Add Ord Laws to next Haskell Report
David Feuer
david.feuer at gmail.com
Thu Feb 7 21:41:32 UTC 2019
Even if Ord becomes lawful for floating point, there will still be massive
problems reasoning about it because the Num instances can't support the
ring laws, let alone the ordered ring laws. What should `compare NaN n` be?
If it's an exception, then the ordering is not total, you can't store NaN
in a Set, etc. If it's LT or GT, then you get a total ordering, but a
rather weird one. So yeah, you'd be able to store NaN in a Set and have an
NaN key in a Map, but then as soon as you start looking at where these are
coming from and where they're going, everything goes weird and you need
type-specific code anyway.
On Thu, Feb 7, 2019, 4:29 PM Carter Schonwald <carter.schonwald at gmail.com
wrote:
> to further add weight, i'm still doing preliminary hackery on the
> signalling approach, but the signalling for FP state stuff seems to be OS
> thread local, so it can be treated as an exception perfectly well!
>
> On Thu, Feb 7, 2019 at 4:27 PM Carter Schonwald <
> carter.schonwald at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> @sven and @henning :
>> i'm actually doing some preliminary work to add save and restore for FPU
>> state to the GHC RTS, at the green/haskell thread layer. after first
>> ripping out x87 code gen, which just needs some more docs written out
>> before its merged in. note that i'm speaking specifically of the MXCSR
>> register save and restore, not the more hefty operations you might be
>> thinking.
>>
>> FPU mode state save and restore is done already on EVERY OS when
>> switching threads/processes, and in the agner fog latency tables the cost
>> of manipulating mxcsr registers is pretty small!
>> https://www.agner.org/optimize/instruction_tables.pdf
>>
>> LDMXCSR (restore) and STMXCSR (save) have cpu latencies at like 5-20
>> cycles (more often 8-15), so having the current C ffi calls set the
>> default C FPU environment (as we currently have ordinarily) is super doable
>> to ensure no breakage of existing C bindings, plus have a new ccall variant
>> that inherits the host haskell thread FPU state. we're talking sub 10
>> nanosecond overhead on x86 and x86_64 platforms (and either way, on those
>> platforms soon ghc will only be using the sse2 or higher ).
>>
>> point being: aside from like AMD piledriver micro architecture and some
>> stuff from VIA, the performance of the CPU instruction for the signalling
>> nans state setup and related rounding mode etc, should work perfectly well,
>>
>> @Daniel Cartwright <chessai1996 at gmail.com> I do not support documenting
>> false laws in any enshrined way, it will result in broken code. (Also i'm
>> actually working to do some fixes, if you reread my remarks and merijn's,
>> and i think we can have our cake and eat it, with the finest floats). Lets
>> fix stuff and then document true laws!
>>
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Feb 7, 2019 at 12:05 PM Sven Panne <svenpanne at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Am Do., 7. Feb. 2019 um 17:22 Uhr schrieb Henning Thielemann <
>>> lemming at henning-thielemann.de>:
>>>
>>>> [...] What about calling into foreign code? If I call a BLAS routine
>>>> and one
>>>> element of the result vector is NaN, shall this be trapped? Or shall it
>>>> be
>>>> trapped once I access the NaN element?
>>>>
>>>
>>> IMHO this is the biggest show stopper for some exotic NaN handling, as
>>> correct as it may be mathematically or aesthetically: The floating point
>>> environment is a thread-local (i.e. basically global) entity on most
>>> platforms, and most programming language runtimes expect a "default"
>>> environment, i.e. no traps when NaNs are encountered. So if Haskell wants
>>> to do things differently, the FPE has to be set/reset around foreign calls
>>> and for around every Haskell callback. I am not sure if this is really
>>> worth the trouble and the performance loss. For some special applications
>>> it might be OK or even important, but my gut feeling is that trapping NaNs
>>> is the wrong default in our current world...
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