parallel-hashmap
A family of header-only, very fast and memory-friendly hashmap and btree containers. (by greg7mdp)
corrade
C++11 multiplatform utility library (by mosra)
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parallel-hashmap | corrade | |
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31 | 1 | |
2,307 | 470 | |
- | - | |
7.6 | 9.3 | |
14 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
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.
parallel-hashmap
Posts with mentions or reviews of parallel-hashmap.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2024-04-13.
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The One Billion Row Challenge in CUDA: from 17 minutes to 17 seconds
Standard library maps/unordered_maps are themselves notoriously slow anyway. A sparse_hash_map from abseil or parallel-hashmaps[1] would be better.
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My own Concurrent Hash Map picks
Cool! Looking forward to you trying my phmap - and please let me know if you have any question.
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Boost 1.81 will have boost::unordered_flat_map...
I do this as well in my phmap and gtl implementations. It makes the tables look worse in benchmarks like the above, but prevents really bad surprises occasionally.
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Comprehensive C++ Hashmap Benchmarks 2022
Thanks a lot for the great benchmark, Martin. Glad you used different hash functions, because I do sacrifice some speed to make sure that the performance of my hash maps doesn't degrade drastically with poor hash functions. Happy to see that my phmap and gtl (the C++20 version) performed well.
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Can C++ maps be as efficient as Python dictionaries ?
I use https://github.com/greg7mdp/parallel-hashmap when I need better performance of maps and sets.
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How to build a Chess Engine, an interactive guide
Then they should really try https://github.com/greg7mdp/parallel-hashmap, the current state of the art.
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boost::unordered map is a new king of data structures
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
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Is A* just always slow?
std::unordered_map is notorious for being slow. Use a better implementation (I like the flat naps from here, which are the same as abseil’s). The question that needs to be asked too is if you need to use a map.
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New Boost.Unordered containers have BIG improvements!
A comparison against phmap would also be nice.
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How to implement static typing in a C++ bytecode VM?
std::unordered_map is perfectly fine. You can do better with external libraries, like parallel hashmap, but these tend to be drop-in replacements
corrade
Posts with mentions or reviews of corrade.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-03-19.
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Highest Performance C++ Libraries to Replace Std Features?
For general lightweight containers I would use (https://github.com/mosra/corrade/tree/master/src/Corrade/Containers) see also https://doc.magnum.graphics/corrade/namespaceCorrade_1_1Containers.html .
What are some alternatives?
When comparing parallel-hashmap and corrade you can also consider the following projects:
Folly - An open-source C++ library developed and used at Facebook.
libunifex - Unified Executors
robin-hood-hashing - Fast & memory efficient hashtable based on robin hood hashing for C++11/14/17/20
OpenLoco - An open source re-implementation of Chris Sawyer's Locomotion
libcuckoo - A high-performance, concurrent hash table
tangram-es - 2D and 3D map renderer using OpenGL ES
rust-phf - Compile time static maps for Rust
magnum-examples - Examples for the Magnum C++11 graphics engine
flat_hash_map - A very fast hashtable
crc32 - Fast C++17 and C11 CRC32 library
tracy - Frame profiler
llfio - P1031 low level file i/o and filesystem library for the C++ standard
parallel-hashmap vs Folly
corrade vs libunifex
parallel-hashmap vs robin-hood-hashing
corrade vs OpenLoco
parallel-hashmap vs libcuckoo
corrade vs tangram-es
parallel-hashmap vs rust-phf
corrade vs magnum-examples
parallel-hashmap vs flat_hash_map
corrade vs crc32
parallel-hashmap vs tracy
corrade vs llfio