#Libvecpf: The Vector Printf Library
For the GNU/Linux Operating System and GNU C Library (glibc) Version 2.10
Authors: Michael Brutman, Ryan S. Arnold
Contributed by IBM Corporation
This library extends ISO C printf so that it may print out vector data types. The description of the extensions are in the AltiVec Technology Programming Interface Manual. Below is a paraphrasing of the extensions:
New separator chars (used like flags):
,
;
:
_
Note: The default separator is a space unless the 'c' conversion is
being used. If 'c' is being used the default separator character
is a null. Only one separator character may be specified.
New size modifiers:
vll, vl, vh, llv, lv, hv, v
Valid modifiers and conversions (all else are undefined):
vll or llv: long integer conversions; vectors are composed of eight byte vals
vl or lv: integer conversions; vectors are composed of four byte vals
vh or hv: short integer conversions; vectors are composed of two byte vals
v: byte conversions; vectors are composed of 1 byte vals
v: float conversions; vectors are composed of 4 byte vals
-
We only support the default separator; as things are today we can't add flags to printf to support the other separators.
-
We add a new modifier 'vv' to support vector double for VSX, which is new in Power Instruction Set Architecture (ISA) Version 2.06.
Vectors are 16 bytes long and can hold a variety of data types. These are the vector data types that Libvecpf knows about at the moment.
Type Elements VMX VSX
--------------------------------------------------
unsigned and signed char 16 Y Y
bool char 16 Y Y
unsigned and signed short 8 Y Y
bool short 8 Y Y
unsigned and signed int 4 Y Y
bool int 4 Y Y
float 4 Y Y
pixel 8 Y Y
Type Elements VMX VSX
--------------------------------------------------
unsigned and signed long 2 N Y
bool long 2 N Y
unsigned and signed long long 2 N Y
bool long long 2 N Y
double 2 N Y
The Altivec Programming Interface Manual defines how to print all of these data types except for pixel, which is undefined and double, which is newer than the Altivec PIM. We add support for double but leave pixel alone.
Please see README for more information.