dslib
is a library of cohesive data structures. The goal of dslib
is to demonstrate how complex data structures (and related algorithms) can be developed by reusing simpler ones. In general, textbooks come with numerous unrelated examples, each relevant to a specific data structure. dslib
, on the other hand, grows by building on the elementary data structures.
The core component is a circular doubly linked list. Library-internal data structures are dynamically (de)allocated.
Most of the code conforms to the Linux kernel coding standards (verified against checkpatch.pl), other than a few unavoidable instances.
dslib
is an academic library. However, we'll be glad if someone finds any other application of it.
DS | Description |
---|---|
dlist | Circular doubly linked list. Node has next, prev and data (void * , caller (de)allocates) pointers. |
queue | Builds on top of dlist. Each element is a dlist node pointing to the value inserted in the queue. |
stack | Builds on top of dlist. Each element is a dlist node pointing to the value pushed in the stack. |
tree | A binary search tree, stores integers. |
AVL | An AVL tree implementation, stores integers. |
BFS | Iterative Breadth-first search for tree and AVL implemented using the queue. |
DFS | Iterative Depth-first search for tree implemented using the stack. |
There are test cases for each DS. Though not very organized, they provide an insight into the usage of dslib
.
A complete list of APIs can be found in apilist.txt. Most of the APIs are iterative. The following 2 APIs are recursive and the iterative implementations are left as an exercise:
bool delete_tree_node(tree_pp head, int val);
bool delete_avl_node(avl_pp head, int val);
Currently the Thread-Safe mode is implemented only for AVL. The lock functions are in common.h and common.c and it's easy to extend thread-safety in other structures.
The following compilation steps are tested on Ubuntu 14.04.4 x86_64:
$ git clone https://github.com/jarun/dslib/
$ cd dslib
$ make
To install dslib
, run:
$ sudo make install
To remove dslib
from your system, run:
$ sudo make uninstall
Clean up (cleans test executables too):
$ make clean
Make sure dslib
is installed. To compile test cases under test
subdirectory:
$ sudo make install
$ make test
Only informative logs are enabled. For DEBUG logs, set:
int current_log_level = DEBUG;
in the source test file.
- Arun Prakash Jana (Copyright © 2015)
- Ananya Jana
Contributions are welcome! We would love to see more data structures and APIs added to dslib
.