From: Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> There's no easy way to make a copy of a bitmap. Obviously a caller can iterate over the bits and set them one by one in a new bitmap, but we can go much faster by copying whole words with memcpy(). Signed-off-by: Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Taylor Blau <me@xxxxxxxxxxxx> --- ewah/bitmap.c | 7 +++++++ ewah/ewok.h | 1 + 2 files changed, 8 insertions(+) diff --git a/ewah/bitmap.c b/ewah/bitmap.c index c3f8e7242b..eb7e2539be 100644 --- a/ewah/bitmap.c +++ b/ewah/bitmap.c @@ -35,6 +35,13 @@ struct bitmap *bitmap_new(void) return bitmap_word_alloc(32); } +struct bitmap *bitmap_dup(const struct bitmap *src) +{ + struct bitmap *dst = bitmap_word_alloc(src->word_alloc); + COPY_ARRAY(dst->words, src->words, src->word_alloc); + return dst; +} + static void bitmap_grow(struct bitmap *self, size_t word_alloc) { if (word_alloc > self->word_alloc) { diff --git a/ewah/ewok.h b/ewah/ewok.h index 011852bef1..1fc555e672 100644 --- a/ewah/ewok.h +++ b/ewah/ewok.h @@ -173,6 +173,7 @@ struct bitmap { struct bitmap *bitmap_new(void); struct bitmap *bitmap_word_alloc(size_t word_alloc); +struct bitmap *bitmap_dup(const struct bitmap *src); void bitmap_set(struct bitmap *self, size_t pos); void bitmap_unset(struct bitmap *self, size_t pos); int bitmap_get(struct bitmap *self, size_t pos); -- 2.29.2.312.gabc4d358d8