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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T08:33:54+00:00 2026-05-18T08:33:54+00:00

Here is an interesting optimization problem that I think about for some days now:

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Here is an interesting optimization problem that I think about for some days now:

In a system I read data from a slow IO device. I don’t know beforehand how much data I need. The exact length is only known once I have read an entire package (think of it as it has some kind of end-symbol). Reading more data than required is not a problem except that it wastes time in IO.

Two constrains also come into play: Reads are very slow. Each byte I read costs. Also each read-request has a constant setup cost regardless of the number of bytes I read. This makes reading byte by byte costly. As a rule of thumb: the setup costs are roughly as expensive as a read of 5 bytes.

The packages I read are usually between 9 and 64 bytes, but there are rare occurrences larger or smaller packages. The entire range will be between 1 to 120 bytes.

Of course I know a little bit of my data: Packages come in sequences of identical sizes. I can classify three patterns here:

Sequences of reads with identical sizes:

   A A A A A ...

Alternating sequences:

  A B A B A B A B ...

And sequences of triples:

 A B C A B C A B C ...

The special case of degenerated triples exist as well:

 A A B A A B A A B ...

(A, B and C denote some package size between 1 and 120 here).

Question:

Based on the size of the previous packages, how do I predict the size of the next read request? I need something that adapts fast, uses little storage (lets say below 500 bytes) and is fast from a computational point of view as well.

Oh – and pre-generating some tables won’t work because the statistic of read sizes can vary a lot with different devices I read from.

Any ideas?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T08:33:54+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 8:33 am

    You need to read at least 3 packages and at most 4 packages to identify the pattern.

    1. Read 3 packages. If they are all same size, then the pattern is AAAAAA…
    2. If they are all not the same size, read the 4th package. If 1=3 & 2=4, pattern is ABAB. Otherwise, pattern is ABCABC…

    With that outline, it is probably a good idea to do a speculative read of 3 package sizes (something like 3*64 bytes at a single go).

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