Hello all,

I'm encountering a very weird bug with some floating-point maths code, but only 
under very specific configurations. First I thought it was a Clang bug, but 
then further digging eventually showed it to only occur under Windows VMs with 
specific QEMU CPU options, I'm not certain whether it is a QEMU/KVM bug or a 
Windows bug, but thought starting here would be easiest.

When compiled under MSVC Clang with modern CPU instructions disabled (e.g. 
-march=pentium3 or -march=pentium-mmx), the floorf() call in the following 
program always returns 0.0, while the truncation works correctly:

#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
    float n = atof(argv[1]);
    printf("n = %f\n", n);

    float f = floorf(n);
    printf("f = %f\n", f);

    float c = (int)(n);
    printf("c = %f\n", c);

    return 0;
}

Example output on an affected VM:

C:\Users\Administrator> floorf-p3.exe 10
n = 10.000000
f = 0.000000
c = 10.000000

C:\Users\Administrator> floorf-p4.exe 10
n = 10.000000
f = 10.000000
c = 10.000000

(floorf-p3.exe was compiled with -march=pentium3 and floorf-p4.exe with 
-march=pentium4 above)

I've tried a few QEMU CPU models on a variety of Intel/AMD VM hosts and two 
different Windows versions (10 and Server 2022), and observed the following:

host-passthrough: works (on AMD and Intel hosts)
qemu64: broken
EPYC-Milan: works
Westmere: works
Penryn: broken

Happy to provide executables and/or disassembly to aid in debugging this.

Daniel


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