// Copyright 2014 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be // found in the LICENSE file. #ifndef BASE_NUMERICS_SAFE_MATH_IMPL_H_ #define BASE_NUMERICS_SAFE_MATH_IMPL_H_ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "base/numerics/safe_conversions.h" namespace base { namespace internal { // Everything from here up to the floating point operations is portable C++, // but it may not be fast. This code could be split based on // platform/architecture and replaced with potentially faster implementations. // Integer promotion templates used by the portable checked integer arithmetic. template struct IntegerForSizeAndSign; template <> struct IntegerForSizeAndSign<1, true> { typedef int8_t type; }; template <> struct IntegerForSizeAndSign<1, false> { typedef uint8_t type; }; template <> struct IntegerForSizeAndSign<2, true> { typedef int16_t type; }; template <> struct IntegerForSizeAndSign<2, false> { typedef uint16_t type; }; template <> struct IntegerForSizeAndSign<4, true> { typedef int32_t type; }; template <> struct IntegerForSizeAndSign<4, false> { typedef uint32_t type; }; template <> struct IntegerForSizeAndSign<8, true> { typedef int64_t type; }; template <> struct IntegerForSizeAndSign<8, false> { typedef uint64_t type; }; // WARNING: We have no IntegerForSizeAndSign<16, *>. If we ever add one to // support 128-bit math, then the ArithmeticPromotion template below will need // to be updated (or more likely replaced with a decltype expression). template struct UnsignedIntegerForSize { typedef typename std::enable_if< std::numeric_limits::is_integer, typename IntegerForSizeAndSign::type>::type type; }; template struct SignedIntegerForSize { typedef typename std::enable_if< std::numeric_limits::is_integer, typename IntegerForSizeAndSign::type>::type type; }; template struct TwiceWiderInteger { typedef typename std::enable_if< std::numeric_limits::is_integer, typename IntegerForSizeAndSign< sizeof(Integer) * 2, std::numeric_limits::is_signed>::type>::type type; }; template struct PositionOfSignBit { static const typename std::enable_if::is_integer, size_t>::type value = 8 * sizeof(Integer) - 1; }; // This is used for UnsignedAbs, where we need to support floating-point // template instantiations even though we don't actually support the operations. // However, there is no corresponding implementation of e.g. CheckedUnsignedAbs, // so the float versions will not compile. template ::is_integer, bool IsFloat = std::numeric_limits::is_iec559> struct UnsignedOrFloatForSize; template struct UnsignedOrFloatForSize { typedef typename UnsignedIntegerForSize::type type; }; template struct UnsignedOrFloatForSize { typedef Numeric type; }; // Helper templates for integer manipulations. template bool HasSignBit(T x) { // Cast to unsigned since right shift on signed is undefined. return !!(static_cast::type>(x) >> PositionOfSignBit::value); } // This wrapper undoes the standard integer promotions. template T BinaryComplement(T x) { return ~x; } // Here are the actual portable checked integer math implementations. // TODO(jschuh): Break this code out from the enable_if pattern and find a clean // way to coalesce things into the CheckedNumericState specializations below. template typename std::enable_if::is_integer, T>::type CheckedAdd(T x, T y, RangeConstraint* validity) { // Since the value of x+y is undefined if we have a signed type, we compute // it using the unsigned type of the same size. typedef typename UnsignedIntegerForSize::type UnsignedDst; UnsignedDst ux = static_cast(x); UnsignedDst uy = static_cast(y); UnsignedDst uresult = ux + uy; // Addition is valid if the sign of (x + y) is equal to either that of x or // that of y. if (std::numeric_limits::is_signed) { if (HasSignBit(BinaryComplement((uresult ^ ux) & (uresult ^ uy)))) *validity = RANGE_VALID; else // Direction of wrap is inverse of result sign. *validity = HasSignBit(uresult) ? RANGE_OVERFLOW : RANGE_UNDERFLOW; } else { // Unsigned is either valid or overflow. *validity = BinaryComplement(x) >= y ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_OVERFLOW; } return static_cast(uresult); } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer, T>::type CheckedSub(T x, T y, RangeConstraint* validity) { // Since the value of x+y is undefined if we have a signed type, we compute // it using the unsigned type of the same size. typedef typename UnsignedIntegerForSize::type UnsignedDst; UnsignedDst ux = static_cast(x); UnsignedDst uy = static_cast(y); UnsignedDst uresult = ux - uy; // Subtraction is valid if either x and y have same sign, or (x-y) and x have // the same sign. if (std::numeric_limits::is_signed) { if (HasSignBit(BinaryComplement((uresult ^ ux) & (ux ^ uy)))) *validity = RANGE_VALID; else // Direction of wrap is inverse of result sign. *validity = HasSignBit(uresult) ? RANGE_OVERFLOW : RANGE_UNDERFLOW; } else { // Unsigned is either valid or underflow. *validity = x >= y ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_UNDERFLOW; } return static_cast(uresult); } // Integer multiplication is a bit complicated. In the fast case we just // we just promote to a twice wider type, and range check the result. In the // slow case we need to manually check that the result won't be truncated by // checking with division against the appropriate bound. template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && sizeof(T) * 2 <= sizeof(uintmax_t), T>::type CheckedMul(T x, T y, RangeConstraint* validity) { typedef typename TwiceWiderInteger::type IntermediateType; IntermediateType tmp = static_cast(x) * static_cast(y); *validity = DstRangeRelationToSrcRange(tmp); return static_cast(tmp); } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && std::numeric_limits::is_signed && (sizeof(T) * 2 > sizeof(uintmax_t)), T>::type CheckedMul(T x, T y, RangeConstraint* validity) { // If either side is zero then the result will be zero. if (!x || !y) { return RANGE_VALID; } else if (x > 0) { if (y > 0) *validity = x <= std::numeric_limits::max() / y ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_OVERFLOW; else *validity = y >= std::numeric_limits::min() / x ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_UNDERFLOW; } else { if (y > 0) *validity = x >= std::numeric_limits::min() / y ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_UNDERFLOW; else *validity = y >= std::numeric_limits::max() / x ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_OVERFLOW; } return x * y; } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && !std::numeric_limits::is_signed && (sizeof(T) * 2 > sizeof(uintmax_t)), T>::type CheckedMul(T x, T y, RangeConstraint* validity) { *validity = (y == 0 || x <= std::numeric_limits::max() / y) ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_OVERFLOW; return x * y; } // Division just requires a check for an invalid negation on signed min/-1. template T CheckedDiv(T x, T y, RangeConstraint* validity, typename std::enable_if::is_integer, int>::type = 0) { if (std::numeric_limits::is_signed && x == std::numeric_limits::min() && y == static_cast(-1)) { *validity = RANGE_OVERFLOW; return std::numeric_limits::min(); } *validity = RANGE_VALID; return x / y; } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && std::numeric_limits::is_signed, T>::type CheckedMod(T x, T y, RangeConstraint* validity) { *validity = y > 0 ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_INVALID; return x % y; } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && !std::numeric_limits::is_signed, T>::type CheckedMod(T x, T y, RangeConstraint* validity) { *validity = RANGE_VALID; return x % y; } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && std::numeric_limits::is_signed, T>::type CheckedNeg(T value, RangeConstraint* validity) { *validity = value != std::numeric_limits::min() ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_OVERFLOW; // The negation of signed min is min, so catch that one. return -value; } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && !std::numeric_limits::is_signed, T>::type CheckedNeg(T value, RangeConstraint* validity) { // The only legal unsigned negation is zero. *validity = value ? RANGE_UNDERFLOW : RANGE_VALID; return static_cast( -static_cast::type>(value)); } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && std::numeric_limits::is_signed, T>::type CheckedAbs(T value, RangeConstraint* validity) { *validity = value != std::numeric_limits::min() ? RANGE_VALID : RANGE_OVERFLOW; return static_cast(std::abs(value)); } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && !std::numeric_limits::is_signed, T>::type CheckedAbs(T value, RangeConstraint* validity) { // T is unsigned, so |value| must already be positive. *validity = RANGE_VALID; return value; } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && std::numeric_limits::is_signed, typename UnsignedIntegerForSize::type>::type CheckedUnsignedAbs(T value) { typedef typename UnsignedIntegerForSize::type UnsignedT; return value == std::numeric_limits::min() ? static_cast(std::numeric_limits::max()) + 1 : static_cast(std::abs(value)); } template typename std::enable_if::is_integer && !std::numeric_limits::is_signed, T>::type CheckedUnsignedAbs(T value) { // T is unsigned, so |value| must already be positive. return value; } // These are the floating point stubs that the compiler needs to see. Only the // negation operation is ever called. #define BASE_FLOAT_ARITHMETIC_STUBS(NAME) \ template \ typename std::enable_if::is_iec559, T>::type \ Checked##NAME(T, T, RangeConstraint*) { \ NOTREACHED(); \ return 0; \ } BASE_FLOAT_ARITHMETIC_STUBS(Add) BASE_FLOAT_ARITHMETIC_STUBS(Sub) BASE_FLOAT_ARITHMETIC_STUBS(Mul) BASE_FLOAT_ARITHMETIC_STUBS(Div) BASE_FLOAT_ARITHMETIC_STUBS(Mod) #undef BASE_FLOAT_ARITHMETIC_STUBS template typename std::enable_if::is_iec559, T>::type CheckedNeg( T value, RangeConstraint*) { return -value; } template typename std::enable_if::is_iec559, T>::type CheckedAbs( T value, RangeConstraint*) { return std::abs(value); } // Floats carry around their validity state with them, but integers do not. So, // we wrap the underlying value in a specialization in order to hide that detail // and expose an interface via accessors. enum NumericRepresentation { NUMERIC_INTEGER, NUMERIC_FLOATING, NUMERIC_UNKNOWN }; template struct GetNumericRepresentation { static const NumericRepresentation value = std::numeric_limits::is_integer ? NUMERIC_INTEGER : (std::numeric_limits::is_iec559 ? NUMERIC_FLOATING : NUMERIC_UNKNOWN); }; template ::value> class CheckedNumericState {}; // Integrals require quite a bit of additional housekeeping to manage state. template class CheckedNumericState { private: T value_; RangeConstraint validity_; public: template friend class CheckedNumericState; CheckedNumericState() : value_(0), validity_(RANGE_VALID) {} template CheckedNumericState(Src value, RangeConstraint validity) : value_(static_cast(value)), validity_(GetRangeConstraint(validity | DstRangeRelationToSrcRange(value))) { static_assert(std::numeric_limits::is_specialized, "Argument must be numeric."); } // Copy constructor. template CheckedNumericState(const CheckedNumericState& rhs) : value_(static_cast(rhs.value())), validity_(GetRangeConstraint( rhs.validity() | DstRangeRelationToSrcRange(rhs.value()))) {} template explicit CheckedNumericState( Src value, typename std::enable_if::is_specialized, int>::type = 0) : value_(static_cast(value)), validity_(DstRangeRelationToSrcRange(value)) {} RangeConstraint validity() const { return validity_; } T value() const { return value_; } }; // Floating points maintain their own validity, but need translation wrappers. template class CheckedNumericState { private: T value_; public: template friend class CheckedNumericState; CheckedNumericState() : value_(0.0) {} template CheckedNumericState( Src value, RangeConstraint validity, typename std::enable_if::is_integer, int>::type = 0) { switch (DstRangeRelationToSrcRange(value)) { case RANGE_VALID: value_ = static_cast(value); break; case RANGE_UNDERFLOW: value_ = -std::numeric_limits::infinity(); break; case RANGE_OVERFLOW: value_ = std::numeric_limits::infinity(); break; case RANGE_INVALID: value_ = std::numeric_limits::quiet_NaN(); break; default: NOTREACHED(); } } template explicit CheckedNumericState( Src value, typename std::enable_if::is_specialized, int>::type = 0) : value_(static_cast(value)) {} // Copy constructor. template CheckedNumericState(const CheckedNumericState& rhs) : value_(static_cast(rhs.value())) {} RangeConstraint validity() const { return GetRangeConstraint(value_ <= std::numeric_limits::max(), value_ >= -std::numeric_limits::max()); } T value() const { return value_; } }; // For integers less than 128-bit and floats 32-bit or larger, we can distil // C/C++ arithmetic promotions down to two simple rules: // 1. The type with the larger maximum exponent always takes precedence. // 2. The resulting type must be promoted to at least an int. // The following template specializations implement that promotion logic. enum ArithmeticPromotionCategory { LEFT_PROMOTION, RIGHT_PROMOTION, DEFAULT_PROMOTION }; template ::value > MaxExponent::value) ? (MaxExponent::value > MaxExponent::value ? LEFT_PROMOTION : DEFAULT_PROMOTION) : (MaxExponent::value > MaxExponent::value ? RIGHT_PROMOTION : DEFAULT_PROMOTION) > struct ArithmeticPromotion; template struct ArithmeticPromotion { typedef Lhs type; }; template struct ArithmeticPromotion { typedef Rhs type; }; template struct ArithmeticPromotion { typedef int type; }; // We can statically check if operations on the provided types can wrap, so we // can skip the checked operations if they're not needed. So, for an integer we // care if the destination type preserves the sign and is twice the width of // the source. template struct IsIntegerArithmeticSafe { static const bool value = !std::numeric_limits::is_iec559 && StaticDstRangeRelationToSrcRange::value == NUMERIC_RANGE_CONTAINED && sizeof(T) >= (2 * sizeof(Lhs)) && StaticDstRangeRelationToSrcRange::value != NUMERIC_RANGE_CONTAINED && sizeof(T) >= (2 * sizeof(Rhs)); }; } // namespace internal } // namespace base #endif // BASE_NUMERICS_SAFE_MATH_IMPL_H_