#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use Test;
use strict;
my $count;
BEGIN
{
$| = 1;
if ($^O eq 'os390') { print "1..0\n"; exit(0) } # test takes too long there
unshift @INC, '../lib'; # for running manually
my $location = $0; $location =~ s/mbi_rand.t//;
unshift @INC, $location; # to locate the testing files
chdir 't' if -d 't';
$count = 128;
plan tests => $count*2;
}
use Math::BigInt;
my $c = 'Math::BigInt';
my $length = 128;
# If you get a failure here, please re-run the test with the printed seed
# value as input: perl t/mbi_rand.t seed
my $seed = ($#ARGV == 0) ? $ARGV[0] : int(rand(65537));
print "# seed: $seed\n"; srand($seed);
my ($A,$B,$As,$Bs,$ADB,$AMB,$la,$lb);
my $two = Math::BigInt->new(2);
for (my $i = 0; $i < $count; $i++)
{
# length of A and B
$la = int(rand($length)+1); $lb = int(rand($length)+1);
$As = ''; $Bs = '';
# we create the numbers from "patterns", e.g. get a random number and a
# random count and string them together. This means things like
# "100000999999999999911122222222" are much more likely. If we just strung
# together digits, we would end up with "1272398823211223" etc.
while (length($As) < $la) { $As .= int(rand(100)) x int(rand(16)); }
while (length($Bs) < $lb) { $Bs .= int(rand(100)) x int(rand(16)); }
$As =~ s/^0+//; $Bs =~ s/^0+//;
$As = $As || '0'; $Bs = $Bs || '0';
# print "# As $As\n# Bs $Bs\n";
$A = $c->new($As); $B = $c->new($Bs);
# print "# A $A\n# B $B\n";
if ($A->is_zero() || $B->is_zero())
{
ok (1,1); ok (1,1); next;
}
# check that int(A/B)*B + A % B == A holds for all inputs
# $X = ($A/$B)*$B + 2 * ($A % $B) - ($A % $B);
($ADB,$AMB) = $A->copy()->bdiv($B);
print "# ". join(' ',Math::BigInt::Calc->_base_len()),"\n"
unless ok ($ADB*$B+$two*$AMB-$AMB,$As);
# swap 'em and try this, too
# $X = ($B/$A)*$A + $B % $A;
($ADB,$AMB) = $B->copy()->bdiv($A);
print "# ". join(' ',Math::BigInt::Calc->_base_len()),"\n"
unless ok ($ADB*$A+$two*$AMB-$AMB,$Bs);
}
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