dsa-connectors/contracts/arbitrum/connectors/uniswap-sell-beta/libraries/FullMath.sol
pradyuman-verma 69ce278335
update
2021-11-19 18:29:55 +05:30

125 lines
5.0 KiB
Solidity
Raw Permalink Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
pragma solidity >=0.4.0;
/// @title Contains 512-bit math functions
/// @notice Facilitates multiplication and division that can have overflow of an intermediate value without any loss of precision
/// @dev Handles "phantom overflow" i.e., allows multiplication and division where an intermediate value overflows 256 bits
library FullMath {
/// @notice Calculates floor(a×b÷denominator) with full precision. Throws if result overflows a uint256 or denominator == 0
/// @param a The multiplicand
/// @param b The multiplier
/// @param denominator The divisor
/// @return result The 256-bit result
/// @dev Credit to Remco Bloemen under MIT license https://xn--2-umb.com/21/muldiv
function mulDiv(
uint256 a,
uint256 b,
uint256 denominator
) internal pure returns (uint256 result) {
// 512-bit multiply [prod1 prod0] = a * b
// Compute the product mod 2**256 and mod 2**256 - 1
// then use the Chinese Remainder Theorem to reconstruct
// the 512 bit result. The result is stored in two 256
// variables such that product = prod1 * 2**256 + prod0
uint256 prod0; // Least significant 256 bits of the product
uint256 prod1; // Most significant 256 bits of the product
assembly {
let mm := mulmod(a, b, not(0))
prod0 := mul(a, b)
prod1 := sub(sub(mm, prod0), lt(mm, prod0))
}
// Handle non-overflow cases, 256 by 256 division
if (prod1 == 0) {
require(denominator > 0);
assembly {
result := div(prod0, denominator)
}
return result;
}
// Make sure the result is less than 2**256.
// Also prevents denominator == 0
require(denominator > prod1);
///////////////////////////////////////////////
// 512 by 256 division.
///////////////////////////////////////////////
// Make division exact by subtracting the remainder from [prod1 prod0]
// Compute remainder using mulmod
uint256 remainder;
assembly {
remainder := mulmod(a, b, denominator)
}
// Subtract 256 bit number from 512 bit number
assembly {
prod1 := sub(prod1, gt(remainder, prod0))
prod0 := sub(prod0, remainder)
}
// Factor powers of two out of denominator
// Compute largest power of two divisor of denominator.
// Always >= 1.
uint256 twos = -denominator & denominator;
// Divide denominator by power of two
assembly {
denominator := div(denominator, twos)
}
// Divide [prod1 prod0] by the factors of two
assembly {
prod0 := div(prod0, twos)
}
// Shift in bits from prod1 into prod0. For this we need
// to flip `twos` such that it is 2**256 / twos.
// If twos is zero, then it becomes one
assembly {
twos := add(div(sub(0, twos), twos), 1)
}
prod0 |= prod1 * twos;
// Invert denominator mod 2**256
// Now that denominator is an odd number, it has an inverse
// modulo 2**256 such that denominator * inv = 1 mod 2**256.
// Compute the inverse by starting with a seed that is correct
// correct for four bits. That is, denominator * inv = 1 mod 2**4
uint256 inv = (3 * denominator) ^ 2;
// Now use Newton-Raphson iteration to improve the precision.
// Thanks to Hensel's lifting lemma, this also works in modular
// arithmetic, doubling the correct bits in each step.
inv *= 2 - denominator * inv; // inverse mod 2**8
inv *= 2 - denominator * inv; // inverse mod 2**16
inv *= 2 - denominator * inv; // inverse mod 2**32
inv *= 2 - denominator * inv; // inverse mod 2**64
inv *= 2 - denominator * inv; // inverse mod 2**128
inv *= 2 - denominator * inv; // inverse mod 2**256
// Because the division is now exact we can divide by multiplying
// with the modular inverse of denominator. This will give us the
// correct result modulo 2**256. Since the precoditions guarantee
// that the outcome is less than 2**256, this is the final result.
// We don't need to compute the high bits of the result and prod1
// is no longer required.
result = prod0 * inv;
return result;
}
/// @notice Calculates ceil(a×b÷denominator) with full precision. Throws if result overflows a uint256 or denominator == 0
/// @param a The multiplicand
/// @param b The multiplier
/// @param denominator The divisor
/// @return result The 256-bit result
function mulDivRoundingUp(
uint256 a,
uint256 b,
uint256 denominator
) internal pure returns (uint256 result) {
result = mulDiv(a, b, denominator);
if (mulmod(a, b, denominator) > 0) {
require(result < type(uint256).max);
result++;
}
}
}