On 2019-05-18 17:14:59 -0500, Ron wrote: > On 5/18/19 3:49 PM, Peter J. Holzer wrote: > > On 2019-05-18 15:19:22 -0500, Ron wrote: > > On 5/18/19 2:27 PM, Peter J. Holzer wrote: > > On 2019-05-18 10:49:53 -0700, David G. Johnston wrote: > > You don’t perform math on a hash > > That's not generally true. Hashes are used for further computation for > example in hash tables or in cryptography. > > How is it "using math" to use a hash key in a hash lookup table? > > hash modulo table size. > > > I've seen that used when the tablespace is pre-allocated, and you hash modulo > the tablespace page number. (Yes, performance tanks when you start filling up > pages.) How do you hash on the (ever growing) table size? The hash function returns a number in a range much larger than the possible number of buckets. 64 bits is a good choice today. To determine the bucket you need to reduce this number to something in the range [0, nr_buckets). This is where modulo comes in: i = h % nr_buckets If the the table fills up, you increase nr_buckets, reallocate and rehash all entries. (If nr_buckets is a power of two, the modulo operation can be efficiently implemented by using bitwise and) hp -- _ | Peter J. Holzer | we build much bigger, better disasters now |_|_) | | because we have much more sophisticated | | | hjp@xxxxxx | management tools. __/ | http://www.hjp.at/ | -- Ross Anderson <https://www.edge.org/>
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