#!/usr/bin/env perl use strict; use warnings; use Test::More; use Math::Prime::Util qw/is_aks_prime/; my $use64 = Math::Prime::Util::prime_get_config->{'maxbits'} > 32; my $extra = defined $ENV{EXTENDED_TESTING} && $ENV{EXTENDED_TESTING}; my $ispp = !Math::Prime::Util::prime_get_config->{xs}; plan tests => 6 # range + 1 # small number + 2 # medium numbers + 1*$extra + 0; # Note: AKS testing is *extremely* sparse due to its lack of speed. # This does almost nothing to test whether AKS is working properly. # # If you are concerned about AKS correctness, you really need to use # the xt/primality-aks.pl test. ok(!eval { is_aks_prime(undef); }, "is_prime(undef)"); ok( is_aks_prime(2), '2 is prime'); ok(!is_aks_prime(1), '1 is not prime'); ok(!is_aks_prime(0), '0 is not prime'); ok(!is_aks_prime(-1), '-1 is not prime'); ok(!is_aks_prime(-2), '-2 is not prime'); # Simple number (cought by sqrt test) is( is_aks_prime(877), 1, "is_aks_prime(877) is true" ); # This test can take a very long time if mulmods are very slow (e.g. on # UltraSPARC). With the B+V improvements this should be fast enough for # the little example that we are ok. SKIP: { # If we're pure Perl, then this is definitely too slow. # Arguably we should check to see if they have the GMP code. skip "Skipping PP AKS on PP -- just too slow.", 1 if $ispp; # The least number that performs the full test with either implementation. is( is_aks_prime(69197), 1, "is_aks_prime(69197) is true" ); } # A small composite that runs the real primality test. is( is_aks_prime(69199), 0, "is_aks_prime(69199) is false" ); if ($extra) { # A composite (product of two 5-digit primes) is( is_aks_prime(1262952907), 0, "is_aks_prime(1262952907) is false" ); }