xref: /freebsd/lib/libc/stdlib/qsort.3 (revision f126890a)
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32.Dd April 19, 2023
33.Dt QSORT 3
34.Os
35.Sh NAME
36.Nm qsort ,
37.Nm qsort_b ,
38.Nm qsort_r ,
39.Nm heapsort ,
40.Nm heapsort_b ,
41.Nm mergesort ,
42.Nm mergesort_b
43.Nd sort functions
44.Sh LIBRARY
45.Lb libc
46.Sh SYNOPSIS
47.In stdlib.h
48.Ft void
49.Fo qsort
50.Fa "void *base"
51.Fa "size_t nmemb"
52.Fa "size_t size"
53.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
54.Fc
55.Ft void
56.Fo qsort_b
57.Fa "void *base"
58.Fa "size_t nmemb"
59.Fa "size_t size"
60.Fa "int \*[lp]^compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
61.Fc
62.Ft void
63.Fo qsort_r
64.Fa "void *base"
65.Fa "size_t nmemb"
66.Fa "size_t size"
67.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *, void *\*[rp]"
68.Fa "void *thunk"
69.Fc
70.Ft int
71.Fo heapsort
72.Fa "void *base"
73.Fa "size_t nmemb"
74.Fa "size_t size"
75.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
76.Fc
77.Ft int
78.Fo heapsort_b
79.Fa "void *base"
80.Fa "size_t nmemb"
81.Fa "size_t size"
82.Fa "int \*[lp]^compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
83.Fc
84.Ft int
85.Fo mergesort
86.Fa "void *base"
87.Fa "size_t nmemb"
88.Fa "size_t size"
89.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
90.Fc
91.Ft int
92.Fo mergesort_b
93.Fa "void *base"
94.Fa "size_t nmemb"
95.Fa "size_t size"
96.Fa "int \*[lp]^compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
97.Fc
98.Fd #define __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__ 1
99.Ft errno_t
100.Fo qsort_s
101.Fa "void *base"
102.Fa "rsize_t nmemb"
103.Fa "rsize_t size"
104.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *, void *\*[rp]"
105.Fa "void *thunk"
106.Fc
107.Sh DESCRIPTION
108The
109.Fn qsort
110function is a modified partition-exchange sort, or quicksort.
111The
112.Fn heapsort
113function is a modified selection sort.
114The
115.Fn mergesort
116function is a modified merge sort with exponential search
117intended for sorting data with pre-existing order.
118.Pp
119The
120.Fn qsort
121and
122.Fn heapsort
123functions sort an array of
124.Fa nmemb
125objects, the initial member of which is pointed to by
126.Fa base .
127The size of each object is specified by
128.Fa size .
129The
130.Fn mergesort
131function
132behaves similarly, but
133.Em requires
134that
135.Fa size
136be greater than
137.Dq "sizeof(void *) / 2" .
138.Pp
139The contents of the array
140.Fa base
141are sorted in ascending order according to
142a comparison function pointed to by
143.Fa compar ,
144which requires two arguments pointing to the objects being
145compared.
146.Pp
147The comparison function must return an integer less than, equal to, or
148greater than zero if the first argument is considered to be respectively
149less than, equal to, or greater than the second.
150.Pp
151The
152.Fn qsort_r
153function behaves identically to
154.Fn qsort ,
155except that it takes an additional argument,
156.Fa thunk ,
157which is passed unchanged as the last argument to function pointed to
158.Fa compar .
159This allows the comparison function to access additional
160data without using global variables, and thus
161.Fn qsort_r
162is suitable for use in functions which must be reentrant.
163The
164.Fn qsort_b
165function behaves identically to
166.Fn qsort ,
167except that it takes a block, rather than a function pointer.
168.Pp
169The algorithms implemented by
170.Fn qsort ,
171.Fn qsort_r ,
172and
173.Fn heapsort
174are
175.Em not
176stable, that is, if two members compare as equal, their order in
177the sorted array is undefined.
178The
179.Fn heapsort_b
180function behaves identically to
181.Fn heapsort ,
182except that it takes a block, rather than a function pointer.
183The
184.Fn mergesort
185algorithm is stable.
186The
187.Fn mergesort_b
188function behaves identically to
189.Fn mergesort ,
190except that it takes a block, rather than a function pointer.
191.Pp
192The
193.Fn qsort
194and
195.Fn qsort_r
196functions are an implementation of C.A.R.
197Hoare's
198.Dq quicksort
199algorithm,
200a variant of partition-exchange sorting; in particular, see
201.An D.E. Knuth Ns 's
202.%T "Algorithm Q" .
203.Sy Quicksort
204takes O N lg N average time.
205This implementation uses median selection to avoid its
206O N**2 worst-case behavior.
207.Pp
208The
209.Fn heapsort
210function is an implementation of
211.An "J.W.J. William" Ns 's
212.Dq heapsort
213algorithm,
214a variant of selection sorting; in particular, see
215.An "D.E. Knuth" Ns 's
216.%T "Algorithm H" .
217.Sy Heapsort
218takes O N lg N worst-case time.
219Its
220.Em only
221advantage over
222.Fn qsort
223is that it uses almost no additional memory; while
224.Fn qsort
225does not allocate memory, it is implemented using recursion.
226.Pp
227The function
228.Fn mergesort
229requires additional memory of size
230.Fa nmemb *
231.Fa size
232bytes; it should be used only when space is not at a premium.
233The
234.Fn mergesort
235function
236is optimized for data with pre-existing order; its worst case
237time is O N lg N; its best case is O N.
238.Pp
239Normally,
240.Fn qsort
241is faster than
242.Fn mergesort
243is faster than
244.Fn heapsort .
245Memory availability and pre-existing order in the data can make this
246untrue.
247.Pp
248The
249.Fn qsort_s
250function behaves the same as
251.Fn qsort_r , except that:
252.Bl -dash
253.It
254The order of arguments is different
255.It
256The order of arguments to
257.Fa compar
258is different
259.It
260If
261.Fa nmemb
262or
263.Fa size
264are greater than
265.Dv RSIZE_MAX ,
266or
267.Fa nmemb
268is not zero and
269.Fa compar
270is
271.Dv NULL
272or
273.Fa size
274is zero, then the runtime-constraint handler is called, and
275.Fn qsort_s
276returns an error.
277Note that the handler is called before
278.Fn qsort_s
279returns the error, and the handler function might not return.
280.El
281.Sh RETURN VALUES
282The
283.Fn qsort
284and
285.Fn qsort_r
286functions
287return no value.
288The
289.Fn qsort_s
290function returns zero on success, non-zero on error.
291.Pp
292.Rv -std heapsort mergesort
293.Sh EXAMPLES
294A sample program that sorts an array of
295.Vt int
296values in place using
297.Fn qsort ,
298and then prints the sorted array to standard output is:
299.Bd -literal
300#include <stdio.h>
301#include <stdlib.h>
302
303/*
304 * Custom comparison function that compares 'int' values through pointers
305 * passed by qsort(3).
306 */
307static int
308int_compare(const void *p1, const void *p2)
309{
310	int left = *(const int *)p1;
311	int right = *(const int *)p2;
312
313	return ((left > right) - (left < right));
314}
315
316/*
317 * Sort an array of 'int' values and print it to standard output.
318 */
319int
320main(void)
321{
322	int int_array[] = { 4, 5, 9, 3, 0, 1, 7, 2, 8, 6 };
323	size_t array_size = sizeof(int_array) / sizeof(int_array[0]);
324	size_t k;
325
326	qsort(&int_array, array_size, sizeof(int_array[0]), int_compare);
327	for (k = 0; k < array_size; k++)
328		printf(" %d", int_array[k]);
329	puts("");
330	return (EXIT_SUCCESS);
331}
332.Ed
333.Sh COMPATIBILITY
334The order of arguments for the comparison function used with
335.Fn qsort_r
336is different from the one used by
337.Fn qsort_s ,
338and the GNU libc implementation of
339.Fn qsort_r .
340When porting software written for GNU libc, it is usually possible
341to replace
342.Fn qsort_r
343with
344.Fn qsort_s
345to work around this problem.
346.Pp
347.Fn qsort_s
348is part of the
349.Em optional
350Annex K portion of
351.St -isoC-2011
352and may not be portable to other standards-conforming platforms.
353.Pp
354Previous versions of
355.Fn qsort
356did not permit the comparison routine itself to call
357.Fn qsort 3 .
358This is no longer true.
359.Sh ERRORS
360The
361.Fn heapsort
362and
363.Fn mergesort
364functions succeed unless:
365.Bl -tag -width Er
366.It Bq Er EINVAL
367The
368.Fa size
369argument is zero, or,
370the
371.Fa size
372argument to
373.Fn mergesort
374is less than
375.Dq "sizeof(void *) / 2" .
376.It Bq Er ENOMEM
377The
378.Fn heapsort
379or
380.Fn mergesort
381functions
382were unable to allocate memory.
383.El
384.Sh SEE ALSO
385.Xr sort 1 ,
386.Xr radixsort 3
387.Rs
388.%A Hoare, C.A.R.
389.%D 1962
390.%T "Quicksort"
391.%J "The Computer Journal"
392.%V 5:1
393.%P pp. 10-15
394.Re
395.Rs
396.%A Williams, J.W.J
397.%D 1964
398.%T "Heapsort"
399.%J "Communications of the ACM"
400.%V 7:1
401.%P pp. 347-348
402.Re
403.Rs
404.%A Knuth, D.E.
405.%D 1968
406.%B "The Art of Computer Programming"
407.%V Vol. 3
408.%T "Sorting and Searching"
409.%P pp. 114-123, 145-149
410.Re
411.Rs
412.%A McIlroy, P.M.
413.%T "Optimistic Sorting and Information Theoretic Complexity"
414.%J "Fourth Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms"
415.%V January 1992
416.Re
417.Rs
418.%A Bentley, J.L.
419.%A McIlroy, M.D.
420.%T "Engineering a Sort Function"
421.%J "Software--Practice and Experience"
422.%V Vol. 23(11)
423.%P pp. 1249-1265
424.%D November\ 1993
425.Re
426.Sh STANDARDS
427The
428.Fn qsort
429function
430conforms to
431.St -isoC .
432.Fn qsort_s
433conforms to
434.St -isoC-2011
435K.3.6.3.2.
436.Sh HISTORY
437The variants of these functions that take blocks as arguments first appeared in
438Mac OS X.
439This implementation was created by David Chisnall.
440.Pp
441In
442.Fx 14.0 ,
443the prototype of
444.Fn qsort_r
445was updated to match POSIX.
446