Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lib-src/qsort.c @ 5776:65d65b52d608
Pass character count from coding systems to buffer insertion code.
src/ChangeLog addition:
2014-01-16 Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net>
Pass character count information from the no-conversion and
unicode coding systems to the buffer insertion code, making
#'find-file on large buffers a little snappier (if
ERROR_CHECK_TEXT is not defined).
* file-coding.c:
* file-coding.c (coding_character_tell): New.
* file-coding.c (conversion_coding_stream_description): New.
* file-coding.c (no_conversion_convert):
Update characters_seen when decoding.
* file-coding.c (no_conversion_character_tell): New.
* file-coding.c (lstream_type_create_file_coding): Create the
no_conversion type with data.
* file-coding.c (coding_system_type_create):
Make the character_tell method available here.
* file-coding.h:
* file-coding.h (struct coding_system_methods):
Add a new character_tell() method, passing charcount information
from the coding systems to the buffer code, avoiding duplicate
bytecount-to-charcount work especially with large buffers.
* fileio.c (Finsert_file_contents_internal):
Update this to pass charcount information to
buffer_insert_string_1(), if that is available from the lstream code.
* insdel.c:
* insdel.c (buffer_insert_string_1):
Add a new CCLEN argument, giving the character count of the string
to insert. It can be -1 to indicate that te function should work
it out itself using bytecount_to_charcount(), as it used to.
* insdel.c (buffer_insert_raw_string_1):
* insdel.c (buffer_insert_lisp_string_1):
* insdel.c (buffer_insert_ascstring_1):
* insdel.c (buffer_insert_emacs_char_1):
* insdel.c (buffer_insert_from_buffer_1):
* insdel.c (buffer_replace_char):
Update these functions to use the new calling convention.
* insdel.h:
* insdel.h (buffer_insert_string):
Update this header to reflect the new buffer_insert_string_1()
argument.
* lstream.c (Lstream_character_tell): New.
Return the number of characters *read* and seen by the consumer so
far, taking into account the unget buffer, and buffered reading.
* lstream.c (Lstream_unread):
Update unget_character_count here as appropriate.
* lstream.c (Lstream_rewind):
Reset unget_character_count here too.
* lstream.h:
* lstream.h (struct lstream):
Provide the character_tell method, add a new field,
unget_character_count, giving the number of characters ever passed
to Lstream_unread().
Declare Lstream_character_tell().
Make Lstream_ungetc(), which happens to be unused, an inline
function rather than a macro, in the course of updating it to
modify unget_character_count.
* print.c (output_string):
Use the new argument to buffer_insert_string_1().
* tests.c:
* tests.c (Ftest_character_tell):
New test function.
* tests.c (syms_of_tests):
Make it available.
* unicode.c:
* unicode.c (struct unicode_coding_stream):
* unicode.c (unicode_character_tell):
New method.
* unicode.c (unicode_convert):
Update the character counter as appropriate.
* unicode.c (coding_system_type_create_unicode):
Make the character_tell method available.
| author | Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> |
|---|---|
| date | Thu, 16 Jan 2014 16:27:52 +0000 |
| parents | 061f4f90f874 |
| children |
line wrap: on
line source
/* Plug-compatible replacement for UNIX qsort. Copyright (C) 1989 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Written by Douglas C. Schmidt (schmidt@ics.uci.edu) This file is part of GNU CC. GNU QSORT is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU QSORT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU QSORT. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ /* Synched up with: FSF 19.28. */ #ifdef sparc #include <alloca.h> #endif /* Invoke the comparison function, returns either 0, < 0, or > 0. */ #define CMP(A,B) ((*cmp)((A),(B))) /* Byte-wise swap two items of size SIZE. */ #define SWAP(A,B,SIZE) do {int sz = (SIZE); char *a = (A); char *b = (B); \ do { char _temp = *a;*a++ = *b;*b++ = _temp;} while (--sz);} while (0) /* Copy SIZE bytes from item B to item A. */ #define COPY(A,B,SIZE) {int sz = (SIZE); do { *(A)++ = *(B)++; } while (--sz); } /* This should be replaced by a standard ANSI macro. */ #define BYTES_PER_WORD 8 /* The next 4 #defines implement a very fast in-line stack abstraction. */ #define STACK_SIZE (BYTES_PER_WORD * sizeof (long)) #define PUSH(LOW,HIGH) do {top->lo = LOW;top++->hi = HIGH;} while (0) #define POP(LOW,HIGH) do {LOW = (--top)->lo;HIGH = top->hi;} while (0) #define STACK_NOT_EMPTY (stack < top) /* Discontinue quicksort algorithm when partition gets below this size. This particular magic number was chosen to work best on a Sun 4/260. */ #define MAX_THRESH 4 /* Stack node declarations used to store unfulfilled partition obligations. */ typedef struct { char *lo; char *hi; } stack_node; /* Order size using quicksort. This implementation incorporates four optimizations discussed in Sedgewick: 1. Non-recursive, using an explicit stack of pointer that store the next array partition to sort. To save time, this maximum amount of space required to store an array of MAX_INT is allocated on the stack. Assuming a 32-bit integer, this needs only 32 * sizeof (stack_node) == 136 bits. Pretty cheap, actually. 2. Choose the pivot element using a median-of-three decision tree. This reduces the probability of selecting a bad pivot value and eliminates certain extraneous comparisons. 3. Only quicksorts TOTAL_ELEMS / MAX_THRESH partitions, leaving insertion sort to order the MAX_THRESH items within each partition. This is a big win, since insertion sort is faster for small, mostly sorted array segments. 4. The larger of the two sub-partitions is always pushed onto the stack first, with the algorithm then concentrating on the smaller partition. This *guarantees* no more than log (n) stack size is needed (actually O(1) in this case)! */ int qsort (base_ptr, total_elems, size, cmp) char *base_ptr; int total_elems; int size; int (*cmp)(); { /* Allocating SIZE bytes for a pivot buffer facilitates a better algorithm below since we can do comparisons directly on the pivot. */ char *pivot_buffer = (char *) alloca (size); int max_thresh = MAX_THRESH * size; if (total_elems > MAX_THRESH) { char *lo = base_ptr; char *hi = lo + size * (total_elems - 1); stack_node stack[STACK_SIZE]; /* Largest size needed for 32-bit int!!! */ stack_node *top = stack + 1; while (STACK_NOT_EMPTY) { char *left_ptr; char *right_ptr; { char *pivot = pivot_buffer; { /* Select median value from among LO, MID, and HI. Rearrange LO and HI so the three values are sorted. This lowers the probability of picking a pathological pivot value and skips a comparison for both the LEFT_PTR and RIGHT_PTR. */ char *mid = lo + size * ((hi - lo) / size >> 1); if (CMP (mid, lo) < 0) SWAP (mid, lo, size); if (CMP (hi, mid) < 0) SWAP (mid, hi, size); else goto jump_over; if (CMP (mid, lo) < 0) SWAP (mid, lo, size); jump_over: COPY (pivot, mid, size); pivot = pivot_buffer; } left_ptr = lo + size; right_ptr = hi - size; /* Here's the famous ``collapse the walls'' section of quicksort. Gotta like those tight inner loops! They are the main reason that this algorithm runs much faster than others. */ do { while (CMP (left_ptr, pivot) < 0) left_ptr += size; while (CMP (pivot, right_ptr) < 0) right_ptr -= size; if (left_ptr < right_ptr) { SWAP (left_ptr, right_ptr, size); left_ptr += size; right_ptr -= size; } else if (left_ptr == right_ptr) { left_ptr += size; right_ptr -= size; break; } } while (left_ptr <= right_ptr); } /* Set up pointers for next iteration. First determine whether left and right partitions are below the threshold size. If so, ignore one or both. Otherwise, push the larger partition's bounds on the stack and continue sorting the smaller one. */ if ((right_ptr - lo) <= max_thresh) { if ((hi - left_ptr) <= max_thresh) /* Ignore both small partitions. */ POP (lo, hi); else /* Ignore small left partition. */ lo = left_ptr; } else if ((hi - left_ptr) <= max_thresh) /* Ignore small right partition. */ hi = right_ptr; else if ((right_ptr - lo) > (hi - left_ptr)) /* Push larger left partition indices. */ { PUSH (lo, right_ptr); lo = left_ptr; } else /* Push larger right partition indices. */ { PUSH (left_ptr, hi); hi = right_ptr; } } } /* Once the BASE_PTR array is partially sorted by quicksort the rest is completely sorted using insertion sort, since this is efficient for partitions below MAX_THRESH size. BASE_PTR points to the beginning of the array to sort, and END_PTR points at the very last element in the array (*not* one beyond it!). */ #define MIN(X,Y) ((X) < (Y) ? (X) : (Y)) { char *end_ptr = base_ptr + size * (total_elems - 1); char *run_ptr; char *tmp_ptr = base_ptr; char *thresh = MIN (end_ptr, base_ptr + max_thresh); /* Find smallest element in first threshold and place it at the array's beginning. This is the smallest array element, and the operation speeds up insertion sort's inner loop. */ for (run_ptr = tmp_ptr + size; run_ptr <= thresh; run_ptr += size) if (CMP (run_ptr, tmp_ptr) < 0) tmp_ptr = run_ptr; if (tmp_ptr != base_ptr) SWAP (tmp_ptr, base_ptr, size); /* Insertion sort, running from left-hand-side up to `right-hand-side.' Pretty much straight out of the original GNU qsort routine. */ for (run_ptr = base_ptr + size; (tmp_ptr = run_ptr += size) <= end_ptr; ) { while (CMP (run_ptr, tmp_ptr -= size) < 0) ; if ((tmp_ptr += size) != run_ptr) { char *trav; for (trav = run_ptr + size; --trav >= run_ptr;) { char c = *trav; char *hi, *lo; for (hi = lo = trav; (lo -= size) >= tmp_ptr; hi = lo) *hi = *lo; *hi = c; } } } } return 1; }
