On Tue, Oct 26, 2021 at 5:18 PM Steven Rostedt <rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, 26 Oct 2021 16:39:13 -0700 > Kalesh Singh <kaleshsingh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > // This works best for small divisors > > > if (div > max_div) { > > > // only do a real division > > > return; > > > } > > > shift = 20; > > > mult = ((1 << shift) + div - 1) / div; > > > delta = mult * div - (1 << shift); > > > if (!delta) { > > > /* div is a power of 2 */ > > > max = -1; > > > return; > > > } > > > max = (1 << shift) / delta; > > > > I'm still trying to digest the above algorithm. > > mult = (2^20 + div - 1) / div; > > The "div - 1" is to round up. > > Basically, it's doing: X / div = X * (2^20 / div) / 2^20 > > If div is constant, the 2^20 / div is constant, and the "2^20" is the > same as a shift. > > So multiplier is 2^20 / div, and the shift is 20. > > But because there's rounding errors it is only accurate up to the > difference of: > > delta = mult * div / 2^20 > > That is if mult is a power of two, then there would be no rounding > errors, and the delta is zero, making the max infinite: > > max = 2^20 / delta as delta goes to zero. > > > But doesn't this add 2 extra divisions? What am I missing here? > > The above is only done at parsing not during the trace, where we care > about. Hi Steve, Thanks for the explanation, this cleared it up for me. - Kalesh > > > > > > > > > > We would of course need to use 64 bit operations (maybe only do this for 64 > > > bit machines). And perhaps even use bigger shift values to get a bigger max. > > > > > > Then we could do: > > > > > > if (val1 < max) > > > return (val1 * mult) >> shift; > > This is done at the time of recording. > > Actually, it would be: > > if (val1 < max) > return (val1 * mult) >> shift; > else > return val1 / div; > > -- Steve