putty/tree234.h

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7.0 KiB
C

/*
* tree234.h: header defining functions in tree234.c.
*
* This file is copyright 1999-2001 Simon Tatham.
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
* obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
* files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without
* restriction, including without limitation the rights to use,
* copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
* sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
* Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following
* conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
* included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
* NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL SIMON TATHAM BE LIABLE FOR
* ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF
* CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
* SOFTWARE.
*/
#ifndef TREE234_H
#define TREE234_H
/*
* This typedef is opaque outside tree234.c itself.
*/
typedef struct tree234_Tag tree234;
typedef int (*cmpfn234) (void *, void *);
/*
* Create a 2-3-4 tree. If `cmp' is NULL, the tree is unsorted, and
* lookups by key will fail: you can only look things up by numeric
* index, and you have to use addpos234() and delpos234().
*/
tree234 *newtree234(cmpfn234 cmp);
/*
* Free a 2-3-4 tree (not including freeing the elements).
*/
void freetree234(tree234 * t);
/*
* Add an element e to a sorted 2-3-4 tree t. Returns e on success,
* or if an existing element compares equal, returns that.
*/
void *add234(tree234 * t, void *e);
/*
* Add an element e to an unsorted 2-3-4 tree t. Returns e on
* success, NULL on failure. (Failure should only occur if the
* index is out of range or the tree is sorted.)
*
* Index range can be from 0 to the tree's current element count,
* inclusive.
*/
void *addpos234(tree234 * t, void *e, int index);
/*
* Look up the element at a given numeric index in a 2-3-4 tree.
* Returns NULL if the index is out of range.
*
* One obvious use for this function is in iterating over the whole
* of a tree (sorted or unsorted):
*
* for (i = 0; (p = index234(tree, i)) != NULL; i++) consume(p);
*
* or
*
* int maxcount = count234(tree);
* for (i = 0; i < maxcount; i++) {
* p = index234(tree, i);
* assert(p != NULL);
* consume(p);
* }
*/
void *index234(tree234 * t, int index);
/*
* Find an element e in a sorted 2-3-4 tree t. Returns NULL if not
* found. e is always passed as the first argument to cmp, so cmp
* can be an asymmetric function if desired. cmp can also be passed
* as NULL, in which case the compare function from the tree proper
* will be used.
*
* Three of these functions are special cases of findrelpos234. The
* non-`pos' variants lack the `index' parameter: if the parameter
* is present and non-NULL, it must point to an integer variable
* which will be filled with the numeric index of the returned
* element.
*
* The non-`rel' variants lack the `relation' parameter. This
* parameter allows you to specify what relation the element you
* provide has to the element you're looking for. This parameter
* can be:
*
* REL234_EQ - find only an element that compares equal to e
* REL234_LT - find the greatest element that compares < e
* REL234_LE - find the greatest element that compares <= e
* REL234_GT - find the smallest element that compares > e
* REL234_GE - find the smallest element that compares >= e
*
* Non-`rel' variants assume REL234_EQ.
*
* If `rel' is REL234_GT or REL234_LT, the `e' parameter may be
* NULL. In this case, REL234_GT will return the smallest element
* in the tree, and REL234_LT will return the greatest. This gives
* an alternative means of iterating over a sorted tree, instead of
* using index234:
*
* // to loop forwards
* for (p = NULL; (p = findrel234(tree, p, NULL, REL234_GT)) != NULL ;)
* consume(p);
*
* // to loop backwards
* for (p = NULL; (p = findrel234(tree, p, NULL, REL234_LT)) != NULL ;)
* consume(p);
*/
enum {
REL234_EQ, REL234_LT, REL234_LE, REL234_GT, REL234_GE
};
void *find234(tree234 * t, void *e, cmpfn234 cmp);
void *findrel234(tree234 * t, void *e, cmpfn234 cmp, int relation);
void *findpos234(tree234 * t, void *e, cmpfn234 cmp, int *index);
void *findrelpos234(tree234 * t, void *e, cmpfn234 cmp, int relation,
int *index);
/*
* A more general search type still. Use search234_start() to
* initialise one of these state structures; it will fill in
* state->element with an element of the tree, and state->index with
* the index of that element. If you don't like that element, call
* search234_step, with direction == -1 if you want an element earlier
* in the tree, or +1 if you want a later one.
*
* If either function returns state->element == NULL, then you've
* narrowed the search to a point between two adjacent elements, so
* there are no further elements left to return consistent with the
* constraints you've imposed. In this case, state->index tells you
* how many elements come before the point you narrowed down to. After
* this, you mustn't call search234_step again (unless the state
* structure is first reinitialised).
*
* The use of this search system is that you get both the candidate
* element _and_ its index at every stage, so you can use both of them
* to make your decision. Also, you can remember element pointers from
* earlier in the search.
*
* The fields beginning with underscores are private to the
* implementation, and only exposed so that clients can know how much
* space to allocate for the structure as a whole. Don't modify them.
* (Except that it's safe to copy the whole structure.)
*/
typedef struct search234_state {
void *element;
int index;
int _lo, _hi, _last, _base;
void *_node;
} search234_state;
void search234_start(search234_state *state, tree234 *t);
void search234_step(search234_state *state, int direction);
/*
* Delete an element e in a 2-3-4 tree. Does not free the element,
* merely removes all links to it from the tree nodes.
*
* delpos234 deletes the element at a particular tree index: it
* works on both sorted and unsorted trees.
*
* del234 deletes the element passed to it, so it only works on
* sorted trees. (It's equivalent to using findpos234 to determine
* the index of an element, and then passing that index to
* delpos234.)
*
* Both functions return a pointer to the element they delete, for
* the user to free or pass on elsewhere or whatever. If the index
* is out of range (delpos234) or the element is already not in the
* tree (del234) then they return NULL.
*/
void *del234(tree234 * t, void *e);
void *delpos234(tree234 * t, int index);
/*
* Return the total element count of a tree234.
*/
int count234(tree234 * t);
#endif /* TREE234_H */