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authorDavid Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>2015-12-07 18:34:05 +0100
committerDavid Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>2015-12-07 18:34:05 +0100
commita0e4cae82065edae47885614d73c534171aa8f7b (patch)
treee8d988cf71cf7cc9c3e2ab7ac72ab37c585f3ae8 /src/basic
parent1941d19a5407ff9fecb6a6b02dfc8b3ca6de9bd8 (diff)
basic: add RB-Tree implementation
This adds an self-standing RB-Tree implementation to src/basic/. This will be needed for NSEC RR lookups, since we need "close lookups", which hashmaps (not even ordered-hashmaps) can give us in reasonable time.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/basic')
-rw-r--r--src/basic/c-rbtree.c679
-rw-r--r--src/basic/c-rbtree.h297
2 files changed, 976 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/basic/c-rbtree.c b/src/basic/c-rbtree.c
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..914d7e5229
--- /dev/null
+++ b/src/basic/c-rbtree.c
@@ -0,0 +1,679 @@
+/***
+ This file is part of systemd. See COPYING for details.
+
+ systemd is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
+ under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
+
+ systemd 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
+ Lesser General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
+ along with systemd; If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+***/
+
+/*
+ * RB-Tree Implementation
+ * This implements the insertion/removal of elements in RB-Trees. You're highly
+ * recommended to have an RB-Tree documentation at hand when reading this. Both
+ * insertion and removal can be split into a handful of situations that can
+ * occur. Those situations are enumerated as "Case 1" to "Case n" here, and
+ * follow closely the cases described in most RB-Tree documentations. This file
+ * does not explain why it is enough to handle just those cases, nor does it
+ * provide a proof of correctness. Dig out your algorithm 101 handbook if
+ * you're interested.
+ *
+ * This implementation is *not* straightforward. Usually, a handful of
+ * rotation, reparent, swap and link helpers can be used to implement the
+ * rebalance operations. However, those often perform unnecessary writes.
+ * Therefore, this implementation hard-codes all the operations. You're highly
+ * recommended to look at the two basic helpers before reading the code:
+ * c_rbtree_swap_child()
+ * c_rbtree_set_parent_and_color()
+ * Those are the only helpers used, hence, you should really know what they do
+ * before digging into the code.
+ *
+ * For a highlevel documentation of the API, see the header file and docbook
+ * comments.
+ */
+
+#include <assert.h>
+#include <stddef.h>
+#include "c-rbtree.h"
+
+enum {
+ C_RBNODE_RED = 0,
+ C_RBNODE_BLACK = 1,
+};
+
+static inline unsigned long c_rbnode_color(CRBNode *n) {
+ return (unsigned long)n->__parent_and_color & 1UL;
+}
+
+static inline _Bool c_rbnode_is_red(CRBNode *n) {
+ return c_rbnode_color(n) == C_RBNODE_RED;
+}
+
+static inline _Bool c_rbnode_is_black(CRBNode *n) {
+ return c_rbnode_color(n) == C_RBNODE_BLACK;
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbnode_leftmost() - return leftmost child
+ * @n: current node, or NULL
+ *
+ * This returns the leftmost child of @n. If @n is NULL, this will return NULL.
+ * In all other cases, this function returns a valid pointer. That is, if @n
+ * does not have any left children, this returns @n.
+ *
+ * Worst case runtime (n: number of elements in tree): O(log(n))
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to leftmost child, or NULL.
+ */
+CRBNode *c_rbnode_leftmost(CRBNode *n) {
+ if (n)
+ while (n->left)
+ n = n->left;
+ return n;
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbnode_rightmost() - return rightmost child
+ * @n: current node, or NULL
+ *
+ * This returns the rightmost child of @n. If @n is NULL, this will return
+ * NULL. In all other cases, this function returns a valid pointer. That is, if
+ * @n does not have any right children, this returns @n.
+ *
+ * Worst case runtime (n: number of elements in tree): O(log(n))
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to rightmost child, or NULL.
+ */
+CRBNode *c_rbnode_rightmost(CRBNode *n) {
+ if (n)
+ while (n->right)
+ n = n->right;
+ return n;
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbnode_next() - return next node
+ * @n: current node, or NULL
+ *
+ * An RB-Tree always defines a linear order of its elements. This function
+ * returns the logically next node to @n. If @n is NULL, the last node or
+ * unlinked, this returns NULL.
+ *
+ * Worst case runtime (n: number of elements in tree): O(log(n))
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to next node, or NULL.
+ */
+CRBNode *c_rbnode_next(CRBNode *n) {
+ CRBNode *p;
+
+ if (!c_rbnode_is_linked(n))
+ return NULL;
+ if (n->right)
+ return c_rbnode_leftmost(n->right);
+
+ while ((p = c_rbnode_parent(n)) && n == p->right)
+ n = p;
+
+ return p;
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbnode_prev() - return previous node
+ * @n: current node, or NULL
+ *
+ * An RB-Tree always defines a linear order of its elements. This function
+ * returns the logically previous node to @n. If @n is NULL, the first node or
+ * unlinked, this returns NULL.
+ *
+ * Worst case runtime (n: number of elements in tree): O(log(n))
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to previous node, or NULL.
+ */
+CRBNode *c_rbnode_prev(CRBNode *n) {
+ CRBNode *p;
+
+ if (!c_rbnode_is_linked(n))
+ return NULL;
+ if (n->left)
+ return c_rbnode_rightmost(n->left);
+
+ while ((p = c_rbnode_parent(n)) && n == p->left)
+ n = p;
+
+ return p;
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbtree_first() - return first node
+ * @t: tree to operate on
+ *
+ * An RB-Tree always defines a linear order of its elements. This function
+ * returns the logically first node in @t. If @t is empty, NULL is returned.
+ *
+ * Fixed runtime (n: number of elements in tree): O(log(n))
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to first node, or NULL.
+ */
+CRBNode *c_rbtree_first(CRBTree *t) {
+ assert(t);
+ return c_rbnode_leftmost(t->root);
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbtree_last() - return last node
+ * @t: tree to operate on
+ *
+ * An RB-Tree always defines a linear order of its elements. This function
+ * returns the logically last node in @t. If @t is empty, NULL is returned.
+ *
+ * Fixed runtime (n: number of elements in tree): O(log(n))
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to last node, or NULL.
+ */
+CRBNode *c_rbtree_last(CRBTree *t) {
+ assert(t);
+ return c_rbnode_rightmost(t->root);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Set the color and parent of a node. This should be treated as a simple
+ * assignment of the 'color' and 'parent' fields of the node. No other magic is
+ * applied. But since both fields share its backing memory, this helper
+ * function is provided.
+ */
+static inline void c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(CRBNode *n, CRBNode *p, unsigned long c) {
+ assert(!((unsigned long)p & 1));
+ assert(c < 2);
+ n->__parent_and_color = (CRBNode*)((unsigned long)p | c);
+}
+
+/* same as c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(), but keeps the current parent */
+static inline void c_rbnode_set_color(CRBNode *n, unsigned long c) {
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(n, c_rbnode_parent(n), c);
+}
+
+/* same as c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(), but keeps the current color */
+static inline void c_rbnode_set_parent(CRBNode *n, CRBNode *p) {
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(n, p, c_rbnode_color(n));
+}
+
+/*
+ * This function partially replaces an existing child pointer to a new one. The
+ * existing child must be given as @old, the new child as @new. @p must be the
+ * parent of @old (or NULL if it has no parent).
+ * This function ensures that the parent of @old now points to @new. However,
+ * it does *NOT* change the parent pointer of @new. The caller must ensure
+ * this.
+ * If @p is NULL, this function ensures that the root-pointer is adjusted
+ * instead (given as @t).
+ */
+static inline void c_rbtree_swap_child(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *p, CRBNode *old, CRBNode *new) {
+ if (p) {
+ if (p->left == old)
+ p->left = new;
+ else
+ p->right = new;
+ } else {
+ t->root = new;
+ }
+}
+
+static inline CRBNode *c_rbtree_paint_one(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *n) {
+ CRBNode *p, *g, *gg, *u, *x;
+
+ /*
+ * Paint a single node according to RB-Tree rules. The node must
+ * already be linked into the tree and painted red.
+ * We repaint the node or rotate the tree, if required. In case a
+ * recursive repaint is required, the next node to be re-painted
+ * is returned.
+ * p: parent
+ * g: grandparent
+ * gg: grandgrandparent
+ * u: uncle
+ * x: temporary
+ */
+
+ /* node is red, so we can access the parent directly */
+ p = n->__parent_and_color;
+
+ if (!p) {
+ /* Case 1:
+ * We reached the root. Mark it black and be done. As all
+ * leaf-paths share the root, the ratio of black nodes on each
+ * path stays the same. */
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(n, p, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ n = NULL;
+ } else if (c_rbnode_is_black(p)) {
+ /* Case 2:
+ * The parent is already black. As our node is red, we did not
+ * change the number of black nodes on any path, nor do we have
+ * multiple consecutive red nodes. */
+ n = NULL;
+ } else if (p == p->__parent_and_color->left) { /* parent is red, so grandparent exists */
+ g = p->__parent_and_color;
+ gg = c_rbnode_parent(g);
+ u = g->right;
+
+ if (u && c_rbnode_is_red(u)) {
+ /* Case 3:
+ * Parent and uncle are both red. We know the
+ * grandparent must be black then. Repaint parent and
+ * uncle black, the grandparent red and recurse into
+ * the grandparent. */
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, g, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(u, g, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(g, gg, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ n = g;
+ } else {
+ /* parent is red, uncle is black */
+
+ if (n == p->right) {
+ /* Case 4:
+ * We're the right child. Rotate on parent to
+ * become left child, so we can handle it the
+ * same as case 5. */
+ x = n->left;
+ p->right = n->left;
+ n->left = p;
+ if (x)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, p, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, n, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ p = n;
+ }
+
+ /* 'n' is invalid from here on! */
+ n = NULL;
+
+ /* Case 5:
+ * We're the red left child or a red parent, black
+ * grandparent and uncle. Rotate on grandparent and
+ * switch color with parent. Number of black nodes on
+ * each path stays the same, but we got rid of the
+ * double red path. As the grandparent is still black,
+ * we're done. */
+ x = p->right;
+ g->left = x;
+ p->right = g;
+ if (x)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, g, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, gg, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(g, p, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, gg, g, p);
+ }
+ } else /* if (p == p->__parent_and_color->left) */ { /* same as above, but mirrored */
+ g = p->__parent_and_color;
+ gg = c_rbnode_parent(g);
+ u = g->left;
+
+ if (u && c_rbnode_is_red(u)) {
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, g, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(u, g, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(g, gg, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ n = g;
+ } else {
+ if (n == p->left) {
+ x = n->right;
+ p->left = n->right;
+ n->right = p;
+ if (x)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, p, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, n, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ p = n;
+ }
+
+ n = NULL;
+
+ x = p->left;
+ g->right = x;
+ p->left = g;
+ if (x)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, g, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, gg, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(g, p, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, gg, g, p);
+ }
+ }
+
+ return n;
+}
+
+static inline void c_rbtree_paint(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *n) {
+ assert(t);
+ assert(n);
+
+ while (n)
+ n = c_rbtree_paint_one(t, n);
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbtree_add() - add node to tree
+ * @t: tree to operate one
+ * @p: parent node to link under, or NULL
+ * @l: left/right slot of @p (or root) to link at
+ * @n: node to add
+ *
+ * This links @n into the tree given as @t. The caller must provide the exact
+ * spot where to link the node. That is, the caller must traverse the tree
+ * based on their search order. Once they hit a leaf where to insert the node,
+ * call this function to link it and rebalance the tree.
+ *
+ * A typical insertion would look like this (@t is your tree, @n is your node):
+ *
+ * CRBNode **i, *p;
+ *
+ * i = &t->root;
+ * p = NULL;
+ * while (*i) {
+ * p = *i;
+ * if (compare(n, *i) < 0)
+ * i = &(*i)->left;
+ * else
+ * i = &(*i)->right;
+ * }
+ *
+ * c_rbtree_add(t, p, i, n);
+ *
+ * Once the node is linked into the tree, a simple lookup on the same tree can
+ * be coded like this:
+ *
+ * CRBNode *i;
+ *
+ * i = t->root;
+ * while (i) {
+ * int v = compare(n, i);
+ * if (v < 0)
+ * i = (*i)->left;
+ * else if (v > 0)
+ * i = (*i)->right;
+ * else
+ * break;
+ * }
+ *
+ * When you add nodes to a tree, the memory contents of the node do not matter.
+ * That is, there is no need to initialize the node via c_rbnode_init().
+ * However, if you relink nodes multiple times during their lifetime, it is
+ * usually very convenient to use c_rbnode_init() and c_rbtree_remove_init().
+ * In those cases, you should validate that a node is unlinked before you call
+ * c_rbtree_add().
+ */
+void c_rbtree_add(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *p, CRBNode **l, CRBNode *n) {
+ assert(t);
+ assert(l);
+ assert(n);
+ assert(!p || l == &p->left || l == &p->right);
+ assert(p || l == &t->root);
+
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(n, p, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ n->left = n->right = NULL;
+ *l = n;
+
+ c_rbtree_paint(t, n);
+}
+
+static inline CRBNode *c_rbtree_rebalance_one(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *p, CRBNode *n) {
+ CRBNode *s, *x, *y, *g;
+
+ /*
+ * Rebalance tree after a node was removed. This happens only if you
+ * remove a black node and one path is now left with an unbalanced
+ * number or black nodes.
+ * This function assumes all paths through p and n have one black node
+ * less than all other paths. If recursive fixup is required, the
+ * current node is returned.
+ */
+
+ if (n == p->left) {
+ s = p->right;
+ if (c_rbnode_is_red(s)) {
+ /* Case 3:
+ * We have a red node as sibling. Rotate it onto our
+ * side so we can later on turn it black. This way, we
+ * gain the additional black node in our path. */
+ g = c_rbnode_parent(p);
+ x = s->left;
+ p->right = x;
+ s->left = p;
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, p, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(s, g, c_rbnode_color(p));
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, s, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, g, p, s);
+ s = x;
+ }
+
+ x = s->right;
+ if (!x || c_rbnode_is_black(x)) {
+ y = s->left;
+ if (!y || c_rbnode_is_black(y)) {
+ /* Case 4:
+ * Our sibling is black and has only black
+ * children. Flip it red and turn parent black.
+ * This way we gained a black node in our path,
+ * or we fix it recursively one layer up, which
+ * will rotate the red sibling as parent. */
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(s, p, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ if (c_rbnode_is_black(p))
+ return p;
+
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, c_rbnode_parent(p), C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ return NULL;
+ }
+
+ /* Case 5:
+ * Left child of our sibling is red, right one is black.
+ * Rotate on parent so the right child of our sibling is
+ * now red, and we can fall through to case 6. */
+ x = y->right;
+ s->left = y->right;
+ y->right = s;
+ p->right = y;
+ if (x)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, s, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ x = s;
+ s = y;
+ }
+
+ /* Case 6:
+ * The right child of our sibling is red. Rotate left and flip
+ * colors, which gains us an additional black node in our path,
+ * that was previously on our sibling. */
+ g = c_rbnode_parent(p);
+ y = s->left;
+ p->right = y;
+ s->left = p;
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, s, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ if (y)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(y, p, c_rbnode_color(y));
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(s, g, c_rbnode_color(p));
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, s, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, g, p, s);
+ } else /* if (!n || n == p->right) */ { /* same as above, but mirrored */
+ s = p->left;
+ if (c_rbnode_is_red(s)) {
+ g = c_rbnode_parent(p);
+ x = s->right;
+ p->left = x;
+ s->right = p;
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, p, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(s, g, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, s, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, g, p, s);
+ s = x;
+ }
+
+ x = s->left;
+ if (!x || c_rbnode_is_black(x)) {
+ y = s->right;
+ if (!y || c_rbnode_is_black(y)) {
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(s, p, C_RBNODE_RED);
+ if (c_rbnode_is_black(p))
+ return p;
+
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, c_rbnode_parent(p), C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ return NULL;
+ }
+
+ x = y->left;
+ s->right = y->left;
+ y->left = s;
+ p->left = y;
+ if (x)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, s, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ x = s;
+ s = y;
+ }
+
+ g = c_rbnode_parent(p);
+ y = s->right;
+ p->left = y;
+ s->right = p;
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(x, s, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ if (y)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(y, p, c_rbnode_color(y));
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(s, g, c_rbnode_color(p));
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(p, s, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, g, p, s);
+ }
+
+ return NULL;
+}
+
+static inline void c_rbtree_rebalance(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *p) {
+ CRBNode *n = NULL;
+
+ assert(t);
+ assert(p);
+
+ do {
+ n = c_rbtree_rebalance_one(t, p, n);
+ p = n ? c_rbnode_parent(n) : NULL;
+ } while (p);
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbtree_remove() - remove node from tree
+ * @t: tree to operate one
+ * @n: node to remove
+ *
+ * This removes the given node from its tree. Once unlinked, the tree is
+ * rebalanced.
+ * The caller *must* ensure that the given tree is actually the tree it is
+ * linked on. Otherwise, behavior is undefined.
+ *
+ * This does *NOT* reset @n to being unlinked (for performance reason, this
+ * function *never* modifies @n at all). If you need this, use
+ * c_rbtree_remove_init().
+ */
+void c_rbtree_remove(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *n) {
+ CRBNode *p, *s, *gc, *x, *next = NULL;
+ unsigned long c;
+
+ assert(t);
+ assert(n);
+ assert(c_rbnode_is_linked(n));
+
+ /*
+ * There are three distinct cases during node removal of a tree:
+ * * The node has no children, in which case it can simply be removed.
+ * * The node has exactly one child, in which case the child displaces
+ * its parent.
+ * * The node has two children, in which case there is guaranteed to
+ * be a successor to the node (successor being the node ordered
+ * directly after it). This successor cannot have two children by
+ * itself (two interior nodes can never be successive). Therefore,
+ * we can simply swap the node with its successor (including color)
+ * and have reduced this case to either of the first two.
+ *
+ * Whenever the node we removed was black, we have to rebalance the
+ * tree. Note that this affects the actual node we _remove_, not @n (in
+ * case we swap it).
+ *
+ * p: parent
+ * s: successor
+ * gc: grand-...-child
+ * x: temporary
+ * next: next node to rebalance on
+ */
+
+ if (!n->left) {
+ /*
+ * Case 1:
+ * The node has no left child. If it neither has a right child,
+ * it is a leaf-node and we can simply unlink it. If it also
+ * was black, we have to rebalance, as always if we remove a
+ * black node.
+ * But if the node has a right child, the child *must* be red
+ * (otherwise, the right path has more black nodes as the
+ * non-existing left path), and the node to be removed must
+ * hence be black. We simply replace the node with its child,
+ * turning the red child black, and thus no rebalancing is
+ * required.
+ */
+ p = c_rbnode_parent(n);
+ c = c_rbnode_color(n);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, p, n, n->right);
+ if (n->right)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(n->right, p, c);
+ else
+ next = (c == C_RBNODE_BLACK) ? p : NULL;
+ } else if (!n->right) {
+ /*
+ * Case 1.1:
+ * The node has exactly one child, and it is on the left. Treat
+ * it as mirrored case of Case 1 (i.e., replace the node by its
+ * child).
+ */
+ p = c_rbnode_parent(n);
+ c = c_rbnode_color(n);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, p, n, n->left);
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(n->left, p, c);
+ } else {
+ /*
+ * Case 2:
+ * We are dealing with a full interior node with a child not on
+ * both sides. Find its successor and swap it. Then remove the
+ * node similar to Case 1. For performance reasons we don't
+ * perform the full swap, but skip links that are about to be
+ * removed, anyway.
+ */
+ s = n->right;
+ if (!s->left) {
+ /* right child is next, no need to touch grandchild */
+ p = s;
+ gc = s->right;
+ } else {
+ /* find successor and swap partially */
+ s = c_rbnode_leftmost(s);
+ p = c_rbnode_parent(s);
+
+ gc = s->right;
+ p->left = s->right;
+ s->right = n->right;
+ c_rbnode_set_parent(n->right, s);
+ }
+
+ /* node is partially swapped, now remove as in Case 1 */
+ s->left = n->left;
+ c_rbnode_set_parent(n->left, s);
+
+ x = c_rbnode_parent(n);
+ c = c_rbnode_color(n);
+ c_rbtree_swap_child(t, x, n, s);
+ if (gc)
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(gc, p, C_RBNODE_BLACK);
+ else
+ next = c_rbnode_is_black(s) ? p : NULL;
+ c_rbnode_set_parent_and_color(s, x, c);
+ }
+
+ if (next)
+ c_rbtree_rebalance(t, next);
+}
diff --git a/src/basic/c-rbtree.h b/src/basic/c-rbtree.h
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..20c5515ca1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/src/basic/c-rbtree.h
@@ -0,0 +1,297 @@
+#pragma once
+
+/***
+ This file is part of systemd. See COPYING for details.
+
+ systemd is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
+ under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
+
+ systemd 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
+ Lesser General Public License for more details.
+
+ You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
+ along with systemd; If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+***/
+
+/*
+ * Standalone Red-Black-Tree Implementation in Standard ISO-C11
+ *
+ * This header provides an RB-Tree API, that is fully implemented in ISO-C11
+ * and has no external dependencies. Furthermore, tree traversal, memory
+ * allocations, and key comparisons a fully in control of the API user. The
+ * implementation only provides the RB-Tree specific rebalancing and coloring.
+ *
+ * A tree is represented by the "CRBTree" structure. It contains a *singly*
+ * field, which is a pointer to the root node. If NULL, the tree is empty. If
+ * non-NULL, there is at least a single element in the tree.
+ *
+ * Each node of the tree is represented by the "CRBNode" structure. It has
+ * three fields. The @left and @right members can be accessed by the API user
+ * directly to traverse the tree. The third member is an implementation detail
+ * and encodes the parent pointer and color of the node.
+ * API users are required to embed the CRBNode object into their own objects
+ * and then use offsetof() (i.e., container_of() and friends) to turn CRBNode
+ * pointers into pointers to their own structure.
+ */
+
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+extern "C" {
+#endif
+
+typedef struct CRBNode CRBNode;
+typedef struct CRBTree CRBTree;
+
+/**
+ * struct CRBNode - Node of a Red-Black Tree
+ * @__parent_and_color: internal state
+ * @left: left child, or NULL
+ * @right: right child, or NULL
+ *
+ * Each node in an RB-Tree must embed an CRBNode object. This object contains
+ * pointers to its left and right child, which can be freely accessed by the
+ * API user at any time. They are NULL, if the node does not have a left/right
+ * child.
+ *
+ * The @__parent_and_color field must never be accessed directly. It encodes
+ * the pointer to the parent node, and the color of the node. Use the accessor
+ * functions instead.
+ *
+ * There is no reason to initialize a CRBNode object before linking it.
+ * However, if you need a boolean state that tells you whether the node is
+ * linked or not, you should initialize the node via c_rbnode_init() or
+ * C_RBNODE_INIT.
+ */
+struct CRBNode {
+ CRBNode *__parent_and_color;
+ CRBNode *left;
+ CRBNode *right;
+};
+
+#define C_RBNODE_INIT(_var) { .__parent_and_color = &(_var) }
+
+CRBNode *c_rbnode_leftmost(CRBNode *n);
+CRBNode *c_rbnode_rightmost(CRBNode *n);
+CRBNode *c_rbnode_next(CRBNode *n);
+CRBNode *c_rbnode_prev(CRBNode *n);
+
+/**
+ * struct CRBTree - Red-Black Tree
+ * @root: pointer to the root node, or NULL
+ *
+ * Each Red-Black Tree is rooted in an CRBTree object. This object contains a
+ * pointer to the root node of the tree. The API user is free to access the
+ * @root member at any time, and use it to traverse the tree.
+ *
+ * To initialize an RB-Tree, set it to NULL / all zero.
+ */
+struct CRBTree {
+ CRBNode *root;
+};
+
+CRBNode *c_rbtree_first(CRBTree *t);
+CRBNode *c_rbtree_last(CRBTree *t);
+
+void c_rbtree_add(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *p, CRBNode **l, CRBNode *n);
+void c_rbtree_remove(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *n);
+
+/**
+ * c_rbnode_init() - mark a node as unlinked
+ * @n: node to operate on
+ *
+ * This marks the node @n as unlinked. The node will be set to a valid state
+ * that can never happen if the node is linked in a tree. Furthermore, this
+ * state is fully known to the implementation, and as such handled gracefully
+ * in all cases.
+ *
+ * You are *NOT* required to call this on your node. c_rbtree_add() can handle
+ * uninitialized nodes just fine. However, calling this allows to use
+ * c_rbnode_is_linked() to check for the state of a node. Furthermore,
+ * iterators and accessors can be called on initialized (yet unlinked) nodes.
+ *
+ * Use the C_RBNODE_INIT macro if you want to initialize static variables.
+ */
+static inline void c_rbnode_init(CRBNode *n) {
+ *n = (CRBNode)C_RBNODE_INIT(*n);
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbnode_is_linked() - check whether a node is linked
+ * @n: node to check, or NULL
+ *
+ * This checks whether the passed node is linked. If you pass NULL, or if the
+ * node is not linked into a tree, this will return false. Otherwise, this
+ * returns true.
+ *
+ * Note that you must have either linked the node or initialized it, before
+ * calling this function. Never call this function on uninitialized nodes.
+ * Furthermore, removing a node via c_rbtree_remove() does *NOT* mark the node
+ * as unlinked. You have to call c_rbnode_init() yourself after removal, or use
+ * the c_rbtree_remove_init() helper.
+ *
+ * Return: true if the node is linked, false if not.
+ */
+static inline _Bool c_rbnode_is_linked(CRBNode *n) {
+ return n && n->__parent_and_color != n;
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbnode_parent() - return parent pointer
+ * @n node to access
+ *
+ * This returns a pointer to the parent of the given node @n. If @n does not
+ * have a parent, NULL is returned. If @n is not linked, @n itself is returned.
+ *
+ * You should not call this on unlinked or uninitialized nodes! If you do, you
+ * better know how its semantics.
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to parent.
+ */
+static inline CRBNode *c_rbnode_parent(CRBNode *n) {
+ return (CRBNode*)((unsigned long)n->__parent_and_color & ~1UL);
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbtree_remove_init() - safely remove node from tree and reinitialize it
+ * @t: tree to operate on
+ * @n: node to remove, or NULL
+ *
+ * This is almost the same as c_rbtree_remove(), but extends it slightly, to be
+ * more convenient to use in many cases:
+ * - if @n is unlinked or NULL, this is a no-op
+ * - @n is reinitialized after being removed
+ */
+static inline void c_rbtree_remove_init(CRBTree *t, CRBNode *n) {
+ if (c_rbnode_is_linked(n)) {
+ c_rbtree_remove(t, n);
+ c_rbnode_init(n);
+ }
+}
+
+/**
+ * CRBCompareFunc - compare a node to a key
+ * @t: tree where the node is linked to
+ * @k: key to compare
+ * @n: node to compare
+ *
+ * If you use the tree-traversal helpers (which are optional), you need to
+ * provide this callback so they can compare nodes in a tree to the key you
+ * look for.
+ *
+ * The tree @t is provided as optional context to this callback. The key you
+ * look for is provided as @k, the current node that should be compared to is
+ * provided as @n. This function should work like strcmp(), that is, return -1
+ * if @key orders before @n, 0 if both compare equal, and 1 if it orders after
+ * @n.
+ */
+typedef int (*CRBCompareFunc) (CRBTree *t, void *k, CRBNode *n);
+
+/**
+ * c_rbtree_find_node() - find node
+ * @t: tree to search through
+ * @f: comparison function
+ * @k: key to search for
+ *
+ * This searches through @t for a node that compares equal to @k. The function
+ * @f must be provided by the caller, which is used to compare nodes to @k. See
+ * the documentation of CRBCompareFunc for details.
+ *
+ * If there are multiple entries that compare equal to @k, this will return a
+ * pseudo-randomly picked node. If you need stable lookup functions for trees
+ * where duplicate entries are allowed, you better code your own lookup.
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to matching node, or NULL.
+ */
+static inline CRBNode *c_rbtree_find_node(CRBTree *t, CRBCompareFunc f, const void *k) {
+ CRBNode *i;
+
+ assert(t);
+ assert(f);
+
+ i = t->root;
+ while (i) {
+ int v = f(t, (void *)k, i);
+ if (v < 0)
+ i = i->left;
+ else if (v > 0)
+ i = i->right;
+ else
+ return i;
+ }
+
+ return NULL;
+}
+
+/**
+ * c_rbtree_find_entry() - find entry
+ * @_t: tree to search through
+ * @_f: comparison function
+ * @_k: key to search for
+ * @_t: type of the structure that embeds the nodes
+ * @_o: name of the node-member in type @_t
+ *
+ * This is very similar to c_rbtree_find_node(), but instead of returning a
+ * pointer to the CRBNode, it returns a pointer to the surrounding object. This
+ * object must embed the CRBNode object. The type of the surrounding object
+ * must be given as @_t, and the name of the embedded CRBNode member as @_o.
+ *
+ * See c_rbtree_find_node() for more details.
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to found entry, NULL if not found.
+ */
+#define c_rbtree_find_entry(_m, _f, _k, _t, _o) \
+ ((_t *)(((char *)c_rbtree_find_node((_m), (_f), (_k)) ?: \
+ (char *)NULL + offsetof(_t, _o)) - offsetof(_t, _o)))
+
+/**
+ * c_rbtree_find_slot() - find slot to insert new node
+ * @t: tree to search through
+ * @f: comparison function
+ * @k: key to search for
+ * @p: output storage for parent pointer
+ *
+ * This searches through @t just like c_rbtree_find_node() does. However,
+ * instead of returning a pointer to a node that compares equal to @k, this
+ * searches for a slot to insert a node with key @k. A pointer to the slot is
+ * returned, and a pointer to the parent of the slot is stored in @p. Both
+ * can be passed directly to c_rbtree_add(), together with your node to insert.
+ *
+ * If there already is a node in the tree, that compares equal to @k, this will
+ * return NULL and store the conflicting node in @p. In all other cases,
+ * this will return a pointer (non-NULL) to the empty slot to insert the node
+ * at. @p will point to the parent node of that slot.
+ *
+ * If you want trees that allow duplicate nodes, you better code your own
+ * insertion function.
+ *
+ * Return: Pointer to slot to insert node, or NULL on conflicts.
+ */
+static inline CRBNode **c_rbtree_find_slot(CRBTree *t, CRBCompareFunc f, const void *k, CRBNode **p) {
+ CRBNode **i;
+
+ assert(t);
+ assert(f);
+ assert(p);
+
+ i = &t->root;
+ *p = NULL;
+ while (*i) {
+ int v = f(t, (void *)k, *i);
+ *p = *i;
+ if (v < 0)
+ i = &(*i)->left;
+ else if (v > 0)
+ i = &(*i)->right;
+ else
+ return NULL;
+ }
+
+ return i;
+}
+
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+}
+#endif