Spreadsort

Spreadsort

[http://sourceforge.net/projects/spreadsort/ Spreadsort] is a relatively new sorting algorithm invented by Steven J. Ross in 2002. [Steven J. Ross. The Spreadsort High-performance General-case Sorting Algorithm. "Parallel and Distributed Processing Techniques and Applications", Volume 3, pp.1100–1106. Las Vegas Nevada. 2002.] It combines concepts from distribution-based sorts, such as radix sort and bucket sort, with partitioning concepts from comparison sorts such as quicksort and mergesort. In experimental results it was shown to be highly efficient, often outperforming traditional algorithms such as quicksort, particularly on distributions exhibiting structure.

Quicksort identifies a "pivot element" in the list and then partitions the list into two sublists, those elements less than the pivot and those greater than the pivot. Spreadsort generalizes this idea by partitioning the list into "n"/"c" partitions at each step, where "n" is the total number of elements in the list and "c" is a small constant (in practice usually between 4 and 8 when comparisons are slow, or much larger in situations where they are fast). It uses distribution-based techniques to accomplish this, first locating the minimum and maximum value in the list, and then dividing the region between them into "n"/"c" equal-sized bins.Where caching is an issue, it can help to have a maximum number of bins in each recursive division step, causing this division process to take multiple steps. Though this causes more iterations, it reduces cache misses and can make the algorithm run faster overall.

In the case where the number of bins is at least the number of elements, spreadsort degenerates to bucket sort and the sort completes. Otherwise, each bin is sorted recursively. The algorithm uses heuristic tests to determine whether each bin would be more efficiently sorted by spreadsort or some other classical sort algorithm, then recursively sorts the bin.

Like other distribution-based sorts, spreadsort has the weakness that the programmer is required to provide a means of converting each element into a numeric key, for the purpose of identifying which bin it falls in. Although it is possible to do this for arbitrary-length elements such as strings by considering each element to be followed by an infinite number of minimum values, and indeed for any datatype possessing a total order, this can be more difficult to implement correctly than a simple comparison function, especially on complex structures. Poor implementation of this "value" function can result in clustering that harms the algorithm's relative performance.

Performance

The worst-case performance of spreadsort ultimately depends on what sort it switches to on smaller bins &mdash; O("n" log "n") if it uses a worst-case O("n" log "n") sort such as mergesort or heapsort, and O("n"2) if it uses quicksort. In the case of distributions where the size of the key in bits "k" times 2 is roughly the square of the log of the list size "n" or smaller (2"k" < log("n")2), it does better in the worst case, achieving O("n"·("k" - log("n")).5) worst-case time.

Experiments were done comparing an optimized version of spreadsort to the highly-optimized C++ std::sort, typically implemented with quicksort switching to insertion sort on small sublists. On lists of integers spreadsort shows a 30-50% time improvement for random data on linux operating systems. [http://sourceforge.net/projects/spreadsort/]

In space performance, spreadsort is worse than most in-place algorithms: in its simplest form, it is not an in-place algorithm, using O("n") extra space; in experiments, about 20% more than quicksort using a c of 4-8. With a cache-aware form, less memory is used and there is an upper bound on memory usage of the maximum bin count times the maximum number of recursions, which ends up being a few kilobytes times the size of the key in bytes. Although it uses asymptotically more space than the O(log "n") overhead of quicksort or the O(1) overhead of heapsort, it uses considerably less space than the basic form of mergesort, which uses auxiliary space equal to the space occupied by the list.

Spreadsort also works efficiently on problems too large to fit in memory and thus requiring disk access.

Implementation

unsigned RoughLog2(DATATYPE input) { unsigned char cResult = 0; //The && is necessary on some compilers to avoid infinite loops; it doesn't significantly impair performance if(input >= 0) while((input >> cResult) && (cResult < DATA_SIZE)) cResult++; else while(((input >> cResult) < -1) && (cResult < DATA_SIZE)) cResult++; return cResult;}SIZETYPEGetMaxCount(unsigned logRange, unsigned uCount){ unsigned logSize = RoughLog2Size(uCount); unsigned uRelativeWidth = (LOG_CONST * logRange)/((logSize > MAX_SPLITS) ? MAX_SPLITS : logSize); //Don't try to bitshift more than the size of an element if(DATA_SIZE <= uRelativeWidth) uRelativeWidth = DATA_SIZE - 1; return 1 << ((uRelativeWidth < (LOG_MEAN_BIN_SIZE + LOG_MIN_SPLIT_COUNT)) ? (LOG_MEAN_BIN_SIZE + LOG_MIN_SPLIT_COUNT) : uRelativeWidth);}

void FindExtremes(DATATYPE *Array, SIZETYPE uCount, DATATYPE & piMax, DATATYPE & piMin){ SIZETYPE u = 1; piMin = piMax = Array [0] ; for(; u < uCount; ++u){ if(Array [u] > piMax) piMax=Array [u] ; else if(Array [u] < piMin) piMin= Array [u] ;

//---------------------SpreadSort Source-----------------

Bin *SpreadSortCore(DATATYPE *Array, SIZETYPE uCount, SIZETYPE & uBinCount, DATATYPE &iMax, DATATYPE &iMin){ //This step is roughly 10% of runtime, but it helps avoid worst-case behavior and improve behavior with real data //If you know the maximum and minimum ahead of time, you can pass those values in and skip this step for the first iteration FindExtremes((DATATYPE *) Array, uCount, iMax, iMin); if(iMax = iMin) return NULL; DATATYPE divMin,divMax; SIZETYPE u; int LogDivisor; Bin * BinArray; Bin* CurrentBin; unsigned logRange; logRange = RoughLog2Size((SIZETYPE)iMax-iMin); if((LogDivisor = logRange - RoughLog2Size(uCount) + LOG_MEAN_BIN_SIZE) < 0) LogDivisor = 0; //The below if statement is only necessary on systems with high memory latency relative to their processor speed //Otherwise known as modern processors if((logRange - LogDivisor) > MAX_SPLITS) LogDivisor = logRange - MAX_SPLITS; divMin = iMin >> LogDivisor; divMax = iMax >> LogDivisor; uBinCount = divMax - divMin + 1; //Allocate the bins and determine their sizes BinArray = (Bin *) calloc(uBinCount, sizeof(Bin)); //Memory allocation failure check and clean return with sorted results if(!BinArray) { printf("Using std::sort because of memory allocation failure "); std::sort(Array, Array + uCount); return NULL; } //Calculating the size of each bin; this takes roughly 10% of runtime for(u = 0; u < uCount; ++u) BinArray [(Array [u] >> LogDivisor) - divMin] .uCount++; //Assign the bin positions BinArray [0] .CurrentPosition = (DATATYPE *)Array; for(u = 0; u < uBinCount - 1; u++) { BinArray [u + 1] .CurrentPosition = BinArray [u] .CurrentPosition + BinArray [u] .uCount; BinArray [u] .uCount = BinArray [u] .CurrentPosition - Array; } BinArray [u] .uCount = BinArray [u] .CurrentPosition - Array; //Swap into place //This dominates runtime, especially in the swap; std::sort calls are the other main time-user for(u = 0; u < uCount; ++u) { for(CurrentBin = BinArray + ((Array [u] >> LogDivisor) - divMin); (CurrentBin->uCount > u); CurrentBin = BinArray + ((Array [u] >> LogDivisor) - divMin)) SWAP(Array + u, CurrentBin->CurrentPosition++); //Now that we've found the item belonging in this position, increment the bucket count if(CurrentBin->CurrentPosition = Array + u) ++(CurrentBin->CurrentPosition); } //If we've bucketsorted, the array is sorted and we should skip recursion if(!LogDivisor) { free(BinArray); return NULL; } return BinArray;}

voidSpreadSortBins(DATATYPE *Array, SIZETYPE uCount, SIZETYPE uBinCount, const DATATYPE &iMax , const DATATYPE &iMin, Bin * BinArray, SIZETYPE uMaxCount){ SIZETYPE u; for(u = 0; u < uBinCount; u++){ SIZETYPE count = (BinArray [u] .CurrentPosition - Array) - BinArray [u] .uCount; //don't sort unless there is at least two items to compare if(count < 2) continue; if(count < uMaxCount) std::sort(Array + BinArray [u] .uCount, BinArray [u] .CurrentPosition); else SpreadSortRec(Array + BinArray [u] .uCount, count); } free(BinArray);}

void SpreadSortRec(DATATYPE *Array, SIZETYPE uCount){ if(uCount < 2) return; DATATYPE iMax, iMin; SIZETYPE uBinCount; Bin * BinArray = SpreadSortCore(Array, uCount, uBinCount, iMax, iMin); if(!BinArray) return; SpreadSortBins(Array, uCount, uBinCount, iMax, iMin, BinArray, GetMaxCount(RoughLog2Size((SIZETYPE)iMax-iMin), uCount));}

Two Levels are as Good as Any

An interesting result for algorithms of this general type (splitting based on the radix, then comparison-based sorting) is that they are O("n") for any continuous integrable function. [Markku Tamminen: Two Levels are as Good as Any. J. Algorithms 6(1): 138-144 (1985)] This result can be obtained by forcing Spreadsort to always iterate at least twice if the bin size after the first iteration is above some constant value. If data is known to come in based upon some continuous integrable function at all times, this modification of Spreadsort can attain some performance improvement over the basic algorithm, and will have better worst-case performance. If this restriction cannot usually be depended on, this change will add a little extra runtime overhead to the algorithm and gain little.Other similar algorithms are Flashsort (which is simpler) and Adaptive Left Radix. Adaptive Left Radix is apparently quite similar, the main difference being recursive behavior, with Spreadsort checking for worst-case situations and using std::sort to avoid performance problems where necessary, and Adaptive Left Radix recursing continuously until done or the data is small enough to use insertionsort.

References


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