213 lines
6.1 KiB
C
213 lines
6.1 KiB
C
/*
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Copyright David Anderson 2010-2014.
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This is free software.
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Permission hereby granted for anyone to copy or
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use this code for any purpose without restriction.
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Attribution may be given or may not, it is your choice.
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September 8, 2011: The tdelete example code was wrong in that
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it did not clean up entirely. So was the tsearch example code.
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Both are now fixed (it's surprisingly difficult to do this
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all correctly, but then the available documentation is at best
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a hint).
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The GNU/Linux tsearch man page (in the man-page 3.54 edition)
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suggests that tdestroy() takes a pointer to a variable which
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points to the root. In reality tdestroy() takes a pointer
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to the root. As revealed by trying tdestroy() both ways.
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*/
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/* tsearch() tfind() tdelete() twalk() tdestroy() example.
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*/
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <unistd.h>
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#include <errno.h>
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/* __USE_GNU exposes the GNU tdestroy() function, a
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function that is not mentioned by the Single Unix
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Specification. */
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#define __USE_GNU 1
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#include <search.h>
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/* The struct is trivially usable to implement a set or
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map (mapping an integer to a string).
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The following struct is the example basis
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because that is the capability I wanted to use.
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tsearch has no idea what data is involved, only the comparison function
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mt_compare_func() and the free function mt_free_func()
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(passed in to tsearch calls) know what data is involved.
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Making tsearch very flexible indeed.
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Obviously the use of a struct is arbitrary, it is just
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an example.
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*/
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struct my_tentry {
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unsigned mt_key;
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/* When using this as a set of mt_key the mt_name
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field is set to 0 (NULL). */
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char * mt_name;
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};
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/* We allow a NULL name so this struct acts sort of like a set
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and sort of like a map.
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*/
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struct my_tentry *
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make_my_tentry(unsigned k,char *name)
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{
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struct my_tentry *mt =
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(struct my_tentry *)calloc(sizeof(struct my_tentry),1);
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if(!mt) {
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printf("calloc fail\n");
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exit(1);
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}
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mt->mt_key = k;
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if(name) {
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mt->mt_name = strdup(name);
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}
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return mt;
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}
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void
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mt_free_func(void *mt_data)
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{
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struct my_tentry *m = mt_data;
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if(!m) {
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return;
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}
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free(m->mt_name);
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free(mt_data);
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return;
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}
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int mt_compare_func(const void *l, const void *r)
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{
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const struct my_tentry *ml = l;
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const struct my_tentry *mr = r;
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if(ml->mt_key < mr->mt_key) {
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return -1;
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}
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if(ml->mt_key > mr->mt_key) {
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return 1;
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}
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return 0;
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}
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void
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walk_entry(const void *mt_data,VISIT x,int level)
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{
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struct my_tentry *m = *(struct my_tentry **)mt_data;
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printf("<%d>Walk on node %s %u %s \n",
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level,
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x == preorder?"preorder":
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x == postorder?"postorder":
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x == endorder?"endorder":
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x == leaf?"leaf":
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"unknown",
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m->mt_key,m->mt_name);
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return;
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}
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int main()
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{
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unsigned i;
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void *tree1 = 0;
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#define RECMAX 3
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for(i = 0 ; i < RECMAX ; ++i) {
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int k = 0;
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char kbuf[40];
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char dbuf[60];
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struct my_tentry *mt = 0;
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struct my_tentry *retval = 0;
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snprintf(kbuf,sizeof(kbuf),"%u",i);
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strcpy(dbuf," data for ");
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strcat(dbuf,kbuf);
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/* Do it twice so we have test the case where
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tsearch adds and one
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where it finds an existing record. */
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for (k = 0; k < 2 ;++k) {
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mt = make_my_tentry(i,dbuf);
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errno = 0;
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/* tsearch adds an entry if its not present already. */
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retval = tsearch(mt,&tree1, mt_compare_func );
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if(retval == 0) {
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printf("Fail ENOMEM\n");
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exit(1);
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} else {
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struct my_tentry *re = 0;
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re = *(struct my_tentry **)retval;
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if(re != mt) {
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printf("found existing ok %u\n",i);
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/* Prevents data leak: mt was
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already present. */
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mt_free_func(mt);
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} else {
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printf("insert ok %u\n",i);
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/* New entry mt was added. */
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}
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}
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}
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}
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for(i = 0 ; i < 5 ; ++i) {
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char kbuf[40];
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char dbuf[60];
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dbuf[0] = 0;
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struct my_tentry *mt = 0;
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struct my_tentry *retval = 0;
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snprintf(kbuf,sizeof(kbuf),"%u",i);
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mt = make_my_tentry(i,dbuf);
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retval = tfind(mt,&tree1,mt_compare_func);
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if(!retval) {
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if(i < RECMAX) {
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printf("Fail TSRCH on %s is FAILURE\n",kbuf);
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exit(1);
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} else {
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printf("Fail TSRCH on %s is ok\n",kbuf);
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}
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} else {
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printf("found ok %u\n",i);
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}
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mt_free_func(mt);
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}
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twalk(tree1,walk_entry);
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{
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struct my_tentry *mt = 0;
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struct my_tentry *re3 = 0;
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void *r = 0;
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mt = make_my_tentry(1,0);
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r = tfind(mt,&tree1,mt_compare_func);
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if (r) {
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/* This is what tdelete will delete.
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tdelete just removes the reference from
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the tree, it does not actually delete
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the memory for the entry itself. */
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re3 = *(struct my_tentry **)r;
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r = tdelete(mt,&tree1,mt_compare_func);
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/* We don't want the 'test' node left around. */
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mt_free_func(mt);
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if(r) {
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struct my_tentry *re2 = 0;
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re2 = *(struct my_tentry **)r;
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printf("tdelete returned parent: %u %s\n",
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re2->mt_key, re2->mt_name);
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} else {
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printf("tdelete returned NULL, tree now empty.\n");
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}
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/* Delete the content of the node that tdelete removed. */
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mt_free_func(re3);
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} else {
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/* There is no node like this to delete. */
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/* We don't want the 'test' node left around. */
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mt_free_func(mt);
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}
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}
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twalk(tree1,walk_entry);
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tdestroy(tree1,mt_free_func);
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printf("PASS tsearch test.\n");
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exit(0);
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}
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