1 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3 -- GNAT RUN-TIME COMPONENTS --
5 -- A D A . N U M E R I C S . F L O A T _ R A N D O M --
9 -- Copyright (C) 1992-2006, Free Software Foundation, Inc. --
11 -- This specification is derived from the Ada Reference Manual for use with --
12 -- GNAT. The copyright notice above, and the license provisions that follow --
13 -- apply solely to the contents of the part following the private keyword. --
15 -- GNAT is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under --
16 -- terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Soft- --
17 -- ware Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later ver- --
18 -- sion. GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- --
19 -- OUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY --
20 -- or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License --
21 -- for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General --
22 -- Public License distributed with GNAT; see file COPYING. If not, write --
23 -- to the Free Software Foundation, 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, --
24 -- Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. --
26 -- As a special exception, if other files instantiate generics from this --
27 -- unit, or you link this unit with other files to produce an executable, --
28 -- this unit does not by itself cause the resulting executable to be --
29 -- covered by the GNU General Public License. This exception does not --
30 -- however invalidate any other reasons why the executable file might be --
31 -- covered by the GNU Public License. --
33 -- GNAT was originally developed by the GNAT team at New York University. --
34 -- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies Inc. --
36 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
38 -- Note: the implementation used in this package was contributed by
39 -- Robert Eachus. It is based on the work of L. Blum, M. Blum, and
40 -- M. Shub, SIAM Journal of Computing, Vol 15. No 2, May 1986. The
41 -- particular choices for P and Q chosen here guarantee a period of
42 -- 562,085,314,430,582 (about 2**49), and the generated sequence has
43 -- excellent randomness properties. For further details, see the
44 -- paper "Fast Generation of Trustworthy Random Numbers", by Robert
45 -- Eachus, which describes both the algorithm and the efficient
46 -- implementation approach used here.
50 package Ada
.Numerics
.Float_Random
is
54 type Generator
is limited private;
56 subtype Uniformly_Distributed
is Float range 0.0 .. 1.0;
58 function Random
(Gen
: Generator
) return Uniformly_Distributed
;
60 procedure Reset
(Gen
: Generator
);
61 procedure Reset
(Gen
: Generator
; Initiator
: Integer);
63 -- Advanced facilities
65 type State
is private;
67 procedure Save
(Gen
: Generator
; To_State
: out State
);
68 procedure Reset
(Gen
: Generator
; From_State
: State
);
70 Max_Image_Width
: constant := 80;
72 function Image
(Of_State
: State
) return String;
73 function Value
(Coded_State
: String) return State
;
76 type Int
is new Interfaces
.Integer_32
;
78 -- We prefer to use 14 digits for Flt, but some targets are more limited
80 type Flt
is digits Positive'Min (14, Long_Long_Float'Digits);
82 K1
: constant := 94_833_359
;
83 K1F
: constant := 94_833_359
.0
;
84 K2
: constant := 47_416_679
;
85 K2F
: constant := 47_416_679
.0
;
86 Scal
: constant := 1.0 / (K1F
* K2F
);
89 X1
: Int
:= 2999 ** 2; -- Square mod p
90 X2
: Int
:= 1439 ** 2; -- Square mod q
97 type Generator
is limited record
101 end Ada
.Numerics
.Float_Random
;