Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Instead of a separate implementation for find/insert, use just one that
can do both. This reduces the code size and simplifies code coverage;
the resulting code is close to what we had in terms of performance and
since hash table is a fall back should not affect any real workloads.
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This will make sure we don't forget to implement offset_debug for new
node types if they ever happen (really it's mostly for consistency).
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Instead of a complicated partitioning scheme that tries to maintain the
equal area in the middle, use a scheme where we keep the equal area in
the left part of the array and then move it to the middle.
Since generally sorted arrays don't contain many duplicates this extra
copy is not too expensive, and it significantly simplifies the logic and
maintains good complexity for sorting arrays with many equal elements
nonetheless (unlike Hoare partitioning).
Instead of a median of 9 just use a median of 3 - it performs pretty
much identically on some internal performance tests, despite having a
bit more comparisons in some cases.
Finally, change the insertion sort threshold to 16 elements since that
appears to have slightly better performance.
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The previous implementation opted for doing two comparisons per element
in the sorted case in order to remove one iterator bounds check per
moved element when we actually need to copy. In our case however the
comparator is pretty expensive (except for remove_duplicates which is
fast as it is) so an extra object comparison hurts much more than an
iterator comparison saves.
This makes sorting by document order up to 3% faster for random
sequences.
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Instead of delegating to a method that just forwards the call to
xpath_query call the relevant method directly.
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It adds one stack frame to string query evaluation and does not really
simplify the code.
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Instead of having two checks for out-of-memory when exceptions are
enabled, do just one and decide what to do based on whether we can
throw.
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Instead of relying on a specific string in the parse result, use
allocator error state to report the error and then convert it to a
string if necessary.
We currently have to manually trigger the OOM error in two places
because we use global allocator in rare cases; we don't really need to
do this so this will be cleaned up later.
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The code works fine regardless of the *j->name check, and omitting this
makes the code more symmetric between the "count" and "write" stage;
additionally this improves coverage - due to how strcpy_insitu works
it's not really possible to get an empty non-NULL name in the node.
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All other functions treat null pointer inputs as invalid; now this
function does as well.
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Now error handling in XPath implementation relies on explicit error
propagation and is converted to an appropriate result at the end.
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This generates some out-of-memory code paths that are not covered by
existing tests, which will need to be resolved later.
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Instead of rolling back the allocation and trying to allocate again,
explicitly handle inplace reallocate if possible, and allocate a new
block otherwise.
This is going to be important once we use reallocate_nothrow from a
non-throwing context.
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This requires explicit error handling for xpath_string::data calls.
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This allows us to gradually convert exception handling of out-of-memory
during evaluation to a non-throwing approach without changing the
observable behavior.
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W3C specification does not allow predicates after abbreviated steps.
Currently this results in parsing terminating at the step, which leads
to confusing error messages like "Invalid query" or "Unmatched braces".
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Any time an allocation fails xpath_allocator can set an externally
provided bool. The plan is to keep this bool up until evaluation ends,
so that we can use it to discard the potentially malformed result.
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For both allocate and reallocate, provide both _nothrow and _throw
functions; this change renames allocate() to allocate_throw() (same for
reallocate) to make it easier to change the code to remove throwing
variants.
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Handle node type error before creating expression node
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We currently need to convert error based on the text to a different type
of C++ exceptions when C++ exceptions are enabled.
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This allows us to handle OOM during node allocation without triggering
undefined behavior that occurs when placement new gets a NULL pointer.
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Instead, return 0 and rely on parsing logic to propagate that all the
way down, and convert result to exception to maintain existing
interface.
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Propagate the failure to the caller manually. This is a first step to
parser structure that does not depend on exceptions or longjmp for error
handling (and thus matches the XML parser). To preserve semantics we'll
have to convert error code to exception later.
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Simplify function argument parsing by folding arg 0 parsing into the
main loop, reuse expression parsing logic for unary expression
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It was only used in three places and didn't really make the code more
readable.
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NULL return value will be reserved for the OOM error indicator.
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It's still not clear as to what exactly makes it emit this error when compiling
string_to_integer:
CC-3059 crayc++: INTERNAL __C_FILE_SCOPE_DATA__, File = <pugixml>/src/pugixml.cpp, Line = 4524, Column = 4
Expected no overflow in routine.
But a viable workaround for now is to exploit the knowledge that it uses
two-complement arithmetics and invert the sign manually.
Fixes #125.
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These warnings are emitted on some GCC versions when targeting ARM; the
alignment is guaranteed to be correct due to how page offsets are set up
but the compiler doesn't know.
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It's too dangerous to overload here - easy to accidentally mix floating point
path with boolean one.
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Unfortunately, some compilers don't suppress these kinds of warnings in
template instantiations; solve this by moving the responsibility for computing
negative bool to the caller.
Also since we're doing that we don't really need to convert to unsigned in the
implementation - might as well have the caller do it, which removes some type
dispatch logic and slightly reduces binary size.
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Previously the error offset pointed to the first mismatching character, which
can be confusing especially if the start tag name is a prefix of the end tag
name. Instead, move the offset to the first character of the name - that way
it should be more obvious that the problem is that the entire name mismatches.
Fixes #112.
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Setting this flag outputs start and end tag for every element, including empty
elements.
Fixes #118.
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Split some lines into two and add braces in some places to make the code more
readable.
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This keeps all code that creates document/allocator/page structures together.
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The separate copy of allocator state in parser was meant to increase parsing
performance by reducing aliasing/indirection, but benchmarks against the
current source don't indicate that this is worthwhile.
Removing this simplifies the code slightly and makes it possible to move
compact hash table to the allocator.
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Do it in one place and set PUGIXML_HAS_MOVE if it's available.
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VS 2013 supports C++11, but __cplusplus macro isn't updated, and it is 199711 so the old check always fails, even though the compiler supports c++11.
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While I grew to dislike references for this case, there are other functions in
the source that use references so switch to that for consistency.
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This adds about 40 cycles for parsing <?xml version='1.0'?> declaration and
about 70 cycles for parsing <?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>, as
measured on a Core i7, which should be negligible for all documents.
Fixes #16.
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Previously the page size was defining the data size, and due to additional
headers (+ recently removed allocation padding) the actual allocation was a bit
bigger.
The problem is that some allocators round 2^N+k allocations to 2^N+M, which can
result in noticeable waste of space. Specifically, on 64-bit OSX allocating the
previous page size (32k+40) resulted in 32k+512 allocation, thereby wasting 472
bytes, or 1.4%.
Now we have the allocation size specified exactly and just recompute the available
data size, which can in small space savings depending on the allocator.
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When using format_raw the space in the empty tag (<node />) is the only
character that does not have to be there; so format_raw almost results in
a minimal XML but not quite.
It's pretty unlikely that this is crucial for any users - the formatting
change should be benign, and it's better to improve format_raw than to add
yet another flag.
Fixes #87.
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Also rename auto_deleter_fclose to close_file.
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compilers use a special calling convention for stdlib functions like fclose
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Unify the implementations by automatically deducing the unsigned type from its
signed counterpart. That allows us to use a templated function instead of
duplicating code.
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This makes the coverage for basic numeric types complete (sans long double).
Fixes #78.
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Git warns when it finds "whitespace errors". This commit gets
rid of these whitespace errors for code and adoc files.
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