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Semisort is a fundamental algorithmic primitive widely used in the design and analysis of efficient parallel algorithms. It takes input as an array of records and a function extracting a key per record, and reorders them so that records with equal keys are contiguous. Since many applications only require collecting equal values, but not fully sorting the input, semisort is broadly applicable, e.g., in string algorithms, graph analytics, and geometry processing, among many other domains. However, despite dozens of recent papers that use semisort in their theoretical analysis and the existence of an asymptotically optimal parallel semisort algorithm, most implementations of these parallel algorithms choose to implement semisort by using comparison or integer sorting in practice, due to potential performance issues in existing semisort implementations.