bitmap_onto — translate one bitmap relative to another
void bitmap_onto ( | unsigned long * dst, |
| const unsigned long * orig, | |
| const unsigned long * relmap, | |
unsigned int bits); |
dstresulting translated bitmap
origoriginal untranslated bitmap
relmapbitmap relative to which translated
bitsnumber of bits in each of these bitmaps
Set the n-th bit of dst iff there exists some m such that the
n-th bit of relmap is set, the m-th bit of orig is set, and
the n-th bit of relmap is also the m-th _set_ bit of relmap.
(If you understood the previous sentence the first time your
read it, you're overqualified for your current job.)
In other words, orig is mapped onto (surjectively) dst,
using the map { <n, m> | the n-th bit of relmap is the
m-th set bit of relmap }.
Any set bits in orig above bit number W, where W is the
weight of (number of set bits in) relmap are mapped nowhere.
In particular, if for all bits m set in orig, m >= W, then
dst will end up empty. In situations where the possibility
of such an empty result is not desired, one way to avoid it is
to use the bitmap_fold operator, below, to first fold the
orig bitmap over itself so that all its set bits x are in the
range 0 <= x < W. The bitmap_fold operator does this by
setting the bit (m % W) in dst, for each bit (m) set in orig.
Example [1] for bitmap_onto:
Let's say relmap has bits 30-39 set, and orig has bits
1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 set. Then on return from this routine,
dst will have bits 31, 33, 35, 37 and 39 set.
When bit 0 is set in orig, it means turn on the bit in
dst corresponding to whatever is the first bit (if any)
that is turned on in relmap. Since bit 0 was off in the
above example, we leave off that bit (bit 30) in dst.
When bit 1 is set in orig (as in the above example), it
means turn on the bit in dst corresponding to whatever
is the second bit that is turned on in relmap. The second
bit in relmap that was turned on in the above example was
bit 31, so we turned on bit 31 in dst.
Similarly, we turned on bits 33, 35, 37 and 39 in dst,
because they were the 4th, 6th, 8th and 10th set bits
set in relmap, and the 4th, 6th, 8th and 10th bits of
orig (i.e. bits 3, 5, 7 and 9) were also set.
When bit 11 is set in orig, it means turn on the bit in
dst corresponding to whatever is the twelfth bit that is
turned on in relmap. In the above example, there were
only ten bits turned on in relmap (30..39), so that bit
11 was set in orig had no affect on dst.
Example [2] for bitmap_fold + bitmap_onto:
Let's say relmap has these ten bits set:
40 41 42 43 45 48 53 61 74 95
(for the curious, that's 40 plus the first ten terms of the
Fibonacci sequence.)
Further lets say we use the following code, invoking
bitmap_fold then bitmap_onto, as suggested above to
avoid the possibility of an empty dst result:
unsigned long *tmp; // a temporary bitmap's bits
bitmap_fold(tmp, orig, bitmap_weight(relmap, bits), bits); bitmap_onto(dst, tmp, relmap, bits);
Then this table shows what various values of dst would be, for
various orig's. I list the zero-based positions of each set bit.
The tmp column shows the intermediate result, as computed by
using bitmap_fold to fold the orig bitmap modulo ten
(the weight of relmap).
orig tmp dst
0 0 40
1 1 41
9 9 95
10 0 40 (*)
1 3 5 7 1 3 5 7 41 43 48 61
0 1 2 3 4 0 1 2 3 4 40 41 42 43 45
0 9 18 27 0 9 8 7 40 61 74 95
0 10 20 30 0 40
0 11 22 33 0 1 2 3 40 41 42 43
0 12 24 36 0 2 4 6 40 42 45 53
78 102 211 1 2 8 41 42 74 (*)
(*) For these marked lines, if we hadn't first done bitmap_fold
into tmp, then the dst result would have been empty.
If either of orig or relmap is empty (no set bits), then dst
will be returned empty.
If (as explained above) the only set bits in orig are in positions
m where m >= W, (where W is the weight of relmap) then dst will
once again be returned empty.
All bits in dst not set by the above rule are cleared.