rocksdb/util/hash.h

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// Copyright (c) 2011-present, Facebook, Inc. All rights reserved.
// This source code is licensed under both the GPLv2 (found in the
// COPYING file in the root directory) and Apache 2.0 License
// (found in the LICENSE.Apache file in the root directory).
//
// Copyright (c) 2011 The LevelDB Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file. See the AUTHORS file for names of contributors.
//
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
// Common hash functions with convenient interfaces. If hashing a
// statically-sized input in a performance-critical context, consider
// calling a specific hash implementation directly, such as
// XXH3_64bits from xxhash.h.
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
//
// Since this is a very common header, implementation details are kept
// out-of-line. Out-of-lining also aids in tracking the time spent in
// hashing functions. Inlining is of limited benefit for runtime-sized
// hash inputs.
#pragma once
#include <cstddef>
#include <cstdint>
#include "rocksdb/slice.h"
#include "util/fastrange.h"
namespace ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE {
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
// Stable/persistent 64-bit hash. Higher quality and generally faster than
// Hash(), especially for inputs > 24 bytes.
Ribbon: major re-work of hashing, seeds, and more (#7635) Summary: * Fully optimized StandardHasher, in terms of efficiently generating Start, CoeffRow, and ResultRow from a stock hash value, with sufficient independence between them to have no measurably degraded behavior. (Degraded behavior would be an FP rate higher than explainable by 2^-b and, if using a 32-bit stock hash function, expected stock hash collisions.) Details in code comments. * Our standard 64-bit and 32-bit hash functions do not exhibit sufficient independence on sequential seeds (for one Ribbon construction attempt to have independent probability from the next). I have worked around this in the Ribbon code by "pre-mixing" "ordinal seeds," sequentially tried and appropriate for storage in persisted metadata, into "raw seeds," ready for application and appropriate for in-memory storage. This way the pre-mixing step (though fast) is only applied on loading or configuring the structure, not on each query or banding add. * Fix a subtle flaw in which backtracking not clearing ResultRow data could lead to elevated FP rate on keys that were backtracked on and should (for generality) exhibit the same FP rate as novel keys. * Added a basic test for PhsfQuery and construction algorithms (map or "retrieval structure" rather than set or filter), and made a few trivial related fixes. * Better random configuration generation in unit tests * Some other minor cleanup / clarification / etc. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7635 Test Plan: unit tests included Reviewed By: jay-zhuang Differential Revision: D24738978 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: f9d03599d9e2ca3e30e9d3e7d81cd936b56f76f0
2020-11-08 00:39:14 +00:00
// KNOWN FLAW: incrementing seed by 1 might not give sufficiently independent
// results from previous seed. Recommend incrementing by a large odd number.
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
extern uint64_t Hash64(const char* data, size_t n, uint64_t seed);
// Specific optimization without seed (same as seed = 0)
extern uint64_t Hash64(const char* data, size_t n);
// Non-persistent hash. Must only used for in-memory data structures.
// The hash results are thus subject to change between releases,
// architectures, build configuration, etc. (Thus, it rarely makes sense
// to specify a seed for this function, except for a "rolling" hash.)
Ribbon: major re-work of hashing, seeds, and more (#7635) Summary: * Fully optimized StandardHasher, in terms of efficiently generating Start, CoeffRow, and ResultRow from a stock hash value, with sufficient independence between them to have no measurably degraded behavior. (Degraded behavior would be an FP rate higher than explainable by 2^-b and, if using a 32-bit stock hash function, expected stock hash collisions.) Details in code comments. * Our standard 64-bit and 32-bit hash functions do not exhibit sufficient independence on sequential seeds (for one Ribbon construction attempt to have independent probability from the next). I have worked around this in the Ribbon code by "pre-mixing" "ordinal seeds," sequentially tried and appropriate for storage in persisted metadata, into "raw seeds," ready for application and appropriate for in-memory storage. This way the pre-mixing step (though fast) is only applied on loading or configuring the structure, not on each query or banding add. * Fix a subtle flaw in which backtracking not clearing ResultRow data could lead to elevated FP rate on keys that were backtracked on and should (for generality) exhibit the same FP rate as novel keys. * Added a basic test for PhsfQuery and construction algorithms (map or "retrieval structure" rather than set or filter), and made a few trivial related fixes. * Better random configuration generation in unit tests * Some other minor cleanup / clarification / etc. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7635 Test Plan: unit tests included Reviewed By: jay-zhuang Differential Revision: D24738978 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: f9d03599d9e2ca3e30e9d3e7d81cd936b56f76f0
2020-11-08 00:39:14 +00:00
// KNOWN FLAW: incrementing seed by 1 might not give sufficiently independent
// results from previous seed. Recommend incrementing by a large odd number.
inline uint64_t NPHash64(const char* data, size_t n, uint64_t seed) {
#ifdef ROCKSDB_MODIFY_NPHASH
// For testing "subject to change"
return Hash64(data, n, seed + 123456789);
#else
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
// Currently same as Hash64
return Hash64(data, n, seed);
#endif
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
}
// Specific optimization without seed (same as seed = 0)
inline uint64_t NPHash64(const char* data, size_t n) {
#ifdef ROCKSDB_MODIFY_NPHASH
// For testing "subject to change"
return Hash64(data, n, 123456789);
#else
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
// Currently same as Hash64
return Hash64(data, n);
#endif
}
Consolidate hash function used for non-persistent data in a new function (#5155) Summary: Create new function NPHash64() and GetSliceNPHash64(), which are currently implemented using murmurhash. Replace the current direct call of murmurhash() to use the new functions if the hash results are not used in on-disk format. This will make it easier to try out or switch to alternative functions in the uses where data format compatibility doesn't need to be considered. This part shouldn't have any performance impact. Also, the sharded cache hash function is changed to the new format, because it falls into this categoery. It doesn't show visible performance impact in db_bench results. CPU showed by perf is increased from about 0.2% to 0.4% in an extreme benchmark setting (4KB blocks, no-compression, everything cached in block cache). We've known that the current hash function used, our own Hash() has serious hash quality problem. It can generate a lots of conflicts with similar input. In this use case, it means extra lock contention for reads from the same file. This slight CPU regression is worthy to me to counter the potential bad performance with hot keys. And hopefully this will get further improved in the future with a better hash function. cache_test's condition is relaxed a little bit to. The new hash is slightly more skewed in this use case, but I manually checked the data and see the hash results are still in a reasonable range. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5155 Differential Revision: D14834821 Pulled By: siying fbshipit-source-id: ec9a2c0a2f8ae4b54d08b13a5c2e9cc97aa80cb5
2019-04-08 20:24:29 +00:00
Built-in support for generating unique IDs, bug fix (#8708) Summary: Env::GenerateUniqueId() works fine on Windows and on POSIX where /proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid exists. Our other implementation is flawed and easily produces collision in a new multi-threaded test. As we rely more heavily on DB session ID uniqueness, this becomes a serious issue. This change combines several individually suitable entropy sources for reliable generation of random unique IDs, with goal of uniqueness and portability, not cryptographic strength nor maximum speed. Specifically: * Moves code for getting UUIDs from the OS to port::GenerateRfcUuid rather than in Env implementation details. Callers are now told whether the operation fails or succeeds. * Adds an internal API GenerateRawUniqueId for generating high-quality 128-bit unique identifiers, by combining entropy from three "tracks": * Lots of info from default Env like time, process id, and hostname. * std::random_device * port::GenerateRfcUuid (when working) * Built-in implementations of Env::GenerateUniqueId() will now always produce an RFC 4122 UUID string, either from platform-specific API or by converting the output of GenerateRawUniqueId. DB session IDs now use GenerateRawUniqueId while DB IDs (not as critical) try to use port::GenerateRfcUuid but fall back on GenerateRawUniqueId with conversion to an RFC 4122 UUID. GenerateRawUniqueId is declared and defined under env/ rather than util/ or even port/ because of the Env dependency. Likely follow-up: enhance GenerateRawUniqueId to be faster after the first call and to guarantee uniqueness within the lifetime of a single process (imparting the same property onto DB session IDs). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8708 Test Plan: A new mini-stress test in env_test checks the various public and internal APIs for uniqueness, including each track of GenerateRawUniqueId individually. We can't hope to verify anywhere close to 128 bits of entropy, but it can at least detect flaws as bad as the old code. Serial execution of the new tests takes about 350 ms on my machine. Reviewed By: zhichao-cao, mrambacher Differential Revision: D30563780 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: de4c9ff4b2f581cf784fcedb5f39f16e5185c364
2021-08-30 22:19:39 +00:00
// Convenient and equivalent version of Hash128 without depending on 128-bit
// scalars
void Hash2x64(const char* data, size_t n, uint64_t* high64, uint64_t* low64);
Experimental support for SST unique IDs (#8990) Summary: * New public header unique_id.h and function GetUniqueIdFromTableProperties which computes a universally unique identifier based on table properties of table files from recent RocksDB versions. * Generation of DB session IDs is refactored so that they are guaranteed unique in the lifetime of a process running RocksDB. (SemiStructuredUniqueIdGen, new test included.) Along with file numbers, this enables SST unique IDs to be guaranteed unique among SSTs generated in a single process, and "better than random" between processes. See https://github.com/pdillinger/unique_id * In addition to public API producing 'external' unique IDs, there is a function for producing 'internal' unique IDs, with functions for converting between the two. In short, the external ID is "safe" for things people might do with it, and the internal ID enables more "power user" features for the future. Specifically, the external ID goes through a hashing layer so that any subset of bits in the external ID can be used as a hash of the full ID, while also preserving uniqueness guarantees in the first 128 bits (bijective both on first 128 bits and on full 192 bits). Intended follow-up: * Use the internal unique IDs in cache keys. (Avoid conflicts with https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8912) (The file offset can be XORed into the third 64-bit value of the unique ID.) * Publish the external unique IDs in FileStorageInfo (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8968) Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8990 Test Plan: Unit tests added, and checking of unique ids in stress test. NOTE in stress test we do not generate nearly enough files to thoroughly stress uniqueness, but the test trims off pieces of the ID to check for uniqueness so that we can infer (with some assumptions) stronger properties in the aggregate. Reviewed By: zhichao-cao, mrambacher Differential Revision: D31582865 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 1f620c4c86af9abe2a8d177b9ccf2ad2b9f48243
2021-10-19 06:28:28 +00:00
void Hash2x64(const char* data, size_t n, uint64_t seed, uint64_t* high64,
uint64_t* low64);
// Hash 128 bits to 128 bits, guaranteed not to lose data (equivalent to
// Hash2x64 on 16 bytes little endian)
void BijectiveHash2x64(uint64_t in_high64, uint64_t in_low64,
uint64_t* out_high64, uint64_t* out_low64);
void BijectiveHash2x64(uint64_t in_high64, uint64_t in_low64, uint64_t seed,
uint64_t* out_high64, uint64_t* out_low64);
// Inverse of above (mostly for testing)
void BijectiveUnhash2x64(uint64_t in_high64, uint64_t in_low64,
uint64_t* out_high64, uint64_t* out_low64);
void BijectiveUnhash2x64(uint64_t in_high64, uint64_t in_low64, uint64_t seed,
uint64_t* out_high64, uint64_t* out_low64);
Built-in support for generating unique IDs, bug fix (#8708) Summary: Env::GenerateUniqueId() works fine on Windows and on POSIX where /proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid exists. Our other implementation is flawed and easily produces collision in a new multi-threaded test. As we rely more heavily on DB session ID uniqueness, this becomes a serious issue. This change combines several individually suitable entropy sources for reliable generation of random unique IDs, with goal of uniqueness and portability, not cryptographic strength nor maximum speed. Specifically: * Moves code for getting UUIDs from the OS to port::GenerateRfcUuid rather than in Env implementation details. Callers are now told whether the operation fails or succeeds. * Adds an internal API GenerateRawUniqueId for generating high-quality 128-bit unique identifiers, by combining entropy from three "tracks": * Lots of info from default Env like time, process id, and hostname. * std::random_device * port::GenerateRfcUuid (when working) * Built-in implementations of Env::GenerateUniqueId() will now always produce an RFC 4122 UUID string, either from platform-specific API or by converting the output of GenerateRawUniqueId. DB session IDs now use GenerateRawUniqueId while DB IDs (not as critical) try to use port::GenerateRfcUuid but fall back on GenerateRawUniqueId with conversion to an RFC 4122 UUID. GenerateRawUniqueId is declared and defined under env/ rather than util/ or even port/ because of the Env dependency. Likely follow-up: enhance GenerateRawUniqueId to be faster after the first call and to guarantee uniqueness within the lifetime of a single process (imparting the same property onto DB session IDs). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8708 Test Plan: A new mini-stress test in env_test checks the various public and internal APIs for uniqueness, including each track of GenerateRawUniqueId individually. We can't hope to verify anywhere close to 128 bits of entropy, but it can at least detect flaws as bad as the old code. Serial execution of the new tests takes about 350 ms on my machine. Reviewed By: zhichao-cao, mrambacher Differential Revision: D30563780 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: de4c9ff4b2f581cf784fcedb5f39f16e5185c364
2021-08-30 22:19:39 +00:00
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
// Stable/persistent 32-bit hash. Moderate quality and high speed on
// small inputs.
// TODO: consider rename to Hash32
Ribbon: major re-work of hashing, seeds, and more (#7635) Summary: * Fully optimized StandardHasher, in terms of efficiently generating Start, CoeffRow, and ResultRow from a stock hash value, with sufficient independence between them to have no measurably degraded behavior. (Degraded behavior would be an FP rate higher than explainable by 2^-b and, if using a 32-bit stock hash function, expected stock hash collisions.) Details in code comments. * Our standard 64-bit and 32-bit hash functions do not exhibit sufficient independence on sequential seeds (for one Ribbon construction attempt to have independent probability from the next). I have worked around this in the Ribbon code by "pre-mixing" "ordinal seeds," sequentially tried and appropriate for storage in persisted metadata, into "raw seeds," ready for application and appropriate for in-memory storage. This way the pre-mixing step (though fast) is only applied on loading or configuring the structure, not on each query or banding add. * Fix a subtle flaw in which backtracking not clearing ResultRow data could lead to elevated FP rate on keys that were backtracked on and should (for generality) exhibit the same FP rate as novel keys. * Added a basic test for PhsfQuery and construction algorithms (map or "retrieval structure" rather than set or filter), and made a few trivial related fixes. * Better random configuration generation in unit tests * Some other minor cleanup / clarification / etc. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7635 Test Plan: unit tests included Reviewed By: jay-zhuang Differential Revision: D24738978 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: f9d03599d9e2ca3e30e9d3e7d81cd936b56f76f0
2020-11-08 00:39:14 +00:00
// KNOWN FLAW: incrementing seed by 1 might not give sufficiently independent
// results from previous seed. Recommend pseudorandom or hashed seeds.
extern uint32_t Hash(const char* data, size_t n, uint32_t seed);
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
// TODO: consider rename to LegacyBloomHash32
inline uint32_t BloomHash(const Slice& key) {
return Hash(key.data(), key.size(), 0xbc9f1d34);
}
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
inline uint64_t GetSliceHash64(const Slice& key) {
return Hash64(key.data(), key.size());
}
Integrity protection for live updates to WriteBatch (#7748) Summary: This PR adds the foundation classes for key-value integrity protection and the first use case: protecting live updates from the source buffers added to `WriteBatch` through the destination buffer in `MemTable`. The width of the protection info is not yet configurable -- only eight bytes per key is supported. This PR allows users to enable protection by constructing `WriteBatch` with `protection_bytes_per_key == 8`. It does not yet expose a way for users to get integrity protection via other write APIs (e.g., `Put()`, `Merge()`, `Delete()`, etc.). The foundation classes (`ProtectionInfo.*`) embed the coverage info in their type, and provide `Protect.*()` and `Strip.*()` functions to navigate between types with different coverage. For making bytes per key configurable (for powers of two up to eight) in the future, these classes are templated on the unsigned integer type used to store the protection info. That integer contains the XOR'd result of hashes with independent seeds for all covered fields. For integer fields, the hash is computed on the raw unadjusted bytes, so the result is endian-dependent. The most significant bytes are truncated when the hash value (8 bytes) is wider than the protection integer. When `WriteBatch` is constructed with `protection_bytes_per_key == 8`, we hold a `ProtectionInfoKVOTC` (i.e., one that covers key, value, optype aka `ValueType`, timestamp, and CF ID) for each entry added to the batch. The protection info is generated from the original buffers passed by the user, as well as the original metadata generated internally. When writing to memtable, each entry is transformed to a `ProtectionInfoKVOTS` (i.e., dropping coverage of CF ID and adding coverage of sequence number), since at that point we know the sequence number, and have already selected a memtable corresponding to a particular CF. This protection info is verified once the entry is encoded in the `MemTable` buffer. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7748 Test Plan: - an integration test to verify a wide variety of single-byte changes to the encoded `MemTable` buffer are caught - add to stress/crash test to verify it works in variety of configs/operations without intentional corruption - [deferred] unit tests for `ProtectionInfo.*` classes for edge cases like KV swap, `SliceParts` and `Slice` APIs are interchangeable, etc. Reviewed By: pdillinger Differential Revision: D25754492 Pulled By: ajkr fbshipit-source-id: e481bac6c03c2ab268be41359730f1ceb9964866
2021-01-29 20:17:17 +00:00
// Provided for convenience for use with template argument deduction, where a
// specific overload needs to be used.
extern uint64_t (*kGetSliceNPHash64UnseededFnPtr)(const Slice&);
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
Consolidate hash function used for non-persistent data in a new function (#5155) Summary: Create new function NPHash64() and GetSliceNPHash64(), which are currently implemented using murmurhash. Replace the current direct call of murmurhash() to use the new functions if the hash results are not used in on-disk format. This will make it easier to try out or switch to alternative functions in the uses where data format compatibility doesn't need to be considered. This part shouldn't have any performance impact. Also, the sharded cache hash function is changed to the new format, because it falls into this categoery. It doesn't show visible performance impact in db_bench results. CPU showed by perf is increased from about 0.2% to 0.4% in an extreme benchmark setting (4KB blocks, no-compression, everything cached in block cache). We've known that the current hash function used, our own Hash() has serious hash quality problem. It can generate a lots of conflicts with similar input. In this use case, it means extra lock contention for reads from the same file. This slight CPU regression is worthy to me to counter the potential bad performance with hot keys. And hopefully this will get further improved in the future with a better hash function. cache_test's condition is relaxed a little bit to. The new hash is slightly more skewed in this use case, but I manually checked the data and see the hash results are still in a reasonable range. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5155 Differential Revision: D14834821 Pulled By: siying fbshipit-source-id: ec9a2c0a2f8ae4b54d08b13a5c2e9cc97aa80cb5
2019-04-08 20:24:29 +00:00
inline uint64_t GetSliceNPHash64(const Slice& s) {
return NPHash64(s.data(), s.size());
Consolidate hash function used for non-persistent data in a new function (#5155) Summary: Create new function NPHash64() and GetSliceNPHash64(), which are currently implemented using murmurhash. Replace the current direct call of murmurhash() to use the new functions if the hash results are not used in on-disk format. This will make it easier to try out or switch to alternative functions in the uses where data format compatibility doesn't need to be considered. This part shouldn't have any performance impact. Also, the sharded cache hash function is changed to the new format, because it falls into this categoery. It doesn't show visible performance impact in db_bench results. CPU showed by perf is increased from about 0.2% to 0.4% in an extreme benchmark setting (4KB blocks, no-compression, everything cached in block cache). We've known that the current hash function used, our own Hash() has serious hash quality problem. It can generate a lots of conflicts with similar input. In this use case, it means extra lock contention for reads from the same file. This slight CPU regression is worthy to me to counter the potential bad performance with hot keys. And hopefully this will get further improved in the future with a better hash function. cache_test's condition is relaxed a little bit to. The new hash is slightly more skewed in this use case, but I manually checked the data and see the hash results are still in a reasonable range. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5155 Differential Revision: D14834821 Pulled By: siying fbshipit-source-id: ec9a2c0a2f8ae4b54d08b13a5c2e9cc97aa80cb5
2019-04-08 20:24:29 +00:00
}
Integrity protection for live updates to WriteBatch (#7748) Summary: This PR adds the foundation classes for key-value integrity protection and the first use case: protecting live updates from the source buffers added to `WriteBatch` through the destination buffer in `MemTable`. The width of the protection info is not yet configurable -- only eight bytes per key is supported. This PR allows users to enable protection by constructing `WriteBatch` with `protection_bytes_per_key == 8`. It does not yet expose a way for users to get integrity protection via other write APIs (e.g., `Put()`, `Merge()`, `Delete()`, etc.). The foundation classes (`ProtectionInfo.*`) embed the coverage info in their type, and provide `Protect.*()` and `Strip.*()` functions to navigate between types with different coverage. For making bytes per key configurable (for powers of two up to eight) in the future, these classes are templated on the unsigned integer type used to store the protection info. That integer contains the XOR'd result of hashes with independent seeds for all covered fields. For integer fields, the hash is computed on the raw unadjusted bytes, so the result is endian-dependent. The most significant bytes are truncated when the hash value (8 bytes) is wider than the protection integer. When `WriteBatch` is constructed with `protection_bytes_per_key == 8`, we hold a `ProtectionInfoKVOTC` (i.e., one that covers key, value, optype aka `ValueType`, timestamp, and CF ID) for each entry added to the batch. The protection info is generated from the original buffers passed by the user, as well as the original metadata generated internally. When writing to memtable, each entry is transformed to a `ProtectionInfoKVOTS` (i.e., dropping coverage of CF ID and adding coverage of sequence number), since at that point we know the sequence number, and have already selected a memtable corresponding to a particular CF. This protection info is verified once the entry is encoded in the `MemTable` buffer. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7748 Test Plan: - an integration test to verify a wide variety of single-byte changes to the encoded `MemTable` buffer are caught - add to stress/crash test to verify it works in variety of configs/operations without intentional corruption - [deferred] unit tests for `ProtectionInfo.*` classes for edge cases like KV swap, `SliceParts` and `Slice` APIs are interchangeable, etc. Reviewed By: pdillinger Differential Revision: D25754492 Pulled By: ajkr fbshipit-source-id: e481bac6c03c2ab268be41359730f1ceb9964866
2021-01-29 20:17:17 +00:00
inline uint64_t GetSliceNPHash64(const Slice& s, uint64_t seed) {
return NPHash64(s.data(), s.size(), seed);
}
// Similar to `GetSliceNPHash64()` with `seed`, but input comes from
// concatenation of `Slice`s in `data`.
extern uint64_t GetSlicePartsNPHash64(const SliceParts& data, uint64_t seed);
inline size_t GetSliceRangedNPHash(const Slice& s, size_t range) {
return FastRange64(NPHash64(s.data(), s.size()), range);
}
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
// TODO: consider rename to GetSliceHash32
inline uint32_t GetSliceHash(const Slice& s) {
return Hash(s.data(), s.size(), 397);
}
Add new persistent 64-bit hash (#5984) Summary: For upcoming new SST filter implementations, we will use a new 64-bit hash function (XXH3 preview, slightly modified). This change updates hash.{h,cc} for that change, adds unit tests, and out-of-lines the implementations to keep hash.h as clean/small as possible. In developing the unit tests, I discovered that the XXH3 preview always returns zero for the empty string. Zero is problematic for some algorithms (including an upcoming SST filter implementation) if it occurs more often than at the "natural" rate, so it should not be returned from trivial values using trivial seeds. I modified our fork of XXH3 to return a modest hash of the seed for the empty string. With hash function details out-of-lines in hash.h, it makes sense to enable XXH_INLINE_ALL, so that direct calls to XXH64/XXH32/XXH3p are inlined. To fix array-bounds warnings on some inline calls, I injected some casts to uintptr_t in xxhash.cc. (Issue reported to Yann.) Revised: Reverted using XXH_INLINE_ALL for now. Some Facebook checks are unhappy about #include on xxhash.cc file. I would fix that by rename to xxhash_cc.h, but to best preserve history I want to do that in a separate commit (PR) from the uintptr casts. Also updated filter_bench for this change, improving the performance predictability of dry run hashing and adding support for 64-bit hash (for upcoming new SST filter implementations, minor dead code in the tool for now). Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5984 Differential Revision: D18246567 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: 6162fbf6381d63c8cc611dd7ec70e1ddc883fbb8
2019-10-31 23:34:51 +00:00
// Useful for splitting up a 64-bit hash
inline uint32_t Upper32of64(uint64_t v) {
return static_cast<uint32_t>(v >> 32);
}
inline uint32_t Lower32of64(uint64_t v) { return static_cast<uint32_t>(v); }
Improve memory efficiency of many OptimisticTransactionDBs (#11439) Summary: Currently it's easy to use a ton of memory with many small OptimisticTransactionDB instances, because each one by default allocates a million mutexes (40 bytes each on my compiler) for validating transactions. It even puts a lot of pressure on the allocator by allocating each one individually! In this change: * Create a new object and option that enables sharing these buckets of mutexes between instances. This is generally good for load balancing potential contention as various DBs become hotter or colder with txn writes. About the only cases where this sharing wouldn't make sense (e.g. each DB usually written by one thread) are cases that would be better off with OccValidationPolicy::kValidateSerial which doesn't use the buckets anyway. * Allocate the mutexes in a contiguous array, for efficiency * Add an option to ensure the mutexes are cache-aligned. In several other places we use cache-aligned mutexes but OptimisticTransactionDB historically does not. It should be a space-time trade-off the user can choose. * Provide some visibility into the memory used by the mutex buckets with an ApproximateMemoryUsage() function (also used in unit testing) * Share code with other users of "striped" mutexes, appropriate refactoring for customization & efficiency (e.g. using FastRange instead of modulus) Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11439 Test Plan: unit tests added. Ran sized-up versions of stress test in unit test, including a before-and-after performance test showing no consistent difference. (NOTE: OptimisticTransactionDB not currently covered by db_stress!) Reviewed By: ltamasi Differential Revision: D45796393 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: ae2b3a26ad91ceeec15debcdc63ff48df6736a54
2023-05-24 18:57:15 +00:00
// std::hash-like interface.
struct SliceHasher32 {
uint32_t operator()(const Slice& s) const { return GetSliceHash(s); }
};
Improve memory efficiency of many OptimisticTransactionDBs (#11439) Summary: Currently it's easy to use a ton of memory with many small OptimisticTransactionDB instances, because each one by default allocates a million mutexes (40 bytes each on my compiler) for validating transactions. It even puts a lot of pressure on the allocator by allocating each one individually! In this change: * Create a new object and option that enables sharing these buckets of mutexes between instances. This is generally good for load balancing potential contention as various DBs become hotter or colder with txn writes. About the only cases where this sharing wouldn't make sense (e.g. each DB usually written by one thread) are cases that would be better off with OccValidationPolicy::kValidateSerial which doesn't use the buckets anyway. * Allocate the mutexes in a contiguous array, for efficiency * Add an option to ensure the mutexes are cache-aligned. In several other places we use cache-aligned mutexes but OptimisticTransactionDB historically does not. It should be a space-time trade-off the user can choose. * Provide some visibility into the memory used by the mutex buckets with an ApproximateMemoryUsage() function (also used in unit testing) * Share code with other users of "striped" mutexes, appropriate refactoring for customization & efficiency (e.g. using FastRange instead of modulus) Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11439 Test Plan: unit tests added. Ran sized-up versions of stress test in unit test, including a before-and-after performance test showing no consistent difference. (NOTE: OptimisticTransactionDB not currently covered by db_stress!) Reviewed By: ltamasi Differential Revision: D45796393 Pulled By: pdillinger fbshipit-source-id: ae2b3a26ad91ceeec15debcdc63ff48df6736a54
2023-05-24 18:57:15 +00:00
struct SliceNPHasher64 {
uint64_t operator()(const Slice& s, uint64_t seed = 0) const {
return GetSliceNPHash64(s, seed);
}
};
} // namespace ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE