OpenCores
URL https://opencores.org/ocsvn/openrisc/openrisc/trunk

Subversion Repositories openrisc

[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-stable/] [gcc-4.5.1/] [gcc/] [ada/] [g-hesorg.adb] - Blame information for rev 826

Details | Compare with Previous | View Log

Line No. Rev Author Line
1 281 jeremybenn
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2
--                                                                          --
3
--                         GNAT RUN-TIME COMPONENTS                         --
4
--                                                                          --
5
--                     G N A T . H E A P _ S O R T _ G                      --
6
--                                                                          --
7
--                                 B o d y                                  --
8
--                                                                          --
9
--                     Copyright (C) 1995-2008, AdaCore                     --
10
--                                                                          --
11
-- GNAT is free software;  you can  redistribute it  and/or modify it under --
12
-- terms of the  GNU General Public License as published  by the Free Soft- --
13
-- ware  Foundation;  either version 2,  or (at your option) any later ver- --
14
-- sion.  GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- --
15
-- OUT ANY WARRANTY;  without even the  implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY --
16
-- or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License --
17
-- for  more details.  You should have  received  a copy of the GNU General --
18
-- Public License  distributed with GNAT;  see file COPYING.  If not, write --
19
-- to  the  Free Software Foundation,  51  Franklin  Street,  Fifth  Floor, --
20
-- Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.                                              --
21
--                                                                          --
22
-- As a special exception,  if other files  instantiate  generics from this --
23
-- unit, or you link  this unit with other files  to produce an executable, --
24
-- this  unit  does not  by itself cause  the resulting  executable  to  be --
25
-- covered  by the  GNU  General  Public  License.  This exception does not --
26
-- however invalidate  any other reasons why  the executable file  might be --
27
-- covered by the  GNU Public License.                                      --
28
--                                                                          --
29
-- GNAT was originally developed  by the GNAT team at  New York University. --
30
-- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies Inc.      --
31
--                                                                          --
32
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
33
 
34
package body GNAT.Heap_Sort_G is
35
 
36
   ----------
37
   -- Sort --
38
   ----------
39
 
40
   --  We are using the classical heapsort algorithm (i.e. Floyd's Treesort3)
41
   --  as described by Knuth ("The Art of Programming", Volume III, first
42
   --  edition, section 5.2.3, p. 145-147) with the modification that is
43
   --  mentioned in exercise 18. For more details on this algorithm, see
44
   --  Robert B. K. Dewar PhD thesis "The use of Computers in the X-ray
45
   --  Phase Problem". University of Chicago, 1968, which was the first
46
   --  publication of the modification, which reduces the number of compares
47
   --  from 2NlogN to NlogN.
48
 
49
   procedure Sort (N : Natural) is
50
 
51
      Max : Natural := N;
52
      --  Current Max index in tree being sifted
53
 
54
      procedure Sift (S : Positive);
55
      --  This procedure sifts up node S, i.e. converts the subtree rooted
56
      --  at node S into a heap, given the precondition that any sons of
57
      --  S are already heaps. On entry, the contents of node S is found
58
      --  in the temporary (index 0), the actual contents of node S on
59
      --  entry are irrelevant. This is just a minor optimization to avoid
60
      --  what would otherwise be two junk moves in phase two of the sort.
61
 
62
      ----------
63
      -- Sift --
64
      ----------
65
 
66
      procedure Sift (S : Positive) is
67
         C      : Positive := S;
68
         Son    : Positive;
69
         Father : Positive;
70
         --  Note: by making the above all Positive, we ensure that a test
71
         --  against zero for the temporary location can be resolved on the
72
         --  basis of types when the routines are inlined.
73
 
74
      begin
75
         --  This is where the optimization is done, normally we would do a
76
         --  comparison at each stage between the current node and the larger
77
         --  of the two sons, and continue the sift only if the current node
78
         --  was less than this maximum. In this modified optimized version,
79
         --  we assume that the current node will be less than the larger
80
         --  son, and unconditionally sift up. Then when we get to the bottom
81
         --  of the tree, we check parents to make sure that we did not make
82
         --  a mistake. This roughly cuts the number of comparisons in half,
83
         --  since it is almost always the case that our assumption is correct.
84
 
85
         --  Loop to pull up larger sons
86
 
87
         loop
88
            Son := 2 * C;
89
 
90
            if Son < Max then
91
               if Lt (Son, Son + 1) then
92
                  Son := Son + 1;
93
               end if;
94
            elsif Son > Max then
95
               exit;
96
            end if;
97
 
98
            Move (Son, C);
99
            C := Son;
100
         end loop;
101
 
102
         --  Loop to check fathers
103
 
104
         while C /= S loop
105
            Father := C / 2;
106
 
107
            if Lt (Father, 0) then
108
               Move (Father, C);
109
               C := Father;
110
            else
111
               exit;
112
            end if;
113
         end loop;
114
 
115
         --  Last step is to pop the sifted node into place
116
 
117
         Move (0, C);
118
      end Sift;
119
 
120
   --  Start of processing for Sort
121
 
122
   begin
123
      --  Phase one of heapsort is to build the heap. This is done by
124
      --  sifting nodes N/2 .. 1 in sequence.
125
 
126
      for J in reverse 1 .. N / 2 loop
127
         Move (J, 0);
128
         Sift (J);
129
      end loop;
130
 
131
      --  In phase 2, the largest node is moved to end, reducing the size
132
      --  of the tree by one, and the displaced node is sifted down from
133
      --  the top, so that the largest node is again at the top.
134
 
135
      while Max > 1 loop
136
         Move (Max, 0);
137
         Move (1, Max);
138
         Max := Max - 1;
139
         Sift (1);
140
      end loop;
141
 
142
   end Sort;
143
 
144
end GNAT.Heap_Sort_G;

powered by: WebSVN 2.1.0

© copyright 1999-2024 OpenCores.org, equivalent to Oliscience, all rights reserved. OpenCores®, registered trademark.