Thomas: As stated, twice, the full code is on SourceForge as uac19 v3.3. If you need me to send you a tgz with sample data please let me know, but note the comments and patch below. I can certainly walk you through reproducing the problem if you believe that is worthwhile.
Stephen: Thank you. I couldn't get the 'blame' to work (I am not git savvy), but I got the cygwin qsort.c. The problem is *EXACTLY* as described by Dennis de Champeaux in the 2015-01-11 cygwin list posting. The secondary insertion sort attempt is not safe. I patched as follows, the de Champeaux is code is more correct in removing swap_cnt as it is no longer used: kc: diff -u qsort.c cygsort.c --- qsort.c 2020-09-01 15:36:39.716029300 -0700 +++ cygsort.c 2020-09-01 16:47:30.152545600 -0700 @@ -252,14 +252,15 @@ pb += es; pc -= es; } - if (swap_cnt == 0) { /* Switch to insertion sort */ +/* kc + if (swap_cnt == 0) { // Switch to insertion sort for (pm = (char *) a + es; pm < (char *) a + n * es; pm += es) for (pl = pm; pl > (char *) a && CMP(thunk, pl - es, pl) > 0; pl -= es) swap(pl, pl - es); goto pop; } - +kc */ /* * Rearrange the array in three parts sorted like this: * { elements < pivot, elements == pivot, elements > pivot } If you need me to provide further information, please advise. Regards, kurt On Tue, Sep 1, 2020 at 3:02 PM Thomas Wolff <t...@towo.net> wrote: > Am 01.09.2020 um 22:29 schrieb Kurt-Karen Carlson-Lougheed via Cygwin: > > Brian: > > 1. The Qsort() source I sent was from netbsd.org, NOT cygwin. netbsd > works. > > 2. Complete package is on SourceForge as uac19 v3.3. I'm happy to send a > > tgz if you prefer that. Read 3 choices at end before considering this. > > 3. Data is curl'd from owid as shown in the script example. Likewise I > can > > send a sample data set. The program analyzes COVID-19 csv files from > either > > owid or github/nytimes > > 4. I've used qsort() for years. I agree, keeping the sort routines simple > > is always appropriate. I confirmed today the only ones that fail include > > float divides, lDsort() and lXsort() in attached c19sort.c. When it's > > pre-calculated and added to the struct it works, the code has a toggle > now > > for testing that. > > > > Thomas: > > I tried (again) today to build a simple test case. The data structures > in > > use are complex, probably the only thing I can attempt is stripping down > > the code which will be very time consuming. I know you don't know me at > > all, but I've written code, debugged proprietary operating systems > > (assembler), performed OS dump analysis, troubleshot intermittent > hardware > > issues, identified disk firmware issues causing intermittent data > > corruption, identified nfs performance issues, managed large hpc > clusters, > > etc. etc. etc. over 40+ years. > Your code does not even compile. I did not ask for a minimal test case > although that is generally appreciated. But a working test case at least > is required to establlish your claim of a bug. > > > > I see three choices: > > A. One of you look at simple the qqsort wrapper. I modified my code to > > toggle between the functional netbsd Qsort() and cygwin qsort(). I have > > demonstrated erroneous results coming from the cygwin version in a small > > percentage of requests. If you can acknowledge that, perhaps you can > check > > the cygwin version of qsort() vs. the current netbsd.org? > > B. If you could kindly provide me or point me to the cygwin qsort() > source > > I'll check it out myself. > > C. We can thank each other and leave cygwin's qsort() as is broken in > some > > small number of circumstances since I've compiled netbsd's into my code > and > > that always works. > > > > Regards, kurt > -- > Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html > FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ > Documentation: https://cygwin.com/docs.html > Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple > -- Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: https://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple