| 1 |
/* enough.c -- determine the maximum size of inflate's Huffman code tables over |
| 2 |
* all possible valid and complete Huffman codes, subject to a length limit. |
| 3 |
* Copyright (C) 2007, 2008, 2012 Mark Adler |
| 4 |
* Version 1.4 18 August 2012 Mark Adler |
| 5 |
*/ |
| 6 |
|
| 7 |
/* Version history: |
| 8 |
1.0 3 Jan 2007 First version (derived from codecount.c version 1.4) |
| 9 |
1.1 4 Jan 2007 Use faster incremental table usage computation |
| 10 |
Prune examine() search on previously visited states |
| 11 |
1.2 5 Jan 2007 Comments clean up |
| 12 |
As inflate does, decrease root for short codes |
| 13 |
Refuse cases where inflate would increase root |
| 14 |
1.3 17 Feb 2008 Add argument for initial root table size |
| 15 |
Fix bug for initial root table size == max - 1 |
| 16 |
Use a macro to compute the history index |
| 17 |
1.4 18 Aug 2012 Avoid shifts more than bits in type (caused endless loop!) |
| 18 |
Clean up comparisons of different types |
| 19 |
Clean up code indentation |
| 20 |
*/ |
| 21 |
|
| 22 |
/* |
| 23 |
Examine all possible Huffman codes for a given number of symbols and a |
| 24 |
maximum code length in bits to determine the maximum table size for zilb's |
| 25 |
inflate. Only complete Huffman codes are counted. |
| 26 |
|
| 27 |
Two codes are considered distinct if the vectors of the number of codes per |
| 28 |
length are not identical. So permutations of the symbol assignments result |
| 29 |
in the same code for the counting, as do permutations of the assignments of |
| 30 |
the bit values to the codes (i.e. only canonical codes are counted). |
| 31 |
|
| 32 |
We build a code from shorter to longer lengths, determining how many symbols |
| 33 |
are coded at each length. At each step, we have how many symbols remain to |
| 34 |
be coded, what the last code length used was, and how many bit patterns of |
| 35 |
that length remain unused. Then we add one to the code length and double the |
| 36 |
number of unused patterns to graduate to the next code length. We then |
| 37 |
assign all portions of the remaining symbols to that code length that |
| 38 |
preserve the properties of a correct and eventually complete code. Those |
| 39 |
properties are: we cannot use more bit patterns than are available; and when |
| 40 |
all the symbols are used, there are exactly zero possible bit patterns |
| 41 |
remaining. |
| 42 |
|
| 43 |
The inflate Huffman decoding algorithm uses two-level lookup tables for |
| 44 |
speed. There is a single first-level table to decode codes up to root bits |
| 45 |
in length (root == 9 in the current inflate implementation). The table |
| 46 |
has 1 << root entries and is indexed by the next root bits of input. Codes |
| 47 |
shorter than root bits have replicated table entries, so that the correct |
| 48 |
entry is pointed to regardless of the bits that follow the short code. If |
| 49 |
the code is longer than root bits, then the table entry points to a second- |
| 50 |
level table. The size of that table is determined by the longest code with |
| 51 |
that root-bit prefix. If that longest code has length len, then the table |
| 52 |
has size 1 << (len - root), to index the remaining bits in that set of |
| 53 |
codes. Each subsequent root-bit prefix then has its own sub-table. The |
| 54 |
total number of table entries required by the code is calculated |
| 55 |
incrementally as the number of codes at each bit length is populated. When |
| 56 |
all of the codes are shorter than root bits, then root is reduced to the |
| 57 |
longest code length, resulting in a single, smaller, one-level table. |
| 58 |
|
| 59 |
The inflate algorithm also provides for small values of root (relative to |
| 60 |
the log2 of the number of symbols), where the shortest code has more bits |
| 61 |
than root. In that case, root is increased to the length of the shortest |
| 62 |
code. This program, by design, does not handle that case, so it is verified |
| 63 |
that the number of symbols is less than 2^(root + 1). |
| 64 |
|
| 65 |
In order to speed up the examination (by about ten orders of magnitude for |
| 66 |
the default arguments), the intermediate states in the build-up of a code |
| 67 |
are remembered and previously visited branches are pruned. The memory |
| 68 |
required for this will increase rapidly with the total number of symbols and |
| 69 |
the maximum code length in bits. However this is a very small price to pay |
| 70 |
for the vast speedup. |
| 71 |
|
| 72 |
First, all of the possible Huffman codes are counted, and reachable |
| 73 |
intermediate states are noted by a non-zero count in a saved-results array. |
| 74 |
Second, the intermediate states that lead to (root + 1) bit or longer codes |
| 75 |
are used to look at all sub-codes from those junctures for their inflate |
| 76 |
memory usage. (The amount of memory used is not affected by the number of |
| 77 |
codes of root bits or less in length.) Third, the visited states in the |
| 78 |
construction of those sub-codes and the associated calculation of the table |
| 79 |
size is recalled in order to avoid recalculating from the same juncture. |
| 80 |
Beginning the code examination at (root + 1) bit codes, which is enabled by |
| 81 |
identifying the reachable nodes, accounts for about six of the orders of |
| 82 |
magnitude of improvement for the default arguments. About another four |
| 83 |
orders of magnitude come from not revisiting previous states. Out of |
| 84 |
approximately 2x10^16 possible Huffman codes, only about 2x10^6 sub-codes |
| 85 |
need to be examined to cover all of the possible table memory usage cases |
| 86 |
for the default arguments of 286 symbols limited to 15-bit codes. |
| 87 |
|
| 88 |
Note that an unsigned long long type is used for counting. It is quite easy |
| 89 |
to exceed the capacity of an eight-byte integer with a large number of |
| 90 |
symbols and a large maximum code length, so multiple-precision arithmetic |
| 91 |
would need to replace the unsigned long long arithmetic in that case. This |
| 92 |
program will abort if an overflow occurs. The big_t type identifies where |
| 93 |
the counting takes place. |
| 94 |
|
| 95 |
An unsigned long long type is also used for calculating the number of |
| 96 |
possible codes remaining at the maximum length. This limits the maximum |
| 97 |
code length to the number of bits in a long long minus the number of bits |
| 98 |
needed to represent the symbols in a flat code. The code_t type identifies |
| 99 |
where the bit pattern counting takes place. |
| 100 |
*/ |
| 101 |
|
| 102 |
#include <stdio.h> |
| 103 |
#include <stdlib.h> |
| 104 |
#include <string.h> |
| 105 |
#include <assert.h> |
| 106 |
|
| 107 |
#define local static |
| 108 |
|
| 109 |
/* special data types */ |
| 110 |
typedef unsigned long long big_t; /* type for code counting */ |
| 111 |
typedef unsigned long long code_t; /* type for bit pattern counting */ |
| 112 |
struct tab { /* type for been here check */ |
| 113 |
size_t len; /* length of bit vector in char's */ |
| 114 |
char *vec; /* allocated bit vector */ |
| 115 |
}; |
| 116 |
|
| 117 |
/* The array for saving results, num[], is indexed with this triplet: |
| 118 |
|
| 119 |
syms: number of symbols remaining to code |
| 120 |
left: number of available bit patterns at length len |
| 121 |
len: number of bits in the codes currently being assigned |
| 122 |
|
| 123 |
Those indices are constrained thusly when saving results: |
| 124 |
|
| 125 |
syms: 3..totsym (totsym == total symbols to code) |
| 126 |
left: 2..syms - 1, but only the evens (so syms == 8 -> 2, 4, 6) |
| 127 |
len: 1..max - 1 (max == maximum code length in bits) |
| 128 |
|
| 129 |
syms == 2 is not saved since that immediately leads to a single code. left |
| 130 |
must be even, since it represents the number of available bit patterns at |
| 131 |
the current length, which is double the number at the previous length. |
| 132 |
left ends at syms-1 since left == syms immediately results in a single code. |
| 133 |
(left > sym is not allowed since that would result in an incomplete code.) |
| 134 |
len is less than max, since the code completes immediately when len == max. |
| 135 |
|
| 136 |
The offset into the array is calculated for the three indices with the |
| 137 |
first one (syms) being outermost, and the last one (len) being innermost. |
| 138 |
We build the array with length max-1 lists for the len index, with syms-3 |
| 139 |
of those for each symbol. There are totsym-2 of those, with each one |
| 140 |
varying in length as a function of sym. See the calculation of index in |
| 141 |
count() for the index, and the calculation of size in main() for the size |
| 142 |
of the array. |
| 143 |
|
| 144 |
For the deflate example of 286 symbols limited to 15-bit codes, the array |
| 145 |
has 284,284 entries, taking up 2.17 MB for an 8-byte big_t. More than |
| 146 |
half of the space allocated for saved results is actually used -- not all |
| 147 |
possible triplets are reached in the generation of valid Huffman codes. |
| 148 |
*/ |
| 149 |
|
| 150 |
/* The array for tracking visited states, done[], is itself indexed identically |
| 151 |
to the num[] array as described above for the (syms, left, len) triplet. |
| 152 |
Each element in the array is further indexed by the (mem, rem) doublet, |
| 153 |
where mem is the amount of inflate table space used so far, and rem is the |
| 154 |
remaining unused entries in the current inflate sub-table. Each indexed |
| 155 |
element is simply one bit indicating whether the state has been visited or |
| 156 |
not. Since the ranges for mem and rem are not known a priori, each bit |
| 157 |
vector is of a variable size, and grows as needed to accommodate the visited |
| 158 |
states. mem and rem are used to calculate a single index in a triangular |
| 159 |
array. Since the range of mem is expected in the default case to be about |
| 160 |
ten times larger than the range of rem, the array is skewed to reduce the |
| 161 |
memory usage, with eight times the range for mem than for rem. See the |
| 162 |
calculations for offset and bit in beenhere() for the details. |
| 163 |
|
| 164 |
For the deflate example of 286 symbols limited to 15-bit codes, the bit |
| 165 |
vectors grow to total approximately 21 MB, in addition to the 4.3 MB done[] |
| 166 |
array itself. |
| 167 |
*/ |
| 168 |
|
| 169 |
/* Globals to avoid propagating constants or constant pointers recursively */ |
| 170 |
local int max; /* maximum allowed bit length for the codes */ |
| 171 |
local int root; /* size of base code table in bits */ |
| 172 |
local int large; /* largest code table so far */ |
| 173 |
local size_t size; /* number of elements in num and done */ |
| 174 |
local int *code; /* number of symbols assigned to each bit length */ |
| 175 |
local big_t *num; /* saved results array for code counting */ |
| 176 |
local struct tab *done; /* states already evaluated array */ |
| 177 |
|
| 178 |
/* Index function for num[] and done[] */ |
| 179 |
#define INDEX(i,j,k) (((size_t)((i-1)>>1)*((i-2)>>1)+(j>>1)-1)*(max-1)+k-1) |
| 180 |
|
| 181 |
/* Free allocated space. Uses globals code, num, and done. */ |
| 182 |
local void cleanup(void) |
| 183 |
{ |
| 184 |
size_t n; |
| 185 |
|
| 186 |
if (done != NULL) { |
| 187 |
for (n = 0; n < size; n++) |
| 188 |
if (done[n].len) |
| 189 |
free(done[n].vec); |
| 190 |
free(done); |
| 191 |
} |
| 192 |
if (num != NULL) |
| 193 |
free(num); |
| 194 |
if (code != NULL) |
| 195 |
free(code); |
| 196 |
} |
| 197 |
|
| 198 |
/* Return the number of possible Huffman codes using bit patterns of lengths |
| 199 |
len through max inclusive, coding syms symbols, with left bit patterns of |
| 200 |
length len unused -- return -1 if there is an overflow in the counting. |
| 201 |
Keep a record of previous results in num to prevent repeating the same |
| 202 |
calculation. Uses the globals max and num. */ |
| 203 |
local big_t count(int syms, int len, int left) |
| 204 |
{ |
| 205 |
big_t sum; /* number of possible codes from this juncture */ |
| 206 |
big_t got; /* value returned from count() */ |
| 207 |
int least; /* least number of syms to use at this juncture */ |
| 208 |
int most; /* most number of syms to use at this juncture */ |
| 209 |
int use; /* number of bit patterns to use in next call */ |
| 210 |
size_t index; /* index of this case in *num */ |
| 211 |
|
| 212 |
/* see if only one possible code */ |
| 213 |
if (syms == left) |
| 214 |
return 1; |
| 215 |
|
| 216 |
/* note and verify the expected state */ |
| 217 |
assert(syms > left && left > 0 && len < max); |
| 218 |
|
| 219 |
/* see if we've done this one already */ |
| 220 |
index = INDEX(syms, left, len); |
| 221 |
got = num[index]; |
| 222 |
if (got) |
| 223 |
return got; /* we have -- return the saved result */ |
| 224 |
|
| 225 |
/* we need to use at least this many bit patterns so that the code won't be |
| 226 |
incomplete at the next length (more bit patterns than symbols) */ |
| 227 |
least = (left << 1) - syms; |
| 228 |
if (least < 0) |
| 229 |
least = 0; |
| 230 |
|
| 231 |
/* we can use at most this many bit patterns, lest there not be enough |
| 232 |
available for the remaining symbols at the maximum length (if there were |
| 233 |
no limit to the code length, this would become: most = left - 1) */ |
| 234 |
most = (((code_t)left << (max - len)) - syms) / |
| 235 |
(((code_t)1 << (max - len)) - 1); |
| 236 |
|
| 237 |
/* count all possible codes from this juncture and add them up */ |
| 238 |
sum = 0; |
| 239 |
for (use = least; use <= most; use++) { |
| 240 |
got = count(syms - use, len + 1, (left - use) << 1); |
| 241 |
sum += got; |
| 242 |
if (got == (big_t)0 - 1 || sum < got) /* overflow */ |
| 243 |
return (big_t)0 - 1; |
| 244 |
} |
| 245 |
|
| 246 |
/* verify that all recursive calls are productive */ |
| 247 |
assert(sum != 0); |
| 248 |
|
| 249 |
/* save the result and return it */ |
| 250 |
num[index] = sum; |
| 251 |
return sum; |
| 252 |
} |
| 253 |
|
| 254 |
/* Return true if we've been here before, set to true if not. Set a bit in a |
| 255 |
bit vector to indicate visiting this state. Each (syms,len,left) state |
| 256 |
has a variable size bit vector indexed by (mem,rem). The bit vector is |
| 257 |
lengthened if needed to allow setting the (mem,rem) bit. */ |
| 258 |
local int beenhere(int syms, int len, int left, int mem, int rem) |
| 259 |
{ |
| 260 |
size_t index; /* index for this state's bit vector */ |
| 261 |
size_t offset; /* offset in this state's bit vector */ |
| 262 |
int bit; /* mask for this state's bit */ |
| 263 |
size_t length; /* length of the bit vector in bytes */ |
| 264 |
char *vector; /* new or enlarged bit vector */ |
| 265 |
|
| 266 |
/* point to vector for (syms,left,len), bit in vector for (mem,rem) */ |
| 267 |
index = INDEX(syms, left, len); |
| 268 |
mem -= 1 << root; |
| 269 |
offset = (mem >> 3) + rem; |
| 270 |
offset = ((offset * (offset + 1)) >> 1) + rem; |
| 271 |
bit = 1 << (mem & 7); |
| 272 |
|
| 273 |
/* see if we've been here */ |
| 274 |
length = done[index].len; |
| 275 |
if (offset < length && (done[index].vec[offset] & bit) != 0) |
| 276 |
return 1; /* done this! */ |
| 277 |
|
| 278 |
/* we haven't been here before -- set the bit to show we have now */ |
| 279 |
|
| 280 |
/* see if we need to lengthen the vector in order to set the bit */ |
| 281 |
if (length <= offset) { |
| 282 |
/* if we have one already, enlarge it, zero out the appended space */ |
| 283 |
if (length) { |
| 284 |
do { |
| 285 |
length <<= 1; |
| 286 |
} while (length <= offset); |
| 287 |
vector = realloc(done[index].vec, length); |
| 288 |
if (vector != NULL) |
| 289 |
memset(vector + done[index].len, 0, length - done[index].len); |
| 290 |
} |
| 291 |
|
| 292 |
/* otherwise we need to make a new vector and zero it out */ |
| 293 |
else { |
| 294 |
length = 1 << (len - root); |
| 295 |
while (length <= offset) |
| 296 |
length <<= 1; |
| 297 |
vector = calloc(length, sizeof(char)); |
| 298 |
} |
| 299 |
|
| 300 |
/* in either case, bail if we can't get the memory */ |
| 301 |
if (vector == NULL) { |
| 302 |
fputs("abort: unable to allocate enough memory\n", stderr); |
| 303 |
cleanup(); |
| 304 |
exit(1); |
| 305 |
} |
| 306 |
|
| 307 |
/* install the new vector */ |
| 308 |
done[index].len = length; |
| 309 |
done[index].vec = vector; |
| 310 |
} |
| 311 |
|
| 312 |
/* set the bit */ |
| 313 |
done[index].vec[offset] |= bit; |
| 314 |
return 0; |
| 315 |
} |
| 316 |
|
| 317 |
/* Examine all possible codes from the given node (syms, len, left). Compute |
| 318 |
the amount of memory required to build inflate's decoding tables, where the |
| 319 |
number of code structures used so far is mem, and the number remaining in |
| 320 |
the current sub-table is rem. Uses the globals max, code, root, large, and |
| 321 |
done. */ |
| 322 |
local void examine(int syms, int len, int left, int mem, int rem) |
| 323 |
{ |
| 324 |
int least; /* least number of syms to use at this juncture */ |
| 325 |
int most; /* most number of syms to use at this juncture */ |
| 326 |
int use; /* number of bit patterns to use in next call */ |
| 327 |
|
| 328 |
/* see if we have a complete code */ |
| 329 |
if (syms == left) { |
| 330 |
/* set the last code entry */ |
| 331 |
code[len] = left; |
| 332 |
|
| 333 |
/* complete computation of memory used by this code */ |
| 334 |
while (rem < left) { |
| 335 |
left -= rem; |
| 336 |
rem = 1 << (len - root); |
| 337 |
mem += rem; |
| 338 |
} |
| 339 |
assert(rem == left); |
| 340 |
|
| 341 |
/* if this is a new maximum, show the entries used and the sub-code */ |
| 342 |
if (mem > large) { |
| 343 |
large = mem; |
| 344 |
printf("max %d: ", mem); |
| 345 |
for (use = root + 1; use <= max; use++) |
| 346 |
if (code[use]) |
| 347 |
printf("%d[%d] ", code[use], use); |
| 348 |
putchar('\n'); |
| 349 |
fflush(stdout); |
| 350 |
} |
| 351 |
|
| 352 |
/* remove entries as we drop back down in the recursion */ |
| 353 |
code[len] = 0; |
| 354 |
return; |
| 355 |
} |
| 356 |
|
| 357 |
/* prune the tree if we can */ |
| 358 |
if (beenhere(syms, len, left, mem, rem)) |
| 359 |
return; |
| 360 |
|
| 361 |
/* we need to use at least this many bit patterns so that the code won't be |
| 362 |
incomplete at the next length (more bit patterns than symbols) */ |
| 363 |
least = (left << 1) - syms; |
| 364 |
if (least < 0) |
| 365 |
least = 0; |
| 366 |
|
| 367 |
/* we can use at most this many bit patterns, lest there not be enough |
| 368 |
available for the remaining symbols at the maximum length (if there were |
| 369 |
no limit to the code length, this would become: most = left - 1) */ |
| 370 |
most = (((code_t)left << (max - len)) - syms) / |
| 371 |
(((code_t)1 << (max - len)) - 1); |
| 372 |
|
| 373 |
/* occupy least table spaces, creating new sub-tables as needed */ |
| 374 |
use = least; |
| 375 |
while (rem < use) { |
| 376 |
use -= rem; |
| 377 |
rem = 1 << (len - root); |
| 378 |
mem += rem; |
| 379 |
} |
| 380 |
rem -= use; |
| 381 |
|
| 382 |
/* examine codes from here, updating table space as we go */ |
| 383 |
for (use = least; use <= most; use++) { |
| 384 |
code[len] = use; |
| 385 |
examine(syms - use, len + 1, (left - use) << 1, |
| 386 |
mem + (rem ? 1 << (len - root) : 0), rem << 1); |
| 387 |
if (rem == 0) { |
| 388 |
rem = 1 << (len - root); |
| 389 |
mem += rem; |
| 390 |
} |
| 391 |
rem--; |
| 392 |
} |
| 393 |
|
| 394 |
/* remove entries as we drop back down in the recursion */ |
| 395 |
code[len] = 0; |
| 396 |
} |
| 397 |
|
| 398 |
/* Look at all sub-codes starting with root + 1 bits. Look at only the valid |
| 399 |
intermediate code states (syms, left, len). For each completed code, |
| 400 |
calculate the amount of memory required by inflate to build the decoding |
| 401 |
tables. Find the maximum amount of memory required and show the code that |
| 402 |
requires that maximum. Uses the globals max, root, and num. */ |
| 403 |
local void enough(int syms) |
| 404 |
{ |
| 405 |
int n; /* number of remaing symbols for this node */ |
| 406 |
int left; /* number of unused bit patterns at this length */ |
| 407 |
size_t index; /* index of this case in *num */ |
| 408 |
|
| 409 |
/* clear code */ |
| 410 |
for (n = 0; n <= max; n++) |
| 411 |
code[n] = 0; |
| 412 |
|
| 413 |
/* look at all (root + 1) bit and longer codes */ |
| 414 |
large = 1 << root; /* base table */ |
| 415 |
if (root < max) /* otherwise, there's only a base table */ |
| 416 |
for (n = 3; n <= syms; n++) |
| 417 |
for (left = 2; left < n; left += 2) |
| 418 |
{ |
| 419 |
/* look at all reachable (root + 1) bit nodes, and the |
| 420 |
resulting codes (complete at root + 2 or more) */ |
| 421 |
index = INDEX(n, left, root + 1); |
| 422 |
if (root + 1 < max && num[index]) /* reachable node */ |
| 423 |
examine(n, root + 1, left, 1 << root, 0); |
| 424 |
|
| 425 |
/* also look at root bit codes with completions at root + 1 |
| 426 |
bits (not saved in num, since complete), just in case */ |
| 427 |
if (num[index - 1] && n <= left << 1) |
| 428 |
examine((n - left) << 1, root + 1, (n - left) << 1, |
| 429 |
1 << root, 0); |
| 430 |
} |
| 431 |
|
| 432 |
/* done */ |
| 433 |
printf("done: maximum of %d table entries\n", large); |
| 434 |
} |
| 435 |
|
| 436 |
/* |
| 437 |
Examine and show the total number of possible Huffman codes for a given |
| 438 |
maximum number of symbols, initial root table size, and maximum code length |
| 439 |
in bits -- those are the command arguments in that order. The default |
| 440 |
values are 286, 9, and 15 respectively, for the deflate literal/length code. |
| 441 |
The possible codes are counted for each number of coded symbols from two to |
| 442 |
the maximum. The counts for each of those and the total number of codes are |
| 443 |
shown. The maximum number of inflate table entires is then calculated |
| 444 |
across all possible codes. Each new maximum number of table entries and the |
| 445 |
associated sub-code (starting at root + 1 == 10 bits) is shown. |
| 446 |
|
| 447 |
To count and examine Huffman codes that are not length-limited, provide a |
| 448 |
maximum length equal to the number of symbols minus one. |
| 449 |
|
| 450 |
For the deflate literal/length code, use "enough". For the deflate distance |
| 451 |
code, use "enough 30 6". |
| 452 |
|
| 453 |
This uses the %llu printf format to print big_t numbers, which assumes that |
| 454 |
big_t is an unsigned long long. If the big_t type is changed (for example |
| 455 |
to a multiple precision type), the method of printing will also need to be |
| 456 |
updated. |
| 457 |
*/ |
| 458 |
int main(int argc, char **argv) |
| 459 |
{ |
| 460 |
int syms; /* total number of symbols to code */ |
| 461 |
int n; /* number of symbols to code for this run */ |
| 462 |
big_t got; /* return value of count() */ |
| 463 |
big_t sum; /* accumulated number of codes over n */ |
| 464 |
code_t word; /* for counting bits in code_t */ |
| 465 |
|
| 466 |
/* set up globals for cleanup() */ |
| 467 |
code = NULL; |
| 468 |
num = NULL; |
| 469 |
done = NULL; |
| 470 |
|
| 471 |
/* get arguments -- default to the deflate literal/length code */ |
| 472 |
syms = 286; |
| 473 |
root = 9; |
| 474 |
max = 15; |
| 475 |
if (argc > 1) { |
| 476 |
syms = atoi(argv[1]); |
| 477 |
if (argc > 2) { |
| 478 |
root = atoi(argv[2]); |
| 479 |
if (argc > 3) |
| 480 |
max = atoi(argv[3]); |
| 481 |
} |
| 482 |
} |
| 483 |
if (argc > 4 || syms < 2 || root < 1 || max < 1) { |
| 484 |
fputs("invalid arguments, need: [sym >= 2 [root >= 1 [max >= 1]]]\n", |
| 485 |
stderr); |
| 486 |
return 1; |
| 487 |
} |
| 488 |
|
| 489 |
/* if not restricting the code length, the longest is syms - 1 */ |
| 490 |
if (max > syms - 1) |
| 491 |
max = syms - 1; |
| 492 |
|
| 493 |
/* determine the number of bits in a code_t */ |
| 494 |
for (n = 0, word = 1; word; n++, word <<= 1) |
| 495 |
; |
| 496 |
|
| 497 |
/* make sure that the calculation of most will not overflow */ |
| 498 |
if (max > n || (code_t)(syms - 2) >= (((code_t)0 - 1) >> (max - 1))) { |
| 499 |
fputs("abort: code length too long for internal types\n", stderr); |
| 500 |
return 1; |
| 501 |
} |
| 502 |
|
| 503 |
/* reject impossible code requests */ |
| 504 |
if ((code_t)(syms - 1) > ((code_t)1 << max) - 1) { |
| 505 |
fprintf(stderr, "%d symbols cannot be coded in %d bits\n", |
| 506 |
syms, max); |
| 507 |
return 1; |
| 508 |
} |
| 509 |
|
| 510 |
/* allocate code vector */ |
| 511 |
code = calloc(max + 1, sizeof(int)); |
| 512 |
if (code == NULL) { |
| 513 |
fputs("abort: unable to allocate enough memory\n", stderr); |
| 514 |
return 1; |
| 515 |
} |
| 516 |
|
| 517 |
/* determine size of saved results array, checking for overflows, |
| 518 |
allocate and clear the array (set all to zero with calloc()) */ |
| 519 |
if (syms == 2) /* iff max == 1 */ |
| 520 |
num = NULL; /* won't be saving any results */ |
| 521 |
else { |
| 522 |
size = syms >> 1; |
| 523 |
if (size > ((size_t)0 - 1) / (n = (syms - 1) >> 1) || |
| 524 |
(size *= n, size > ((size_t)0 - 1) / (n = max - 1)) || |
| 525 |
(size *= n, size > ((size_t)0 - 1) / sizeof(big_t)) || |
| 526 |
(num = calloc(size, sizeof(big_t))) == NULL) { |
| 527 |
fputs("abort: unable to allocate enough memory\n", stderr); |
| 528 |
cleanup(); |
| 529 |
return 1; |
| 530 |
} |
| 531 |
} |
| 532 |
|
| 533 |
/* count possible codes for all numbers of symbols, add up counts */ |
| 534 |
sum = 0; |
| 535 |
for (n = 2; n <= syms; n++) { |
| 536 |
got = count(n, 1, 2); |
| 537 |
sum += got; |
| 538 |
if (got == (big_t)0 - 1 || sum < got) { /* overflow */ |
| 539 |
fputs("abort: can't count that high!\n", stderr); |
| 540 |
cleanup(); |
| 541 |
return 1; |
| 542 |
} |
| 543 |
printf("%llu %d-codes\n", got, n); |
| 544 |
} |
| 545 |
printf("%llu total codes for 2 to %d symbols", sum, syms); |
| 546 |
if (max < syms - 1) |
| 547 |
printf(" (%d-bit length limit)\n", max); |
| 548 |
else |
| 549 |
puts(" (no length limit)"); |
| 550 |
|
| 551 |
/* allocate and clear done array for beenhere() */ |
| 552 |
if (syms == 2) |
| 553 |
done = NULL; |
| 554 |
else if (size > ((size_t)0 - 1) / sizeof(struct tab) || |
| 555 |
(done = calloc(size, sizeof(struct tab))) == NULL) { |
| 556 |
fputs("abort: unable to allocate enough memory\n", stderr); |
| 557 |
cleanup(); |
| 558 |
return 1; |
| 559 |
} |
| 560 |
|
| 561 |
/* find and show maximum inflate table usage */ |
| 562 |
if (root > max) /* reduce root to max length */ |
| 563 |
root = max; |
| 564 |
if ((code_t)syms < ((code_t)1 << (root + 1))) |
| 565 |
enough(syms); |
| 566 |
else |
| 567 |
puts("cannot handle minimum code lengths > root"); |
| 568 |
|
| 569 |
/* done */ |
| 570 |
cleanup(); |
| 571 |
return 0; |
| 572 |
} |