64 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
64 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
# Sparsemap
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`sparsemap` is a sparse, compressed bitmap. In best case, it can store 2048
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bits in just 8 bytes. In worst case, it stores the 2048 bits uncompressed and
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requires additional 8 bytes of overhead.
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The "best" case happens when large consecutive sequences of the bits are
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either set ("1") or not set ("0"). If your numbers are consecutive 64bit
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integers then sparsemap can compress up to 16kb in just 8 bytes.
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## How does it work?
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On the lowest level stores bits in sm_bitvec_t's (a uint32_t or uint64_t).
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Each sm_bitvec_t has an additional descriptor (2 bits). A single word prepended
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to each sm_bitvec_t describes its condition. The descriptor word and the
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sm_bitvec_t's have the same size.) The descriptor of a sm_bitvec_t
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specifies whether the sm_bitvec_t consists only of set bits ("1"), unset
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bits ("0") or has a mixed payload. In the first and second case the
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sm_bitvec_t is not stored.
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An example shows a sequence of 4 x 16 bits (here, each sm_bitvec_t and the
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Descriptor word has 16 bits):
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Descriptor:
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00 00 00 00 11 00 11 10
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^^ ^^ ^^ ^^-- sm_bitvec_t #0 - #3 are "0000000000000000"
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^^-- sm_bitvec_t #4 is "1111111111111111"
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^^-- sm_bitvec_t #5 is "0000000000000000"
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^^-- sm_bitvec_t #7 is "1111111111111111"
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^^-- sm_bitvec_t #7 is "0110010101111001"
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Since the first 7 sm_bitvec_t's are either all "1" or "0" they are not stored.
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The actual memory sequence looks like this:
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0000000011001110 0110010101111001
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Instead of storing 8 Words (16 bytes), we only store 2 Words (2 bytes): one
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for the descriptor, one for last sm_bitvec_t #7.
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The sparsemap stores a list of chunk maps, and for each chunk map it stores the
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absolute address (i.e. if the user sets bit 0 and bit 10000, and the chunk map
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capacity is 2048, the sparsemap creates two chunk maps; the first starts at
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offset 0, the second starts at offset 8192).
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## Usage instructions
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The file `examples/ex_1.c` has example code.
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## Final words
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This bitmap has efficient compression when used on long sequences of set (or
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unset) bits (i.e. with a word size of 64bit, and a payload of consecutive
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numbers without gaps, the payload of 2048 x sizeof(uint64_t) = 16kb will occupy
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only 8 bytes!
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However, if the sequence is not consecutive and has gaps, it's possible that
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the compression is inefficient, and the size (in the worst case) is identical
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to an uncompressed bit vector (sometimes higher due to the bytes required for
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metadata). In such cases, other compression schemes are more efficient (i.e.
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http://lemire.me/blog/archives/2008/08/20/the-mythical-bitmap-index/).
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This library was originally created for hamsterdb [http://hamsterdb.com] in
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C++ and then translated to C99 code by Greg Burd <greg@burd.me>.
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