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Diffstat (limited to 'results/classifier/deepseek-r1:32b/reasoning/runtime/1941')
| -rw-r--r-- | results/classifier/deepseek-r1:32b/reasoning/runtime/1941 | 13 |
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:32b/reasoning/runtime/1941 b/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:32b/reasoning/runtime/1941 new file mode 100644 index 00000000..84b0345e --- /dev/null +++ b/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:32b/reasoning/runtime/1941 @@ -0,0 +1,13 @@ +<think> +Alright, I'm trying to classify this bug report about QEMU 8.0.4 related to VSX vector float to integer conversion instructions not handling NaN values correctly. Let me break it down. + +The user describes that certain VSX instructions like xvcvspsxws and others are producing unexpected results when the source vectors contain NaNs. Instead of converting non-NaN values properly, they're returning -9223372036854775808 or other incorrect integers where a valid conversion should occur. + +Looking at the provided outputs from QEMU 6.2.0 and 8.0.4, it's clear that in 8.0.4, when NaNs are present in the vector, subsequent non-NaN elements are being incorrectly converted to min int values or zeros instead of their correct integer representations. + +The problem occurs during runtime when these conversion instructions are executed. It doesn't seem to be a syscall issue because it's about how specific assembly instructions handle data, not system calls. It also isn't an instruction-level fault in the CPU itself but rather how QEMU emulates these instructions, especially in handling NaNs. + +Therefore, this bug is related to how the runtime environment (QEMU) processes these vector operations when NaN values are involved, leading to incorrect results. +</think> + +runtime \ No newline at end of file |