A city subway line has become huge and it is hard to take the shortest path through them. You have to find the shortest path in subway lines. In the second \(0\), you are in the station \(start\) and you want to go to the station \(end\).
The city has \(n\) stations. The subway has \(m\) lines. Each subway line goes to some stations.
The $$i-th$$ subway goes to stations \(u_{i, 1}, u_{i, 2}, u_{i, 3}, ..., u_{i, k_i}\)(in order) and this train takes $$w_{i, j}$$ seconds to travel from \(u_{i, j}\) to \(u_{i, j+1}\)(for \(1 \le i \le m\) and \(1 \le j < k_i\)).
Trains are ready for the passengers to get in, but the last train goes in the second $$t_i$$(and you are allowed to board it in between the path).
Input
The first line contains $$n, m$$(in order).
Next $$3*m$$ lines describe subway lines.
The first line contains $$k_i, t_i$$ and next line contains \(u_{i, 1}, u_{i, 2}, u_{i, 3}, ..., u_{i, k_i}\)and the next line contains \(w_1, w_2, ..., w_{k_{i - 1}}\).
The last line containts $$start, end$$.
It is guaranteed \(start \neq end\) and no subway line intersects itself.
Output
Print the shortest path in subway lines from the station \(start\) to \(end\).
If there is no way from \(start\) to \(end\), print -1.
Constraints
\(1 \le n, m \le 100\ 000\)
\(1 \le u_{i, j} \le n\)
\(2 \le k_i\)
\(k_1 + k_2 + ... + k_m \le 100\ 000\)
\(0 \le t_i \le 10^9\)
\(1 \le w_{i, j} \le 10^9\)