Commit Graph

35 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Clasen
fe564318b6 sortlistmodel: Cosmetic docs changes 2021-05-22 20:46:16 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
4a0d3d7acc docs: Reduce redundancy
Remove a boatload of "or %NULL" from nullable parameters
and return values. gi-docgen generates suitable text from
the annotation that we don't need to duplicate.

This adds a few missing nullable annotations too.
2021-05-20 20:45:06 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
7fe0610b68 introspection: Stop using allow-none
allow-none has been deprecated for a long time
already. Instead use optional and nullable everywhere.
2021-05-20 19:17:49 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
da9a320a40 sortlistmodel: Convert docs 2021-03-11 16:37:35 +00:00
Matthias Clasen
87855dd375 Move timsort sources to a subdirectory
This makes it easier to identify the files that
belong together, and are under the same license.
2020-09-01 14:25:56 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
7972dc8776 docs: Unify docs around incremental operations
Sync up the wording around incremental filtering
and sorting to be more similar.
2020-08-03 18:43:25 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
a46cfd3ff4 sortlistmodel: Make constructor transfer full
This is for consistency with other wrapping list constructors.
We want them all to be transfer full, allow-none.

Update all callers.
2020-07-26 18:04:40 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
f7b73b2e01 sortlistmodel: Fix a crash 2020-07-24 14:15:14 -04:00
Benjamin Otte
2b19e2fc1f sortlistmodel: Add progress estimation 2020-07-22 14:30:49 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
5b18968867 sortlistmodel: Make key generation part of the step function
SSave the missing keys as a bitset and iterate over that bitset in the
step function.

Solves the problem with a large UI block at the beginning of a sort
operation when all the keys were generated, in particular when key
generation was slow.

Benchmarks for maximum time taken by a single main loop callback:

     initial sort with complex GFileInfo keys
                       old      new
      32,000 items   137ms      3ms
     128,000 items   520ms     31ms

     initial sort with string keys
                       old      new
      32,000 items   187ms      1ms
     128,000 items   804ms      3ms
2020-07-22 14:30:49 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
bf5c540357 sortlistmodel: Properly compute runs
When updating a (partially) sorted model, take the known runs for the
existing sort and apply them to the new sort. That way, we don't have to
check the whole model again.

Benchmarks:

      appending half the items to a model of strings
                        old      new
      512,000 items   437ms    389ms
    1,024,000 items  1006ms    914ms

      appending 10% of the items to a model of strings
                        old      new
      512,000 items   206ms    132ms
    1,024,000 items   438ms    301ms

      appending 1 item to a model of strings
                        old      new
       64,000 items   1.8ms   0.00ms
      512,000 items     ---   0.01ms
2020-07-22 14:30:49 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
c03383d3e5 sortlistmodel: Make sort stable again
Previously, the sort was not stable when items were added/removed while
sorting or the sort algorithm was changed.

Now the sort looks at the item position (via the key's location in the
keys array) to make sure each comparison stays stable with respect to
this position.
2020-07-22 14:30:49 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
eaaa287078 multisorter: Implement GtkSortKeys 2020-07-22 14:30:49 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
3b24c8a0a4 sortlistmodel: Use GtkSortKeys
This massively speeds up sorting with expensive sort functions that it's
the most worthwhile optimization of this whole branch.
It's slower for simple sort functions though.

It's also quite a lot slower when the model doesn't support sort keys
(like GtkCustomSorter), but all the other sorters do support keys.

Of course, this depends on the number of items in the model - the number
of comparisons scales O(N * log N) while the overhead for key handling
scales O(N).
So as the log N part grows, generating keys gets more and more
beneficial.

Benchmarks:

       initial sort of a GFileInfo model with display-name keys
                       items     keys
         8,000 items   715ms     50ms
        64,000 items     ---    554ms

       initial sort of a GFileInfo model with complex keys
                       items     keys
        64,000 items   340ms    295ms
       128,000 items   641ms    605ms

       removing half a GFileInfo model with display-name keys
       (no comparisons, just key freeing overhead of a complex sorter)
                       items     keys
       512,000 items    14ms     21ms
     2,048,000 items    40ms     62ms

       removing half a GFileInfo model with complex keys
       (no comparisons, just key freeing overhead of a complex sorter)
                       items     keys
       512,000 items    90ms    237ms
     2,048,000 items   247ms    601ms
2020-07-22 14:30:49 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
8c608e9c1c sortlistmodel: Split the SortItem into 2 arrays
Instead of one item keeping the item + its position and sorting that
list, keep the items in 1 array and put the positions into a 2nd array.

This is generally slower while sorting, but allows multiple improvements:

1. We can replace items with keys
   This allows avoiding multiple slow lookups when using complex
   comparisons

2. We can keep multiple position arrays
   This allows doing a sorting in the background without actually
   emitting items-changed() until the array is completely sorted.

3. The main list tracks the items in the original model
   So only a single memmove() is necessary there, while the old version
   had to upgrade the position in every item.
Benchmarks:

        sorting a model of simple strings
                          old      new
        256,000 items   256ms    268ms
        512,000 items   569ms    638ms

        sorting a model of file trees, directories first, by size
                          old      new
         64,000 items   350ms    364ms
        128,000 items   667ms    691ms

        removing half the model
                          old      new
        512,000 items    24ms     15ms
      1,024,000 items    49ms     25ms
2020-07-22 14:30:49 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
283c3b70dd sortlistmodel: Add an incremental property
Also refactor a large part of the sortmodel to make this convenient.

A large amount of time has been spent on getting items-changed regions
minimized.
2020-07-22 14:30:49 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
080e625090 sortlistmodel: Make the sort callback useful
1. Run step() for a while to avoid very short steps
   This way, we batch items-changed() emissions.

2. Track the change region accurately
   This way, we can avoid invalidating the whole list if our step just
   touched a small part of a huge list.
   As this is a merge sort, this is a common occurence when we're buys
   merging chunks: The rest of the model outside those chunks isn't
   changed.

Note that the tracking is accurate: It determines the minimum change
region in the model.

This will be important, because the testsuite is going to test this.
2020-07-22 14:04:40 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
26696a741e timsort: Add change tracking to gtk_tim_sort_step() 2020-07-22 14:04:40 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
a209e54b8f timsort: Add gtk_tim_sort_set_max_merge_size()
Makes the SOrtListModel responsive when incrementally sorting.

By making it configurable we can avoid losting performance in the
non-incremental case.
2020-07-22 14:04:40 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
47232acbd8 sortlistmodel: Make sorting incremental
This is just an experiment so far to see how long it takes to sort.
2020-07-22 14:04:40 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
cbad8ec2e4 timsort: Add gtk_tim_sort_set_runs()
... and use it in the SortListModel

Setting runs allows declaring already sorted regions so the sort does
not attempt to sort them again.

This massively speeds up partial inserts where we can reuse the sorted
model as a run and only resort the newly inserted parts.

Benchmarks:

    appending half the model
                    qsort  timsort
    128,000 items    94ms     69ms
    256,000 items   202ms    143ms
    512,000 items   488ms    328ms

    appending 1 item
                    qsort  timsort
      8,000 items   1.5ms    0.0ms
     16,000 items   3.1ms    0.0ms
              ...
    512,000 items     ---    1.8ms
2020-07-22 14:04:40 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
800170b47d sortlistmodel: Use timsort
Simply replace the old qsort() call with a timsort() call.

This is ultimately relevant because timsort is a LOT faster in merging
to already sorted lists (think items-chaged adding some items) or
reversing an existing list (think columnview sort order changes).

Benchmarks:

    initially sorting the model
                    qsort  timsort
    128,000 items   124ms    111ms
    256,000 items   264ms    250ms
2020-07-22 14:04:40 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
081afc0477 sortlistmodel: Track item positions
The model now tracks the original positions on top of just the items so that
it can remove items in an items-changed emission.

It now takes twice as much memory but removes items much faster.

Benchmarks:

Removing 50% of a model:
                   before    after
   250,000 items    135ms     10ms
   500,000 items    300ms     25ms

Removing 1 item:
     4,000 items    2.2ms      0ms
     8,000 items    4.6ms      0ms
   500,000 items      ---   0.01ms
2020-07-22 14:04:40 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
e807fc3be0 sortlistmodel: Replace with an array-based model
This is the dumbest possible sortmodel using an array:
Just grab all the items, put them in the array, qsort() the array.

Some benchmarks (setting a new model):

  125,000 items - old: 549ms
                  new: 115ms
  250,000 items - new: 250ms

This performance can not be kept for simple additions and removals
though.
2020-07-22 14:04:40 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
c36cbd5140 sortlistmodel: Remove forgotten G_PARAM_CONSTRUCT_ONLY 2020-07-16 17:33:29 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
5080730728 listmodels: Stop respecting item-type
Simplify all view model APIs and always return G_TYPE_OBJECT as the
item-type for every model.

It turns out nobody uses item-type anyway.

So instead of adding lots of APIs, forcing people to think about it and
trying to figure out how to handle filter or map models that modify item
types, just having an easy life is a better approach.

All the models need to be able to deal with any type of object going
through anyway.
2020-07-05 02:59:21 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
a928ea6c57 sortlistmodel: Look at order
For now, we just look at SORT_ORDER_NONE to bypass any sorting.
2020-06-21 14:17:47 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
ee3faf24b9 sortlistmodel: Make sort stable
The sort of the sortlistmodel is now stable with respect to the original
list model.

That means that if the sorter compares items as equal, the model
will make sure those items keep the order they were in in the original
model.

Or in other words: The model guarantees a total order based on the
item's position in the original model.
2020-05-30 19:26:44 -04:00
Benjamin Otte
16ab648093 sortlistmodel: Redo the way we store the items
We need to keep this data around for changes in future commits where we
make the sorting stable.

An important part of the new data handling is that the unsorted list
needs to always be dealt with before the sorted list - upon creation we
rely on the unsorted iter and upon destruction, the sorted sequence
frees the entry leaving the unsorted sequence pointer invalid.

This change does not do any behavioral changes.
2020-05-30 19:26:44 -04:00
Matthias Clasen
11a1f8f36a Redo sort list model with GtkSorter
Reshuffle the api to take full advantage
of GtkSorter. Update all callers.
2020-05-30 19:26:44 -04:00
Robert Ancell
83867f9cbf Add missing (closure) GIR annotations 2020-01-13 14:26:50 +13:00
Matthias Clasen
d3c45cb979 docs: Miscellaneous doc fixes
Additions and correction all over the place,
in GDK and GTK docs.
2019-02-24 16:53:12 -05:00
Rico Tzschichholz
f3e6d00db1 gtk: Fix some g-i annotations warnings 2018-09-17 13:00:36 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
b92c328425 sortlistmodel: Actually insert unsorted items at the wrong place
We were adding items in reverse order, oops.
2018-09-17 03:57:37 +02:00
Benjamin Otte
f3834138f7 GtkSortListModel: Add 2018-09-16 18:50:17 +02:00