codeforces#P643D. Bearish Fanpages

Bearish Fanpages

Description

There is a social website with n fanpages, numbered 1 through n. There are also n companies, and the i-th company owns the i-th fanpage.

Recently, the website created a feature called following. Each fanpage must choose exactly one other fanpage to follow.

The website doesn’t allow a situation where i follows j and at the same time j follows i. Also, a fanpage can't follow itself.

Let’s say that fanpage i follows some other fanpage j0. Also, let’s say that i is followed by k other fanpages j1, j2, ..., jk. Then, when people visit fanpage i they see ads from k + 2 distinct companies: i, j0, j1, ..., jk. Exactly ti people subscribe (like) the i-th fanpage, and each of them will click exactly one add. For each of k + 1 companies j0, j1, ..., jk, exactly people will click their ad. Remaining people will click an ad from company i (the owner of the fanpage).

The total income of the company is equal to the number of people who click ads from this copmany.

Limak and Radewoosh ask you for help. Initially, fanpage i follows fanpage fi. Your task is to handle q queries of three types:

  • 1 i j — fanpage i follows fanpage j from now. It's guaranteed that i didn't follow j just before the query. Note an extra constraint for the number of queries of this type (below, in the Input section).
  • 2 i — print the total income of the i-th company.
  • 3 — print two integers: the smallest income of one company and the biggest income of one company.

The first line of the input contains two integers n and q (3 ≤ n ≤ 100 000, 1 ≤ q ≤ 100 000) — the number of fanpages and the number of queries, respectively.

The second line contains n integers t1, t2, ..., tn (1 ≤ ti ≤ 1012) where ti denotes the number of people subscribing the i-th fanpage.

The third line contains n integers f1, f2, ..., fn (1 ≤ fi ≤ n). Initially, fanpage i follows fanpage fi.

Then, q lines follow. The i-th of them describes the i-th query. The first number in the line is an integer typei (1 ≤ typei ≤ 3) — the type of the query.

There will be at most 50 000 queries of the first type. There will be at least one query of the second or the third type (so, the output won't be empty).

It's guaranteed that at each moment a fanpage doesn't follow itself, and that no two fanpages follow each other.

For each query of the second type print one integer in a separate line - the total income of the given company. For each query of the third type print two integers in a separate line - the minimum and the maximum total income, respectively.

Input

The first line of the input contains two integers n and q (3 ≤ n ≤ 100 000, 1 ≤ q ≤ 100 000) — the number of fanpages and the number of queries, respectively.

The second line contains n integers t1, t2, ..., tn (1 ≤ ti ≤ 1012) where ti denotes the number of people subscribing the i-th fanpage.

The third line contains n integers f1, f2, ..., fn (1 ≤ fi ≤ n). Initially, fanpage i follows fanpage fi.

Then, q lines follow. The i-th of them describes the i-th query. The first number in the line is an integer typei (1 ≤ typei ≤ 3) — the type of the query.

There will be at most 50 000 queries of the first type. There will be at least one query of the second or the third type (so, the output won't be empty).

It's guaranteed that at each moment a fanpage doesn't follow itself, and that no two fanpages follow each other.

Output

For each query of the second type print one integer in a separate line - the total income of the given company. For each query of the third type print two integers in a separate line - the minimum and the maximum total income, respectively.

Samples

5 12
10 20 30 40 50
2 3 4 5 2
2 1
2 2
2 3
2 4
2 5
1 4 2
2 1
2 2
2 3
2 4
2 5
3

10
36
28
40
36
9
57
27
28
29
9 57

Note

In the sample test, there are 5 fanpages. The i-th of them has i·10 subscribers.

On drawings, numbers of subscribers are written in circles. An arrow from A to B means that A follows B.

The left drawing shows the initial situation. The first company gets income from its own fanpage, and gets income from the 2-nd fanpage. So, the total income is 5 + 5 = 10. After the first query ("2 1") you should print 10.

The right drawing shows the situation after a query "1 4 2" (after which fanpage 4 follows fanpage 2). Then, the first company still gets income 5 from its own fanpage, but now it gets only from the 2-nd fanpage. So, the total income is 5 + 4 = 9 now.