view lphobos/internal/qsort2.d @ 979:523bf4f166bc

Fix some assembler issues: The assembler was miscompiling "add" (specifically, the "add reg/mem, imm" variations). The change that caused this seems to have been made because without it, some "add"s didn't compile at all. This patch reverts the previous change, and makes sure assembler operands are remapped correctly even though the input operands auto-generated due to updating operations aren't explicitly used.
author Frits van Bommel <fvbommel wxs.nl>
date Wed, 18 Feb 2009 21:46:14 +0100
parents 373489eeaf90
children
line wrap: on
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/*
 * Placed into Public Domain
 * written by Walter Bright
 * www.digitalmars.com
 *
 * This is a public domain version of qsort.d.
 * All it does is call C's qsort(), but runs a little slower since
 * it needs to synchronize a global variable.
 */


//debug=qsort;

import std.c.stdlib;

pragma(no_typeinfo)
struct Array
{
    size_t length;
    void *ptr;
}

private TypeInfo tiglobal;

extern (C) int cmp(void* p1, void* p2)
{
    return tiglobal.compare(p1, p2);
}

extern (C) Array _adSort(Array a, TypeInfo ti)
{
    synchronized
    {
	tiglobal = ti;
	std.c.stdlib.qsort(a.ptr, a.length, cast(size_t)ti.tsize(), &cmp);
    }
    return a;
}



unittest
{
    debug(qsort) printf("array.sort.unittest()\n");

    int a[] = new int[10];

    a[0] = 23;
    a[1] = 1;
    a[2] = 64;
    a[3] = 5;
    a[4] = 6;
    a[5] = 5;
    a[6] = 17;
    a[7] = 3;
    a[8] = 0;
    a[9] = -1;

    a.sort;

    for (int i = 0; i < a.length - 1; i++)
    {
	//printf("i = %d", i);
	//printf(" %d %d\n", a[i], a[i + 1]);
	assert(a[i] <= a[i + 1]);
    }
}