In order to make these more interchangeable in more places, always
return `(impl Iterator, u64)`. This will facilitate using other
generators for extensive tests.
Use the generic `scalbn` to provide `f16` and `f128` versions, which
also work for `ldexp`.
This involves a new algorithm for `f16` because the default does not
converge fast enough with a limited number of rounds.
This function is significantly slower than all others so includes an
override in `EXTREMELY_SLOW_TESTS`. Without it, PR CI takes ~1hour and
the extensive tests in CI take ~1day.
The icount benchmarks are what we will be relying on in CI more than the
existing benchmarks. There isn't much reason to keep these around, but
there isn't much point in dropping them either. So, just reduce the
runtime.
This also allows reusing the same generator logic between logspace tests
and extensive tests, so comes with a nice bit of cleanup.
Changes:
* Make the generator part of `CheckCtx` since a `Generator` and
`CheckCtx` are almost always passed together.
* Rename `domain_logspace` to `spaced` since this no longer only
operates within a domain and we may want to handle integer spacing.
* Domain is now calculated at runtime rather than using traits, which is
much easier to work with.
* With the above, domains for multidimensional functions are added.
* The extensive test generator code tests has been combined with the
domain_logspace generator code. With this, the domain tests have just
become a subset of extensive tests. These were renamed to "quickspace"
since, technically, the extensive tests are also "domain" or "domain
logspace" tests.
* Edge case generators now handle functions with multiple inputs.
* The test runners can be significantly cleaned up and deduplicated.
Update test traits to support `f16` and `f128`, as applicable. Add the
new routines (`fabs` and `copysign` for `f16` and `f128`) to the list of
all operations.
Currently, all inputs are generated and then cached. This works
reasonably well but it isn't very configurable or extensible (adding
`f16` and `f128` is awkward).
Replace this with a trait for generating random sequences of tuples.
This also removes possible storage limitations of caching all inputs.
Once we start addinf `f16` and `f128` routines, we will need to have
this cfg for almost all uses of `for_each_function`. Rather than needing
to specify this each time, always emit `#[cfg(f16_enabled)]` or
`#[cfg(f128_enabled)]` for each function that uses `f16` or `f128`,
respectively.
The ambiguous associated types error sometimes fires in cases where it
shouldn't be ambiguous ([1]), which can make things clunky when working
with chained associated types (e.g. `Op::FTy::Int::*` does not work).
Add helper types that we can use instead of the full syntax.
There aren't too many cases in-crate now but this is relevant for some
open PRs.
[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38078