/* * LibXDiff by Davide Libenzi ( File Differential Library ) * Copyright (C) 2003-2009 Davide Libenzi, Johannes E. Schindelin * * This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or * modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public * License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either * version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. * * This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU * Lesser General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public * License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA * * Davide Libenzi * */ #include "xinclude.h" #include "xtypes.h" #include "xdiff.h" /* * The basic idea of patience diff is to find lines that are unique in * both files. These are intuitively the ones that we want to see as * common lines. * * The maximal ordered sequence of such line pairs (where ordered means * that the order in the sequence agrees with the order of the lines in * both files) naturally defines an initial set of common lines. * * Now, the algorithm tries to extend the set of common lines by growing * the line ranges where the files have identical lines. * * Between those common lines, the patience diff algorithm is applied * recursively, until no unique line pairs can be found; these line ranges * are handled by the well-known Myers algorithm. */ #define NON_UNIQUE ULONG_MAX /* * This is a hash mapping from line hash to line numbers in the first and * second file. */ struct hashmap { int nr, alloc; struct entry { unsigned long hash; /* * 0 = unused entry, 1 = first line, 2 = second, etc. * line2 is NON_UNIQUE if the line is not unique * in either the first or the second file. */ unsigned long line1, line2; /* * "next" & "previous" are used for the longest common * sequence; * initially, "next" reflects only the order in file1. */ struct entry *next, *previous; } *entries, *first, *last; /* were common records found? */ unsigned long has_matches; mmfile_t *file1, *file2; xdfenv_t *env; xpparam_t const *xpp; }; /* The argument "pass" is 1 for the first file, 2 for the second. */ static void insert_record(int line, struct hashmap *map, int pass) { xrecord_t **records = pass == 1 ? map->env->xdf1.recs : map->env->xdf2.recs; xrecord_t *record = records[line - 1], *other; /* * After xdl_prepare_env() (or more precisely, due to * xdl_classify_record()), the "ha" member of the records (AKA lines) * is _not_ the hash anymore, but a linearized version of it. In * other words, the "ha" member is guaranteed to start with 0 and * the second record's ha can only be 0 or 1, etc. * * So we multiply ha by 2 in the hope that the hashing was * "unique enough". */ int index = (int)((record->ha << 1) % map->alloc); while (map->entries[index].line1) { other = map->env->xdf1.recs[map->entries[index].line1 - 1]; if (map->entries[index].hash != record->ha || !xdl_recmatch(record->ptr, record->size, other->ptr, other->size, map->xpp->flags)) { if (++index >= map->alloc) index = 0; continue; } if (pass == 2) map->has_matches = 1; if (pass == 1 || map->entries[index].line2) map->entries[index].line2 = NON_UNIQUE; else map->entries[index].line2 = line; return; } if (pass == 2) return; map->entries[index].line1 = line; map->entries[index].hash = record->ha; if (!map->first) map->first = map->entries + index; if (map->last) { map->last->next = map->entries + index; map->entries[index].previous = map->last; } map->last = map->entries + index; map->nr++; } /* * This function has to be called for each recursion into the inter-hunk * parts, as previously non-unique lines can become unique when being * restricted to a smaller part of the files. * * It is assumed that env has been prepared using xdl_prepare(). */ static int fill_hashmap(mmfile_t *file1, mmfile_t *file2, xpparam_t const *xpp, xdfenv_t *env, struct hashmap *result, int line1, int count1, int line2, int count2) { result->file1 = file1; result->file2 = file2; result->xpp = xpp; result->env = env; /* We know exactly how large we want the hash map */ result->alloc = count1 * 2; result->entries = (struct entry *) xdl_malloc(result->alloc * sizeof(struct entry)); if (!result->entries) return -1; memset(result->entries, 0, result->alloc * sizeof(struct entry)); /* First, fill with entries from the first file */ while (count1--) insert_record(line1++, result, 1); /* Then search for matches in the second file */ while (count2--) insert_record(line2++, result, 2); return 0; } /* * Find the longest sequence with a smaller last element (meaning a smaller * line2, as we construct the sequence with entries ordered by line1). */ static int binary_search(struct entry **sequence, int longest, struct entry *entry) { int left = -1, right = longest; while (left + 1 < right) { int middle = (left + right) / 2; /* by construction, no two entries can be equal */ if (sequence[middle]->line2 > entry->line2) right = middle; else left = middle; } /* return the index in "sequence", _not_ the sequence length */ return left; } /* * The idea is to start with the list of common unique lines sorted by * the order in file1. For each of these pairs, the longest (partial) * sequence whose last element's line2 is smaller is determined. * * For efficiency, the sequences are kept in a list containing exactly one * item per sequence length: the sequence with the smallest last * element (in terms of line2). */ static struct entry *find_longest_common_sequence(struct hashmap *map) { struct entry **sequence = xdl_malloc(map->nr * sizeof(struct entry *)); int longest = 0, i; struct entry *entry; for (entry = map->first; entry; entry = entry->next) { if (!entry->line2 || entry->line2 == NON_UNIQUE) continue; i = binary_search(sequence, longest, entry); entry->previous = i < 0 ? NULL : sequence[i]; sequence[++i] = entry; if (i == longest) longest++; } /* No common unique lines were found */ if (!longest) { xdl_free(sequence); return NULL; } /* Iterate starting at the last element, adjusting the "next" members */ entry = sequence[longest - 1]; entry->next = NULL; while (entry->previous) { entry->previous->next = entry; entry = entry->previous; } xdl_free(sequence); return entry; } static int match(struct hashmap *map, int line1, int line2) { xrecord_t *record1 = map->env->xdf1.recs[line1 - 1]; xrecord_t *record2 = map->env->xdf2.recs[line2 - 1]; return xdl_recmatch(record1->ptr, record1->size, record2->ptr, record2->size, map->xpp->flags); } static int patience_diff(mmfile_t *file1, mmfile_t *file2, xpparam_t const *xpp, xdfenv_t *env, int line1, int count1, int line2, int count2); static int walk_common_sequence(struct hashmap *map, struct entry *first, int line1, int count1, int line2, int count2) { int end1 = line1 + count1, end2 = line2 + count2; int next1, next2; for (;;) { /* Try to grow the line ranges of common lines */ if (first) { next1 = first->line1; next2 = first->line2; while (next1 > line1 && next2 > line2 && match(map, next1 - 1, next2 - 1)) { next1--; next2--; } } else { next1 = end1; next2 = end2; } while (line1 < next1 && line2 < next2 && match(map, line1, line2)) { line1++; line2++; } /* Recurse */ if (next1 > line1 || next2 > line2) { struct hashmap submap; memset(&submap, 0, sizeof(submap)); if (patience_diff(map->file1, map->file2, map->xpp, map->env, line1, next1 - line1, line2, next2 - line2)) return -1; } if (!first) return 0; while (first->next && first->next->line1 == first->line1 + 1 && first->next->line2 == first->line2 + 1) first = first->next; line1 = first->line1 + 1; line2 = first->line2 + 1; first = first->next; } } static int fall_back_to_classic_diff(struct hashmap *map, int line1, int count1, int line2, int count2) { xpparam_t xpp; xpp.flags = map->xpp->flags & ~XDF_PATIENCE_DIFF; return xdl_fall_back_diff(map->env, &xpp, line1, count1, line2, count2); } /* * Recursively find the longest common sequence of unique lines, * and if none was found, ask xdl_do_diff() to do the job. * * This function assumes that env was prepared with xdl_prepare_env(). */ static int patience_diff(mmfile_t *file1, mmfile_t *file2, xpparam_t const *xpp, xdfenv_t *env, int line1, int count1, int line2, int count2) { struct hashmap map; struct entry *first; int result = 0; /* trivial case: one side is empty */ if (!count1) { while(count2--) env->xdf2.rchg[line2++ - 1] = 1; return 0; } else if (!count2) { while(count1--) env->xdf1.rchg[line1++ - 1] = 1; return 0; } memset(&map, 0, sizeof(map)); if (fill_hashmap(file1, file2, xpp, env, &map, line1, count1, line2, count2)) return -1; /* are there any matching lines at all? */ if (!map.has_matches) { while(count1--) env->xdf1.rchg[line1++ - 1] = 1; while(count2--) env->xdf2.rchg[line2++ - 1] = 1; xdl_free(map.entries); return 0; } first = find_longest_common_sequence(&map); if (first) result = walk_common_sequence(&map, first, line1, count1, line2, count2); else result = fall_back_to_classic_diff(&map, line1, count1, line2, count2); xdl_free(map.entries); return result; } int xdl_do_patience_diff(mmfile_t *file1, mmfile_t *file2, xpparam_t const *xpp, xdfenv_t *env) { if (xdl_prepare_env(file1, file2, xpp, env) < 0) return -1; /* environment is cleaned up in xdl_diff() */ return patience_diff(file1, file2, xpp, env, 1, env->xdf1.nrec, 1, env->xdf2.nrec); }