[Top][All Lists]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: msgmerge speedup: fstrcmp and diffseq improvements
From: |
Bruno Haible |
Subject: |
Re: msgmerge speedup: fstrcmp and diffseq improvements |
Date: |
Tue, 16 Sep 2008 03:28:51 +0200 |
User-agent: |
KMail/1.5.4 |
Hi Ralf,
> Your draft patch doesn't directly apply to the current CVS
> tree; I haven't tested and looked at it in detail yet.
It is all committed now.
> See below for a character frequency bound that is only a little more
> expensive than string length comparison (sort of a 1-gram version of
> msgl-fsearch). Here, it gives me almost another factor of two speedup;
> I would be interested to see whether it still helps at all on top of
> your patch.
Excellent again!! Yes, for me too it nearly gives a 2x speedup:
> > "msgmerge af.po coreutils.pot"
> > 152 sec. before all your work,
> > 16.5 sec. with all your patches,
> > 7.6 sec. with this additional sorting.
now: 4.3 sec. with your second bound.
Since clearing and summing up an array of size 256 is a bit expensive if
both strings are small, I made it conditional on
(xvec_length + yvec_length >= 20).
The threshold 20 was determined experimentally:
Threshold Time of "msgmerge af.po coreutils.pot"
1 4.29 sec
10 4.28 sec
20 4.266 sec
30 4.28 sec
40 4.29 sec
50 4.35 sec
60 4.50 sec
Committed like this:
2008-09-15 Ralf Wildenhues <address@hidden>
* lib/fstrcmp.c (fstrcmp_bounded): Use a second, less quick upper bound
based on character occurrence counts.
*** lib/fstrcmp.c.orig 2008-09-16 03:11:53.000000000 +0200
--- lib/fstrcmp.c 2008-09-16 03:10:03.000000000 +0200
***************
*** 141,146 ****
--- 141,195 ----
if (upper_bound < lower_bound)
/* Return an arbitrary value < LOWER_BOUND. */
return 0.0;
+
+ #if CHAR_BIT <= 8
+ /* When X and Y are both small, avoid the overhead of setting up an
+ array of size 256. */
+ if (xvec_length + yvec_length >= 20)
+ {
+ /* Compute a less quick upper bound.
+ Each edit is an insertion or deletion of a character, hence
+ modifies the occurrence count of a character by 1 and leaves the
+ other occurrence counts unchanged.
+ Therefore, when starting from a sequence X and ending at a
+ sequence Y, and denoting the occurrence count of C in X with
+ OCC (X, C), with N edits,
+ sum_C | OCC (X, C) - OCC (Y, C) | <= N.
+ (Proof by induction over N.)
+ So, at the end, we will have
+ edit_count >= sum_C | OCC (X, C) - OCC (Y, C) |,
+ and hence
+ result
+ = (xvec_length + yvec_length - edit_count)
+ / (xvec_length + yvec_length)
+ <= (xvec_length + yvec_length - sum_C | OCC(X,C) - OCC(Y,C) |)
+ / (xvec_length + yvec_length).
+ */
+ int occ_diff[UCHAR_MAX + 1]; /* array C -> OCC(X,C) - OCC(Y,C) */
+ int sum;
+
+ /* Determine the occurrence counts in X. */
+ memset (occ_diff, 0, sizeof (occ_diff));
+ for (i = xvec_length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
+ occ_diff[(unsigned char) string1[i]]++;
+ /* Subtract the occurrence counts in Y. */
+ for (i = yvec_length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
+ occ_diff[(unsigned char) string2[i]]--;
+ /* Sum up the absolute values. */
+ sum = 0;
+ for (i = 0; i <= UCHAR_MAX; i++)
+ {
+ int d = occ_diff[i];
+ sum += (d >= 0 ? d : -d);
+ }
+
+ upper_bound = 1.0 - (double) sum / (xvec_length + yvec_length);
+
+ if (upper_bound < lower_bound)
+ /* Return an arbitrary value < LOWER_BOUND. */
+ return 0.0;
+ }
+ #endif
}
/* set the info for each string. */