[FFmpeg-devel] [PATCHv2] configure+libm.h: add hypot emulation

Hendrik Leppkes h.leppkes at gmail.com
Tue Nov 17 17:05:11 CET 2015


On Tue, Nov 17, 2015 at 5:00 PM, Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanag at mit.edu> wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 15, 2015 at 11:59 AM, Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanag at mit.edu> wrote:
>> On Sun, Nov 15, 2015 at 11:34 AM, Michael Niedermayer
>> <michael at niedermayer.cc> wrote:
>>> On Sun, Nov 15, 2015 at 11:01:58AM -0500, Ganesh Ajjanagadde wrote:
>>>> On Sun, Nov 15, 2015 at 10:56 AM, Michael Niedermayer
>>>> <michael at niedermayer.cc> wrote:
>>>> > On Sun, Nov 15, 2015 at 10:03:37AM -0500, Ganesh Ajjanagadde wrote:
>>>> >> It is known that the naive sqrt(x*x + y*y) approach for computing the
>>>> >> hypotenuse suffers from overflow and accuracy issues, see e.g
>>>> >> http://www.johndcook.com/blog/2010/06/02/whats-so-hard-about-finding-a-hypotenuse/.
>>>> >> This adds hypot support to FFmpeg, a C99 function.
>>>> >>
>>>> >> On platforms without hypot, this patch does a reaonable workaround, that
>>>> >> although not as accurate as GNU libm, is readable and does not suffer
>>>> >> from the overflow issue. Improvements can be made separately.
>>>> >>
>>>> >> Signed-off-by: Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanagadde at gmail.com>
>>>> >> ---
>>>> >>  configure        |  2 ++
>>>> >>  libavutil/libm.h | 23 +++++++++++++++++++++++
>>>> >>  2 files changed, 25 insertions(+)
>>>> >>
>>>> >> diff --git a/configure b/configure
>>>> >> index d518b21..45df724 100755
>>>> >> --- a/configure
>>>> >> +++ b/configure
>>>> >> @@ -1774,6 +1774,7 @@ MATH_FUNCS="
>>>> >>      exp2
>>>> >>      exp2f
>>>> >>      expf
>>>> >> +    hypot
>>>> >>      isinf
>>>> >>      isnan
>>>> >>      ldexpf
>>>> >> @@ -5309,6 +5310,7 @@ disabled crystalhd || check_lib libcrystalhd/libcrystalhd_if.h DtsCrystalHDVersi
>>>> >>
>>>> >>  atan2f_args=2
>>>> >>  copysign_args=2
>>>> >> +hypot_args=2
>>>> >>  ldexpf_args=2
>>>> >>  powf_args=2
>>>> >>
>>>> >> diff --git a/libavutil/libm.h b/libavutil/libm.h
>>>> >> index 6c17b28..f7a2b41 100644
>>>> >> --- a/libavutil/libm.h
>>>> >> +++ b/libavutil/libm.h
>>>> >> @@ -102,6 +102,29 @@ static av_always_inline av_const int isnan(float x)
>>>> >>  }
>>>> >>  #endif /* HAVE_ISNAN */
>>>> >>
>>>> >> +#if !HAVE_HYPOT
>>>> >> +#undef hypot
>>>> >> +static inline av_const double hypot(double x, double y)
>>>> >> +{
>>>> >> +    double ret, temp;
>>>> >> +    x = fabs(x);
>>>> >> +    y = fabs(y);
>>>> >> +
>>>> >> +    if (isinf(x) || isinf(y))
>>>> >> +        return av_int2double(0x7ff0000000000000);
>>>> >
>>>> > if either is NaN the result should be NaN i think
>>>> > return x+y
>>>> > might achive this
>>>>
>>>> No, quoting the man page/standard:
>>>>        If x or y is an infinity, positive infinity is returned.
>>>>
>>>>        If x or y is a NaN, and the other argument is not an infinity,
>>>> a NaN is returned.
>>>
>>> indeed, the spec says thats how it should be.
>>>
>>> this is not what i expected though and renders the function
>>> problematic in practice IMHO.
>>> For example a big use of NaN is to detect errors.
>>> One does a big complicated computation and if at the end the result is
>>> NaN or +-Inf then one knows there was something wrong in it.
>>> if NaN is infective then any computation that returns it can reliably
>>> be detected. These exceptions in C like hypot() break this.
>>> 1/hypot(x,y) should be NaN if either x or y was NaN
>>>
>>> also mathematically its wrong to ignore a NaN argument
>>> consider
>>> hypot(sqrt(-x), sqrt(x)) for x->infinite
>>>
>>> of course theres nothing we can or should do about hypot() its defined
>>> in C as it is defined but its something one should be aware of if
>>> one expects that NaNs can be used as a reliable means to detect
>>> NaNs from intermediate steps of a complicated calculation
>>
>> Yes, I was extremely surprised myself, and you are right that it
>> defeats the NaN's purpose. Some day I may dig up the committee's
>> rationale for this, am curious. I doubt it was oversight, since they
>> are usually very careful about such things, and the defined behavior
>> is very specific suggesting deep thought.
>>
>> Anyway, I do not take this as a formal ack yet. Hopefully we don't run
>> into Carl's weird debian thing that forced disabling fmax, fmin
>> emulation.
>
> Anyone willing to do a Windows build test to make sure that the compat
> hack works? I want to avoid build failures. Thanks.
>

hypot is available on windows, can't test your compat code, sorry. :D


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