libcuckoo provides a high-performance, compact hash table that allows multiple concurrent reader and writer threads.
The Doxygen-generated documentation is available at the project page.
Authors: Manu Goyal, Bin Fan, Xiaozhou Li, David G. Andersen, and Michael Kaminsky
For details about this algorithm and citations, please refer to our papers in NSDI 2013 and EuroSys 2014. Some of the details of the hashing algorithm have been improved since that work (e.g., the previous algorithm in 1 serializes all writer threads, while our current implementation supports multiple concurrent writers), however, and this source code is now the definitive reference.
This library has been tested on Mac OSX >= 10.8 and Ubuntu >= 12.04.
It compiles with clang++ >= 3.3 and g++ >= 4.7, however we strongly suggest using the latest versions of both compilers, as they have greatly improved support for atomic operations. Building the library requires CMake version >= 3.1.0. To install it on Ubuntu
$ sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install cmake
We suggest you build out of source, in a separate build
directory:
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
There are numerous flags you can pass to CMake
to set which parts of the
repository it builds.
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
: set the location where the libcuckoo header files are installed
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
: enable different types of build flags for different purposes
-DBUILD_EXAMPLES=1
: tell CMake
to build the examples
directory
-DBUILD_TESTS=1
: build all tests in the tests
directory
-DBUILD_STRESS_TESTS=1
: build all tests in the tests/stress-tests
directory
-DBUILD_UNIT_TESTS=1
: build all tests in the tests/unit-tests
directory
-DBUILD_UNIVERSAL_BENCHMARK=1
: build the universal benchmark in the tests/universal-benchmark
directory.
This benchmark allows you to test a variety of operations in arbitrary
percentages, with specific keys and values. Consult the README
in the
benchmark directory for more details.
So, if, for example, we want to build all examples and all tests into a local
installation directory, we'd run the following command from the build
directory.
$ cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=../install -DBUILD_EXAMPLES=1 -DBUILD_TESTS=1 ..
$ make all
$ make install
When compiling your own files with libcuckoo
, always remember to enable C++11
features on your compiler. On g++
, this would be -std=c++11
, and on
clang++
, this would be -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++
.
Once you have installed the header files and the install location has been added
to your search path, you can include <libcuckoo/cuckoohash_map.hh>
, and any of
the other headers you installed, into your source file.
There is also a C wrapper around the table that can be leveraged to use
libcuckoo
in a C program. The interface consists of a template header and
implementation file that can be used to generate instances of the hashtable for
different key-value types.
See the examples
directory for a demonstration of all of these features.
The tests
directory contains a number of tests and benchmarks of the hash
table, which also can serve as useful examples of how to use the table's various
features. Make sure to enable the tests you want to build with the corresponding
CMake
flags. The test suite can be run with the make test
command. The test
executables can be run individually as well.
To let us know your questions or issues, we recommend you report an issue on github. You can also email us at libcuckoo-dev@googlegroups.com.
Copyright (C) 2013, Carnegie Mellon University and Intel Corporation
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
The third-party libraries have their own licenses, as detailed in their source files.