xref: /freebsd/lib/libopenbsd/ohash_init.3 (revision 257e70f1d5ee61037c8c59b116538d3b6b1427a2)
1.\"	$OpenBSD: ohash_init.3,v 1.2 2014/05/13 14:01:41 jmc Exp $
2.\" Copyright (c) 1999 Marc Espie <espie@openbsd.org>
3.\"
4.\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
5.\" purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
6.\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
7.\"
8.\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
9.\" WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
10.\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
11.\" ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
12.\" WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
13.\" ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
14.\" OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
15.\"
16.Dd May 12, 2014
17.Dt OHASH_INIT 3
18.Os
19.Sh NAME
20.Nm ohash_init ,
21.Nm ohash_delete ,
22.Nm ohash_lookup_interval ,
23.Nm ohash_lookup_memory ,
24.Nm ohash_find ,
25.Nm ohash_remove ,
26.Nm ohash_insert ,
27.Nm ohash_first ,
28.Nm ohash_next ,
29.Nm ohash_entries
30.Nd light-weight open hashing
31.Sh SYNOPSIS
32.In stdint.h
33.In stddef.h
34.In ohash.h
35.Ft void
36.Fn ohash_init "struct ohash *h" "unsigned int size" "struct ohash_info *info"
37.Ft void
38.Fn ohash_delete "struct ohash *h"
39.Ft "unsigned int"
40.Fn ohash_lookup_interval "struct ohash *h" "const char *start" "const char *end" "uint32_t hv"
41.Ft "unsigned int"
42.Fn ohash_lookup_memory "struct ohash *h" "const char *k" "size_t s" "uint32_t hv"
43.Ft void *
44.Fn ohash_find "struct ohash *h" "unsigned int i"
45.Ft void *
46.Fn ohash_remove "struct ohash *h" "unsigned int i"
47.Ft void *
48.Fn ohash_insert "struct ohash *h" "unsigned int i" "void *p"
49.Ft void *
50.Fn ohash_first "struct ohash *h" "unsigned int *i"
51.Ft void *
52.Fn ohash_next "struct ohash *h" "unsigned int *i"
53.Ft "unsigned int"
54.Fn ohash_entries "struct ohash *h"
55.Sh DESCRIPTION
56These functions have been designed as a fast, extensible alternative to
57the usual hash table functions.
58They provide storage and retrieval of records indexed by keys,
59where a key is a contiguous sequence of bytes at a fixed position in
60each record.
61Keys can either be NUL-terminated strings or fixed-size memory areas.
62All functions take a pointer to an ohash structure as the
63.Fa h
64function argument.
65Storage for this structure should be provided by user code.
66.Pp
67.Fn ohash_init
68initializes the table to store roughly 2 to the power
69.Fa size
70elements.
71.Fa info
72is a pointer to a
73.Fa struct ohash_info .
74.Bd -literal -offset indent
75struct ohash_info {
76	ptrdiff_t key_offset;
77	void *data;	/* user data */
78	void *(*calloc)(size_t, size_t, void *);
79	void (*free)(void *, void *);
80	void *(*alloc)(size_t, void *);
81};
82.Ed
83.Pp
84The
85.Va offset
86field holds the position of the key in each record;
87the
88.Va calloc
89and
90.Va free
91fields are pointers to
92.Xr calloc 3
93and
94.Xr free 3 Ns -like
95functions, used for managing the table internal storage;
96the
97.Va alloc
98field is only used by the utility function
99.Xr ohash_create_entry 3 .
100.Pp
101Each of these functions are called similarly to their standard counterpart,
102but with an extra
103.Ft void *
104parameter corresponding to the content of the field
105.Fa data ,
106which can be used to communicate specific information to the functions.
107.Pp
108.Fn ohash_init
109stores a copy of those fields internally, so
110.Fa info
111can be reclaimed after initialization.
112.Pp
113.Fn ohash_delete
114frees storage internal to
115.Fa h .
116Elements themselves should be freed by the user first, using for instance
117.Fn ohash_first
118and
119.Fn ohash_next .
120.Pp
121.Fn ohash_lookup_interval
122and
123.Fn ohash_lookup_memory
124are the basic look-up element functions.
125The hashing function result is provided by the user as
126.Fa hv .
127These return a
128.Qq slot
129in the ohash table
130.Fa h ,
131to be used with
132.Fn ohash_find ,
133.Fn ohash_insert ,
134or
135.Fn ohash_remove .
136This slot is only valid up to the next call to
137.Fn ohash_insert
138or
139.Fn ohash_remove .
140.Pp
141.Fn ohash_lookup_interval
142handles string-like keys.
143.Fn ohash_lookup_interval
144assumes the key is the interval between
145.Fa start
146and
147.Fa end ,
148exclusive,
149though the actual elements stored in the table should only contain
150NUL-terminated keys.
151.Pp
152.Fn ohash_lookup_memory
153assumes the key is the memory area starting at
154.Fa k
155of size
156.Fa s .
157All bytes are significant in key comparison.
158.Pp
159.Fn ohash_find
160retrieves an element from a slot
161.Fa i
162returned by the
163.Fn ohash_lookup*
164functions.
165It returns
166.Dv NULL
167if the slot is empty.
168.Pp
169.Fn ohash_insert
170inserts a new element
171.Fa p
172at slot
173.Fa i .
174Slot
175.Fa i
176must be empty and element
177.Fa p
178must have a key corresponding to the
179.Fn ohash_lookup*
180call.
181.Pp
182.Fn ohash_remove
183removes the element at slot
184.Fa i .
185It returns the removed element, for user code to dispose of, or
186.Dv NULL
187if the slot was empty.
188.Pp
189.Fn ohash_first
190and
191.Fn ohash_next
192can be used to access all elements in an ohash table, like this:
193.Bd -literal -offset indent
194for (n = ohash_first(h, &i); n != NULL; n = ohash_next(h, &i))
195	do_something_with(n);
196.Ed
197.Pp
198.Fa i
199points to an auxiliary unsigned integer used to record the current position
200in the ohash table.
201Those functions are safe to use even while entries are added to/removed
202from the table, but in such a case they don't guarantee that new entries
203will be returned.
204As a special case, they can safely be used to free elements in the table.
205.Pp
206.Fn ohash_entries
207returns the number of elements in the hash table.
208.Sh STORAGE HANDLING
209Only
210.Fn ohash_init ,
211.Fn ohash_insert ,
212.Fn ohash_remove
213and
214.Fn ohash_delete
215may call the user-supplied memory functions:
216.Bd -literal -offset indent
217p = (*info->calloc)(n, sizeof_record, info->data);
218/* copy data from old to p */
219(*info->free)(old, info->data);
220.Ed
221.Pp
222It is the responsibility of the user memory allocation code to verify
223that those calls did not fail.
224.Pp
225If memory allocation fails,
226.Fn ohash_init
227returns a useless hash table.
228.Fn ohash_insert
229and
230.Fn ohash_remove
231still perform the requested operation, but the returned table should be
232considered read-only.
233It can still be accessed by
234.Fn ohash_lookup* ,
235.Fn ohash_find ,
236.Fn ohash_first
237and
238.Fn ohash_next
239to dump relevant information to disk before aborting.
240.Sh THREAD SAFETY
241The open hashing functions are not thread-safe by design.
242In particular, in a threaded environment, there is no guarantee that a
243.Qq slot
244will not move between a
245.Fn ohash_lookup*
246and a
247.Fn ohash_find ,
248.Fn ohash_insert
249or
250.Fn ohash_remove
251call.
252.Pp
253Multi-threaded applications should explicitly protect ohash table access.
254.Sh SEE ALSO
255.Xr hcreate 3 ,
256.Xr ohash_interval 3
257.Rs
258.%A Donald E. Knuth
259.%B The Art of Computer Programming
260.%V Vol. 3
261.%P pp 506-550
262.%D 1973
263.Re
264.Sh STANDARDS
265Those functions are completely non-standard and should be avoided in
266portable programs.
267.Sh HISTORY
268Those functions were designed and written for
269.Ox
270.Xr make 1
271by Marc Espie in 1999.
272