On 2021-08-01 21:39, Liam Beguin wrote: > From: Liam Beguin <lvb@xxxxxxxxxx> > > The IIO_VAL_FRACTIONAL_LOG2 scale type doesn't return the expected > scale. Update the case so that the rescaler returns a fractional type > and a more precise scale. > > Signed-off-by: Liam Beguin <lvb@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c | 15 ++++++++++----- > 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c b/drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c > index abd7ad73d1ce..e37a9766080c 100644 > --- a/drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c > +++ b/drivers/iio/afe/iio-rescale.c > @@ -47,12 +47,17 @@ int rescale_process_scale(struct rescale *rescale, int scale_type, > *val2 = rescale->denominator; > return IIO_VAL_FRACTIONAL; > case IIO_VAL_FRACTIONAL_LOG2: > - tmp = *val * 1000000000LL; > - do_div(tmp, rescale->denominator); > - tmp *= rescale->numerator; > - do_div(tmp, 1000000000LL); > + if (check_mul_overflow(*val, rescale->numerator, (s32 *)&tmp) || > + check_mul_overflow(rescale->denominator, (1 << *val2), (s32 *)&tmp2)) { > + tmp = (s64)*val * rescale->numerator; > + tmp2 = (s64)rescale->denominator * (1 << *val2); > + factor = gcd(abs(tmp), abs(tmp2)); > + tmp = div_s64(tmp, factor); > + tmp2 = div_s64(tmp2, factor); The case I really worry about is when trying to get an exact result by using gcd() really doesn't improve the situation, and the only way to avoid overflow is to reduce the precision. A perhaps contrived example: scale numerator 1,220,703,125 i.e. 5 ^ 13 scale denominator 1,162,261,467 i.e. 3 ^ 19 *val 1,129,900,996 i.e. 7 ^ 10 * 2 ^ 2 *val2 2 i.e. value = 7 ^ 10 Then you get overflow for both the calls to check_mul_overflow(). But when gcd() returns 1 (or something too small) the overflow is "returned" as-is. With the old code you get something that is at least not completely wrong, just not as accurate as is perhaps possible: *val 1,186,715,480 *val2 2 Or 1,186,715,480 / 2^2 = 296,678,870. With this patch the above makes you attempt to return the fraction: *val 1,379,273,676,757,812,500 *val2 4,649,045,868 Or 296,678,870.443403528 (or something like that, not 100% sure about all the fractional digits, but they are not really important for my argument) While the latter is more correct, truncation to 32-bit clobbers the result so in reality this is returned: *val -281,918,188 *val2 354,078,572 Or -0.796202341 So, while it might seem unlucky that gcd() will not find a big enough factor, it is certainly possible. And I also worry that when this happens it will only happen once in a while, and that the resulting bad values might be extremely unexpected and difficult to track down. Things that happen once in a blue moon are simply not fun to debug. I.e. I worry that small islands of input will cause failures. With the old code there are no such islands. The scale factor alone determines the precision, and if you get poor precision you get poor precision throughout the range. And any problem will therefore be "stable" and much easier to debug for "innocent" 3rd party users that may not even be aware that the rescaler is involved at all. This is also an issue I have with patch 7/13, but there the only thing that is sacrificed is CPU cycles. But nonetheless, I'm dubious if patch 7/13 is wise precisely because it might cause issues that are intermittent and therefore difficult to debug. Also, changing the calculation so that you get more precision whenever that is possible feels dangerous. I fear linearity breaks and that bigger input cause smaller output due to rounding if the bigger value has to be rounded down, but that this isn't done carefully enough. I.e. attempting to return an exact fraction and only falling back to the old code when that is not possible is still not safe since the old code isn't careful enough about rounding. I think it is really important that bigger input cause bigger (or equal) output. Otherwise you might trigger instability in feedback loops should a rescaler be involved in a some regulator function. Cheers, Peter > + } > *val = tmp; > - return scale_type; > + *val2 = tmp2; > + return IIO_VAL_FRACTIONAL; > case IIO_VAL_INT_PLUS_NANO: > case IIO_VAL_INT_PLUS_MICRO: > if (scale_type == IIO_VAL_INT_PLUS_NANO) >