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Motivation
==========

Treaps provide a memory-efficient binary search tree structure.
Insertion/deletion/search are about as about as fast in the average
case as red-black trees and the chances of worst-case behavior are
vanishingly small, thanks to (pseudo-)randomness.  The bad worst-case
behavior is a small price to pay, given that treaps are much simpler
to implement.

API
===

The trp API generates a data structure and functions to handle a
large growing set of objects stored in a pool.

The caller:

. Specifies parameters for the generated functions with the
  trp_gen(static, foo_, ...) macro.

. Allocates a `struct trp_root` variable and sets it to {~0}.

. Adds new nodes to the set using `foo_insert`.  Any pointers
  to existing nodes cannot be relied upon any more, so the caller
  might retrieve them anew with `foo_pointer`.

. Can find a specific item in the set using `foo_search`.

. Can iterate over items in the set using `foo_first` and `foo_next`.

. Can remove an item from the set using `foo_remove`.

Example:

----
struct ex_node {
	const char *s;
	struct trp_node ex_link;
};
static struct trp_root ex_base = {~0};
obj_pool_gen(ex, struct ex_node, 4096);
trp_gen(static, ex_, struct ex_node, ex_link, ex, strcmp)
struct ex_node *item;

item = ex_pointer(ex_alloc(1));
item->s = "hello";
ex_insert(&ex_base, item);
item = ex_pointer(ex_alloc(1));
item->s = "goodbye";
ex_insert(&ex_base, item);
for (item = ex_first(&ex_base); item; item = ex_next(&ex_base, item))
	printf("%s\n", item->s);
----

Functions
---------

trp_gen(attr, foo_, node_type, link_field, pool, cmp)::

	Generate a type-specific treap implementation.
+
. The storage class for generated functions will be 'attr' (e.g., `static`).
. Generated function names are prefixed with 'foo_' (e.g., `treap_`).
. Treap nodes will be of type 'node_type' (e.g., `struct treap_node`).
  This type must be a struct with at least one `struct trp_node` field
  to point to its children.
. The field used to access child nodes will be 'link_field'.
. All treap nodes must lie in the 'pool' object pool.
. Treap nodes must be totally ordered by the 'cmp' relation, with the
  following prototype:
+
int (*cmp)(node_type \*a, node_type \*b)
+
and returning a value less than, equal to, or greater than zero
according to the result of comparison.

node_type {asterisk}foo_insert(struct trp_root *treap, node_type \*node)::

	Insert node into treap.  If inserted multiple times,
	a node will appear in the treap multiple times.
+
The return value is the address of the node within the treap,
which might differ from `node` if `pool_alloc` had to call
`realloc` to expand the pool.

void foo_remove(struct trp_root *treap, node_type \*node)::

	Remove node from treap.  Caller must ensure node is
	present in treap before using this function.

node_type *foo_search(struct trp_root \*treap, node_type \*key)::

	Search for a node that matches key.  If no match is found,
	result is NULL.

node_type *foo_nsearch(struct trp_root \*treap, node_type \*key)::

	Like `foo_search`, but if the key is missing return what
	would be key's successor, were key in treap (NULL if no
	successor).

node_type *foo_first(struct trp_root \*treap)::

	Find the first item from the treap, in sorted order.

node_type *foo_next(struct trp_root \*treap, node_type \*node)::

	Find the next item.