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c++ - About deque<T>'s extra indirection

Wondering why my memory accesses were somewhat slower than I expected, I finally figured out that the Visual C++ implementation of deque indeed has an extra layer of indirection built-in, destroying my memory locality.

i.e. it seems to hold an array of T*, not an array of T.

Is there another implementation I can use with VC++ that doesn't have this "feature", or is there some way (although I consider it unlikely) to be able to avoid it in this implementation?

I'm basically looking for a vector that has also O(1) push/pop at the front.
I guess I could implement it myself, but dealing with allocators and such is a pain and it would take a while to get it right, so I'd rather use something previously written/tested if possible.

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For whatever reason, at least as of MSVC 2010, the std::deque implementation appears to make use of an unbelievably small block size (the max of 16 bytes or 1 single element if I'm not mistaken!).

This, in my experience, can result in very significant performance issues, because essentially each "block" in the data structure only ends up storing a single element, which leads to all kinds of additional overhead (time and memory).

I don't know why it's done this way. As far as I understand it setting up a deque with such a small block size is exactly how it's not supposed to be done.

Check out the gcc stdlib implementation. From memory they use a much larger block size.

EDIT: In an attempt to address the other issues:

  • std::deque should have an extra layer of indirection. It is often implemented as a "blocked" data structure - i.e. storing an array of "nodes" where each node is itself an array of data elements. It's not ever like a linked-list - the array of nodes is never "traversed" like a list, it's always directly indexed (even in the case of 1 element per block).

  • Of course you can roll your own data structure that keeps some extra space at the front. It wont have worst case O(1) push/pop front/back behaviour, and as such it wont satisfy the requirements of the std::deque container. But if you don't care about any of that...


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