#P1804G. Flow Control

Flow Control

Description

Raj has a single physical network line that connects his office to the Internet. This line bandwidth is $b$ bytes per millisecond.

There are $n$ users who would like to use this network line to transmit some data. The $i$-th of them will use the line from millisecond $s_i$ to millisecond $f_i$ inclusive. His initial data rate will be set to $d_i$. That means he will use data rate equal to $d_i$ for millisecond $s_i$, and then it will change according to the procedure described below.

The flow control will happen as follows. Suppose there are $m$ users trying to transmit some data via the given network line during millisecond $x$. Denote as $t_i$ the data rate that the $i$-th of these $m$ users has at the beginning of this millisecond. All $t_i$ are non-negative integer values.

  1. If $m = 0$, i. e. there are no users trying to transmit data during this millisecond, nothing happens.
  2. If the sum of all $t_i$ is less than or equal to $b$, each active user successfully completes his transmission (the $i$-th active user transmits $t_i$ bytes). After that, the data rate of each active user grows by $1$, i. e. each $t_i$ is increased by $1$.
  3. If the sum of all $t_i$ is greater than $b$, the congestion occurs and no data transmissions succeed this millisecond at all. If that happens, each $t_i$ decreases twice, i. e. each $t_i$ is replaced with $\lfloor \frac{t_i}{2} \rfloor$.

Raj knows all the values $n$, $b$, $s_i$, $f_i$, and $d_i$, he wants to calculate the total number of bytes transmitted by all the users in the aggregate.

The first line of the input contains two integers $n$ and $b$ ($1 \leq n \leq 2 \cdot 10^5$, $1 \leq b \leq 10^9$), the number of users who will use the line and the line bandwidth, respectively.

Each of the following $n$ lines contains three integers $s_i$, $f_i$ and $d_i$ ($1 \leq s_i \leq f_i \leq 10^9$, $1 \leq d_i \leq 10^9$), denoting that the $i$-th user will try to transmit data during each millisecond between $s_i$ and $f_i$ inclusive, and the initial data rate of the $i$-th user.

Print one integer — the total number of bytes all users will successfully transmit.

Input

The first line of the input contains two integers $n$ and $b$ ($1 \leq n \leq 2 \cdot 10^5$, $1 \leq b \leq 10^9$), the number of users who will use the line and the line bandwidth, respectively.

Each of the following $n$ lines contains three integers $s_i$, $f_i$ and $d_i$ ($1 \leq s_i \leq f_i \leq 10^9$, $1 \leq d_i \leq 10^9$), denoting that the $i$-th user will try to transmit data during each millisecond between $s_i$ and $f_i$ inclusive, and the initial data rate of the $i$-th user.

Output

Print one integer — the total number of bytes all users will successfully transmit.

1 3
1 5 2
1 10
7 11 1000
2 6
1 12 1
8 20 3
3 10
1 100 1
30 60 20
40 80 6
10
0
64
534

Note

Consider the first example.

  • Millisecond $1$: User $1$ transmits $2$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $2$: User $1$ transmits $3$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $3$: Congestion occurs, and no user transmits data.
  • Millisecond $4$: User $1$ transmits $2$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $5$: User $1$ transmits $3$ bytes.

In the second example, at each millisecond from the $7$-th to the $11$-th inclusive, congestion occurs, and the only user decreases their rate twice. However, they don't decrease the speed enough before disconnecting.

Consider the third example.

  • Millisecond $1$: User $1$ transmits $1$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $2$: User $1$ transmits $2$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $3$: User $1$ transmits $3$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $4$: User $1$ transmits $4$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $5$: User $1$ transmits $5$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $6$: User $1$ transmits $6$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $7$: Congestion occurs, and no user transmits data.
  • Millisecond $8$: User $1$ transmits $3$ bytes. User $2$ transmits $3$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $9$: Congestion occurs, and no user transmits data.
  • Millisecond $10$: User $1$ transmits $2$ bytes. User $2$ transmits $2$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $11$: User $1$ transmits $3$ bytes. User $2$ transmits $3$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $12$: Congestion occurs, and no user transmits data.
  • Millisecond $13$: User $2$ transmits $2$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $14$: User $2$ transmits $3$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $15$: User $2$ transmits $4$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $16$: User $2$ transmits $5$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $17$: User $2$ transmits $6$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $18$: Congestion occurs, and no user transmits data.
  • Millisecond $19$: User $2$ transmits $3$ bytes.
  • Millisecond $20$: User $2$ transmits $4$ bytes.