Well equidistributed long-period linear

Family of pseudorandom number generators
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The Well Equidistributed Long-period Linear (WELL) is a family of pseudorandom number generators developed in 2006 by François Panneton, Pierre L'Ecuyer, and Makoto Matsumoto (松本 眞).[1] It is a form of linear-feedback shift register optimized for software implementation on a 32-bit machine.

Operational design

The structure is similar to the Mersenne Twister, a large state made up of previous output words (32 bits each), from which a new output word is generated using linear recurrences modulo 2 over a finite binary field F 2 {\displaystyle F_{2}} . However, a more complex recurrence produces a denser generator polynomial, producing better statistical properties.

Each step of the generator reads five words of state: the oldest 32 bits (which may straddle a word boundary if the state size is not a multiple of 32), the newest 32 bits, and three other words in between.

Then a series of eight single-word transformations (mostly of the form x := x ( x k ) {\textstyle x:=x\oplus (x\gg k)} and six exclusive-or operations combine those into two words, which become the newest two words of state, one of which will be the output.

Variants

Specific parameters are provided for the following generators:

Numbers give the state size in bits; letter suffixes denote variants of the same size.

Implementations

References

  1. ^ Panneton, François O.; l'Ecuyer, Pierre; Matsumoto, Makoto (March 2006). "Improved long-period generators based on linear recurrences modulo 2" (PDF). ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software. 32 (1): 1–16. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.73.5499. doi:10.1145/1132973.1132974. S2CID 7368302.


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