2 Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
4 trivial database library
6 Copyright (C) Rusty Russell 2010
8 ** NOTE! The following LGPL license applies to the tdb
9 ** library. This does NOT imply that all of Samba is released
12 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
13 modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
14 License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
15 version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
17 This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
18 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
19 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
20 Lesser General Public License for more details.
22 You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
23 License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
25 #include "tdb1_private.h"
27 /* This is based on the hash algorithm from gdbm */
28 uint64_t tdb1_old_hash(const void *key
, size_t len
, uint64_t seed
, void *unused
)
30 uint32_t value
; /* Used to compute the hash value. */
31 uint32_t i
; /* Used to cycle through random values. */
32 const unsigned char *dptr
= key
;
34 /* Set the initial value from the key size. */
35 for (value
= 0x238F13AF * len
, i
=0; i
< len
; i
++)
36 value
= (value
+ (dptr
[i
] << (i
*5 % 24)));
38 return (1103515243 * value
+ 12345);
41 #ifndef WORDS_BIGENDIAN
42 # define HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN 1
43 # define HASH_BIG_ENDIAN 0
45 # define HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN 0
46 # define HASH_BIG_ENDIAN 1
50 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
51 lookup3.c, by Bob Jenkins, May 2006, Public Domain.
53 These are functions for producing 32-bit hashes for hash table lookup.
54 hash_word(), hashlittle(), hashlittle2(), hashbig(), mix(), and final()
55 are externally useful functions. Routines to test the hash are included
56 if SELF_TEST is defined. You can use this free for any purpose. It's in
57 the public domain. It has no warranty.
59 You probably want to use hashlittle(). hashlittle() and hashbig()
60 hash byte arrays. hashlittle() is is faster than hashbig() on
61 little-endian machines. Intel and AMD are little-endian machines.
62 On second thought, you probably want hashlittle2(), which is identical to
63 hashlittle() except it returns two 32-bit hashes for the price of one.
64 You could implement hashbig2() if you wanted but I haven't bothered here.
66 If you want to find a hash of, say, exactly 7 integers, do
67 a = i1; b = i2; c = i3;
69 a += i4; b += i5; c += i6;
73 then use c as the hash value. If you have a variable length array of
74 4-byte integers to hash, use hash_word(). If you have a byte array (like
75 a character string), use hashlittle(). If you have several byte arrays, or
76 a mix of things, see the comments above hashlittle().
78 Why is this so big? I read 12 bytes at a time into 3 4-byte integers,
79 then mix those integers. This is fast (you can do a lot more thorough
80 mixing with 12*3 instructions on 3 integers than you can with 3 instructions
81 on 1 byte), but shoehorning those bytes into integers efficiently is messy.
84 #define hashsize(n) ((uint32_t)1<<(n))
85 #define hashmask(n) (hashsize(n)-1)
86 #define rot(x,k) (((x)<<(k)) | ((x)>>(32-(k))))
89 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
90 mix -- mix 3 32-bit values reversibly.
92 This is reversible, so any information in (a,b,c) before mix() is
93 still in (a,b,c) after mix().
95 If four pairs of (a,b,c) inputs are run through mix(), or through
96 mix() in reverse, there are at least 32 bits of the output that
97 are sometimes the same for one pair and different for another pair.
99 * pairs that differed by one bit, by two bits, in any combination
100 of top bits of (a,b,c), or in any combination of bottom bits of
102 * "differ" is defined as +, -, ^, or ~^. For + and -, I transformed
103 the output delta to a Gray code (a^(a>>1)) so a string of 1's (as
104 is commonly produced by subtraction) look like a single 1-bit
106 * the base values were pseudorandom, all zero but one bit set, or
107 all zero plus a counter that starts at zero.
109 Some k values for my "a-=c; a^=rot(c,k); c+=b;" arrangement that
114 Well, "9 15 3 18 27 15" didn't quite get 32 bits diffing
115 for "differ" defined as + with a one-bit base and a two-bit delta. I
116 used http://burtleburtle.net/bob/hash/avalanche.html to choose
117 the operations, constants, and arrangements of the variables.
119 This does not achieve avalanche. There are input bits of (a,b,c)
120 that fail to affect some output bits of (a,b,c), especially of a. The
121 most thoroughly mixed value is c, but it doesn't really even achieve
124 This allows some parallelism. Read-after-writes are good at doubling
125 the number of bits affected, so the goal of mixing pulls in the opposite
126 direction as the goal of parallelism. I did what I could. Rotates
127 seem to cost as much as shifts on every machine I could lay my hands
128 on, and rotates are much kinder to the top and bottom bits, so I used
130 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
134 a -= c; a ^= rot(c, 4); c += b; \
135 b -= a; b ^= rot(a, 6); a += c; \
136 c -= b; c ^= rot(b, 8); b += a; \
137 a -= c; a ^= rot(c,16); c += b; \
138 b -= a; b ^= rot(a,19); a += c; \
139 c -= b; c ^= rot(b, 4); b += a; \
143 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
144 final -- final mixing of 3 32-bit values (a,b,c) into c
146 Pairs of (a,b,c) values differing in only a few bits will usually
147 produce values of c that look totally different. This was tested for
148 * pairs that differed by one bit, by two bits, in any combination
149 of top bits of (a,b,c), or in any combination of bottom bits of
151 * "differ" is defined as +, -, ^, or ~^. For + and -, I transformed
152 the output delta to a Gray code (a^(a>>1)) so a string of 1's (as
153 is commonly produced by subtraction) look like a single 1-bit
155 * the base values were pseudorandom, all zero but one bit set, or
156 all zero plus a counter that starts at zero.
158 These constants passed:
161 and these came close:
165 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
167 #define final(a,b,c) \
169 c ^= b; c -= rot(b,14); \
170 a ^= c; a -= rot(c,11); \
171 b ^= a; b -= rot(a,25); \
172 c ^= b; c -= rot(b,16); \
173 a ^= c; a -= rot(c,4); \
174 b ^= a; b -= rot(a,14); \
175 c ^= b; c -= rot(b,24); \
180 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
181 hashlittle() -- hash a variable-length key into a 32-bit value
182 k : the key (the unaligned variable-length array of bytes)
183 length : the length of the key, counting by bytes
184 val2 : IN: can be any 4-byte value OUT: second 32 bit hash.
185 Returns a 32-bit value. Every bit of the key affects every bit of
186 the return value. Two keys differing by one or two bits will have
187 totally different hash values. Note that the return value is better
188 mixed than val2, so use that first.
190 The best hash table sizes are powers of 2. There is no need to do
191 mod a prime (mod is sooo slow!). If you need less than 32 bits,
192 use a bitmask. For example, if you need only 10 bits, do
193 h = (h & hashmask(10));
194 In which case, the hash table should have hashsize(10) elements.
196 If you are hashing n strings (uint8_t **)k, do it like this:
197 for (i=0, h=0; i<n; ++i) h = hashlittle( k[i], len[i], h);
199 By Bob Jenkins, 2006. bob_jenkins@burtleburtle.net. You may use this
200 code any way you wish, private, educational, or commercial. It's free.
202 Use for hash table lookup, or anything where one collision in 2^^32 is
203 acceptable. Do NOT use for cryptographic purposes.
204 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
207 static uint32_t hashlittle( const void *key
, size_t length
)
209 uint32_t a
,b
,c
; /* internal state */
210 union { const void *ptr
; size_t i
; } u
; /* needed for Mac Powerbook G4 */
212 /* Set up the internal state */
213 a
= b
= c
= 0xdeadbeef + ((uint32_t)length
);
216 if (HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN
&& ((u
.i
& 0x3) == 0)) {
217 const uint32_t *k
= (const uint32_t *)key
; /* read 32-bit chunks */
220 /*------ all but last block: aligned reads and affect 32 bits of (a,b,c) */
231 /*----------------------------- handle the last (probably partial) block */
232 k8
= (const uint8_t *)k
;
235 case 12: c
+=k
[2]; b
+=k
[1]; a
+=k
[0]; break;
236 case 11: c
+=((uint32_t)k8
[10])<<16; /* fall through */
237 case 10: c
+=((uint32_t)k8
[9])<<8; /* fall through */
238 case 9 : c
+=k8
[8]; /* fall through */
239 case 8 : b
+=k
[1]; a
+=k
[0]; break;
240 case 7 : b
+=((uint32_t)k8
[6])<<16; /* fall through */
241 case 6 : b
+=((uint32_t)k8
[5])<<8; /* fall through */
242 case 5 : b
+=k8
[4]; /* fall through */
243 case 4 : a
+=k
[0]; break;
244 case 3 : a
+=((uint32_t)k8
[2])<<16; /* fall through */
245 case 2 : a
+=((uint32_t)k8
[1])<<8; /* fall through */
246 case 1 : a
+=k8
[0]; break;
249 } else if (HASH_LITTLE_ENDIAN
&& ((u
.i
& 0x1) == 0)) {
250 const uint16_t *k
= (const uint16_t *)key
; /* read 16-bit chunks */
253 /*--------------- all but last block: aligned reads and different mixing */
256 a
+= k
[0] + (((uint32_t)k
[1])<<16);
257 b
+= k
[2] + (((uint32_t)k
[3])<<16);
258 c
+= k
[4] + (((uint32_t)k
[5])<<16);
264 /*----------------------------- handle the last (probably partial) block */
265 k8
= (const uint8_t *)k
;
268 case 12: c
+=k
[4]+(((uint32_t)k
[5])<<16);
269 b
+=k
[2]+(((uint32_t)k
[3])<<16);
270 a
+=k
[0]+(((uint32_t)k
[1])<<16);
272 case 11: c
+=((uint32_t)k8
[10])<<16; /* fall through */
274 b
+=k
[2]+(((uint32_t)k
[3])<<16);
275 a
+=k
[0]+(((uint32_t)k
[1])<<16);
277 case 9 : c
+=k8
[8]; /* fall through */
278 case 8 : b
+=k
[2]+(((uint32_t)k
[3])<<16);
279 a
+=k
[0]+(((uint32_t)k
[1])<<16);
281 case 7 : b
+=((uint32_t)k8
[6])<<16; /* fall through */
283 a
+=k
[0]+(((uint32_t)k
[1])<<16);
285 case 5 : b
+=k8
[4]; /* fall through */
286 case 4 : a
+=k
[0]+(((uint32_t)k
[1])<<16);
288 case 3 : a
+=((uint32_t)k8
[2])<<16; /* fall through */
293 case 0 : return c
; /* zero length requires no mixing */
296 } else { /* need to read the key one byte at a time */
297 const uint8_t *k
= (const uint8_t *)key
;
299 /*--------------- all but the last block: affect some 32 bits of (a,b,c) */
303 a
+= ((uint32_t)k
[1])<<8;
304 a
+= ((uint32_t)k
[2])<<16;
305 a
+= ((uint32_t)k
[3])<<24;
307 b
+= ((uint32_t)k
[5])<<8;
308 b
+= ((uint32_t)k
[6])<<16;
309 b
+= ((uint32_t)k
[7])<<24;
311 c
+= ((uint32_t)k
[9])<<8;
312 c
+= ((uint32_t)k
[10])<<16;
313 c
+= ((uint32_t)k
[11])<<24;
319 /*-------------------------------- last block: affect all 32 bits of (c) */
320 switch(length
) /* all the case statements fall through */
322 case 12: c
+=((uint32_t)k
[11])<<24;
323 case 11: c
+=((uint32_t)k
[10])<<16;
324 case 10: c
+=((uint32_t)k
[9])<<8;
326 case 8 : b
+=((uint32_t)k
[7])<<24;
327 case 7 : b
+=((uint32_t)k
[6])<<16;
328 case 6 : b
+=((uint32_t)k
[5])<<8;
330 case 4 : a
+=((uint32_t)k
[3])<<24;
331 case 3 : a
+=((uint32_t)k
[2])<<16;
332 case 2 : a
+=((uint32_t)k
[1])<<8;
343 _PUBLIC_
uint64_t tdb1_incompatible_hash(const void *key
, size_t len
, uint64_t seed
,
346 return hashlittle(key
, len
);