--
5f3c139695d5c497ca030e95a607537a7be7caa7 by Benjamin Barenblat <bbaren@google.com>:
Don’t examine irrelevant destination buckets in DiscreteDistributionTest
Abseil generates discrete distributions using Walker’s aliasing
algorithm. This creates uniformly distributed buckets, each with a
probability of sending traffic to a different bucket. Abseil represents
a bucket as a pair
(probability of retaining traffic ×
alternate bucket if traffic is passed)
and a distribution as a vector of such pairs. For example, {(0.3, 1),
(1.0, 1)} represents a distribution with two buckets, the zeroth of
which passes 70% of its traffic to bucket 1 and the first of which holds
on to all its traffic.
This representation is not unique: When a bucket retains traffic with
probability 1, the alternate bucket is irrelevant. Continuing the
example above, {(0.3, 1), (1.0, 0)} _also_ represents a two-bucket
distribution where the zeroth bucket passes 70% of its traffic to the
first and the first hangs on to all traffic. Exactly what representation
Abseil generates for a given input is related to how much precision is
used in intermediate floating-point operations, which is an
architectural implementation detail. Remove sensitivity to that detail
by not examining the alternate bucket when the retention probability is
1.0.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 372993410
--
062ac80699f748831c09a061538abffec2cdea5c by Martijn Vels <mvels@google.com>:
Avoid alredy sampled cord remaining sampled if not picked or source is sampled
PiperOrigin-RevId: 372985990
--
a9f3537e1110b7bb6450fd72a03f0c5dc6b8c89b by Evan Brown <ezb@google.com>:
Add tests for function pointer comparators, comparators that have SFINAE-visible comparison operators that are unimplemented, and for implicit construction from unadapted comparators.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 372927616
GitOrigin-RevId: 5f3c139695d5c497ca030e95a607537a7be7caa7
Change-Id: I996a8452e7bd88f9dd2e59633b01bbc09f42620d