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C implementation of the JellyFish hash table

Isaac Turner
12 August 2013
License: Public Domain

A thread-safe hash table that uses compressed bit representation. Fast, low memory and multithreaded. Inspired by the jellyfish kmer-counter [http://www.cbcb.umd.edu/software/jellyfish].

Note: this is experimental code - beware changes and bugs.

About

The memory footprint is reduced by using a reversible hash function to allocate a position in the hash table. For any given element in the hash table, we can infer information about it by using the reverse hash function on it's position. This reduces the amount of information (bits) we have to use to store each item. Additionally, items are stored in a packed bit array. This implentation is a single .h file and allows multiple threads to add to the hash at the same time safely. Should work on 32 and 64 bit systems.

Differences from Jellyfish:

  1. single .h file in C
  2. uses reversible static hash function instead of generating random matrix, calculating its inverse and doing matrix multiplication
  3. unlimited bound on size of k (number of bits per element) vs 62 bits in JellyFish
  4. pt 3 requires us to introduce one bit per element to be used as a write lock

Default memory usage for storing b*2^l entries is (k-l+5)b2^l, with a rehash limit of 15. This allows up to 90% occupancy.

Developed for use with very large hash tables in memory on a single machine with many cores. This has applications in genome assembly where de Bruijn graphs are often memory intensive (~100GB of RAM).

Usage

#include "jellyhash.h"

...


JellyHash jhash;
jelly_hash_alloc(&jhash, 7, 20, 16); // 20*2^7 entries, 16 bits each

char in[10] =, out[10];
HKey hpos;

// Find or insert beef
strcpy(in, "Beef");
hpos = jelly_hash_find(jhash, in, 1, &inserted);
if(hpos == JHASH_NULL) exit(-1); // hash table full

// Where's the beef? Find and get value from key
hpos = jelly_hash_find(jhash, in, 0, &inserted);
if(hpos == JHASH_NULL) exit(-1); // entry not found
jelly_hash_get_key(jhash, hpos, out); // get value for `key`
printf("Found value at position %i: %s\n", (int)key, out);

jelly_hash_dealloc(&jhash);

To compile copy jellyhash.h into your working directory.

API

void jelly_hash_alloc(JellyHash *jhash, uint32_t l, uint32_t b, uint32_t k)

Allocate a new hash table, with b*2^l entries, bucket size of b, storing values of size k-bits. Memory usage is (k-l+JH_NRBITS+1)b2^l. Rehash limit is (2^JH_NRBITS)-1. k must be > l, if you want k <= l, you do not need a hash table and can just use a bit array with no collisions.

void jelly_hash_dealloc(JellyHash *jhash)

Free the hash table

HKey jelly_hash_find(JellyHash *jhash, const char *key,
                     int insert, int *inserted)

Find or insert an item into the hash table. If an element is not already in the hash table: returns JHASH_NULL if insert == 0; otherwise will attempt to insert the element. If rehash limit (16) is hit whilst attempting to insert, returns JHASH_NULL. key must be at least k bits long. If insertion is successful, *inserted is set to 1.

void jelly_hash_get_key(JellyHash *jhash, HKey loc, char *key)

Use the location of an element to fetch its value.

Rehash limit and word size can be set before including jellyhash.h. To set rehash limit to 2^5-1 = 31 and use words of size 32 bits:

// Set number of collisions allowed (rehash max is: 2^JH_NRBITS-1)
#define JH_NRBITS 5

// Set word size to be used by the hash table
// #define JH_FORCE_64 1
#define JH_FORCE_32 1

#include "jellyhash.h"

Cite

I am not associated with Guillaume Marçais or Carl Kingsford, the authors of JellyFish. If you use this software you may wish to cite their paper:

TODO

  1. benchmark
  2. add support for k < l (just a bit array)
  3. add non-threadsafe functions (possibly faster)