Quick sort in compiltion time using C++11 variadic template

Hi, all. I just implement the quick sort by using C++11 variadic template to evaluate it in compilation time. But I encounter the performance issue when the data set is large.

#include <iostream>

using namespace std;

template<int... vs>
struct Seq
{}; 
template<int v1, int...vs>
struct Seq<v1, vs...>{
};


template<typename newT, typename srcT>
struct PushFront{
};
template<int vadded, int...vs>
struct PushFront<Seq<vadded>, Seq<vs...>>{
  typedef Seq<vadded, vs...> ResultType;
};

template<typename T>
struct PopFront{
};
template<int v1, int...vs>
struct PopFront<Seq<v1, vs...>>{
  typedef Seq<vs...> RemaindType;
  typedef Seq<v1>    ResultType;
};

template<typename T1, typename T2>
struct CatSeq{};
template<int...v, int...us>
struct CatSeq<Seq<v...>, Seq<us...>>{
  typedef Seq< v..., us... >  ResultType;
};


template<bool c, typename NewT, typename TrueClsT, typename FalseClsT>
struct Classify{
};
template<typename NewT, typename TrueClsT, typename FalseClsT>
struct Classify<true, NewT, TrueClsT, FalseClsT>{
  typedef typename PushFront<NewT, TrueClsT>::ResultType NewTrueClsT;
  typedef FalseClsT  NewFalseClsT;
};
template<typename NewT, typename TrueClsT, typename FalseClsT>
struct Classify<false, NewT, TrueClsT, FalseClsT>{
  typedef TrueClsT  NewTrueClsT;
  typedef typename PushFront<NewT, FalseClsT>::ResultType NewFalseClsT;
};

template<typename T1, typename T2>
struct Compare{};
template<int v1, int v2>
struct Compare<Seq<v1>, Seq<v2>>{
  static const bool result=(v1>=v2); 
};


template<typename AnchorT, typename SeqT, typename GESet, typename LSet>
struct PartitionImpl{};
template<typename GESet, typename LSet, int anchorv, int v1>
struct PartitionImpl<Seq<anchorv>, Seq<v1>, GESet, LSet>{
  static const bool isge=Compare<typename PopFront<Seq<v1>>::ResultType, Seq<anchorv>>::result;
  typedef typename Classify<isge, Seq<v1>, GESet, LSet>::NewTrueClsT  RstGESet;
  typedef typename Classify<isge, Seq<v1>, GESet, LSet>::NewFalseClsT  RstLSet;  
};
template<typename GESet, typename LSet, int anchorv, int v1, int...vs>
struct PartitionImpl<Seq<anchorv>, Seq<v1, vs...>, GESet, LSet>{
  static const bool isge=Compare<typename PopFront<Seq<v1, vs...>>::ResultType, Seq<anchorv>>::result;
  typedef typename Classify<isge, Seq<v1>, GESet, LSet>::NewTrueClsT  TmpRstGESet;
  typedef typename Classify<isge, Seq<v1>, GESet, LSet>::NewFalseClsT  TmpRstLSet;

  typedef typename PartitionImpl<Seq<anchorv>, Seq<vs...>, TmpRstGESet, TmpRstLSet>::RstGESet RstGESet;
  typedef typename PartitionImpl<Seq<anchorv>, Seq<vs...>, TmpRstGESet, TmpRstLSet>::RstLSet  RstLSet;
};


template<typename T>
struct Partition{
};
template<int v1, int v2, int...vs>
struct Partition<Seq<v1, v2, vs...>>{
  typedef Seq<v1> AnchorType;
  typedef Seq<> GESet;
  typedef Seq<> LSet;
  typedef typename PartitionImpl<AnchorType, Seq<v1, v2, vs...>, GESet, LSet>::RstGESet  RstGESet;
  typedef typename PartitionImpl<AnchorType, Seq<v1, v2, vs...>, GESet, LSet>::RstLSet   RstLSet;
};

//why introduce this? refer to Sort
template<typename SrcT, typename GESet, typename LSet, template<typename > class SortOp>
struct SortSub{  
  typedef typename SortOp<GESet>::ResultType  TmpGESet2;
  typedef typename SortOp<LSet>::ResultType   TmpLSet2;
};
template<typename SrcT, typename LSet, template<typename> class SortOp>
struct SortSub<SrcT, SrcT, LSet, SortOp>{
  typedef SrcT  TmpGESet2;
  typedef typename SortOp<LSet>::ResultType   TmpLSet2;
};
template<typename SrcT, typename GESet, template<typename> class SortOp>
struct SortSub<SrcT, GESet, SrcT, SortOp>{
  typedef typename SortOp<GESet>::ResultType  TmpGESet2;
  typedef SrcT   TmpLSet2;
};

template<typename T>
struct Sort;
template<>
struct Sort<Seq<>>{
  typedef Seq<> ResultType;
};
template<int v>
struct Sort< Seq<v> >{
  typedef Seq<v> ResultType;
};
template<int v1, int...vs>
struct Sort< Seq<v1, vs...> >{
  typedef Seq<v1, vs...> SrcType;
  typedef typename Partition< Seq<v1, vs...> >::RstGESet TmpGESet;
  typedef typename Partition< Seq<v1, vs...> >::RstLSet TmpLSet;

  //to by pass the case SrcType <==> TmpGESet or  SrcType <==> TmpLSet
  typedef typename SortSub<SrcType, TmpGESet, TmpLSet, Sort>::TmpGESet2  TmpGESet2;
  typedef typename SortSub<SrcType, TmpGESet, TmpLSet, Sort>::TmpLSet2   TmpLSet2;

  typedef typename CatSeq<TmpGESet2, TmpLSet2>::ResultType ResultType;
};


void dumpSeqTypeImpl(Seq<> ){
}
template<int v1>
void dumpSeqTypeImpl(Seq<v1> ){
  cout<<v1<<" ";
}
template<int v1, int...vs>
void dumpSeqTypeImpl(Seq<v1, vs...> ){
  cout<<v1<<" ";
  dumpSeqTypeImpl( Seq<vs...>() );
}
template<int...vs>
void dumpSeqType(Seq<vs...> ){
  cout<<"Seq type < ";
  dumpSeqTypeImpl( Seq<vs...>() );
  cout<<" >"<<endl;
}

    //test data
#include "qsort_input.txt"

int main(){
  //Seq<>  s0;// aggregate ‘Seq<> s0’ has incomplete type and cannot be defined
  Seq<1> s1;
  Seq<1, 2> s2;

  typedef Seq<5, 5, 5> TestType_SAME;
  TestType_SAME same;
  dumpSeqType( same );
  typename Partition< TestType_SAME >::RstGESet _ts1;
  typename Partition< TestType_SAME >::RstLSet _ts2;
  dumpSeqType( _ts1 );
  dumpSeqType( _ts2 );

#if 1
  typedef Seq<4, 7, 3, 9, 1, 2, 5, 5, 19, 5> TestType;
  TestType s3;
  dumpSeqType( s3 );
  typename Partition< TestType >::RstGESet ts1;
  typename Partition< TestType >::RstLSet ts2;
  dumpSeqType( ts1 );
  dumpSeqType( ts2 );

  typename Sort<TestType>::ResultType so1;
  dumpSeqType( so1 );
#endif 

#if 1
  typedef Seq<TEST_DATA_100> TAdvanceType;
  typename Sort<TAdvanceType>::ResultType soadvance;
  dumpSeqType(soadvance);
#endif

  return 0;
}

When the data set is TEST_DATA_100, it use 1.7s to compile it. When the data set is TEST_DATA_1000, the compiler seems halt....

And BTW, I use the gcc 4.6.0.

link|improve this question

44% accept rate
4  
Heh, fun. Report the performance problem as a GCC bug. :) – wilx Aug 25 '11 at 9:48
3  
I don't know what to say (other than "accept more answers!!"), but definitely +1 for writing this thing out in TMP! – Kerrek SB Aug 25 '11 at 11:14
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

Have you also looked at its memory consumption? Note that quicksort itself is worse than linear, with a quite bad worse case runtime. This multiplies with the worse than linear runtime behaviour of certain steps of template compilation and instantiation (sometimes those are exponentional). You should maybe graph your compiletime for various datasets to observe the real complexity class for your code. Usually template metaprogramming with such large datasets is not feasible.

Edit: Out of curiosity I tried the code out and found that up until ~500 it follows roughly the formula pow(N*log(N),1.47)*0.0004+0.6 but then starts to get incredibly much slower, with 155 seconds for 700 items. Also at around that it starts eating very much ram (3GiB for 600) which leads me to the conclusion that for 1000 elements it will need more ram than most people have and will take hours to compile.

Further note that the code does not work when not every element is unique.

link|improve this answer
1  
gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.5/changes.html: Compilation time for code that uses templates should now scale linearly with the number of instantiations rather than quadratically, as template instantiations are now looked up using hash tables. – phresnel Aug 25 '11 at 10:42
Sounds like they have a fixed size for the hashtable and don't grow it, adn things degenerate after 500 elements here (which of course cause a much bigger amount of instantiations) – PlasmaHH Aug 25 '11 at 10:44
For which version of gcc? – phresnel Aug 25 '11 at 11:05
I took 4.6, since the OP used it too. – PlasmaHH Aug 25 '11 at 11:11
All I can say is: Interesting. I share your assumption about the hash table, then. – phresnel Aug 25 '11 at 11:26
show 2 more comments
feedback

You are using recursive metafunctions to build your quicksort. What exactly did you expect to happen when you tried to shove 1000 recursive instantiations at the compiler?

Just because a function can theoretically take arbitrary numbers of arguments does not mean that the compiler actually can handle arbitrary numbers of arguments. Compilers have limits.

Besides: what's the point of compile-time sorting? You could do that off-line and copy the data into the .cpp file. Or just run std::sort one time when the program starts.

link|improve this answer
1  
Compile-time sort could be useful if it were types you were sorting. – R. Martinho Fernandes Aug 25 '11 at 10:12
1  
The point of such code is usually that the code documents exactly what it's doing. You present the data the way it seems "natural" in the application domain and is easiest to maintain. Then you force it through a Sort meta function in order to get the data in a form needed for your algorithms. Things like this might save you half a page of comments on what the data is, where it comes from, and how it was put into whatever form you had to embed it. I prefer code that is clear at first look over code that needs extensive comments. – sbi Aug 25 '11 at 10:14
7  
Of course, all this doesn't rule out that the OP might have done this just for fun. :) – sbi Aug 25 '11 at 10:14
2  
Yeah, I do it just for fun. I have been wanting to implement quick sort in compilation time long time ago (when the C++11 was just C++0x). Now the C++0x is C++11. i can implement it by using variadic template. Funny. – Yuncy Aug 25 '11 at 10:30
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.