Fix non portability spotted by Florian:
[valgrind.git] / perf / ffbench.c
blob7a02ce43acd4e9f1a47ba1e71754732424ffabf5
1 // This small program computes a Fast Fourier Transform. It tests
2 // Valgrind's handling of FP operations. It is representative of all
3 // programs that do a lot of FP operations.
5 // Licensing: This program is closely based on the one of the same name from
6 // http://www.fourmilab.ch/. The front page of that site says:
7 //
8 // "Except for a few clearly-marked exceptions, all the material on this
9 // site is in the public domain and may be used in any manner without
10 // permission, restriction, attribution, or compensation."
14 Two-dimensional FFT benchmark
16 Designed and implemented by John Walker in April of 1989.
18 This benchmark executes a specified number of passes (default
19 20) through a loop in which each iteration performs a fast
20 Fourier transform of a square matrix (default size 256x256) of
21 complex numbers (default precision double), followed by the
22 inverse transform. After all loop iterations are performed
23 the results are checked against known correct values.
25 This benchmark is intended for use on C implementations which
26 define "int" as 32 bits or longer and permit allocation and
27 direct addressing of arrays larger than one megabyte.
29 If CAPOUT is defined, the result after all iterations is
30 written as a CA Lab pattern file. This is intended for
31 debugging in case horribly wrong results are obtained on a
32 given machine.
34 Archival timings are run with the definitions below set as
35 follows: Float = double, Asize = 256, Passes = 20, CAPOUT not
36 defined.
38 Time (seconds) System
40 2393.93 Sun 3/260, SunOS 3.4, C, "-f68881 -O".
41 (John Walker).
43 1928 Macintosh IIx, MPW C 3.0, "-mc68020
44 -mc68881 -elems881 -m". (Hugh Hoover).
46 1636.1 Sun 4/110, "cc -O3 -lm". (Michael McClary).
47 The suspicion is that this is software
48 floating point.
50 1556.7 Macintosh II, A/UX, "cc -O -lm"
51 (Michael McClary).
53 1388.8 Sun 386i/250, SunOS 4.0.1 C
54 "-O /usr/lib/trig.il". (James Carrington).
56 1331.93 Sun 3/60, SunOS 4.0.1, C,
57 "-O4 -f68881 /usr/lib/libm.il"
58 (Bob Elman).
60 1204.0 Apollo Domain DN4000, C, "-cpu 3000 -opt 4".
61 (Sam Crupi).
63 1174.66 Compaq 386/25, SCO Xenix 386 C.
64 (Peter Shieh).
66 1068 Compaq 386/25, SCO Xenix 386,
67 Metaware High C. (Robert Wenig).
69 1064.0 Sun 3/80, SunOS 4.0.3 Beta C
70 "-O3 -f68881 /usr/lib/libm.il". (James Carrington).
72 1061.4 Compaq 386/25, SCO Xenix, High C 1.4.
73 (James Carrington).
75 1059.79 Compaq 386/25, 387/25, High C 1.4,
76 DOS|Extender 2.2, 387 inline code
77 generation. (Nathan Bender).
79 777.14 Compaq 386/25, IIT 3C87-25 (387 Compatible),
80 High C 1.5, DOS|Extender 2.2, 387 inline
81 code generation. (Nathan Bender).
83 751 Compaq DeskPro 386/33, High C 1.5 + DOS|Extender,
84 387 code generation. (James Carrington).
86 431.44 Compaq 386/25, Weitek 3167-25, DOS 3.31,
87 High C 1.4, DOS|Extender, Weitek code generation.
88 (Nathan Bender).
90 344.9 Compaq 486/25, Metaware High C 1.6, Phar Lap
91 DOS|Extender, in-line floating point. (Nathan
92 Bender).
94 324.2 Data General Motorola 88000, 16 Mhz, Gnu C.
96 323.1 Sun 4/280, C, "-O4". (Eric Hill).
98 254 Compaq SystemPro 486/33, High C 1.5 + DOS|Extender,
99 387 code generation. (James Carrington).
101 242.8 Silicon Graphics Personal IRIS, MIPS R2000A,
102 12.5 Mhz, "-O3" (highest level optimisation).
103 (Mike Zentner).
105 233.0 Sun SPARCStation 1, C, "-O4", SunOS 4.0.3.
106 (Nathan Bender).
108 187.30 DEC PMAX 3100, MIPS 2000 chip.
109 (Robert Wenig).
111 120.46 Sun SparcStation 2, C, "-O4", SunOS 4.1.1.
112 (John Walker).
114 120.21 DEC 3MAX, MIPS 3000, "-O4".
116 98.0 Intel i860 experimental environment,
117 OS/2, data caching disabled. (Kern
118 Sibbald).
120 34.9 Silicon Graphics Indigo², MIPS R4400,
121 175 Mhz, IRIX 5.2, "-O".
123 32.4 Pentium 133, Windows NT, Microsoft Visual
124 C++ 4.0.
126 17.25 Silicon Graphics Indigo², MIPS R4400,
127 175 Mhz, IRIX 6.5, "-O3".
129 14.10 Dell Dimension XPS R100, Pentium II 400 MHz,
130 Windows 98, Microsoft Visual C 5.0.
132 10.7 Hewlett-Packard Kayak XU 450Mhz Pentium II,
133 Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0, Windows NT 4.0sp3. (Nathan Bender).
135 5.09 Sun Ultra 2, UltraSPARC V9, 300 MHz, gcc -O3.
137 0.846 Dell Inspiron 9100, Pentium 4, 3.4 GHz, gcc -O3.
141 #include <stdio.h>
142 #include <stdlib.h>
143 #include <math.h>
144 #include <string.h>
146 /* The program may be run with Float defined as either float or
147 double. With IEEE arithmetic, the same answers are generated for
148 either floating point mode. */
150 #define Float double /* Floating point type used in FFT */
152 #define Asize 256 /* Array edge size */
153 #define Passes 20 /* Number of FFT/Inverse passes */
155 #define max(a,b) ((a)>(b)?(a):(b))
156 #define min(a,b) ((a)<=(b)?(a):(b))
160 Multi-dimensional fast Fourier transform
162 Adapted from Press et al., "Numerical Recipes in C".
166 #define SWAP(a,b) tempr=(a); (a)=(b); (b)=tempr
168 static void fourn(data, nn, ndim, isign)
169 Float data[];
170 int nn[], ndim, isign;
172 register int i1, i2, i3;
173 int i2rev, i3rev, ip1, ip2, ip3, ifp1, ifp2;
174 int ibit, idim, k1, k2, n, nprev, nrem, ntot;
175 Float tempi, tempr;
176 double theta, wi, wpi, wpr, wr, wtemp;
178 ntot = 1;
179 for (idim = 1; idim <= ndim; idim++)
180 ntot *= nn[idim];
181 nprev = 1;
182 for (idim = ndim; idim >= 1; idim--) {
183 n = nn[idim];
184 nrem = ntot / (n * nprev);
185 ip1 = nprev << 1;
186 ip2 = ip1 * n;
187 ip3 = ip2 * nrem;
188 i2rev = 1;
189 for (i2 = 1; i2 <= ip2; i2 += ip1) {
190 if (i2 < i2rev) {
191 for (i1 = i2; i1 <= i2 + ip1 - 2; i1 += 2) {
192 for (i3 = i1; i3 <= ip3; i3 += ip2) {
193 i3rev = i2rev + i3 - i2;
194 SWAP(data[i3], data[i3rev]);
195 SWAP(data[i3 + 1], data[i3rev + 1]);
199 ibit = ip2 >> 1;
200 while (ibit >= ip1 && i2rev > ibit) {
201 i2rev -= ibit;
202 ibit >>= 1;
204 i2rev += ibit;
206 ifp1 = ip1;
207 while (ifp1 < ip2) {
208 ifp2 = ifp1 << 1;
209 theta = isign * 6.28318530717959 / (ifp2 / ip1);
210 wtemp = sin(0.5 * theta);
211 wpr = -2.0 * wtemp * wtemp;
212 wpi = sin(theta);
213 wr = 1.0;
214 wi = 0.0;
215 for (i3 = 1; i3 <= ifp1; i3 += ip1) {
216 for (i1 = i3; i1 <= i3 + ip1 - 2; i1 += 2) {
217 for (i2 = i1; i2 <= ip3; i2 += ifp2) {
218 k1 = i2;
219 k2 = k1 + ifp1;
220 tempr = wr * data[k2] - wi * data[k2 + 1];
221 tempi = wr * data[k2 + 1] + wi * data[k2];
222 data[k2] = data[k1] - tempr;
223 data[k2 + 1] = data[k1 + 1] - tempi;
224 data[k1] += tempr;
225 data[k1 + 1] += tempi;
228 wr = (wtemp = wr) * wpr - wi * wpi + wr;
229 wi = wi * wpr + wtemp * wpi + wi;
231 ifp1 = ifp2;
233 nprev *= n;
236 #undef SWAP
238 int main()
240 int i, j, k, l, m, npasses = Passes, faedge;
241 Float *fdata /* , *fd */ ;
242 static int nsize[] = {0, 0, 0};
243 long fanum, fasize;
244 double mapbase, mapscale, /* x, */ rmin, rmax, imin, imax;
246 faedge = Asize; /* FFT array edge size */
247 fanum = faedge * faedge; /* Elements in FFT array */
248 fasize = ((fanum + 1) * 2 * sizeof(Float)); /* FFT array size */
249 nsize[1] = nsize[2] = faedge;
251 fdata = (Float *) malloc(fasize);
252 if (fdata == NULL) {
253 fprintf(stdout, "Can't allocate data array.\n");
254 exit(1);
257 /* Generate data array to process. */
259 #define Re(x,y) fdata[1 + (faedge * (x) + (y)) * 2]
260 #define Im(x,y) fdata[2 + (faedge * (x) + (y)) * 2]
262 memset(fdata, 0, fasize);
263 for (i = 0; i < faedge; i++) {
264 for (j = 0; j < faedge; j++) {
265 if (((i & 15) == 8) || ((j & 15) == 8))
266 Re(i, j) = 128.0;
270 for (i = 0; i < npasses; i++) {
271 /*printf("Pass %d\n", i);*/
272 /* Transform image to frequency domain. */
273 fourn(fdata, nsize, 2, 1);
275 /* Back-transform to image. */
276 fourn(fdata, nsize, 2, -1);
280 double r, ij, ar, ai;
281 rmin = 1e10; rmax = -1e10;
282 imin = 1e10; imax = -1e10;
283 ar = 0;
284 ai = 0;
286 for (i = 1; i <= fanum; i += 2) {
287 r = fdata[i];
288 ij = fdata[i + 1];
289 ar += r;
290 ai += ij;
291 rmin = min(r, rmin);
292 rmax = max(r, rmax);
293 imin = min(ij, imin);
294 imax = max(ij, imax);
296 #ifdef DEBUG
297 printf("Real min %.4g, max %.4g. Imaginary min %.4g, max %.4g.\n",
298 rmin, rmax, imin, imax);
299 printf("Average real %.4g, imaginary %.4g.\n",
300 ar / fanum, ai / fanum);
301 #endif
302 mapbase = rmin;
303 mapscale = 255 / (rmax - rmin);
306 /* See if we got the right answers. */
308 m = 0;
309 for (i = 0; i < faedge; i++) {
310 for (j = 0; j < faedge; j++) {
311 k = (Re(i, j) - mapbase) * mapscale;
312 l = (((i & 15) == 8) || ((j & 15) == 8)) ? 255 : 0;
313 if (k != l) {
314 m++;
315 fprintf(stdout,
316 "Wrong answer at (%d,%d)! Expected %d, got %d.\n",
317 i, j, l, k);
321 if (m == 0) {
322 fprintf(stdout, "%d passes. No errors in results.\n", npasses);
323 } else {
324 fprintf(stdout, "%d passes. %d errors in results.\n",
325 npasses, m);
328 #ifdef CAPOUT
330 /* Output the result of the transform as a CA Lab pattern
331 file for debugging. */
334 #define SCRX 322
335 #define SCRY 200
336 #define SCRN (SCRX * SCRY)
337 unsigned char patarr[SCRY][SCRX];
338 FILE *fp;
340 /* Map user external state numbers to internal state index */
342 #define UtoI(x) (((((x) >> 1) & 0x7F) | ((x) << 7)) & 0xFF)
344 /* Copy data from FFT buffer to map. */
346 memset(patarr, 0, sizeof patarr);
347 l = (SCRX - faedge) / 2;
348 m = (faedge > SCRY) ? 0 : ((SCRY - faedge) / 2);
349 for (i = 1; i < faedge; i++) {
350 for (j = 0; j < min(SCRY, faedge); j++) {
351 k = (Re(i, j) - mapbase) * mapscale;
352 patarr[j + m][i + l] = UtoI(k);
356 /* Dump pattern map to file. */
358 fp = fopen("fft.cap", "w");
359 if (fp == NULL) {
360 fprintf(stdout, "Cannot open output file.\n");
361 exit(0);
363 putc(':', fp);
364 putc(1, fp);
365 fwrite(patarr, SCRN, 1, fp);
366 putc(6, fp);
367 fclose(fp);
369 #endif
371 return 0;