diff options
author | Szabolcs Nagy <nsz@port70.net> | 2013-05-15 23:08:52 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Szabolcs Nagy <nsz@port70.net> | 2013-05-15 23:08:52 +0000 |
commit | e216951f509b71da193da2fc63e25b998740d58b (patch) | |
tree | 391381eafd8b0b7eb4fdbb693608072df5c181d5 /src/math/j1.c | |
parent | 2c184264eae3797de028403ed1e86c1f7ae5b813 (diff) | |
download | musl-e216951f509b71da193da2fc63e25b998740d58b.tar.gz musl-e216951f509b71da193da2fc63e25b998740d58b.tar.bz2 musl-e216951f509b71da193da2fc63e25b998740d58b.tar.xz musl-e216951f509b71da193da2fc63e25b998740d58b.zip |
math: use double_t for temporaries to avoid stores on i386
When FLT_EVAL_METHOD!=0 (only i386 with x87 fp) the excess
precision of an expression must be removed in an assignment.
(gcc needs -fexcess-precision=standard or -std=c99 for this)
This is done by extra load/store instructions which adds code
bloat when lot of temporaries are used and it makes the result
less precise in many cases.
Using double_t and float_t avoids these issues on i386 and
it makes no difference on other archs.
For now only a few functions are modified where the excess
precision is clearly beneficial (mostly polynomial evaluations
with temporaries).
object size differences on i386, gcc-4.8:
old new
__cosdf.o 123 95
__cos.o 199 169
__sindf.o 131 95
__sin.o 225 203
__tandf.o 207 151
__tan.o 605 499
erff.o 1470 1416
erf.o 1703 1649
j0f.o 1779 1745
j0.o 2308 2274
j1f.o 1602 1568
j1.o 2286 2252
tgamma.o 1431 1424
math/*.o 64164 63635
Diffstat (limited to 'src/math/j1.c')
-rw-r--r-- | src/math/j1.c | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/src/math/j1.c b/src/math/j1.c index ac7bb1eb..df724d17 100644 --- a/src/math/j1.c +++ b/src/math/j1.c @@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ static const double ps2[5] = { static double pone(double x) { const double *p,*q; - double z,r,s; + double_t z,r,s; uint32_t ix; GET_HIGH_WORD(ix, x); @@ -346,7 +346,7 @@ static const double qs2[6] = { static double qone(double x) { const double *p,*q; - double s,r,z; + double_t s,r,z; uint32_t ix; GET_HIGH_WORD(ix, x); |