netsurf/utils/hashtable.c
Vincent Sanders c105738fa3 Change LOG() macro to be varadic
This changes the LOG macro to be varadic removing the need for all
callsites to have double bracketing and allows for future improvement
on how we use the logging macros.

The callsites were changed with coccinelle and the changes checked by
hand. Compile tested for several frontends but not all.

A formatting annotation has also been added which allows the compiler
to check the parameters and types passed to the logging.
2015-05-28 16:08:46 +01:00

335 lines
8.2 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright 2006 Rob Kendrick <rjek@rjek.com>
* Copyright 2006 Richard Wilson <info@tinct.net>
*
* This file is part of NetSurf, http://www.netsurf-browser.org/
*
* NetSurf is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License.
*
* NetSurf is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
/** \file
* Write-Once hash table for string to string mappings */
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#ifdef TEST_RIG
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#endif
#include "utils/hashtable.h"
#include "utils/log.h"
struct hash_entry {
char *pairing; /**< block containing 'key\0value\0' */
unsigned int key_length; /**< length of key */
struct hash_entry *next; /**< next entry */
};
struct hash_table {
unsigned int nchains;
struct hash_entry **chain;
};
/**
* Hash a string, returning a 32bit value. The hash algorithm used is
* Fowler Noll Vo - a very fast and simple hash, ideal for short strings.
* See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fowler_Noll_Vo_hash for more details.
*
* \param datum The string to hash.
* \param len Pointer to unsigned integer to record datum's length in.
* \return The calculated hash value for the datum.
*/
static inline unsigned int hash_string_fnv(const char *datum, unsigned int *len)
{
unsigned int z = 0x811c9dc5;
const char *start = datum;
*len = 0;
if (datum == NULL)
return 0;
while (*datum) {
z *= 0x01000193;
z ^= *datum++;
}
*len = datum - start;
return z;
}
/**
* Create a new hash table, and return a context for it. The memory consumption
* of a hash table is approximately 8 + (nchains * 12) bytes if it is empty.
*
* \param chains Number of chains/buckets this hash table will have. This
* should be a prime number, and ideally a prime number just
* over a power of two, for best performance and distribution.
* \return struct hash_table containing the context of this hash table or NULL
* if there is insufficent memory to create it and its chains.
*/
struct hash_table *hash_create(unsigned int chains)
{
struct hash_table *r = malloc(sizeof(struct hash_table));
if (r == NULL) {
LOG("Not enough memory for hash table.");
return NULL;
}
r->nchains = chains;
r->chain = calloc(chains, sizeof(struct hash_entry *));
if (r->chain == NULL) {
LOG("Not enough memory for %d hash table chains.", chains);
free(r);
return NULL;
}
return r;
}
/**
* Destroys a hash table, freeing all memory associated with it.
*
* \param ht Hash table to destroy. After the function returns, this
* will nolonger be valid.
*/
void hash_destroy(struct hash_table *ht)
{
unsigned int i;
if (ht == NULL)
return;
for (i = 0; i < ht->nchains; i++) {
if (ht->chain[i] != NULL) {
struct hash_entry *e = ht->chain[i];
while (e) {
struct hash_entry *n = e->next;
free(e->pairing);
free(e);
e = n;
}
}
}
free(ht->chain);
free(ht);
}
/**
* Adds a key/value pair to a hash table. If the key you're adding is already
* in the hash table, it does not replace it, but it does take precedent over
* it. The old key/value pair will be inaccessable but still in memory until
* hash_destroy() is called on the hash table.
*
* \param ht The hash table context to add the key/value pair to.
* \param key The key to associate the value with. A copy is made.
* \param value The value to associate the key with. A copy is made.
* \return true if the add succeeded, false otherwise. (Failure most likely
* indicates insufficent memory to make copies of the key and value.
*/
bool hash_add(struct hash_table *ht, const char *key, const char *value)
{
unsigned int h, c, v;
struct hash_entry *e;
if (ht == NULL || key == NULL || value == NULL)
return false;
e = malloc(sizeof(struct hash_entry));
if (e == NULL) {
LOG("Not enough memory for hash entry.");
return false;
}
h = hash_string_fnv(key, &(e->key_length));
c = h % ht->nchains;
v = strlen(value) ;
e->pairing = malloc(v + e->key_length + 2);
if (e->pairing == NULL) {
LOG("Not enough memory for string duplication.");
free(e);
return false;
}
memcpy(e->pairing, key, e->key_length + 1);
memcpy(e->pairing + e->key_length + 1, value, v + 1);
e->next = ht->chain[c];
ht->chain[c] = e;
return true;
}
/**
* Looks up a the value associated with with a key from a specific hash table.
*
* \param ht The hash table context to look up the key in.
* \param key The key to search for.
* \return The value associated with the key, or NULL if it was not found.
*/
const char *hash_get(struct hash_table *ht, const char *key)
{
unsigned int h, c, key_length;
struct hash_entry *e;
if (ht == NULL || key == NULL)
return NULL;
h = hash_string_fnv(key, &key_length);
c = h % ht->nchains;
for (e = ht->chain[c]; e; e = e->next)
if ((key_length == e->key_length) &&
(memcmp(key, e->pairing, key_length) == 0))
return e->pairing + key_length + 1;
return NULL;
}
/**
* Iterate through all available hash keys.
*
* \param ht The hash table context to iterate.
* \param c1 Pointer to first context
* \param c2 Pointer to second context (set to 0 on first call)
* \return The next hash key, or NULL for no more keys
*/
const char *hash_iterate(struct hash_table *ht, unsigned int *c1, unsigned int **c2) {
struct hash_entry **he = (struct hash_entry **)c2;
if (ht == NULL)
return NULL;
if (!*he)
*c1 = -1;
else
*he = (*he)->next;
if (*he)
return (*he)->pairing;
while (!*he) {
(*c1)++;
if (*c1 >= ht->nchains)
return NULL;
*he = ht->chain[*c1];
}
return (*he)->pairing;
}
/* A simple test rig. To compile, use:
* gcc -o hashtest -I../ -DTEST_RIG utils/hashtable.c
*
* If you make changes to this hash table implementation, please rerun this
* test, and if possible, through valgrind to make sure there are no memory
* leaks or invalid memory accesses. If you add new functionality, please
* include a test for it that has good coverage along side the other tests.
*/
#ifdef TEST_RIG
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
struct hash_table *a, *b;
FILE *dict;
char keybuf[BUFSIZ], valbuf[BUFSIZ];
int i;
a = hash_create(79);
assert(a != NULL);
b = hash_create(103);
assert(b != NULL);
hash_add(a, "cow", "moo");
hash_add(b, "moo", "cow");
hash_add(a, "pig", "oink");
hash_add(b, "oink", "pig");
hash_add(a, "chicken", "cluck");
hash_add(b, "cluck", "chicken");
hash_add(a, "dog", "woof");
hash_add(b, "woof", "dog");
hash_add(a, "cat", "meow");
hash_add(b, "meow", "cat");
#define MATCH(x,y) assert(!strcmp(hash_get(a, x), y)); assert(!strcmp(hash_get(b, y), x))
MATCH("cow", "moo");
MATCH("pig", "oink");
MATCH("chicken", "cluck");
MATCH("dog", "woof");
MATCH("cat", "meow");
hash_destroy(a);
hash_destroy(b);
/* this test requires /usr/share/dict/words - a large list of English
* words. We load the entire file - odd lines are used as keys, and
* even lines are used as the values for the previous line. we then
* work through it again making sure everything matches.
*
* We do this twice - once in a hash table with many chains, and once
* with a hash table with fewer chains.
*/
a = hash_create(1031);
b = hash_create(7919);
dict = fopen("/usr/share/dict/words", "r");
if (dict == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "Unable to open /usr/share/dict/words - extensive testing skipped.\n");
exit(0);
}
while (!feof(dict)) {
fscanf(dict, "%s", keybuf);
fscanf(dict, "%s", valbuf);
hash_add(a, keybuf, valbuf);
hash_add(b, keybuf, valbuf);
}
for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
fseek(dict, 0, SEEK_SET);
while (!feof(dict)) {
fscanf(dict, "%s", keybuf);
fscanf(dict, "%s", valbuf);
assert(strcmp(hash_get(a, keybuf), valbuf) == 0);
assert(strcmp(hash_get(b, keybuf), valbuf) == 0);
}
}
hash_destroy(a);
hash_destroy(b);
fclose(dict);
return 0;
}
#endif