map_benchmark VS Hopscotch map

Compare map_benchmark vs Hopscotch map and see what are their differences.

map_benchmark

Comprehensive benchmarks of C++ maps (by martinus)

Hopscotch map

C++ implementation of a fast hash map and hash set using hopscotch hashing (by Tessil)
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map_benchmark Hopscotch map
5 3
287 698
- -
5.5 3.7
about 1 year ago 7 months ago
C++ C++
MIT License MIT License
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.

map_benchmark

Posts with mentions or reviews of map_benchmark. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-04-02.
  • Optimizing Open Addressing
    3 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 2 Apr 2023
    I tied adding the maps to the [1] benchmark, but I wasn't able to, since they aren't type generic yet. You may want to benchmark against [2], and [3] which are the best performing ones in the above benchmark.

    [1] https://github.com/martinus/map_benchmark/

    [2] https://github.com/TheNumbat/hashtables/blob/main/code/robin...

    [3] https://github.com/ktprime/ktprime

  • Benchmarking my data structure
    2 projects | /r/cpp_questions | 2 Jan 2023
    In any case, I guess you can find some inspiration in this comparison of maps which was posted to /r/cpp a couple of months ago: https://martin.ankerl.com/2022/08/27/hashmap-bench-01/ (source code for the benchmark seems to be on https://github.com/martinus/map_benchmark ). It's made for maps but adjusting most benchmarks for other containers should be fairly straightforward.
  • Is there a committee paper on a "simplified" random interface?
    2 projects | /r/cpp | 7 Aug 2022
    There is no such thing as best random generator. They have so many different properties, e.g. is it cryptographic secure, how large is the state, how fast on x86 architecture, can it jump forward, etc. My go-to generator is sfc64 because it's fast, simple, and seems to produce high quality random numbers. Here is one implementation: https://github.com/martinus/map_benchmark/blob/master/src/app/sfc64.h other popular generators are PCG and xorshift
  • boost::unordered map is a new king of data structures
    10 projects | /r/cpp | 30 Jun 2022
    I've implemented this PoolAllocator which does exactly this: https://github.com/martinus/map_benchmark/blob/master/src/app/pool.h
  • Development Plan for Boost.Unordered
    2 projects | /r/cpp | 8 Mar 2022
    Hi Martin, thanks for the pointer! BTW, I think we may use your impressive benchmark suite to test our advances once we come up with something worth deep testing.

Hopscotch map

Posts with mentions or reviews of Hopscotch map. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-06-30.
  • boost::unordered map is a new king of data structures
    10 projects | /r/cpp | 30 Jun 2022
    Unordered hash map shootout CMAP = https://github.com/tylov/STC KMAP = https://github.com/attractivechaos/klib PMAP = https://github.com/greg7mdp/parallel-hashmap FMAP = https://github.com/skarupke/flat_hash_map RMAP = https://github.com/martinus/robin-hood-hashing HMAP = https://github.com/Tessil/hopscotch-map TMAP = https://github.com/Tessil/robin-map UMAP = std::unordered_map Usage: shootout [n-million=40 key-bits=25] Random keys are in range [0, 2^25). Seed = 1656617916: T1: Insert/update random keys: KMAP: time: 1.949, size: 15064129, buckets: 33554432, sum: 165525449561381 CMAP: time: 1.649, size: 15064129, buckets: 22145833, sum: 165525449561381 PMAP: time: 2.434, size: 15064129, buckets: 33554431, sum: 165525449561381 FMAP: time: 2.112, size: 15064129, buckets: 33554432, sum: 165525449561381 RMAP: time: 1.708, size: 15064129, buckets: 33554431, sum: 165525449561381 HMAP: time: 2.054, size: 15064129, buckets: 33554432, sum: 165525449561381 TMAP: time: 1.645, size: 15064129, buckets: 33554432, sum: 165525449561381 UMAP: time: 6.313, size: 15064129, buckets: 31160981, sum: 165525449561381 T2: Insert sequential keys, then remove them in same order: KMAP: time: 1.173, size: 0, buckets: 33554432, erased 20000000 CMAP: time: 1.651, size: 0, buckets: 33218751, erased 20000000 PMAP: time: 3.840, size: 0, buckets: 33554431, erased 20000000 FMAP: time: 1.722, size: 0, buckets: 33554432, erased 20000000 RMAP: time: 2.359, size: 0, buckets: 33554431, erased 20000000 HMAP: time: 0.849, size: 0, buckets: 33554432, erased 20000000 TMAP: time: 0.660, size: 0, buckets: 33554432, erased 20000000 UMAP: time: 2.138, size: 0, buckets: 31160981, erased 20000000 T3: Remove random keys: KMAP: time: 1.973, size: 0, buckets: 33554432, erased 23367671 CMAP: time: 2.020, size: 0, buckets: 33218751, erased 23367671 PMAP: time: 2.940, size: 0, buckets: 33554431, erased 23367671 FMAP: time: 1.147, size: 0, buckets: 33554432, erased 23367671 RMAP: time: 1.941, size: 0, buckets: 33554431, erased 23367671 HMAP: time: 1.135, size: 0, buckets: 33554432, erased 23367671 TMAP: time: 1.064, size: 0, buckets: 33554432, erased 23367671 UMAP: time: 5.632, size: 0, buckets: 31160981, erased 23367671 T4: Iterate random keys: KMAP: time: 0.748, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554432, repeats: 8, sum: 4465059465719680 CMAP: time: 0.627, size: 23367671, buckets: 33218751, repeats: 8, sum: 4465059465719680 PMAP: time: 0.680, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554431, repeats: 8, sum: 4465059465719680 FMAP: time: 0.735, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554432, repeats: 8, sum: 4465059465719680 RMAP: time: 0.464, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554431, repeats: 8, sum: 4465059465719680 HMAP: time: 0.719, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554432, repeats: 8, sum: 4465059465719680 TMAP: time: 0.662, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554432, repeats: 8, sum: 4465059465719680 UMAP: time: 6.168, size: 23367671, buckets: 31160981, repeats: 8, sum: 4465059465719680 T5: Lookup random keys: KMAP: time: 0.943, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554432, lookups: 34235332, found: 29040438 CMAP: time: 0.863, size: 23367671, buckets: 33218751, lookups: 34235332, found: 29040438 PMAP: time: 1.635, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554431, lookups: 34235332, found: 29040438 FMAP: time: 0.969, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554432, lookups: 34235332, found: 29040438 RMAP: time: 1.705, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554431, lookups: 34235332, found: 29040438 HMAP: time: 0.712, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554432, lookups: 34235332, found: 29040438 TMAP: time: 0.584, size: 23367671, buckets: 33554432, lookups: 34235332, found: 29040438 UMAP: time: 1.974, size: 23367671, buckets: 31160981, lookups: 34235332, found: 29040438
  • Yes, this is embarrassingly slow .so I solved your problem
    1 project | news.ycombinator.com | 26 Mar 2022
    the map member used for the lookups is a tsl::hopscotch_map (https://github.com/Tessil/hopscotch-map), which is a proper hash map. so it seems to be the latter, that the API is wrong, but from what I can tell it is only a wrongly named class. i don't see where the API makes guarantees about iteration order, which is where the implementation difference would be noticeable (beyond performance for lookup).
  • Any suggestions for resources to optimize for memory allocation/reallocation?
    2 projects | /r/cpp | 24 Jan 2021
    using an open-addressing hash table, such as abseil flat_hash_map or tessil/hopscotch-map

What are some alternatives?

When comparing map_benchmark and Hopscotch map you can also consider the following projects:

robin-map - C++ implementation of a fast hash map and hash set using robin hood hashing

C++ B-tree - Git mirror of the official (mercurial) repository of cpp-btree

unordered_dense - A fast & densely stored hashmap and hashset based on robin-hood backward shift deletion

PEGTL - Parsing Expression Grammar Template Library

unordered - Boost.org unordered module

sparsehash-c11 - Experimental C++11 version of sparsehash

parallel-hashmap - A family of header-only, very fast and memory-friendly hashmap and btree containers.

sparsehash - C++ associative containers

robin-hood-hashing - Fast & memory efficient hashtable based on robin hood hashing for C++11/14/17/20

Optional Argument in C++ - Named Optional Arguments in C++17

STC - A modern, user friendly, generic, type-safe and fast C99 container library: String, Vector, Sorted and Unordered Map and Set, Deque, Forward List, Smart Pointers, Bitset and Random numbers.

Hashmaps - Various open addressing hashmap algorithms in C++