On 13 Nov 2007, at 9:43 AM, Geoffrey Zhu wrote:
> On Nov 13, 2007 2:37 AM, David Cournapeau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> u.ac.jp> wrote:
>> Geoffrey Zhu wrote:
>>> Pointer problems are usually random...
...
> The original MSI version hangs on numpy.test() if I open IDLE and type
>
> import numpy
> numpy.test()
>
> If I try the OP's test first, once it hang on "from numpy.linalg
> import eig" and the other time it ran successfully. After it ran
> successfully, it ran numpy.test() successfully, too.
>
> As you said, it is random.
I have also been having random problems with the latest numpy from
svn built on an Intel core 2 Duo Linux box running in 64 bit mode
under Red Hat 3.4.6-8 with the gcc 3.4.6 20060404 and ATLAS 3.8.0.
I am having a problem with numpy.linalg.eigh and complex Hermitian
matrices. Randomly, I get seemingly correct answers, and then
eigenvectors full of Nan's (though not completely. The first row the
the eigenvectors seem to be numbers, but incorrect.)
Sometimes, I can stop just after the error with pdb and "play".
Calling eigh from the debugger sometimes gives a correct answer, and
then other times gives eigenvalues and eigenvectors full of Nan's
(not completely full mind you). For example:
(Pdb) p numpy.linalg.eigh(HH)
(array([-50.50589438, -45.86305013, -40.56713543, -35.57216233,
38.1497506 , 40.17291371, 43.35773763, 46.59527636,
49.42413434, NaN, NaN,
NaN, NaN, NaN,
NaN, NaN, NaN, NaN, NaN,
NaN, NaN, NaN,
NaN, NaN, NaN,
NaN, NaN, NaN, NaN, NaN,
NaN, NaN, NaN,
NaN]), array([[-0.00072424 +0.j, -0.00136655 +0.j,
0.00200233 +0.j, ..., 0.00000000 +0.j, 0.00000000 +0.j, 0.00000000
+0.j],
[ NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN
NaNj, ..., NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj],
[ NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN
NaNj, ..., NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj],
...,
[ NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN
NaNj, ..., NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj],
[ NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN
NaNj, ..., NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj],
[ NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN
NaNj, ..., NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj, NaN NaNj]]))
(Pdb) p numpy.linalg.eigh(HH)
(array([-51.06208813, -48.50332834, -48.49643331, -46.25814405,
-46.25813858, -44.33668063, -44.33668063, -42.73548661, -42.73548661,
-41.45454929, -41.45454929,
-40.49386126, -40.49386126, -39.85344006, -39.85344006,
-39.53308677, -39.53308677, 37.91885011, 37.91885011,
38.2392034 , 38.2392034 , 38.8796246 ,
38.8796246 , 39.84031263, 39.84031263, 41.12124995,
41.12124995, 42.72244397, 42.72244398, 44.64390192, 44.6439074 ,
46.88219666, 46.88909168,
49.44785148]), array([[ -5.28060016e-04 +0.00000000e+00j,
-3.92271866e-05 +0.00000000e+00j, 7.72453920e-04 +0.00000000e
+00j, ..., -3.36896226e-01 +0.00000000e+00j,
6.28651296e-02 +0.00000000e+00j, -2.42202473e-01
+0.00000000e+00j],
[ 1.48818848e-03 +2.78190640e-04j, 1.06069959e-03
+1.98279117e-04j, -1.88322135e-03 -3.52035081e-04j, ...,
2.86677919e-01 +5.35893907e-02j,
-1.77188491e-01 -3.31222694e-02j, 2.38244862e-01
+4.45356831e-02j],
[ -2.14234988e-03 -8.29950766e-04j, -2.44246082e-03
-9.46214364e-04j, 1.92200953e-03 +7.44590459e-04j, ...,
-1.92999931e-01 -7.47685718e-02j,
2.55119386e-01 +9.88337767e-02j, -2.26238355e-01
-8.76452055e-02j],
...,
[ 2.06281453e-01 -1.27724068e-01j, -2.32614835e-01
+1.44029008e-01j, -1.75975052e-01 +1.08959139e-01j, ...,
1.75246553e-03 -1.08508072e-03j,
2.22700685e-03 -1.37890426e-03j, 1.95336925e-03
-1.20947504e-03j],
[ -2.26004880e-01 +8.75547569e-02j, 1.68085319e-01
-6.51165996e-02j, 2.71949658e-01 -1.05353859e-01j, ...,
-1.78646965e-03 +6.92082029e-04j,
-1.00620547e-03 +3.89806076e-04j, -1.41173185e-03
+5.46907831e-04j],
[ 2.38078516e-01 -4.45045876e-02j, -6.17947313e-02
+1.15514373e-02j, -3.31159928e-01 +6.19045191e-02j, ...,
7.59301424e-04 -1.41938035e-04j,
3.85592692e-05 -7.20797663e-06j, 5.19068791e-04
-9.70307734e-05j]]))
Here is the version info (Everything build from scratch, numpy from
svn):
>>> sys.version
'2.5.1 (r251:54863, Nov 10 2007, 00:44:16) \n[GCC 3.4.6 20060404 (Red
Hat 3.4.6-8)]'
>>> numpy.version.version
'1.0.5.dev4427'
>>> scipy.version.version
'0.7.0.dev3511'
Using ATLAS-3.8.0.
This is extremely annoying, and difficult to reproduce. I will try
recompiling with some different versions and see if I can reproduce
the problem.
Running numpy.test() does *not* fail...
Michael.
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