Mercurial > hg4j
view src/org/tmatesoft/hg/internal/BatchRangeHelper.java @ 534:243202f1bda5
Commit: refactor revision creation code from clone command to work separately, fit into existing library structure
author | Artem Tikhomirov <tikhomirov.artem@gmail.com> |
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date | Mon, 04 Feb 2013 18:00:55 +0100 |
parents | 1ee452f31187 |
children |
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/* * Copyright (c) 2012 TMate Software Ltd * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. * * This program 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 General Public License for more details. * * For information on how to redistribute this software under * the terms of a license other than GNU General Public License * contact TMate Software at support@hg4j.com */ package org.tmatesoft.hg.internal; import java.util.Arrays; import java.util.NoSuchElementException; /** * Helper to break given range [start..end] (inclusive bounds) to series of ranges, * all but last are of batchSize length, and the last one is at most of batchSize+batchSizeTolerance length. * * Range is [{@link #start()rangeStart}..{@link #end() rangeEnd}], where rangeStart is less or equal to rangeEnd. * * When reverse range iteration is requested, original range is iterated from end to start, but the subranges * boundaries are in natural order. i.e. for 0..100, 10 first subrange would be [91..100], not [100..91]. This * helps clients of this class to get [start()..end()] in natural order regardless of iteration direction. * * Note, this class (and its treatment of inclusive boundaries) is designed solely for use with methods that navigate * revlogs and take (start,end) pair of inclusive range. * * @author Artem Tikhomirov * @author TMate Software Ltd. */ public class BatchRangeHelper { private final int rangeCount; private final int rangeDelta; private final int nextValueDelta; private final int firstBoundary, lastBoundary; private int rangeIndex, rangeValue, rangeStart, rangeEnd; public BatchRangeHelper(int start, int end, int batchSize, boolean reverse) { this(start, end, batchSize, batchSize/5, reverse); } public BatchRangeHelper(int start, int end, int batchSize, int batchSizeTolerance, boolean reverse) { assert end >= start; assert start >= 0; assert batchSize > 0; assert batchSizeTolerance >= 0; final int totalElements = end-start+1; int batchRangeCount = totalElements / batchSize; // batchRangeCount == 0, totalElements > 0 => need at least 1 range if (batchRangeCount == 0 || batchRangeCount*batchSize+batchSizeTolerance < totalElements) { batchRangeCount++; } rangeCount = batchRangeCount; rangeDelta = batchSize-1; // ranges are inclusive, and always grow naturally. nextValueDelta = reverse ? -batchSize : batchSize; firstBoundary = reverse ? end-rangeDelta : start; lastBoundary = reverse ? start : end; reset(); } public boolean hasNext() { return rangeIndex < rangeCount; } public void next() { if (!hasNext()) { throw new NoSuchElementException(); } rangeStart = rangeValue; rangeEnd = rangeValue + rangeDelta; rangeValue += nextValueDelta; if (++rangeIndex >= rangeCount) { if (nextValueDelta < 0) { // reverse iteration, lastBoundary represents start rangeStart = lastBoundary; } else { // lastBoundary represents end rangeEnd = lastBoundary; } } } public int start() { return rangeStart; } public int end() { return rangeEnd; } public BatchRangeHelper reset() { rangeValue = firstBoundary; rangeIndex = 0; return this; } public int[] toArray() { int[] rv = new int[rangeCount*2]; reset(); int i = 0; while (hasNext()) { next(); rv[i++] = start(); rv[i++] = end(); } reset(); return rv; } public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("With remainder within tolerance"); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(0, 102, 10, 4, false).toArray())); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(0, 102, 10, 4, true).toArray())); System.out.println("With remainder out of tolerance"); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(0, 102, 10, 2, false).toArray())); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(0, 102, 10, 2, true).toArray())); System.out.println("Range smaller than batch"); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(1, 9, 10, false).toArray())); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(1, 9, 10, true).toArray())); System.out.println("Range smaller than batch and smaller than tolerance"); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(1, 9, 10, 20, false).toArray())); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(1, 9, 10, 20, true).toArray())); System.out.println("Zero tolerance"); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(0, 100, 10, 0, false).toArray())); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(0, 100, 10, 0, true).toArray())); System.out.println("Right to boundary"); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(1, 100, 10, false).toArray())); System.out.println(Arrays.toString(new BatchRangeHelper(1, 100, 10, true).toArray())); } }