROP to the factorial of N: 'mpz_fac_ui' computes the plain |
| factorial N!, 'mpz_2fac_ui' computes the double-factorial N!!, and |
| 'mpz_mfac_uiui' the M-multi-factorial N!^(M). |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_primorial_ui (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int N) |
| Set ROP to the primorial of N, i.e. the product of all positive |
| prime numbers <=N. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_bin_ui (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t N, unsigned long |
| int K) |
| -- Function: void mpz_bin_uiui (mpz_t ROP, unsigned long int N, |
| unsigned long int K) |
| Compute the binomial coefficient N over K and store the result in |
| ROP. Negative values of N are supported by 'mpz_bin_ui', using the |
| identity bin(-n,k) = (-1)^k * bin(n+k-1,k), see Knuth volume 1 |
| section 1.2.6 part G. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_fib_ui (mpz_t FN, unsigned long int N) |
| -- Function: void mpz_fib2_ui (mpz_t FN, mpz_t FNSUB1, unsigned long |
| int N) |
| 'mpz_fib_ui' sets FN to to F[n], the N'th Fibonacci number. |
| 'mpz_fib2_ui' sets FN to F[n], and FNSUB1 to F[n-1]. |
| |
| These functions are designed for calculating isolated Fibonacci |
| numbers. When a sequence of values is wanted it's best to start |
| with 'mpz_fib2_ui' and iterate the defining F[n+1]=F[n]+F[n-1] or |
| similar. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_lucnum_ui (mpz_t LN, unsigned long int N) |
| -- Function: void mpz_lucnum2_ui (mpz_t LN, mpz_t LNSUB1, unsigned long |
| int N) |
| 'mpz_lucnum_ui' sets LN to to L[n], the N'th Lucas number. |
| 'mpz_lucnum2_ui' sets LN to L[n], and LNSUB1 to L[n-1]. |
| |
| These functions are designed for calculating isolated Lucas |
| numbers. When a sequence of values is wanted it's best to start |
| with 'mpz_lucnum2_ui' and iterate the defining L[n+1]=L[n]+L[n-1] |
| or similar. |
| |
| The Fibonacci numbers and Lucas numbers are related sequences, so |
| it's never necessary to call both 'mpz_fib2_ui' and |
| 'mpz_lucnum2_ui'. The formulas for going from Fibonacci to Lucas |
| can be found in *note Lucas Numbers Algorithm::, the reverse is |
| straightforward too. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Comparisons, Next: Integer Logic and Bit Fiddling, Prev: Number Theoretic Functions, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.10 Comparison Functions |
| ========================= |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_cmp (const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| -- Function: int mpz_cmp_d (const mpz_t OP1, double OP2) |
| -- Macro: int mpz_cmp_si (const mpz_t OP1, signed long int OP2) |
| -- Macro: int mpz_cmp_ui (const mpz_t OP1, unsigned long int OP2) |
| Compare OP1 and OP2. Return a positive value if OP1 > OP2, zero if |
| OP1 = OP2, or a negative value if OP1 < OP2. |
| |
| 'mpz_cmp_ui' and 'mpz_cmp_si' are macros and will evaluate their |
| arguments more than once. 'mpz_cmp_d' can be called with an |
| infinity, but results are undefined for a NaN. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_cmpabs (const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| -- Function: int mpz_cmpabs_d (const mpz_t OP1, double OP2) |
| -- Function: int mpz_cmpabs_ui (const mpz_t OP1, unsigned long int OP2) |
| Compare the absolute values of OP1 and OP2. Return a positive |
| value if abs(OP1) > abs(OP2), zero if abs(OP1) = abs(OP2), or a |
| negative value if abs(OP1) < abs(OP2). |
| |
| 'mpz_cmpabs_d' can be called with an infinity, but results are |
| undefined for a NaN. |
| |
| -- Macro: int mpz_sgn (const mpz_t OP) |
| Return +1 if OP > 0, 0 if OP = 0, and -1 if OP < 0. |
| |
| This function is actually implemented as a macro. It evaluates its |
| argument multiple times. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Logic and Bit Fiddling, Next: I/O of Integers, Prev: Integer Comparisons, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.11 Logical and Bit Manipulation Functions |
| =========================================== |
| |
| These functions behave as if twos complement arithmetic were used |
| (although sign-magnitude is the actual implementation). The least |
| significant bit is number 0. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_and (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 bitwise-and OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_ior (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 bitwise inclusive-or OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_xor (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 bitwise exclusive-or OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_com (mpz_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| Set ROP to the one's complement of OP. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpz_popcount (const mpz_t OP) |
| If OP>=0, return the population count of OP, which is the number of |
| 1 bits in the binary representation. If OP<0, the number of 1s is |
| infinite, and the return value is the largest possible |
| 'mp_bitcnt_t'. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpz_hamdist (const mpz_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| If OP1 and OP2 are both >=0 or both <0, return the hamming distance |
| between the two operands, which is the number of bit positions |
| where OP1 and OP2 have different bit values. If one operand is >=0 |
| and the other <0 then the number of bits different is infinite, and |
| the return value is the largest possible 'mp_bitcnt_t'. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpz_scan0 (const mpz_t OP, mp_bitcnt_t |
| STARTING_BIT) |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpz_scan1 (const mpz_t OP, mp_bitcnt_t |
| STARTING_BIT) |
| Scan OP, starting from bit STARTING_BIT, towards more significant |
| bits, until the first 0 or 1 bit (respectively) is found. Return |
| the index of the found bit. |
| |
| If the bit at STARTING_BIT is already what's sought, then |
| STARTING_BIT is returned. |
| |
| If there's no bit found, then the largest possible 'mp_bitcnt_t' is |
| returned. This will happen in 'mpz_scan0' past the end of a |
| negative number, or 'mpz_scan1' past the end of a nonnegative |
| number. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_setbit (mpz_t ROP, mp_bitcnt_t BIT_INDEX) |
| Set bit BIT_INDEX in ROP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_clrbit (mpz_t ROP, mp_bitcnt_t BIT_INDEX) |
| Clear bit BIT_INDEX in ROP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_combit (mpz_t ROP, mp_bitcnt_t BIT_INDEX) |
| Complement bit BIT_INDEX in ROP. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_tstbit (const mpz_t OP, mp_bitcnt_t BIT_INDEX) |
| Test bit BIT_INDEX in OP and return 0 or 1 accordingly. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: I/O of Integers, Next: Integer Random Numbers, Prev: Integer Logic and Bit Fiddling, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.12 Input and Output Functions |
| =============================== |
| |
| Functions that perform input from a stdio stream, and functions that |
| output to a stdio stream, of 'mpz' numbers. Passing a 'NULL' pointer |
| for a STREAM argument to any of these functions will make them read from |
| 'stdin' and write to 'stdout', respectively. |
| |
| When using any of these functions, it is a good idea to include |
| 'stdio.h' before 'gmp.h', since that will allow 'gmp.h' to define |
| prototypes for these functions. |
| |
| See also *note Formatted Output:: and *note Formatted Input::. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpz_out_str (FILE *STREAM, int BASE, const mpz_t |
| OP) |
| Output OP on stdio stream STREAM, as a string of digits in base |
| BASE. The base argument may vary from 2 to 62 or from -2 to -36. |
| |
| For BASE in the range 2..36, digits and lower-case letters are |
| used; for -2..-36, digits and upper-case letters are used; for |
| 37..62, digits, upper-case letters, and lower-case letters (in that |
| significance order) are used. |
| |
| Return the number of bytes written, or if an error occurred, return |
| 0. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpz_inp_str (mpz_t ROP, FILE *STREAM, int BASE) |
| Input a possibly white-space preceded string in base BASE from |
| stdio stream STREAM, and put the read integer in ROP. |
| |
| The BASE may vary from 2 to 62, or if BASE is 0, then the leading |
| characters are used: '0x' and '0X' for hexadecimal, '0b' and '0B' |
| for binary, '0' for octal, or decimal otherwise. |
| |
| For bases up to 36, case is ignored; upper-case and lower-case |
| letters have the same value. For bases 37 to 62, upper-case letter |
| represent the usual 10..35 while lower-case letter represent |
| 36..61. |
| |
| Return the number of bytes read, or if an error occurred, return 0. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpz_out_raw (FILE *STREAM, const mpz_t OP) |
| Output OP on stdio stream STREAM, in raw binary format. The |
| integer is written in a portable format, with 4 bytes of size |
| information, and that many bytes of limbs. Both the size and the |
| limbs are written in decreasing significance order (i.e., in |
| big-endian). |
| |
| The output can be read with 'mpz_inp_raw'. |
| |
| Return the number of bytes written, or if an error occurred, return |
| 0. |
| |
| The output of this can not be read by 'mpz_inp_raw' from GMP 1, |
| because of changes necessary for compatibility between 32-bit and |
| 64-bit machines. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpz_inp_raw (mpz_t ROP, FILE *STREAM) |
| Input from stdio stream STREAM in the format written by |
| 'mpz_out_raw', and put the result in ROP. Return the number of |
| bytes read, or if an error occurred, return 0. |
| |
| This routine can read the output from 'mpz_out_raw' also from GMP |
| 1, in spite of changes necessary for compatibility between 32-bit |
| and 64-bit machines. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Random Numbers, Next: Integer Import and Export, Prev: I/O of Integers, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.13 Random Number Functions |
| ============================ |
| |
| The random number functions of GMP come in two groups; older function |
| that rely on a global state, and newer functions that accept a state |
| parameter that is read and modified. Please see the *note Random Number |
| Functions:: for more information on how to use and not to use random |
| number functions. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_urandomb (mpz_t ROP, gmp_randstate_t STATE, |
| mp_bitcnt_t N) |
| Generate a uniformly distributed random integer in the range 0 to |
| 2^N-1, inclusive. |
| |
| The variable STATE must be initialized by calling one of the |
| 'gmp_randinit' functions (*note Random State Initialization::) |
| before invoking this function. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_urandomm (mpz_t ROP, gmp_randstate_t STATE, const |
| mpz_t N) |
| Generate a uniform random integer in the range 0 to N-1, inclusive. |
| |
| The variable STATE must be initialized by calling one of the |
| 'gmp_randinit' functions (*note Random State Initialization::) |
| before invoking this function. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_rrandomb (mpz_t ROP, gmp_randstate_t STATE, |
| mp_bitcnt_t N) |
| Generate a random integer with long strings of zeros and ones in |
| the binary representation. Useful for testing functions and |
| algorithms, since this kind of random numbers have proven to be |
| more likely to trigger corner-case bugs. The random number will be |
| in the range 2^(N-1) to 2^N-1, inclusive. |
| |
| The variable STATE must be initialized by calling one of the |
| 'gmp_randinit' functions (*note Random State Initialization::) |
| before invoking this function. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_random (mpz_t ROP, mp_size_t MAX_SIZE) |
| Generate a random integer of at most MAX_SIZE limbs. The generated |
| random number doesn't satisfy any particular requirements of |
| randomness. Negative random numbers are generated when MAX_SIZE is |
| negative. |
| |
| This function is obsolete. Use 'mpz_urandomb' or 'mpz_urandomm' |
| instead. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_random2 (mpz_t ROP, mp_size_t MAX_SIZE) |
| Generate a random integer of at most MAX_SIZE limbs, with long |
| strings of zeros and ones in the binary representation. Useful for |
| testing functions and algorithms, since this kind of random numbers |
| have proven to be more likely to trigger corner-case bugs. |
| Negative random numbers are generated when MAX_SIZE is negative. |
| |
| This function is obsolete. Use 'mpz_rrandomb' instead. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Import and Export, Next: Miscellaneous Integer Functions, Prev: Integer Random Numbers, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.14 Integer Import and Export |
| ============================== |
| |
| 'mpz_t' variables can be converted to and from arbitrary words of binary |
| data with the following functions. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_import (mpz_t ROP, size_t COUNT, int ORDER, |
| size_t SIZE, int ENDIAN, size_t NAILS, const void *OP) |
| Set ROP from an array of word data at OP. |
| |
| The parameters specify the format of the data. COUNT many words |
| are read, each SIZE bytes. ORDER can be 1 for most significant |
| word first or -1 for least significant first. Within each word |
| ENDIAN can be 1 for most significant byte first, -1 for least |
| significant first, or 0 for the native endianness of the host CPU. |
| The most significant NAILS bits of each word are skipped, this can |
| be 0 to use the full words. |
| |
| There is no sign taken from the data, ROP will simply be a positive |
| integer. An application can handle any sign itself, and apply it |
| for instance with 'mpz_neg'. |
| |
| There are no data alignment restrictions on OP, any address is |
| allowed. |
| |
| Here's an example converting an array of 'unsigned long' data, most |
| significant element first, and host byte order within each value. |
| |
| unsigned long a[20]; |
| /* Initialize Z and A */ |
| mpz_import (z, 20, 1, sizeof(a[0]), 0, 0, a); |
| |
| This example assumes the full 'sizeof' bytes are used for data in |
| the given type, which is usually true, and certainly true for |
| 'unsigned long' everywhere we know of. However on Cray vector |
| systems it may be noted that 'short' and 'int' are always stored in |
| 8 bytes (and with 'sizeof' indicating that) but use only 32 or 46 |
| bits. The NAILS feature can account for this, by passing for |
| instance '8*sizeof(int)-INT_BIT'. |
| |
| -- Function: void * mpz_export (void *ROP, size_t *COUNTP, int ORDER, |
| size_t SIZE, int ENDIAN, size_t NAILS, const mpz_t OP) |
| Fill ROP with word data from OP. |
| |
| The parameters specify the format of the data produced. Each word |
| will be SIZE bytes and ORDER can be 1 for most significant word |
| first or -1 for least significant first. Within each word ENDIAN |
| can be 1 for most significant byte first, -1 for least significant |
| first, or 0 for the native endianness of the host CPU. The most |
| significant NAILS bits of each word are unused and set to zero, |
| this can be 0 to produce full words. |
| |
| The number of words produced is written to '*COUNTP', or COUNTP can |
| be 'NULL' to discard the count. ROP must have enough space for the |
| data, or if ROP is 'NULL' then a result array of the necessary size |
| is allocated using the current GMP allocation function (*note |
| Custom Allocation::). In either case the return value is the |
| destination used, either ROP or the allocated block. |
| |
| If OP is non-zero then the most significant word produced will be |
| non-zero. If OP is zero then the count returned will be zero and |
| nothing written to ROP. If ROP is 'NULL' in this case, no block is |
| allocated, just 'NULL' is returned. |
| |
| The sign of OP is ignored, just the absolute value is exported. An |
| application can use 'mpz_sgn' to get the sign and handle it as |
| desired. (*note Integer Comparisons::) |
| |
| There are no data alignment restrictions on ROP, any address is |
| allowed. |
| |
| When an application is allocating space itself the required size |
| can be determined with a calculation like the following. Since |
| 'mpz_sizeinbase' always returns at least 1, 'count' here will be at |
| least one, which avoids any portability problems with 'malloc(0)', |
| though if 'z' is zero no space at all is actually needed (or |
| written). |
| |
| numb = 8*size - nail; |
| count = (mpz_sizeinbase (z, 2) + numb-1) / numb; |
| p = malloc (count * size); |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Miscellaneous Integer Functions, Next: Integer Special Functions, Prev: Integer Import and Export, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.15 Miscellaneous Functions |
| ============================ |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_fits_ulong_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpz_fits_slong_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpz_fits_uint_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpz_fits_sint_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpz_fits_ushort_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpz_fits_sshort_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| Return non-zero iff the value of OP fits in an 'unsigned long int', |
| 'signed long int', 'unsigned int', 'signed int', 'unsigned short |
| int', or 'signed short int', respectively. Otherwise, return zero. |
| |
| -- Macro: int mpz_odd_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Macro: int mpz_even_p (const mpz_t OP) |
| Determine whether OP is odd or even, respectively. Return non-zero |
| if yes, zero if no. These macros evaluate their argument more than |
| once. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpz_sizeinbase (const mpz_t OP, int BASE) |
| Return the size of OP measured in number of digits in the given |
| BASE. BASE can vary from 2 to 62. The sign of OP is ignored, just |
| the absolute value is used. The result will be either exact or 1 |
| too big. If BASE is a power of 2, the result is always exact. If |
| OP is zero the return value is always 1. |
| |
| This function can be used to determine the space required when |
| converting OP to a string. The right amount of allocation is |
| normally two more than the value returned by 'mpz_sizeinbase', one |
| extra for a minus sign and one for the null-terminator. |
| |
| It will be noted that 'mpz_sizeinbase(OP,2)' can be used to locate |
| the most significant 1 bit in OP, counting from 1. (Unlike the |
| bitwise functions which start from 0, *Note Logical and Bit |
| Manipulation Functions: Integer Logic and Bit Fiddling.) |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Integer Special Functions, Prev: Miscellaneous Integer Functions, Up: Integer Functions |
| |
| 5.16 Special Functions |
| ====================== |
| |
| The functions in this section are for various special purposes. Most |
| applications will not need them. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_array_init (mpz_t INTEGER_ARRAY, mp_size_t |
| ARRAY_SIZE, mp_size_t FIXED_NUM_BITS) |
| *This is an obsolete function. Do not use it.* |
| |
| -- Function: void * _mpz_realloc (mpz_t INTEGER, mp_size_t NEW_ALLOC) |
| Change the space for INTEGER to NEW_ALLOC limbs. The value in |
| INTEGER is preserved if it fits, or is set to 0 if not. The return |
| value is not useful to applications and should be ignored. |
| |
| 'mpz_realloc2' is the preferred way to accomplish allocation |
| changes like this. 'mpz_realloc2' and '_mpz_realloc' are the same |
| except that '_mpz_realloc' takes its size in limbs. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpz_getlimbn (const mpz_t OP, mp_size_t N) |
| Return limb number N from OP. The sign of OP is ignored, just the |
| absolute value is used. The least significant limb is number 0. |
| |
| 'mpz_size' can be used to find how many limbs make up OP. |
| 'mpz_getlimbn' returns zero if N is outside the range 0 to |
| 'mpz_size(OP)-1'. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpz_size (const mpz_t OP) |
| Return the size of OP measured in number of limbs. If OP is zero, |
| the returned value will be zero. |
| |
| -- Function: const mp_limb_t * mpz_limbs_read (const mpz_t X) |
| Return a pointer to the limb array representing the absolute value |
| of X. The size of the array is 'mpz_size(X)'. Intended for read |
| access only. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t * mpz_limbs_write (mpz_t X, mp_size_t N) |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t * mpz_limbs_modify (mpz_t X, mp_size_t N) |
| Return a pointer to the limb array, intended for write access. The |
| array is reallocated as needed, to make room for N limbs. Requires |
| N > 0. The 'mpz_limbs_modify' function returns an array that holds |
| the old absolute value of X, while 'mpz_limbs_write' may destroy |
| the old value and return an array with unspecified contents. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_limbs_finish (mpz_t X, mp_size_t S) |
| Updates the internal size field of X. Used after writing to the |
| limb array pointer returned by 'mpz_limbs_write' or |
| 'mpz_limbs_modify' is completed. The array should contain abs(S) |
| valid limbs, representing the new absolute value for X, and the |
| sign of X is taken from the sign of S. This function never |
| reallocates X, so the limb pointer remains valid. |
| |
| void foo (mpz_t x) |
| { |
| mp_size_t n, i; |
| mp_limb_t *xp; |
| |
| n = mpz_size (x); |
| xp = mpz_limbs_modify (x, 2*n); |
| for (i = 0; i < n; i++) |
| xp[n+i] = xp[n-1-i]; |
| mpz_limbs_finish (x, mpz_sgn (x) < 0 ? - 2*n : 2*n); |
| } |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_srcptr mpz_roinit_n (mpz_t X, const mp_limb_t *XP, |
| mp_size_t XS) |
| Special initialization of X, using the given limb array and size. |
| X should be treated as read-only: it can be passed safely as input |
| to any mpz function, but not as an output. The array XP must point |
| to at least a readable limb, its size is abs(XS), and the sign of X |
| is the sign of XS. For convenience, the function returns X, but |
| cast to a const pointer type. |
| |
| void foo (mpz_t x) |
| { |
| static const mp_limb_t y[3] = { 0x1, 0x2, 0x3 }; |
| mpz_t tmp; |
| mpz_add (x, x, mpz_roinit_n (tmp, y, 3)); |
| } |
| |
| -- Macro: mpz_t MPZ_ROINIT_N (mp_limb_t *XP, mp_size_t XS) |
| This macro expands to an initializer which can be assigned to an |
| mpz_t variable. The limb array XP must point to at least a |
| readable limb, moreover, unlike the 'mpz_roinit_n' function, the |
| array must be normalized: if XS is non-zero, then 'XP[abs(XS)-1]' |
| must be non-zero. Intended primarily for constant values. Using |
| it for non-constant values requires a C compiler supporting C99. |
| |
| void foo (mpz_t x) |
| { |
| static const mp_limb_t ya[3] = { 0x1, 0x2, 0x3 }; |
| static const mpz_t y = MPZ_ROINIT_N ((mp_limb_t *) ya, 3); |
| |
| mpz_add (x, x, y); |
| } |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Rational Number Functions, Next: Floating-point Functions, Prev: Integer Functions, Up: Top |
| |
| 6 Rational Number Functions |
| *************************** |
| |
| This chapter describes the GMP functions for performing arithmetic on |
| rational numbers. These functions start with the prefix 'mpq_'. |
| |
| Rational numbers are stored in objects of type 'mpq_t'. |
| |
| All rational arithmetic functions assume operands have a canonical |
| form, and canonicalize their result. The canonical form means that the |
| denominator and the numerator have no common factors, and that the |
| denominator is positive. Zero has the unique representation 0/1. |
| |
| Pure assignment functions do not canonicalize the assigned variable. |
| It is the responsibility of the user to canonicalize the assigned |
| variable before any arithmetic operations are performed on that |
| variable. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_canonicalize (mpq_t OP) |
| Remove any factors that are common to the numerator and denominator |
| of OP, and make the denominator positive. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Initializing Rationals:: |
| * Rational Conversions:: |
| * Rational Arithmetic:: |
| * Comparing Rationals:: |
| * Applying Integer Functions:: |
| * I/O of Rationals:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Initializing Rationals, Next: Rational Conversions, Prev: Rational Number Functions, Up: Rational Number Functions |
| |
| 6.1 Initialization and Assignment Functions |
| =========================================== |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_init (mpq_t X) |
| Initialize X and set it to 0/1. Each variable should normally only |
| be initialized once, or at least cleared out (using the function |
| 'mpq_clear') between each initialization. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_inits (mpq_t X, ...) |
| Initialize a NULL-terminated list of 'mpq_t' variables, and set |
| their values to 0/1. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_clear (mpq_t X) |
| Free the space occupied by X. Make sure to call this function for |
| all 'mpq_t' variables when you are done with them. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_clears (mpq_t X, ...) |
| Free the space occupied by a NULL-terminated list of 'mpq_t' |
| variables. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_set (mpq_t ROP, const mpq_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpq_set_z (mpq_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| Assign ROP from OP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_set_ui (mpq_t ROP, unsigned long int OP1, |
| unsigned long int OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpq_set_si (mpq_t ROP, signed long int OP1, unsigned |
| long int OP2) |
| Set the value of ROP to OP1/OP2. Note that if OP1 and OP2 have |
| common factors, ROP has to be passed to 'mpq_canonicalize' before |
| any operations are performed on ROP. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpq_set_str (mpq_t ROP, const char *STR, int BASE) |
| Set ROP from a null-terminated string STR in the given BASE. |
| |
| The string can be an integer like "41" or a fraction like "41/152". |
| The fraction must be in canonical form (*note Rational Number |
| Functions::), or if not then 'mpq_canonicalize' must be called. |
| |
| The numerator and optional denominator are parsed the same as in |
| 'mpz_set_str' (*note Assigning Integers::). White space is allowed |
| in the string, and is simply ignored. The BASE can vary from 2 to |
| 62, or if BASE is 0 then the leading characters are used: '0x' or |
| '0X' for hex, '0b' or '0B' for binary, '0' for octal, or decimal |
| otherwise. Note that this is done separately for the numerator and |
| denominator, so for instance '0xEF/100' is 239/100, whereas |
| '0xEF/0x100' is 239/256. |
| |
| The return value is 0 if the entire string is a valid number, or -1 |
| if not. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_swap (mpq_t ROP1, mpq_t ROP2) |
| Swap the values ROP1 and ROP2 efficiently. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Rational Conversions, Next: Rational Arithmetic, Prev: Initializing Rationals, Up: Rational Number Functions |
| |
| 6.2 Conversion Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| -- Function: double mpq_get_d (const mpq_t OP) |
| Convert OP to a 'double', truncating if necessary (i.e. rounding |
| towards zero). |
| |
| If the exponent from the conversion is too big or too small to fit |
| a 'double' then the result is system dependent. For too big an |
| infinity is returned when available. For too small 0.0 is normally |
| returned. Hardware overflow, underflow and denorm traps may or may |
| not occur. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_set_d (mpq_t ROP, double OP) |
| -- Function: void mpq_set_f (mpq_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| Set ROP to the value of OP. There is no rounding, this conversion |
| is exact. |
| |
| -- Function: char * mpq_get_str (char *STR, int BASE, const mpq_t OP) |
| Convert OP to a string of digits in base BASE. The base argument |
| may vary from 2 to 62 or from -2 to -36. The string will be of the |
| form 'num/den', or if the denominator is 1 then just 'num'. |
| |
| For BASE in the range 2..36, digits and lower-case letters are |
| used; for -2..-36, digits and upper-case letters are used; for |
| 37..62, digits, upper-case letters, and lower-case letters (in that |
| significance order) are used. |
| |
| If STR is 'NULL', the result string is allocated using the current |
| allocation function (*note Custom Allocation::). The block will be |
| 'strlen(str)+1' bytes, that being exactly enough for the string and |
| null-terminator. |
| |
| If STR is not 'NULL', it should point to a block of storage large |
| enough for the result, that being |
| |
| mpz_sizeinbase (mpq_numref(OP), BASE) |
| + mpz_sizeinbase (mpq_denref(OP), BASE) + 3 |
| |
| The three extra bytes are for a possible minus sign, possible |
| slash, and the null-terminator. |
| |
| A pointer to the result string is returned, being either the |
| allocated block, or the given STR. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Rational Arithmetic, Next: Comparing Rationals, Prev: Rational Conversions, Up: Rational Number Functions |
| |
| 6.3 Arithmetic Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_add (mpq_t SUM, const mpq_t ADDEND1, const mpq_t |
| ADDEND2) |
| Set SUM to ADDEND1 + ADDEND2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_sub (mpq_t DIFFERENCE, const mpq_t MINUEND, const |
| mpq_t SUBTRAHEND) |
| Set DIFFERENCE to MINUEND - SUBTRAHEND. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_mul (mpq_t PRODUCT, const mpq_t MULTIPLIER, const |
| mpq_t MULTIPLICAND) |
| Set PRODUCT to MULTIPLIER times MULTIPLICAND. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_mul_2exp (mpq_t ROP, const mpq_t OP1, mp_bitcnt_t |
| OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 times 2 raised to OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_div (mpq_t QUOTIENT, const mpq_t DIVIDEND, const |
| mpq_t DIVISOR) |
| Set QUOTIENT to DIVIDEND/DIVISOR. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_div_2exp (mpq_t ROP, const mpq_t OP1, mp_bitcnt_t |
| OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 divided by 2 raised to OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_neg (mpq_t NEGATED_OPERAND, const mpq_t OPERAND) |
| Set NEGATED_OPERAND to -OPERAND. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_abs (mpq_t ROP, const mpq_t OP) |
| Set ROP to the absolute value of OP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_inv (mpq_t INVERTED_NUMBER, const mpq_t NUMBER) |
| Set INVERTED_NUMBER to 1/NUMBER. If the new denominator is zero, |
| this routine will divide by zero. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Comparing Rationals, Next: Applying Integer Functions, Prev: Rational Arithmetic, Up: Rational Number Functions |
| |
| 6.4 Comparison Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| -- Function: int mpq_cmp (const mpq_t OP1, const mpq_t OP2) |
| -- Function: int mpq_cmp_z (const mpq_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| Compare OP1 and OP2. Return a positive value if OP1 > OP2, zero if |
| OP1 = OP2, and a negative value if OP1 < OP2. |
| |
| To determine if two rationals are equal, 'mpq_equal' is faster than |
| 'mpq_cmp'. |
| |
| -- Macro: int mpq_cmp_ui (const mpq_t OP1, unsigned long int NUM2, |
| unsigned long int DEN2) |
| -- Macro: int mpq_cmp_si (const mpq_t OP1, long int NUM2, unsigned long |
| int DEN2) |
| Compare OP1 and NUM2/DEN2. Return a positive value if OP1 > |
| NUM2/DEN2, zero if OP1 = NUM2/DEN2, and a negative value if OP1 < |
| NUM2/DEN2. |
| |
| NUM2 and DEN2 are allowed to have common factors. |
| |
| These functions are implemented as a macros and evaluate their |
| arguments multiple times. |
| |
| -- Macro: int mpq_sgn (const mpq_t OP) |
| Return +1 if OP > 0, 0 if OP = 0, and -1 if OP < 0. |
| |
| This function is actually implemented as a macro. It evaluates its |
| argument multiple times. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpq_equal (const mpq_t OP1, const mpq_t OP2) |
| Return non-zero if OP1 and OP2 are equal, zero if they are |
| non-equal. Although 'mpq_cmp' can be used for the same purpose, |
| this function is much faster. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Applying Integer Functions, Next: I/O of Rationals, Prev: Comparing Rationals, Up: Rational Number Functions |
| |
| 6.5 Applying Integer Functions to Rationals |
| =========================================== |
| |
| The set of 'mpq' functions is quite small. In particular, there are few |
| functions for either input or output. The following functions give |
| direct access to the numerator and denominator of an 'mpq_t'. |
| |
| Note that if an assignment to the numerator and/or denominator could |
| take an 'mpq_t' out of the canonical form described at the start of this |
| chapter (*note Rational Number Functions::) then 'mpq_canonicalize' must |
| be called before any other 'mpq' functions are applied to that 'mpq_t'. |
| |
| -- Macro: mpz_t mpq_numref (const mpq_t OP) |
| -- Macro: mpz_t mpq_denref (const mpq_t OP) |
| Return a reference to the numerator and denominator of OP, |
| respectively. The 'mpz' functions can be used on the result of |
| these macros. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_get_num (mpz_t NUMERATOR, const mpq_t RATIONAL) |
| -- Function: void mpq_get_den (mpz_t DENOMINATOR, const mpq_t RATIONAL) |
| -- Function: void mpq_set_num (mpq_t RATIONAL, const mpz_t NUMERATOR) |
| -- Function: void mpq_set_den (mpq_t RATIONAL, const mpz_t DENOMINATOR) |
| Get or set the numerator or denominator of a rational. These |
| functions are equivalent to calling 'mpz_set' with an appropriate |
| 'mpq_numref' or 'mpq_denref'. Direct use of 'mpq_numref' or |
| 'mpq_denref' is recommended instead of these functions. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: I/O of Rationals, Prev: Applying Integer Functions, Up: Rational Number Functions |
| |
| 6.6 Input and Output Functions |
| ============================== |
| |
| Functions that perform input from a stdio stream, and functions that |
| output to a stdio stream, of 'mpq' numbers. Passing a 'NULL' pointer |
| for a STREAM argument to any of these functions will make them read from |
| 'stdin' and write to 'stdout', respectively. |
| |
| When using any of these functions, it is a good idea to include |
| 'stdio.h' before 'gmp.h', since that will allow 'gmp.h' to define |
| prototypes for these functions. |
| |
| See also *note Formatted Output:: and *note Formatted Input::. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpq_out_str (FILE *STREAM, int BASE, const mpq_t |
| OP) |
| Output OP on stdio stream STREAM, as a string of digits in base |
| BASE. The base argument may vary from 2 to 62 or from -2 to -36. |
| Output is in the form 'num/den' or if the denominator is 1 then |
| just 'num'. |
| |
| For BASE in the range 2..36, digits and lower-case letters are |
| used; for -2..-36, digits and upper-case letters are used; for |
| 37..62, digits, upper-case letters, and lower-case letters (in that |
| significance order) are used. |
| |
| Return the number of bytes written, or if an error occurred, return |
| 0. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpq_inp_str (mpq_t ROP, FILE *STREAM, int BASE) |
| Read a string of digits from STREAM and convert them to a rational |
| in ROP. Any initial white-space characters are read and discarded. |
| Return the number of characters read (including white space), or 0 |
| if a rational could not be read. |
| |
| The input can be a fraction like '17/63' or just an integer like |
| '123'. Reading stops at the first character not in this form, and |
| white space is not permitted within the string. If the input might |
| not be in canonical form, then 'mpq_canonicalize' must be called |
| (*note Rational Number Functions::). |
| |
| The BASE can be between 2 and 62, or can be 0 in which case the |
| leading characters of the string determine the base, '0x' or '0X' |
| for hexadecimal, '0b' and '0B' for binary, '0' for octal, or |
| decimal otherwise. The leading characters are examined separately |
| for the numerator and denominator of a fraction, so for instance |
| '0x10/11' is 16/11, whereas '0x10/0x11' is 16/17. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Floating-point Functions, Next: Low-level Functions, Prev: Rational Number Functions, Up: Top |
| |
| 7 Floating-point Functions |
| ************************** |
| |
| GMP floating point numbers are stored in objects of type 'mpf_t' and |
| functions operating on them have an 'mpf_' prefix. |
| |
| The mantissa of each float has a user-selectable precision, in |
| practice only limited by available memory. Each variable has its own |
| precision, and that can be increased or decreased at any time. This |
| selectable precision is a minimum value, GMP rounds it up to a whole |
| limb. |
| |
| The accuracy of a calculation is determined by the priorly set |
| precision of the destination variable and the numeric values of the |
| input variables. Input variables' set precisions do not affect |
| calculations (except indirectly as their values might have been affected |
| when they were assigned). |
| |
| The exponent of each float has fixed precision, one machine word on |
| most systems. In the current implementation the exponent is a count of |
| limbs, so for example on a 32-bit system this means a range of roughly |
| 2^-68719476768 to 2^68719476736, or on a 64-bit system this will be much |
| greater. Note however that 'mpf_get_str' can only return an exponent |
| which fits an 'mp_exp_t' and currently 'mpf_set_str' doesn't accept |
| exponents bigger than a 'long'. |
| |
| Each variable keeps track of the mantissa data actually in use. This |
| means that if a float is exactly represented in only a few bits then |
| only those bits will be used in a calculation, even if the variable's |
| selected precision is high. This is a performance optimization; it does |
| not affect the numeric results. |
| |
| Internally, GMP sometimes calculates with higher precision than that |
| of the destination variable in order to limit errors. Final results are |
| always truncated to the destination variable's precision. |
| |
| The mantissa is stored in binary. One consequence of this is that |
| decimal fractions like 0.1 cannot be represented exactly. The same is |
| true of plain IEEE 'double' floats. This makes both highly unsuitable |
| for calculations involving money or other values that should be exact |
| decimal fractions. (Suitably scaled integers, or perhaps rationals, are |
| better choices.) |
| |
| The 'mpf' functions and variables have no special notion of infinity |
| or not-a-number, and applications must take care not to overflow the |
| exponent or results will be unpredictable. |
| |
| Note that the 'mpf' functions are _not_ intended as a smooth |
| extension to IEEE P754 arithmetic. In particular results obtained on |
| one computer often differ from the results on a computer with a |
| different word size. |
| |
| New projects should consider using the GMP extension library MPFR |
| (<http://mpfr.org>) instead. MPFR provides well-defined precision and |
| accurate rounding, and thereby naturally extends IEEE P754. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Initializing Floats:: |
| * Assigning Floats:: |
| * Simultaneous Float Init & Assign:: |
| * Converting Floats:: |
| * Float Arithmetic:: |
| * Float Comparison:: |
| * I/O of Floats:: |
| * Miscellaneous Float Functions:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Initializing Floats, Next: Assigning Floats, Prev: Floating-point Functions, Up: Floating-point Functions |
| |
| 7.1 Initialization Functions |
| ============================ |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_set_default_prec (mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| Set the default precision to be *at least* PREC bits. All |
| subsequent calls to 'mpf_init' will use this precision, but |
| previously initialized variables are unaffected. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpf_get_default_prec (void) |
| Return the default precision actually used. |
| |
| An 'mpf_t' object must be initialized before storing the first value |
| in it. The functions 'mpf_init' and 'mpf_init2' are used for that |
| purpose. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_init (mpf_t X) |
| Initialize X to 0. Normally, a variable should be initialized once |
| only or at least be cleared, using 'mpf_clear', between |
| initializations. The precision of X is undefined unless a default |
| precision has already been established by a call to |
| 'mpf_set_default_prec'. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_init2 (mpf_t X, mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| Initialize X to 0 and set its precision to be *at least* PREC bits. |
| Normally, a variable should be initialized once only or at least be |
| cleared, using 'mpf_clear', between initializations. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_inits (mpf_t X, ...) |
| Initialize a NULL-terminated list of 'mpf_t' variables, and set |
| their values to 0. The precision of the initialized variables is |
| undefined unless a default precision has already been established |
| by a call to 'mpf_set_default_prec'. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_clear (mpf_t X) |
| Free the space occupied by X. Make sure to call this function for |
| all 'mpf_t' variables when you are done with them. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_clears (mpf_t X, ...) |
| Free the space occupied by a NULL-terminated list of 'mpf_t' |
| variables. |
| |
| Here is an example on how to initialize floating-point variables: |
| { |
| mpf_t x, y; |
| mpf_init (x); /* use default precision */ |
| mpf_init2 (y, 256); /* precision _at least_ 256 bits */ |
| ... |
| /* Unless the program is about to exit, do ... */ |
| mpf_clear (x); |
| mpf_clear (y); |
| } |
| |
| The following three functions are useful for changing the precision |
| during a calculation. A typical use would be for adjusting the |
| precision gradually in iterative algorithms like Newton-Raphson, making |
| the computation precision closely match the actual accurate part of the |
| numbers. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpf_get_prec (const mpf_t OP) |
| Return the current precision of OP, in bits. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_set_prec (mpf_t ROP, mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| Set the precision of ROP to be *at least* PREC bits. The value in |
| ROP will be truncated to the new precision. |
| |
| This function requires a call to 'realloc', and so should not be |
| used in a tight loop. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_set_prec_raw (mpf_t ROP, mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| Set the precision of ROP to be *at least* PREC bits, without |
| changing the memory allocated. |
| |
| PREC must be no more than the allocated precision for ROP, that |
| being the precision when ROP was initialized, or in the most recent |
| 'mpf_set_prec'. |
| |
| The value in ROP is unchanged, and in particular if it had a higher |
| precision than PREC it will retain that higher precision. New |
| values written to ROP will use the new PREC. |
| |
| Before calling 'mpf_clear' or the full 'mpf_set_prec', another |
| 'mpf_set_prec_raw' call must be made to restore ROP to its original |
| allocated precision. Failing to do so will have unpredictable |
| results. |
| |
| 'mpf_get_prec' can be used before 'mpf_set_prec_raw' to get the |
| original allocated precision. After 'mpf_set_prec_raw' it reflects |
| the PREC value set. |
| |
| 'mpf_set_prec_raw' is an efficient way to use an 'mpf_t' variable |
| at different precisions during a calculation, perhaps to gradually |
| increase precision in an iteration, or just to use various |
| different precisions for different purposes during a calculation. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Assigning Floats, Next: Simultaneous Float Init & Assign, Prev: Initializing Floats, Up: Floating-point Functions |
| |
| 7.2 Assignment Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| These functions assign new values to already initialized floats (*note |
| Initializing Floats::). |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_set (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_set_ui (mpf_t ROP, unsigned long int OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_set_si (mpf_t ROP, signed long int OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_set_d (mpf_t ROP, double OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_set_z (mpf_t ROP, const mpz_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_set_q (mpf_t ROP, const mpq_t OP) |
| Set the value of ROP from OP. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpf_set_str (mpf_t ROP, const char *STR, int BASE) |
| Set the value of ROP from the string in STR. The string is of the |
| form 'M@N' or, if the base is 10 or less, alternatively 'MeN'. 'M' |
| is the mantissa and 'N' is the exponent. The mantissa is always in |
| the specified base. The exponent is either in the specified base |
| or, if BASE is negative, in decimal. The decimal point expected is |
| taken from the current locale, on systems providing 'localeconv'. |
| |
| The argument BASE may be in the ranges 2 to 62, or -62 to -2. |
| Negative values are used to specify that the exponent is in |
| decimal. |
| |
| For bases up to 36, case is ignored; upper-case and lower-case |
| letters have the same value; for bases 37 to 62, upper-case letter |
| represent the usual 10..35 while lower-case letter represent |
| 36..61. |
| |
| Unlike the corresponding 'mpz' function, the base will not be |
| determined from the leading characters of the string if BASE is 0. |
| This is so that numbers like '0.23' are not interpreted as octal. |
| |
| White space is allowed in the string, and is simply ignored. [This |
| is not really true; white-space is ignored in the beginning of the |
| string and within the mantissa, but not in other places, such as |
| after a minus sign or in the exponent. We are considering changing |
| the definition of this function, making it fail when there is any |
| white-space in the input, since that makes a lot of sense. Please |
| tell us your opinion about this change. Do you really want it to |
| accept "3 14" as meaning 314 as it does now?] |
| |
| This function returns 0 if the entire string is a valid number in |
| base BASE. Otherwise it returns -1. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_swap (mpf_t ROP1, mpf_t ROP2) |
| Swap ROP1 and ROP2 efficiently. Both the values and the precisions |
| of the two variables are swapped. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Simultaneous Float Init & Assign, Next: Converting Floats, Prev: Assigning Floats, Up: Floating-point Functions |
| |
| 7.3 Combined Initialization and Assignment Functions |
| ==================================================== |
| |
| For convenience, GMP provides a parallel series of initialize-and-set |
| functions which initialize the output and then store the value there. |
| These functions' names have the form 'mpf_init_set...' |
| |
| Once the float has been initialized by any of the 'mpf_init_set...' |
| functions, it can be used as the source or destination operand for the |
| ordinary float functions. Don't use an initialize-and-set function on a |
| variable already initialized! |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_init_set (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_init_set_ui (mpf_t ROP, unsigned long int OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_init_set_si (mpf_t ROP, signed long int OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_init_set_d (mpf_t ROP, double OP) |
| Initialize ROP and set its value from OP. |
| |
| The precision of ROP will be taken from the active default |
| precision, as set by 'mpf_set_default_prec'. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpf_init_set_str (mpf_t ROP, const char *STR, int |
| BASE) |
| Initialize ROP and set its value from the string in STR. See |
| 'mpf_set_str' above for details on the assignment operation. |
| |
| Note that ROP is initialized even if an error occurs. (I.e., you |
| have to call 'mpf_clear' for it.) |
| |
| The precision of ROP will be taken from the active default |
| precision, as set by 'mpf_set_default_prec'. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Converting Floats, Next: Float Arithmetic, Prev: Simultaneous Float Init & Assign, Up: Floating-point Functions |
| |
| 7.4 Conversion Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| -- Function: double mpf_get_d (const mpf_t OP) |
| Convert OP to a 'double', truncating if necessary (i.e. rounding |
| towards zero). |
| |
| If the exponent in OP is too big or too small to fit a 'double' |
| then the result is system dependent. For too big an infinity is |
| returned when available. For too small 0.0 is normally returned. |
| Hardware overflow, underflow and denorm traps may or may not occur. |
| |
| -- Function: double mpf_get_d_2exp (signed long int *EXP, const mpf_t |
| OP) |
| Convert OP to a 'double', truncating if necessary (i.e. rounding |
| towards zero), and with an exponent returned separately. |
| |
| The return value is in the range 0.5<=abs(D)<1 and the exponent is |
| stored to '*EXP'. D * 2^EXP is the (truncated) OP value. If OP is |
| zero, the return is 0.0 and 0 is stored to '*EXP'. |
| |
| This is similar to the standard C 'frexp' function (*note |
| (libc)Normalization Functions::). |
| |
| -- Function: long mpf_get_si (const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: unsigned long mpf_get_ui (const mpf_t OP) |
| Convert OP to a 'long' or 'unsigned long', truncating any fraction |
| part. If OP is too big for the return type, the result is |
| undefined. |
| |
| See also 'mpf_fits_slong_p' and 'mpf_fits_ulong_p' (*note |
| Miscellaneous Float Functions::). |
| |
| -- Function: char * mpf_get_str (char *STR, mp_exp_t *EXPPTR, int BASE, |
| size_t N_DIGITS, const mpf_t OP) |
| Convert OP to a string of digits in base BASE. The base argument |
| may vary from 2 to 62 or from -2 to -36. Up to N_DIGITS digits |
| will be generated. Trailing zeros are not returned. No more |
| digits than can be accurately represented by OP are ever generated. |
| If N_DIGITS is 0 then that accurate maximum number of digits are |
| generated. |
| |
| For BASE in the range 2..36, digits and lower-case letters are |
| used; for -2..-36, digits and upper-case letters are used; for |
| 37..62, digits, upper-case letters, and lower-case letters (in that |
| significance order) are used. |
| |
| If STR is 'NULL', the result string is allocated using the current |
| allocation function (*note Custom Allocation::). The block will be |
| 'strlen(str)+1' bytes, that being exactly enough for the string and |
| null-terminator. |
| |
| If STR is not 'NULL', it should point to a block of N_DIGITS + 2 |
| bytes, that being enough for the mantissa, a possible minus sign, |
| and a null-terminator. When N_DIGITS is 0 to get all significant |
| digits, an application won't be able to know the space required, |
| and STR should be 'NULL' in that case. |
| |
| The generated string is a fraction, with an implicit radix point |
| immediately to the left of the first digit. The applicable |
| exponent is written through the EXPPTR pointer. For example, the |
| number 3.1416 would be returned as string "31416" and exponent 1. |
| |
| When OP is zero, an empty string is produced and the exponent |
| returned is 0. |
| |
| A pointer to the result string is returned, being either the |
| allocated block or the given STR. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Float Arithmetic, Next: Float Comparison, Prev: Converting Floats, Up: Floating-point Functions |
| |
| 7.5 Arithmetic Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_add (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, const mpf_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpf_add_ui (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, unsigned long |
| int OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 + OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_sub (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, const mpf_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpf_ui_sub (mpf_t ROP, unsigned long int OP1, const |
| mpf_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpf_sub_ui (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, unsigned long |
| int OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 - OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_mul (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, const mpf_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpf_mul_ui (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, unsigned long |
| int OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 times OP2. |
| |
| Division is undefined if the divisor is zero, and passing a zero |
| divisor to the divide functions will make these functions intentionally |
| divide by zero. This lets the user handle arithmetic exceptions in |
| these functions in the same manner as other arithmetic exceptions. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_div (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, const mpf_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpf_ui_div (mpf_t ROP, unsigned long int OP1, const |
| mpf_t OP2) |
| -- Function: void mpf_div_ui (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, unsigned long |
| int OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1/OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_sqrt (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_sqrt_ui (mpf_t ROP, unsigned long int OP) |
| Set ROP to the square root of OP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_pow_ui (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, unsigned long |
| int OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 raised to the power OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_neg (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| Set ROP to -OP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_abs (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| Set ROP to the absolute value of OP. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_mul_2exp (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, mp_bitcnt_t |
| OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 times 2 raised to OP2. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_div_2exp (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, mp_bitcnt_t |
| OP2) |
| Set ROP to OP1 divided by 2 raised to OP2. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Float Comparison, Next: I/O of Floats, Prev: Float Arithmetic, Up: Floating-point Functions |
| |
| 7.6 Comparison Functions |
| ======================== |
| |
| -- Function: int mpf_cmp (const mpf_t OP1, const mpf_t OP2) |
| -- Function: int mpf_cmp_z (const mpf_t OP1, const mpz_t OP2) |
| -- Function: int mpf_cmp_d (const mpf_t OP1, double OP2) |
| -- Function: int mpf_cmp_ui (const mpf_t OP1, unsigned long int OP2) |
| -- Function: int mpf_cmp_si (const mpf_t OP1, signed long int OP2) |
| Compare OP1 and OP2. Return a positive value if OP1 > OP2, zero if |
| OP1 = OP2, and a negative value if OP1 < OP2. |
| |
| 'mpf_cmp_d' can be called with an infinity, but results are |
| undefined for a NaN. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpf_eq (const mpf_t OP1, const mpf_t OP2, mp_bitcnt_t |
| op3) |
| *This function is mathematically ill-defined and should not be |
| used.* |
| |
| Return non-zero if the first OP3 bits of OP1 and OP2 are equal, |
| zero otherwise. Note that numbers like e.g., 256 (binary |
| 100000000) and 255 (binary 11111111) will never be equal by this |
| function's measure, and furthermore that 0 will only be equal to |
| itself. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_reldiff (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP1, const mpf_t |
| OP2) |
| Compute the relative difference between OP1 and OP2 and store the |
| result in ROP. This is abs(OP1-OP2)/OP1. |
| |
| -- Macro: int mpf_sgn (const mpf_t OP) |
| Return +1 if OP > 0, 0 if OP = 0, and -1 if OP < 0. |
| |
| This function is actually implemented as a macro. It evaluates its |
| argument multiple times. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: I/O of Floats, Next: Miscellaneous Float Functions, Prev: Float Comparison, Up: Floating-point Functions |
| |
| 7.7 Input and Output Functions |
| ============================== |
| |
| Functions that perform input from a stdio stream, and functions that |
| output to a stdio stream, of 'mpf' numbers. Passing a 'NULL' pointer |
| for a STREAM argument to any of these functions will make them read from |
| 'stdin' and write to 'stdout', respectively. |
| |
| When using any of these functions, it is a good idea to include |
| 'stdio.h' before 'gmp.h', since that will allow 'gmp.h' to define |
| prototypes for these functions. |
| |
| See also *note Formatted Output:: and *note Formatted Input::. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpf_out_str (FILE *STREAM, int BASE, size_t |
| N_DIGITS, const mpf_t OP) |
| Print OP to STREAM, as a string of digits. Return the number of |
| bytes written, or if an error occurred, return 0. |
| |
| The mantissa is prefixed with an '0.' and is in the given BASE, |
| which may vary from 2 to 62 or from -2 to -36. An exponent is then |
| printed, separated by an 'e', or if the base is greater than 10 |
| then by an '@'. The exponent is always in decimal. The decimal |
| point follows the current locale, on systems providing |
| 'localeconv'. |
| |
| For BASE in the range 2..36, digits and lower-case letters are |
| used; for -2..-36, digits and upper-case letters are used; for |
| 37..62, digits, upper-case letters, and lower-case letters (in that |
| significance order) are used. |
| |
| Up to N_DIGITS will be printed from the mantissa, except that no |
| more digits than are accurately representable by OP will be |
| printed. N_DIGITS can be 0 to select that accurate maximum. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpf_inp_str (mpf_t ROP, FILE *STREAM, int BASE) |
| Read a string in base BASE from STREAM, and put the read float in |
| ROP. The string is of the form 'M@N' or, if the base is 10 or |
| less, alternatively 'MeN'. 'M' is the mantissa and 'N' is the |
| exponent. The mantissa is always in the specified base. The |
| exponent is either in the specified base or, if BASE is negative, |
| in decimal. The decimal point expected is taken from the current |
| locale, on systems providing 'localeconv'. |
| |
| The argument BASE may be in the ranges 2 to 36, or -36 to -2. |
| Negative values are used to specify that the exponent is in |
| decimal. |
| |
| Unlike the corresponding 'mpz' function, the base will not be |
| determined from the leading characters of the string if BASE is 0. |
| This is so that numbers like '0.23' are not interpreted as octal. |
| |
| Return the number of bytes read, or if an error occurred, return 0. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Miscellaneous Float Functions, Prev: I/O of Floats, Up: Floating-point Functions |
| |
| 7.8 Miscellaneous Functions |
| =========================== |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_ceil (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_floor (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: void mpf_trunc (mpf_t ROP, const mpf_t OP) |
| Set ROP to OP rounded to an integer. 'mpf_ceil' rounds to the next |
| higher integer, 'mpf_floor' to the next lower, and 'mpf_trunc' to |
| the integer towards zero. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpf_integer_p (const mpf_t OP) |
| Return non-zero if OP is an integer. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpf_fits_ulong_p (const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpf_fits_slong_p (const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpf_fits_uint_p (const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpf_fits_sint_p (const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpf_fits_ushort_p (const mpf_t OP) |
| -- Function: int mpf_fits_sshort_p (const mpf_t OP) |
| Return non-zero if OP would fit in the respective C data type, when |
| truncated to an integer. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_urandomb (mpf_t ROP, gmp_randstate_t STATE, |
| mp_bitcnt_t NBITS) |
| Generate a uniformly distributed random float in ROP, such that 0 |
| <= ROP < 1, with NBITS significant bits in the mantissa or less if |
| the precision of ROP is smaller. |
| |
| The variable STATE must be initialized by calling one of the |
| 'gmp_randinit' functions (*note Random State Initialization::) |
| before invoking this function. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_random2 (mpf_t ROP, mp_size_t MAX_SIZE, mp_exp_t |
| EXP) |
| Generate a random float of at most MAX_SIZE limbs, with long |
| strings of zeros and ones in the binary representation. The |
| exponent of the number is in the interval -EXP to EXP (in limbs). |
| This function is useful for testing functions and algorithms, since |
| these kind of random numbers have proven to be more likely to |
| trigger corner-case bugs. Negative random numbers are generated |
| when MAX_SIZE is negative. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Low-level Functions, Next: Random Number Functions, Prev: Floating-point Functions, Up: Top |
| |
| 8 Low-level Functions |
| ********************* |
| |
| This chapter describes low-level GMP functions, used to implement the |
| high-level GMP functions, but also intended for time-critical user code. |
| |
| These functions start with the prefix 'mpn_'. |
| |
| The 'mpn' functions are designed to be as fast as possible, *not* to |
| provide a coherent calling interface. The different functions have |
| somewhat similar interfaces, but there are variations that make them |
| hard to use. These functions do as little as possible apart from the |
| real multiple precision computation, so that no time is spent on things |
| that not all callers need. |
| |
| A source operand is specified by a pointer to the least significant |
| limb and a limb count. A destination operand is specified by just a |
| pointer. It is the responsibility of the caller to ensure that the |
| destination has enough space for storing the result. |
| |
| With this way of specifying operands, it is possible to perform |
| computations on subranges of an argument, and store the result into a |
| subrange of a destination. |
| |
| A common requirement for all functions is that each source area needs |
| at least one limb. No size argument may be zero. Unless otherwise |
| stated, in-place operations are allowed where source and destination are |
| the same, but not where they only partly overlap. |
| |
| The 'mpn' functions are the base for the implementation of the |
| 'mpz_', 'mpf_', and 'mpq_' functions. |
| |
| This example adds the number beginning at S1P and the number |
| beginning at S2P and writes the sum at DESTP. All areas have N limbs. |
| |
| cy = mpn_add_n (destp, s1p, s2p, n) |
| |
| It should be noted that the 'mpn' functions make no attempt to |
| identify high or low zero limbs on their operands, or other special |
| forms. On random data such cases will be unlikely and it'd be wasteful |
| for every function to check every time. An application knowing |
| something about its data can take steps to trim or perhaps split its |
| calculations. |
| |
| |
| In the notation used below, a source operand is identified by the |
| pointer to the least significant limb, and the limb count in braces. |
| For example, {S1P, S1N}. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_add_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Add {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, and write the N least significant limbs |
| of the result to RP. Return carry, either 0 or 1. |
| |
| This is the lowest-level function for addition. It is the |
| preferred function for addition, since it is written in assembly |
| for most CPUs. For addition of a variable to itself (i.e., S1P |
| equals S2P) use 'mpn_lshift' with a count of 1 for optimal speed. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_add_1 (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t S2LIMB) |
| Add {S1P, N} and S2LIMB, and write the N least significant limbs of |
| the result to RP. Return carry, either 0 or 1. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_add (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t S1N, const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t S2N) |
| Add {S1P, S1N} and {S2P, S2N}, and write the S1N least significant |
| limbs of the result to RP. Return carry, either 0 or 1. |
| |
| This function requires that S1N is greater than or equal to S2N. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_sub_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Subtract {S2P, N} from {S1P, N}, and write the N least significant |
| limbs of the result to RP. Return borrow, either 0 or 1. |
| |
| This is the lowest-level function for subtraction. It is the |
| preferred function for subtraction, since it is written in assembly |
| for most CPUs. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_sub_1 (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t S2LIMB) |
| Subtract S2LIMB from {S1P, N}, and write the N least significant |
| limbs of the result to RP. Return borrow, either 0 or 1. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_sub (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t S1N, const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t S2N) |
| Subtract {S2P, S2N} from {S1P, S1N}, and write the S1N least |
| significant limbs of the result to RP. Return borrow, either 0 or |
| 1. |
| |
| This function requires that S1N is greater than or equal to S2N. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_neg (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *SP, |
| mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the negation of {SP, N}, and write the result to {RP, N}. |
| This is equivalent to calling 'mpn_sub_n' with a N-limb zero |
| minuend and passing {SP, N} as subtrahend. Return borrow, either 0 |
| or 1. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_mul_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, const |
| mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Multiply {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, and write the 2*N-limb result to |
| RP. |
| |
| The destination has to have space for 2*N limbs, even if the |
| product's most significant limb is zero. No overlap is permitted |
| between the destination and either source. |
| |
| If the two input operands are the same, use 'mpn_sqr'. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_mul (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t S1N, const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t S2N) |
| Multiply {S1P, S1N} and {S2P, S2N}, and write the (S1N+S2N)-limb |
| result to RP. Return the most significant limb of the result. |
| |
| The destination has to have space for S1N + S2N limbs, even if the |
| product's most significant limb is zero. No overlap is permitted |
| between the destination and either source. |
| |
| This function requires that S1N is greater than or equal to S2N. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_sqr (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t N) |
| Compute the square of {S1P, N} and write the 2*N-limb result to RP. |
| |
| The destination has to have space for 2N limbs, even if the |
| result's most significant limb is zero. No overlap is permitted |
| between the destination and the source. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_mul_1 (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t S2LIMB) |
| Multiply {S1P, N} by S2LIMB, and write the N least significant |
| limbs of the product to RP. Return the most significant limb of |
| the product. {S1P, N} and {RP, N} are allowed to overlap provided |
| RP <= S1P. |
| |
| This is a low-level function that is a building block for general |
| multiplication as well as other operations in GMP. It is written |
| in assembly for most CPUs. |
| |
| Don't call this function if S2LIMB is a power of 2; use |
| 'mpn_lshift' with a count equal to the logarithm of S2LIMB instead, |
| for optimal speed. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_addmul_1 (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t |
| *S1P, mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t S2LIMB) |
| Multiply {S1P, N} and S2LIMB, and add the N least significant limbs |
| of the product to {RP, N} and write the result to RP. Return the |
| most significant limb of the product, plus carry-out from the |
| addition. {S1P, N} and {RP, N} are allowed to overlap provided RP |
| <= S1P. |
| |
| This is a low-level function that is a building block for general |
| multiplication as well as other operations in GMP. It is written |
| in assembly for most CPUs. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_submul_1 (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t |
| *S1P, mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t S2LIMB) |
| Multiply {S1P, N} and S2LIMB, and subtract the N least significant |
| limbs of the product from {RP, N} and write the result to RP. |
| Return the most significant limb of the product, plus borrow-out |
| from the subtraction. {S1P, N} and {RP, N} are allowed to overlap |
| provided RP <= S1P. |
| |
| This is a low-level function that is a building block for general |
| multiplication and division as well as other operations in GMP. It |
| is written in assembly for most CPUs. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_tdiv_qr (mp_limb_t *QP, mp_limb_t *RP, mp_size_t |
| QXN, const mp_limb_t *NP, mp_size_t NN, const mp_limb_t *DP, |
| mp_size_t DN) |
| Divide {NP, NN} by {DP, DN} and put the quotient at {QP, NN-DN+1} |
| and the remainder at {RP, DN}. The quotient is rounded towards 0. |
| |
| No overlap is permitted between arguments, except that NP might |
| equal RP. The dividend size NN must be greater than or equal to |
| divisor size DN. The most significant limb of the divisor must be |
| non-zero. The QXN operand must be zero. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_divrem (mp_limb_t *R1P, mp_size_t QXN, |
| mp_limb_t *RS2P, mp_size_t RS2N, const mp_limb_t *S3P, |
| mp_size_t S3N) |
| [This function is obsolete. Please call 'mpn_tdiv_qr' instead for |
| best performance.] |
| |
| Divide {RS2P, RS2N} by {S3P, S3N}, and write the quotient at R1P, |
| with the exception of the most significant limb, which is returned. |
| The remainder replaces the dividend at RS2P; it will be S3N limbs |
| long (i.e., as many limbs as the divisor). |
| |
| In addition to an integer quotient, QXN fraction limbs are |
| developed, and stored after the integral limbs. For most usages, |
| QXN will be zero. |
| |
| It is required that RS2N is greater than or equal to S3N. It is |
| required that the most significant bit of the divisor is set. |
| |
| If the quotient is not needed, pass RS2P + S3N as R1P. Aside from |
| that special case, no overlap between arguments is permitted. |
| |
| Return the most significant limb of the quotient, either 0 or 1. |
| |
| The area at R1P needs to be RS2N - S3N + QXN limbs large. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_divrem_1 (mp_limb_t *R1P, mp_size_t QXN, |
| mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t S2N, mp_limb_t S3LIMB) |
| -- Macro: mp_limb_t mpn_divmod_1 (mp_limb_t *R1P, mp_limb_t *S2P, |
| mp_size_t S2N, mp_limb_t S3LIMB) |
| Divide {S2P, S2N} by S3LIMB, and write the quotient at R1P. Return |
| the remainder. |
| |
| The integer quotient is written to {R1P+QXN, S2N} and in addition |
| QXN fraction limbs are developed and written to {R1P, QXN}. Either |
| or both S2N and QXN can be zero. For most usages, QXN will be |
| zero. |
| |
| 'mpn_divmod_1' exists for upward source compatibility and is simply |
| a macro calling 'mpn_divrem_1' with a QXN of 0. |
| |
| The areas at R1P and S2P have to be identical or completely |
| separate, not partially overlapping. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_divmod (mp_limb_t *R1P, mp_limb_t *RS2P, |
| mp_size_t RS2N, const mp_limb_t *S3P, mp_size_t S3N) |
| [This function is obsolete. Please call 'mpn_tdiv_qr' instead for |
| best performance.] |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_divexact_1 (mp_limb_t * RP, const mp_limb_t * SP, |
| mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t D) |
| Divide {SP, N} by D, expecting it to divide exactly, and writing |
| the result to {RP, N}. If D doesn't divide exactly, the value |
| written to {RP, N} is undefined. The areas at RP and SP have to be |
| identical or completely separate, not partially overlapping. |
| |
| -- Macro: mp_limb_t mpn_divexact_by3 (mp_limb_t *RP, mp_limb_t *SP, |
| mp_size_t N) |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_divexact_by3c (mp_limb_t *RP, mp_limb_t *SP, |
| mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t CARRY) |
| Divide {SP, N} by 3, expecting it to divide exactly, and writing |
| the result to {RP, N}. If 3 divides exactly, the return value is |
| zero and the result is the quotient. If not, the return value is |
| non-zero and the result won't be anything useful. |
| |
| 'mpn_divexact_by3c' takes an initial carry parameter, which can be |
| the return value from a previous call, so a large calculation can |
| be done piece by piece from low to high. 'mpn_divexact_by3' is |
| simply a macro calling 'mpn_divexact_by3c' with a 0 carry |
| parameter. |
| |
| These routines use a multiply-by-inverse and will be faster than |
| 'mpn_divrem_1' on CPUs with fast multiplication but slow division. |
| |
| The source a, result q, size n, initial carry i, and return value c |
| satisfy c*b^n + a-i = 3*q, where b=2^GMP_NUMB_BITS. The return c is |
| always 0, 1 or 2, and the initial carry i must also be 0, 1 or 2 |
| (these are both borrows really). When c=0 clearly q=(a-i)/3. When |
| c!=0, the remainder (a-i) mod 3 is given by 3-c, because b == 1 mod |
| 3 (when 'mp_bits_per_limb' is even, which is always so currently). |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_mod_1 (const mp_limb_t *S1P, mp_size_t S1N, |
| mp_limb_t S2LIMB) |
| Divide {S1P, S1N} by S2LIMB, and return the remainder. S1N can be |
| zero. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_lshift (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *SP, |
| mp_size_t N, unsigned int COUNT) |
| Shift {SP, N} left by COUNT bits, and write the result to {RP, N}. |
| The bits shifted out at the left are returned in the least |
| significant COUNT bits of the return value (the rest of the return |
| value is zero). |
| |
| COUNT must be in the range 1 to mp_bits_per_limb-1. The regions |
| {SP, N} and {RP, N} may overlap, provided RP >= SP. |
| |
| This function is written in assembly for most CPUs. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_rshift (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *SP, |
| mp_size_t N, unsigned int COUNT) |
| Shift {SP, N} right by COUNT bits, and write the result to {RP, N}. |
| The bits shifted out at the right are returned in the most |
| significant COUNT bits of the return value (the rest of the return |
| value is zero). |
| |
| COUNT must be in the range 1 to mp_bits_per_limb-1. The regions |
| {SP, N} and {RP, N} may overlap, provided RP <= SP. |
| |
| This function is written in assembly for most CPUs. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpn_cmp (const mp_limb_t *S1P, const mp_limb_t *S2P, |
| mp_size_t N) |
| Compare {S1P, N} and {S2P, N} and return a positive value if S1 > |
| S2, 0 if they are equal, or a negative value if S1 < S2. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpn_zero_p (const mp_limb_t *SP, mp_size_t N) |
| Test {SP, N} and return 1 if the operand is zero, 0 otherwise. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_gcd (mp_limb_t *RP, mp_limb_t *XP, mp_size_t |
| XN, mp_limb_t *YP, mp_size_t YN) |
| Set {RP, RETVAL} to the greatest common divisor of {XP, XN} and |
| {YP, YN}. The result can be up to YN limbs, the return value is |
| the actual number produced. Both source operands are destroyed. |
| |
| It is required that XN >= YN > 0, the most significant limb of {YP, |
| YN} must be non-zero, and at least one of the two operands must be |
| odd. No overlap is permitted between {XP, XN} and {YP, YN}. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_gcd_1 (const mp_limb_t *XP, mp_size_t XN, |
| mp_limb_t YLIMB) |
| Return the greatest common divisor of {XP, XN} and YLIMB. Both |
| operands must be non-zero. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_gcdext (mp_limb_t *GP, mp_limb_t *SP, |
| mp_size_t *SN, mp_limb_t *UP, mp_size_t UN, mp_limb_t *VP, |
| mp_size_t VN) |
| Let U be defined by {UP, UN} and let V be defined by {VP, VN}. |
| |
| Compute the greatest common divisor G of U and V. Compute a |
| cofactor S such that G = US + VT. The second cofactor T is not |
| computed but can easily be obtained from (G - U*S) / V (the |
| division will be exact). It is required that UN >= VN > 0, and the |
| most significant limb of {VP, VN} must be non-zero. |
| |
| S satisfies S = 1 or abs(S) < V / (2 G). S = 0 if and only if V |
| divides U (i.e., G = V). |
| |
| Store G at GP and let the return value define its limb count. |
| Store S at SP and let |*SN| define its limb count. S can be |
| negative; when this happens *SN will be negative. The area at GP |
| should have room for VN limbs and the area at SP should have room |
| for VN+1 limbs. |
| |
| Both source operands are destroyed. |
| |
| Compatibility notes: GMP 4.3.0 and 4.3.1 defined S less strictly. |
| Earlier as well as later GMP releases define S as described here. |
| GMP releases before GMP 4.3.0 required additional space for both |
| input and output areas. More precisely, the areas {UP, UN+1} and |
| {VP, VN+1} were destroyed (i.e. the operands plus an extra limb |
| past the end of each), and the areas pointed to by GP and SP should |
| each have room for UN+1 limbs. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_sqrtrem (mp_limb_t *R1P, mp_limb_t *R2P, |
| const mp_limb_t *SP, mp_size_t N) |
| Compute the square root of {SP, N} and put the result at {R1P, |
| ceil(N/2)} and the remainder at {R2P, RETVAL}. R2P needs space for |
| N limbs, but the return value indicates how many are produced. |
| |
| The most significant limb of {SP, N} must be non-zero. The areas |
| {R1P, ceil(N/2)} and {SP, N} must be completely separate. The |
| areas {R2P, N} and {SP, N} must be either identical or completely |
| separate. |
| |
| If the remainder is not wanted then R2P can be 'NULL', and in this |
| case the return value is zero or non-zero according to whether the |
| remainder would have been zero or non-zero. |
| |
| A return value of zero indicates a perfect square. See also |
| 'mpn_perfect_square_p'. |
| |
| -- Function: size_t mpn_sizeinbase (const mp_limb_t *XP, mp_size_t N, |
| int BASE) |
| Return the size of {XP,N} measured in number of digits in the given |
| BASE. BASE can vary from 2 to 62. Requires N > 0 and XP[N-1] > 0. |
| The result will be either exact or 1 too big. If BASE is a power |
| of 2, the result is always exact. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_get_str (unsigned char *STR, int BASE, |
| mp_limb_t *S1P, mp_size_t S1N) |
| Convert {S1P, S1N} to a raw unsigned char array at STR in base |
| BASE, and return the number of characters produced. There may be |
| leading zeros in the string. The string is not in ASCII; to |
| convert it to printable format, add the ASCII codes for '0' or 'A', |
| depending on the base and range. BASE can vary from 2 to 256. |
| |
| The most significant limb of the input {S1P, S1N} must be non-zero. |
| The input {S1P, S1N} is clobbered, except when BASE is a power of |
| 2, in which case it's unchanged. |
| |
| The area at STR has to have space for the largest possible number |
| represented by a S1N long limb array, plus one extra character. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_set_str (mp_limb_t *RP, const unsigned char |
| *STR, size_t STRSIZE, int BASE) |
| Convert bytes {STR,STRSIZE} in the given BASE to limbs at RP. |
| |
| STR[0] is the most significant input byte and STR[STRSIZE-1] is the |
| least significant input byte. Each byte should be a value in the |
| range 0 to BASE-1, not an ASCII character. BASE can vary from 2 to |
| 256. |
| |
| The converted value is {RP,RN} where RN is the return value. If |
| the most significant input byte STR[0] is non-zero, then RP[RN-1] |
| will be non-zero, else RP[RN-1] and some number of subsequent limbs |
| may be zero. |
| |
| The area at RP has to have space for the largest possible number |
| with STRSIZE digits in the chosen base, plus one extra limb. |
| |
| The input must have at least one byte, and no overlap is permitted |
| between {STR,STRSIZE} and the result at RP. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpn_scan0 (const mp_limb_t *S1P, mp_bitcnt_t |
| BIT) |
| Scan S1P from bit position BIT for the next clear bit. |
| |
| It is required that there be a clear bit within the area at S1P at |
| or beyond bit position BIT, so that the function has something to |
| return. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpn_scan1 (const mp_limb_t *S1P, mp_bitcnt_t |
| BIT) |
| Scan S1P from bit position BIT for the next set bit. |
| |
| It is required that there be a set bit within the area at S1P at or |
| beyond bit position BIT, so that the function has something to |
| return. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_random (mp_limb_t *R1P, mp_size_t R1N) |
| -- Function: void mpn_random2 (mp_limb_t *R1P, mp_size_t R1N) |
| Generate a random number of length R1N and store it at R1P. The |
| most significant limb is always non-zero. 'mpn_random' generates |
| uniformly distributed limb data, 'mpn_random2' generates long |
| strings of zeros and ones in the binary representation. |
| |
| 'mpn_random2' is intended for testing the correctness of the 'mpn' |
| routines. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpn_popcount (const mp_limb_t *S1P, mp_size_t |
| N) |
| Count the number of set bits in {S1P, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpn_hamdist (const mp_limb_t *S1P, const |
| mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Compute the hamming distance between {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, which |
| is the number of bit positions where the two operands have |
| different bit values. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpn_perfect_square_p (const mp_limb_t *S1P, mp_size_t |
| N) |
| Return non-zero iff {S1P, N} is a perfect square. The most |
| significant limb of the input {S1P, N} must be non-zero. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_and_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, const |
| mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise logical and of {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, and write |
| the result to {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_ior_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, const |
| mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise logical inclusive or of {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, |
| and write the result to {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_xor_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, const |
| mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise logical exclusive or of {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, |
| and write the result to {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_andn_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise logical and of {S1P, N} and the bitwise |
| complement of {S2P, N}, and write the result to {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_iorn_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise logical inclusive or of {S1P, N} and the |
| bitwise complement of {S2P, N}, and write the result to {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_nand_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise logical and of {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, and write |
| the bitwise complement of the result to {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_nior_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise logical inclusive or of {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, |
| and write the bitwise complement of the result to {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_xnor_n (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise logical exclusive or of {S1P, N} and {S2P, N}, |
| and write the bitwise complement of the result to {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_com (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *SP, |
| mp_size_t N) |
| Perform the bitwise complement of {SP, N}, and write the result to |
| {RP, N}. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_copyi (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t N) |
| Copy from {S1P, N} to {RP, N}, increasingly. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_copyd (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *S1P, |
| mp_size_t N) |
| Copy from {S1P, N} to {RP, N}, decreasingly. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_zero (mp_limb_t *RP, mp_size_t N) |
| Zero {RP, N}. |
| |
| |
| 8.1 Low-level functions for cryptography |
| ======================================== |
| |
| The functions prefixed with 'mpn_sec_' and 'mpn_cnd_' are designed to |
| perform the exact same low-level operations and have the same cache |
| access patterns for any two same-size arguments, assuming that function |
| arguments are placed at the same position and that the machine state is |
| identical upon function entry. These functions are intended for |
| cryptographic purposes, where resilience to side-channel attacks is |
| desired. |
| |
| These functions are less efficient than their "leaky" counterparts; |
| their performance for operands of the sizes typically used for |
| cryptographic applications is between 15% and 100% worse. For larger |
| operands, these functions might be inadequate, since they rely on |
| asymptotically elementary algorithms. |
| |
| These functions do not make any explicit allocations. Those of these |
| functions that need scratch space accept a scratch space operand. This |
| convention allows callers to keep sensitive data in designated memory |
| areas. Note however that compilers may choose to spill scalar values |
| used within these functions to their stack frame and that such scalars |
| may contain sensitive data. |
| |
| In addition to these specially crafted functions, the following 'mpn' |
| functions are naturally side-channel resistant: 'mpn_add_n', |
| 'mpn_sub_n', 'mpn_lshift', 'mpn_rshift', 'mpn_zero', 'mpn_copyi', |
| 'mpn_copyd', 'mpn_com', and the logical function ('mpn_and_n', etc). |
| |
| There are some exceptions from the side-channel resilience: (1) Some |
| assembly implementations of 'mpn_lshift' identify shift-by-one as a |
| special case. This is a problem iff the shift count is a function of |
| sensitive data. (2) Alpha ev6 and Pentium4 using 64-bit limbs have |
| leaky 'mpn_add_n' and 'mpn_sub_n'. (3) Alpha ev6 has a leaky |
| 'mpn_mul_1' which also makes 'mpn_sec_mul' on those systems unsafe. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_cnd_add_n (mp_limb_t CND, mp_limb_t *RP, |
| const mp_limb_t *S1P, const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_cnd_sub_n (mp_limb_t CND, mp_limb_t *RP, |
| const mp_limb_t *S1P, const mp_limb_t *S2P, mp_size_t N) |
| These functions do conditional addition and subtraction. If CND is |
| non-zero, they produce the same result as a regular 'mpn_add_n' or |
| 'mpn_sub_n', and if CND is zero, they copy {S1P,N} to the result |
| area and return zero. The functions are designed to have timing |
| and memory access patterns depending only on size and location of |
| the data areas, but independent of the condition CND. Like for |
| 'mpn_add_n' and 'mpn_sub_n', on most machines, the timing will also |
| be independent of the actual limb values. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_sec_add_1 (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t |
| *AP, mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t B, mp_limb_t *TP) |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_sec_sub_1 (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t |
| *AP, mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t B, mp_limb_t *TP) |
| Set R to A + B or A - B, respectively, where R = {RP,N}, A = |
| {AP,N}, and B is a single limb. Returns carry. |
| |
| These functions take O(N) time, unlike the leaky functions |
| 'mpn_add_1' which are O(1) on average. They require scratch space |
| of 'mpn_sec_add_1_itch(N)' and 'mpn_sec_sub_1_itch(N)' limbs, |
| respectively, to be passed in the TP parameter. The scratch space |
| requirements are guaranteed to be at most N limbs, and increase |
| monotonously in the operand size. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_cnd_swap (mp_limb_t CND, volatile mp_limb_t *AP, |
| volatile mp_limb_t *BP, mp_size_t N) |
| If CND is non-zero, swaps the contents of the areas {AP,N} and |
| {BP,N}. Otherwise, the areas are left unmodified. Implemented |
| using logical operations on the limbs, with the same memory |
| accesses independent of the value of CND. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_sec_mul (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *AP, |
| mp_size_t AN, const mp_limb_t *BP, mp_size_t BN, mp_limb_t |
| *TP) |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_sec_mul_itch (mp_size_t AN, mp_size_t BN) |
| Set R to A * B, where A = {AP,AN}, B = {BP,BN}, and R = {RP,AN+BN}. |
| |
| It is required that AN >= BN > 0. |
| |
| No overlapping between R and the input operands is allowed. For A |
| = B, use 'mpn_sec_sqr' for optimal performance. |
| |
| This function requires scratch space of 'mpn_sec_mul_itch(AN, BN)' |
| limbs to be passed in the TP parameter. The scratch space |
| requirements are guaranteed to increase monotonously in the operand |
| sizes. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_sec_sqr (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *AP, |
| mp_size_t AN, mp_limb_t *TP) |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_sec_sqr_itch (mp_size_t AN) |
| Set R to A^2, where A = {AP,AN}, and R = {RP,2AN}. |
| |
| It is required that AN > 0. |
| |
| No overlapping between R and the input operands is allowed. |
| |
| This function requires scratch space of 'mpn_sec_sqr_itch(AN)' |
| limbs to be passed in the TP parameter. The scratch space |
| requirements are guaranteed to increase monotonously in the operand |
| size. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_sec_powm (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t *BP, |
| mp_size_t BN, const mp_limb_t *EP, mp_bitcnt_t ENB, const |
| mp_limb_t *MP, mp_size_t N, mp_limb_t *TP) |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_sec_powm_itch (mp_size_t BN, mp_bitcnt_t |
| ENB, size_t N) |
| Set R to (B raised to E) modulo M, where R = {RP,N}, M = {MP,N}, |
| and E = {EP,ceil(ENB / 'GMP\_NUMB\_BITS')}. |
| |
| It is required that B > 0, that M > 0 is odd, and that E < 2^ENB, |
| with ENB > 0. |
| |
| No overlapping between R and the input operands is allowed. |
| |
| This function requires scratch space of 'mpn_sec_powm_itch(BN, ENB, |
| N)' limbs to be passed in the TP parameter. The scratch space |
| requirements are guaranteed to increase monotonously in the operand |
| sizes. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_sec_tabselect (mp_limb_t *RP, const mp_limb_t |
| *TAB, mp_size_t N, mp_size_t NENTS, mp_size_t WHICH) |
| Select entry WHICH from table TAB, which has NENTS entries, each N |
| limbs. Store the selected entry at RP. |
| |
| This function reads the entire table to avoid side-channel |
| information leaks. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_limb_t mpn_sec_div_qr (mp_limb_t *QP, mp_limb_t *NP, |
| mp_size_t NN, const mp_limb_t *DP, mp_size_t DN, mp_limb_t |
| *TP) |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_sec_div_qr_itch (mp_size_t NN, mp_size_t DN) |
| |
| Set Q to the truncated quotient N / D and R to N modulo D, where N |
| = {NP,NN}, D = {DP,DN}, Q's most significant limb is the function |
| return value and the remaining limbs are {QP,NN-DN}, and R = |
| {NP,DN}. |
| |
| It is required that NN >= DN >= 1, and that DP[DN-1] != 0. This |
| does not imply that N >= D since N might be zero-padded. |
| |
| Note the overlapping between N and R. No other operand overlapping |
| is allowed. The entire space occupied by N is overwritten. |
| |
| This function requires scratch space of 'mpn_sec_div_qr_itch(NN, |
| DN)' limbs to be passed in the TP parameter. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpn_sec_div_r (mp_limb_t *NP, mp_size_t NN, const |
| mp_limb_t *DP, mp_size_t DN, mp_limb_t *TP) |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_sec_div_r_itch (mp_size_t NN, mp_size_t DN) |
| |
| Set R to N modulo D, where N = {NP,NN}, D = {DP,DN}, and R = |
| {NP,DN}. |
| |
| It is required that NN >= DN >= 1, and that DP[DN-1] != 0. This |
| does not imply that N >= D since N might be zero-padded. |
| |
| Note the overlapping between N and R. No other operand overlapping |
| is allowed. The entire space occupied by N is overwritten. |
| |
| This function requires scratch space of 'mpn_sec_div_r_itch(NN, |
| DN)' limbs to be passed in the TP parameter. |
| |
| -- Function: int mpn_sec_invert (mp_limb_t *RP, mp_limb_t *AP, const |
| mp_limb_t *MP, mp_size_t N, mp_bitcnt_t NBCNT, mp_limb_t *TP) |
| -- Function: mp_size_t mpn_sec_invert_itch (mp_size_t N) |
| Set R to the inverse of A modulo M, where R = {RP,N}, A = {AP,N}, |
| and M = {MP,N}. *This function's interface is preliminary.* |
| |
| If an inverse exists, return 1, otherwise return 0 and leave R |
| undefined. In either case, the input A is destroyed. |
| |
| It is required that M is odd, and that NBCNT >= ceil(\log(A+1)) + |
| ceil(\log(M+1)). A safe choice is NBCNT = 2 * N * GMP_NUMB_BITS, |
| but a smaller value might improve performance if M or A are known |
| to have leading zero bits. |
| |
| This function requires scratch space of 'mpn_sec_invert_itch(N)' |
| limbs to be passed in the TP parameter. |
| |
| |
| 8.2 Nails |
| ========= |
| |
| *Everything in this section is highly experimental and may disappear or |
| be subject to incompatible changes in a future version of GMP.* |
| |
| Nails are an experimental feature whereby a few bits are left unused |
| at the top of each 'mp_limb_t'. This can significantly improve carry |
| handling on some processors. |
| |
| All the 'mpn' functions accepting limb data will expect the nail bits |
| to be zero on entry, and will return data with the nails similarly all |
| zero. This applies both to limb vectors and to single limb arguments. |
| |
| Nails can be enabled by configuring with '--enable-nails'. By |
| default the number of bits will be chosen according to what suits the |
| host processor, but a particular number can be selected with |
| '--enable-nails=N'. |
| |
| At the mpn level, a nail build is neither source nor binary |
| compatible with a non-nail build, strictly speaking. But programs |
| acting on limbs only through the mpn functions are likely to work |
| equally well with either build, and judicious use of the definitions |
| below should make any program compatible with either build, at the |
| source level. |
| |
| For the higher level routines, meaning 'mpz' etc, a nail build should |
| be fully source and binary compatible with a non-nail build. |
| |
| -- Macro: GMP_NAIL_BITS |
| -- Macro: GMP_NUMB_BITS |
| -- Macro: GMP_LIMB_BITS |
| 'GMP_NAIL_BITS' is the number of nail bits, or 0 when nails are not |
| in use. 'GMP_NUMB_BITS' is the number of data bits in a limb. |
| 'GMP_LIMB_BITS' is the total number of bits in an 'mp_limb_t'. In |
| all cases |
| |
| GMP_LIMB_BITS == GMP_NAIL_BITS + GMP_NUMB_BITS |
| |
| -- Macro: GMP_NAIL_MASK |
| -- Macro: GMP_NUMB_MASK |
| Bit masks for the nail and number parts of a limb. 'GMP_NAIL_MASK' |
| is 0 when nails are not in use. |
| |
| 'GMP_NAIL_MASK' is not often needed, since the nail part can be |
| obtained with 'x >> GMP_NUMB_BITS', and that means one less large |
| constant, which can help various RISC chips. |
| |
| -- Macro: GMP_NUMB_MAX |
| The maximum value that can be stored in the number part of a limb. |
| This is the same as 'GMP_NUMB_MASK', but can be used for clarity |
| when doing comparisons rather than bit-wise operations. |
| |
| The term "nails" comes from finger or toe nails, which are at the |
| ends of a limb (arm or leg). "numb" is short for number, but is also |
| how the developers felt after trying for a long time to come up with |
| sensible names for these things. |
| |
| In the future (the distant future most likely) a non-zero nail might |
| be permitted, giving non-unique representations for numbers in a limb |
| vector. This would help vector processors since carries would only ever |
| need to propagate one or two limbs. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Random Number Functions, Next: Formatted Output, Prev: Low-level Functions, Up: Top |
| |
| 9 Random Number Functions |
| ************************* |
| |
| Sequences of pseudo-random numbers in GMP are generated using a variable |
| of type 'gmp_randstate_t', which holds an algorithm selection and a |
| current state. Such a variable must be initialized by a call to one of |
| the 'gmp_randinit' functions, and can be seeded with one of the |
| 'gmp_randseed' functions. |
| |
| The functions actually generating random numbers are described in |
| *note Integer Random Numbers::, and *note Miscellaneous Float |
| Functions::. |
| |
| The older style random number functions don't accept a |
| 'gmp_randstate_t' parameter but instead share a global variable of that |
| type. They use a default algorithm and are currently not seeded (though |
| perhaps that will change in the future). The new functions accepting a |
| 'gmp_randstate_t' are recommended for applications that care about |
| randomness. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Random State Initialization:: |
| * Random State Seeding:: |
| * Random State Miscellaneous:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Random State Initialization, Next: Random State Seeding, Prev: Random Number Functions, Up: Random Number Functions |
| |
| 9.1 Random State Initialization |
| =============================== |
| |
| -- Function: void gmp_randinit_default (gmp_randstate_t STATE) |
| Initialize STATE with a default algorithm. This will be a |
| compromise between speed and randomness, and is recommended for |
| applications with no special requirements. Currently this is |
| 'gmp_randinit_mt'. |
| |
| -- Function: void gmp_randinit_mt (gmp_randstate_t STATE) |
| Initialize STATE for a Mersenne Twister algorithm. This algorithm |
| is fast and has good randomness properties. |
| |
| -- Function: void gmp_randinit_lc_2exp (gmp_randstate_t STATE, const |
| mpz_t A, unsigned long C, mp_bitcnt_t M2EXP) |
| Initialize STATE with a linear congruential algorithm X = (A*X + C) |
| mod 2^M2EXP. |
| |
| The low bits of X in this algorithm are not very random. The least |
| significant bit will have a period no more than 2, and the second |
| bit no more than 4, etc. For this reason only the high half of |
| each X is actually used. |
| |
| When a random number of more than M2EXP/2 bits is to be generated, |
| multiple iterations of the recurrence are used and the results |
| concatenated. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_randinit_lc_2exp_size (gmp_randstate_t STATE, |
| mp_bitcnt_t SIZE) |
| Initialize STATE for a linear congruential algorithm as per |
| 'gmp_randinit_lc_2exp'. A, C and M2EXP are selected from a table, |
| chosen so that SIZE bits (or more) of each X will be used, i.e. |
| M2EXP/2 >= SIZE. |
| |
| If successful the return value is non-zero. If SIZE is bigger than |
| the table data provides then the return value is zero. The maximum |
| SIZE currently supported is 128. |
| |
| -- Function: void gmp_randinit_set (gmp_randstate_t ROP, |
| gmp_randstate_t OP) |
| Initialize ROP with a copy of the algorithm and state from OP. |
| |
| -- Function: void gmp_randinit (gmp_randstate_t STATE, |
| gmp_randalg_t ALG, ...) |
| *This function is obsolete.* |
| |
| Initialize STATE with an algorithm selected by ALG. The only |
| choice is 'GMP_RAND_ALG_LC', which is 'gmp_randinit_lc_2exp_size' |
| described above. A third parameter of type 'unsigned long' is |
| required, this is the SIZE for that function. |
| 'GMP_RAND_ALG_DEFAULT' or 0 are the same as 'GMP_RAND_ALG_LC'. |
| |
| 'gmp_randinit' sets bits in the global variable 'gmp_errno' to |
| indicate an error. 'GMP_ERROR_UNSUPPORTED_ARGUMENT' if ALG is |
| unsupported, or 'GMP_ERROR_INVALID_ARGUMENT' if the SIZE parameter |
| is too big. It may be noted this error reporting is not thread |
| safe (a good reason to use 'gmp_randinit_lc_2exp_size' instead). |
| |
| -- Function: void gmp_randclear (gmp_randstate_t STATE) |
| Free all memory occupied by STATE. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Random State Seeding, Next: Random State Miscellaneous, Prev: Random State Initialization, Up: Random Number Functions |
| |
| 9.2 Random State Seeding |
| ======================== |
| |
| -- Function: void gmp_randseed (gmp_randstate_t STATE, const mpz_t |
| SEED) |
| -- Function: void gmp_randseed_ui (gmp_randstate_t STATE, |
| unsigned long int SEED) |
| Set an initial seed value into STATE. |
| |
| The size of a seed determines how many different sequences of |
| random numbers that it's possible to generate. The "quality" of |
| the seed is the randomness of a given seed compared to the previous |
| seed used, and this affects the randomness of separate number |
| sequences. The method for choosing a seed is critical if the |
| generated numbers are to be used for important applications, such |
| as generating cryptographic keys. |
| |
| Traditionally the system time has been used to seed, but care needs |
| to be taken with this. If an application seeds often and the |
| resolution of the system clock is low, then the same sequence of |
| numbers might be repeated. Also, the system time is quite easy to |
| guess, so if unpredictability is required then it should definitely |
| not be the only source for the seed value. On some systems there's |
| a special device '/dev/random' which provides random data better |
| suited for use as a seed. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Random State Miscellaneous, Prev: Random State Seeding, Up: Random Number Functions |
| |
| 9.3 Random State Miscellaneous |
| ============================== |
| |
| -- Function: unsigned long gmp_urandomb_ui (gmp_randstate_t STATE, |
| unsigned long N) |
| Return a uniformly distributed random number of N bits, i.e. in the |
| range 0 to 2^N-1 inclusive. N must be less than or equal to the |
| number of bits in an 'unsigned long'. |
| |
| -- Function: unsigned long gmp_urandomm_ui (gmp_randstate_t STATE, |
| unsigned long N) |
| Return a uniformly distributed random number in the range 0 to N-1, |
| inclusive. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Formatted Output, Next: Formatted Input, Prev: Random Number Functions, Up: Top |
| |
| 10 Formatted Output |
| ******************* |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Formatted Output Strings:: |
| * Formatted Output Functions:: |
| * C++ Formatted Output:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Formatted Output Strings, Next: Formatted Output Functions, Prev: Formatted Output, Up: Formatted Output |
| |
| 10.1 Format Strings |
| =================== |
| |
| 'gmp_printf' and friends accept format strings similar to the standard C |
| 'printf' (*note Formatted Output: (libc)Formatted Output.). A format |
| specification is of the form |
| |
| % [flags] [width] [.[precision]] [type] conv |
| |
| GMP adds types 'Z', 'Q' and 'F' for 'mpz_t', 'mpq_t' and 'mpf_t' |
| respectively, 'M' for 'mp_limb_t', and 'N' for an 'mp_limb_t' array. |
| 'Z', 'Q', 'M' and 'N' behave like integers. 'Q' will print a '/' and a |
| denominator, if needed. 'F' behaves like a float. For example, |
| |
| mpz_t z; |
| gmp_printf ("%s is an mpz %Zd\n", "here", z); |
| |
| mpq_t q; |
| gmp_printf ("a hex rational: %#40Qx\n", q); |
| |
| mpf_t f; |
| int n; |
| gmp_printf ("fixed point mpf %.*Ff with %d digits\n", n, f, n); |
| |
| mp_limb_t l; |
| gmp_printf ("limb %Mu\n", l); |
| |
| const mp_limb_t *ptr; |
| mp_size_t size; |
| gmp_printf ("limb array %Nx\n", ptr, size); |
| |
| For 'N' the limbs are expected least significant first, as per the |
| 'mpn' functions (*note Low-level Functions::). A negative size can be |
| given to print the value as a negative. |
| |
| All the standard C 'printf' types behave the same as the C library |
| 'printf', and can be freely intermixed with the GMP extensions. In the |
| current implementation the standard parts of the format string are |
| simply handed to 'printf' and only the GMP extensions handled directly. |
| |
| The flags accepted are as follows. GLIBC style ' is only for the |
| standard C types (not the GMP types), and only if the C library supports |
| it. |
| |
| 0 pad with zeros (rather than spaces) |
| # show the base with '0x', '0X' or '0' |
| + always show a sign |
| (space) show a space or a '-' sign |
| ' group digits, GLIBC style (not GMP |
| types) |
| |
| The optional width and precision can be given as a number within the |
| format string, or as a '*' to take an extra parameter of type 'int', the |
| same as the standard 'printf'. |
| |
| The standard types accepted are as follows. 'h' and 'l' are |
| portable, the rest will depend on the compiler (or include files) for |
| the type and the C library for the output. |
| |
| h short |
| hh char |
| j intmax_t or uintmax_t |
| l long or wchar_t |
| ll long long |
| L long double |
| q quad_t or u_quad_t |
| t ptrdiff_t |
| z size_t |
| |
| The GMP types are |
| |
| F mpf_t, float conversions |
| Q mpq_t, integer conversions |
| M mp_limb_t, integer conversions |
| N mp_limb_t array, integer conversions |
| Z mpz_t, integer conversions |
| |
| The conversions accepted are as follows. 'a' and 'A' are always |
| supported for 'mpf_t' but depend on the C library for standard C float |
| types. 'm' and 'p' depend on the C library. |
| |
| a A hex floats, C99 style |
| c character |
| d decimal integer |
| e E scientific format float |
| f fixed point float |
| i same as d |
| g G fixed or scientific float |
| m 'strerror' string, GLIBC style |
| n store characters written so far |
| o octal integer |
| p pointer |
| s string |
| u unsigned integer |
| x X hex integer |
| |
| 'o', 'x' and 'X' are unsigned for the standard C types, but for types |
| 'Z', 'Q' and 'N' they are signed. 'u' is not meaningful for 'Z', 'Q' |
| and 'N'. |
| |
| 'M' is a proxy for the C library 'l' or 'L', according to the size of |
| 'mp_limb_t'. Unsigned conversions will be usual, but a signed |
| conversion can be used and will interpret the value as a twos complement |
| negative. |
| |
| 'n' can be used with any type, even the GMP types. |
| |
| Other types or conversions that might be accepted by the C library |
| 'printf' cannot be used through 'gmp_printf', this includes for instance |
| extensions registered with GLIBC 'register_printf_function'. Also |
| currently there's no support for POSIX '$' style numbered arguments |
| (perhaps this will be added in the future). |
| |
| The precision field has its usual meaning for integer 'Z' and float |
| 'F' types, but is currently undefined for 'Q' and should not be used |
| with that. |
| |
| 'mpf_t' conversions only ever generate as many digits as can be |
| accurately represented by the operand, the same as 'mpf_get_str' does. |
| Zeros will be used if necessary to pad to the requested precision. This |
| happens even for an 'f' conversion of an 'mpf_t' which is an integer, |
| for instance 2^1024 in an 'mpf_t' of 128 bits precision will only |
| produce about 40 digits, then pad with zeros to the decimal point. An |
| empty precision field like '%.Fe' or '%.Ff' can be used to specifically |
| request just the significant digits. Without any dot and thus no |
| precision field, a precision value of 6 will be used. Note that these |
| rules mean that '%Ff', '%.Ff', and '%.0Ff' will all be different. |
| |
| The decimal point character (or string) is taken from the current |
| locale settings on systems which provide 'localeconv' (*note Locales and |
| Internationalization: (libc)Locales.). The C library will normally do |
| the same for standard float output. |
| |
| The format string is only interpreted as plain 'char's, multibyte |
| characters are not recognised. Perhaps this will change in the future. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Formatted Output Functions, Next: C++ Formatted Output, Prev: Formatted Output Strings, Up: Formatted Output |
| |
| 10.2 Functions |
| ============== |
| |
| Each of the following functions is similar to the corresponding C |
| library function. The basic 'printf' forms take a variable argument |
| list. The 'vprintf' forms take an argument pointer, see *note Variadic |
| Functions: (libc)Variadic Functions, or 'man 3 va_start'. |
| |
| It should be emphasised that if a format string is invalid, or the |
| arguments don't match what the format specifies, then the behaviour of |
| any of these functions will be unpredictable. GCC format string |
| checking is not available, since it doesn't recognise the GMP |
| extensions. |
| |
| The file based functions 'gmp_printf' and 'gmp_fprintf' will return |
| -1 to indicate a write error. Output is not "atomic", so partial output |
| may be produced if a write error occurs. All the functions can return |
| -1 if the C library 'printf' variant in use returns -1, but this |
| shouldn't normally occur. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_printf (const char *FMT, ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_vprintf (const char *FMT, va_list AP) |
| Print to the standard output 'stdout'. Return the number of |
| characters written, or -1 if an error occurred. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_fprintf (FILE *FP, const char *FMT, ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_vfprintf (FILE *FP, const char *FMT, va_list AP) |
| Print to the stream FP. Return the number of characters written, |
| or -1 if an error occurred. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_sprintf (char *BUF, const char *FMT, ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_vsprintf (char *BUF, const char *FMT, va_list AP) |
| Form a null-terminated string in BUF. Return the number of |
| characters written, excluding the terminating null. |
| |
| No overlap is permitted between the space at BUF and the string |
| FMT. |
| |
| These functions are not recommended, since there's no protection |
| against exceeding the space available at BUF. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_snprintf (char *BUF, size_t SIZE, const char *FMT, |
| ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_vsnprintf (char *BUF, size_t SIZE, const char |
| *FMT, va_list AP) |
| Form a null-terminated string in BUF. No more than SIZE bytes will |
| be written. To get the full output, SIZE must be enough for the |
| string and null-terminator. |
| |
| The return value is the total number of characters which ought to |
| have been produced, excluding the terminating null. If RETVAL >= |
| SIZE then the actual output has been truncated to the first SIZE-1 |
| characters, and a null appended. |
| |
| No overlap is permitted between the region {BUF,SIZE} and the FMT |
| string. |
| |
| Notice the return value is in ISO C99 'snprintf' style. This is so |
| even if the C library 'vsnprintf' is the older GLIBC 2.0.x style. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_asprintf (char **PP, const char *FMT, ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_vasprintf (char **PP, const char *FMT, va_list AP) |
| Form a null-terminated string in a block of memory obtained from |
| the current memory allocation function (*note Custom Allocation::). |
| The block will be the size of the string and null-terminator. The |
| address of the block in stored to *PP. The return value is the |
| number of characters produced, excluding the null-terminator. |
| |
| Unlike the C library 'asprintf', 'gmp_asprintf' doesn't return -1 |
| if there's no more memory available, it lets the current allocation |
| function handle that. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_obstack_printf (struct obstack *OB, const char |
| *FMT, ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_obstack_vprintf (struct obstack *OB, const char |
| *FMT, va_list AP) |
| Append to the current object in OB. The return value is the number |
| of characters written. A null-terminator is not written. |
| |
| FMT cannot be within the current object in OB, since that object |
| might move as it grows. |
| |
| These functions are available only when the C library provides the |
| obstack feature, which probably means only on GNU systems, see |
| *note Obstacks: (libc)Obstacks. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Formatted Output, Prev: Formatted Output Functions, Up: Formatted Output |
| |
| 10.3 C++ Formatted Output |
| ========================= |
| |
| The following functions are provided in 'libgmpxx' (*note Headers and |
| Libraries::), which is built if C++ support is enabled (*note Build |
| Options::). Prototypes are available from '<gmp.h>'. |
| |
| -- Function: ostream& operator<< (ostream& STREAM, const mpz_t OP) |
| Print OP to STREAM, using its 'ios' formatting settings. |
| 'ios::width' is reset to 0 after output, the same as the standard |
| 'ostream operator<<' routines do. |
| |
| In hex or octal, OP is printed as a signed number, the same as for |
| decimal. This is unlike the standard 'operator<<' routines on |
| 'int' etc, which instead give twos complement. |
| |
| -- Function: ostream& operator<< (ostream& STREAM, const mpq_t OP) |
| Print OP to STREAM, using its 'ios' formatting settings. |
| 'ios::width' is reset to 0 after output, the same as the standard |
| 'ostream operator<<' routines do. |
| |
| Output will be a fraction like '5/9', or if the denominator is 1 |
| then just a plain integer like '123'. |
| |
| In hex or octal, OP is printed as a signed value, the same as for |
| decimal. If 'ios::showbase' is set then a base indicator is shown |
| on both the numerator and denominator (if the denominator is |
| required). |
| |
| -- Function: ostream& operator<< (ostream& STREAM, const mpf_t OP) |
| Print OP to STREAM, using its 'ios' formatting settings. |
| 'ios::width' is reset to 0 after output, the same as the standard |
| 'ostream operator<<' routines do. |
| |
| The decimal point follows the standard library float 'operator<<', |
| which on recent systems means the 'std::locale' imbued on STREAM. |
| |
| Hex and octal are supported, unlike the standard 'operator<<' on |
| 'double'. The mantissa will be in hex or octal, the exponent will |
| be in decimal. For hex the exponent delimiter is an '@'. This is |
| as per 'mpf_out_str'. |
| |
| 'ios::showbase' is supported, and will put a base on the mantissa, |
| for example hex '0x1.8' or '0x0.8', or octal '01.4' or '00.4'. |
| This last form is slightly strange, but at least differentiates |
| itself from decimal. |
| |
| These operators mean that GMP types can be printed in the usual C++ |
| way, for example, |
| |
| mpz_t z; |
| int n; |
| ... |
| cout << "iteration " << n << " value " << z << "\n"; |
| |
| But note that 'ostream' output (and 'istream' input, *note C++ |
| Formatted Input::) is the only overloading available for the GMP types |
| and that for instance using '+' with an 'mpz_t' will have unpredictable |
| results. For classes with overloading, see *note C++ Class Interface::. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Formatted Input, Next: C++ Class Interface, Prev: Formatted Output, Up: Top |
| |
| 11 Formatted Input |
| ****************** |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Formatted Input Strings:: |
| * Formatted Input Functions:: |
| * C++ Formatted Input:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Formatted Input Strings, Next: Formatted Input Functions, Prev: Formatted Input, Up: Formatted Input |
| |
| 11.1 Formatted Input Strings |
| ============================ |
| |
| 'gmp_scanf' and friends accept format strings similar to the standard C |
| 'scanf' (*note Formatted Input: (libc)Formatted Input.). A format |
| specification is of the form |
| |
| % [flags] [width] [type] conv |
| |
| GMP adds types 'Z', 'Q' and 'F' for 'mpz_t', 'mpq_t' and 'mpf_t' |
| respectively. 'Z' and 'Q' behave like integers. 'Q' will read a '/' |
| and a denominator, if present. 'F' behaves like a float. |
| |
| GMP variables don't require an '&' when passed to 'gmp_scanf', since |
| they're already "call-by-reference". For example, |
| |
| /* to read say "a(5) = 1234" */ |
| int n; |
| mpz_t z; |
| gmp_scanf ("a(%d) = %Zd\n", &n, z); |
| |
| mpq_t q1, q2; |
| gmp_sscanf ("0377 + 0x10/0x11", "%Qi + %Qi", q1, q2); |
| |
| /* to read say "topleft (1.55,-2.66)" */ |
| mpf_t x, y; |
| char buf[32]; |
| gmp_scanf ("%31s (%Ff,%Ff)", buf, x, y); |
| |
| All the standard C 'scanf' types behave the same as in the C library |
| 'scanf', and can be freely intermixed with the GMP extensions. In the |
| current implementation the standard parts of the format string are |
| simply handed to 'scanf' and only the GMP extensions handled directly. |
| |
| The flags accepted are as follows. 'a' and ''' will depend on |
| support from the C library, and ''' cannot be used with GMP types. |
| |
| * read but don't store |
| a allocate a buffer (string conversions) |
| ' grouped digits, GLIBC style (not GMP |
| types) |
| |
| The standard types accepted are as follows. 'h' and 'l' are |
| portable, the rest will depend on the compiler (or include files) for |
| the type and the C library for the input. |
| |
| h short |
| hh char |
| j intmax_t or uintmax_t |
| l long int, double or wchar_t |
| ll long long |
| L long double |
| q quad_t or u_quad_t |
| t ptrdiff_t |
| z size_t |
| |
| The GMP types are |
| |
| F mpf_t, float conversions |
| Q mpq_t, integer conversions |
| Z mpz_t, integer conversions |
| |
| The conversions accepted are as follows. 'p' and '[' will depend on |
| support from the C library, the rest are standard. |
| |
| c character or characters |
| d decimal integer |
| e E f g float |
| G |
| i integer with base indicator |
| n characters read so far |
| o octal integer |
| p pointer |
| s string of non-whitespace characters |
| u decimal integer |
| x X hex integer |
| [ string of characters in a set |
| |
| 'e', 'E', 'f', 'g' and 'G' are identical, they all read either fixed |
| point or scientific format, and either upper or lower case 'e' for the |
| exponent in scientific format. |
| |
| C99 style hex float format ('printf %a', *note Formatted Output |
| Strings::) is always accepted for 'mpf_t', but for the standard float |
| types it will depend on the C library. |
| |
| 'x' and 'X' are identical, both accept both upper and lower case |
| hexadecimal. |
| |
| 'o', 'u', 'x' and 'X' all read positive or negative values. For the |
| standard C types these are described as "unsigned" conversions, but that |
| merely affects certain overflow handling, negatives are still allowed |
| (per 'strtoul', *note Parsing of Integers: (libc)Parsing of Integers.). |
| For GMP types there are no overflows, so 'd' and 'u' are identical. |
| |
| 'Q' type reads the numerator and (optional) denominator as given. If |
| the value might not be in canonical form then 'mpq_canonicalize' must be |
| called before using it in any calculations (*note Rational Number |
| Functions::). |
| |
| 'Qi' will read a base specification separately for the numerator and |
| denominator. For example '0x10/11' would be 16/11, whereas '0x10/0x11' |
| would be 16/17. |
| |
| 'n' can be used with any of the types above, even the GMP types. '*' |
| to suppress assignment is allowed, though in that case it would do |
| nothing at all. |
| |
| Other conversions or types that might be accepted by the C library |
| 'scanf' cannot be used through 'gmp_scanf'. |
| |
| Whitespace is read and discarded before a field, except for 'c' and |
| '[' conversions. |
| |
| For float conversions, the decimal point character (or string) |
| expected is taken from the current locale settings on systems which |
| provide 'localeconv' (*note Locales and Internationalization: |
| (libc)Locales.). The C library will normally do the same for standard |
| float input. |
| |
| The format string is only interpreted as plain 'char's, multibyte |
| characters are not recognised. Perhaps this will change in the future. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Formatted Input Functions, Next: C++ Formatted Input, Prev: Formatted Input Strings, Up: Formatted Input |
| |
| 11.2 Formatted Input Functions |
| ============================== |
| |
| Each of the following functions is similar to the corresponding C |
| library function. The plain 'scanf' forms take a variable argument |
| list. The 'vscanf' forms take an argument pointer, see *note Variadic |
| Functions: (libc)Variadic Functions, or 'man 3 va_start'. |
| |
| It should be emphasised that if a format string is invalid, or the |
| arguments don't match what the format specifies, then the behaviour of |
| any of these functions will be unpredictable. GCC format string |
| checking is not available, since it doesn't recognise the GMP |
| extensions. |
| |
| No overlap is permitted between the FMT string and any of the results |
| produced. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_scanf (const char *FMT, ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_vscanf (const char *FMT, va_list AP) |
| Read from the standard input 'stdin'. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_fscanf (FILE *FP, const char *FMT, ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_vfscanf (FILE *FP, const char *FMT, va_list AP) |
| Read from the stream FP. |
| |
| -- Function: int gmp_sscanf (const char *S, const char *FMT, ...) |
| -- Function: int gmp_vsscanf (const char *S, const char *FMT, va_list |
| AP) |
| Read from a null-terminated string S. |
| |
| The return value from each of these functions is the same as the |
| standard C99 'scanf', namely the number of fields successfully parsed |
| and stored. '%n' fields and fields read but suppressed by '*' don't |
| count towards the return value. |
| |
| If end of input (or a file error) is reached before a character for a |
| field or a literal, and if no previous non-suppressed fields have |
| matched, then the return value is 'EOF' instead of 0. A whitespace |
| character in the format string is only an optional match and doesn't |
| induce an 'EOF' in this fashion. Leading whitespace read and discarded |
| for a field don't count as characters for that field. |
| |
| For the GMP types, input parsing follows C99 rules, namely one |
| character of lookahead is used and characters are read while they |
| continue to meet the format requirements. If this doesn't provide a |
| complete number then the function terminates, with that field not stored |
| nor counted towards the return value. For instance with 'mpf_t' an |
| input '1.23e-XYZ' would be read up to the 'X' and that character pushed |
| back since it's not a digit. The string '1.23e-' would then be |
| considered invalid since an 'e' must be followed by at least one digit. |
| |
| For the standard C types, in the current implementation GMP calls the |
| C library 'scanf' functions, which might have looser rules about what |
| constitutes a valid input. |
| |
| Note that 'gmp_sscanf' is the same as 'gmp_fscanf' and only does one |
| character of lookahead when parsing. Although clearly it could look at |
| its entire input, it is deliberately made identical to 'gmp_fscanf', the |
| same way C99 'sscanf' is the same as 'fscanf'. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Formatted Input, Prev: Formatted Input Functions, Up: Formatted Input |
| |
| 11.3 C++ Formatted Input |
| ======================== |
| |
| The following functions are provided in 'libgmpxx' (*note Headers and |
| Libraries::), which is built only if C++ support is enabled (*note Build |
| Options::). Prototypes are available from '<gmp.h>'. |
| |
| -- Function: istream& operator>> (istream& STREAM, mpz_t ROP) |
| Read ROP from STREAM, using its 'ios' formatting settings. |
| |
| -- Function: istream& operator>> (istream& STREAM, mpq_t ROP) |
| An integer like '123' will be read, or a fraction like '5/9'. No |
| whitespace is allowed around the '/'. If the fraction is not in |
| canonical form then 'mpq_canonicalize' must be called (*note |
| Rational Number Functions::) before operating on it. |
| |
| As per integer input, an '0' or '0x' base indicator is read when |
| none of 'ios::dec', 'ios::oct' or 'ios::hex' are set. This is done |
| separately for numerator and denominator, so that for instance |
| '0x10/11' is 16/11 and '0x10/0x11' is 16/17. |
| |
| -- Function: istream& operator>> (istream& STREAM, mpf_t ROP) |
| Read ROP from STREAM, using its 'ios' formatting settings. |
| |
| Hex or octal floats are not supported, but might be in the future, |
| or perhaps it's best to accept only what the standard float |
| 'operator>>' does. |
| |
| Note that digit grouping specified by the 'istream' locale is |
| currently not accepted. Perhaps this will change in the future. |
| |
| |
| These operators mean that GMP types can be read in the usual C++ way, |
| for example, |
| |
| mpz_t z; |
| ... |
| cin >> z; |
| |
| But note that 'istream' input (and 'ostream' output, *note C++ |
| Formatted Output::) is the only overloading available for the GMP types |
| and that for instance using '+' with an 'mpz_t' will have unpredictable |
| results. For classes with overloading, see *note C++ Class Interface::. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Class Interface, Next: Custom Allocation, Prev: Formatted Input, Up: Top |
| |
| 12 C++ Class Interface |
| ********************** |
| |
| This chapter describes the C++ class based interface to GMP. |
| |
| All GMP C language types and functions can be used in C++ programs, |
| since 'gmp.h' has 'extern "C"' qualifiers, but the class interface |
| offers overloaded functions and operators which may be more convenient. |
| |
| Due to the implementation of this interface, a reasonably recent C++ |
| compiler is required, one supporting namespaces, partial specialization |
| of templates and member templates. |
| |
| *Everything described in this chapter is to be considered preliminary |
| and might be subject to incompatible changes if some unforeseen |
| difficulty reveals itself.* |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * C++ Interface General:: |
| * C++ Interface Integers:: |
| * C++ Interface Rationals:: |
| * C++ Interface Floats:: |
| * C++ Interface Random Numbers:: |
| * C++ Interface Limitations:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Interface General, Next: C++ Interface Integers, Prev: C++ Class Interface, Up: C++ Class Interface |
| |
| 12.1 C++ Interface General |
| ========================== |
| |
| All the C++ classes and functions are available with |
| |
| #include <gmpxx.h> |
| |
| Programs should be linked with the 'libgmpxx' and 'libgmp' libraries. |
| For example, |
| |
| g++ mycxxprog.cc -lgmpxx -lgmp |
| |
| The classes defined are |
| |
| -- Class: mpz_class |
| -- Class: mpq_class |
| -- Class: mpf_class |
| |
| The standard operators and various standard functions are overloaded |
| to allow arithmetic with these classes. For example, |
| |
| int |
| main (void) |
| { |
| mpz_class a, b, c; |
| |
| a = 1234; |
| b = "-5678"; |
| c = a+b; |
| cout << "sum is " << c << "\n"; |
| cout << "absolute value is " << abs(c) << "\n"; |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| An important feature of the implementation is that an expression like |
| 'a=b+c' results in a single call to the corresponding 'mpz_add', without |
| using a temporary for the 'b+c' part. Expressions which by their nature |
| imply intermediate values, like 'a=b*c+d*e', still use temporaries |
| though. |
| |
| The classes can be freely intermixed in expressions, as can the |
| classes and the standard types 'long', 'unsigned long' and 'double'. |
| Smaller types like 'int' or 'float' can also be intermixed, since C++ |
| will promote them. |
| |
| Note that 'bool' is not accepted directly, but must be explicitly |
| cast to an 'int' first. This is because C++ will automatically convert |
| any pointer to a 'bool', so if GMP accepted 'bool' it would make all |
| sorts of invalid class and pointer combinations compile but almost |
| certainly not do anything sensible. |
| |
| Conversions back from the classes to standard C++ types aren't done |
| automatically, instead member functions like 'get_si' are provided (see |
| the following sections for details). |
| |
| Also there are no automatic conversions from the classes to the |
| corresponding GMP C types, instead a reference to the underlying C |
| object can be obtained with the following functions, |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_t mpz_class::get_mpz_t () |
| -- Function: mpq_t mpq_class::get_mpq_t () |
| -- Function: mpf_t mpf_class::get_mpf_t () |
| |
| These can be used to call a C function which doesn't have a C++ class |
| interface. For example to set 'a' to the GCD of 'b' and 'c', |
| |
| mpz_class a, b, c; |
| ... |
| mpz_gcd (a.get_mpz_t(), b.get_mpz_t(), c.get_mpz_t()); |
| |
| In the other direction, a class can be initialized from the |
| corresponding GMP C type, or assigned to if an explicit constructor is |
| used. In both cases this makes a copy of the value, it doesn't create |
| any sort of association. For example, |
| |
| mpz_t z; |
| // ... init and calculate z ... |
| mpz_class x(z); |
| mpz_class y; |
| y = mpz_class (z); |
| |
| There are no namespace setups in 'gmpxx.h', all types and functions |
| are simply put into the global namespace. This is what 'gmp.h' has done |
| in the past, and continues to do for compatibility. The extras provided |
| by 'gmpxx.h' follow GMP naming conventions and are unlikely to clash |
| with anything. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Interface Integers, Next: C++ Interface Rationals, Prev: C++ Interface General, Up: C++ Class Interface |
| |
| 12.2 C++ Interface Integers |
| =========================== |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_class::mpz_class (type N) |
| Construct an 'mpz_class'. All the standard C++ types may be used, |
| except 'long long' and 'long double', and all the GMP C++ classes |
| can be used, although conversions from 'mpq_class' and 'mpf_class' |
| are 'explicit'. Any necessary conversion follows the corresponding |
| C function, for example 'double' follows 'mpz_set_d' (*note |
| Assigning Integers::). |
| |
| -- Function: explicit mpz_class::mpz_class (const mpz_t Z) |
| Construct an 'mpz_class' from an 'mpz_t'. The value in Z is copied |
| into the new 'mpz_class', there won't be any permanent association |
| between it and Z. |
| |
| -- Function: explicit mpz_class::mpz_class (const char *S, int BASE = |
| 0) |
| -- Function: explicit mpz_class::mpz_class (const string& S, int BASE = |
| 0) |
| Construct an 'mpz_class' converted from a string using |
| 'mpz_set_str' (*note Assigning Integers::). |
| |
| If the string is not a valid integer, an 'std::invalid_argument' |
| exception is thrown. The same applies to 'operator='. |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_class operator"" _mpz (const char *STR) |
| With C++11 compilers, integers can be constructed with the syntax |
| '123_mpz' which is equivalent to 'mpz_class("123")'. |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_class operator/ (mpz_class A, mpz_class D) |
| -- Function: mpz_class operator% (mpz_class A, mpz_class D) |
| Divisions involving 'mpz_class' round towards zero, as per the |
| 'mpz_tdiv_q' and 'mpz_tdiv_r' functions (*note Integer Division::). |
| This is the same as the C99 '/' and '%' operators. |
| |
| The 'mpz_fdiv...' or 'mpz_cdiv...' functions can always be called |
| directly if desired. For example, |
| |
| mpz_class q, a, d; |
| ... |
| mpz_fdiv_q (q.get_mpz_t(), a.get_mpz_t(), d.get_mpz_t()); |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_class abs (mpz_class OP) |
| -- Function: int cmp (mpz_class OP1, type OP2) |
| -- Function: int cmp (type OP1, mpz_class OP2) |
| |
| -- Function: bool mpz_class::fits_sint_p (void) |
| -- Function: bool mpz_class::fits_slong_p (void) |
| -- Function: bool mpz_class::fits_sshort_p (void) |
| |
| -- Function: bool mpz_class::fits_uint_p (void) |
| -- Function: bool mpz_class::fits_ulong_p (void) |
| -- Function: bool mpz_class::fits_ushort_p (void) |
| |
| -- Function: double mpz_class::get_d (void) |
| -- Function: long mpz_class::get_si (void) |
| -- Function: string mpz_class::get_str (int BASE = 10) |
| -- Function: unsigned long mpz_class::get_ui (void) |
| |
| -- Function: int mpz_class::set_str (const char *STR, int BASE) |
| -- Function: int mpz_class::set_str (const string& STR, int BASE) |
| -- Function: int sgn (mpz_class OP) |
| -- Function: mpz_class sqrt (mpz_class OP) |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_class gcd (mpz_class OP1, mpz_class OP2) |
| -- Function: mpz_class lcm (mpz_class OP1, mpz_class OP2) |
| -- Function: mpz_class mpz_class::factorial (type OP) |
| -- Function: mpz_class factorial (mpz_class OP) |
| -- Function: mpz_class mpz_class::primorial (type OP) |
| -- Function: mpz_class primorial (mpz_class OP) |
| -- Function: mpz_class mpz_class::fibonacci (type OP) |
| -- Function: mpz_class fibonacci (mpz_class OP) |
| |
| -- Function: void mpz_class::swap (mpz_class& OP) |
| -- Function: void swap (mpz_class& OP1, mpz_class& OP2) |
| These functions provide a C++ class interface to the corresponding |
| GMP C routines. Calling 'factorial' or 'primorial' on a negative |
| number is undefined. |
| |
| 'cmp' can be used with any of the classes or the standard C++ |
| types, except 'long long' and 'long double'. |
| |
| |
| Overloaded operators for combinations of 'mpz_class' and 'double' are |
| provided for completeness, but it should be noted that if the given |
| 'double' is not an integer then the way any rounding is done is |
| currently unspecified. The rounding might take place at the start, in |
| the middle, or at the end of the operation, and it might change in the |
| future. |
| |
| Conversions between 'mpz_class' and 'double', however, are defined to |
| follow the corresponding C functions 'mpz_get_d' and 'mpz_set_d'. And |
| comparisons are always made exactly, as per 'mpz_cmp_d'. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Interface Rationals, Next: C++ Interface Floats, Prev: C++ Interface Integers, Up: C++ Class Interface |
| |
| 12.3 C++ Interface Rationals |
| ============================ |
| |
| In all the following constructors, if a fraction is given then it should |
| be in canonical form, or if not then 'mpq_class::canonicalize' called. |
| |
| -- Function: mpq_class::mpq_class (type OP) |
| -- Function: mpq_class::mpq_class (integer NUM, integer DEN) |
| Construct an 'mpq_class'. The initial value can be a single value |
| of any type (conversion from 'mpf_class' is 'explicit'), or a pair |
| of integers ('mpz_class' or standard C++ integer types) |
| representing a fraction, except that 'long long' and 'long double' |
| are not supported. For example, |
| |
| mpq_class q (99); |
| mpq_class q (1.75); |
| mpq_class q (1, 3); |
| |
| -- Function: explicit mpq_class::mpq_class (const mpq_t Q) |
| Construct an 'mpq_class' from an 'mpq_t'. The value in Q is copied |
| into the new 'mpq_class', there won't be any permanent association |
| between it and Q. |
| |
| -- Function: explicit mpq_class::mpq_class (const char *S, int BASE = |
| 0) |
| -- Function: explicit mpq_class::mpq_class (const string& S, int BASE = |
| 0) |
| Construct an 'mpq_class' converted from a string using |
| 'mpq_set_str' (*note Initializing Rationals::). |
| |
| If the string is not a valid rational, an 'std::invalid_argument' |
| exception is thrown. The same applies to 'operator='. |
| |
| -- Function: mpq_class operator"" _mpq (const char *STR) |
| With C++11 compilers, integral rationals can be constructed with |
| the syntax '123_mpq' which is equivalent to 'mpq_class(123_mpz)'. |
| Other rationals can be built as '-1_mpq/2' or '0xb_mpq/123456_mpz'. |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_class::canonicalize () |
| Put an 'mpq_class' into canonical form, as per *note Rational |
| Number Functions::. All arithmetic operators require their |
| operands in canonical form, and will return results in canonical |
| form. |
| |
| -- Function: mpq_class abs (mpq_class OP) |
| -- Function: int cmp (mpq_class OP1, type OP2) |
| -- Function: int cmp (type OP1, mpq_class OP2) |
| |
| -- Function: double mpq_class::get_d (void) |
| -- Function: string mpq_class::get_str (int BASE = 10) |
| |
| -- Function: int mpq_class::set_str (const char *STR, int BASE) |
| -- Function: int mpq_class::set_str (const string& STR, int BASE) |
| -- Function: int sgn (mpq_class OP) |
| |
| -- Function: void mpq_class::swap (mpq_class& OP) |
| -- Function: void swap (mpq_class& OP1, mpq_class& OP2) |
| These functions provide a C++ class interface to the corresponding |
| GMP C routines. |
| |
| 'cmp' can be used with any of the classes or the standard C++ |
| types, except 'long long' and 'long double'. |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_class& mpq_class::get_num () |
| -- Function: mpz_class& mpq_class::get_den () |
| Get a reference to an 'mpz_class' which is the numerator or |
| denominator of an 'mpq_class'. This can be used both for read and |
| write access. If the object returned is modified, it modifies the |
| original 'mpq_class'. |
| |
| If direct manipulation might produce a non-canonical value, then |
| 'mpq_class::canonicalize' must be called before further operations. |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_t mpq_class::get_num_mpz_t () |
| -- Function: mpz_t mpq_class::get_den_mpz_t () |
| Get a reference to the underlying 'mpz_t' numerator or denominator |
| of an 'mpq_class'. This can be passed to C functions expecting an |
| 'mpz_t'. Any modifications made to the 'mpz_t' will modify the |
| original 'mpq_class'. |
| |
| If direct manipulation might produce a non-canonical value, then |
| 'mpq_class::canonicalize' must be called before further operations. |
| |
| -- Function: istream& operator>> (istream& STREAM, mpq_class& ROP); |
| Read ROP from STREAM, using its 'ios' formatting settings, the same |
| as 'mpq_t operator>>' (*note C++ Formatted Input::). |
| |
| If the ROP read might not be in canonical form then |
| 'mpq_class::canonicalize' must be called. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Interface Floats, Next: C++ Interface Random Numbers, Prev: C++ Interface Rationals, Up: C++ Class Interface |
| |
| 12.4 C++ Interface Floats |
| ========================= |
| |
| When an expression requires the use of temporary intermediate |
| 'mpf_class' values, like 'f=g*h+x*y', those temporaries will have the |
| same precision as the destination 'f'. Explicit constructors can be |
| used if this doesn't suit. |
| |
| -- Function: mpf_class::mpf_class (type OP) |
| -- Function: mpf_class::mpf_class (type OP, mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| Construct an 'mpf_class'. Any standard C++ type can be used, |
| except 'long long' and 'long double', and any of the GMP C++ |
| classes can be used. |
| |
| If PREC is given, the initial precision is that value, in bits. If |
| PREC is not given, then the initial precision is determined by the |
| type of OP given. An 'mpz_class', 'mpq_class', or C++ builtin type |
| will give the default 'mpf' precision (*note Initializing |
| Floats::). An 'mpf_class' or expression will give the precision of |
| that value. The precision of a binary expression is the higher of |
| the two operands. |
| |
| mpf_class f(1.5); // default precision |
| mpf_class f(1.5, 500); // 500 bits (at least) |
| mpf_class f(x); // precision of x |
| mpf_class f(abs(x)); // precision of x |
| mpf_class f(-g, 1000); // 1000 bits (at least) |
| mpf_class f(x+y); // greater of precisions of x and y |
| |
| -- Function: explicit mpf_class::mpf_class (const mpf_t F) |
| -- Function: mpf_class::mpf_class (const mpf_t F, mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| Construct an 'mpf_class' from an 'mpf_t'. The value in F is copied |
| into the new 'mpf_class', there won't be any permanent association |
| between it and F. |
| |
| If PREC is given, the initial precision is that value, in bits. If |
| PREC is not given, then the initial precision is that of F. |
| |
| -- Function: explicit mpf_class::mpf_class (const char *S) |
| -- Function: mpf_class::mpf_class (const char *S, mp_bitcnt_t PREC, int |
| BASE = 0) |
| -- Function: explicit mpf_class::mpf_class (const string& S) |
| -- Function: mpf_class::mpf_class (const string& S, mp_bitcnt_t PREC, |
| int BASE = 0) |
| Construct an 'mpf_class' converted from a string using |
| 'mpf_set_str' (*note Assigning Floats::). If PREC is given, the |
| initial precision is that value, in bits. If not, the default |
| 'mpf' precision (*note Initializing Floats::) is used. |
| |
| If the string is not a valid float, an 'std::invalid_argument' |
| exception is thrown. The same applies to 'operator='. |
| |
| -- Function: mpf_class operator"" _mpf (const char *STR) |
| With C++11 compilers, floats can be constructed with the syntax |
| '1.23e-1_mpf' which is equivalent to 'mpf_class("1.23e-1")'. |
| |
| -- Function: mpf_class& mpf_class::operator= (type OP) |
| Convert and store the given OP value to an 'mpf_class' object. The |
| same types are accepted as for the constructors above. |
| |
| Note that 'operator=' only stores a new value, it doesn't copy or |
| change the precision of the destination, instead the value is |
| truncated if necessary. This is the same as 'mpf_set' etc. Note |
| in particular this means for 'mpf_class' a copy constructor is not |
| the same as a default constructor plus assignment. |
| |
| mpf_class x (y); // x created with precision of y |
| |
| mpf_class x; // x created with default precision |
| x = y; // value truncated to that precision |
| |
| Applications using templated code may need to be careful about the |
| assumptions the code makes in this area, when working with |
| 'mpf_class' values of various different or non-default precisions. |
| For instance implementations of the standard 'complex' template |
| have been seen in both styles above, though of course 'complex' is |
| normally only actually specified for use with the builtin float |
| types. |
| |
| -- Function: mpf_class abs (mpf_class OP) |
| -- Function: mpf_class ceil (mpf_class OP) |
| -- Function: int cmp (mpf_class OP1, type OP2) |
| -- Function: int cmp (type OP1, mpf_class OP2) |
| |
| -- Function: bool mpf_class::fits_sint_p (void) |
| -- Function: bool mpf_class::fits_slong_p (void) |
| -- Function: bool mpf_class::fits_sshort_p (void) |
| |
| -- Function: bool mpf_class::fits_uint_p (void) |
| -- Function: bool mpf_class::fits_ulong_p (void) |
| -- Function: bool mpf_class::fits_ushort_p (void) |
| |
| -- Function: mpf_class floor (mpf_class OP) |
| -- Function: mpf_class hypot (mpf_class OP1, mpf_class OP2) |
| |
| -- Function: double mpf_class::get_d (void) |
| -- Function: long mpf_class::get_si (void) |
| -- Function: string mpf_class::get_str (mp_exp_t& EXP, int BASE = 10, |
| size_t DIGITS = 0) |
| -- Function: unsigned long mpf_class::get_ui (void) |
| |
| -- Function: int mpf_class::set_str (const char *STR, int BASE) |
| -- Function: int mpf_class::set_str (const string& STR, int BASE) |
| -- Function: int sgn (mpf_class OP) |
| -- Function: mpf_class sqrt (mpf_class OP) |
| |
| -- Function: void mpf_class::swap (mpf_class& OP) |
| -- Function: void swap (mpf_class& OP1, mpf_class& OP2) |
| -- Function: mpf_class trunc (mpf_class OP) |
| These functions provide a C++ class interface to the corresponding |
| GMP C routines. |
| |
| 'cmp' can be used with any of the classes or the standard C++ |
| types, except 'long long' and 'long double'. |
| |
| The accuracy provided by 'hypot' is not currently guaranteed. |
| |
| -- Function: mp_bitcnt_t mpf_class::get_prec () |
| -- Function: void mpf_class::set_prec (mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| -- Function: void mpf_class::set_prec_raw (mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| Get or set the current precision of an 'mpf_class'. |
| |
| The restrictions described for 'mpf_set_prec_raw' (*note |
| Initializing Floats::) apply to 'mpf_class::set_prec_raw'. Note in |
| particular that the 'mpf_class' must be restored to it's allocated |
| precision before being destroyed. This must be done by application |
| code, there's no automatic mechanism for it. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Interface Random Numbers, Next: C++ Interface Limitations, Prev: C++ Interface Floats, Up: C++ Class Interface |
| |
| 12.5 C++ Interface Random Numbers |
| ================================= |
| |
| -- Class: gmp_randclass |
| The C++ class interface to the GMP random number functions uses |
| 'gmp_randclass' to hold an algorithm selection and current state, |
| as per 'gmp_randstate_t'. |
| |
| -- Function: gmp_randclass::gmp_randclass (void (*RANDINIT) |
| (gmp_randstate_t, ...), ...) |
| Construct a 'gmp_randclass', using a call to the given RANDINIT |
| function (*note Random State Initialization::). The arguments |
| expected are the same as RANDINIT, but with 'mpz_class' instead of |
| 'mpz_t'. For example, |
| |
| gmp_randclass r1 (gmp_randinit_default); |
| gmp_randclass r2 (gmp_randinit_lc_2exp_size, 32); |
| gmp_randclass r3 (gmp_randinit_lc_2exp, a, c, m2exp); |
| gmp_randclass r4 (gmp_randinit_mt); |
| |
| 'gmp_randinit_lc_2exp_size' will fail if the size requested is too |
| big, an 'std::length_error' exception is thrown in that case. |
| |
| -- Function: gmp_randclass::gmp_randclass (gmp_randalg_t ALG, ...) |
| Construct a 'gmp_randclass' using the same parameters as |
| 'gmp_randinit' (*note Random State Initialization::). This |
| function is obsolete and the above RANDINIT style should be |
| preferred. |
| |
| -- Function: void gmp_randclass::seed (unsigned long int S) |
| -- Function: void gmp_randclass::seed (mpz_class S) |
| Seed a random number generator. See *note Random Number |
| Functions::, for how to choose a good seed. |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_class gmp_randclass::get_z_bits (mp_bitcnt_t BITS) |
| -- Function: mpz_class gmp_randclass::get_z_bits (mpz_class BITS) |
| Generate a random integer with a specified number of bits. |
| |
| -- Function: mpz_class gmp_randclass::get_z_range (mpz_class N) |
| Generate a random integer in the range 0 to N-1 inclusive. |
| |
| -- Function: mpf_class gmp_randclass::get_f () |
| -- Function: mpf_class gmp_randclass::get_f (mp_bitcnt_t PREC) |
| Generate a random float F in the range 0 <= F < 1. F will be to |
| PREC bits precision, or if PREC is not given then to the precision |
| of the destination. For example, |
| |
| gmp_randclass r; |
| ... |
| mpf_class f (0, 512); // 512 bits precision |
| f = r.get_f(); // random number, 512 bits |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: C++ Interface Limitations, Prev: C++ Interface Random Numbers, Up: C++ Class Interface |
| |
| 12.6 C++ Interface Limitations |
| ============================== |
| |
| 'mpq_class' and Templated Reading |
| A generic piece of template code probably won't know that |
| 'mpq_class' requires a 'canonicalize' call if inputs read with |
| 'operator>>' might be non-canonical. This can lead to incorrect |
| results. |
| |
| 'operator>>' behaves as it does for reasons of efficiency. A |
| canonicalize can be quite time consuming on large operands, and is |
| best avoided if it's not necessary. |
| |
| But this potential difficulty reduces the usefulness of |
| 'mpq_class'. Perhaps a mechanism to tell 'operator>>' what to do |
| will be adopted in the future, maybe a preprocessor define, a |
| global flag, or an 'ios' flag pressed into service. Or maybe, at |
| the risk of inconsistency, the 'mpq_class' 'operator>>' could |
| canonicalize and leave 'mpq_t' 'operator>>' not doing so, for use |
| on those occasions when that's acceptable. Send feedback or |
| alternate ideas to <gmp-bugs@gmplib.org>. |
| |
| Subclassing |
| Subclassing the GMP C++ classes works, but is not currently |
| recommended. |
| |
| Expressions involving subclasses resolve correctly (or seem to), |
| but in normal C++ fashion the subclass doesn't inherit constructors |
| and assignments. There's many of those in the GMP classes, and a |
| good way to reestablish them in a subclass is not yet provided. |
| |
| Templated Expressions |
| A subtle difficulty exists when using expressions together with |
| application-defined template functions. Consider the following, |
| with 'T' intended to be some numeric type, |
| |
| template <class T> |
| T fun (const T &, const T &); |
| |
| When used with, say, plain 'mpz_class' variables, it works fine: |
| 'T' is resolved as 'mpz_class'. |
| |
| mpz_class f(1), g(2); |
| fun (f, g); // Good |
| |
| But when one of the arguments is an expression, it doesn't work. |
| |
| mpz_class f(1), g(2), h(3); |
| fun (f, g+h); // Bad |
| |
| This is because 'g+h' ends up being a certain expression template |
| type internal to 'gmpxx.h', which the C++ template resolution rules |
| are unable to automatically convert to 'mpz_class'. The workaround |
| is simply to add an explicit cast. |
| |
| mpz_class f(1), g(2), h(3); |
| fun (f, mpz_class(g+h)); // Good |
| |
| Similarly, within 'fun' it may be necessary to cast an expression |
| to type 'T' when calling a templated 'fun2'. |
| |
| template <class T> |
| void fun (T f, T g) |
| { |
| fun2 (f, f+g); // Bad |
| } |
| |
| template <class T> |
| void fun (T f, T g) |
| { |
| fun2 (f, T(f+g)); // Good |
| } |
| |
| C++11 |
| C++11 provides several new ways in which types can be inferred: |
| 'auto', 'decltype', etc. While they can be very convenient, they |
| don't mix well with expression templates. In this example, the |
| addition is performed twice, as if we had defined 'sum' as a macro. |
| |
| mpz_class z = 33; |
| auto sum = z + z; |
| mpz_class prod = sum * sum; |
| |
| This other example may crash, though some compilers might make it |
| look like it is working, because the expression 'z+z' goes out of |
| scope before it is evaluated. |
| |
| mpz_class z = 33; |
| auto sum = z + z + z; |
| mpz_class prod = sum * 2; |
| |
| It is thus strongly recommended to avoid 'auto' anywhere a GMP C++ |
| expression may appear. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Custom Allocation, Next: Language Bindings, Prev: C++ Class Interface, Up: Top |
| |
| 13 Custom Allocation |
| ******************** |
| |
| By default GMP uses 'malloc', 'realloc' and 'free' for memory |
| allocation, and if they fail GMP prints a message to the standard error |
| output and terminates the program. |
| |
| Alternate functions can be specified, to allocate memory in a |
| different way or to have a different error action on running out of |
| memory. |
| |
| -- Function: void mp_set_memory_functions ( |
| void *(*ALLOC_FUNC_PTR) (size_t), |
| void *(*REALLOC_FUNC_PTR) (void *, size_t, size_t), |
| void (*FREE_FUNC_PTR) (void *, size_t)) |
| Replace the current allocation functions from the arguments. If an |
| argument is 'NULL', the corresponding default function is used. |
| |
| These functions will be used for all memory allocation done by GMP, |
| apart from temporary space from 'alloca' if that function is |
| available and GMP is configured to use it (*note Build Options::). |
| |
| *Be sure to call 'mp_set_memory_functions' only when there are no |
| active GMP objects allocated using the previous memory functions! |
| Usually that means calling it before any other GMP function.* |
| |
| The functions supplied should fit the following declarations: |
| |
| -- Function: void * allocate_function (size_t ALLOC_SIZE) |
| Return a pointer to newly allocated space with at least ALLOC_SIZE |
| bytes. |
| |
| -- Function: void * reallocate_function (void *PTR, size_t OLD_SIZE, |
| size_t NEW_SIZE) |
| Resize a previously allocated block PTR of OLD_SIZE bytes to be |
| NEW_SIZE bytes. |
| |
| The block may be moved if necessary or if desired, and in that case |
| the smaller of OLD_SIZE and NEW_SIZE bytes must be copied to the |
| new location. The return value is a pointer to the resized block, |
| that being the new location if moved or just PTR if not. |
| |
| PTR is never 'NULL', it's always a previously allocated block. |
| NEW_SIZE may be bigger or smaller than OLD_SIZE. |
| |
| -- Function: void free_function (void *PTR, size_t SIZE) |
| De-allocate the space pointed to by PTR. |
| |
| PTR is never 'NULL', it's always a previously allocated block of |
| SIZE bytes. |
| |
| A "byte" here means the unit used by the 'sizeof' operator. |
| |
| The REALLOCATE_FUNCTION parameter OLD_SIZE and the FREE_FUNCTION |
| parameter SIZE are passed for convenience, but of course they can be |
| ignored if not needed by an implementation. The default functions using |
| 'malloc' and friends for instance don't use them. |
| |
| No error return is allowed from any of these functions, if they |
| return then they must have performed the specified operation. In |
| particular note that ALLOCATE_FUNCTION or REALLOCATE_FUNCTION mustn't |
| return 'NULL'. |
| |
| Getting a different fatal error action is a good use for custom |
| allocation functions, for example giving a graphical dialog rather than |
| the default print to 'stderr'. How much is possible when genuinely out |
| of memory is another question though. |
| |
| There's currently no defined way for the allocation functions to |
| recover from an error such as out of memory, they must terminate program |
| execution. A 'longjmp' or throwing a C++ exception will have undefined |
| results. This may change in the future. |
| |
| GMP may use allocated blocks to hold pointers to other allocated |
| blocks. This will limit the assumptions a conservative garbage |
| collection scheme can make. |
| |
| Since the default GMP allocation uses 'malloc' and friends, those |
| functions will be linked in even if the first thing a program does is an |
| 'mp_set_memory_functions'. It's necessary to change the GMP sources if |
| this is a problem. |
| |
| |
| -- Function: void mp_get_memory_functions ( |
| void *(**ALLOC_FUNC_PTR) (size_t), |
| void *(**REALLOC_FUNC_PTR) (void *, size_t, size_t), |
| void (**FREE_FUNC_PTR) (void *, size_t)) |
| Get the current allocation functions, storing function pointers to |
| the locations given by the arguments. If an argument is 'NULL', |
| that function pointer is not stored. |
| |
| For example, to get just the current free function, |
| |
| void (*freefunc) (void *, size_t); |
| |
| mp_get_memory_functions (NULL, NULL, &freefunc); |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Language Bindings, Next: Algorithms, Prev: Custom Allocation, Up: Top |
| |
| 14 Language Bindings |
| ******************** |
| |
| The following packages and projects offer access to GMP from languages |
| other than C, though perhaps with varying levels of functionality and |
| efficiency. |
| |
| |
| C++ |
| * GMP C++ class interface, *note C++ Class Interface:: |
| Straightforward interface, expression templates to eliminate |
| temporaries. |
| * ALP <https://www-sop.inria.fr/saga/logiciels/ALP/> |
| Linear algebra and polynomials using templates. |
| * CLN <https://www.ginac.de/CLN/> |
| High level classes for arithmetic. |
| * Linbox <http://www.linalg.org/> |
| Sparse vectors and matrices. |
| * NTL <http://www.shoup.net/ntl/> |
| A C++ number theory library. |
| |
| Eiffel |
| * Eiffelroom <http://www.eiffelroom.org/node/442> |
| |
| Haskell |
| * Glasgow Haskell Compiler <https://www.haskell.org/ghc/> |
| |
| Java |
| * Kaffe <https://github.com/kaffe/kaffe> |
| |
| Lisp |
| * GNU Common Lisp <https://www.gnu.org/software/gcl/gcl.html> |
| * Librep <http://librep.sourceforge.net/> |
| * XEmacs (21.5.18 beta and up) <https://www.xemacs.org> |
| Optional big integers, rationals and floats using GMP. |
| |
| ML |
| * MLton compiler <http://mlton.org/> |
| |
| Objective Caml |
| * MLGMP <https://opam.ocaml.org/packages/mlgmp/> |
| * Numerix <http://pauillac.inria.fr/~quercia/> |
| Optionally using GMP. |
| |
| Oz |
| * Mozart <https://mozart.github.io/> |
| |
| Pascal |
| * GNU Pascal Compiler <http://www.gnu-pascal.de/> |
| GMP unit. |
| * Numerix <http://pauillac.inria.fr/~quercia/> |
| For Free Pascal, optionally using GMP. |
| |
| Perl |
| * GMP module, see 'demos/perl' in the GMP sources (*note |
| Demonstration Programs::). |
| * Math::GMP <https://www.cpan.org/> |
| Compatible with Math::BigInt, but not as many functions as the |
| GMP module above. |
| * Math::BigInt::GMP <https://www.cpan.org/> |
| Plug Math::GMP into normal Math::BigInt operations. |
| |
| Pike |
| * pikempz module in the standard distribution, |
| <https://pike.lysator.liu.se/> |
| |
| Prolog |
| * SWI Prolog <http://www.swi-prolog.org/> |
| Arbitrary precision floats. |
| |
| Python |
| * GMPY <https://code.google.com/p/gmpy/> |
| |
| Ruby |
| * <https://rubygems.org/gems/gmp> |
| |
| Scheme |
| * GNU Guile <https://www.gnu.org/software/guile/guile.html> |
| * RScheme <https://www.rscheme.org/> |
| * STklos <http://www.stklos.net/> |
| |
| Smalltalk |
| * GNU Smalltalk <http://smalltalk.gnu.org/> |
| |
| Other |
| * Axiom <https://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/axiom> |
| Computer algebra using GCL. |
| * DrGenius <http://drgenius.seul.org/> |
| Geometry system and mathematical programming language. |
| * GiNaC <httsp://www.ginac.de/> |
| C++ computer algebra using CLN. |
| * GOO <https://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/~jrb/goo/> |
| Dynamic object oriented language. |
| * Maxima <https://www.ma.utexas.edu/users/wfs/maxima.html> |
| Macsyma computer algebra using GCL. |
| * Regina <http://regina.sourceforge.net/> |
| Topological calculator. |
| * Yacas <http://yacas.sourceforge.net> |
| Yet another computer algebra system. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Algorithms, Next: Internals, Prev: Language Bindings, Up: Top |
| |
| 15 Algorithms |
| ************* |
| |
| This chapter is an introduction to some of the algorithms used for |
| various GMP operations. The code is likely to be hard to understand |
| without knowing something about the algorithms. |
| |
| Some GMP internals are mentioned, but applications that expect to be |
| compatible with future GMP releases should take care to use only the |
| documented functions. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Multiplication Algorithms:: |
| * Division Algorithms:: |
| * Greatest Common Divisor Algorithms:: |
| * Powering Algorithms:: |
| * Root Extraction Algorithms:: |
| * Radix Conversion Algorithms:: |
| * Other Algorithms:: |
| * Assembly Coding:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Multiplication Algorithms, Next: Division Algorithms, Prev: Algorithms, Up: Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1 Multiplication |
| =================== |
| |
| NxN limb multiplications and squares are done using one of seven |
| algorithms, as the size N increases. |
| |
| Algorithm Threshold |
| Basecase (none) |
| Karatsuba 'MUL_TOOM22_THRESHOLD' |
| Toom-3 'MUL_TOOM33_THRESHOLD' |
| Toom-4 'MUL_TOOM44_THRESHOLD' |
| Toom-6.5 'MUL_TOOM6H_THRESHOLD' |
| Toom-8.5 'MUL_TOOM8H_THRESHOLD' |
| FFT 'MUL_FFT_THRESHOLD' |
| |
| Similarly for squaring, with the 'SQR' thresholds. |
| |
| NxM multiplications of operands with different sizes above |
| 'MUL_TOOM22_THRESHOLD' are currently done by special Toom-inspired |
| algorithms or directly with FFT, depending on operand size (*note |
| Unbalanced Multiplication::). |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Basecase Multiplication:: |
| * Karatsuba Multiplication:: |
| * Toom 3-Way Multiplication:: |
| * Toom 4-Way Multiplication:: |
| * Higher degree Toom'n'half:: |
| * FFT Multiplication:: |
| * Other Multiplication:: |
| * Unbalanced Multiplication:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Basecase Multiplication, Next: Karatsuba Multiplication, Prev: Multiplication Algorithms, Up: Multiplication Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1.1 Basecase Multiplication |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Basecase NxM multiplication is a straightforward rectangular set of |
| cross-products, the same as long multiplication done by hand and for |
| that reason sometimes known as the schoolbook or grammar school method. |
| This is an O(N*M) algorithm. See Knuth section 4.3.1 algorithm M (*note |
| References::), and the 'mpn/generic/mul_basecase.c' code. |
| |
| Assembly implementations of 'mpn_mul_basecase' are essentially the |
| same as the generic C code, but have all the usual assembly tricks and |
| obscurities introduced for speed. |
| |
| A square can be done in roughly half the time of a multiply, by using |
| the fact that the cross products above and below the diagonal are the |
| same. A triangle of products below the diagonal is formed, doubled |
| (left shift by one bit), and then the products on the diagonal added. |
| This can be seen in 'mpn/generic/sqr_basecase.c'. Again the assembly |
| implementations take essentially the same approach. |
| |
| u0 u1 u2 u3 u4 |
| +---+---+---+---+---+ |
| u0 | d | | | | | |
| +---+---+---+---+---+ |
| u1 | | d | | | | |
| +---+---+---+---+---+ |
| u2 | | | d | | | |
| +---+---+---+---+---+ |
| u3 | | | | d | | |
| +---+---+---+---+---+ |
| u4 | | | | | d | |
| +---+---+---+---+---+ |
| |
| In practice squaring isn't a full 2x faster than multiplying, it's |
| usually around 1.5x. Less than 1.5x probably indicates |
| 'mpn_sqr_basecase' wants improving on that CPU. |
| |
| On some CPUs 'mpn_mul_basecase' can be faster than the generic C |
| 'mpn_sqr_basecase' on some small sizes. 'SQR_BASECASE_THRESHOLD' is the |
| size at which to use 'mpn_sqr_basecase', this will be zero if that |
| routine should be used always. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Karatsuba Multiplication, Next: Toom 3-Way Multiplication, Prev: Basecase Multiplication, Up: Multiplication Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1.2 Karatsuba Multiplication |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| The Karatsuba multiplication algorithm is described in Knuth section |
| 4.3.3 part A, and various other textbooks. A brief description is given |
| here. |
| |
| The inputs x and y are treated as each split into two parts of equal |
| length (or the most significant part one limb shorter if N is odd). |
| |
| high low |
| +----------+----------+ |
| | x1 | x0 | |
| +----------+----------+ |
| |
| +----------+----------+ |
| | y1 | y0 | |
| +----------+----------+ |
| |
| Let b be the power of 2 where the split occurs, i.e. if x0 is k limbs |
| (y0 the same) then b=2^(k*mp_bits_per_limb). With that x=x1*b+x0 and |
| y=y1*b+y0, and the following holds, |
| |
| x*y = (b^2+b)*x1*y1 - b*(x1-x0)*(y1-y0) + (b+1)*x0*y0 |
| |
| This formula means doing only three multiplies of (N/2)x(N/2) limbs, |
| whereas a basecase multiply of NxN limbs is equivalent to four |
| multiplies of (N/2)x(N/2). The factors (b^2+b) etc represent the |
| positions where the three products must be added. |
| |
| high low |
| +--------+--------+ +--------+--------+ |
| | x1*y1 | | x0*y0 | |
| +--------+--------+ +--------+--------+ |
| +--------+--------+ |
| add | x1*y1 | |
| +--------+--------+ |
| +--------+--------+ |
| add | x0*y0 | |
| +--------+--------+ |
| +--------+--------+ |
| sub | (x1-x0)*(y1-y0) | |
| +--------+--------+ |
| |
| The term (x1-x0)*(y1-y0) is best calculated as an absolute value, and |
| the sign used to choose to add or subtract. Notice the sum |
| high(x0*y0)+low(x1*y1) occurs twice, so it's possible to do 5*k limb |
| additions, rather than 6*k, but in GMP extra function call overheads |
| outweigh the saving. |
| |
| Squaring is similar to multiplying, but with x=y the formula reduces |
| to an equivalent with three squares, |
| |
| x^2 = (b^2+b)*x1^2 - b*(x1-x0)^2 + (b+1)*x0^2 |
| |
| The final result is accumulated from those three squares the same way |
| as for the three multiplies above. The middle term (x1-x0)^2 is now |
| always positive. |
| |
| A similar formula for both multiplying and squaring can be |
| constructed with a middle term (x1+x0)*(y1+y0). But those sums can |
| exceed k limbs, leading to more carry handling and additions than the |
| form above. |
| |
| Karatsuba multiplication is asymptotically an O(N^1.585) algorithm, |
| the exponent being log(3)/log(2), representing 3 multiplies each 1/2 the |
| size of the inputs. This is a big improvement over the basecase |
| multiply at O(N^2) and the advantage soon overcomes the extra additions |
| Karatsuba performs. 'MUL_TOOM22_THRESHOLD' can be as little as 10 |
| limbs. The 'SQR' threshold is usually about twice the 'MUL'. |
| |
| The basecase algorithm will take a time of the form M(N) = a*N^2 + |
| b*N + c and the Karatsuba algorithm K(N) = 3*M(N/2) + d*N + e, which |
| expands to K(N) = 3/4*a*N^2 + 3/2*b*N + 3*c + d*N + e. The factor 3/4 |
| for a means per-crossproduct speedups in the basecase code will increase |
| the threshold since they benefit M(N) more than K(N). And conversely the |
| 3/2 for b means linear style speedups of b will increase the threshold |
| since they benefit K(N) more than M(N). The latter can be seen for |
| instance when adding an optimized 'mpn_sqr_diagonal' to |
| 'mpn_sqr_basecase'. Of course all speedups reduce total time, and in |
| that sense the algorithm thresholds are merely of academic interest. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Toom 3-Way Multiplication, Next: Toom 4-Way Multiplication, Prev: Karatsuba Multiplication, Up: Multiplication Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1.3 Toom 3-Way Multiplication |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| The Karatsuba formula is the simplest case of a general approach to |
| splitting inputs that leads to both Toom and FFT algorithms. A |
| description of Toom can be found in Knuth section 4.3.3, with an example |
| 3-way calculation after Theorem A. The 3-way form used in GMP is |
| described here. |
| |
| The operands are each considered split into 3 pieces of equal length |
| (or the most significant part 1 or 2 limbs shorter than the other two). |
| |
| high low |
| +----------+----------+----------+ |
| | x2 | x1 | x0 | |
| +----------+----------+----------+ |
| |
| +----------+----------+----------+ |
| | y2 | y1 | y0 | |
| +----------+----------+----------+ |
| |
| These parts are treated as the coefficients of two polynomials |
| |
| X(t) = x2*t^2 + x1*t + x0 |
| Y(t) = y2*t^2 + y1*t + y0 |
| |
| Let b equal the power of 2 which is the size of the x0, x1, y0 and y1 |
| pieces, i.e. if they're k limbs each then b=2^(k*mp_bits_per_limb). |
| With this x=X(b) and y=Y(b). |
| |
| Let a polynomial W(t)=X(t)*Y(t) and suppose its coefficients are |
| |
| W(t) = w4*t^4 + w3*t^3 + w2*t^2 + w1*t + w0 |
| |
| The w[i] are going to be determined, and when they are they'll give |
| the final result using w=W(b), since x*y=X(b)*Y(b)=W(b). The |
| coefficients will be roughly b^2 each, and the final W(b) will be an |
| addition like, |
| |
| high low |
| +-------+-------+ |
| | w4 | |
| +-------+-------+ |
| +--------+-------+ |
| | w3 | |
| +--------+-------+ |
| +--------+-------+ |
| | w2 | |
| +--------+-------+ |
| +--------+-------+ |
| | w1 | |
| +--------+-------+ |
| +-------+-------+ |
| | w0 | |
| +-------+-------+ |
| |
| The w[i] coefficients could be formed by a simple set of cross |
| products, like w4=x2*y2, w3=x2*y1+x1*y2, w2=x2*y0+x1*y1+x0*y2 etc, but |
| this would need all nine x[i]*y[j] for i,j=0,1,2, and would be |
| equivalent merely to a basecase multiply. Instead the following |
| approach is used. |
| |
| X(t) and Y(t) are evaluated and multiplied at 5 points, giving values |
| of W(t) at those points. In GMP the following points are used, |
| |
| Point Value |
| t=0 x0 * y0, which gives w0 immediately |
| t=1 (x2+x1+x0) * (y2+y1+y0) |
| t=-1 (x2-x1+x0) * (y2-y1+y0) |
| t=2 (4*x2+2*x1+x0) * (4*y2+2*y1+y0) |
| t=inf x2 * y2, which gives w4 immediately |
| |
| At t=-1 the values can be negative and that's handled using the |
| absolute values and tracking the sign separately. At t=inf the value is |
| actually X(t)*Y(t)/t^4 in the limit as t approaches infinity, but it's |
| much easier to think of as simply x2*y2 giving w4 immediately (much like |
| x0*y0 at t=0 gives w0 immediately). |
| |
| Each of the points substituted into W(t)=w4*t^4+...+w0 gives a linear |
| combination of the w[i] coefficients, and the value of those |
| combinations has just been calculated. |
| |
| W(0) = w0 |
| W(1) = w4 + w3 + w2 + w1 + w0 |
| W(-1) = w4 - w3 + w2 - w1 + w0 |
| W(2) = 16*w4 + 8*w3 + 4*w2 + 2*w1 + w0 |
| W(inf) = w4 |
| |
| This is a set of five equations in five unknowns, and some elementary |
| linear algebra quickly isolates each w[i]. This involves adding or |
| subtracting one W(t) value from another, and a couple of divisions by |
| powers of 2 and one division by 3, the latter using the special |
| 'mpn_divexact_by3' (*note Exact Division::). |
| |
| The conversion of W(t) values to the coefficients is interpolation. |
| A polynomial of degree 4 like W(t) is uniquely determined by values |
| known at 5 different points. The points are arbitrary and can be chosen |
| to make the linear equations come out with a convenient set of steps for |
| quickly isolating the w[i]. |
| |
| Squaring follows the same procedure as multiplication, but there's |
| only one X(t) and it's evaluated at the 5 points, and those values |
| squared to give values of W(t). The interpolation is then identical, |
| and in fact the same 'toom_interpolate_5pts' subroutine is used for both |
| squaring and multiplying. |
| |
| Toom-3 is asymptotically O(N^1.465), the exponent being |
| log(5)/log(3), representing 5 recursive multiplies of 1/3 the original |
| size each. This is an improvement over Karatsuba at O(N^1.585), though |
| Toom does more work in the evaluation and interpolation and so it only |
| realizes its advantage above a certain size. |
| |
| Near the crossover between Toom-3 and Karatsuba there's generally a |
| range of sizes where the difference between the two is small. |
| 'MUL_TOOM33_THRESHOLD' is a somewhat arbitrary point in that range and |
| successive runs of the tune program can give different values due to |
| small variations in measuring. A graph of time versus size for the two |
| shows the effect, see 'tune/README'. |
| |
| At the fairly small sizes where the Toom-3 thresholds occur it's |
| worth remembering that the asymptotic behaviour for Karatsuba and Toom-3 |
| can't be expected to make accurate predictions, due of course to the big |
| influence of all sorts of overheads, and the fact that only a few |
| recursions of each are being performed. Even at large sizes there's a |
| good chance machine dependent effects like cache architecture will mean |
| actual performance deviates from what might be predicted. |
| |
| The formula given for the Karatsuba algorithm (*note Karatsuba |
| Multiplication::) has an equivalent for Toom-3 involving only five |
| multiplies, but this would be complicated and unenlightening. |
| |
| An alternate view of Toom-3 can be found in Zuras (*note |
| References::), using a vector to represent the x and y splits and a |
| matrix multiplication for the evaluation and interpolation stages. The |
| matrix inverses are not meant to be actually used, and they have |
| elements with values much greater than in fact arise in the |
| interpolation steps. The diagram shown for the 3-way is attractive, but |
| again doesn't have to be implemented that way and for example with a bit |
| of rearrangement just one division by 6 can be done. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Toom 4-Way Multiplication, Next: Higher degree Toom'n'half, Prev: Toom 3-Way Multiplication, Up: Multiplication Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1.4 Toom 4-Way Multiplication |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Karatsuba and Toom-3 split the operands into 2 and 3 coefficients, |
| respectively. Toom-4 analogously splits the operands into 4 |
| coefficients. Using the notation from the section on Toom-3 |
| multiplication, we form two polynomials: |
| |
| X(t) = x3*t^3 + x2*t^2 + x1*t + x0 |
| Y(t) = y3*t^3 + y2*t^2 + y1*t + y0 |
| |
| X(t) and Y(t) are evaluated and multiplied at 7 points, giving values |
| of W(t) at those points. In GMP the following points are used, |
| |
| Point Value |
| t=0 x0 * y0, which gives w0 immediately |
| t=1/2 (x3+2*x2+4*x1+8*x0) * (y3+2*y2+4*y1+8*y0) |
| t=-1/2 (-x3+2*x2-4*x1+8*x0) * (-y3+2*y2-4*y1+8*y0) |
| t=1 (x3+x2+x1+x0) * (y3+y2+y1+y0) |
| t=-1 (-x3+x2-x1+x0) * (-y3+y2-y1+y0) |
| t=2 (8*x3+4*x2+2*x1+x0) * (8*y3+4*y2+2*y1+y0) |
| t=inf x3 * y3, which gives w6 immediately |
| |
| The number of additions and subtractions for Toom-4 is much larger |
| than for Toom-3. But several subexpressions occur multiple times, for |
| example x2+x0, occurs for both t=1 and t=-1. |
| |
| Toom-4 is asymptotically O(N^1.404), the exponent being |
| log(7)/log(4), representing 7 recursive multiplies of 1/4 the original |
| size each. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Higher degree Toom'n'half, Next: FFT Multiplication, Prev: Toom 4-Way Multiplication, Up: Multiplication Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1.5 Higher degree Toom'n'half |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| The Toom algorithms described above (*note Toom 3-Way Multiplication::, |
| *note Toom 4-Way Multiplication::) generalizes to split into an |
| arbitrary number of pieces. In general a split of two equally long |
| operands into r pieces leads to evaluations and pointwise |
| multiplications done at 2*r-1 points. To fully exploit symmetries it |
| would be better to have a multiple of 4 points, that's why for higher |
| degree Toom'n'half is used. |
| |
| Toom'n'half means that the existence of one more piece is considered |
| for a single operand. It can be virtual, i.e. zero, or real, when the |
| two operand are not exactly balanced. By choosing an even r, Toom-r+1/2 |
| requires 2r points, a multiple of four. |
| |
| The quadruplets of points include 0, inf, +1, -1 and +-2^i, +-2^-i . |
| Each of them giving shortcuts for the evaluation phase and for some |
| steps in the interpolation phase. Further tricks are used to reduce the |
| memory footprint of the whole multiplication algorithm to a memory |
| buffer equal in size to the result of the product. |
| |
| Current GMP uses both Toom-6'n'half and Toom-8'n'half. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: FFT Multiplication, Next: Other Multiplication, Prev: Higher degree Toom'n'half, Up: Multiplication Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1.6 FFT Multiplication |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| At large to very large sizes a Fermat style FFT multiplication is used, |
| following Schönhage and Strassen (*note References::). Descriptions of |
| FFTs in various forms can be found in many textbooks, for instance Knuth |
| section 4.3.3 part C or Lipson chapter IX. A brief description of the |
| form used in GMP is given here. |
| |
| The multiplication done is x*y mod 2^N+1, for a given N. A full |
| product x*y is obtained by choosing N>=bits(x)+bits(y) and padding x and |
| y with high zero limbs. The modular product is the native form for the |
| algorithm, so padding to get a full product is unavoidable. |
| |
| The algorithm follows a split, evaluate, pointwise multiply, |
| interpolate and combine similar to that described above for Karatsuba |
| and Toom-3. A k parameter controls the split, with an FFT-k splitting |
| into 2^k pieces of M=N/2^k bits each. N must be a multiple of |
| (2^k)*mp_bits_per_limb so the split falls on limb boundaries, avoiding |
| bit shifts in the split and combine stages. |
| |
| The evaluations, pointwise multiplications, and interpolation, are |
| all done modulo 2^N'+1 where N' is 2M+k+3 rounded up to a multiple of |
| 2^k and of 'mp_bits_per_limb'. The results of interpolation will be the |
| following negacyclic convolution of the input pieces, and the choice of |
| N' ensures these sums aren't truncated. |
| |
| --- |
| \ b |
| w[n] = / (-1) * x[i] * y[j] |
| --- |
| i+j==b*2^k+n |
| b=0,1 |
| |
| The points used for the evaluation are g^i for i=0 to 2^k-1 where |
| g=2^(2N'/2^k). g is a 2^k'th root of unity mod 2^N'+1, which produces |
| necessary cancellations at the interpolation stage, and it's also a |
| power of 2 so the fast Fourier transforms used for the evaluation and |
| interpolation do only shifts, adds and negations. |
| |
| The pointwise multiplications are done modulo 2^N'+1 and either |
| recurse into a further FFT or use a plain multiplication (Toom-3, |
| Karatsuba or basecase), whichever is optimal at the size N'. The |
| interpolation is an inverse fast Fourier transform. The resulting set |
| of sums of x[i]*y[j] are added at appropriate offsets to give the final |
| result. |
| |
| Squaring is the same, but x is the only input so it's one transform |
| at the evaluate stage and the pointwise multiplies are squares. The |
| interpolation is the same. |
| |
| For a mod 2^N+1 product, an FFT-k is an O(N^(k/(k-1))) algorithm, the |
| exponent representing 2^k recursed modular multiplies each 1/2^(k-1) the |
| size of the original. Each successive k is an asymptotic improvement, |
| but overheads mean each is only faster at bigger and bigger sizes. In |
| the code, 'MUL_FFT_TABLE' and 'SQR_FFT_TABLE' are the thresholds where |
| each k is used. Each new k effectively swaps some multiplying for some |
| shifts, adds and overheads. |
| |
| A mod 2^N+1 product can be formed with a normal NxN->2N bit multiply |
| plus a subtraction, so an FFT and Toom-3 etc can be compared directly. |
| A k=4 FFT at O(N^1.333) can be expected to be the first faster than |
| Toom-3 at O(N^1.465). In practice this is what's found, with |
| 'MUL_FFT_MODF_THRESHOLD' and 'SQR_FFT_MODF_THRESHOLD' being between 300 |
| and 1000 limbs, depending on the CPU. So far it's been found that only |
| very large FFTs recurse into pointwise multiplies above these sizes. |
| |
| When an FFT is to give a full product, the change of N to 2N doesn't |
| alter the theoretical complexity for a given k, but for the purposes of |
| considering where an FFT might be first used it can be assumed that the |
| FFT is recursing into a normal multiply and that on that basis it's |
| doing 2^k recursed multiplies each 1/2^(k-2) the size of the inputs, |
| making it O(N^(k/(k-2))). This would mean k=7 at O(N^1.4) would be the |
| first FFT faster than Toom-3. In practice 'MUL_FFT_THRESHOLD' and |
| 'SQR_FFT_THRESHOLD' have been found to be in the k=8 range, somewhere |
| between 3000 and 10000 limbs. |
| |
| The way N is split into 2^k pieces and then 2M+k+3 is rounded up to a |
| multiple of 2^k and 'mp_bits_per_limb' means that when |
| 2^k>=mp\_bits\_per\_limb the effective N is a multiple of 2^(2k-1) bits. |
| The +k+3 means some values of N just under such a multiple will be |
| rounded to the next. The complexity calculations above assume that a |
| favourable size is used, meaning one which isn't padded through |
| rounding, and it's also assumed that the extra +k+3 bits are negligible |
| at typical FFT sizes. |
| |
| The practical effect of the 2^(2k-1) constraint is to introduce a |
| step-effect into measured speeds. For example k=8 will round N up to a |
| multiple of 32768 bits, so for a 32-bit limb there'll be 512 limb groups |
| of sizes for which 'mpn_mul_n' runs at the same speed. Or for k=9 |
| groups of 2048 limbs, k=10 groups of 8192 limbs, etc. In practice it's |
| been found each k is used at quite small multiples of its size |
| constraint and so the step effect is quite noticeable in a time versus |
| size graph. |
| |
| The threshold determinations currently measure at the mid-points of |
| size steps, but this is sub-optimal since at the start of a new step it |
| can happen that it's better to go back to the previous k for a while. |
| Something more sophisticated for 'MUL_FFT_TABLE' and 'SQR_FFT_TABLE' |
| will be needed. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Other Multiplication, Next: Unbalanced Multiplication, Prev: FFT Multiplication, Up: Multiplication Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1.7 Other Multiplication |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| The Toom algorithms described above (*note Toom 3-Way Multiplication::, |
| *note Toom 4-Way Multiplication::) generalizes to split into an |
| arbitrary number of pieces, as per Knuth section 4.3.3 algorithm C. |
| This is not currently used. The notes here are merely for interest. |
| |
| In general a split into r+1 pieces is made, and evaluations and |
| pointwise multiplications done at 2*r+1 points. A 4-way split does 7 |
| pointwise multiplies, 5-way does 9, etc. Asymptotically an (r+1)-way |
| algorithm is O(N^(log(2*r+1)/log(r+1))). Only the pointwise |
| multiplications count towards big-O complexity, but the time spent in |
| the evaluate and interpolate stages grows with r and has a significant |
| practical impact, with the asymptotic advantage of each r realized only |
| at bigger and bigger sizes. The overheads grow as O(N*r), whereas in an |
| r=2^k FFT they grow only as O(N*log(r)). |
| |
| Knuth algorithm C evaluates at points 0,1,2,...,2*r, but exercise 4 |
| uses -r,...,0,...,r and the latter saves some small multiplies in the |
| evaluate stage (or rather trades them for additions), and has a further |
| saving of nearly half the interpolate steps. The idea is to separate |
| odd and even final coefficients and then perform algorithm C steps C7 |
| and C8 on them separately. The divisors at step C7 become j^2 and the |
| multipliers at C8 become 2*t*j-j^2. |
| |
| Splitting odd and even parts through positive and negative points can |
| be thought of as using -1 as a square root of unity. If a 4th root of |
| unity was available then a further split and speedup would be possible, |
| but no such root exists for plain integers. Going to complex integers |
| with i=sqrt(-1) doesn't help, essentially because in Cartesian form it |
| takes three real multiplies to do a complex multiply. The existence of |
| 2^k'th roots of unity in a suitable ring or field lets the fast Fourier |
| transform keep splitting and get to O(N*log(r)). |
| |
| Floating point FFTs use complex numbers approximating Nth roots of |
| unity. Some processors have special support for such FFTs. But these |
| are not used in GMP since it's very difficult to guarantee an exact |
| result (to some number of bits). An occasional difference of 1 in the |
| last bit might not matter to a typical signal processing algorithm, but |
| is of course of vital importance to GMP. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Unbalanced Multiplication, Prev: Other Multiplication, Up: Multiplication Algorithms |
| |
| 15.1.8 Unbalanced Multiplication |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Multiplication of operands with different sizes, both below |
| 'MUL_TOOM22_THRESHOLD' are done with plain schoolbook multiplication |
| (*note Basecase Multiplication::). |
| |
| For really large operands, we invoke FFT directly. |
| |
| For operands between these sizes, we use Toom inspired algorithms |
| suggested by Alberto Zanoni and Marco Bodrato. The idea is to split the |
| operands into polynomials of different degree. GMP currently splits the |
| smaller operand onto 2 coefficients, i.e., a polynomial of degree 1, but |
| the larger operand can be split into 2, 3, or 4 coefficients, i.e., a |
| polynomial of degree 1 to 3. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Division Algorithms, Next: Greatest Common Divisor Algorithms, Prev: Multiplication Algorithms, Up: Algorithms |
| |
| 15.2 Division Algorithms |
| ======================== |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Single Limb Division:: |
| * Basecase Division:: |
| * Divide and Conquer Division:: |
| * Block-Wise Barrett Division:: |
| * Exact Division:: |
| * Exact Remainder:: |
| * Small Quotient Division:: |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Single Limb Division, Next: Basecase Division, Prev: Division Algorithms, Up: Division Algorithms |
| |
| 15.2.1 Single Limb Division |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| Nx1 division is implemented using repeated 2x1 divisions from high to |
| low, either with a hardware divide instruction or a multiplication by |
| inverse, whichever is best on a given CPU. |
| |
| The multiply by inverse follows "Improved division by invariant |
| integers" by Möller and Granlund (*note References::) and is implemented |
| as 'udiv_qrnnd_preinv' in 'gmp-impl.h'. The idea is to have a |
| fixed-point approximation to 1/d (see 'invert_limb') and then multiply |
| by the high limb (plus one bit) of the dividend to get a quotient q. |
| With d normalized (high bit set), q is no more than 1 too small. |
| Subtracting q*d from the dividend gives a remainder, and reveals whether |
| q or q-1 is correct. |
| |
| The result is a division done with two multiplications and four or |
| five arithmetic operations. On CPUs with low latency multipliers this |
| can be much faster than a hardware divide, though the cost of |
| calculating the inverse at the start may mean it's only better on inputs |
| bigger than say 4 or 5 limbs. |
| |
| When a divisor must be normalized, either for the generic C |
| '__udiv_qrnnd_c' or the multiply by inverse, the division performed is |
| actually a*2^k by d*2^k where a is the dividend and k is the power |
| necessary to have the high bit of d*2^k set. The bit shifts for the |
| dividend are usually accomplished "on the fly" meaning by extracting the |
| appropriate bits at each step. Done this way the quotient limbs come |
| out aligned ready to store. When only the remainder is wanted, an |
| alternative is to take the dividend limbs unshifted and calculate r = a |
| mod d*2^k followed by an extra final step r*2^k mod d*2^k. This can |
| help on CPUs with poor bit shifts or few registers. |
| |
| The multiply by inverse can be done two limbs at a time. The |
| calculation is basically the same, but the inverse is two limbs and the |
| divisor treated as if padded with a low zero limb. This means more |
| work, since the inverse will need a 2x2 multiply, but the four 1x1s to |
| do that are independent and can therefore be done partly or wholly in |
| parallel. Likewise for a 2x1 calculating q*d. The net effect is to |
| process two limbs with roughly the same two multiplies worth of latency |
| that one limb at a time gives. This extends to 3 or 4 limbs at a time, |
| though the extra work to apply the inverse will almost certainly soon |
| reach the limits of multiplier throughput. |
| |
| A similar approach in reverse can be taken to process just half a |
| limb at a time if the divisor is only a half limb. In this case the 1x1 |
| multiply for the inverse effectively becomes two (1/2)x1 for each limb, |
| which can be a saving on CPUs with a fast half limb multiply, or in fact |
| if the only multiply is a half limb, and especially if it's not |
| pipelined. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Basecase Division, Next: Divide and Conquer Division, Prev: Single Limb Division, Up: Division Algorithms |
| |
| 15.2.2 Basecase Division |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| Basecase NxM division is like long division done by hand, but in base |
| 2^mp_bits_per_limb. See Knuth section 4.3.1 algorithm D, and |
| 'mpn/generic/sb_divrem_mn.c'. |
| |
| Briefly stated, while the dividend remains larger than the divisor, a |
| high quotient limb is formed and the Nx1 product q*d subtracted at the |
| top end of the dividend. With a normalized divisor (most significant |
| bit set), each quotient limb can be formed with a 2x1 division and a 1x1 |
| multiplication plus some subtractions. The 2x1 division is by the high |
| limb of the divisor and is done either with a hardware divide or a |
| multiply by inverse (the same as in *note Single Limb Division::) |
| whichever is faster. Such a quotient is sometimes one too big, |
| requiring an addback of the divisor, but that happens rarely. |
| |
| With Q=N-M being the number of quotient limbs, this is an O(Q*M) |
| algorithm and will run at a speed similar to a basecase QxM |
| multiplication, differing in fact only in the extra multiply and divide |
| for each of the Q quotient limbs. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Divide and Conquer Division, Next: Block-Wise Barrett Division, Prev: Basecase Division, Up: Division Algorithms |
| |
| 15.2.3 Divide and Conquer Division |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| For divisors larger than 'DC_DIV_QR_THRESHOLD', division is done by |
| dividing. Or to be precise by a recursive divide and conquer algorithm |
| based on work by Moenck and Borodin, Jebelean, and Burnikel and Ziegler |
| (*note References::). |
| |
| The algorithm consists essentially of recognising that a 2NxN |
| division can be done with the basecase division algorithm (*note |
| Basecase Division::), but using N/2 limbs as a base, not just a single |
| limb. This way the multiplications that arise are (N/2)x(N/2) and can |
| take advantage of Karatsuba and higher multiplication algorithms (*note |
| Multiplication Algorithms::). The two "digits" of the quotient are |
| formed by recursive Nx(N/2) divisions. |
| |
| If the (N/2)x(N/2) multiplies are done with a basecase multiplication |
| then the work is about the same as a basecase division, but with more |
| function call overheads and with some subtractions separated from the |
| multiplies. These overheads mean that it's only when N/2 is above |
| 'MUL_TOOM22_THRESHOLD' that divide and conquer is of use. |
| |
| 'DC_DIV_QR_THRESHOLD' is based on the divisor size N, so it will be |
| somewhere above twice 'MUL_TOOM22_THRESHOLD', but how much above depends |
| on the CPU. An optimized 'mpn_mul_basecase' can lower |
| 'DC_DIV_QR_THRESHOLD' a little by offering a ready-made advantage over |
| repeated 'mpn_submul_1' calls. |
| |
| Divide and conquer is asymptotically O(M(N)*log(N)) where M(N) is the |
| time for an NxN multiplication done with FFTs. The actual time is a sum |
| over multiplications of the recursed sizes, as can be seen near the end |
| of section 2.2 of Burnikel and Ziegler. For example, within the Toom-3 |
| range, divide and conquer is 2.63*M(N). With higher algorithms the M(N) |
| term improves and the multiplier tends to log(N). In practice, at |
| moderate to large sizes, a 2NxN division is about 2 to 4 times slower |
| than an NxN multiplication. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Block-Wise Barrett Division, Next: Exact Division, Prev: Divide and Conquer Division, Up: Division Algorithms |
| |
| 15.2.4 Block-Wise Barrett Division |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| For the largest divisions, a block-wise Barrett division algorithm is |
| used. Here, the divisor is inverted to a precision determined by the |
| relative size of the dividend and divisor. Blocks of quotient limbs are |
| then generated by multiplying blocks from the dividend by the inverse. |
| |
| Our block-wise algorithm computes a smaller inverse than in the plain |
| Barrett algorithm. For a 2n/n division, the inverse will be just |
| ceil(n/2) limbs. |
| |
| |
| File: gmp.info, Node: Exact Division, Next: Exact Remainder, Prev: Block-Wise Barrett Division, Up: Division Algorithms |
| |
| 15.2.5 Exact Division |
| --------------------- |
| |
| A so-called exact division is when the dividend is known to be an exact |
| multiple of the divisor. Jebelean's exact division algorithm uses this |
| knowledge to make some significant optimizations (*note References::). |
| |
| The idea can be illustrated in decimal for example with 368154 |
| divided by 543. Because the low digit of the dividend is 4, the low |
| digit of the quotient must be 8. This is arrived at from 4*7 mod 10, |
| using the fact 7 is the modular inverse of 3 (the low digit of the |
| divisor), since 3*7 == 1 mod 10. So 8*543=4344 can be subtracted from |
| the dividend leaving 363810. Notice the low digit has become zero. |
| |
| The procedure is repeated at the second digit, with the next quotient |
| digit 7 (7 == 1*7 mod 10), subtracting 7*543=3801, leaving 325800. And |
| finally at the third digit with quotient digit 6 (8*7 mod 10), |
| subtracting 6*543=3258 leaving 0. So the quotient is 678. |
| |
| Notice however that the multiplies and subtractions don't need to |
| extend past the low three digits of the dividend, since that's enough to |
| determine the three quotient digits. For the last quotient digit no |
| subtraction is needed at all. On a 2NxN division like this one, only |
| about half the work of a normal basecase division is necessary. |
| |
| For an NxM exact division producing Q=N-M quotient limbs, the saving |
| over a normal basecase division is in two parts. Firstly, each of the Q |
| quotient limbs needs only one multiply, not a 2x1 divide and multiply. |
| Secondly, the crossproducts are reduced when Q>M to Q*M-M*(M+1)/2, or |
| when Q<=M to Q*(Q-1)/2. Notice the savings are complementary. If Q is |
| big then many divisions are saved, or if Q is small then the |
| crossproducts reduce to a small number. |
| |
| The modular inverse used is calculated efficiently by 'binvert_limb' |
| in 'gmp-impl.h'. This does four multiplies for a 32-bit limb, or six |
| for a 64-bit limb. 'tune/modlinv.c' has some alternate implementations |
| that might suit processors better at bit twiddling than multiplying. |
| |
| The sub-quadratic exact division described by Jebelean in "Exact |
| Division with Karatsuba Complexity" is not currently implemented. It |
| uses a rearrangement similar to the divide and conquer for normal |
| division (*note Divide and Conquer Division::), but operating from low |
| to high. A further possibility not currently implemented is |
| "Bidirectional Exact Integer Division" by Krandick and Jebelean which |
| forms quotient limbs from both the high and low ends of the dividend, |
| and can halve once more the number of crossproducts needed in a 2NxN |
| division. |
| |
| A special case exact division by 3 exists in 'mpn_divexact_by3', |
| supporting Toom-3 multiplication and 'mpq' canonicalizations. It forms |
| quotient digits with a multiply by the modular inverse of 3 (which is |
| '0xAA..AAB') and uses two comparisons to determine a borrow for the next |
| limb. The multiplications don't need to be on the dependent chain, as |
| long as the effect of the borrows is applied, which can help chips with |
| pipelined multipliers. |
| |