Orasort: 5x faster column-sorting with an expired patent from Oracle

22 pointsposted 5 hours ago
by theanonymousone

13 Comments

orlp

an hour ago

First, this article is mostly (AI?) regurgitation. This is much better: https://smalldatum.blogspot.com/2026/01/common-prefix-skippi....

Second, I have independently invented this (quicksort on string prefixes) at my time at CWI, although I didn't end up publishing it, because...

Third, this was already published in the original 1961 Quicksort paper by Hoare: https://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/files/6226/H2006%20-%20Historic%20Qu.... Near the end, the section on "Multi-word keys" describes a quicksort that partitions on just the first word, and only accesses the next word for the equality partition. And funnily enough this paper credits P. Shackleton for this, thus this idea was thought of even before the Quicksort paper came out.

So as is usual for software patents, this patent never should have been awarded.

dafelst

2 hours ago

It's kind of insane that such an obvious optimization can be patented, I have to imagine that it has been invented independently dozens if not hundreds of times.

Validark

33 minutes ago

Thank you.

For wasting my time.

The only thing someone could learn from this is that CPU registers can be 8 bytes.

galkk

27 minutes ago

Looks like an AI rewrite of something better.

hermitcrab

39 minutes ago

A vague article.

With one sentence per line.

Most annoying.

charcircuit

an hour ago

>A CPU register is naturally 8 bytes in size

What does naturally even mean here. How is a 64 byte register's (zmm0) size any less natural?

RealityVoid

an hour ago

Or a 7 byte register, if you really want to get freaky.

_3u10

29 minutes ago

What about 36 bit registers

jeffbee

39 minutes ago

Nothing in this slop means anything particularly, but this detail is extra-wrong considering the variety of processors that the inventor says he used to create this algorithm.