djbsort: Download

To download and unpack the latest version of djbsort:

wget -m https://sorting.cr.yp.to/djbsort-latest-version.txt
version=$(cat sorting.cr.yp.to/djbsort-latest-version.txt)
wget -m https://sorting.cr.yp.to/djbsort-$version.tar.gz
tar -xzf sorting.cr.yp.to/djbsort-$version.tar.gz
cd djbsort-$version

Then install and test.

Archives and changelog (reverse chronological)

djbsort-20260127.tar.gz browse

Algorithm. The vectorizable sorting algorithm has been redesigned from the ground up for higher speed and improved generality. Both int32/avx2 and the new int64/avx2 are now automatically generated by autogen/sort.

C API. There are new uint64 and float64 wrappers similar to the previous uint32 and float32 wrappers. There are also new reverse-sorting wrappers int32down, uint32down, float32down, int64down, uint64down, float64down.

Each wrapper now has an avx2useint implementation to supplement the useint implementation. All of these implementations are now automatically generated by autogen/useint.

All external symbols are now within the djbsort namespace (meaning C symbols beginning djbsort_, not C++ symbols djbsort::).

Packaging. The infrastructure is now a variant of the packaging infrastructure from lib25519 and libmceliece. This provides cross-compilation, namespace tests, instruction-set tests, tests for branches in the binaries, automatic run-time selection of implementations, etc.

Internals. The software now uses cryptoint to provide efficient comparators (minmax) on many CPUs while at the same time protecting against current compilers converting arithmetic into branches.

Benchmarking. Cycle counting now relies on libcpucycles, both for sortbench and for the installed djbsort-speed.

An updated version of the sortbench package is now included in the djbsort package and supersedes the separately released sortbench package. The updated version compares the aspas, djbsort, far, herf, stdsort, vqsort, vxsort, and x86simdsort libraries for int32 and int64 at many different array sizes; systematically varies the data permutations, the physical tagging (running each benchmark program 8 times), and the array alignment; and plots stabilized quartiles.

Verification. The verifymany driver has been rewritten, and now analyzes all of the int32 and int64 implementations compiled into the library.

For minmax: Speedups. Less memory usage. Computations for concrete inputs are now integrated, both for constant propagation and for sanity checks. More peephole optimizations for the code being analyzed, moving further towards allowing a simpler symbolic-execution backend. Almost all rewrite rules are now handled systematically with a DSL. A separate checkrules script uses an SMT solver to verify rewrite rules expressed in the DSL.

For unroll: Various tweaks, such as disabling some angr peephole optimizations and modifying angr's CPUID to report AVX2.


sortbench-20240116.tar.gz browse

Intermediate release of sortbench as a separate package.


djbsort-20190516.tar.gz browse

Benchmarking. Speed tests now call cpucycles() before setting resource limits. This is important on platforms where cpucycles() needs to read files.

Verification. Support for SignExt and several more peephole optimizations, working towards support for simpler symbolic-execution backend. Various updates to work with angr8 and python3.


djbsort-20180729.tar.gz browse

Algorithm. Rewrite of the core int32/avx2 implementation for (1) higher speed and (2) reduced memory consumption. Stack allocation is now at most a few kilobytes, even for gigantic arrays.

Internally, the sorting algorithm is now mostly bitonic to simplify indexing, although odd-even speedups are still applied when convenient. Lanes are complemented to take the down-up decision out of the inner loops.

As in previous djbsort versions, data is sorted first in vector lanes and then transposed for final merges, reducing the overall number of vector permutations. Unlike previous versions, transposition is done in-place. The transposition in this version is bit-reversal on the outer 6 bits (bottom 3 bits and the top 3 bits), but leaves intermediate bits alone. Non-power-of-2 array sizes are handled by an extra, more traditional, merge step.

Sizes 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 16, 32 are now special-cased. Non-power-of-2 sizes below 256 are padded to the next power of 2.

Portable implementations: The out-of-place int32/portable1 and int32/portable2 implementations are now gone; the in-place int32/portable3 and int32/portable4 implementations remain.

C API. float32_sort is now supported. The arithmetic in the reduction from float32 to int32 is int32 31-bit right shift, uint32 1-bit right shift, xor; this is slightly more efficient than the reduction from float32 to uint32 from 2001 Herf.

Compiling. Tests now have more variation (without much slowdown): the uint32 test cases now deviate from int32 in more than the sign; float32 uses floating-point numbers that aren't integers; int32 does more loops for small cases, and some larger cases.

Internals. API for 2-input sorting is now MINMAX macro operating on two inputs in place.

Better inline assembly from Jason Donenfeld for 2-input sorting: more flexibility in compiler's register allocation.

The package version number is now automatically copied to version.c as the implementation version number for implementations that don't provide version.c.

Verification. minmax now supports more peephole optimizations for complemented bitonic sorting and for padding: xor(s,xor(s,t))t; xor(-1,s)invert(s); Reverse(Reverse(s))s; signedmin(invert(s),invert(t))invert(signedmax(s,t)); signedmax(invert(s),invert(t))invert(signedmin(s,t)); invert(s)[high:low]invert(s[high:low]); s[bits-1:0]s; s[high:low][high2:low2]s[high2+low:low2+low]; Concat(...)[high:low]...[high-pos:low-pos] when possible; Reverse(s)[high:low]Reverse(s[...]) when possible; eliminate signedmin/signedmax when one input is the minimum or maximum constant.

verifymany now includes the implementation version number on verified lines.


djbsort-20180717.tar.gz browse

C API. uint32_sort is now supported, joining int32_sort. (Internally, uint32_sort simply flips top bits and calls int32_sort. Inlining the int32_sort code and integrating the flips into the initial and final passes would be noticeably faster. Adapting the int32 code to handle uint32 directly, without flips, would be noticeably faster on platforms that have all relevant uint32 instructions. However, the separate flip has the virtue of minimizing the code size for the library.)

The .h files should work from C++ now. (Not tested yet.)

Compiling and benchmarking. ./do now finishes by running int32-speed.

int32-speed now prints cycle-count overhead; cycle counts for some intermediate sizes; and cycles per byte.

The default compiler list is now revamped, and shorter.

Internals. There is now a unified internal API for 2-input sorting. This API has the following interchangeable implementations: int32_minmax.c (portable); int32_minmax_x86.c (using cmovg in assembly); presumably more later. These implementations are now shared by the higher-level sorting code.

Verification. verifymany now prints a "verified" line for each successful verification.

Verification is now flexible enough to handle the portable implementations, at least compiled on amd64 with typical compiler options.

Internally, Z3 is no longer asked to simplify symbolic expressions. All necessary simplifications are handled by peephole optimizations (in djbsort's minmax, or in patches from djbsort to angr's claripy). Added peephole optimizations in minmax: If(c,constbit1,constbit0)c; xor(c,constbit1)invert(c); equal(c,bit0)invert(c); invert(invert(c))c.

More operations supported in input DSL for minmax and tryinput: xor; or; and; add; sub; mul; equal; signedlt; signedrshift; any number of inputs to concatenation. Reduced redundancy in minmax input grammar. Some work on cleaning up DSL syntax.


djbsort-20180710.tar.gz browse

Original release.


Archive of angr patches

To simplify the unroll and minmax tools, djbsort contributed some patches to angr back in 2018:


Version: This is version 2026.01.27 of the "Download" web page.