[Rd] NaN and linear algebra
stefano iacus
stefano.iacus at unimi.it
Wed Mar 23 18:51:57 CET 2005
On 23/mar/05, at 09:04, Martin Maechler wrote:
>>>>>> "Bill" == Bill Northcott <w.northcott at unsw.edu.au>
>>>>>> on Wed, 23 Mar 2005 10:19:22 +1100 writes:
>
> Bill> On 23/03/2005, at 12:55 AM, Simon Urbanek wrote:
>>>> As I see it, the MacOS X behaviour is not IEEE-754 compliant.
>>>>
>>>> I had a quick look at the IEEE web site and it seems quite clear
>>>> that
>>>> NaNs should not cause errors, but propagate through calculations to
>>>> be tested at some appropriate (not too frequent) point.
>>>
>>> This is not quite correct and in fact irrelevant to the problem you
>>> describe. NaNs may or may not signal, depending on how they are used.
>>> Certain operations on NaN must signal by the IEEE-754 standard. The
>>> error you get is not a trap, and it's not a result of a signal check,
>>> either. The whole problem is that depending on which algorithm is
>>> used, the NaNs will be used different ways and thus may or may not
>>> use
>>> signaling operations.
>
> Bill> It may not violate the letter of IEEE-754 because matrix
> calculations
> Bill> are not covered, but it certainly violates the spirit that
> arithmetic
> Bill> should be robust and programs should not halt on these sorts
> of errors.
>>>
>>> I don't consider the `solve' error a bug - in fact I would rather get
>>> an error telling me that something is wrong (although I agree that
>>> the
>>> error is misleading - the error given in Linux is a bit more helpful)
>>> than getting a wrong result.
>
> Bill> You may prefer the error, but it is not in the sprit of
> robust
> Bill> arithmetic. ie
>>> d<-matrix(NaN,3,3)
>>> f<-solve(d)
> Bill> Error in solve.default(d) : Lapack routine dgesv: system is
> exactly
> Bill> singular
>>> f
> Bill> Error: Object "f" not found
>
>>> If I would mark something in your example as a bug that would be
>>> det(m)=0, because it should return NaN (remember, NaN==NaN is FALSE;
>>> furthermore if det was calculated inefficiently using Laplace
>>> expansion, the result would be NaN according to IEEE rules). det=0 is
>>> consistent with the error given, though. Should we check this in R
>>> before calling Lapack - if the vector contains NaNs, det/determinant
>>> should return NaN right away?
>
> Bill> Clearly det(d) returning 0 is wrong. As a result based on a
> Bill> computation including a NaN, it should return NaN. The
> spirit of
> Bill> IEEE-754 is that the programmer should choose the
> appropriate point at
> Bill> which to check for NaNs. I would interpret this to mean the
> R
> Bill> programmer not the R library developer. Surely that is why
> R provides
> Bill> the is.nan function.
>
>>> d
> Bill> [,1] [,2] [,3]
> Bill> [1,] NaN NaN NaN
> Bill> [2,] NaN NaN NaN
> Bill> [3,] NaN NaN NaN
>>> is.nan(solve(d))
> Bill> Error in solve.default(d) : Lapack routine dgesv: system is
> exactly
> Bill> singular
>
> Bill> This is against the spirit of IEEE-754 because it halts the
> program.
>
>>> is.nan(det(d))
> Bill> [1] FALSE
>
> Bill> That is plain wrong.
>
>>>
>>> Many functions in R will actually bark at NaN inputs (e.g. qr, eigen,
>>> ...) - maybe you're saying that we should check for NaNs in solve
>>> before proceeding and raising an error?
>
> Bill> However, this problem is in the Apple library not R.
>
> Bill> Bill Northcott
>
> Indeed!
>
> I pretty much entirely agree with your points, Bill, and would
> tend to declare that this Apple library is ``broken''
> for building a correctly running R.
>
> Let me ask one question I've been wondering about now for a
> while:
>
> Did you run "make check" after building R,
> and "make check" ran to completion without an error?
Martin,
the use vecLib was (since now?) the suggested way to build R on OS X
with blas support.
This is the way OS X binaries are distributed and of course they pass
make check (I've checked again just now and both 2.0.0 and r-devel pass
make check) so probably the NaN is a special case with don't test for
LAPACK?
stefano
>
> If yes (which I doubt quite a bit), there *is* a bug in R's
> quality control / quality assurance tools -- and I would want to
> add a check for the misbehavior you've mentioned.
>
> Martin Maechler, ETH Zurich
>
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