| // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| #include <linux/kernel.h> |
| #include <linux/bug.h> |
| #include <linux/compiler.h> |
| #include <linux/export.h> |
| #include <linux/string.h> |
| #include <linux/list_sort.h> |
| #include <linux/list.h> |
| |
| /* |
| * Returns a list organized in an intermediate format suited |
| * to chaining of merge() calls: null-terminated, no reserved or |
| * sentinel head node, "prev" links not maintained. |
| */ |
| __attribute__((nonnull(2,3,4))) |
| static struct list_head *merge(void *priv, list_cmp_func_t cmp, |
| struct list_head *a, struct list_head *b) |
| { |
| struct list_head *head, **tail = &head; |
| |
| for (;;) { |
| /* if equal, take 'a' -- important for sort stability */ |
| if (cmp(priv, a, b) <= 0) { |
| *tail = a; |
| tail = &a->next; |
| a = a->next; |
| if (!a) { |
| *tail = b; |
| break; |
| } |
| } else { |
| *tail = b; |
| tail = &b->next; |
| b = b->next; |
| if (!b) { |
| *tail = a; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| return head; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Combine final list merge with restoration of standard doubly-linked |
| * list structure. This approach duplicates code from merge(), but |
| * runs faster than the tidier alternatives of either a separate final |
| * prev-link restoration pass, or maintaining the prev links |
| * throughout. |
| */ |
| __attribute__((nonnull(2,3,4,5))) |
| static void merge_final(void *priv, list_cmp_func_t cmp, struct list_head *head, |
| struct list_head *a, struct list_head *b) |
| { |
| struct list_head *tail = head; |
| u8 count = 0; |
| |
| for (;;) { |
| /* if equal, take 'a' -- important for sort stability */ |
| if (cmp(priv, a, b) <= 0) { |
| tail->next = a; |
| a->prev = tail; |
| tail = a; |
| a = a->next; |
| if (!a) |
| break; |
| } else { |
| tail->next = b; |
| b->prev = tail; |
| tail = b; |
| b = b->next; |
| if (!b) { |
| b = a; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Finish linking remainder of list b on to tail */ |
| tail->next = b; |
| do { |
| /* |
| * If the merge is highly unbalanced (e.g. the input is |
| * already sorted), this loop may run many iterations. |
| * Continue callbacks to the client even though no |
| * element comparison is needed, so the client's cmp() |
| * routine can invoke cond_resched() periodically. |
| */ |
| if (unlikely(!++count)) |
| cmp(priv, b, b); |
| b->prev = tail; |
| tail = b; |
| b = b->next; |
| } while (b); |
| |
| /* And the final links to make a circular doubly-linked list */ |
| tail->next = head; |
| head->prev = tail; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * list_sort - sort a list |
| * @priv: private data, opaque to list_sort(), passed to @cmp |
| * @head: the list to sort |
| * @cmp: the elements comparison function |
| * |
| * The comparison function @cmp must return > 0 if @a should sort after |
| * @b ("@a > @b" if you want an ascending sort), and <= 0 if @a should |
| * sort before @b *or* their original order should be preserved. It is |
| * always called with the element that came first in the input in @a, |
| * and list_sort is a stable sort, so it is not necessary to distinguish |
| * the @a < @b and @a == @b cases. |
| * |
| * This is compatible with two styles of @cmp function: |
| * - The traditional style which returns <0 / =0 / >0, or |
| * - Returning a boolean 0/1. |
| * The latter offers a chance to save a few cycles in the comparison |
| * (which is used by e.g. plug_ctx_cmp() in block/blk-mq.c). |
| * |
| * A good way to write a multi-word comparison is:: |
| * |
| * if (a->high != b->high) |
| * return a->high > b->high; |
| * if (a->middle != b->middle) |
| * return a->middle > b->middle; |
| * return a->low > b->low; |
| * |
| * |
| * This mergesort is as eager as possible while always performing at least |
| * 2:1 balanced merges. Given two pending sublists of size 2^k, they are |
| * merged to a size-2^(k+1) list as soon as we have 2^k following elements. |
| * |
| * Thus, it will avoid cache thrashing as long as 3*2^k elements can |
| * fit into the cache. Not quite as good as a fully-eager bottom-up |
| * mergesort, but it does use 0.2*n fewer comparisons, so is faster in |
| * the common case that everything fits into L1. |
| * |
| * |
| * The merging is controlled by "count", the number of elements in the |
| * pending lists. This is beautifully simple code, but rather subtle. |
| * |
| * Each time we increment "count", we set one bit (bit k) and clear |
| * bits k-1 .. 0. Each time this happens (except the very first time |
| * for each bit, when count increments to 2^k), we merge two lists of |
| * size 2^k into one list of size 2^(k+1). |
| * |
| * This merge happens exactly when the count reaches an odd multiple of |
| * 2^k, which is when we have 2^k elements pending in smaller lists, |
| * so it's safe to merge away two lists of size 2^k. |
| * |
| * After this happens twice, we have created two lists of size 2^(k+1), |
| * which will be merged into a list of size 2^(k+2) before we create |
| * a third list of size 2^(k+1), so there are never more than two pending. |
| * |
| * The number of pending lists of size 2^k is determined by the |
| * state of bit k of "count" plus two extra pieces of information: |
| * |
| * - The state of bit k-1 (when k == 0, consider bit -1 always set), and |
| * - Whether the higher-order bits are zero or non-zero (i.e. |
| * is count >= 2^(k+1)). |
| * |
| * There are six states we distinguish. "x" represents some arbitrary |
| * bits, and "y" represents some arbitrary non-zero bits: |
| * 0: 00x: 0 pending of size 2^k; x pending of sizes < 2^k |
| * 1: 01x: 0 pending of size 2^k; 2^(k-1) + x pending of sizes < 2^k |
| * 2: x10x: 0 pending of size 2^k; 2^k + x pending of sizes < 2^k |
| * 3: x11x: 1 pending of size 2^k; 2^(k-1) + x pending of sizes < 2^k |
| * 4: y00x: 1 pending of size 2^k; 2^k + x pending of sizes < 2^k |
| * 5: y01x: 2 pending of size 2^k; 2^(k-1) + x pending of sizes < 2^k |
| * (merge and loop back to state 2) |
| * |
| * We gain lists of size 2^k in the 2->3 and 4->5 transitions (because |
| * bit k-1 is set while the more significant bits are non-zero) and |
| * merge them away in the 5->2 transition. Note in particular that just |
| * before the 5->2 transition, all lower-order bits are 11 (state 3), |
| * so there is one list of each smaller size. |
| * |
| * When we reach the end of the input, we merge all the pending |
| * lists, from smallest to largest. If you work through cases 2 to |
| * 5 above, you can see that the number of elements we merge with a list |
| * of size 2^k varies from 2^(k-1) (cases 3 and 5 when x == 0) to |
| * 2^(k+1) - 1 (second merge of case 5 when x == 2^(k-1) - 1). |
| */ |
| __attribute__((nonnull(2,3))) |
| void list_sort(void *priv, struct list_head *head, list_cmp_func_t cmp) |
| { |
| struct list_head *list = head->next, *pending = NULL; |
| size_t count = 0; /* Count of pending */ |
| |
| if (list == head->prev) /* Zero or one elements */ |
| return; |
| |
| /* Convert to a null-terminated singly-linked list. */ |
| head->prev->next = NULL; |
| |
| /* |
| * Data structure invariants: |
| * - All lists are singly linked and null-terminated; prev |
| * pointers are not maintained. |
| * - pending is a prev-linked "list of lists" of sorted |
| * sublists awaiting further merging. |
| * - Each of the sorted sublists is power-of-two in size. |
| * - Sublists are sorted by size and age, smallest & newest at front. |
| * - There are zero to two sublists of each size. |
| * - A pair of pending sublists are merged as soon as the number |
| * of following pending elements equals their size (i.e. |
| * each time count reaches an odd multiple of that size). |
| * That ensures each later final merge will be at worst 2:1. |
| * - Each round consists of: |
| * - Merging the two sublists selected by the highest bit |
| * which flips when count is incremented, and |
| * - Adding an element from the input as a size-1 sublist. |
| */ |
| do { |
| size_t bits; |
| struct list_head **tail = &pending; |
| |
| /* Find the least-significant clear bit in count */ |
| for (bits = count; bits & 1; bits >>= 1) |
| tail = &(*tail)->prev; |
| /* Do the indicated merge */ |
| if (likely(bits)) { |
| struct list_head *a = *tail, *b = a->prev; |
| |
| a = merge(priv, cmp, b, a); |
| /* Install the merged result in place of the inputs */ |
| a->prev = b->prev; |
| *tail = a; |
| } |
| |
| /* Move one element from input list to pending */ |
| list->prev = pending; |
| pending = list; |
| list = list->next; |
| pending->next = NULL; |
| count++; |
| } while (list); |
| |
| /* End of input; merge together all the pending lists. */ |
| list = pending; |
| pending = pending->prev; |
| for (;;) { |
| struct list_head *next = pending->prev; |
| |
| if (!next) |
| break; |
| list = merge(priv, cmp, pending, list); |
| pending = next; |
| } |
| /* The final merge, rebuilding prev links */ |
| merge_final(priv, cmp, head, pending, list); |
| } |
| EXPORT_SYMBOL(list_sort); |